Thursday, December 12, 2013

The Last Dance, the Last Launch?





Sandy says she might have another book in her but maybe not another launch!  Well that might be a little extreme, what do you think?  

I do have another launch in me.  I'm already in denial about how much work it is.  Kind of like having a baby; you have one and swear you will never do it again.  But then…the baby is so precious!  Ok, so we reserve the right to change our minds.  

We did have fun!  Seeing family, fans and friends is so great.  But more importantly have I mentioned my dress?  Here's a photo, looks like it was made for me right?  Guess what?  It was.  Sandy made this vintage dress from a pattern I bought so we could reflect some of the time period The Last Dance covers.  



Sandy also made another dress.  Kira wore this period style plaid jumper complete with a Peter Pan collar--so darling.   She was one of the greeters at the door of the launch venue welcoming our guests to the 'Pine Crescent  Lodge'.  We're all about setting the mood and the tone of the launch.  Lucas didn't have his outfit custom made for him but he was a little trooper wearing an 'olden days' (as he called it) outfit. 



More important than our clothing is that Sandy got to mingle and thank people for coming on such a frigid day, sign some books, talk about her new book The Last Dance with 
folks and enjoy her day in the sun!  

About the nitty gritty details of the event-- Sandy was fortunate to have 2 great friends help, one from high school.   We want to thank them publically for helping.  Kay, the high school friend helped in the kitchen again.  She is so organized and efficient.  Another good friend Carol also helped for this and the Timber launch in so many ways.  This time though she was recovering from shoulder sugery and still came to support Sandy.  Now that's a friend!  Here are our dear friends Kay and Carol at work:

Carol managing book sales
Kay managing the kitchen AND Lucas!  That's huge.

                                           Here's Sandy and her family and friends:

Sandy with friends and neighbors, Joyce, Debbie and Stew.  First guy on the left is my husband, adored son in law
Saint Charlie.  Seriously Charlie makes it all happen!

Sandy and brother Ron Sanderson

Ooh I almost forgot our young helpers Greta and Soren.  I have a picture of Greta with Kira but no brother Soren!  He is awesome too, what a great young man.
Great helpers Greta and Kira.


Lucas asked me to dance toward the end of the night.  Which seems normal since there was a dance floor.  Except for a few facts.  He's five.  He doesn't really dance.  No one else was dancing!   But I was honored to dance with my grandson and kind of stunned when Lucas yelled "grandma dip me!"

"The Dip"
                                                    

                                   And finally…the last dance with Lucas and grandma Susan.

      




READY TO WRITE

Southwest metro magazine published by Tiger Oak Media recently published an article called "Ready to Write" about Sandy.  After meeting her, author Carolyn Pierson supported the point of view that "it's never too late to fulfill your dreams."  A page right out of Sandy's life.  It's a nice article with some details that you will have never heard before.  

I really appreciated the detail Carolyn gleaned from the interview and how she captured the essence of Sandy's life.   Go check it out!  Here's a link:

http://southwestmetromag.com/author-bio-eden-prairies-al-sandy-sanderson

You can also go to Sandy's website www.alsanderson.com and see the article and other bits of information about her life and books.

We were excited about the timing with the holidays hoping people go to the website www.alsanderson.com and purchase the new book The Last Dance as well as the first Pine Crescent Novel Timber; Fire in the Pines.  TIMBER is available in digital format, The Last Dance is not formatted digitally yet.  Let us know, would you like to read it digitally?  If you'd like to have Sandy sign and dedicate a book to someone she's happy to do that.  Just let her know when you place your order.

Books make a nice gift to someone or to yourself!  Thank you.






http://southwestmetromag.com/author-bio-eden-prairies-al-sandy-sanderson

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Yearning for more?

