More on The Lady of the Vineyard
In a post last Monday, I told you that I’m going to publish The Lady of the Vineyard on September 10th of this year. Well, that’s still holds true, and today I’ll be sharing a brief excerpt plus me rambling about my novella a little … which will happen, knowing me.
First, the excerpt!
An Excerpt from Chapter Four
Ā Ā Ā āI like France,ā Judy commented from behind a large box of chocolates.
āIām glad,ā Troy replied. The cab stopped in front of a small boarding house that looked tiny next to the huge, grand hotels they had passed on the way. Troy jumped out and reached back for Judy and the chocolates and Marilou.
āWhere are we?ā Judy inquired, examining the weathered-gray building with interest.
āThis is the home of my dear friends, Monsieur and Madame Lecroix.ā
āWhy are we here?ā
āI always stay with them when Iām in Paris.ā He fetched his and Judyās suitcases, giving Judy the candy and Marilou to hold (which nearly toppled her over). Troy paid the cab driver, and they hurried up the steps and knocked on the front door.
A chubby little girl about Judyās age answered the door. She beamed up at Troy when she saw him.
āMonsieur Kee! It has been too long!ā the girl said, dipping a graceful curtsey.
āIt has been far too long, Mademoiselle Colette,ā Troy said with a broad grin. āEtta, this is my daughter, Mademoiselle Kee. Judy.ā
āAh, oui! I have heard so much about you, Judy!ā Collette repeated her curtsey.
āIām glad to meet you, too,ā said Judy, unsure if she should imitate Coletteās quaint gesture or not.
āCome in, now, both of you!ā Colette led them into a largish foyer with red carpets, a large oak desk, and a grand staircase rising from it. āYour room is ready as it is anytime, Monsieur Kee. May the young mademoiselle stay in our room, perhaps?ā
āIf Judy wants to, and your mother doesnāt object, I donāt see why not.ā
Turning away from the door, Colette ran to the bottom of the stairway and shouted up. āMama! Monsieur Kee is here!ā
Out of a door at the top came a round, middle-aged woman with messy, graying black hair and twinkling dark eyes. She had a baby under one arm, and led a child of three or four. āTroy, chere! We are honored, once again, by your presence!ā
āAnd Iām glad to be here, Madame Lecroix. Is my room still available?ā
āNaturally!ā
āAnd will you be able to lend a room to Judy? Or could she stay with your girls?ā
āWhichever you prefer!ā
āJudy?ā
āIād like to stay with Colette,ā Judy said.
āThatās settled, then,ā Troy announced.
āI have the key to your room somewhere,ā Madame Lecroix muttered, feeling through the numerous pockets of her dress. She found a baby bottle, several coins, three handkerchiefs, and a small notebook, each of which she exclaimed over, having lost and now found them. She then bustled over to the desk and dug through papers until she found a ring of keys. āThere, these are mine to give to the boarders! My husband keeps the master keys ⦠he knows I would lose them!ā Madame Lecroix explained to Judy. She handed Troy a small silver key. āNow, donāt you lose it!ā she said with a light laugh, waggling her finger at him. āHenri! Louis!ā
Two small but stout boys ran into the room. They both grinned broadly when they saw Troy.
āTake the Keesā suitcases upstairs. Put Mademoiselle Keeās in our girlsā room, and Monsieur Keeās in his regular room. Hurry, hurry!ā
The boys, still grinning, hurried to do as bid. Troy laughingly removed their caps and put chocolates (along with the key) in them as they passed.
āMerci, Monsieur Kee!ā they cried as they hurried up the stairs, toting suitcases.
āI suppose your husband is still at his breakfast, Madame Lecroix,ā Troy asked as he followed the lady and her children up to the second floor.
āYes, Troy. He still takes longer to chew than any other man in the world.ā
āGood, good! I was afraid some of you would change, but none of you have.ā
āWell, the boys are growing.ā
āSo I saw! So tall! But I meant on the inside. I donāt care how you look.ā
āYouād change your tune if we remodeled your room, as we have threatened to,ā Madame Lecroix laughed.
āWell, thatās different. Atmosphere in a room has a great deal to do with the way it looks. And if you were to remodel it, the smell would leave, too, and the feel, perhaps. All my senses would be offended.ā
āWhat strange ideas you have, Monsieur Kee!ā Madame Lecroix exclaimed, shaking her head.
āItās true, though.ā He entered his room where the boys were neatly removing his clothes from the suitcase and placing them in the closet and dresser drawer. Louis removed a small package wrapped in brown paper, undid it, and put the object on the little bedside table. It was a picture frame. Even from a distance, Judy knew who the person in the photograph was.
āMother?ā she questioned as if the woman in question were standing right next to her.
āYes, Judy. Now, I think thatās all weāll be needing for now. Weāre going to go out for lunch, if you donāt mind, but weāll be back for dinner ⦠especially if youāre having soup de jour!ā
Madame Lecroix waggled her finger at him. āNow, Monsieur Kee! You know very well that soup de jour mens āsoup of the day.ā It changes every time!ā
āAnd every time itās delicious! I suppose dinnerās still at six?ā
āYes, Monsieur Kee.ā
āThen weāll see you then.ā He tipped his hat, took Judyās hand, and left the room.
Well? What do you think? It’s a work-in-progress, obviously, so constructive criticism would be more than welcome! As would be crazy, fangirl screaming … whatever floats your boat. š
Moving on, I suppose I should tell you a little about that novella from which you just read a section (unless you skimmed/skipped … evil reader …). It’s a historical fiction novella set in the 1930s – 1938, to be precise – in England and France.
How did this fantastic novella come into being? What inspired me to write it? Well, if I must be honest, The Dressmaker’s Secret did! How this came about was explained in more detail in this post, but, shortly, The Lady of the Vineyard is the original The Dressmaker’s Secret.
WHAT? you say. HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE?!?!?!
Well, The Lady of the Vineyard was originally written (well, planned … I never got around to writing it) as the prequel to The Sapphire of the Seine, aĀ romance novel which I actually did write a couple chapters of. It was … awful. I’m not kidding, guys. It was so bad! And it’s burnt now, so the badness is a distant memory. š
Anyway, skip ahead a couple years. October 2014. I’m planning to undertake NaNoWriMo for the first time (*shivers*) and I decide to write The Lady of the Vineyard. Of course, by then (I’d been re-outlining it since September) it’s set in England in the 1870s and has nothing at all to do with vineyards or ladies.
So I rename it “The Dressmaker’s Daughters.” Finding this title to be under usage, I change this to “The Dressmaker’s Secret” after much searching around for the right title (Finding Father, Chasing a Shadow, Seams of Life, and The Dressmaker’s Twins all had their turns).
And in November I wrote a novel that vaguely resembled TDS. At that point, the series (simply titled the Dressmaker books) included The Dressmaker’s Legacy, The Dressmaker’s Gift, and the prequel, The Dressmaker, was very rough and … it needed to die, so TDS went through a complete overhaul and the series was renamed and I decided to include Ivy, who deserves a spotlight instead of just not existing, as she did in the Dressmaker books.
Anyway. Back to The Lady of the Vineyard.
Last December, I started thinking about writing The Lady of the Vineyard. I mean, it was a good story. It just wasn’t meant for Alice. It was meant for a different kind of character entirely, I decided. Not a witty, intelligent, spunky little girl who can do anything she wants. It was meant for a sweet, serious child, quiet, and contained but inwardly emotional.
Neither was TLOTV meant for the 1870s, when divorce was a social no-no. It was meant for the 1930s, when divorce was acceptable and when travel was easier.
Although the underlying theme (a child’s need for a complete family) is the same as for TDS, TLOTV is more the story of discovering something laying in plain sight than finding something hidden.
At the moment, I’m taking a break in between drafts of TLOTV. I’m also letting other people read and critique it, so if you’re interested in beta-reading, let me know! Shoot me an email or contact me over Goodreads, NaNoWriMo (Adult, Camp, and YWP work), or Google+. I’d love to give you a link to the Google Doc and let you read it in exchange for pointing out typos and giving your opinion on characters, plot, setting, etc. Every little bit helps.
Well, that’s about all I have to say today! Sorry for the rambling!
~Kellyn Roth
*CRAZY FANGIRL SCREAM*Yay! Great excerpt! My favorite part is the one about the room remodel! I would love to reread it again, if you’d like šI’d love it if you reread it again! Do you still have the link to the Google doc or …?
Yeah, It’s in a folder or something??? I dont know. But it says stuff like Kellyn Roth edited at blah blah blah P.M. so i think so.
Yeah, that would probably be the one. It’s just a doc titled “The Lady of the Vineyard.”
š I’ll look tonight or tomorroe
Thanks. You don’t have to (of course!) but it’d be so helpful!
Its ok, I want to! Maybe I’ll even pick up some tips!
Well, thanks! š
š
Looking now!
i dont know why its all crossed out…
let me try something
*CRAZY FANGIRL SCREAM*YAY!! Great excerpt! My favorite part is the one about the room remodel! I would love to reread it again, if youd like. š š
nope, didnt work. ugh.
*shrugs* Sometimes computers act weird …
yep… š
Cool! by the way your books sound interesting. by the way, How have you been?
I’ve been great! How have you been?
Good. how’s your nano story going?
Um … well … *clears throat awkwardly* I haven’t really worked on it at all. And when I do work on it, I don’t remember to update my word count goal. July is really a busy month for me. I just got back from vacation and I’ll be heading out again Monday! š
That’s ok, at least finish your story whenever you can, you don’t have to win Camp NaNoWrimo
Camp NaNo is one of the things I never get done. For some reason, even though I don’t have anything to do in the summer, I can’t write. I guess the lack of structure makes it so I’m not so … driven. I do really want to finish IvIn before summer’s up, though …
It’s ok, when I first did it I never reached my word-count goal either, I also had stuff to do, plus I had relatives over as well. so don’t feel discouraged.
No, I don’t feel discouraged at all. I know I can do it … it’s more a choice than anything. I’m famous for choosing not to live up to goals I’ve set. XD
ok. So, you like my blog?
It’s nice!
Ooh! I can’t wait to read your book! š Thanks for sharing, Kellyn!
You’re welcome! I can’t wait to share it all with you! š
Very nice! I’m intrigued by the characters and the theme, setting, and all the French make me very happy š Best of luck to you!
Yeah, I almost want to turn this into a full-length novel just to have more of the characters and setting, but there’s really not enough plot for a full-length novel. š
You’re publishing the novella on my birthday.Isn’t it funny how stories change like that, though? Like you have this one plan for them, and they go, “Nope, this is what I am instead!”
Really? Well, happy birthday! š If I remember that (I tend to forget stuff), I’ll give you a free copy. š If you have a kindle, that is, I guess … I’m not going to be publishing it in paperback. š
I have a kindle app, so yeah! I’d appreciate it, but don’t feel obligated or anything. (In other words, it’s okay if you forgot. (: )
I’d have to figure out how to give away just one kindle copy … hmm. I’m so bad at technology ……. XD
Teehee, that’s okay. Unfortunately, I can’t help, because I have no idea.
Well, I may get it out on paperback after all … but then comes the problem of addresses. Well, we’ll figure it out when the time comes. XD
That’s probably a good plan.
CONGRATS I SO WANT TO READ THIS IT SOUNDS A-M-A-Z-I-N-G! I’d be happy to read it over and give feedback/point out typos, but I’m not a professional editor by any means, so I don’t really know if I’m what you’re looking for. š
Just email me at lpinterton@gmail.com if you’d like me to do so. š Or just reply to this comment . . . I’m so efficient, right? š
I’d love to have your help! I’ll email you in a moment here. š
Okay, awesome!