Holly Christine – Tuesday Tells it Slant

Title: Tuesday Tells it Slant

Author: Holly Christine

ISBN: ASIN from Amazon: B0034KYT9G

Page count: 278

Genre: Chick-Lit with a Twist

Price: $0.99 Kindle only

Author Bio:

Holly Christine is the author of The Nine Lives of Clemenza, a spiritual novel, and Retail Ready, a satire of one hellacious workweek. Holly is currently employed by a major financial corporation, but dreams of the day she can make her love of writing a full-time position. She resides in Pittsburgh, PA, and recently finished Tuesday Tells it Slant, calling it Chick-Lit with a Twist, which is now available for Kindle download. Holly also writes independent book reviews for Examiner and is currently working on developing a Book Club for Pittsburgh Kindle Addicts. She is co-creator of the Pittsburgh South Writers Group with Sandy Ward Bell, meeting the second Tuesday of each month in the Bethel Park Library.

Tell us about your book:

Tuesday Tells it Slant shares the story of Tuesday Morning, who decides that she is sick of being what she considers less then desirable. While exploring what she believes is Emily Dickinson’s Transcendental inspiration, she comes across a poem that completely changes her life. In one moment, a sort of revelation, she uncovers the secret to not only becoming what she has always wanted to become (popular, thin, desirable), but also being what she always wanted to be. In one compulsive afternoon she manages to completely recreate her past into what she has always dreamed. In the process, she decides what to keep and what to toss of her past, unconsciously losing bits of herself along the way. Six years later, when confronted by the past, she has to decide what she really wants: the truth or the truth that she has created.

How long did it take to write the book?

Twenty days of sheer manic-over-caffeinated-madness.

What inspired you to write the book?

Emily Dickinson, of course. I really researched Emerson’s influence on Dickinson in college. I majored in English because of Emerson and had my heart broken my sophomore year when one professor told me that Emerson was the LazyBoy of the Transcendentalists. But also, oddly enough, John Mayer. I was singing along in the car one day to “Who Says” and the concept hit me: a girl that rewrites her history (the actual lyrics: Who says I can’t be free/ from all of the things that I used to be?/ Rewrite my history/ Who says I can’t be free?).

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

I’m not an organized person by any means. I come up with a story and let it fester in the back of my head until the narrative develops itself. I would call this the fermentation process.

Part two is dirty and a bit obscene. Once I have the voice of the narrative down, the writing begins. I have no idea where the story is going or what kind of story it will become. I only know a few major characters and typically become surprised while writing, like I’m reading it for the first time. During this time, I’m locked up in my office and type until I can’t type anymore.

With Tuesday, for the first time ever, I did an outline after I had reached about 60,000 words, knowing that I needed to wrap it up. It’s a reverse outline, just like you would outline a chapter of, say, a Sociology textbook. Tuesday deals with numerous years, ages and truths, so some sort of organization was necessary to keep it all together.

Regarding research: I Google everything. I would love to have Google in my car, just asking a question to the air and having it answered. I only write fiction, so the Internet works well for my kind of research.

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

I hope they think differently about life. I hope they turn their head to the side and smile when they come across a passage that touches them. That’s my favorite part of reading: the motivation to underline some great quote, a quote so great that it stands alone without its original context.

Where can we go to buy your book?

Right now Tuesday Tells it Slant is available for Kindle only for $0.99, but I should have the paperback version out within a month.

http://www.amazon.com/Tuesday-Tells-it-Slant-ebook/dp/B0034KYT9G/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=digital-text&qid=1263756191&sr=8-1

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

I have a website: hollychristineonline.com and I’m also on Facebook (addicted, but not Farmville addicted) and Goodreads (a fantastic site for networking and boasting your library).

Excerpt:

April 29, 2003

Claudia,

Isn’t it funny how we sometimes forget the things we thought we’d never lose? We take in the day and promise each other that this day, this very day, will stay with us forever and ever and we will never let this moment leave our soul. It will stay in our mind until death and even upon death we won’t forget. We will find it again in heaven, whispering it’s syrupy sounds of reverie into our souls and reviving our spirits with the saccharine sounds of bliss.

But then, life. The day passes and the next and new memories form over the one that we had promised would never be forgotten. It’s as if our mind has a limit and once over the limit it begins to recycle memories, combining some, twisting a few with jagged edges to fit into the mold we call a mind until all that’s left is the past and not just the past but the past that we have made. Consciously deciding what to keep and what to lose until it’s exactly as we want it right now.

It’s that easy, then. We can’t forget but we can mold and sculpt the past into our new present and perhaps even change our future.

~Tuesday

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comments (4) | Leave a Reply
  1. Extremely intriguing idea. Sounds like a perfect read for a gray, rainy almost-spring day. (Well, would you look at that? It’s gray and rainy where I am.) I’m scootin’ off to Amazon.

    Hope you sell a zillion copies, Holly!

  2. Rainey says:
    March 22, 2010

    I downloaded it on my kindle last week, after hearing about it on the Feb/March Inde Author Spotlight. havent started reading it yet, but look forward to soon.

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