Bio: Ruchti, Cynthia - Central Wis. Author to Visit
NPL (2022)
Contact: Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon
E-mail:
dolores@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Ruchti, Brooks
----Source: Clark County Press (Neillsville, Clark Co., WI) 4/20/2022
Central Wis. Author Cynthia Ruchti to Visit NPL (2022)
Central Wisconsin Author Cynthia Ruchti to Visit Neillsville Public Library
Area author Cynthia Ruchti will visit the Neillsville Public Library May 2
to share about the inspiration behind her stories. Submitted photo
By Valorie Brecht
Author Cynthia Ruchti offers stores ‘hemmed in hope,” as she puts it, to
encourage and inspire readers.
Ruchti will visit the Neillsville Public Library May 2 at 6 p.m. The event is
free and open to the public.
Ruchti lives in rural Pittsville. She spent 33 years writing and producing a
scripted inspirational radio broadcast, “The Heartbeat of the Home.” The
broadcast retired in 2012, but just prior to that, Cynthia published her first
of what are now more than 36 books – fiction and nonfiction, many of them
award-winning, some bestselling.
People are invited to come hear how Ruchti crafts her novels and what it’s like
to be an author.
“Most readers love to hear the stories behind the stories. How does a novelist
take a thought from idea to book? What personal events intersect with the
characters?” wrote Ruchti in an email.
Those are some of the questions she will answer at the May 2 event. She will
also share about the impact of story on mental health, anxiety reduction,
empathy and more as she talks through her own writing and reading journey and
answers attendees’ questions.
Ruchti answered a few questions to help readers get to know her a bit better.
The following are her responses.
Q: What are some of your most popular books and what are they about?
A: People often list my first novel, “They Almost Always Come Home,” as their
personal favorite. It’s the story of a woman whose husband doesn’t return from
his two-week solo trip to the Canadian wilderness and she’s not sure she wanted
him to. But she has to retrace his steps, or paddle strokes, through the
wilderness to find out what happened to him, to their marriage and to her faith.
Another favorite often mentioned is “As Waters Gone By.” Set on beautiful
Madeline Island (near Hayfield), the area itself again serves as a character in
the story as a woman and her husband prepare to reunite after his five-year
prison sentence that changed her life as well as his. Some of the secondary
characters in this story are perhaps among the most memorable, like the quirky
Bougie Unfortunate.
“Miles from Where We Started” is the story of a millennial couple nearing their
one-year anniversary, but they’re ready to call it quits. This marriage thing is
hard! They’re forced into a three-week, three-thousand-mile cross-country trip
in a teardrop camper – with an 11-year-old foster boy who has a lot to say about
life.
“Afraid of the Light” often comes up in conversations with readers because of
its unique Premise. Camille Brooks is a psychologist who counsels hoarders and
their families. But because of her past, she’s hoarding emotions with as much
fervor as her clients [hoard possessions]. And when the trash hauler she’s hired
turns out to be both nemesis and friend…
My recent release, “Facing the Dawn,” is a book that one reviewer said, “ripped
her heart to shreds, then put it back together again.” A woman who is
practically a single mom to three (in her words) “delinquents” faces more grief
than she thinks she can bear. With the help of a couple of unexpected friends,
she begins the slow crawl back to mental and emotional health. [It’s] a
sensitive look at grief and loss in story form.
Q. What do you hope readers take away from your books?
A: My tagline is “I can’t unravel, I’m hemmed in hope.” That concept makes its
way into everything I write, whether it’s women’s fiction or romantic comedy or
tender nonfiction. If readers walk away with a sliver or a bucketful of hope,
they’ve carried away something of value.
Q: Where do you find inspiration for your writing?”
A: I’m an observer, a noticer. Finding inspiration for a story is like picking
up sea glass on a shore or collecting heart-shaped rocks. I look for those
elements of beauty or uniqueness or curiosity in the people around me and what
matters to them. Nature is always inspiring. Survival and endurance, courage,
strength and even points of pain or distress can serve as inspiration for a plot
line or a character.
Q: What do you enjoy most about being an author?
A: I most enjoy exploring how far creativity can take us in our approach to what
we face in life. I love watching characters take on a life of their own and
informing or challenging me, the author.
Q: What projects are you currently working on?
A: I’m playing with the beginnings of a novel set in southwest Wisconsin, where
I grew up. It has a charming setting that keeps me awake at night imagining
living on that piece of property, counting those unique characters as my
friends. The story is still forming, but they’ve won me over.
Q: Tell us a little about yourself.
A: My grade school sweetheart husband and I live in the heart of Wisconsin, not
far from our three kids and six (to-date) grandkids. In addition to writing
books, I’m a literary agent for Books & Such Literary Management, so I’m
swimming in books, proposals, negotiations [and] editing, working with words all
day every day. Music is both hobby and soul-health for me. Most of my other
hobbies – other than amateur photography – are memories for me now in favor of
playing with words.
Q:Anything else you would like people to know?
A: “It’s a joy to have an opportunity to connect with library patrons. In
addition to being surrounded by books as a young child, my love for the power of
story started with the weekly arrival of a bookmobile in the small village in
Minnesota where we lived when I first learned to read. One of the other places
that influenced my love of story was every local library that opened its arms to
readers like me. So having books that might inspire others like I was inspired
as a child and talking about them in a thriving library is truly a dream come
trye,
© Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.
Show your appreciation of this freely provided information by not copying it to any other site without our permission.
Become a Clark County History Buff
|
|
A site created and
maintained by the Clark County History Buffs
Webmasters: Leon Konieczny, Tanya Paschke, Janet & Stan Schwarze, James W. Sternitzky,
|