As most of you know, most authors write about what they know.  A.L. Sanderson, aka Sandy knows her sticky buns!  
Sandy's mother, my grandmother Frieda Sanderson used to make what we simply called "cinnamon rolls".  Yeasty, buttery, sugary and a little gooey.  Yum.  They were the highlight of any of our family food gatherings for decades.

As time went by the "family recipe" evolved into a more caramelly confection now dubbed "sticky buns".  So with that family history established you won't be surprised to read about Martha, a character from "The Last Dance" making them on the farm to thank her new neighbors the Nilsson's.


A Yummy Sticky Bun
On Saturday we'll be making a 'large party' version of our sticky buns for YOU, our fans to thank you for your support!  In case you need a visual incentive, here's one we made recently.  

But in case you can't come to our launch, do the next best thing and read "The Last Dance" and both the sticky buns and the story will have you yearning for more!

You can now purchase "The Last Dance" at our website:
www.alsanderson.com



Monday, December 2, 2013

Journey back with us to a simpler time...

Inside the Historic Preserve Barn Event Room

Franlo Farm
Saturday December 7, 2-4 we'll be gathering in an old hay barn now called the Preserve Barn.  The barn is going to be such a great venue as the book "The Last Dance" we're launching feature family farms in the story.

The Preserve area was originally homesteaded by William Nesbitt in 1891.  Like most of the land in Eden Prairie, the prairie is transformed into farmland.  The Nesbitt family farmed it for three generations.  Ironically the first Pine Crescent novel "Timber; Fire in the Pines" begins about this same time about 2 hours north near the Hinckley area.

The male protagonist Thor Nilsson logged the magnificent white pine timber until The Great Hinckley Fire in 1894.  Four hundred square miles were decimated.  Eventually the fictional Nilsson family begins to farm the charred landscape.

"The Last Dance" story picks up 75 years later and the Nilsson family still farms the land.  But the land proves that the soil its better suited to growing pine trees than crops.  The family begins to sell real estate and develop some of their land into a lodge resort.

We hope you will join us to journey back to a simpler time in "The Last Dance" and to this historic old barn this weekend!

Saturday, November 23, 2013

The Last Dance Launch! The book is coming out soon…be one of our first reviewers.



Please Join us at the Launch!
You may also order a paperback copy of The Last Dance today, let us know if you'd like the book autographed by Sandy.  Be amongst the first readers to write a review on Goodreads.com.

Timber; Fire in the Pines is available in paperback or digital format.  Visit us@ www.alsanderson.com

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Five Days of Free Kindle Version of TIMBER; Fire in the Pines


Right now you can go to Amazon.com and get a free digital download of TIMBER; Fire in the Pines.    Believe me we need the exposure and readership Amazon can offer.  So please do take advantage of the Amazon deal and buy yourself or someone you care for, the digital gift of TIMBER; Fire in the Pines for free.

However, Sandy and I love real brick and mortar hometown bookstores!  The indie bookstore is the life blood of new books and authors.  For future gift buying consider the independent bookstore near you to buy the paperback of TIMBER; Fire in the Pines.  You can also access indie bookstores via the Internet.  These indie bookstores and gift shops are responsible for promoting authors and books with readings and signings at their stores.    We need to keep these small business healthy as well as buying from Amazon and other mega sites.

In Minnesota here are additional stores you'll find TIMBER; Fire in the Pines:

Scout and Morgan-Cambridge, MN
Reading Frenzy- Zimmerman, Elk River, MN
Tobies- Hinckley, MN
Fitgers Bookstore-Duluth, MN
Bergquist's-Cloquet, MN
Thrifty White, Princeton, Virginia MN
Wildflower, North Branch, MN
Grand Casino, Hinckley, MN
Common Ground, St. Paul, MN
Turtle Town Books, Nisswa, MN
Book World, Baxter, MN
Cheri's Flower Basket, Sandstone, MN
Excelsior Bay Books, Excelsior, MN

Thanks to all our readers!


International Review for TIMBER!

