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The Story Behind the Book - Queen of Broken Hearts
I suspect that every book has a story behind it;
certainly all my novels do. The way this book came about
took me by surprise. After I finished touring for The
Same Sweet Girls, I began imagining characters,
situations and plot ideas for my next novel, thinking
I’d begin a story that had been brewing in my mind,
having to do with the changing landscape of the South.
I was distracted, however, by a family situation that
was becoming more and more alarming. My youngest sister
was having marital difficulties, and I urged her to call
me anytime, day or night, when she needed to talk. I’m
the oldest in a family of three girls, and we are
unusually close. I was twelve when my youngest sister,
Nancy Jane, was born, and I lugged her around and
spoiled her as though she were a beloved doll, come to
life. When I entered my teens, my girlfriends and I kept
it up, once teaching Nancy Jane, age four, to “read”
Shakespeare. We told everyone she was a prodigy as she
faked it, jabbering away in what sounded like
Elizabethan English as her pudgy little finger moved
down the page. Few of our classmates, who were mostly
farm kids, knew Shakespeare, so they were easily
impressed.
From the beginning, Nancy had seemed like a special
blessing to the family because of the trauma of her
premature birth, when we were told that our mother’s
life was in danger and there was very little hope of the
baby’s survival. Nancy not only survived but grew into a
beautiful, smart, and spunky young woman. When she
married a man the family adored, and after years of
fertility difficulties, had a son, I couldn’t have been
happier. During the following years, their close-knit
family of three seemed idyllic, and Nancy and I grew
even closer. But as I began the process of plotting my
fourth novel, my sister’s happy home fell apart. During
the agonizing months leading up to her divorce, I had to
remind both myself and Nancy that she was a survivor
because at times, I didn’t think she would.
At this point, my novel took on a new direction. Out of
the helplessness I felt when confronted with my sister’s
pain , I decided to write about the havoc and heartbreak
caused by divorce. I envisioned a story other than the
tried-and-true “By overcoming many obstacles,
newly-divorced heroine finds herself,” but I was at a
loss to come up with one.
Then life brought me a serendipitous happening: At an
author luncheon in Atlanta, I signed a book for a
lovely, dynamic woman who told me she had founded an
organization which conducted support groups and recovery
retreats for separated or divorced women. “Don’t leave,”
I told her. “I want to send my sister to one your
retreats.” At the time, I was simply seeking help for my
sister, but driving home from the luncheon it hit me—I
had found my novel.. The main character would be a
woman, a therapist, who has dedicated herself to helping
others survive the trauma of divorce. What a life she
would lead, dealing daily with the tragedy of broken
homes and broken lives! What a strong character she
would have to be, especially if a situation arose where
she struggled to help someone she loved, a friend or
family member, and how intriguing it would be to explore
her inner struggle. But even more so, what if this same
character had her own demons, her own unresolved
heartbreak? Given all that, she would surely be seen as
the Queen of Broken Hearts. I could barely wait to get
home to my writing desk, and try to make such a woman
come to life. But first I placed a call to Nancy Jane :
“You are going to a divorce recovery retreat, and I’m
going with you to do research.” Research for what, she
responded with a trace of alarm in her voice, and I
said, “Fasten your seat belt, baby sister. You’re about
to become a character in my next book!”
-- Cassandra King
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