Monday, February 22, 2021

"Roots of Wood and Stone" by Amanda Wen -- Book Review and Giveaway

About the Book 



This historic home holds the keys to their destiny . . . and their hearts

Abandoned at birth, her family roots a mystery, historical museum curator Sloane Kelley has dedicated her life to making sure others know theirs. When a donor drops off a dusty old satchel, she doesn't expect much from the common artifact . . .until she finds real treasure inside: a nineteenth-century diary.Now she's on the hunt to find out more.

Garrett Anderson just wanted to clean out his grandmother's historic but tumbledown farmhouse before selling it to fund her medical care. With her advancing Alzheimer's, he can't afford to be sentimental about the family home. But his carefully ordered plan runs up against two formidable obstacles: Sloane, who's fallen in love with both the diaries and the house, and his own heart, which is irresistibly drawn to Sloane.

A century and a half earlier, motherless Annabelle Collins embarks with her aunt and uncle on the adventure of a lifetime: settling the prairies of Sedgwick County, Kansas. The diaries she left behind paint a portrait of life, loss, and love--and a God who faithfully carries her through it all. Paging through the diaries together takes Sloane and Garrett on a journey they never could have planned, which will change them in ways they never imagined.

This warm, beautifully written split-time novel will resonate with readers looking for stories that reveal the beauty of God's plan for our lives, and how our actions ripple for generations


My Thoughts

I wasn't sure at first if I wanted to read/review this book, but ended up going for it. I am very glad that I did as I absolutely loved it. I found it to be well written and had a nice flow. Once I got reading, I didn't want to put it down and lost track of the time a few times due to reading. I liked the characters and I wished I could go to Marty's to listen to the jazz band or read Annabelle's diary along with Sloane. The book took me on a rollercoaster ride of emotions and there were several twists that I did not see coming. I enjoyed the biblical faith element present in the book. I eagerly look forward to Amanda Wen's next book.


About the Author 


Amanda Wen is an award-winning writer of inspirational romance and split-time women’s fiction. She has placed first in multiple contests, including the 2017 Indiana Golden Opportunity Contest, the 2017 Phoenix Rattler Contest, and the 2016 ACFW First Impressions Contest, among others. She was also a 2018 ACFW Genesis Contest finalist. Her debut novel, Roots of Wood and Stone, will release from Kregel Publications on January 26, 2021.

In addition to her writing, Amanda is an accomplished professional cellist and pianist, frequently performing with symphony orchestras, string quartets, and her church’s worship team, and accompanying high school and middle school choirs. A lifelong denizen of the flatlands, Amanda currently lives in Kansas with her patient, loving, and hilarious husband, their three adorable Wenlets, and a snuggly Siamese cat.


An Interview with Amanda Wen

For readers who can’t decide if they would like to pick up something historical or
contemporary for their next read, debut author Amanda Wen offers them the best of both
worlds in her new release. Roots of Wood and Stone (Kregel Publications) is a warm,
delightfully written split-time novel that will resonate with readers looking for stories that
reveal the beauty of God’s plan for our lives, and how our actions ripple for generations.

Q: What drew you to the split-time genre? What unique challenges does writing in two time
periods present?
I’ve always loved reading both historical and contemporary books, and I’ve long been a fan of TV
shows that hop from era to era. From the ‘80s sci-fi show Quantum Leap and the 2000s crime
drama Cold Case to the new hit This Is Us, series like these illustrate in dramatic fashion just how
deeply the past impacts the present. Split-time novels do the same thing: characters’ past decisions
have ripple effects, both good and bad, for generations to come.

