Introduction by Melissa Amster
I came to Tracey Garvis-Graves's books a bit late. However, I have loved the ones I've read so far, which include her latest and greatest novel, The Trail of Lost Hearts. (See my five-star review.) I currently have her debut, On the Island, in my five-book pile and I look forward to reading it soon. I hope to read her other books that I missed, as well. In the meantime, I'm excited to share a signed copy of Trail, courtesy of Tracey!
Tracey Garvis Graves is the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and international bestselling author of contemporary fiction. Her debut novel, On the Island, spent nine weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, has been translated into thirty-six languages, and is in development with MGM and Temple Hill Productions for a feature film. She is also the author of Uncharted, Covet, Every Time I Think of You, Cherish, Heart-Shaped Hack, White-Hot Hack, The Girl He Used to Know, Heard It in a Love Song, and The Trail of Lost Hearts. She is hard at work on her next book. (Bio courtesy of Tracey's website.)
The biggest reward was how the story turned out. I had a vision that I was working toward, and seeing it finally come alive on the page felt amazing. The biggest challenge was NOT seeing it come alive in the first several drafts and becoming frustrated. I rewrote the entire book at least twice because I just couldn't get it to work at first.
Did you know much about geocaching before writing The Trail of Lost Hearts? If not, what inspired you to write about it?
Much like Wren's comments in the book, I'd heard the term and knew what it meant, but that's where my knowledge ended. But I initially pictured this story as more of a heist tale with the characters involved in a competition, of sorts. This led me down the path of needing something for the hero or heroine to abscond with before the other character could get to it. The seed of the initial idea eventually led me to geocaching. I became a huge fan of the activity while writing the book and bought the paid version of the geocaching app. Looking for urban caches in my downtown neighborhood delighted me, and I look forward to finding more when I'm out walking or hiking this spring. Also, side note, heist novels are really difficult to write!
If you could tell the debut novelist version of yourself one thing, what would it be?
You will need to break in all over again with every new book you write. Publishing does not hold spots, so be prepared to earn yours with every new manuscript if you want to stay in the industry.
What is the last book you read that you would recommend?
I recently finished reading the biographies of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk written by Walter Isaacson. I also read Bad Blood by John Carreyrou about Elizabeth Holmes and her Theranos startup. They were fascinating, hubris-filled, often cautionary storylines with a ton of overlap in the traits of all three people.
If your life was a TV series, which celebrity would you want to narrate it?
Sarah Jessica Parker. As a massive Sex and the City fan, her voiceover would feel like listening to an old friend.
If we were to visit you right now, what are some places you would take us to see?
I would take you on a walking tour of my urban neighborhood and point out the first geocache I ever found. I'd make sure to point out our state capitol building that looks over downtown Des Moines and is known for its dome covered in thin sheets of twenty-three-carat gold. I'd also take you to my neighborhood bookstore and my favorite place to buy cupcakes.
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21 comments:
I have never heard of it.
I’ve never heard of geocaching
I have never heard of geocaching.
I have never heard of Geocatching. I love Tracey’s books!
I never heard of Geocatching. I love Tracey’s books!
I have never gone geocatching and do not know much about it. But I am always up for a new adventure
I have never gone geocaching. I do know that people use GPS to find hidden containers.
I have never gone geocoaching but would like to.
I have never gone geocaching, but I would someday like to try it. It's basically like a treasure hunt.
I have not gone geocaching, but I have observed someone doing it.
I've never heard of it.
I've never been geocaching but I know a few people who used to go geocaching regularly and they would frequently tell me all about it. I think they grew tired of it though as they don't seem to mention it anymore.
My daughter and I have gone geocaching a few times. It's loads of fun.
I have never heard of the word or knew what it meant until I read your posting. It seems interesting.
My husband and I used to take our boys to do this!
I cannot seem to get anything done through rafflecopter!
Never been. Only know the basics.
no
I have never gone geocaching
Reading about it now
I have never heard of geocaching.
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