From her Q & A with Deborah Kalb:
Q: How did you come up with the idea for The Rules of Love & Grammar, and for your main character, Grace?Learn more about the book and author at Mary Simses's website and follow her on Facebook.
A: The idea started with something that happened when I was a teenager. When I was 14, I had a huge crush on a boy in my ninth grade class. He was very cute and very popular. Unfortunately for me, he was dating another girl who was also very cute and very popular (definitely more in his league). But he was always friendly to me, as he was to everyone…
That memory [of our one dance together] had been rattling around in my head for years, and I guess it was destined to emerge in a story sooner or later. Although I wanted to use an incident like that as a springboard, I didn’t know where one dance was going to take me in terms of a whole book.
And then another idea came to me through a conversation I had with a friend. We were talking about how people often feel guilt over the death of a loved one – they didn’t do this or they should have done that – and how it can haunt someone forever. It was an idea I wanted to explore and with those two fragments, I began to build a tale.
I think the character of Grace came to me largely because of a little article I read years ago in a newspaper. It was a story about two guys who were traveling across the country and along the way they were correcting all the grammatical mistakes they encountered – in restaurant menus, posters, newspapers, flyers, you name it.
They explained how they would approach the “owner” of the mistake and ask if they could correct it. Most people said yes; others were...[read on]
My Book, The Movie: The Irresistible Blueberry Bakeshop & Cafe.
--Marshal Zeringue