Isla Morley's Writing Space
Today, I have a special treat for my readers. We're going to get a peek inside author Isla Morley's writing space. She's the author of Come Sunday, a novel about how a mother deals with the loss of her daughter and the devastating loss it dredges up from her past in South Africa. Married to a minister and living in Hawaii, Abbe Deighton must confront her demons and find solace.
Please give Isla a warm welcome.
Much of the writing of Come Sunday took place in the spare room closet of a 1920s parsonage. On the rod above my computer monitor hung a few of my husband’s denim shirts. On the top shelf were several handmade Tongan quilts we’d received as gifts while living in Hawaii, and a wildly colorful afghan crocheted by a great-granny - much loved, but too scratchy to use.
The closet suited me well, mirroring my secret activity. Apart from my husband and a close friend, nobody knew I spent hours following the life of Abbe Deighton. I’d go into my little closet, close my eyes and she would appear to me, every bit as compelling as the first night she materialized at my bedside. Many times I felt I was recording her story rather than writing it, and as the words piled up, I was both exhilarated and terrified.
Last year we moved from the quaint little cottage to our own home in the hills. It’s situated on a couple of acres, surrounded by Live Oak, Walnut and Pine trees, and it faces the majestic San Gabriel Mountains. The house has enough room for me to claim my own office. Requisite bookshelves line one wall, and against the other is my desk, strewn with scraps of paper and post-it notes and fairy figurines and dozens of things which belong some place else. There’s a window seat with a view of the garden, and a picture of Kjell Sandved’s alphabet on butterfly wings behind my chair. If that isn’t enough to inspire me, there’s a framed promise from a long-ago prophet about there being a plan for my life, a future filled with hope.
You’d think this would do it. You’d think I’d spend the hours my daughter is at school typing furiously away at the next novel, occasionally rubbing the crystal my friend promised unleashes the imagination, trying to persuade the cat not to keeping marching back and forth across my keyboard. But no. It’s outside you will find me. On the deck at the table where the view beyond the Magnolia trees stretches for miles. The voices in my head have to compete with the mockingbird which is so desperate for a mate he has added to his repertoire the sound of the neighbor’s rap music. I wonder if I could place an ad in the personals for the poor guy. The koi swim in the pond behind me as Samson, our dog, scans the sky for that beastly blue heron which treats the pond as his personal buffet. Every day, the lizard pays me a visit. He does a few push-ups as though to remind me that I can’t spend the whole day sitting observing all creation. Come on, love, back to work! he seems to insinuate.
I take another sip of tea, then lift my pen, and turn to a fresh page in my notebook. The bees hum, and in the far distance, cars roar along the freeway, going someplace important, no doubt. But my soul tunes to another sound; another story is waiting to be told.
Thanks, Isla, for sharing your space with us.
About the Author:
Isla Morley grew up in South Africa during apartheid, the child of a British father and fourth-generation South African mother. During the country’s State of Emergency, she graduated from Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University in Port Elizabeth with a degree in English Literature.
She has lived in some of the most culturally diverse places of the world, including Johannesburg, London and Honolulu. Now in the Los Angeles area, she shares a home with her husband, daughter, two cats, a dog and a tortoise. Check out her Facebook page.
Giveaway details:
1 copy to a US/Canada reader
1. Leave a comment on this post with an email
2. Tweet, Facebook, etc. and leave a link for a second entry.
Deadline is Sept. 3, 2010 at 11:59PM EST