The beautiful village of Teplice

Marketa and friend Judith from DeLasalle High School in Minneapolis 


We're pleased to report that we have a reader Marketa from the Czech Republic!  A friend sent her TIMBER; Fire in the Pines to read and she wrote this review:


TIMBER; Fire in the Pines by A.L.Sanderson

It was a pleasure to read a book concerning the history of Minnesota. I like when I know the area where the story takes place. Living in a lumber camp must have been hard for men, so it was a sign of great courage and determination of Sarah to work there, in disguise. In real life she could probably not have gone so long without revealing her true self, but the plot is plausible. I was quite absorbed in reading TIMBER and I would like to recommend it to not only all interested in Minnesota history, but also to people loving a little bit of romance.

Markéta Strašrybková,
Teplice, the Czech Republic



Friday, October 18, 2013

Book Fair Success

                             A.L. (Sandy) Sanderson at TCBF signing copies of                                       TIMBER; Fire in the Pines   
The book fair was great!  Loads of book lovers were anxious to discuss books with authors.  I met some interesting people and was glad to see some author's we know there as well.

In fact I just finished Murder at Spirit Falls written by Barbara Deese and Dorothy Olson, and it was a good read.  Both authors have had interesting and unusual work experience.  In this fictional novel they write about how their book club "No Ordinary Women"  help solve a murder.  I was actually in this book club for a few months and helped them pick their club name!   Her follow up book "Spirited Away" is a solo effort and just came out.  I will read that one next.  I really like the design of her book covers and how they tie together with each other. 

We had hourly drawings for digital copies of TIMBER and a grand prize of  a canvas TIMBER themed bag filled with loads of Minnesota products.  Congrats to our winners and thank you to all who stopped to visit us.


Saturday, October 5, 2013

Free Event: Come and visit us at our table!

A. L. Sanderson author of 

TIMBER; Fire in the Pines

Learn more about our upcoming release!

Enter our free drawing

 TWIN CITIES BOOK FESTIVAL

Saturday, October 12, 2013
10:00 am to 5:00 pm at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds

BOOK FAIR

Progress Center, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm

An all-day exhibit of publishers, magazines, literary organizations, local authors, booksellers, and more! Check back for a complete listing of exhibitors and exhibitor specials. 

 

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Eden Prairie Senior Center Book Club #2

Sandy and I visited the other Eden Prairie senior center book club on September 11.  It was a lively group of women and we had a good time chatting with them.  We're on their 2014 calendar to read.

This has been a wild summer for us.  Two of our grandchildren stayed with us all summer!  It was fun but challenging at times since they were out of their element and missing their mom part of that time.  But good news, my daughter moved back to Minnesota with them so now I get to see them lots! 

This senior center also has a "let's go fishing" program  to teach kids to fish.   Kira participated in the program this summer and had a fantastic time. The people guiding the kids were super great.



Kira and Lucas

Hinckley Ribfest!

The first week of September brought us to Hinckley, MN for their annual Ribfest.  It's a nice event and we had another beautiful day for it.  As you may know, our novel TIMBER; Fire in the Pines, takes place in a fictional town near Hinckley.  The story culminates with the fire.  We shared a space with three other authors and had a wonderful time talking with them and while trying to kill the bees that were buzzing around our tent!

Karlajean Jirik Becvar, who is also a teacher has written two young adult books in her Firestorm Chronicles series.  Book one is titled "The Seeing Stone" and book two is "The Secrets of the Stone."  They're about a young girl who goes back in time to the Great Hinckley Fire.  I have them both on my reading list!  I gave them to my granddaughter who is now eleven to read first.

Jeanette Lukowski wrote "Heart Scars: A Memoir of Parenting a Teen Runaway."  It's a poignant story about her daughter and how her life changed after she met a man on the Internet.   Tough, but important stuff.

