Candace Simar's Blog, page 2

July 15, 2024

Check out this interview by Awesome Book Reviews

 

Featured Author Candace Simar

Author Candace Simar

Featured Interview With Author Candace Simar

Tell us a little about yourself. Where were you raised? Where do you live now?
Candace Simar likes to imagine how things might have been in frontier America. She combines her passion for history with her Scandinavian heritage to create historical novels that wrap history in compelling stories. “It’s a painless history lesson with real history, lots of research, and good stories.”

I was raised on a dairy farm in western Minnesota. My adult life has been spent in Pequot Lakes, Minnesota, where I drove past seven lakes every day on my way to work. My husband Keith and I recently celebrated our 50th Wedding Anniversary. We have three adult children and five grandkids.

At what age did you realize your fascination with books? When did you start writing?
The Laura Ingalls Wilder books caught my attention in second grade. From there, I read Caddie Woodlawn, Nancy Drew, Lois Lenski, and Louisa May Alcott. In young adulthood, I became captivated by a Kentucky writer, Janice Holt Giles. At that time, I was a student, engaged to be married, and working as a nurse. I always said that if I were to write a book, I would pattern it after the books on American settlers by Janice Holt Giles. She’s still my hero, and the only author that I went out of my way to visit her grave.

The writing bug bit in my mid-forties. I joined a poetry group and was mentored by several elderly poets. Because of poetry, I learned to write with all five senses. Positive comments about my use of descriptions are because of my time spent studying poetry. I began writing small newspaper/magazine articles and was published in Chicken Soup for the Soul. I enjoyed writing small pieces and had no intention of delving into novels until a made a foray into family genealogy changed the direction of my life.

I discovered my great-grandfather had driven the stagecoach as a young Norwegian immigrant toward the end of the Civil War, a bit after the Dakota/US War. To my surprise, I discovered that my college-aged children, Minnesota born and educated, knew little about Minnesota’s role in the Civil War or the Indian War. Our son challenged me to write a book about it “if I cared.” I accepted his challenge–but then had to learn how to write a novel.

I attended every writing workshop that I could find. How amazing to study under MFA professors, editors, and Academy Award winners. I made it a personal mission to learn the writing craft. I’m still learning. Like any art form, there is always more to learn about writing.

My “Abercrombie Trail Series” (Abercrombie Trail 2009; Pomme de Terre 2010; Birdie 2011; Blooming Prairie 2012; and Sister Lumberjack 2024) received a Spur Award from the Western Writers of America. Did you know that frontier fiction is an offshoot of the western genre? I consider myself more of an historical novelist because my books take place in Minnesota and Dakota Territory.

I grew up hearing the family stories about the immigration experiences of my Norwegian and Danish great grandparents. Yes, those family stories creep into my the lives of my characters. I also use family names and places.

“Follow Whiskey Creek” is a stand-alone book about Scandinavian settlers finding refuge at Fort Abercrombie during the U.S./Dakota War. Formerly titled, Escape to Fort Abercrombie, it received a Will Rogers Gold Medallion and a Peacemaker Award from the Western Fictioneers.

Who are your favorite authors to read? What is your favorite genre to read. Who Inspires you in your writings?
Other favorite authors are Leon Uris, Wilhelm Moberg, , Larry McMurtry, CJ Box, Kristin Hannah, Anthony Doerr, Flannery O’Connor, Jaqueline Winspear, and Caryll Houselander. I have fallen in love with the books by Laurie Weinstein set in the 1930s. Marcie Rendon’s mysteries about Native Americans during the Viet Nam war are excellent. I enjoy many genres and read several books at the same time. I love historical novels about World War 2, frontier America, and life in the 1930s. I look for authenticity, character development, and interesting time periods. If I feel I’ve learned something new from a novel, I’m satisfied.

Many historical novels are not sugar-coated. My research tells a different story. Life was very hard, especially for women. I write gritty stories about the struggles of realistic characters who are without language skills, education, family support, conveniences, or money. My books cover topics of Indian wars, immigration struggles, drought, grasshopper plagues, and the early logging days.

