WOF: Many of our readers ‘met’ you
for the first time this year at Women of Faith’s Contagious
Joy conferences, where you performed dramatic
sketches. If you had to choose just one,
would you rather act or write? (And aren’t
you glad you don’t have to choose?)
DONNA: I’m thrilled I don’t
have to choose one or the other and thankful
that God allows me to do both!
WOF: What inspires you
to write a new novel? Is
it a character or plot idea or theme or . .
. ?
DONNA: I wish I knew what
inspired me! I think I’m always listening for
stories. I’ve discovered that inspiration
comes in many different forms. Sometimes
it can be something as simple as something
said in passing by a friend or a statement
by my pastor. It also comes from watching
the evening news or reading through the paper
or just watching people at the grocery store. Whatever
that “something” is triggers more
ideas in my head and I’ll start to put
together characters and a plot to hold them
together. My problem is not a lack of
ideas but a lack of time to put them all together!
WOF: The events in the
book are seen from the perspective of nine-year-old
Jane Gable. Was
it difficult to write a book through the eyes
of a child?
DONNA: No. Jane
tells the story as a grown woman looking
back on 1947 and how that year changed everything
in her life. I
wanted the reader to “see” the
things that Jane did at that time and go through
the questions and fears she was experiencing. It
was confusing to Jane how the people she loved
in her community would treat the first black
family to move into the area. To Jane
they were just people who needed a place to
live. She couldn’t understand why so
many people were prejudiced toward people they’d
never met before. I’ve already
heard from readers who have said, “I
grew up in a town like that,” or “Boy,
did that book ever bring back memories.” I’m
honored to know that readers have really captured
everything that Jane experienced at that time.
WOF: Some of your characters
are on the hostile side. Is it difficult to
write about characters with attitudes and beliefs
different from your own?
DONNA: No, because I think that without
Christ that I could easily be someone like
them. It’s only by the grace of
God that I am a new person. I spoke with
a lot of different people about growing up
in that era. It was a simple time with
simple pleasures but also a scary time because
so many households were rebuilding their lives
after the war. Lynchings were already
occurring in the South, which is so hard to
believe. We won the war overseas against
a man who was annihilating people different
from him yet evil was rearing its ugly head
here because black people weren’t white! I
had to get inside the heads of some of those
people for the book and show the prejudice,
racism and ignorance that they’d let
creep into their lives. And it wasn’t
just rednecks, either. Some of the characters
were upright, decent people but they didn’t
want a black family living in their community. That’s
what was so confusing for Jane. She
admired and respected many of those people
but was baffled by their actions. She
was learning that prejudice comes in all shapes
and sizes.
WOF: The town of Morgan
Hill is practically a character in its own
right. That seems
like it’d be a little complicated; how
did you keep track of all those people and
places?
DONNA: I’m so honored that you
got that! I wanted the community of Morgan
Hill to be its own character—from the
railroad tracks that ran right through the
middle of town to Henry’s store that
crackled with life every day and to the church
and school where so many functions took place
during that time. St. Martin’s
Press has already asked me to write more books
set in that little community and I couldn’t
be happier to take readers back to Morgan Hill. Each
book will have a different main character but
all the action will take place right there
in Morgan Hill so keep your eyes open for more
books in this series! It wasn’t
difficult to keep track of the people because
I would just ask myself, “Okay, where
is Joe during this scene? Where is Henry?” Each
member of the community was vital to the story
so I had to keep track of their comings and
goings.
WOF: Fran and Milo’s relationship is
interesting – in a good way. Was it based
on your own experience as an adoptive mom?
DONNA: No, Milo is older than my girls
when we adopted them. They were both
10.5 months and came out of orphanages. Milo
was six and was growing up in a home filled
with love with both parents and a sister. Milo’s
situation was difficult all the way around. He
lost everyone he loved and was then thrust
into an all white home with a single mother
who had never been around black people. At
one point Fran even says, “I don’t
know anything about his people’s ways.” She
felt insufficient for the task she’d
been given and it didn’t help that so
many people around her wanted her to get rid
of Milo. But then there were those people
who were going to stand next to her and Milo
despite what people thought. They were
angels within reach for Fran. Fran and
her children (Jane and John) and Milo all had
to figure out how to make things work.
WOF: If you had to boil down the message of Angels
of Morgan Hill to one sentence, what
would it be?
DONNA: The hope of belonging and the
dream of family. Jane desperately wanted
to have a complete family. She’d
grown up with a drunken father and when he
died she hoped and prayed that somehow, some
way she could be part of a real family. In
the same sense Milo wants a family where he
belongs. It’s a dream they both
share.
WOF: What’s your favorite part of writing
a book? Your least favorite?
DONNA: My favorite part is actually
getting into the story and making it come to
life. My least favorite part is starting
it!
WOF: What author(s) do
you read and re-read? What
are you reading now?
DONNA: I read lots of different
authors but I re-read Philip Yancey. I
just re-read What’s So Amazing About
Grace and now I’m reading his new
book on prayer. Unfortunately, I always
have about three books going at once in addition
to magazine articles and devotionals and of
course the Bible. You should see my
night stand. Add several children’s
books on top of my books and I’m always
looking at a mess. I clean it off at
least twice a week but then books start piling
up again. If I didn’t clean it
I’d never make it to my bed!
WOF: What’s next
for you?
DONNA: My editor at St. Martin’s
Press has asked me to write another Christmas
novel for fall of ‘07 and then another
Morgan Hill book for ‘08. I’m
working on the Christmas book now but think
this will be the first deadline I miss because
we’re expecting our little boy from Guatemala
to arrive sometime in January or February and
that’s when the manuscript is due. Check
back with me at that time to see if I’ve
finished it and if I don’t answer the
phone you’ll know why!
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