In addition, one of my favorite things about split time is watching the contemporary characters dig into the past. My mother is
a genealogist who’s been tracing our family history since before I was born, and her passion for uncovering our family’s stories
has been an important backdrop my entire life. Her research has given me an appreciation for those who came before and a
desire to pass along this appreciation to my own kids. Given all this, I think the split-time genre is a natural fit for me!
However, split time doesn’t come without its challenges. Instead of writing one story, I’m writing two, and they have to weave
together in an organic way. If you can lift one story line out of the book without hurting the other one, then it’s not integrated
well enough. With two stories come two heroes, two heroines, and two plotlines, all of which must be correctly paced and
equally interesting to the reader. But challenges aside,

Q: How does the historical story connect with the contemporary story?
Roots of Wood and Stone revolves around an 1890s farmhouse that is the home of contemporary hero Garrett Anderson’s
grandmother, Rosie Spencer. In cleaning out the house, he finds an old satchel which he brings to the local historical museum
in hopes that they might have some use for it. The curator, Sloane Kelley, is initially unimpressed with the satchel . . . until she
opens it and finds a nineteenth-century diary inside. That diary, written by past heroine Annabelle Collins, links the past time
line with the present. As Sloane digs into the diary, she wants to find out more, so she ends up going to the farmhouse to help
Garrett and his sister, Lauren, declutter.
Subsequent diaries found in the house shine a light on Annabelle’s life as an early settler to Sedgwick County: the love she
finds, the losses she suffers, and the God who is faithful to carry her through it all. In addition, these diaries draw Sloane and
Garrett together in ways neither could imagine and form the crux of the conflict that arises between the two. Exploring the
past has a direct impact on the present for both Sloane and Garrett.

Q: Roots of Wood and Stone was inspired by your own family history. Can you tell us a little bit about your family’s
story and what parts made their way into your book?
The seed of inspiration for Roots of Wood and Stone is an 1890s farmhouse not far from where I grew up (and where I now
live) which belonged to my great-great-grandfather, Francis Thomas Little. He immigrated to the United States from Ireland as
a child and became one of the earliest settlers of Maize, Kansas. Grandpa Little, as he’s known in my family, wrote a memoir, A
Kansas Farmer, which was an invaluable resource during my research process.
Francis Little married Mattie Stevens, daughter of another early settler, William Fletcher Stevens, who lost his first wife and
infant son shortly after arriving in Sedgwick County in 1870. (In fact, my great-great-great-grandfather would go on to bury a
second wife and eight of his fourteen children.) I wondered how someone would cope with such a tragic loss and emerge with
his faith intact, and it’s this first early loss that forms the crux of the spiritual journey for my past hero, Jack Brennan.
My past heroine, Annabelle Collins, is very loosely based on a paternal ancestor, Antoinette Patrick Peterson, who as a young
child was left with an aunt and uncle after the death of her mother. She moved to Kansas with her aunt and uncle, who raised
her to adulthood, and I grew curious about the impact of such a decision on a child. The rest of Antoinette’s life was no less
interesting and colorful, but I decided to save it for a future book.

Q: Sloane was abandoned at birth, so she never had a connection to her biological family or their history. How did she
compensate for that in her professional life?
Abandoned at birth and adopted by strangers, Sloane differs from her adoptive parents in every way—appearance,
personality, talents, and interests. She struggles with knowing they love her, and they don’t fully understand her. She feels like
plan B: someone her birth parents didn’t want, who her adoptive parents settled for after not being able to conceive
biologically. This feeling haunts her formative years.
As an adult, Sloane discovers historical research, the filling in of gaps in her own knowledge and the sharing of information she
uncovers with others. Though incomplete, the satisfaction she receives from helping people connect with and appreciate the
history of the Wichita area is enough to propel her forward in her career as a museum curator. “I guess that’s why I’m so
passionate about history,” she tells Garrett in one scene. “If I can’t know my own, at least I can help everyone else know theirs.”

Q: Tell us about Garrett. Where does his sense of responsibility come from?

A type-A overachiever since childhood, Garrett Anderson has been thrust into a difficult situation
with the weight of the world on his shoulders. In recent years, he’s lost his mother to cancer, his
father to a hasty remarriage and subsequent new life in Florida, and his grandfather to a sudden
heart attack. As a result, the burden of care for his Alzheimer’s-afflicted grandmother, Rosie, has
fallen to him and his sister, Lauren. The siblings are close but very different in personality, and they
have not been able to reach an agreement as to what’s best for their grandmother.
In caring for Rosie, Garrett has also learned what can happen when people fail to plan. Due to a
family whose approach to life has always been “ready-fire-aim,” as he describes it, he now realizes
his grandmother is in dire financial straits. This impacts him personally and professionally, since,
as a certified financial planner, his career revolves around helping other people avoid the sort of
situation his grandmother has found herself in. He believes that all of life’s problems can be
avoided, or at the very least mitigated, if one just comes up with—and follows through on—the
perfect plan.