Shelterbelts (2015) is my only book set in the 20th century. It takes place in rural Minnesota at the close of WW2. I wrote it because I missed my parents who were married at that time. Though I created fictional characters, my setting is the land and the culture where I grew up, a place and time very much changed from that era. Shelterbelts was a finalist in both the Willa Literary Awards in Historical Fiction and the Midwest Book Awards.

Tell us a little about your latest book?
Sister Lumberjack, my latest book, is about an aging widow forced to take a job cooking for a rough and tough logging camp in 1892 Minnesota. Logging was dangerous work. No safety net existed for injured workers. Sister Lumberjack entwines the stories of a widow, a young lumberjack with “bottle fever,” and a most unusual Benedictine nun (loosely based on a real person) who sought to build hospitals to serve injured men. Their lives intersect at Starkweather Timber, a haywire logging operation where everything goes wrong. 30,000 lumberjacks butchered white pine during Minnesota’s glory days. You’ll meet some of them in Sister Lumberjack.

I began writing and researching Sister Lumberjack in 2018. Sister Lumberjack was slated for publication in 2020, but Covid delayed the process for a year, and then another. When the publisher was finally about to publish it the fall of 2022, the company went out of business, leaving Sister Lumberjack orphaned. It took two more years for it to be released by another publisher. The good news is that I had time for a major revision while seeking a new publisher. Sister Lumberjack is a stronger book because of the delay.

My husband spent forty years working as a forester for the State of Minnesota. He was my go-to for all things lumberjack. I researched the Benedictine health system and its early form of health insurance at monasteries in Minnesota and North Dakota. Solveig, my protagonist, deals with widowhood, being a woman in a man’s world, being a mother to a grown son who breaks promises made to a dying father, and the challenge to start over when you feel too old to do it. I think you’ll enjoy my story and I hope you read it.

Connect with the Author on their Websites and Social media profiles

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Published on July 15, 2024 12:49

July 5, 2024

Reviews of Sister Lumberjack

Thank you, Kay and Jack Kraywinkle, for your review of Sister Lumberjack. You made my day.

 

Both my wife and I recently read Candice Simar’s latest book, Sister Lumberjack, and we both enjoyed it immensely. It was a facinating read and it’s apparent that as a piece of historical fiction she has done her research well. I’m a second generation Scandinavian here in the States, and have been facinated with the early logging history in Minnesota virtually all my life so I know it’s all accurate. She brings a very real and poingnant human element to the characters and makes the reader empathize with their struggles, fears and frustrations as well as their weaknesses. She is a highly skilled story teller and I may read this book again someday.

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Published on July 05, 2024 15:01

April 22, 2024

March 26, 2024

March 19, 2024

Candace Simar Interview On Rendezvous With A Writer

Award-winning author CANDACE SIMAR joins hosts Jim and Bobbi Jean Bell for an engaging conversation about her historical fiction novel SISTER LUMBERJACK. We follow a cast of unforgettable characters in a Minnesota logging camp during the winter of 1893. Obstacles abound. Will they survive the harsh and dangerous winter?

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Published on March 19, 2024 14:30

March 6, 2024

Book Review of Sister Lumberjack by Charlie Johnson

Sister Lumberjack by Candace SimarSISTER LUMBERJACK
By Candace Simar
488 Pages
Published by North Star Press of St. Cloud, MN
ISBN 168201150X

SISTER LUMBERJACK by Candace Simar is one of those books that is unique in every sense of the word. Have you read books about nuns in the Northwoods of Minnesota, or about widows leaving their beloved farm to earn money, or about pencil neck money counters with the sense of fence post, or about winters so desperately nasty that even Siberia would feel tropical?

I would say you haven’t, but in SISTER LUMBERJACK, Candace Simar has given the reader all these notions – and she has presented them in full screen technicolor and stereophonic sound!

