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Monday, March 16, 2020

Finding Lisa

Finding Lisa
by Sigrid Macdonald  

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GENRE  Mystery/women's fiction

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BLURB:

Finding Lisa is a character driven story about a quirky Canadian woman named Tara who is about to turn 40. She dreads the thought. Everything is going wrong in her life from her stale marriage to her boring job to her hopeless crush on a 24-year-old guy. The only thing right in Tara's life is her best friend Lisa who has just confided that she is pregnant and the baby does not belong to her partner Ryan, who has a history of domestic violence. Then Lisa disappears and the search is on to find her.


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EXCERPT:

All the carts were taken at the supermarket on Tuesday. I found one off to the side of the vegetable aisle. It had a defective wheel, which resulted in me almost overturning a display of cantaloupes. The cart was also enormous. No doubt this was a deliberate ploy on the part of the supermarket to encourage excess shopping.  

"I feel as though I'm driving a school bus," I announced to the frail, pale orange-haired woman to my left, who was squeezing the small, unappetizing looking cantaloupes.  

She smiled faintly and nodded. I wondered how she had the strength to push the heavy cart through the long aisles of the grocery store at her age. 

"Mum, I'll go with you to one of those Women against Rape meetings if you want?"  Devon said to my astonishment, his voice rising at the end of his sentence. "There’s only one condition. You have to watch 8 Mile with me."

"8 Mile? Isn’t that the movie based on the book by Stephen King?"

"Nah, you’re thinking about The Green Mile," Devon replied. "8 Mile is the story of a rapper in Detroit. It's based on the life of Eminem, whose real name is Marshall Mathers. Eminem even stars in it," he said with increasing enthusiasm. 

"I think it’ll give you a better idea of where he's coming from. You know, you're always talking about these girls who've been, like, abused and what horrible lives they've had. You even feel bad about boys who were taken advantage of by priests or their hockey coaches. So why don't you have any sympathy for Marshall? His mother was abusive. She was mean to him, and she did drugs! Also, she, like, gave him something called Munchkins syndrome," Devon added uncertainly.

"Munchausen syndrome?” I asked, trying to picture the tough guy with the tattoos and bad attitude as a small child with a manipulative and controlling mother.

"Yeah, that sounds right. She made him feel sick when he was totally healthy. And, Mum, I know you would respect the way Em felt about his little brother, Nathan. He, like, didn't wanna leave him alone in the house with his mother when he finally split from Detroit. He's also really keen about his daughter, Hailie Jade. He talks about her all the time in his songs and on TV."

I pushed the buttons on the radio. The Steve Miller band was singing, "Time keeps on slipping, slipping into the future." I had a sense of motion. The car was moving forward, and with every traffic light I passed, I was moving farther away from Lisa and our routine evenings at the ByTowne Theatre. The rest of us were going ahead, and Lisa had been left behind. I wanted to go back, not just to last Thursday night, but to my university days, so I could live my life all over again. 

I wanted to be sixteen or twenty-six again, making decisions based on what I knew now. So many lost opportunities. How had I managed to completely screw up my life? I'd done everything wrong except that I hadn't become a street prostitute or a serial murderer. Too late for the former—who would want me? But there was still time for the latter.  


Author Interview:

1.Did you always want to be an author?

Actually, I wanted to be a doctor like my dad when I was very young, but I loved reading so much that I thought I would make a better writer than physician. Also, I hated the sight of blood and needles!


2.Tell us about the publication of your first book.

In 1981, I was hit head-on by a drunk driver and nearly killed. I spent three weeks in intensive care, three and a half months in orthopedics, and it took me more than a year and a half to relearn to walk. Years later, most of the bones that I had broken that involved joints, like my hips or knees, wore out, and I was in my 40s when I required a total hip replacement. This was not exactly on my fun list of things to do, but replacing that worn-out joint was very effective and returned my mobility. My nephew recommended that I blog about my experience, and the blog morphed into a book called Getting Hip, which described my experience, and tips on how to recover safely and quickly from hip surgery. I also interviewed nine other people around the globe about their experiences in case mine was atypical. I sold tens of thousands of copies of that book, and I was very proud of it. One of the things I liked best about the book was the fact that my nephew, only 16 at the time, designed the book cover.




3.Besides yourself, who is your favorite author in the genre you write in?

Oh my gosh, where would I even begin? I don't think I have a fave in the mystery genre, but I do love John Grisham, Stephen King, Harlan Coben, Lisa Gardner, Catherine Steadman, and, of course, Gillian Flynn.


4.What's the best part of being an author? The worst?

The best part is that I get to spend my time doing something that I adore. The worst part is the solitude because I can get wrapped up for hours in what I'm doing and not realize that I haven't connected with a live being for days.


5.What are you working on now?

Right now, I'm just doing my day job. I am the owner of an editing company called Book Magic, so I spend my days proofreading, copyediting, and evaluating manuscripts, some of which are excellent. Some of my favorite manuscripts are memoirs. I especially love memoirs that are candid; some people have led fascinating lives, and no matter how different one experience is from the other, we all share universal themes of wanting to be loved and accepted and to belong.



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AUTHOR Bio and Links:

Originally from New Jersey, Sigrid Macdonald lived for almost thirty years in Ottawa, Ontario, and currently resides in Weston, Florida. She has been a freelance writer for years. Her works have appeared in The Globe and Mail newspaper; the Women's Freedom Network Newsletter; the American magazine Justice DeniedThe Toastmaster; and the Anxiety Disorders Association of Ontario Newsletter. Her first book, Getting Hip: Recovery from a Total Hip Replacement, was published in 2004. Her second book, Be Your Own Editor, followed in 2010. Although Finding Lisais written in first person, Macdonald only resembles her character in the sense that she once had a neurotic fixation on her hair, and she has always been called by the wrong name; instead of being called Sigrid, people have called her Susan, Sharon, Astrid, Ingrid and, her personal favorite, Siri.
Macdonald is a social activist who has spent decades working on the seemingly disparate issues of women's rights and wrongful convictions; she has worked at the Women's Center at Ramapo College of New Jersey and Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, and was a member of AIDWYC, The Association in Defense of the Wrongly Convicted. She owns an editing company called Book Magic. Sigrid is a public speaker and a member of Mothers against Drunk Driving, Ottawa Independent Writers, the American Association of University Women, and the Editors' Association of Canada. Visit her website at http://bookmagic.ca/ or friend her on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sigridmac.



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GIVEAWAY INFORMATION

Sigrid Macdonald will be awarding a $20 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.






a Rafflecopter giveaway

5 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for taking time to bring to our attention another great read.   I appreciate it and thank you also for the giveaway. 

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  2. Really great post, thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete