
Author: Susan Sloate
Narrator: Mapuana Makia
Length: 11 hours 53 minutes
Publisher: Covfefe Press
Released: Sep. 23, 2020
Genre: Romance

In glittery 1980s Los Angeles, once-celebrated Broadway lyricist Beau Kellogg is disillusioned, unhappily married and yearning for one last musical hit, while he writes advertising jingles for quick money. Meanwhile, in New York, idealistic young singer, Amanda Harary, works a demanding day job at a charming West Side hotel. From their first fiery phone conversation, sparks fly, and when they begin to talk late at night, miracles begin to happen. They weren't looking for each other but what they find together is a once-in-a-lifetime understanding, impossible joy, and piercing heartache...until they learn that some connections, however improbable, are meant to last forever. Stealing Fire is a story for romantics everywhere, who believe in the transformative power of love.
TURNING LEMONS INTO LEMONADE
By Susan Sloate
What do you do when you’re twenty-five and madly in love with someone you don’t understand, and you don’t know how to fix the problems in your relationship?
If you’re anything like me, you write about it.
I was deeply in love in the spring of
1983, and I was also very young and naïve. It was my first serious
relationship, and I didn’t know how to make this relationship work—it’s hard to
love a married man who lives 6,000 miles away—but I couldn’t bear to walk away,
either.
So one night I sat down at my snazzy IBM
Selectric typewriter (don’t even think about laughing at that) and started
typing. And the first sentence I typed was, “Sixty would be a milestone, he
thought.”
And from there, the story started to flow.
I wasn’t consciously planning to write a
novel. I had begun many novels in the past, which had never lasted more than a
few pages before I gave up. I wasn’t thinking about anything long-term. I just
wanted to find a way to ease the pain of our being separated and my being alone
while wishing he were there.
But for some weeks, I found myself coming
home, sitting at the typewriter, and typing away. And my little stack of pages
began to grow.
When I felt I’d gone dry on one scene I
started another. When I didn’t know what to do in this part of the novel, I
skipped to another part. I had no idea how it would end.
In 1988 I got my first computer. Yippee!
It had a 20 MB hard drive, and at turbo speed (I say that laughingly), it ran
at 10Mghz. I thought I was really something!
One of the first things I did after
getting it was take my stack of pages and type it all into the computer. These
were the early days, when Word files were pretty short, so I kept these
chapters in their own small files. I labeled them STEALING1, STEALING2, etc. I
kept writing in a desultory fashion. Not much changed, but the scenes got
longer and better. And I found I couldn’t bear to delete them. I wasn’t ready
to let this story go.
Then I made a friend, a writer to whom I
trusted my tentative pages. She LOVED the pages, which I now called my ‘baby
novel’, and begged me to finish it. I promised I would… someday.
Years later, after marriage and children,
my husband found the files on a computer I’d abandoned and transferred the
files to a brand-new computer with greater hard-drive capacity. I spent a full
day taking all those little files and putting them into one big file in Word.
It came out to 275 pages, far too much to throw away. And when an Amazon
writing contest came along in 2005, I finished the bulk of the novel and
submitted it. It was named a quarter-finalist in the contest, and I was
thrilled.
In 2013, a friend who ran a small
publishing house in North Carolina asked to publish it, sight unseen. When she
finally read it, after I’d agreed to let her have it, she loved it, and named
it one of her top ten reads that year. The book came out in late summer and
went to #2 in its category on Amazon. It was also a Hot New Release and was
honored in the Readers’ Favorite Book Award competition in 2014. As of last
month, it’s also an audiobook, with a growing following of devoted fans.
And all this from a handful of pages I
wrote to ease my own aching heart and try to find peace in an impossible
relationship. Talk about making lemonade out of lemons!
When your heart hurts and your mind is
clouded… write about it. When you don’t know what to do about a situation…
write about it. When you don’t know if you want to write or not… write about
it. And one day, you never know if you’ll wake up, and a handful of pages that
breaks your heart will have become the most important words you ever put down.

Website
Mapuana
Makia was born and raised in Maui, Hawaii. When she is not working on set as an
actor, or in the vocal booth working on various voiceover projects, she can be
found on her couch watching a documentary with her partner Joe, and her dog
Bandit.

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Plugging you into the audio community since 2016.
Thanks for hosting me and my book today. Looking forward to connecting with your readers!
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome! :)
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