With over a dozen novels
under her pen, K.A. Tucker recently
added a new novel, Chasing River: A Novel (The Burying Water Series), to her Burying Water
series.
I caught up with K.A. just
before its release to chase down some answers about her fascination with
Ireland, the depth of her characters, and her dream automobile.
HH: Your passion for Ireland is palpable in
Chasing River: A Novel; what is your connection to it?
KA: I dreamed of visiting Ireland
long before I ever set foot there. I have Irish roots (as so many people do, it
seems.) I finally made the trip last summer and, though I was there for less
than a week, I fell in love with the people, the culture, and the countryside.
I plan on visiting again, and braving the “wrong side of the road” driving in
order to see the rest of the countryside.
HH: Amber’s character is complex in a
common theme—torn between striving for independence and living up to her
father’s standards; was it a conscious choice to downplay the role of her
mother?
KA: I don’t know that it’s so
much about downplaying the role of her mother as it is that Gabe Welles has
always been such a strong and authoritative figure in his children’s lives. We first
see this in Burying Water, with the situation that Amber’s brother, Jesse,
finds himself in. Gabe Welles is the sheriff, after all. It felt only natural
that it would be Sheriff Welles who would come running to Amber’s rescue in
Ireland, just as he did for his son. Plus, Amber is still very much daddy’s little
girl.
HH: Chasing River: A Novel has so many layers—love, friendship, family—and yet the landscape
around these relationships is painted with great historic detail; how much
research did it take versus innate knowledge?
KA: Before beginning this
book, I spent weeks delving into both Ireland’s history and its current
political situation. I knew that I wanted to weave the IRA into the story, but
I didn’t have a good grasp of what that would entail. So I began digging… and
digging… and digging… and so many dots in my knowledge base began
connecting—the religious strife between Protestant and Catholic, the political
strife between England and Ireland, the mass exodus of Irish to North America.
Ireland has a rich history (much richer than I anticipated) and having a handle
on it made spinning an authentic story much easier.
HH: What is your dream automobile?
HH: With over a dozen and counting novels
under your pen, which character was the hardest to create?
KA: I struggled with both
main characters in Surviving Ice: A Novel (Ivy and Sebastian), because they’re quite similar to each other.
Ivy is not necessarily “likeable” as far as suspenseful romance characters go,
and going out of my way to make her softer didn’t feel like the right thing to
do. Her character does grow and change, but it’s done in a more subtle way. I
hope readers see and appreciate that.
Click here to read my NewYork Journal of Books review for Chasing River.
Thank you, K.A.!
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