Miller was available on Wednesday, October 11 at the Windham
Public Library to discuss her books in the Janet series and the process of how
she became a writer.
Miller, originally from Indiana, has lived in Gorham for 24 years
and retired from teaching at the Portland School Department in 2011. Once
retired, she had a lot of time on her hands and was always a big reader. She
loved to write, but never saw herself as a writer. Storytelling came naturally
to her but writing did not. Miller had written before, but it was more oriented
towards children. She always saw herself writing children’s stories.
“I guess I thought if I’d ever be a writer, it’d be in
children’s literature,” Miller explained.
However, she soon discovered her love for children’s writing
changed. “I felt like I was drawn more to adult fiction,” Miller began. “I feel
there is kind of a drought for literature for the older female. So often I
would read a really great book and the characters were...30 and 40-year-old
women. I read this one book and the mother was only 70, I’m 71, and they made
her like, she had a broken hip and [it was very exaggerated]. I was like
‘really?’ We’re not dead yet. So that’s part of what I wanted to write to. We
truly always stay young in our heads, regardless of what we look like.”
She also discovered that she couldn’t write about explicit sex.
“I could imply the heck out of it, but to write it, I couldn’t,” joked Miller.
As a result, her book originally entitled “50 Shades of White” became “Next to
the Last Act” (the first in the Janet Book series)
Miller explained how she choose the topic of her first book. “A
lot of my friends were finding themselves widows and this book is about a
widow, [which I am not]. I started thinking about what would I do if I became a
widow and I felt guilty; I didn’t want to think that with my husband living.
Well I could imagine it through writing and that’s really how “Next to the Last
Act” happened.”
“Next to the Last Act” is
the story of Janet Stewart, who after losing her husband of forty years,
wonders if she’ll be able to find happiness and fulfillment as a single senior.
She discovers she may have jumped in too soon.
The book started after Miller had been talking with a woman
over Words With Friends, an online app game similar to scrabble, who had
written and published a book. The woman offered to connect Miller with her
publisher. Approximately three years later “Next to the Last Act” was born.
Miller states that her books dive into the subtle passion of the 30-year-old
mind stuck in a 60-year-old body.
Is the author in any way similar to the protagonist in the
Janet series? It didn’t start out that way.
“[When] I started out, Janet was nicer than I am…and then
Marty creeped into Janet big time,” Miller said. “Everyone, including my
daughter, will say, ‘that is so you.’ And of course, it’s my voice.
Miller shared some of her knowledge and discoveries as an
author. “[My favorite part is] making people feel like they are reading about
someone real,” she began. “Every day is an adventure. It’s been a learning
experience.”
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