L.C. Evans – We Interrupt This Date

Title: We Interrupt This Date

Author: L.C. Evans

ISBN: 978-1448614622

Page count: 286

Genre: Southern Fiction

Price: $12.00 paperback  $1.99 ebook

Author Bio:

L.C. Evans loves to write. She grew up in Florida and now lives in North Carolina with her husband Bob, their grandson, and their three dogs. She stays busy writing, wrangling the boy and the dogs, and working in her garden. Occasionally there is a sighting around the Evans home of a certain neurotic cat that may or may not be a part of the Evans household. L.C. is the author of many published mystery stories and children’s stories, as well as four novels. We Interrupt This Date is her most recent book. She likes to hear from readers, especially those with positive comments. Please visit her web site at www.lcevans.com

Tell us about your book:

We Interrupt This Date is the story of a woman who tries to please everyone in her family. Since her divorce a year ago, Susan Caraway has gone through the motions of life. Now she is finally coming out of her shell. Just when she decides on a makeover and a new career, her family members call on her for crisis assistance. First there’s her sister DeLorean who has come back from California with a baby, a designer dog, and no prospects for child support or a job. Susan’s son Christian comes home from college trailing what Susan’s mama refers to as “an androgynous little tart.” Then there’s Mama herself, a southern lady who wrote the book on bossy. A secret from Mama’s past threatens to unravel her own peace. But not before Mama has to move into Susan’s home with her babies-two Chihuahuas with attitude. Susan would like to start her new job as a ghost tour operator. She would like to renew her relationship with Jack Maxwell, a man from her past. But Jack isn’t going to stand in line behind her needy family.

How long did it take to write the book?

I worked on the book off and on for about two years.

What inspired you to write the book?

First of all, I grew up in the South and I’ve always been fascinated by Southern mamas. I am also well-experienced with what happens to people with an over-developed sense of responsibility. I decided to explore these two areas by combining them. My main character feels responsible for everyone in her family. She lets their problems become her problems, while her own life falls apart. At the same time she is hampered by her overbearing and opinionated mama. As soon as I started writing I had all the conflict I could ever have wanted for my story.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

I write best in the mornings and try to set aside two or three hours a day during the week. I rarely write on weekends due to family commitments. When I really got into the book, I often wrote both mornings and afternoons. But to start with, I took my time. I seem to need processing time after each three thousand words or so and waiting until the next day to pick up where I left off works well for me. As for research, I made several weekend trips to Charleston, the setting for the book. I was already familiar with the area, having gone there often. I also did some Internet research on Charleston attractions and studied maps of the South Carolina Coast and Charleston.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

I’d like my readers to come away with the thought that they’ve just read a terrific book. Also, I want them to know it’s never to late to change the direction your life is taking.

Where can we go to buy your book?

My book is available on amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com in both paperback and ebook. And on smashwords.com in ebook.

Any other links or info you’d like to share?

I am proud to be an Operation Ebook Drop author. http://operationebookdrop.com/

Link to my website: http://lcevans.com

Excerpt from We Interrupt This Date:

I had my back to the stairs, but that didn’t matter because Mama was prepared, as always, to keep me up to date.

“I must say, I am shocked. Susan Nicole, you’d better put your foot down now and put it down hard. Your son headed straight for his room with her like a bee back to the main hive. It’s obvious he’s planning to keep that brazen little thing in his own room right here under your roof. Why, she has hair shorter than Christian’s. And she wears mens’ clothing. Army clothing.”

I bit my lip. It wasn’t as if I’d had planning sessions where I contemplated how to react if my son brought home a girlfriend and installed her in his bed. Did I care? Okay, I had to admit to feeling uncomfortable for no reason that I could articulate. But was that reason enough to put up a fight? And after I’d daydreamed about having a fling with a boyfriend if the opportunity arose, was I fair to point fingers at my eighteen-year-old son?

DeLorean rolled her eyes. “Mama, puh-lease. This is the twenty-first century. You are such a dinosaur.”

“If being a dinosaur keeps me from having a child out of wedlock, then I’m quite happy with myself, thank you.”

“So you’re going to throw it in my face that Baldwin and I didn’t get married. What’s next, are you going to call my baby a horrible name because he was born out of wedlock?”

“DeLorean, the accusations. I declare. I would never.” Mama fanned herself with an envelope I’d left on the table.

Christian and Trinity had just walked back into the room.

“Whoa.” Christian put his hands in front of him, palms facing out. “I’m taking Trinity into Charleston. She has a friend who goes to the Citadel and we’re going to get with him for the afternoon and do the tourist thing. Hope you people have your problems sorted out by the time we get back.”

“Come on, Trinity.” He flung himself across the room and out the door. Trinity was right behind him, hanging unto the back of his shirt. “Nice meeting you all,” she called politely over her shoulder.

“Well,” Mama said, after the door banged shut, “that was ugly.”

“Ugly doesn’t begin to cover it.” DeLorean’s jaw was thrust out.

“Please, let’s not fight,” I said, before Mama could say she’d told DeLorean a million times that a man doesn’t buy the cow if the milk is free. “I’ll think about whether I want to tell Christian he can’t sleep with Trinity while he’s in my house.” Like I didn’t have anything more important to obsess over.

“You’d better think fast. I’d hate to imagine what would happen to his college career if he sired a child before he was halfway through his first semester. How would you cope then, having to look after a grandchild?”

The same way I’d cope looking after a mother and a sister and a nephew and a giant dog with too much hair and a live-in flea colony. The same way I coped every day at work up until the day Odell fired me. Cope should have been my middle name.

“Let’s not get ahead of ourselves, Mama. I’m sure Christian doesn’t want a child any more than you want him to have one.”

“You’d better have a talk with that boy about birth control then.” She picked up her empty teacup, peered inside, and set it back down with a thump.

“I believe that’s a required subject in junior high these days. I distinctly remember signing a sex education permission slip some years back.”

“How do you know Christian was paying attention in class? A mother can’t be too careful, Susan. God knows, I’m aware of that better than anyone.” She paused to glance pointedly at DeLorean. “Since you refuse to listen to reason, I’ve a good mind to call his father before it’s too late.”

I had a quick mental flash of T. Chandler showing up on the doorstep with a giant bag of condoms slung over his shoulder. I got up and handed Cole to DeLorean before I started putting dishes in the machine.

Mama scurried over and rearranged the dishes as fast as I could get them into the rack. “You can’t convince me you’re happy your son is in lust with a girl who would look more at home running an obstacle course at the nearest boot camp than attending a tea party.”

“A tea party?” DeLorean blinked. “Do such things even exist these days?”

“You would be surprised. You would be very surprised if you ever tried to live up to your upbringing and act like a lady. But whether tea parties exist isn’t the point, miss. This Trinity person is entirely unsuited for my grandson. And there is no reason to allow her into his bed and chance disaster.”

“But if she’s wrong for him,” I said, “then maybe it’s a good idea not to fight him on this sleepover thing. No need to give him even more reason to rebel.”

“That sounds like utter nonsense to me. Mark my words, Susan, you will wish Christian had never laid eyes on that—that androgynous little tart.”

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comments (2) | Leave a Reply
  1. Jim Chambers says:
    February 10, 2010

    I recently read and reviewed “We Interrupt This Date.” My wife just finished it. We both loved it. Really first rate writing, and Ms. Evans tells a great story. Definitely a 5-star book!

  2. Thanks, Jim. I’m so glad you and your wife enjoyed the book. And thanks to Greg and Ed for featuring the book on The Indie Spotlight.

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