Lastly, lest you be thinking it was just the girls....
Authors from left to right: Karlajean, Sandy, Dale and Jeanette
D.A. (Dale) Swanson joined our group with a historical novel called "The Thirty-Ninth Man:  A Novel of the 1862 Uprising."
  He's got a lot of knowledge to share on the subject of this Native American tragedy from our past which is fascinating to learn about.  I'm looking forward to reading this one too!

Looking ahead to more road trips, meeting new friends and adventures with TIMBER.  If you read it, like us on Facebook and write a review on Goodreads or another book lover site for us.  Thank you!

"It's too nice to be inside!"

Excelsior Bay Books


On August 17, we paired up for a book signing with our favorite mystery writing authors Mary Donlon and Marilyn Rausch.  (Previously I mentioned they just released their second book called "Love Can Be Murder".We went out to the quaint little store --which is in the quaint little town of Excelsior Bay on a bright, sunny dayThey have a nice children's area and a cozy place to sign and look at books.   They also carry this handmade pottery I love! 

Frankly it wasn't a big book signing day by the lake on a perfect summer afternoon but it was fun being in Excelsior and at this indie bookstore which is filled to the brim with lots of good books.  In this business of selling books, we have become accustomed to not selling a lot of books during book signings.  But it helps build exposure for TIMBER and Sandy's upcoming book in the final editing stage. 

Fall is upon us which is a lovely time to curl up with a good....lumberjack!  If you're in a book club, we are filling our calendar with dates to go and discuss the book with people.  Please let us know if you'd like Sandy to visit!

TIMBER and the TALL SHIPS in Duluth


 A picture's worth a thousand words, right?  Well this mermaid in a tree was discovered at an artist's farm on our road trip to Duluth.  My niece Grace and granddaughter Kira came along to their grandma Sandy's book signing in Duluth at Ftigers.  





 Kira and Grace at the Tall Ships Event in Duluth in July 2013.  We decided to combine our signing with some fun during this event.  Wow, they are so cool! 

The day before the event Kira and Grace helped hand out bookmarks to promote the book signing at Fitgers.  For those of you who have read TIMBER, the prolog opens with Thor sailing from Sweden to the United States in a ship very much like the ones displayed during the Tall Ships event.
Lumber "Jill"  Kira!
Kira had fun dressing up in a "lumber Jill" costume and chatting with anyone who would listen.  What a great little speaker she is!  "Hi my name is Kira and my grandma Sandy wrote a book called TIMBER and it's really good but I can't read it because I'm only 10."
Grace and Sandy at Fitgers
Kira during her break

                                                                                                                                                                               
Kira's Announcement "My Grandma Sandy wrote a book called TIMBER....."
We had a great time at Fitgers, I love their bookstore.  The staff is so accomodating, stop and visit some time.  Book signings are a delightful way to engage with our readers. 



Monday, July 22, 2013

North Branch Library Book Signing/Discussion July 20, 2013

Thank you Friends of the North Branch Library for inviting us to your event on Saturday!  We shared TIMBER with the audience and appreciated the questions and comments.  Another author, Bud Hoekstra was also sharing his book The Life and Times of a Railroad Engineer.  Sounds like a good read for those interested in hearing stories about working on the railroad.  Trains are a huge part of our country's history.  The Friends felt having our book paired with a book about trains would be an interesting and appropriate pairing because of the role the train played in saving lives in The Great Hinckley Fire. 

Not only are there lots of interesting stories to read, there also seems to be some brave and heroic folks that have worked for the railroads.  In the case of the Great Hinckley Fire, several engineers including James Root and William Best performed strategically and bravely to save hundreds from the fire storm.  Depot agent Thomas Dunn lost his life heroically transmitting the catastrophe.  Porter John Blair repeatedly went to collect and save many children from the fire ignoring the danger to himself.  There are many wonderful survivor and hero stories I will strive to share in future posts.  Many of the people we meet at book events tell us they had relatives who survived--amazing.  We're coming up to the anniversary of the fire September 1, 1894.


