Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Guest post by R.V. Doon


Brook Cottage Books is thrilled to welcome R.V Doon to the blog with this fantastic guest post.


Extraordinary Love




    When I decided to write The War Nurse, I wanted to explode the romantic theme to explore the concept of commitment, during an arduous separation. The main characters, Katarina and Jack, have experienced the fever-pitched love of early commitment, survived the traumatic phase of breaking up, and the couple is reunited before the war begins. No one can dispute the obvious love between them. They’ve reached the stage of the fully committed and get their HEA, only to have it swept away. They don’t break up; they don’t call it quits. War interrupts and tells them their love story is over.
   If one lover is thrown in harm’s way and the other remains in relative safety, love still simmers. The one in jeopardy lives on the food of their old memories; the one back home daydreams of their future and visits their special places to feel close to their missing lover. But what happens when both lovers are tossed into the same danger zone and their dependable world changes into a dark, unnerving place? How does love survive the ordeal of survival?
Survival we’re told, or true survival where an error means life or death, isn’t pretty to behold.  In war zones, people have to fight to keep their humanity and their hope alive. Circumstances force people to take actions they’d never consider during peace time.
Katarina does the ordinary things to keep Jack close to her heart. She keeps his picture under her pillow and hums their favorite songs. She searches for him when he’s a POW, smuggling food and medicines into the prison even though it’s a death penalty offense. At one point she refuses to take the ‘escape the war flight’ offered early in the story, because she’s waiting for Jack to find her. These are normal actions for a woman in the fully committed romantic relationship.
Mindful of the worsening situation, Katarina drinks in every detail of Jack. She traces the outline of his face into her memory, like a map pointing the way home. She memorizes the color of his lips and the length of his fingers. She concentrates on the strum of his heartbeat until her own merges into a symphony with his; then she writes their heart music on mildewed walls. In doing so, she’s transcending ordinary love into the extraordinary. She can find her man wherever war sends him. Her extraordinary love for Jack saves her from committing the unforgiveable.
    Extraordinary love takes place between lovers who can’t imagine being in love with anyone else. The word tenderly was created just for them. Third parties don’t often witness extraordinary love because it’s taking place on a higher sense level, but occasionally there are glimpses.
     It’s when surprised lovers spot each other in a crowd, as if they’re given off invisible sparks only they can see. It’s when a person is seriously ill, and their life signs respond only to the sound of their lover’s voice or touch. It’s when hearing music or smelling perfume transports one back in time to a blissful, heart-fluttering moment, and he tunes out everything else to drink in the memory. It’s when one partner dies and the other soon follows, because the last one has forgotten how to breathe after a lifetime of shared breaths.
    Katarina and Jack never allow the brutality of war to enter their inner sanctum. Both have visible and invisible wounds, but as soon as they touch...they drown in their love.
     As a writer, I hated putting my characters through an inferno of pain, but on the other hand I gave them extraordinary love, a rare gift in this world. What about you? Have you experienced extraordinary love? Share your love story with us because love has the power to change lives.
    
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The War Nurse is a heart-rending story of two Americans, a civilian nurse and doctor, caught in the Philippines when WWII interrupts their new found love. As the bombs fall, Katarina Stahl frees a German doctor accused of spying. This impulsive act haunts her throughout the war’s duration and, it even sets off a chain of tragic events for her German-born parents in New York. Jack Gallagher surrenders to the Japanese at Bataan, but his pregnant war bride, Katarina, begins a journey into depraved darkness as Manila descends into chaos and occupation. Every choice she’s forced to make to avoid interment and starvation causes Jack’s memory to fade. By the war’s end, she’s earned the nickname given to her by the soldiers on Bataan...but will Jack still love her?

 
 About the Author



R .V. Doon is a registered nurse with a wide variety of experience and certification in emergency medicine, critical care, and clinical research. She’s been a bedside nurse, nurse manager, and teacher. Her nursing experience has given her unique insight into the human condition. While working she wrote novels and short stories until one mystery was a finalist in a national contest. Now R.V. writes across genres from medical and dark fantasy thrillers, to cozy mysteries and historical family sagas.


She lives in historic Mobile, Alabama on the beautiful Gulf Coast with her husband. R.V. loves seafood, deep sea fishing, and she’s recently taken up sailing. She’s also a caffeine and chocolate addict. If she’s not home writing, she can be found reading in a comfortable book nook.


      

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1 comment:

  1. Hey JB,

    Thank you for allowing me to guest post on your blog. On my first visit here I got lost reading all your posts:)

    ReplyDelete

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