The
Grace of Quilting
Much of my adult life I have been more a
quilter than a writer. For years I told stories about African American life
with fabrics, thread and needles. Even though I loved books, I never thought I
could write a novel, didn't think I was really smart enough to do that. But
then a story, I knew was my story, caught my imagination and I was compelled to
set out on my writer's journey.
Act of Grace is loosely based on an
incident that happened several years ago in my hometown during a Klan rally.
When what was supposed to be a nonviolent protest became violent a young black
woman saved a white man from being beaten by throwing her body on him. She got
involved because she believed he had the right to his beliefs even if she and
others felt he was wrong. For weeks after the event people argued about whether
she was a guardian angel or just crazy. My opinion was that she was a
compassionate and brave person, worthy of admiration and respect for living up
to her values.
Five years after the incident at the Klan
rally, I had a dream about a young girl named Grace who saved the life of a
Klansman named Jonathan Gilmore, even though rumor held that years ago a member
of his family murdered several African Americans including her father. What came out of the dream was the idea for
my speculative novel, Act of Grace. In it I use African and African American
mythology to tell a century old, blood -soaked story of eye-for-an-eye
vengeance that left many generations in a small Michigan town blind. Called by the Ancestors, a young African
American woman named, Grace must learn to use her shamanist gifts to bear
witness to her town’s violent racial history so that all involved might
transcend it.
This story would draw me away from my first
love for ten years. However, I would find that writing fiction was a lot like
piecing and quilting fabric in that I stitched thousands of words together to
create an intricate pattern of theme, plot and characterization. Then, one by
one, I layered all the pages to produce what I hoped would be an interesting
and powerful work.
Recently I began to quilt again and as I
lay down stitches on fabric as numerous a as my words on paper, I now see that
the two artistic halves of my personality have merged into a joyous creative
whole.
Bio:
Karen
Simpson, author of Act of Grace, lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She earned a
Masters Degree in Historic Preservation at Eastern Michigan University. An avid
historian, her speculative fiction is base on African American folklore and
history. The 2011 Moonbeam Children's Book Awards recently recognized her novel
Act of Grace as the gold medalist in the Young Adult Religion/Spirituality
category. The novel also received a nomination for the 2012 Amelia Bloomer
Project booklist, an ALA list for books with significant feminist content for
young people.
Contact and Buy AKA Links:
Stops on the Tour:
Monday, February 6
Review at Broken Teepee
Tuesday, February 7
Review at The Book Connection
Wednesday, February 8
Guest Post at Bookish Ardour
Thursday, February 9
Guest Post at Words I Write Crazy
Friday, February 10
Review at Words I Write Crazy
Monday, February 13
Guest Post at Literal Exposure
Wednesday, February 15
Review at Live to Read
Friday, February 17
Interview at As the Pages Turn
Monday, February 20
Spotlight at Everday is an Adventure
Tuesday, February 21
Spotlight at Celtic Lady’s Book Reviews
Wednesday, February 22
Review at Coffee and a Keyboard
Friday, February 24
Review at The Book Vortex
Monday, February 27
Spotlight at The Hot Author Report
Wednesday, February 29
Interview at Beyond the Books
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