Thursday, July 25 we're in Duluth for a book signing at The Bookstore at Fitgers.  Stop and see us if you're able; we're excited to be there!

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

June 22, 2013 Dorset's Festival of Authors and Artists

Sandy was invited to participate in this annual event to promote her debut novel TIMBER; Fire in the Pines.  It's the eighth year of this fun event where writers gather to meet with store patrons to discuss and sell their books.  We were pleased to be part of this unique event along with about 30 other authors including William Kent Krueger, Lorna Landvig and author friends Mary Donlon and Marilyn Rausch who just released their new book "Love can be Murder."  
                                                        
 Sally Wizik Wills and A.L. (Sandy) Sanderson

Sister Wolf is a seasonal bookstore open for the summer tourist season near the Park Rapids area of Minnesota.  Sally Wizik Wills is the owner of this cool little gem of a store.  In an article I read about this interesting lady, she states "I'm a reader.  Either you're a reader or you aren't.  I are."  Hurray for indie bookstores and hardworking booksellers!  Sally also owns Beagle Books and Bindery in Park Rapids.
  Dorset Store: Cabin built circa 1890's by a Swedish Lumberjack

Our recent trip to Dorset included a visit to this quaint little Stained Glass store.  The lady that owns it is a talented artist who creates beautiful stained glass; Sandy bought a lovely piece there.  Turns out this little cabin was built by a Swede back in the late 1800's who was also a lumberjack!  Talk about coincidence.  New book idea...Shades of Thor!

                                           Shades of Weird!

Parked outside a Dorset restaurant, this dead animal adorns a motorcycle.  Another interesting and weird tidbit--the mayor of Dorset is 4 years old.

July 13, 2013 Mooselake Art in the Park

Art in the Park in Mooselake, MN during their Agate Days is a BIG deal!  There were tons of people strolling along; we didn't have a gorgeous day but we had a mostly dry day and for that we were grateful!  Sandy had a great time meeting folks and signing books.  I believe we were the only authors there!  Maybe we started a new tradition.

Mary Donlon and Marilyn Rausch were sharing our booth and being with them was a lot of fun as well.  They just released their new book "Love Can Be Murder" and did well selling it and the first book "Headaches Can Be Murder" as a set.  

Our readers often ask when Sandy's next book will be released.  We are into our second printing of TIMBER and hope to release the second book late this year or early next year.

We also did a free drawing for a hand crocheted (by Sandy) afghanSandy Morgan won the drawing.  We did a drawing once before because it goes with our marketing theme:

                    Curl Up With A Good....Lumberjack!

Our next event is tomorrow at the Eden Prairie Senior Center's Thursday Book Club.  I've met some of the members--all men!  Surprisingly (maybe) older gentlemen are amongst our biggest fans!  On Saturday July 20, we're off to North Branch Library for a reading and discussion.  Next week we're in Duluth July 25 with the Tall Ships!  Good tie in with TIMBER, the prologue begins with Thor's ship voyage.  August is looking busy as well, August 10 we're in Sandstone at Cheri's Flower Basket during Quarry Days!  August 17 we pair up again with our favorite team of author's Donlon and Rausch at Excelsior Bay Books.  Please come and see us if you're in the area!

TIMBER at Turtle Town Books July 6, 2013


From Lake Country Echo and Pine County Journal 7/1/2013:

By Mary Miller, Owner of Turtle Town Books and Gifts

Eden Prairie author to sign books at Turtle Town
When I got a call from a local author’s representative this winter, I wasn’t entirely enthusiastic. Every year I get several requests to read a particular book, and not all the stories are compelling. “I’ll give it two chapters,” I said. “If I’m not hooked, I’m putting it down.”

