Talkshow Thursday:
Meet Award-winning Author Cathy Gohlke
I'm thrilled to welcome, Christy-award winning author, Cathy Gohlke to my blog. Her books are powerful, inspirational, and fascinating works of fiction. Draw up a chair and learn more about the story behind the story of her newest book, releasing this month.
1. What inspired you to write Until We Find Home?
Cathy: Alarmed by the plight of young refugees fleeing gangs in
Mexico to cross United States borders, and heart heavy for victims and refugees
worldwide who’ve suffered and continue to suffer under oppressive regimes, I
looked for a moment in history to tell their tale as I wish it could play
out. I didn’t have to look far.
The Kindertransport of 1938-1940, brought 10,000
predominantly Jewish children to Great Britain for refuge from Nazi
oppression. Accounts abound of men and
women who rescued children through resistance, often at great cost to
themselves—even life itself. But what
happened next? What happened when those
children entered countries of refuge? I
wondered about the average person and what role they might have played once the
children were out of immediate danger. . . and what role we might play in the
world’s need today.
2. The
novel is set during WWII in England’s Lake District—not a location we typically
think of in relation to the war. What is
unique to this location and why did you choose to set your novel there?
Cathy: England’s
magnificent Lake District—breathtakingly beautiful and pristine—might seem an
unlikely place to portray wartime life on the homefront. In reality, the area portrayed just what
might happen to an unsuspecting English village—a location that seemed safe and
far from the maddening war. Because of
its apparent safety, the Sunderland Flying Boat Factory built an entire
village—Calgarth—there to house its employees and manufacture its flying boats
for the war effort.
After the war, those
empty buildings set amid the peaceful and beautiful Lake District became temporary
homes for the Windermere Boys—over 300 children who had barely survived Nazi
concentration camps in Europe and who were in desperate need of rest and
restoration. Nearby Grizedale Hall became one of the first prisoner of war camps
for German prisoners—particularly naval officers. In Keswick, a nondescript pencil factory that
had supplied the nations pencils for years, secretly created spy pencils during
the war—pencils with hollow barrels in which tightly rolled maps were hidden to
aid British aviators shot down over enemy territory. In its eraser was a compass.
3. Can
you tell us about the historical research that went into writing this
novel? Did you learn anything new that
surprised you?
Cathy:
In 2014 I traveled to England and Scotland with my friend
and writing colleague, Carrie Turansky, For me, we travelled to
Windermere and the Lake District to research Beatrix Potter and her renown Hill
Top Farm, the poetry and world of Wordsworth, and to learn just what happened
to refugees and evacuees in the District during WWII.
where we both did research for our book
projects.
That was the travel portion of my research. Internet investigations and the reading of
books, old and new, continued for months.
Included in those books were wartime diaries, especially those compiled
from Britain’s Mass Observation Project, day by day histories of the war waged
against Britain, journals and letters from Beatrix Potter Heelis, journals, letters and biographies of C. S.
Lewis, the books and notes of C. S. Lewis, the history of Glencoe, biographies
and history of Sylvia Beach and details of Shakespeare and Company, the
American bookstore in Paris, studies of Europe’s child refugees housed in
Britain, and so much more. Perhaps the
most fun was found in rereading childhood classics.
4. Is there one character whose experience you especially identify with or one whose story grew out of lessons you leaned in your own life?
Cathy: I must give two here:
a. Claire’s ability to view life and relate through stories
she’s loved and read is one that’s long been my own. Her desire to be loved and belong, and her
journey to knowing she is loved by our Lord—that only He can calm our restless
spirits and give peace to our souls—is my own.
b. Miranda’s journey
through grief and illness, and the desire the Lord creates and leads her to—to
live with His grace—is reflective of my own journey through those dark valleys.
5. A major historical focus of the novel is the European Jewish children who were given refuge in Britain. What led you to focus on this specific aspect of WWII?
Cathy:
Children everywhere hold a special place in my heart. They are the most vulnerable, the least
prepared physically or experientially to face war and the deprivation of home
and family. Jewish children in WWII
Europe had absolutely no recourse or help when there parents were taken
away. The state did not support or help
them. It was up to compassionate
individuals and citizen organized networks to step up to the plate, to help and
protect those in need. In many cases the
people of Britain did that—by taking in their own evacuees and by taking in children
from overseas. Modest governmental
financial assistance was available, though not everyone took advantage of
that. Sadly, not all children were
treated well, but all adults had the opportunity to do something generous,
something naturally heroic for those children.
I very much wanted to show that while it can be difficult to
peel back the reserves, the grief and fears and heartaches in our own adult lives
in order to reach outward and embrace those in need, it is possible. Not only is the journey possible, but it is blessed
. . . blessed as we sacrifice, and blessed as we embrace a different life and a
new family. Stepping out of our comfort
zones, shedding the shackles of all we’ve come to believe we need and must
preserve, means simultaneously stepping into a freedom we didn’t know existed.
6. What did you learn through writing this novel, and what do you hope your readers will take away?
Cathy: I’ve
learned in life and more fully in the writing of this story that letting go of
fear, surrendering insecurity—which torments—to the Lord, is the path to
freedom. I’ve learned, just as the
Scripture says, that “perfect love casts out fear.” I hope recognition of the need to surrender,
to let go of fear and to embrace the joy and freedom found in Christ is what
readers take away. I hope we all walk
boldly into the future, whatever that future may call us to sacrifice or to embrace
7. What is your next project?
Cathy: I’m currently writing a WWII novel that begins in Warsaw, Poland—such
a different wartime experience than that of any other occupied country. This
story was inspired by two courageous people, some real life events discovered
through multiple research and news sources, and a Facebook message from a
friend, all on separate occasions. It
was as if the story was given to me piece by piece. From the very beginning it was a story I’ve
felt compelled to write. It’s working
title is The Medallion, and will
release in 2019.
Cathy will be giving away a copy to one lucky winner who comments about today's post.
Her books are so good!
ReplyDeleteYes they are!
DeleteNice cover. Enjoy WWII theme books.
ReplyDeleteI love WWII books as my dad is a WWII veteran. This sounds so good. Thank you for the review and the chance. Blessings
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds so good! Loved this interview!!
ReplyDelete