In The Brothers’ Keepers, we meet
archaeologist Grace Madison who is in Brussels cataloguing looted antiquities
when her son’s bride is attacked in Switzerland. Her day careens from bad to
catastrophic when daughter Maggie disappears in France.
Coincidence is
a luxury Grace cannot afford as history — saturated in espionage — is repeating
itself.
The title of the book, The Brothers’ Keepers, refers to heroine Grace Madison’s
determination to protect someone important to her. To what lengths would you go
to protect someone you cared about?
I would do whatever it took — and I remember the exact moment I decided
that! I stood at the edge of the tel Dan (northern Israel) archaeological dig
pit in 2007 with my husband and two then-teenage children. They had accompanied
me on an archaeological survey as part of my master’s degree from Dallas
Theological Seminary. Heavy artillery fire began booming from Syria as staccato
machine-gun reports peppered near the Lebanese border. An Israeli Defense Force
camouflage-painted plane broke through an unseasonal cloud cover, circling the
site. I hoped they could see we were unarmed! Grace Madison was born from this
harrowing experience.
The Brothers’
Keepers largely focuses on doing the right thing. Tell us about a situation
in which you chose to do the right thing despite personal cost. Was it worth
it?
My business was thriving, my children were young, and I had to choose
between a smaller role in their lives or limiting my company’s growth. My
husband was trying to transition from one career to another, and I was the
family’s wage-earner.
This was a particularly difficult time because money was tight, and the
decision tore at who I was as a businesswoman and mother. I chose to limit my
accounts, and eventually put small school desks into my office to home school
for a time. (The kids are now an attorney and an engineer, so they survived my
teaching!) I’ve never regretted the choice to put family first, but it was not
an easy one.
Grace is in the midst of rebuilding her marriage and
struggles with the commitment she made vs. still being in love. How hard do you
think it is to try to fall in love again when things become difficult?
Love is a choice, not an accident. A covenant, not a commitment. Choosing to
love again can be extremely difficult in a society of immediate gratification,
and requires a willingness to risk transparency by trusting someone who has
failed you. And the process requires an equal commitment from both partners; it
can’t be one-sided.
I know that God loves me despite my failings and throughout my spiritual
deserts and rebellion. He exhibits grace to me, and I’m called to act in His
image. (Note that I am, at times, an “epic failure,” to use a favorite phrase
from one of my characters.) Being mindful of this model of love and forgiveness
is the only path I know to reconciliation.
What is the difference
between a commitment and a covenant?
A covenant is a binding agreement, sealed with an act of some kind.
A commitment is dedication, without the binding element, and unsealed. A
covenant is much stronger than a commitment. To develop a healthy respect for
the strength of a covenant, mosey through the Old Testament!
Independence is important, even within a marriage. Does
independence ever cause problems between spouses? How can you maintain a sense
of self without living completely separate lives?
Independence AND dependence can cause trouble between spouses. There’s a
balance . . . somewhere. The answer lies in both partners working to identify
with the Imago Dei, or Image of God. Being Christ-like can create a healthy
sense of self and appropriate selflessness as a daily act of worship. (I
confess that “epic failure” comes to mind again.)
The Brothers’ Keepers is
the second book in your Parched series. What meaning does the series name hold
for you?
Around the world, there is a shortage of water for drinking, irrigating crops,
and supporting livestock. That is true even within US borders, especially in the
West where I live. Historical issues aside, a huge factor in the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict is unequal distribution of water.
The world needs new sources of potable and economical drinking water, and we
need to manage this most precious resource wisely. As a Christian and
environmentalist, I believe humans are stewards of God’s creation. Parched addresses
stewardship of the highest order, and I hope the series raises awareness of
this literally life-threatening issue. We can live without oil, but we can’t
survive without water.
Many books feature youthful heroes and heroines, but The Brothers’ Keepers highlights the
life of a more mature protagonist. What are some of the factors that led to
your decision to write characters a little older than the norm? What kind of
feedback have you had?
Readers ADORE Grace Madison. The response has been overwhelming.
Regarding the decision to write about a more mature protagonist, what’s not to
love? Our decades should make us more nuanced, more self-confident, and less
afraid to broaden our horizons. Middle age can be a season of richness and
vitality that I hope to depict with joy and vigor - exactly the way I try to
LIVE!
By developing the character of Grace’s daughter, Maggie, I have the chance to
contrast their generations while ignoring neither. From the octogenarians, to
Grace and her husband, to Maggie and the “twenty-somethings” (her brother and
sister-in-law), each group in The
Brothers’ Keepers responds to challenges in its own uniquely
age-appropriate way.
In The Brothers’ Keepers, we
see two different women – one who raised a family and chose career later in
life. The other sacrificed family life for career. Can a woman “have it all?”
Of course we can. But “having it all” can come at an almost sacrificial price
and creates repercussions that can last for decades. If you’re going to “have
it all,” you’ll have little of yourself left at the end of a difficult road
that will probably be littered with shrapnel.
Is there a right or wrong
answer to choosing a family or a career as your primary life goal?
I think there are absolutes in life, but don't believe the family-versus-career
talking point is one of them. Each woman has to make her choice by responding
to her own situation and environment. And she has to be flexible because
situations change, and marriages evolve over time. Spouses can grow in
different directions, make untenable choices and act outside the boundaries established
by the marriage vows.
I’d like to see less emphasis on this divisive dialogue, and more focus on
women’s education and empowerment — which lead to freedom of choice and
self-determination.
Which of the characters
in The Brothers’ Keepers can you relate to the most, and why?
That’s a tough question. I can understand all of them — their motivations
and desires — and enjoy them all, except when their conversations keep me awake
at night by forcing me to take dictation at my computer! But like readers my
age, I especially relate to Grace: her faith, skepticism, flaws, and humor. I
agree with the reader who wrote, “I want to be Grace!”
I also identify with Grace because I am a Christian who is “in the world, but
not of it.” My career, my education, my travel: each of these elements formed
me, but they occurred in the midst of people whose beliefs did not always ally
with mine. I am invigorated by God’s creation, as is Grace. I want to
experience it! And I hope her character portrays a demographic of Christianity
that is intelligent, fair, and fearless because of its belief in God’s
empowerment, one attractive to non-believers because these Christians live
their faith with realism and love.
Every good story has an antagonist, and your Parched
series is no exception. We learn some things about your villain in The Brothers’ Keepers, however, that might make readers look at her in
a new light. What does Laura McAlex’s story teach us about having compassion
for difficult people?
MaAlex’s past doesn’t excuse her actions and choices, but reveals
motivating aspects of her psyche. Discovering her life journey makes her
behavior easier to understand, but no less evil. I hope her character is a
warning to guard vigilantly against becoming hardened against the greater good.
God’s standards never change, regardless of our trials.
I love working with her character. It’s not that she’s sexually corrupt, as is
so often the case with “the bad girls of literature.” She’s just bad to the
bone in the ways most male antagonists are. How refreshing! When she and Grace
lock up in book three, it’s a humorous pitting of two very different Alpha
Females.
You are a member of the
venerable Explorer’s Club whose membership has included Winston
Churchill and Teddy Roosevelt. What is the history of that organization and
what does being a member entail?
I was so surprised to be nominated! Two letters of recommendation and
months later, my membership was approved. The research in Israel and Jordan, an
Amazon cruise (with a tarantula in the skiff), the graduate degree, and my
unusual interests were important considerations for the vetting committee.
The Explorers Club was founded in 1904 and admitted its first female members in
1981. The goal was to create a place where the adventurous could gather, and
the organization funds expeditions, research, seminars, and other scholarly
endeavors. Explorer Club members were first to the North and South Poles, to
the deepest point of the oceans, to the summit of Mt. Everest, and to the moon!
