When I Was Just a Kid...Virginia Smith
Here's a first for the Chat 'n' Chew Cafe'--I have a kid descendent
from the famous Kentucky McCoy(sic)-Hatfield Feud. (Since Ginny is a
McCoy, she put that name first.) I couldn't even make this stuff up.
And she's a fireball, both as a writer and a person. But the grace of
Jesus Christ has brought peace to Ginny--and she's passing that on to
those who take time to read her fiction.
Ginny was named after her grandmother, Virginia McCoy Patrick.
Ginny said, "Yes, we're those McCoys, half of the famous
Hatfield-McCoy feud. Or, as we refer to it, the McCoy-Hatfield feud."
She left her job as a corporate director to become a full time writer
and speaker in the summer of 2005. Since then she has published six
novels and numerous articles and short stories. She writes
contemporary humorous novels for the Christian market, including her
debut, Just As I Am and just released TODAY-- Murder by Mushroom.
Her short fiction has been anthologized, and her articles have been
published in a variety of Christian magazines. An energetic speaker,
she loves to exemplify God's truth by comparing real-life situations
to well-known works of fiction, such as her popular talk, "Biblical
Truths in Star Trek." (So if you're a Trekkie--you might want to bring
her in as your next speaker.)
And Ginny doesn't just speak and write--she also sings. She just
recorded her first solo CD. To find out how to get a copy of this CD,
go to http://www.virginiasmith.org/id12.html
Let's see what shaped Ginny's writing:
Childhood Ambition: I don't remember having any ambitions when I was
in grade school, but in seventh grade I was selected to be Judge
Jezabelle Justice in a mock courtroom trial. (Thank you, Mr. Davis.)
From that moment on, I wanted to be a lawyer and work my way up to the
bench. I never dreamed in a million years that I'd grow up to be a
writer!
Ginny at 10
Fondest Memory: One hot, humid summer day in central Kentucky my
little sister and I were playing outside and heard the sound every
child recognizes immediately - music from the ice cream truck. We
raced inside and managed to finagle money from Mom. Then we stood at
the end of the driveway, clutching our money in sweaty fists and
waiting for the truck to come our way. The tantalizing tones of that
distinctive music echoed all around us as the truck navigated through
our neighborhood. It seemed the ice cream man was determined to drive
down every street but ours. Occasionally the music would stop as he
served ice cream to some other kid, then start again when he continued
on his way. We decided if we could hear him, then maybe he could hear
us. So we waited for the next pause in the music, and then we shouted
in unison at the top of our lungs, "Ice Cream Man, wherever you are,
come to us at 522 Reed Drive!" Oh, the joy when we saw the brightly
colored truck turn the corner onto our street! And the sense of
victory that we'd managed to draw him to us from afar. I can still
taste my Drumstick - vanilla ice cream in a crunchy cone topped with
chocolate and nuts. Yummy!
Proudest Moment: After my first novel, Just As I Am, was released, I
received a letter from an inmate in a Mississippi prison. He told me
that he was using my book in a discussion group he led with other
inmates, and that one of them had accepted Christ as his Savior. A
proud moment, certainly, but I was also immensely humbled and awed
that the Lord could use something I had written to draw another into
His kingdom.
Biggest Challenge as a child or teen: Insecurity. Isn't that true of
everyone? But of course we always think we're the only kid in the
world who doesn't quite measure up to everyone else, the only one who
isn't "good enough." Remember Pig Pen in the Charlie Brown comic
strip, the kid who was always surrounded by a cloud of filth? That's
how I felt, only my filth was inside. I came from a broken and
dysfunctional home with an alcoholic stepfather. I always felt like an
oddball, like everybody else had nice, normal home lives while mine
was full of strife and darkness. Those feelings haunted me far into my
adult life, until Jesus finally convinced me that His blood really did
scrub me clean.
My First Job: My dad, my real father, owned a couple of drug stores,
so even before I was legally old enough to be on the payroll, I worked
for him on weekends. My first job was helping with a store-wide
inventory - counting and recording every product on the shelves. I
don't know if they still do that now, with computers keeping track of
what is sold, but it was a huge ordeal back in 1973. I think I made
$1.50 an hour, which wasn't even minimum wage, but the going rate for
13-yr-old babysitters was $0.50, so I was rich by local standards.
