My
Review:
Rachel Sheppard learns that her father has been keeping
dark secrets from her for twenty years while visiting Colonial Williamsburg
with her best friend Camisha. Rachel has no memory of the first six years of
her life before she was adopted. While visiting Colonial Williamsburg Rachel
and Camisha meet up with a couple that give them a place to stay at Rosalie;
the home of the Trelawneys in 1746 that use to be a tobacco plantation. The
couple tells them stories about the lives of the Trelawneys and the people who
lived at Rosalie in 1746.
Sometime during the night Rachel and Camisha are
transported back in time to 1746. Rachel wakes to see a small child, a girl
running around out in the storm and goes to help her and then she wakes in the
arms of Grey Trelawney.
In the beginning Rachel has no idea that Camisha has
traveled back in time with her until she sees a young woman being beaten by the
overseer of the Rosalie plantation. Camisha has been beaten so badly that
Rachel hardly recognizes her. During her stay at Rosalie in 1746 Rachel starts
to remember her past but she only gets bits and pieces of it at a time.
Tender is an unforgettable read one that will stay with
me long after I have read the last page. I first fell in love with stories like
this when I first read Roots and Gone with the Wind. I loved traveling back in
time with Rachel and Camisha and finding out about Rachel’s past and her
family.
If I could travel back in time this would be one of the
time periods I would love to visit to experience life on a plantation and to
see how they lived back then. Anne Meredith did a remarkable job of describing
the life and times of the people in the 18th century. Rachel and
Camisha are two wonderful people with great big hearts and would do anything to
help make someone else’s’ life better and safer not matter the cost to their
own.
Would I recommend Tender? Yes definitely to anyone who loves
a good story and historical fiction, romance or would maybe like to be
transported back in time.
Interview
with Anne Meredith
What inspired you to write Trelawneys of Williamsburg Series?
To Kill a Mockingbird.
Now I wish I’d also known about Go Set a
Watchman, what I think of as Harper Lee’s first draft of Mockingbird. Tay Hohoff, her editor, was
the genius behind that book, and it should be a lesson to any new writer. A
great book takes work.
Can
you tell us a little bit about the next books in the Trelawneys of Williamsburg
Series or what you have planned for the future?
Forever is
the third in the series. When I originally wrote Tender (in 1993-94), I planned for a trilogy. Now, my plan is for a
series to go all the way up in time to the Civil Rights era – at least if
readers are interested. I believe the time in our country is ripe for a
different kind of story to be told, and I hope people will respond to these
books. The story I’m telling is that people really are all the same; we want
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and that pursuit includes physical
and spiritual nourishment as well as love and meaning. My books tell difficult
truths on a backdrop of fantasy, and the goal is always unity and healing.
Can
you tell us a little bit about the characters in Trelawneys of Williamsburg
Series?
Forever
will be like Tender and Immortal only in that it’s completely
different. For that reason it’s difficult to speak in specifics, but Juliana,
the third Miller sister and the heroine, should appeal to any modern woman who
loves adventure. Rashall, the joking jester from Immortal is the hero. In Forever, he has undergone a number of jarring
challenges to the values his modern mother, Camisha, gave him.
Characters from previous books will visit, and I’m sorry
to say that a couple of characters – one major character – will die.
As a reader, I don’t usually care for book series. When I
close a romance novel, those characters go off in my mind and live happily ever
after in a fantasy world, and having them come into another book isn’t my idea
of escapism. But with these books, the underlying murder mystery tying the
story together creates a vehicle that justifies their extended presence. These
sisters are spread out over three centuries, and they can’t just do an Internet
search to find each other, then hop on a plane. So it takes time and planning
to enable them to have the smallest interaction with one another – let alone
what I have planned for them.
You know I think we all have a favorite author. Who is your
favorite author and why?
Pat Conroy. I felt like a family member had passed away
when he died last March. I read The
Prince of Tides nearly 30 years ago now and wrote him a gushing fan letter
because the book felt so real to me – not only for his depiction of the
American South that I knew from my Virginian mother, but for a family at the
dinner table with a father who abuses them. A few weeks after I sent that
letter, I got a nice letter from a literary agent I’d never heard of, saying
that Pat Conroy had written to tell her what a wonderful writer I was, and
would I like to send her what I was working on? Within a few weeks, she’d sold
my first time-travel romance, Love’s
Timeless Hope, to St. Martin’s Press. I later learned that this sort of
thing was very common to Pat. He was always willing to lend young writers a
hand however he could.
If you could time-travel would you travel to the future or
the past? Where would you like to go and why would you like to visit this
particular time period?
My books came from the vague feeling
I’d had for years that I was born in the wrong century. I am inspired when I
travel, and I love to travel to historic places. I visited Jefferson, Texas, a
small bed and breakfast town in East Texas with a grand and glorious past. I was
charmed and inspired by the reality of her past and, especially, the folklore
(as only a Texan would be). This experience became Love’s Timeless Hope.
When I took my son and his cousin to
Colonial Williamsburg in 1993, the place resonated deeply within me. If I could,
I would live there. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation truly enables
time-travel every day for its visitors, “that the future may learn from the
past,” (the motto that John D. Rockefeller gave the village when he began its
restoration).
Today, American history in our country
is woefully neglected. It’s become malleable, rewritten in the hands of some
educators and, shockingly, in some U.S. colleges and universities it is not required to study American history
to major in history. As philosopher George Santayana said, “Those who fail
to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.”
So I guess my answer is, I would
always go to the past. The future should learn from us. And fortunately, I am
able to travel in the past each time I pick up a great historical novel or
exceptionally well-written historical romance (which are hard to find now).
Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like a dog or a cat?
Or any pets?
I have six dogs, all rescues. I had four when I moved to
New York City a few years ago, and I can tell you it was a heck of a challenge
finding an apartment that allowed them all. I didn’t stay there long, though,
being a Texan who defines cold as “below 50 degrees.”
My dogs are: Walker, 11 years old, who was my son’s dog
until my son moved to New York; Jessie, an almost nine-year-old Aussie who is
the smartest dog I’ve ever had and who comes to comfort me when she hears me
even sniff when I’m crying; Daisy, her also almost nine-year-old sister who’s
the head of squirrel security; Lucy, a three-year-old handful who barks loudly
enough to wake the dead and who looks kind of like Rowdy on Scrubs; Scout, two years old, the only
dog I’ve ever had who dislikes me (except when she found out I sometimes pass
out beef marrow bones, and then she realized I could occasionally be useful);
and Baby, an 18-month-old German Shepherd who wandered into my yard one day and
stayed when I couldn’t find an owner.
Thanks for inviting me!
Thanks for taking
time out of your busy schedule to visit with us today!
About the Author
Anne Meredith is a
Texas native who has been highly praised for her time travel romances. She
first grew interested in exploring the concept of time travel during a visit to
historic Jefferson, TX – a town rich with
Texas folklore. She traveled back to the historic legends of this region in her
first two novels, Love’s Timeless Hope
and Love Across Time, published by
St. Martin’s Press. When she later visited Colonial Williamsburg with her son,
she was inspired to create the Trelawneys
of Williamsburg series. In addition to writing historical fiction, Anne
Meredith has spent over 24 years as a professional writer.
Author
Links: