any second chance

The Stories We Share

The Gaithersburg Book Festival reminded me why I write. The next day, Zain Asher’s book discussion reminded me why I read.

Many writers are introverts. I am no exception. However, as much as I treasure my quiet time to read and write, some events in the bookish community are just too exciting to pass up. Last weekend, I was lucky enough to attend two back to back! After Saturday’s Gaithersburg Book Festival and Sunday’s book discussion with Zain Asher, I’ve never felt more fulfilled as a writer and a reader.

These are strong words for a woman who would happily make like Thoreau and hole up at Walden for years on end. But, as I was reminded this weekend, I don’t write or read to escape community. We share stories to engage with each other, to find out who we are and how we can lift each other up.

This is what I was thinking as I loaded up the trunk of my car in preparation for the Gaithersburg Book Festival. My goal as an exhibiting author isn’t necessarily to sell books—although I’m grateful that I did fairly well on that end. My primary goal is to build relationships. I hope to leave book festivals with the names of other local authors who want to collaborate and local readers who want to stay in touch.

Since Gaithersburg was my first in-person book festival since the release of Any Second Chance, I was finally able to share an activity that’s been on my mind since I began drafting the Time Wrecker Trilogy. I invited readers to join me in folding 1,000 origami cranes.

In Any Second Chance, Mara takes on this project herself in an effort to heal and, at the same time, reclaim her identity. Although Mara looks very much like her Japanese-American mother, she knows almost nothing about this part of her heritage. What Mara does know is primarily learned from books and movies, not from her family.

Although Mara’s particular circumstances and her need for healing is a work of fiction, the tradition of senbazuru (folding a thousand paper cranes) is very real. The Children’s Peace Monument in Hiroshima, Japan welcomes people from around the world to fold and donate cranes to demonstrate a wish for peace. I have set the goal to fold a thousand cranes to donate. As many do (including Mara in my book), I discovered early on that folding so many cranes requires dedication, persistence, and a bit of help along the way. I was so happy to finally experience this first hand at the Gaithersburg Book Festival.

IIt was really exciting to see how many passers-by stopped to fold a crane with me at the festival. Taking on this project gave us a chance to connect and, while we folded, many people shared their own stories. Instead of just talking about my books and trying to make a sale, I got the chance to talk about Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coe and the real Sadako Sasaki, who is represented by a statue on the top of the Peace Monument. I spoke to some people who had visited Hiroshima themselves and some who had never folded origami but always wanted to learn. I met people who wanted to share their experiences looking for books with characters who looked like them and about uncovering their own forgotten stories from family history.

Connections like this are exactly why I became a writer and why I write the stories I do. This is an activity I look forward to doing again at future book festivals, since folding a thousand cranes will be a long-running project!

Normally, an in-person event like the Gaithersburg Book Festival would be enough to tire this introvert out for, oh, a month or two. However, Jill from Happy Women Dinners reached out to me weeks ago to ask if I’d be interested in attending a brunch with Zain Asher to discuss her new memoir, Where the Children Take Us. Forget that the brunch was the very next day after the book festival—there was no way I was going to miss an opportunity like this! I pre-ordered Where the Children Take Us and—I’m not even kidding—when it arrived in the mail, I ripped open the package and read sixteen pages before I realized I was still standing in the doorway!

If the Gaithersburg Book Festival reminded me why I write, then the book discussion with Zain Asher reminded me why I read. Zain is as lovely and genuinely uplifting in person as she is in her memoir. The discussion began with a lovely reading from the first pages of her memoir. I have never lived in the places Zain describes in her memoir—everywhere from a village in Nigeria to a house in South London, from a private all-girls’ school to the CNN studio. I haven’t experienced many of the topics she explores, either. But the stories she shared tapped into the truths that we all hold just under the surface—the way we grieve and fear rejection, the way we hope for our future and draw strength from our families. The fact that we all experience ndi eji amatu, a phrase Zain translated as loosely meaning, “those who set the standard” or uplift those around them.

As the women around the room chatted over brunch and asked Zain questions about her memoir, I was struck by how her book had resonated with each of us. Because Zain shared her family’s story, we were able to share pieces of our own lives with each other. I never would have imagined the life stories that we all carried into that room. That’s why we read, isn’t it? To enter a world of someone else’s experience or creation, only to discover that we have a home there, too. It was an incredible thing to be in this community of readers. We had all entered Zain’s story and left it more connected to ourselves and each other.

Books are so often written alone, read alone, even pondered and reflected on alone. But when readers come together at a book festival or a book discussion, the stories we share draw us to each other, remind us of who we are and all that we can become. When the introverts among us go back to our solitary work, plugging away at our own stories, we get to carry those connections with us. It’s the community we’re writing for, after all.

What’s in a Meme?

I love memes. Maybe we can blame that on an early love for the Robin Williams movie Flubber (seriously, his robot Weebo totally invented meme and gif culture!) But here I am, ten months or so into quarantine life, and my friends and I communicate almost entirely by sending each other memes. I use this one a lot:

The Bernie Sanders meme took off after Wednesday’s inauguration and it may be my favorite one yet. I love Bernie, I love his awesome upcycled mittens, I love that he dressed for the weather. Seriously, regardless of the event, DC is COLD in January.

Bernie has responded to it pretty well, too. He made his viral meme into a sweatshirt on his website, with 100% of the proceeds going to Meals on Wheels Vermont.

Which made me revisit a question that’s been on my mind ever since “meme culture” took over the Internet…

What if you were made into a meme?

I actually researched this pretty heavily when I was writing Any Second Chance, the second book of the Time Wrecker Trilogy. In the early chapters, a picture of Mara goes viral after she and Will are named in the time wrecker leak. Never mind that Mara herself has just discovered that she was once a time traveler. Now the entire world is sharing an image of her shocked and tear-stained face. One of the most painful moments of her life is now being mocked and endlessly recaptioned. To put it mildly, Mara does not take it well.

That happens, too. As much as I loved reading the positive stories that come out of some of these suddenly-viral memes, like Bad Luck Brian and Success Kid, there are some really ugly tales of lives turned upside down. I won’t name them here. For those that want to separate themselves from their sudden online stardom, it seems like the kindest thing to do is to…not keep talking about them on the Internet. I would recommend reading Shame Nation by Sue Scheff and Melissa Schorr. It’s a really in-depth look at the effects of “going viral” and what happens when it becomes a tool for cyberbullying and online shaming. Link is here (affiliate):

I grew up with the Internet. Around the same time I was starting to do research reports in middle school, the miracle of dial-up made it possible to find information online… in only twice as much time as it would’ve taken to walk to the library! It did get better, thankfully. By high school, people exchanged email addresses more than phone numbers. By college, the stigma of “meeting someone online” had faded—which is fortunate, because that’s how I met my husband. I know all the weird and wonderful ways the Internet can change our lives (to be clear: the Internet research is weird. The aforementioned husband is wonderful.) Over the past year, we’ve managed to keep some of the isolation at bay by bringing our real-life connections online. Thank goodness for that.

Now that we’ve been basically quarantined for the better part of a year, I’m especially grateful for the sheer variety the Internet has to offer. Livestreamed celebrations. Long video chats. Virtual visits. And hundreds upon hundreds of silly memes.

"Dogs drinking coffee/ Cheezburgers with kittens/ Cute baby Yoda/ And warm woolen mittens/ Fist-pumping babies/ and Lord of the Rings/ These are a few/ Of my favorite memes..." by Ellen Smith || Originally posted on the Ellen Smith Writes blog

Release Day! Any Second Chance, Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy, is Available Now!

If you’ve been patiently waiting to find out what happened to Will and Mara after Book 1: Every Last Minute, I have good news! The release day for Any Second Chance, Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy, is finally here! Any Second Chance is available in paperback and e-book through Amazon:

If you prefer shopping for books at Barnes and Noble and Books a Million, keep an eye out for Any Second Chance in the next few days. (Since the paperback was officially released today, it may take a few days for the ISBN to show up in the catalog!)

For those in the US, I’ve also made an (affiliate) account on Bookshop to help you shop indie while staying safe at home. I like Bookshop because it’s a convenient online bookstore—and let’s be honest, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, I did a lot of my shopping online. The exception for me was popping into my local independent bookstore. I really miss being able to chat with the store owners about their favorite books, ask for recommendations, and peruse the shelves on my own. I’m really looking forward to the day I can safely be back in-store, and until then, this solution helps me support my beloved local bookstores while shopping online. You can read more here about Bookshop’s mission to financially support indie bookstores. Here is a link to my affiliate account: Ellen Smith Writes Bookshop. I’ve done some of my Christmas shopping for friends and family already through this site and I love it!

Thank you for reading! I am so excited to share the next part of Will and Mara’s story with you!

Cover Reveal: Any Second Chance (Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy)

What ever happened to Mara and Will Sterling?

At the end of Every Last Minute, I fully intended to have the second book of the trilogy published within the year. But, as it always does, life happened. There was a surgery that got complicated, a way-too-long recovery, and, just to top things off, a global pandemic.

