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Her entry begins:
I am, like many writers, a voracious reader, and my choices in reading material seem to reflect my writing style…in that I write—and read—a variety of genres. I stick with fiction, primarily, and I lean toward upmarket, book club-type fiction, character-driven suspense, and mystery. My only ‘must’: I have to truly like and be ready to root for the protagonist.About Now That I Know You by Heart, from the publisher:
Currently, I’m tackling my ‘meatiest’ writing project yet, and it would appear that my current reading list reflects this. I just finished Wally Lamb’s The River is Waiting, which I found to be a phenomenal character study of human nature at its best and worst (set primarily in the men’s prison system in the U.S.). I also tackled Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead, which I believe is arguably the best book of fiction in the 21st century so far. Timely, relevant, heart- wrenching, and redeeming (ultimately, though Kingsolver certainly makes you wait for it).
I work on my property and walk my dog a lot, so I find...[read on]
A young widow embraces a life-changing new start on San Juan Island in a joyful and redemptive novel about closure, self-discovery, chosen family, and the courage it takes to live truthfully.Visit Amy Hagstrom's website.
Newly widowed Shelby Wright has left the Portland suburbs for a new life on Washington’s San Juan Island to fulfill her late husband’s dying wish.Running the shuttered Captain Merrick Inn, where they’d honeymooned twenty years before, is also a chance for Shelby to prove she can go it solo. Miles from home and her young adult son, Shelby is ready to finally acknowledge to herself that she is gay. But becoming the person she’s hidden away for so long isn’t going to be easy.
As Shelby renovates and rebrands the inn, she meets charismatic winemaker Holly Caster. Their fast connection challenges Shelby to confront her emerging identity and lingering attachment not only to her husband, whom she loved, but to the best friend she left behind. When Shelby is welcomed by a supportive group of local queer women dubbed “the San Juan Sisters,” she’s on her way to making a professional venture―and a long-awaited personal quest―come true.
Both she and the inn may be in need of a little TLC, but Shelby is about to find love and purpose in the most unexpected places.
The Page 69 Test: The Wild Between Us.
Q&A with Amy Hagstrom.
Writers Read: Amy Hagstrom.
--Marshal Zeringue