Childhood indulgence: Hmmm... I didn't get it very often, but I loved
homemade peach ice cream that my aunt and uncle made with an old
hand-crank ice cream freezer. They lived out on a farm, with pigs and
chickens and cows, and I loved going to visit them. And I really do
think we had ice cream at every visit. And fried chicken, which I
tried hard not to compare to the fuzzy baby chicks I fed in the
chicken coop.
Favorite Outfit as a child: When I was about eight my mother made me a
fairy princess costume for Halloween. Oh, it was beautiful; a long,
silky gown that swished when I moved, and a glittery wand and
everything. I still remember how I felt wearing that dress - like a
real princess. It was cold outside, but I refused to wear a coat
because it would hide my costume!
Favorite Childhood Movie: The Wizard of Oz! When it began, Dorothy
lived in a colorless, scary world. But when she stepped out of that
house and into Oz, everything was bright and colorful and shiny and
wonderful. I really, really, really wanted to go to Oz.
Favorite Childhood Book: Without a doubt, C. S. Lewis' The Voyage of
the Dawn Treader. (Gosh, I was really into stories where children
slipped into interesting new worlds, wasn't I?) My mother read all
seven Chronicles of Narnia aloud before I could read, and as soon as I
could read them myself, I did. Over and over. Seriously, I think I've
read each of those books at least twenty times, and VDT was my
favorite. Maybe that's why I like cruises so much today!
Childhood hero: My Aunt Patti was the coolest, hippest, most awesome
relative in the world. She wore bellbottoms and moccasins and beaded
vests and taught me how to make a peace sign. And when she came over
she brought strange music for us to listen to, like Dylan and Bob
Mclean. She played the guitar and the banjo, and she was a prison
guard, for heavens' sake! What isn't cool about that? Every birthday I
can ever remember she has called me and said, "I remember the day you
came home from the hospital, and I got to hold you, and I peeled the
dead skin off your bellybutton." LOL! Okay, maybe it doesn't sound
like a hero-thing to you, but the fact that she still, to this day,
calls me to tell me she is happy that I was born makes her my hero.
Childhood Mystery: I had a great aunt whom I adored. Aunt Teenie was
referred to as the old maid of the family - but never to her face. She
lived with my grandmother in the house in which they'd both been born.
I asked her once why she never married, and she said, "Oh, I almost
did. Once." And she looked so sad I couldn't bear to ask for more
details. But it was the mystery of my childhood - who had Aunt Teenie
loved so intensely that she was still sad about it a gazillion years
later? Why had they not married? Sadly, she died before I learned the
whole story.
Anything else you'd like to share from your childhood that turned you
into the writer you are today?: Primarily, I learned to love books. My
mother modeled that for me - she always had a book going, and she
never went anywhere without a novel or two tucked in her purse. I
remember going with her to the library as a little girl, and she let
me pick out books to read. The feeling of excitement as I walked out
of that big, fancy building with a stack of books in my arms has never
faded. (The photo to the right is Aunt Teenie holding Ginny.)
See Virginia Smith's books and writing at her web site.
You can check her bi-monthly newsletter archives here.
Would you like to win an IPOD?? Ginny is having a contest. If you post
a review of Ginny's book, Murder by Mushroom before August 31st, you
can enter this contest. Go to this site to see details!
Books by Virginia Smith:
Murder by Mushroom (Steeple Hill, August, 2007, ISBN 037344253X) -A
potluck on the lawn of Heritage Community Church attracts the usual
pests - ants and flies, gossips and murderers. In this cozy mystery
set in the small town of Versailles, Kentucky, kitchen klutz Jackie
Hoffner decides to bring something other than potato chips to the
church potluck. When someone plants poisonous mushrooms in her
casserole to kill a gossipy old lady, Jackie determines to find the
killer and clear her name.
Just As I Am (Kregel Publications, March 2006, ISBN 0825436931)
-
Sometimes God's call comes when we least expect it, and to the most
unlikely people! When purple-haired Mayla Strong slumps into the back
pew of Mama's little country church she has only one goal - to get
Mama off her back. But Pastor Paul's message pierces her soul, and
almost before she knows what's happening she's in front of the
congregation, lip stud and all, praying the prayer that changes her
life forever. She is baptized on the spot, wearing Mama's slip under
her white baptism robe to hide her hot pink panties from eyes of the
curious congregation. Coming out of the water, Mayla knows life will
never be the same.
Posted by Crystal Laine Miller at 9:21 PM
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