I always love to have Jamie Beck here to share a new book. Her stories never fail to deliver a ton of heart.
*****
How doΒ youΒ describe your newest novelΒ IfΒ YouΒ MustΒ Know?
This book is a βbeach bookβ in the best sense. Itβs not angsty, yet it has a page-turning plot and a bunch of interesting, relatable characters. I think itβs entertaining and heartfelt at the same time, which is exactly what many enjoy reading while on vacation.
What inspired the novel?
The external plot came to me as a result of the influence of two people in my life. My dear friendβs husband is a forensic accountant, so some of his stories about how people hide money and flee their families provided one point of inspiration. The second is my motherβs best friend who, in her seventies, sold her house and bought a boat, which she and her husband live on full-time. The impetus for the oil-and-water sisters was to provide myself an opportunity to explore the sibling-rivalry dynamic.
Tell us about the two main characters in the storyβsisters Amanda and Erin.
Amanda is the middle child. Sheβs diligent, earnest, hard-working, and generous. She wants the people she loves to be happy and feel her love. Her weakness is a deep-seated insecurityβa sense that she is not interesting enough to be lovable. This leads her to overlook when she is being taken for granted because her need to be pleasing is omnipresent.
Erin is the baby of the family and her late-fatherβs pet. She is outgoing, fun-loving, and views her average intelligence as a blessing (rather than lamenting that her siblings are smarter). She is willful and has her own way of moving through the world. The big weakness she has is her impulsiveness, whether with jobs or relationships. As she approaches her 30th birthday, sheβs looking to mature and create a more stable life for herself.
What kind of relationship do the sisters have?
I think they share a typical relationship insofar as their differences cause many misunderstandings and instill in each a sense of being judged by the other, and yet they do care about and love each other, too. They simply do notΒ knowΒ how to be true friends and trust the otherβat least not at the outset of this tale.
This book focused on the main female characters growing and learning about themselves. What prompted this βwomenβs fictionβ approach to the story?
Partly market forces and partly my own need to stretch. At 53, it was becoming more difficult to write a 20-something woman facing the challenges of dating. The shift to womenβs fiction allows me to write late-30 and early 40-something characters, which comes more naturally to me. I also enjoy exploring family and friendship dynamics, and absolutely love having endless options for story arcs (as opposed to having to follow a traditional romance arc).
What does your new Potomac Point series have in common with yourΒ previous books?
All my books to date have focused on critical relationships and some type of redemption theme. I find damaged people to be very interesting and believe that there is good in most everyone, so I prefer to populate my stories with flawed people whoΒ mustΒ confront their inner demons in order to be happy. My new books will also focus on relationships and redemption, but the non-romantic relationships (or even the relationship with oneβs self) will be more central.
*****
by Jamie Beck
Release Date: June 1, 2020
Publisher: Montlake
Blurb:
Sisters Amanda Foster and Erin Turner have little in common except the childhood bedroom they once shared and the certainty each feels that her way of life is best. Amanda follows the rulesβat the school where she works; in her community; and as a picture-perfect daughter, wife, and mother-to-be. Erin follows her heartβin love and otherwiseβliving a bohemian lifestyle on a shoestring budget and honoring her late fatherβs memory with a passion for music and her fledgling bath-products business.
The sisters are content leading separate but happy lives in their hometown of Potomac Point until everything is upended by lies that force them to confront unsettling truths about their family, themselves, and each other. For sisters as different as these two, building trust doesnβt come easilyβespecially with one secret still between themβbut it may be the only way to save their family.
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Excerpt:
I rolled onto my side with a groan, coming face-to-face with one of my favorite family photos. Weβd taken our annual family summer trip to Hilton Headβthe one real splurge my dad had made sure we enjoyed every year. We had a tradition of having lunch at a little open-air cabana bar and restaurant called Cocoβs on the Beach.
