Anne: I love interviewing Kathi Macias--maybe because I just love this beautiful Christian lady! She's a woman who puts her faith and her passion for issues into print so that you understand why this is something God also cares deeply about. Although Last Chance for Justice [see review HERE]isn't an issue-driven novel, there are a few peeking out from between the pages. I always want to know first off, Kathi--What made you write Last Chance?
Kathi: It was a thought that had been rolling around in my brain for a while, but I wasn’t quite sure what to do with it until my agent, Tamela Hancock Murray, asked if I’d like to be part of the proposal for a multi-author fiction series about a little town named Bloomfield. My idea about this story fit perfectly, so I jumped onboard. The rest, as they say, is history.
Anne: This book isn't in your usual issue-driven style--why is that?
Kathi: For the very reason I wrote in the answer to the previous question. Because it was so different I had no idea what to do with it myself until Tamela invited me to be part of the Bloomfield Bunch. It was a definite deviation from my usual more serious fare, but a lot of fun to write.
Anne: I know you write fast, but maybe the readers don't. How long did it take to write, edit, and publish this one?
Kathi: I wrote and edited it in just under three months. Then it was slightly over a year from the time I turned it in until it released.
Anne: The character around whom the novel revolves has such an unusual name. Why did his fictional parents name him Last Chance?
Kathi: Last Chance Justice was born into a family of about a gazillion girls and no boys. The parents were getting older, and Mrs. Justice was sure her late-in-life baby would be a boy, her “last chance” at having a son. She made that point so strongly before he was born that the name somehow stuck.
Anne: I love the name of the "high-scale" restaurant there in Bloomfield--Fancy-Schmancy--tell us the story of how you chose THAT name.
Kathi: I love that too. It sounds like something my dad would have called a real “upscale” place. However, I can’t take credit for it. One of the authors who wrote a Bloomfield book before me (I believe it was Gail Sattler, but it could have been Debby Mayne) came up with it. I just adopted it into my story.
Anne: Did you travel to Bloomfield to do your research? Or is this a fictional place?
Kathi: Bloomfield is fictional. That’s why we [the authors] never name an actual state. It’s sort of a heartland “anywhere/everywhere USA” location, where nearly everyone can feel at home.
Anne: And finally--Would you like to tell us about your next release?
Kathi: My next release is The Doctor’s Christmas Quilt, book two of the Quilt Series from New Hope Publishers. It releases in September 2013, and is a modern-day story that revolves around the pro-life issue, told against the backdrop of the life of Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman doctor in America.
Anne: I can't wait. You can bet I'll be lining up to buy it! Thanks for coming by today, and God bless!
Thanks, Anne, for the chance to chat with your readers once again. Blessings!
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