Q: How about the historical characters—do they carry the missing pieces of their family with them as well?
Like Sloane, Annabelle Collins was raised by people other than her birth parents, although unlike Sloane, Annabelle had a
relationship with her birth family. A child of eight when her mother died of a sudden illness, Annabelle is left with a father and
two older brothers, all of whom feel called to fight for the Union in the Civil War. Before they enlist, Annabelle’s father leaves
her with his sister, Katherine, and her husband, Stephen, who’ve always longed for a child of their own. As Annabelle grows up
under her aunt and uncle’s roof, she feels loved, cared for, and wanted, but she also suffers the wounds of her father’s
abandonment, particularly when she learns that he has remarried and started a new family: one that has no room for her.
Jack Brennan, meanwhile, is reeling from the tragic loss of his wife and infant son, along with his wife’s sister and her husband,
who made the journey to Sedgwick County with Jack. In fact, the only other survivor of the journey is Jack’s young nephew,
Oliver, who he’s taken in as his own. Jack’s love for his nephew is one of the first things Annabelle notices, and it’s a key part of
their blossoming relationship.

Q: What role does faith play in the lives of your characters?
All my characters are people of faith, but all of them have run up against some struggles. For Sloane, the wound of her
childhood abandonment is the lens through which she sees everything. Feeling unwanted and unloved by her birth parents
extends to her relationship with God. Is she plan B to him too? Garrett, meanwhile, has grown up in the church and has a fairly
strong faith, but he hasn’t truly grasped the concept of trusting God rather than leaning on his own understanding (Proverbs
3:5–6). A highly intelligent and motivated individual, Garrett believes that life will be infinitely easier if he just comes up with
and follows through on the perfect plan. But when his perfect plan runs up against obstacles he can’t overcome, he struggles to
let go and allow God to enact the ultimate plan.
Trust is also a theme for Annabelle Collins, the heroine of the past time line. She suffers some losses both early and later in her
life, and she struggles with the holes those losses leave in her heart. Can she learn to trust God to provide not necessarily
everything she wants but everything she needs? Meanwhile, past hero Jack reels from loss as well, and he struggles to
understand why—if he’s being obedient to God’s call on his life, as he thought he was—his life involves so much suffering.
Throughout the book, Jack learns that just because life is difficult doesn’t mean he’s on the wrong path. Sometimes, one needs
to stay the course.

Q: What did God teach you through the writing of Roots of Wood and Stone? What do you hope your readers take away
from the book?
Roots of Wood and Stone was my first attempt at split time, and I depended on God for the wisdom to know how to weave the
two time lines and stories together. It was an intimidating undertaking, and one possible only through him. Also, trusting God
has always been a challenge for me. Like Garrett, I’m a type-A uber planner, one who needs a plan A, plan B, and plan C to feel
fully on top of things. While writing this book, I quickly discovered that I could control very little. My characters had their own
ideas of how the plot should progress, and the story was frequently better if I let go and trusted them.
The publishing journey was no different. Through the very lengthy (and also agonizing) submission process, I had to trust
every day that the God who gave me the idea for the story and enabled me to put it on paper would do with it what he chose in
the timing that was very best, not only for me but for all who will read the book.
As for those readers, I hope they come away with a renewed and restored faith. Though I would never in a million years have
chosen to release my debut novel during a global pandemic, I think the message of the book—that God will take all your loose
ends and broken pieces and weave them into something more beautiful than you can imagine—is especially timely for such a
difficult period in our world. Many of us have been forced to alter the vast majority of our plans this past year, including plans
for things—church, work, school, family get-togethers—that we never thought we’d have to alter. But God is still in control.
This pandemic has not changed, nor will it change, his good and perfect plan.