Between the deck and the volleyball court in the sand stood a tall pole with colorful arrow-shaped signs pointing in different directions. Each one was painted with the name of a different city somewhere on the globe, along with the mileage to get there. Weβd dream about all the places we might go, and after high school Iβd had the chance to see many. In this picture, our whole family is standing around that sign, smiling at the camera. My dad has his hand on my shoulder, andΒ ifΒ youΒ look closely,Β youΒ can see Amanda holding my hand. IΒ mustβve been only five or sixβyoung enough that she hadnβt given up trying to be my second mother. At the time, Iβd felt smothered by her attention, but looking back, Iβd also felt loved.
I grabbed my phone and called my sister, but it went to voice mail. A heaviness pressed on me, but I couldnβt tellΒ ifΒ it was from looking at that picture of our family that would never again be whole or from the fact that Iβd disappointed my mom and sister today.
They loved me in their way evenΒ ifΒ they couldnβt love and accept meΒ as I am. My dad had, though, and to honor his memory and wishes for our family, I couldnβt continue to drift out of their lives as Iβd been doing.
After the beep, I said, βHey, itβsΒ moi. Surprise! My plans have changed and Iβve got a little time.Β IfΒ youΒ get this message, let meΒ knowΒ whereΒ youΒ are and Iβll try to catch up.β
I hit βEnd,β my feet restlessly kicking the foot of my bed. The small bedroom seemed claustrophobic, but I didnβt want to talk to Max. Not that I could avoid him in here, either, where his dirty laundry, sandals, and other items lay about. Rather than take a match to it all, I decided to organize some of his things to help with his packing. Hauling myself off the bed, I then went to the armoire to get to the vintage albums my dad had left me in his will.
Some were fairly valuable, like the Beatles collection box set from 1982, valued at roughly a thousand bucks. Or theΒ Led ZeppelinΒ first pressing with the turquoise label, which should net around eight hundred or so dollars. U2βsΒ Joshua TreeΒ collection box set from 1987βmaybe worth six or seven hundred. Then there were others worth less than one hundred dollars. But each one had infinite sentimental value.
Every song resurrected a specific memory of time spent with my father playing cards, washing cars, grilling hot dogs β¦ anything. Whatever heβd wanted to do, Iβd done with him, and heβd always chosen the perfect background soundtrack for every activity. Those stolen moments had also been a great way to escape my momβs endless lectures and demands. Sheβd never yelled at me for skipping out on chores or being messy when Iβd been spending that time with him. Probably because he wouldnβt let her.
At present, my restlessness matched the mood of a typical Bob Seger song, so I grabbedΒ Beautiful LoserΒ and slipped the record from its sleeve, resisting the urge to hug it asΒ ifΒ it were my dad. I set it on the old turntable heβd also left me. As the few first drumbeats clangored, my heart kicked an extra beat or twoβpartly happy, partly sad. I glanced toward the bedroom door, picturing Max on the sofa, and then got to work.
It didnβt matter where life led me next. I had faith because my own personal angel was looking out for me now.
Que serΓ‘, serΓ‘.
*****
Wall Street JournalΒ andΒ USA TodayΒ bestselling author Jamie Beckβs realistic and heartwarming stories have sold more than two million copies. She is a two-time Booksellersβ Best Award finalist and a National Readersβ Choice Award winner, and critics atΒ Kirkus, Publishers Weekly,Β andΒ BooklistΒ have respectively called her work βsmart,β βuplifting,β and βentertaining.β In addition to writing novels, she enjoys hitting the slopes in Vermont and Utah and dancing around the kitchen while cooking. Above all, she is a grateful wife and mother to a very patient, supportive family. Fans can get exclusive excerpts, inside scoops, and be eligible for birthday gift drawings by subscribing to her newsletter atΒ http://eepurl.com/b7k7G5. She also loves interacting with everyone on Facebook atΒ www.facebook.com/JamieBeckBooks.
Website –Β https://jamiebeck.com/
Facebook –Β https://www.facebook.com/JamieBeckBooks/
Twitter –Β https://twitter.com/writerjamiebeck
Goodreads –Β https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8020971.Jamie_Beck
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Giveaway:
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