Hello! It’s my turn to tell you a bit more about myself,
which, for many authors, is their least favorite thing to write about. Creating
others is so much more exciting. So, here it goes…
My parents, (in this precious little photo), lived in a
small town called Embarrass, Minnesota when I was born. I was the seventh of
eight children and the second of two daughters. Yes, having six brothers was an
eventful life. We moved to Kansas when I was ten and that’s where I met and
married my hubby. That was also where I fell in love with cowboys of all kinds—not
just Little Joe Cartwright, who by the way was my first boyfriend, he just
never knew it.
My husband and I migrated back to Minnesota after my parents
had. We came to visit them for Christmas and never left. My husband fell in love
with all the hunting and fishing. Our three boys were raised in Minnesota and
two of them are married and now raising their families here in Minnesota. This
is my husband and our four grandchildren.
With a degree in early childhood education, I taught
preschool for many years before becoming the
director of a child abuse and neglect prevention program. It was during that time that I started writing. My husband likes to take
credit for that. We were up north at the ‘hunting shack’. No, I’m not a hunter,
although I do own several guns and have a conceal and carry permit, but that
another story. I went to the hunting shack back then to make sure the boys ate
more than beef jerky and potato chips for a week. My husband wanted me to go
sit in the deer stand with him. I told him that I couldn’t because I had a good
book I wanted to finish. Somewhat sarcastically, he said I should write a book
because I’d read so many of them—which was true, I’ve always been, and still am,
an avid reader. I told him that I would write one—and started it that very
weekend. It took five years to get it published, and it is now off the market.
Thank goodness! I’ve learned so much since then!
During those five years, I switched to a job where I worked
part-time in order to help take care of my father, by then he was suffering
from Alzheimer’s Disease. He was a wonderful man and a great story teller.
While taking care of him he shared many memories with me that I used in writing “A
Wife for Big John” set in a lumber camp in the late 1800’s. This is me and my
dad. He died a week before I ‘sold’ that book.
I now work part-time for a senior care company and dedicate
my other days to writing. My favorite genre to write and read is western
historicals, but last year when my Harlequin editor asked what other era I’d
like to write about, I quickly answered the roaring twenties. I’m excited to
say that four books based in that era will be released in 2015. This year when
she asked if I had another era I’d like to try writing about, I explained how
my eight times great grandmother had been imprisoned as a witch during the
Salem Witch Trials. She told me to write up a proposal and send it in. It was
accepted and that is the book—a romance novel set during that time—I’m
currently working on.
The one last thing I need to mention is our granddog Bear.
Our youngest son ‘moved back home’ last year
with his dog. We love having them
live here (he works construction and is out of town a lot) but I know a
twenty-something son doesn’t want to live with his parents forever. I tell
him he can move out at any time, but the dog stays. This is Bear on his birthday
this July. We gave him one hundred tennis balls at once. He was in his glory!
There you have it. Lauri Robinson in a nutshell. The only
two things I may have forgotten to mention are that I’m a huge Elvis fan. Our
guest bedroom is known as Heartbreak Hotel. And I love watching Nascar—either live
or on T.V.
My soon to be released book, The Wrong Cowboy, has been
given four stars and the K.I.S.S. (Knight In Shining Silver) hero award from
R.T. Reviews.
Thanks for reading a bit more about me today. If you’d like to, I’d be
honored to connect with you elsewhere:
Hi Lauri, I enjoyed learning more about you and I think so much of the caring, compassionate woman you are resonates in your writing. Your grandchildren are just beautiful. The purple sunglasses also made me smile. She looks like a little movie star! Congratulations on all your success, and I cannot wait to read the Salem and Roaring 20s books!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ashley. That is Hayley, and she is our little movie star!
ReplyDeleteLauri,
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to read your books on the roaring twenties and around the Salem witch trials, both periods of history I'm interested in.
I know none of us really enjoy writing about ourselves (that's why we're writing fiction and not biographies) but I've enjoyed getting to know everyone a bit better.
All the best!
Minnesota is not my favorite place on Earth. My oldest sister lived there toward the end of her life and my other sister and I went to see her in April one year for her birthday. Well, the sun was shinning here in NC, the azaleas and rhododendrons were in full bloom, and a nice warm breeze drifted in the air when I left home on the road trip to Minnesota. It snowed the last day I was there. Ugh!
ReplyDeleteI was so sorry to learn about the death of your dad and mom. I know that had to be very sad for you. At least you had them for a good while.
It was fun learning about you and your road to publication. I wish you great success and happiness.
Lauri--I am so impressed.
ReplyDeleteEmbarrass, Minnesota? Really? Don't you love to tell people where you are from--such a conversation starter.
You career is just fantastic--I've known for a while how successful you are, and how your stories touch and reach so many readers. I am dutifully jealous..very much so.
It couldn't happen to a nicer person, though.
For you to quit your job so you could accompany your mother to chemo treatments says it all, as far as I'm concerned. We can show our good side to the world, but what you did for your mom is wonderful.
I wish I had a family member interested in my books..no one, except my husband, who is my biggest fan and supporter. Not one sister, daughter, son, daughter-in-law, cousin,in-law....no one in the family. I have a hard time with this, trying to understand, so when I see that someone out there--you--has a mother who was your biggest fan and critic is worth all the gold in Fort Knox.
Congratulations, and remember to support your children and grandchildren in any endeavor they undertake.
Thanks for sharing your life with us.
I've enjoyed the posts, too Kristen, even though writing them most likely hasn't been the most fun for any of us.
ReplyDeleteOh, yes, Sarah, we get plenty of snow in Minnesota. We never trust it's over until June, however, my mother did remember a year when it snowed in July. (In Embarrass, Minnesota)
ReplyDeleteYes, losing my parents was very hard, for they were wonderful people. But, they will forever remain in my heart. Thanks for your best wishes.
Yes, Celia, Embarrass, Minnesota. Thank you for your kind words. I have to give plenty of credit to my husband, who stood beside me each time I chose to 'back off' working to help my parents. It saddens me to hear that you believe no one in your family supports you. Perhaps they do, just silently. :)
ReplyDeleteLauri, thanks for sharing your story with us. I'm glad to know another Minnesota girl who loves cowboys.
ReplyDeleteI admire your devotion to your parents. You are a good person as well as a terrific author.
Thanks, Lyn! I'm assuming you've heard of Embarrass, being a Minnesotan. :)
ReplyDeleteI just had to come back and say that Celia said so much of what I thought when I read your post. I grinned when I saw the name of your hometown, too. Don't you wonder why it was named Embarrass?
ReplyDeleteI also want to tell you what an outstanding thing you did for your mom. Chemo can be scary, tedious, and awful. Without someone there to care and support you, it can be a lonely, frightening ordeal. I just wanted to be sure to tell you that and how much I admire you for really being there for your mom.
Lauri, looks as if you have a nice family. I'm enjoying learning more about our members this month.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Caroline and Sarah! BTW, the name Embarrass came from the shallow, twisting river. The French fur trappers and Canadian lumbermen back in the 1700's called it the "Riviere d'Embarras" meaning "River of Obstacles" and soon titled the Embarrass River. The Finnish immigrants who originally settled the area and named the town probably had no idea of the English meaning of Embarrass.
ReplyDelete