Q: Which character in Roots of Wood and Stone was easiest for you to write and why? Which character presented the
biggest challenge?
The most challenging character was probably Sloane. An introvert by nature, and one who’s been dealt some serious wounds,
she doesn’t trust easily. In fact, that included me when I was first getting to know her. I’m a seat-of-the-pants writer, so the
only way I get to know characters is by writing them, which doesn’t work well when a character isn’t quite ready to talk. We
spun our wheels for a bit, but I finally decided to put a little of my own love for music into the book and gave Sloane a musical
hobby. That, it seemed, gave us enough common ground for her to feel comfortable opening up to me.
By contrast, Jack Brennan was the easiest character for me to write. Inspired by (but not based on) Jack Pearson from This Is
Us, Jack sprang into my head fully formed and quickly stole all his scenes in the best possible way. He wears his heart on his
sleeve and was thus very easy for me to get to know and love.

Q: How did you start writing? How do you balance writing with being a mom and a professional musician?
I’ve been writing stories since I could hold a pencil, but it wasn’t until 2008 that the writing bug bit me and refused to let go.
This sounds cheesy, but a story idea came to me in a dream one night, and I couldn’t get it out of my head. I wanted to know
what happened next, so I did the only thing I could think to do: write the story so I could read it and find out!
Over the next few years—interspersed with the births of my three kids—I dabbled in story writing in a couple different
genres. In 2014, after my youngest was a year old, I got serious about writing for publication and shared my work with my
best friend, who is a multi-published author in the general market. She took me under her wing and corrected all my newbie
writing errors, but she also encouraged me and inspired me to write better and better stories.
As for how I balance writing with my other life as a professional cellist (playing a lot of freelance gigs, including weddings and
the occasional orchestra concert) and pianist (as a choral accompanist for a local middle school and high school), I’ve learned
the fine art of prioritizing. During busy music seasons, my writing usually gets put on the back burner. Similarly, when I’m
deep in drafting mode or on deadline with revisions, I don’t take on quite so much on the music side. And sometimes I make an
intentional choice to take a week or two off from all professional pursuits and focus on my family.
Both music and writing feed my soul—as well as feed each other—and they’re both wired so deeply into my DNA that I can’t
not do them, so I pray for a lot of wisdom in how to manage my schedule and trust that God will give me the time I need to do
what he’s called me to do.

Q: What’s next from you? Can readers hope for more stories from Sedgwick County?
I am working on a sequel to Roots of Wood and Stone that features with two secondary characters from that book: Garrett’s
sister, Lauren, and his grandmother, Rosie. After a tailspin in her late teens, Lauren’s life is finally on track. Her food blog is
successful, her photography studio bustling, and her battle with bulimia seems to be under control. But an unexpected wrinkle
appears in the form of Carter Douglas, the summer fling whose rejection launched her downward spiral. When old feelings
reappear with new strength, can Lauren risk her heart to love a man who already broke it once?

TV meteorologist Carter Douglas has a job he never thought he’d take in a city where he never planned to live . . . and comes
face-to-face with a woman he never thought he’d see again. He’s determined to make the most of this second chance with
Lauren, but when circumstances force the same decision he made as a teenager, will he have the courage to make a different
choice?
When Lauren’s elderly grandmother calls out a name from the depths of dementia, the name of a man her family has never
heard of, Lauren and her family seek the truth. Who was this man? Who was he to her grandmother? Their journey takes them
to the 1950s, when a gently blossoming love attempts to withstand a storm of racial prejudice and separation. As stories are
told and secrets revealed, Lauren and Carter embark on a journey of forgiveness and second chances that will change their
lives forever.

To find Amanda Wen’s blog and short stories, visit www.amandawen.com. Readers can also follower her on Facebook
(@AuthorAmandaWen), Twitter (@AuthorAmandaWen), and Instagram (@authoramandawen).

Giveaway


"Roots of Wood and Stone" is available in paperback:

  • Publisher : Kregel Publications (February 2, 2021)
  • Language : English
  • Paperback : 304 pages
  • ISBN-10 : 0825446686
  • ISBN-13 : 978-0825446689
  • Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
  • Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches

and in Kindle edition:

  • ASIN : B08QYG69SH
  • Publisher : Kregel Publications (February 3, 2021)
  • Publication date : February 3, 2021
  • Language : English
  • File size : 1263 KB

I got a free copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own and given voluntarily. No compensation was received for my review.  

No comments: