The French Winemaker’s Daughter Tour @DIY_Author @lellsworth #historicalfiction #WW2

Day 3 of The French Winemaker’s Daughter Tour via Kaye Lynn Booth https://writingtoberead.com/

Introduction

About The French Winemaker’s Daughter

Set during World War II, an unforgettable historical novel about love, war, family, and loyalty told in in the voices of two women, generations apart, who find themselves connected by a mysterious and valuable bottle of wine stolen by the Nazis.

1942. Seven-year-old Martine hides in an armoire when the Nazis come to take her father away. Pinned to her dress is a note with her aunt’s address in Paris, and in her arms, a bottle of wine she has been instructed to look after if something happened to her papa. When they are finally gone, the terrified young girl drops the bottle and runs to a neighbor, who puts her on a train to Paris.

But when Martine arrives in the city, her aunt is nowhere to be found. Without a place to go, the girl wanders the streets and eventually falls asleep on the doorstep of Hotel Drouot, where Sister Ada finds her and takes her to the abbey, and watches over her.

1990. Charlotte, a commercial airline pilot, attends an auction with her boyfriend Henri at Hotel Drouot, now the oldest auction house in Paris. Successfully bidding on a box of wine saved from the German occupation during the Second World War, Henri gives Charlotte a seemingly inferior bottle he finds inside the box. Cleaning the label, Charlotte makes a shocking discovery that sends her on a quest to find the origins of this unusual—and very valuable—bottle of wine, a quest that will take her back fifty years into the past. . . .

A powerful tale of love, war, and family, The French Winemaker’s Daughter is an emotionally resonant tale of two women whose fates are intertwined across time. Loretta Ellsworth’s evocative and poignant page-turner will linger in the heart, and make you think about luck, connection, and the meaning of loyalty.

Purchase Link: https://www.amazon.com/French-Winemakers-Daughter-Novel-ebook/dp/B0D3CJYP5Y

About Loretta Ellsworth

Loretta earned a master’s degree in Writing for Children from Hamline University. She’s the author of four young adult novels: THE SHROUDING WOMAN, a Rebecca Caudill nominee; IN SEARCH OF MOCKINGBIRD, which won the Midwest Bookseller’s Choice Honor Award, was a Teen’s Top Ten finalist, an IRA Notable, and was named to the New York Library’s List of Books for the Teen Age; IN A HEARTBEAT, which was named a spring Midwest Connection’s Pick and an ALA Notable; and UNFORGETTABLE, which was a Kirkus Pick of the Month. Her debut adult novel STARS OVER CLEAR LAKE, was published by St. Martin’s Press in 2017. Her debut picture book, Tangle-Knot, will be published by Page Street Kids in 2023.

A former Spanish teacher, she lives with her family in Minnesota.

Visit her website at: www.lorettaellsworth.com and follow her on twitter @lellsworth.

Writing Behind Your Back

By Loretta Ellsworth

I was raised on writing rough drafts and making sense of them later. This was taught to me by Jane Resh-Thomas in small classes in her Minneapolis living room, where she dispensed her wisdom to all of us who eagerly made copious notes. One thing she taught us was the concept of ‘writing behind your own back’. It’s the meat of the story, underneath the plot and characters. During the process of writing, things come to you without you knowing what they mean, or why they’re part of the story. But that’s often the important part. It’s what the story has to do with you, and every story has something to do with you as the writer, even when you don’t see it at first.

And we don’t see it. Not at first. When Kate DiCamillo wrote her book The Tiger Rising, one of the characters has a terrible rash on his legs. She said, “I wrote that book and re-wrote and re-wrote it and Rob’s rash was always present, front and center. And it wasn’t until after the book was done, that I remembered my own eczema, how it bedeviled me as a kid (not that I had forgotten the eczema, only that I hadn’t connected it with Rob’s eczema). I didn’t know what I was writing about, but I was writing about my heart.”

During the revision process, it’s important to ask ourselves why we’re writing a particular story, to recognize what we’re really writing about even when we think it’s something else. When writing The French Winemaker’s Daughter, I concentrated at first on the mystery of a rare and valuable wine bottle, one that spurs pilot Charlotte to search for the owner fifty years later. It wasn’t until after several revisions that I started to see a connection to my own life. My father spent time in Japan during WWII, and amid some of the things he brought back was a small delicate handkerchief decorated with a picture of a red sun and Japanese writing. I found out after his death that it was called a Good Luck Flag, filled with messages of love and support from the family of a soldier going into battle. I wondered what happened to the soldier who’d carried this, the story behind the flag we had owned all these years, and if his family could be located. Although I found out it might be almost impossible to find the family now (he had a common last name), it was suggested that the flag belonged in a museum. It made me wonder what we owe others, especially those who have lost so much during the war? And I realized that my book was searching for a way to bring restitution for my family for owning what we’d assumed was a common handkerchief all those years, but may have been an important piece of someone else’s life.

When examining your story, look for how it’s connected to you, the writer, and don’t be surprised that it’s something you tried to keep secret and buried. But it will reveal itself, and in doing so, will help us as writers to write our truths and reveal the themes of our books.

Tour Schedule

Mon. 12-16: Writing to be Read – Opening day – Interview

Tues. 12-17: Carla Reads – Guest Post

Wed. 12-18: Kyrosmagica – Guest Post

Thurs. 12-19: Book Places – Guest Post

Fri. 12-20: Writing to be Read – Closing day – Book Review

Published by

Unknown's avatar

Marje @ Kyrosmagica

Hi. Welcome to my blog: M J Mallon - Kyrosmagica Publishing. A blog about magic, books, writing, laughter, and much more! I'm a YA fantasy author, poet and reviewer. My first YA fantasy novel The Curse of Time - Book 1 - Bloodstone is set in Cambridge and Book 2 - Golden Healer is now out too. As well as this, I have contributed to several anthologies, created my own with some amazing international writers, bloggers and creatives during the pandemic: This Is Lockdown and written two poetry collections: Lockdown Innit Poems About Absurdity & Mr. Sagittarius Poetry and Prose. I write book reviews on my blog and on Goodreads, book bub and on my bookstagram. I have a penchant for travel and have relatives in far flung places, Australia, Malaysia, and Singapore, (my birthplace.) I grew up in in Bonnie Scotland, in Edinburgh, and now live in Cambridge. I love sunny, hot places, particularly Rome, Venice, Portugal, Barcelona, and I forgot to mention the sun drenched beaches of the Caribbean, how could I? I am lucky to have been blessed with two lovely daughters and a husband who I fondly refer to in this blog as my black sheep. Family joke! With my passion for travel, culture, beautiful beaches, good food, books, theatre, writing, and humour, I hope to keep you entertained. I'm loving every minute of this creative journey, please join me.

9 thoughts on “The French Winemaker’s Daughter Tour @DIY_Author @lellsworth #historicalfiction #WW2”

Leave a reply to Carla Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.