“Timber,” it turns out, is a compelling read. It is the story of Sarah Stewart, betrayed and suddenly penniless, who leaves Boston to search for her father, who abandoned her mother before her birth.  Her journey takes her to Minnesota’s timber country in 1893. In order to continue her search, Sarah needs money, but the only jobs available to women are as wives or as disreputable saloon girls.

Disguised as a boy, she hires on as a cook’s helper at a lumber camp run by the handsome Swede, Thor. Although the story line seems unlikely, Sanderson makes it work.  At one point in the story I thought the book was going to turn into a predictable romance. Not so. This historical fiction gives readers a look into the colorful life of a Minnesota logging camp and the fully fleshed-out characters who make life interesting. Sarah is a likable character, gutsy and hardworking, and the plot is unpredictable.

Finally, it is the Great Hinckley Fire of 1894 that decides so many fates.
Sanderson is a retired attorney living in Eden Prairie. She will be at Turtle Town Books & Gifts in Nisswa on Saturday, July 6, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. to sign copies of her book, available in paperback.

Sandy had a great time signing copies of TIMBER at Mary and Doug Miller's lovely store on Main Street in Nisswa, MN on July 6.  They were busy and fortunately the day was a bit overcast so lots of people were in town giving the fish a much needed respite.  

We met a bunch of friendly folks, several of whom were excited to bring the book to their book club to read!  We are looking forward to fall when groups start meeting again.  Please contact us if you'd like Sandy to visit your club.

Sandy and I appreciate Mary writing such a glowing review on TIMBER; Fire in the Pines!  I especially like the fact that she thinks the plot is unpredictable.  It's true!   I realized she was referring to me "the author's representative" after reading the first sentence.  

It's true Mary wasn't thrilled about carrying the book last winter.  Finally after about 3 months (of my polite stalking) she agreed to read two chapters and put it down if she didn't love it.  I said "I'll take it!"  Because I knew the story would hook her.  It was the ultimate compliment that not only did she begin carrying the book she reserved one of her busiest days of the summer for us to sign books on.

My daughter Andrea and best friend Sarah from Phoenix were also in attendance so it made it that much more special to be in Nisswa together.  The kids are proud of their grandma Sandy the author!

            Andrea posted this on Facebook, it's a copy of the book review.
 



Monday, July 15, 2013

July 2013 Team TIMBER!!

Sandy and I have taken most of June off.  We've been attending graduations, visiting with grown kids and grandkids and lots of gardening.  We rented a cabin on Sand Lake in Mooselake which was beautiful!  We enjoyed food, family, fishing and great times together.  The weather was pretty darn nice too!

The cabin itself was super cute, kind of shabby chic with an "up north" twist.  We went out on the pontoon lots because in addition to swimming and fishing off it we watched for Bald Eagles and Loons.  No our state bird is not the mosquito, it's the LOON.  We should have purchased stock in a bug repellent spray company because we used a ton of it.
                                               
TEAM ARTISTS Grace and Kira

We surprised Sandy with everyone in our group wearing a "Team Timber" T shirt and presented her with her own "Team TIMBER" T shirt.  There were 3 teams participating: Cook Shack, Pine Crescent and Indian Camp.  The designs were created and hand painted by myself, Kira (age 10) and Grace (age 20).
This was a fun project for us to do. For those of you who don't get the significance of the team names I can only recommend you read TIMBER!!!  

Because of all our gallivanting around the state my blog posts will be published out of chronological order.  Please bear with me because I've got some good stuff to share about our events and marketing/publicity efforts for TIMBER!

