
-
- The Story Behind "Good
Hope Road"
Good Hope Road was inspired in part by the events of September 11th,
2001, and in part by a devastating tornado in central Oklahoma.
I began writing Good Hope Road long before September 11th. The book
was originally inspired by a devastating tornado that swept through
Oklahoma City the day after I had been there speaking at a conference
and visiting friends. When I saw coverage of the tornado on the
news, I kept thinking, "Dear God, we were just there." My husband and I started trying to call friends and loved ones,
but the phone lines were down.
As we watched the TV coverage,
trying to discern which areas had been hit, the stories about the community
banding together gave us a sense of hope. There were so many powerful
images, but one in particular stayed with me-that of a girl pulling
photographs from the debris near a rural home and saying she didn't
know who they belonged to, that they might have been carried from miles
away, but she knew someone wanted them back. It was probably only a
minute or two of news footage, but it haunted me. Inspired by that image,
I began writing Jenilee's story.
By September 11th, the manuscript
was completed, and I was about to begin revisions. That September morning,
the book took on a completely new meaning for me. In the wake of those
horrible events, during those few days when we didn't know what might
happen next, I needed to believe that the human spirit, that a community
of people, could overcome even the worst tragedy. I wanted to create
a book that would celebrate the best in human nature and the ability
of good to triumph over destructive forces.
Like the people of Oklahoma
City and New York City, the people of Poetry rise to the occasion when
challenged. I hope that their triumph will leave readers feeling uplifted.
It is always my intention, my desire to write stories in which characters
grow to a fuller understanding of their world, themselves, and their
spirituality. I like stories that end happily, and even though happy
endings are sometimes criticized as being "pat" or unrealistic,
that is where my heart goes as a writer, as a reader, and as a human
being. I want to believe that all things are possible, in writing and
in life.
Reader Group Questions
Click on the book to read the first chapter of Good Hope Road