Welcome to Rooted in Story
There’s something fitting about beginning again with a story.
Years ago, this little corner of the internet lived under a different name — A Fiction-Filled Life. I posted book reviews, interviewed authors, shared photos from research trips, and talked about whatever story had taken hold of my imagination at the time. Then life shifted. Babies grew. My daughter showcased special needs. School schedules filled. Deadlines tightened. And like so many good things, the blog went quiet.But the stories never did. Now, I'm back to tell more. I've heard folks relate better to failures than successes...although they still want to know you succeed. Well, this road bridging to the past has a lot of those tried-but-failed moments.
I’ve always written fiction because story is how I process the world. Give me a setting, a conflict, a pair of wounded hearts trying to find solid ground, and I can untangle almost anything. Fiction lets me ask questions safely. It lets me wrestle with doubt, forgiveness, pride, hope, and redemption without pointing fingers. It gives me room to explore truth through characters who feel real enough to sit across the table from me.
I still remember the years during high school sitting at my childhood desk. That old wooden one with the drawer that stuck every time I tried to open it. At that desk, I drafted my first serious attempt at a novel. I had a spiral notebook, a pen that smeared when I wrote too fast, and absolutely no idea what I was doing. I only knew that the characters wouldn’t leave me alone. I wrote after school, late at night, whenever I could steal an hour. I wasn’t thinking about contracts or publication or platform. I was thinking about whether the heroine would forgive the hero, and whether the ending would feel honest.That hasn’t changed. What has changed is perspective.
Faith has always shaped my storytelling, but not in a heavy-handed way. I don’t sit down with a checklist of lessons to teach. I start with people. With broken places. With longings we all recognize. And because my faith informs how I see the world, grace and redemption naturally find their way onto the page. But I work hard to not lecture. I avoid a sermon disguised as dialogue. Instead, those redemptive themes exist as the quiet undercurrent that reminds me no story is beyond hope.
I believe truth resonates most deeply when it’s woven into lived experience. When readers see themselves in a character’s stubbornness or fear. When they recognize their own questions in a scene. That’s where story becomes more than entertainment. It becomes connection.What You Can Expect Here Now
You’ll find behind-the-scenes glimpses of works in progress. Research rabbit trails. Reflections on books I’m reading and authors who inspire me or tell great stories. The occasional guest voice. Pieces of the writing life that don’t always make it into a polished novel. Let's call them the messy middles, the sparks of inspiration, the moments when a setting suddenly feels real.
This space has grown up a bit since its early days, just like I have. But the heart of it remains the same: a love for story, and a desire to explore the deeper truths that shape us.
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