I hope all of you are enjoying the summer as well!  Upcoming events for TIMBER:

  • Eden Prairie Senior Center Book Club, 7/18 
  • North Branch Library, sponsored by the North Branch Friends of the Library 7/20
  • Fitgers Bookstore, Duluth 7/25
  • Cheri's Flowers and Gifts, Sandstone 8/10
  • Excelsior Bay Books, Excelsior 8/17

Thursday, May 23, 2013

NEMBA Wannabe




Tonight Sandy and I went to the NEMBA 25th annual event in Duluth, MN.  I wanted to buy like 25 books.  I bought 3 books so I did pretty well.  But now so many are on my list to buy or borrow from the library.  I need to add many of these books to my Goodreads "to be read list" Eden Prairie friend and author Mary Donlin and her co-author Marilyn Rausch were nominated in the fiction category for their fun mystery novel Headaches Can Be Murder.  They are also  introducing a sequel this summer called Love Can Be Murder.

It's quite an honor to be nominated but unfortunately they didn't win.  The winning authors in the fiction category were Peter Geye's The Lighthouse Road and Danielle Sosin's The Long Shining Waters.  I want to read both books.  The criteria for the award is that the book must be written in specific counties of northeastern Minnesota and that the story/content reflects the history, heritage,culture or landscape of the area.

So...you  guessed it!  TIMBER will be submitted for the books published in 2013.  We don't know if we'll be nominated until long after submission.  Tonight we had a special treat because Kevin Kling was the speaker before the award presentation.  Wow, what a funny, wise man.  People were mesmerized, taking notes about what he said.  He's got a new book out too, I haven't read him yet but I want to now!  

Met a high school classmate of my husband's, Sheila O'Connor.  She's written two great books which I bought and will give as gifts to my family.  The one nominated this year in the children's category is called Keeping Safe The Stars and another written earlier is called Sparrow Road I can't wait to read them first before I wrap them up.   Shhh!

Did I mention there was pie and desserts at the event tonight?  What more could I want!  Lemon angel and rhubarb crisp, two old fashioned favorites. Yum.  So we strolled around (listening to a harpist playing) to talk to authors and see their books nominated this year and others they have written, it's incredible how many great books there are from Minnesota alone.  We would feel privileged to be nominated for TIMBER next year.

We'll be returning to Duluth for the reading at Fitger's bookstore on July 25 during the Tall Ships week.  We're very excited!  Make sure you stop at some of these stores in your summer travels.  Support independent bookstores!  We need to keep them alive so great books are given a chance and not just the big power house books. 

Coming events for July/Aug after our June hiatus:  
July 6:  Nisswa book signing at the Turtle Town Rainy Day bookstore 11-2
July 13: Mooselake's Art in the Park 9-5
July 20: North Branch Friends of the Library book reading 11-1
July 25: Reading @ Fitgers in Duluth 12-2
Aug 10: Book reading in Sandstone @Cheri's Flower Basket during their summer celebration/parade. 9:30-11:30

Remember, you can buy a paperback or ebook of TIMBER on Sandy's website www.alsanderson.com or the paperback only at any of the independent stores I've mentioned and on Amazon.com.  Happy Summer Reading!

PS Forgive the poor quality pictures, everything was better looking in real life.

 

Friday, May 17, 2013

Book Signing Event May 18, 2013

 
A.L. “Sandy” Sanderson (Submitted photo)

Book Signing Event:
May 18 11:00-1:00
Scout & Morgan Books
Cambridge, MN 
For more information call: 763-689-2474
Stop in and see us tomorrow May 18, this is such a wonderful independent bookstore!  The owner is a delight and we're fortunate to be a guest in her store. 

Eden Prairie resident A.L. “Sandy” Sanderson really doesn’t follow the “natural order of things.” So when she published her first book at the age of 77, she thought it was perfectly fitting.

“Timber” is set in the white pine forests of north central Minnesota in the late 1800s. Amid the rough conditions of a lumber camp in the timbered wilderness of that period, a compelling and complex relationship develops between the two unlikely protagonists and culminates in the tragic Great Hinckley Fire of 1894.

“It’s a story about survival in an environment without safety nets,” Sanderson said. “Adversity is prevalent as the main characters Sarah Stewart and Thor Nillson succeed against long odds as they conquer their past demons while forging a relationship and future together.”

