An Interview with Nancy Joie Wilkie
What would you say to people who believe Christianity and science are at odds with one another? Why did you decide to weave faith and science into this collection of short stories?
I would say that while I do believe there is a divine intelligence running the show we call the Universe, I do not believe that to be at odds with science. Science is simply our attempt to understand what the Good Lord has created.
As for why I decided to weave faith and science into these stories, it really wasn’t much of a decision or anything requiring a great deal of thought. I am a scientist … albeit a retired scientist … and always interested in how things really work behind the curtain. And I am a deeply spiritual person. I think there must be a connection between science and religion somewhere.
Can you talk about your writing process and how you add “Easter eggs” into the stories that give readers insight into your motivations behind your writing?
I do love Easter eggs! And there are quite a few in these novelettes. Friends who know me well immediately recognize them. One dear friend recently told me he wished he didn’t know me so well such that when he was reading the stories his mind could stay in the story and not on me! It is me just having fun!
As for the writing process … whenever the Muses drop something into my head, I feel obliged to write it down! It is really that simple.
What was the most difficult short story for you to write in this collection, and what was the inspiration behind it?
One of the stories was written 25 years ago while the rest were written within the last two or three years. None of them were particularly difficult to write. But I can tell you the story that was the most fun to write … The Wishbringer! The trouble the main character has in finding a significant other is a reflection of own journey of ups and downs in that department. This story does seem to be everyone’s favorite!
In one of your short stories, “The Goldfire Project” you explore what you call “spiritual dynamics”. Can you talk more about that idea and why it was the inspiration for that piece?
Being a distant relative of William Thomson—better known as Lord Kelvin, a major contributor to the Third Law of Thermodynamics—and having been a scientist myself, I have always been interested in the Three Laws of Thermodynamics. After I lost my father to cancer 17 years ago, I started to rethink how I viewed the soul and the afterlife—trying to make some sense of my father’s passing—and then started thinking about our “before life.” It was then that I thought developing the Three Laws of Spiritual Dynamics would be an interesting analog and might be used in some of my stories. How do souls come and go from our physical bodies? A future story titled “The Natural Order of Things” (to be included in a fourth collection of stories titled “By The Light Of The Sun”) will explore these ideas and how they came about in greater depth.
What do you hope that readers will take away from this collection?
- The more mankind looks outward, the more he looks inward.
- Is there really such a place as heaven? And if we are given an alternate path at the end of our corporeal life, would we take it?
- Relationships between parents and children are complicated.
- Do we really understand how the Universe operates and what if we are given a chance to look behind the curtain?
- What was the message that Jesus Christ delivered during his time on Earth? And how would we respond to Him if He were to appear again?
What’s next for you in your author career? Are you working on anything new?
Oh, yes! I am always working on something new! Those darned Muses never seem to leave me alone!
I have a third collection of tales that will be released by Austin Macauley Publishers LLC in early 2024—titled “The River Keeper and Other Tales.” One of the tales is about Aurora, a young girl who discovers a ring with magical powers and uses those powers to help a young knight battle an evil dragon. It isn’t until after the battle she learns that use of those powers came at a cost. The title of the story, not surprisingly, is “Aurora’s Ring.”
And for the record (pun intended), inspiration for the story came from a song of the same name, written by me after an idyllic day on the beach. After hearing the tune, my musical collaborator, Stephen Bloodsworth, suggested we compose and record a concept album telling Aurora’s full story! And so we did! “Dragon’s Door—A Tale of Ring and Sword” was released on Christmas Day 2022. You can hear songs from it on Spotify, iTunes, Apple Music, Pandora, and our HearNow Web Page (https://sparrows-tale.hearnow.com/). It is also available on Amazon … complete with a really nice booklet!
Looking forward, I have completed a fourth work of fiction titled “Who Moved My Planet? —A Story For Those Needing To Understand Something About Needs (A Novella). I have several beta readers reviewing it now and hope to send it to a publisher in early fall of 2023.
When you were a child, what were some of your favorite genres to read?
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Fabulous cover
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