I am honored.
You have traversed the globe – seeing five continents and surveying
archaeological digs in the Middle East and
beyond – which provided research and background for your books. Tell us about
your most recent trip.
I’m answering this question on a train between Vienna and Budapest,
having crossed the North Atlantic on the Queen Mary 2 a month ago. I studied
the Rosetta Stone and Cyrus Cylinder in London, then survived nicotine-infused
St. Vitus’s Cathedral in Prague. I tried not to yodel in Lucerne, and loudly
hummed “The Lonely Goatherd” in Salzburg.
I’ll be on the road for another six weeks, confirming research for book three
in the series by revisiting digs and sites in Italy, Greece, and Turkey (unless
ISIS invades, or the border with Turkey and Syria collapses). Grace Madison is
on the move, although she’s left her beloved camels in Jerusalem.
I could not write these manuscripts without knowing their settings well, and in
some instances, intimately. I can picture the Temple Mount of Jerusalem at
sunrise. I know what the Istanbul spice market smells like on a drizzly day. I
catch my breath at the memory of height vertigo atop Machu Picchu. I remember
the taste of wild blueberries after surprising a 1200-pound grizzly bear on the
Kenai Peninsula. As useful as the Internet is for the copious research behind
each book in the Parched series, nothing replaces living in Grace’s tattered
hiking boots.
You had incredibly successful careers in journalism
and marketing. What brought you to writing fiction?
Journalism, marketing, and advertising were enjoyable means to an end, but
after the afternoon at tel Dan, I could not ignore the storyline that grew
around Grace. No one was writing anything like the Parched series, so I decided
to try to fill the void.
I have written all my life. My undergraduate degree is in journalism and my
previous career prepared me to share Grace (and her friends and family)
professionally, and provided daily practice with the written word.
How has your degree at
Dallas Theological Seminary influenced your writing?
I am VERY careful with the theology in my manuscripts! DTS is a premier institution
with a longstanding reputation for excellence. My professors were peerless
examples of aging joyfully and vigorously.
NLB Horton |
I returned to seminary seeking answers to questions created when what I was
taught as a young woman didn’t support the life I had lived. Along with a
greater understanding, I left seminary with a vast library in fascinating
subjects like Israeli Religion in the Ancient Near Eastern context, Ugaritic
poetry, and the Intertestamental period. My office bookshelves are a geeky wonderland!
What plans do you have
next for your Parched series?
I’m writing book three now, which I hope to release in the fall of 2015.
Then there are two, possibly three, more adventures for Grace.
To keep up with NLB Horton, visit www.nlbhorton.com,
become a fan on Facebook (NLB-Horton) or
follow her on Twitter (NLBHorton).
What a way to get an idea for a book! That was some scary experience, that your family had. I would love to go on an archaeological dig, especially in Egypt!
ReplyDeleteWow, what a life you've led! You have enough adventures to write volumes.
ReplyDeleteQuestion: would you be willing to explore outer space? You've already explored so much of Earth, and space tourism is becoming more possible.
Thank you for the very fascinating interview!
Denise, you're right! That thirty minutes in northern Israel was one of the most frightening in my life, but the time spent in that part of the world has also been some of my richest. I'd love to do a dig in Egypt too, and was actually in the Middle East this past March. Until the current situation settles down, though, I'm going no further East than Greece. (Although I just dashed through Turkey in October.)
ReplyDeleteAnd June, the thought of being in outer space kind of flips me out. I'm a terra firm kind of girl and don't even like heights much! So being cooped up in a spaceship, staring down at Earth, isn't very appealing to me. I guess you've found where I draw my line! Thanks for asking, and the interview was my pleasure. NLBH
This was such an outstanding and relevant interview. I'm so thrilled to "meet" this author and be introduced to her work. Thank you so very much for sharing.
ReplyDelete