“Timber” has personal connections to Sanderson’s family.
“Both my mother and father’s families were first-generation immigrants,” Sanderson said. “My paternal grandparents came to this part of the state from Sweden, and I lived on farms near Ogilvie and Hinckley for several years as a child. My maternal grandparents came from what today is eastern Germany and Russia. As an adult I owned a home in Aitkin and a summer cabin in Pine City.

“I not only feel connected to the area geographically and historically, but also emotionally. I am fascinated by what it must have been like to leave family, friends and homeland to come to a strange new country where you couldn’t even speak the language, knowing you would probably never go home again. It takes a kind of bravery that I’m not sure I would have had,” she added.
 
As Sanderson learned more about the Hinckley Fire, she felt compelled write a book.
“I think having grandparents new to this country, who also lived with uncertainty and hope, helped me create the characters in ‘Timber,’” Sanderson said. “As I learned more about the tragedy of the Hinckley Fire — it was such an intense historical event — that it called both to me and to the characters hiding in my imagination, waiting to spring to life on the pages of a book.”

Sanderson said she has never followed the “natural order of things.”  “I married young and raised four children. I didn’t graduate from high school, so when my children were grown I decided to go back to school,” Sanderson said. “I got my GED in my late 30s, a BA in psychology from Macalester College when I was 43, and a JD from the University of Minnesota Law School when I was 51. A first novel at age 77 seems rather odd to people, but I was 51 when I graduated from law school, so acting outside of the box isn’t a new thing for me. I tend not to follow the natural order of things. But as has been true with other things I’ve done either too early or too late, things have had a way of working out.”

Three years ago Sanderson’s husband passed away, and her daughter, Susan Bissonette, invited her to live with her and her husband in Eden Prairie. Bissonette serves as Sanderson’s publicist.

“My mom has been a great support to me, and we’ve always done projects together,” Bissonette said. “My husband calls us Thelma and Louise or Lucy and Ethel, depending on our antics and adventures. Living together is an adjustment when one is used to being completely independent — but it has worked out for us. We’re quite different in temperament and in our approach to life. She’s much more quiet and reserved. I’m more gregarious and like to have people around more of the time, and she likes to spend time alone with her keyboard. Also, I’m more of a risk taker and she’s more deliberate.”
Sanderson has always enjoyed writing and playing with words and writing poems.

“Our farm outside of Ogilvie had a huge kitchen,” Sanderson said. “Before my mom put up new wallpaper she let me write poems all over the walls. Looking back I realize how unusual it was for my practical, work-worn mother to have allowed me to do something so frivolous. I’d like to say my writing is artsy and literary, but to be perfectly honest, I never seriously intended to become a published author.

“I began writing a novel because it seemed like a challenge, and the process kind of took hold of me. The stories came alive and my characters woke me up at night doing things I had no idea they would ever do. I kept writing without really thinking about ‘style.’ I just wrote the story,” she added.

Sanderson  writes about things she can relate to.  “Anyone who is fortunate enough to reach their 70s and beyond has experienced life in a way that not every young person today can relate to,” Sanderson said. “We lived in a world without television, without cellphones, without central heating and perhaps even without indoor plumbing. Few of us were coddled or pampered, and most of us learned early on that we had to make our own beds — both literally and figuratively. My characters are tough, gritty and determined because those are the things I can relate to.”
 
Sanderson’s next novel, “The Last Dance,” follows much of her own history in terms of where she’s lived, visited, loved and hated. The story takes place between 1940 and the 1970s.  Sanderson said the story and the two main protagonists are fictional and have nothing to do with her actual life. “The Last Dance,” will be published in the fall of 2013.
Scout & Morgan Books is located at 114 Buchanan St. N., Cambridge, and can be reached at 763-689-2474. For more information on Sanderson, visit www.alsandysanderson.com.
Contact Rachel Kytonen at rachel.kytonen@ecm-inc.com.