Her characters live deeply, live with passion, live with goals in mind – and yet each of them has flaws that wrap their intentions with distortion. The setting of a lumber camp is filled with pine fragrance, soft breezes and torrential rains and snows and sounds of the saws buzzing and the falling trees whomping to the ground as they are hauled away.

SISTER LUMBERJACK has a pace that will keep the reader awake late into the night. Each adventure involves one or more of the three dimensional characters – Solveig the widowed farm wife must deal with earning money, with losing a son (at least metaphorically). The enthusiastic young man Nels finds himself turning to the demon liquor, yet has a work ethic that will not perish. The dear nun, Sister Magdalena, for whom the book is named, brings intense faith in God as she delivers her messages from a convent in Duluth to the ribald men of the logging camps.

Train rides with soot filled cars? Chilled winters with conditions that make blizzards look like a walk in the park in April? Fist fights? Shouting arguments? Deep discussions about faith, about serving others? Despair at the loss of a friend or family member? Its all here, all wrapped by the wonderful writing skills of Candace Simar.

Simar’s track record with her books is impressive – good story telling, good characters, interesting plot lines – SISTER LUMBERJACK just might be at the top of the list of all of this author’s work.

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Published on March 06, 2024 16:05

December 3, 2023

Pencil To Paper: Write Your Way Through Winter Workshop Series

Registration Now OPEN! Pencil to Paper 2024: Write Your Way Through Winter

Just as musicians practice scales to improve their overall performance, so writers study the components of writing craft to create dynamic prose. Join this year’s Pencil to Paper zoom classes to study the writing craft and take your writing to the next level.

Join us for a 6 week zoom class series, Pencil to Paper 2024: Write Your Way Through Winter. Learn “The Nuts and Bolts of the Writing Craft”. Have you dreamed of writing a book, but don’t know where to start? Perhaps you’re a published author who wants to improve your writing skills. Together we will investigate Character Development, Scene and Setting, Dialogue, Story Arc and Structure, Point of View, and ways to maximize your creativity. Instructor Candace Simar.

Link to Register: Pencil to Paper Registration Link

 

 

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Published on December 03, 2023 18:42

November 14, 2023

Sister Lumberjack, Finally!

Sister Lumberjack, finally!

Sister Lumberjack, my soon-to-be-released historical novel, is set in a Minnesota Logging Camp in 1893 at the height of the white pine harvest. The book began as a fleeting thought while writing Abercrombie Trail (North Star Press 2009). Solveig, the indentured servant, became my favorite minor character. In fact, she tried to dominate the whole book and displace Evan Jacobson entirely. That, I could not allow to happen. (You may have noticed that she did not reappear in Pomme de Terre, Birdie, or Blooming Prairie. I was tired of fighting with her.)

But now, in her widowhood, Solveig Rognaldson returns as the star of Sister Lumberjack. She’s a strong character with a mind of her own. There’s no holding her back. I think you’ll love her as much as I do.

Sister Lumberjack is scheduled for release in March of 2024 with North Star Press. Chip Borkenhagen of RiverPlace Press created this beautiful cover. Blue Cottage Agency is working on publicity and a book launch, thanks to a generous (and much appreciated) Five Wings Arts Grant.

I’m thrilled to see it coming together.

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Published on November 14, 2023 15:36

October 5, 2023

Candace Simar To Appear At Morning with Minnesota Authors Event in Wadena, MN – Saturday, November 4th.

I’ll be talking about frontier housewifery, complete with old recipes and remedies. It will be fun! Hope you can come.

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Published on October 05, 2023 14:41

September 8, 2023

The Glory of Ordinary Times (Book Cover)

#Wolfpack Publishing #Frontier Fiction #Minnesota history #Blue Cottage Agency

This note from a Minneapolis reader made my day:

“I just finished your book of short stories, The Glory of Ordinary Time. Well done! Beautifully crafted. I was very impressed with your research—hard times and hard lives. I wanted to know what happened with every character. Thank you.”

 

 

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Published on September 08, 2023 13:30