Interview with Kim Boykin: 'I fly by the seat of my pants with no idea of where the story is going'
Kim Boykin was raised in her South
Carolina home with two girly sisters and great
parents. She had a happy, boring childhood, which sucks if you’re a writer
because you have to create your own crazy. PLUS after you’re published and you’re
being interviewed, it’s very appealing when the author actually lived in Crazy Town or
somewhere in the general vicinity.
Almost everything she learned about writing, she learned
from her grandpa, an oral storyteller, who was a master teacher of pacing and
sensory detail. He held court under an old mimosa tree on the family farm, and
people used to come from all around to hear him tell stories about growing up
in rural Georgia and
share his unique take on the world.
As a stay-at-home mom, Kim started writing, grabbing
snip-its of time in the car rider line or on the bleachers at swim practice.
After her kids left the nest, she started submitting her work, sold her first
novel at 53, and has been writing like crazy ever since.
Thanks to the lessons she learned under that mimosa tree,
her books are well reviewed and, according to RT Book Reviews, feel like
they’re being told across a kitchen table. She is the author of The Wisdom
of Hair from Berkley, Steal
Me, Cowboy and Sweet Home Carolina from
Tule, and Palmetto Moon, also
from Berkley 8/5/14.
While her heart is always in the Lowcountry of South Carolina, she lives in Charlotte and
has a heart for hairstylist, librarians, and book junkies like herself.
For More Information
- Visit Kim Boykin’s website.
- Connect with Kim on Facebook and Twitter.
- Visit Holly’s blog.
- More books by Kim Boykin.
- Contact Kim.
About the Book:
June, 1947. Charleston is poised to celebrate the biggest wedding in high-society
history, the joining of two of the oldest families in the city. Except the
bride is nowhere to be found…Unlike the rest of the debs
she grew up with, Vada Hadley doesn’t see marrying Justin McLeod as a
blessing—she sees it as a life sentence. So when she finds herself one day away
from a wedding she doesn’t want, she’s left with no choice but to run away from
the future her parents have so carefully planned for her.
In Round O, South
Carolina, Vada finds independence in the unexpected friendships she forms at
the boarding house where she stays, and a quiet yet fulfilling courtship with
the local diner owner, Frank Darling. For the first time in her life, she
finally feels like she’s where she’s meant to be. But when her dear friend
Darby hunts her down, needing help, Vada will have to confront the life she
gave up—and decide where her heart truly belongs.
For More Information
- Palmetto Moon is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble or IndieBound.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
- Read Chapter One here.
Q: Welcome to The Writer's Life! Now that your book has been published, we’d
love to find out more about the process.
Can we begin by having you take us at the beginning? Where did you come up with the idea to write
your book?
Like many writer, I hear a voice in my head,
usually a woman. She starts telling me her story and off we go. I’m what’s
called a “pantser;” I fly by the seat of my pants with no idea of where the
story is going. I just listen to the voice and then the other voices as they
join the story.j
The idea came from wanting to write about a
situation that happened to my older sister involving a shyster, a show poodle
and postcards. But when Vada Hadley started telling me her story, she had a
mind of her own. There is a postcard and a very brief but cute appearance of a
black poodle puppy.
Q: How hard was it to write a book like this and do
you have any tips that you could pass on which would make the journey easier
for other writers?
The book is told from four POVs, which seemed
daunting at first, but was actually quite liberating. Vada, the protagonist, is
in first person, the others’ stories are told in third.
There are a gazillion how-to writing books out
there, and for writers like me who are newcomers, they are frustrating. Most of
what we do comes from those voices. Of course, the work has to be copyedited
and polished, edited if possible. But trying to fit yourself into one of those
boxes some of the how-to books suggest can make you feel less, different, when
all you really want to do is tell a story.
Q: Who is your publisher and how did you find them
or did you self-publish?
I publish women’s fiction with Berkley Books and
contemporary romance with Jane Porter’s Tule Publishing Group. I met Jane at a
party and she asked me to write a novella for her company. I’m on my fifth one
for her and love every minute of it.
Finding a home at Berkley wasn’t so easy. I finished my first novel, The Wisdom of Hair, and was lucky enough
to get a big agent. I loved her she was like an older me and had this wonderful
Julia Childs voice. After the first round of submissions, she found out the
chronic backache she’d had for two years was cancer. She died a few weeks after
her diagnosis, but before she passed, we talked a lot. She assured me her
partner would sell my work, not that I cared at that point. She was really
special.
To say I was the
proverbial redheaded stepchild with the new agent was an understatement, but I
had representation, right? After two years of hoping this woman would sell my
work, I called her assistant and asked if she thought that would ever happen. I
appreciated her honest answer and divorced my agent that day.
I’m horrible at
rejection and floundered submitting on and off for, I don’t know, five years?
Ten? They all kind of run together. Then I asked myself, “Who buys books?” The
answer isn’t agents. So I found the NY Pitch Conference and pitched directly to
four editors and got three who wanted to read my manuscript. One from Hyperion,
two from Penguin-NAL and Berkely.
That was the first
line of the 167 query letters I sent out. Within in the week, I had 40 who were
reading part of the script, 20 reading the whole script. I ended up with 3
offers of representation, and then I got to do the choosing. And the Berkley editor who requested the script at the
pitch conference bought the book.
Q: Is there anything that surprised you about
getting your first book published?
Marketing is all
consuming. Palmetto Moon launches August 5, and the whole month is looming like
a tidal wave. I asked NYT bestselling author Wendy Wax if it’s always going to
be this crazy and she told me she’s published eleven books. And last summer’s
While We Were Watching Downton Abbey was the first book she DIDN’T feel like
she had to kill herself to make it successful. Oy.
Q: What other books (if any) are you working on and
when will they be published?
I’ll continue to
write contemporary romance novellas because they’re fun and I adore Jane Porter
and her company, Tule. My next novel is set in 1952 and is called A Peach of A
Pair. It’s the story of Nettie, a young woman who is betrayed by her sister and
the two old maid sisters who teacher Nettie the meaning of sisterhood and
forgiveness.
Q: What’s your favorite place to hang out online?
I’m an email junkie and I love Facebook. I was a
great smartass in school and even better as a mom. I thought I’d be really good
at Twitter, but I’m not.
Q: Finally, what message (if any) are you trying to
get across with your book?
Karen White said, “this book is guaranteed to
entertain.” And to be honest, that’s all I want to do. But when Vada who I
thought was just a fluffy blonde turns out to be a feminist in 1947 and Claire
and Reggie enter into an extremely unconventional marriage, I think those
voices are trying to teach lessons of their own.
Q: Thank you again for this interview! Do you have any final words?
NEVER give up. If I
hadn’t stopped and started to publish my work so many times, it might not have
taken twenty-five years.
Cool story- -thanks for sharing!
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