Through it all, I kept re-drafting and rewriting parts of Mara and Will’s what-next. I knew what would happen, but as I experienced my own healing process, it made me more sensitive to what theirs would be like. At long last (and over thirteen drafts), I had a draft that felt right.

Now for the scary-fun part: turning it into a book.

One of the really fun steps to getting a book ready for publication is the cover design. I’m very fortunate to work with Monica Haynes of The Thatchery, who brings her passion for reading to her art. She really takes the time to dig deep into the story and offers suggestions and asks for input as she designs. The result always means a lot to me as an author, because it’s the first time I see how someone else visualizes this story that I imagined. (Did you know she was also the cover designer for Every Last MinuteReluctant Cassandra, and Ghosts of Eagle Valley? See a full gallery of cover designs by The Thatchery here!)

As you can tell, I'm a HUGE fan of Monica's work! And while I might be slightly biased, her newest cover design may be my favorite yet! This is the cover for Any Second Chance, Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy.

Drumroll please...

Cover Reveal: Any Second Chance (Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy) by Ellen Smith. Cover design by Monica Haynes of The Thatchery || from the ellensmithwrites.com blog

Synopsis

New college graduates Will Sterling and Mara Gaines are ready to take on the world--together. With only two weeks to go until their wedding, Will and Mara are busy decorating their new apartment, preparing for two promising careers, and planning their future. They both feel lucky to have met their once-in-a-lifetime love.

Then a breaking news story turns Will and Mara’s happy world upside down. The sealed records maintained by the Department of Timeline Rectification have been hacked and leaked to the press. The data is shocking: in a span of just fifteen years, four and a half million Americans have been granted timeline rectifications. What was thought to be an occasional rehabilitation program for repentant criminals is far more routine than anyone guessed. Collectively, those named in the data leak become known as the Time Wreckers, the subject of national fascination and derision. No one knows which of those named in the leak were victims, which were criminals, or whether any of them can be trusted.

Will and Mara are shocked to see their names on the list, but more troubled to discover that they were married in their first life map, too. Even worse, their rectification took them back to a time before they met. Whatever the crime may have been, Will and Mara were willing to forget everything about that part of their lives, including each other. Does the fact that they found each other again prove that they were meant to be, or does it mean they’re about to make a huge mistake? Before they walk down the aisle, Will and Mara have to confront the truth about who they were…and decide how far they’ll go to find out.

Set in 2006, Any Second Chance is the second book in the Time Wrecker Trilogy.

I am so excited to share the cover design and synopsis for ANY SECOND CHANCE with you! Huge thanks to The Thatchery for once again creating such a beautiful book cover!

Stay tuned for the official release date—Book 2 is coming out later this fall!

Life Imitates Art

What have I been up to in the last 12ish months since I updated this blog?

I was healing.

It was complicated.

While I was recovering, it was not lost on me how much my own life mirrored the book I was writing. I’ve been drafting and editing Book 2 of the Time Wrecker Trilogy. In Book 1, Every Last Minute, Will and Mara must decide whether to allow the gunman to go back and undo his terrible crime, changing the trajectory of all their lives. In Book 2 (no spoilers!) the main characters again have to choose their path for healing. They have decisions to make and soul-searching to do. This time, changing their past is no longer an option.

Isn’t that how it is for all of us in the real world? We know we can’t change the past and that plays a major role in our healing. We have to move forward because there is no other direction.

But what if there was? It took well over a year before I could say, with complete honesty, that I was glad I had this most recent surgery. If I had been offered the chance to go back and undo it all—the most recent surgery, the one before, the one before that, or just eliminate the issue entirely—I can guarantee I would have taken it. I would have risked it all.

Thank goodness I didn’t have that option.

Chronic pain no longer runs my life. And now, healing no longer runs my life, either. I have more energy. I can focus better. I knew that I had turned a corner when I was able to focus enough to read a book. And I knew that I was back to myself when I was able to open up my laptop and write.

Maybe this is the blessing in disguise for my journey through life-imitating-art. As I read through Book 2: Any Second Chance, one chapter at a time, I’m paying attention to my characters’ journey through healing in a whole new way. The premise of the Time Wrecker Trilogy is science fiction, but the characters are true to life. Their thoughts are messy. Their hearts are hurting. Their journey has ups and downs.

And the healing is so, so worth it.

"Life imitates art far more than art imitates life"-Oscar Wilde || from the Ellen Smith Writes blog "Life Imitates Art" January 10, 2020