Lori Benton
A commenter will win a copy of
Lori's book:
A Flight of Arrows
Lori's book:
A Flight of Arrows
Scroll down to see how.
Mary here. I'm so happy to welcome Lori Benton to Let's Talk. I only recently met her and found we have much in common. The day I worked to set this post up I struggled to stay on task. I couldn't gather my thoughts and resorted to my mainstay of writing down my tasks for the day in my daily journal. This is what gets me through each day. My problem: I, like Lori, have days of brain fog as a residual from chemo. But this is Lori's day and Lori's story. She is ready to tell you what God has done for her. I asked Lori: how has God led you on your writing journey? Here is what she said:
When Surrender Takes Place
My debut novel, Burning Sky, released in 2013. More than
once during an interview that year I was asked, "Did your own battle and
survivorship with cancer influence your novel?" My answer is very much so!
In fact, what I learned during the year I went through cancer treatment offered
me much by way of inspiration when it came to writing Burning Sky and every novel I’ve written since.
A theme I explore
frequently in my novels centers around identity. In Burning Sky, more specifically, it was the challenge of redefining
oneself after a significant loss. Many of the story’s characters are on that
difficult journey but one of them, Neil MacGregor—the Scottish botanist aided
by the heroine, Willa Obenchain—has a journey that mirrors my own, though I
didn’t initially intend for that to happen.
I created Neil
MacGregor as the hero of a story different in genre and setting from the one he
now inhabits. While the losses that early version of Neil suffered are similar
to what they are in Burning Sky—due
to a debilitating brain injury—the way in which he dealt with them was vastly
different.
I’ll explain, but
first a little background on my own journey. In 1999, halfway through writing
that early, still unfinished story, I was diagnosed with Hodgkins Lymphoma, a
cancer of the lymphatic system. Chemotherapy and radiation eradicated the
cancer and the side effects I experienced were relatively mild, except for one.
It’s called chemo fog and I was
blind-sided by it.
Anything resembling concentration was beyond me; my memory
for plot threads and character arcs—important things in a novel writer’s
life—was almost nonexistent; I couldn’t retain anything I read by way of
research for more than a few days and found myself looking up the same facts
and material over and over again. After a year or two of frustrated starts and
stops, I reached the dispiriting conclusion that I was no longer able to write
the type of novels I’d created before my diagnosis. A vital part of my identity
was lost. For all I knew, lost forever.
But God was doing a
work in me, a long-term work of submission and trust, of giving my heart’s
desire to write completely into His hands. There came a day when I ceased even
to try to write, even though the desire to write never died. I continued to
pray and wait. It would be nearly five years before the fog lifted enough for
me to feel ready to once again tackle the mountain climb that is novel-writing.
One of the characters waiting for me at the foot of that mountain was Neil
MacGregor, ready to try again if I was. I knew I had to find this character a
story to inhabit, but the setting I had in mind to write about now was as
different as it could from that early story I’d never finished.
So I set him down on
the New York frontier in 1784, and he adjusted remarkably well. In fact, I discovered
that somewhere in that mysterious alchemy of story-weaving that Neil had grown
in the face of his losses in the same way I had. God hadn’t taken away his
heart’s desire to be a botanist despite a serious handicap that would seem to stand
in his way, even as He didn’t take away my passion to write when the ability to
do so was absent.
Yet this new incarnation of Neil MacGregor, alive in the
pages of Burning Sky, had reached a
place of surrender and trust I never could have imagined for him before my own
journey of surrender took place. Neil is acutely aware of the challenges that
stand between him and his goals, yet he knows that if God has called him to be
a botanist, with all that demanded of a man in the eighteenth century, then He
will go before him and make a way. Similarly, I knew that if God had called me
to be a published writer—or a writer at all—He would go before me day by day
and enable me, and open the right doors. If not, then that would be for the
best.

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Lori Benton
was raised east of the Appalachian Mountains, where she was surrounded by three
hundred years of American history. Now her novels transport readers to the
eighteenth century, where she brings to life the Colonial and early Federal
periods of our nation’s history. She is the multiple award-winning author of
numerous books including Burning Sky,
The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn, and
The Wood’s Edge (Book 1 in The
Pathfinders series). Lori makes her home in Oregon, where she enjoys baking,
hiking, and bow-shooting in her spare time.
Lori loves to connect with readers.
You can find her at her:
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A Flight of Arrows blurb
Twenty years past,
in 1757, a young Redcoat named Reginald Aubrey stole a new-born boy--the
lighter-skinned of Oneida twins--during the devastating fall of Fort William Henry
and raised him as his own.
No one connected
to Reginald escaped unscathed from this crime. Not his adopted daughter Anna.
Not Stone Thrower, the Native American father determined to get his son back.
Not Two Hawks, William's twin brother separated since birth, living in the
shadow of his absence and hoping to build a future with Anna. Nor Lydia, who
longs for Reginald to be free from his self-imposed emotional prison and
embrace God's forgiveness--and her love.
Now William, whose
identity has been shattered after discovering the truth of his birth, hides in
the ranks of an increasingly aggressive British army. The Redcoats prepare to
attack frontier New York, and the Continentals, aided by Oneida warriors,
including Two Hawks, rally to defend it. As the Revolutionary War penetrates
the Mohawk Valley, two families separated by culture but united by love and
faith must find a way to reclaim the son marching toward them in the ranks of
their enemies.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Enter the contest to win Lori's book:
A Flight of Arrows
US readers invited to enter!!
Here is how:
1. Leave a comment (and email address)
2. AND sign up to receive my newsletter -in the right column
(subscribers to Mary Vee's newsletter will receive a special gift)
AND/OR sign up to receive posts by email if you aren't already
Thank you, Lori, for joining us this weekend!
We enjoy chatting with you, Reader, and look forward to reading your comments and questions. Or at least your hi, hello, or hey.
Thanks for stopping by!
Don't forget to comment!
Comments
Knowing that author's or any professional like Lori can still become successful sure encourages all of us.
I'm so glad you stopped by to chat with Lori and me.
Blessings to both of you.
Connie
cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com
Kathy West (not really anonymous, but it seems this is the only way for me)
kw0724ATaolDOTcom
Thanks for stopping by!
Isn't it also a good thing to know the rest of the story? The story behind the author who wrote such a wonderful read like The Wood's Edge? Yeah. :)