All the Way to Heaven
Becky Doughty
(The Fallout Series, #1)
Published by: Clean Teen Publishing
Publication date: November 2nd 2015
Genres: New Adult, Romance
Anica Tomlin, business major, has just learned that the man she’s been planning her future around, her Global Finance professor, already has a beautiful wife and family. Ani cashes in her graduation gift to herself a little early—a trip to Tuscany—but from the moment she boards the wrong train in Pisa, her plans for solitude and self-indulgence begin to unravel around her.
When a bicycle accident thrusts Ani into the skilled hands of the dashing Dr. Cosimo Lazzaro, she reluctantly accepts his invitation to recover in his family’s country villa, perched on a hilltop surrounded by the Lazzaro olive groves. But it’s been a black year for olive growers all over Italy, and generations of tradition are being put to the test like never before.
Ani is swept up in the drama of life in Tuscany, the convergence of old and new, and the passions that drive people to pursue the desires of their hearts. Just as Ani begins to get her feet under her again, an unexpected turn of events leaves her doubting the very existence of happily-ever-after, unless she can learn to trust the desires of her own heart.
Although All the Way to Heaven is a stand-alone novel, it is the first book in The Fallout Series, a collection of sweet contemporary romances that follow characters featured in the first book.
EXCERPT:
Seven AM in Lucca, and the quaint medieval town was teeming with life, fueled by a caffeine-and-Mediterranean-air-induced high. Bicycle bells jingle-jangled, and boisterous greetings volleyed from one side of the narrow streets to the other. School children laughed and called out to comrades as they scurried off to class.
“Why is everyone so happy?” I pulled a lumpy pillow over my head, but I could find no entry back into the anesthetizing arms of sleep.
My first morning in this enchanted place, and I felt more like a forgotten princess in a tower than a girl on a much-anticipated trip to Italy.
I hadn’t expected to fall asleep right away, but after a hot shower and a bowl of the packaged soup my mom had slipped into my luggage before they drove me to the airport, fatigue settled its heavy cloak around my shoulders. Crawling between the crisp sheets that smelled of bleach and lavender, I was disquieted by the unfamiliar stillness of a town that collectively slept at night. My world was round-the-clock, where the freeway slowed, but never stopped, businesses stayed open twenty-four hours a day, and people lived in shifts, as though afraid the earth might cease turning on its axis the moment no one was looking. But sleep, I did, like a stone, in spite of the tears that made it impossible to breathe through my nose.
Morning, however, had arrived with a vengeance, the stillness before dawn exploding into a cacophony of sound as unfamiliar to me as last night’s stillness. Cobbled streets bordered by tall, ancient stone buildings made shouts and laughter echo and reverberate, each sound amplified. Everything felt so close, but no one here seemed to mind. Like an orchestra tuning its instruments before a performance, each noise outside the window was finding its perfect pitch in the symphony entitled, “A Day in the Life of Lucca.”
“Why is everyone so happy?” I pulled a lumpy pillow over my head, but I could find no entry back into the anesthetizing arms of sleep.
My first morning in this enchanted place, and I felt more like a forgotten princess in a tower than a girl on a much-anticipated trip to Italy.
I hadn’t expected to fall asleep right away, but after a hot shower and a bowl of the packaged soup my mom had slipped into my luggage before they drove me to the airport, fatigue settled its heavy cloak around my shoulders. Crawling between the crisp sheets that smelled of bleach and lavender, I was disquieted by the unfamiliar stillness of a town that collectively slept at night. My world was round-the-clock, where the freeway slowed, but never stopped, businesses stayed open twenty-four hours a day, and people lived in shifts, as though afraid the earth might cease turning on its axis the moment no one was looking. But sleep, I did, like a stone, in spite of the tears that made it impossible to breathe through my nose.
Morning, however, had arrived with a vengeance, the stillness before dawn exploding into a cacophony of sound as unfamiliar to me as last night’s stillness. Cobbled streets bordered by tall, ancient stone buildings made shouts and laughter echo and reverberate, each sound amplified. Everything felt so close, but no one here seemed to mind. Like an orchestra tuning its instruments before a performance, each noise outside the window was finding its perfect pitch in the symphony entitled, “A Day in the Life of Lucca.”
Author Bio:
Becky Doughty is the author of the best-selling Elderberry Croft series, The Gustafson Girls series, Waters Fall, and more. She’s also the voice behind BraveHeart Audiobooks. She writes Women’s Fiction with strong elements of romance, as well as Young Adult and New Adult Fiction. Becky’s favorite people are edge-dwellers, those who live on that fine line where hope and despair meet, where love is the only answer and grace becomes truly amazing. Becky is married to her champion of more than 25 years. They have three children, two of whom are grown and starting families of their own, and they all live within a few miles of each other in Southern California. They share their lives with too many animals, a large vegetable garden, and a strange underground concrete room they’re certain was built for dark and sinister purposes….
Author
Interview: Becky Doughty
Q: Your new book, All the Way to Heaven, takes place in Italy, and in particular, the
city of Lucca in the heart of Tuscany. What made you choose Lucca for your
location?
A: Several years ago, I visited Italy with
a friend, and we opted to “take the road less traveled.” By that, I mean we
were on a slightly restrictive budget. So we spent most of our time in youth
hostels, guest houses, and bed and breakfasts rather than hotels and resorts.
And we looked for cities that were highly rated by tourists, but that weren’t
necessarily highly populated by them. Lucca was our first stop on our trip, and
I fell in love with the city. There is a sense of being “out of time and place”
in Lucca. The core of the city is completely encircled by a Renaissance period wall
wide enough to race cars on—and at one time, people did! Nowadays, it’s
carefully preserved, and limited to only pedestrians and cyclists. It’s essentially
one huge park that hugs the heart of Lucca, as though protecting it from the
ravages of the real world. A daily promenade on the wall is essential to
experience life in Lucca. In fact, in Italy, there is a custom, passeggiata, a term which means “evening stroll,” and it’s a national
tradition for people to take a walk after work hours and before dinner. If you
live in Lucca, the wall is the place to experience passeggiata at its finest. What better place to fall in love?
Q: You reference opera quite a bit in All the Way to Heaven. Are you an opera buff?
A: I’m pretty much a fake fan. I love listening to the arias
(that would be like saying I’m a Van Halen fan but I only listen to their
ballads) really, really loudly when I clean house. It kinda drowns out my bad
attitude—I hate, loathe, despise, etc., cleaning—and turns my chores into
something dramatic and otherworldly. But I do think the stories told in operas
are some of the wildest and craziest ever, and originally, I intended to write
a whole series of modern retellings of various operas. Unfortunately, my fake
fandom started showing while doing my research, and I realized I didn’t know
enough about opera to base a whole series on it. So I kept the opera elements
in All the Way to Heaven because
they worked, but moved toward other themes in the rest of the series. Music,
however, remains a key player in all three (maybe four) books!
Q: Are there cliffhangers in The Fallout Series?
A: In every book there are some loose threads that will lead
into the next book, but no real cliffhangers. I’m not a huge fan of
cliffhangers, mainly because I’m the kind of reader who needs closure. I love books that leave a few loose ends to tie into
the next book(s) in the series, but I need to be able to close the book and
spend some time looking back on the story and reveling in what I’ve just read,
rather than feeling like I need to charge ahead into the next one. For
instance, I loved The Hunger Games
books. Even though there were many threads left loose, and even some
cliffhanger elements, the premise of each individual book was brought to
resolution. As much as I enjoyed Kiera Cass’ The Selection series (don’t get me wrong – I gave it 5 stars!), it
actually became frustrating to me as I closed the cover on each book and still
had no closure on some of the relationship issues. I kept thinking to myself,
“So choose already, and let’s get on to saving the kingdom!”
Q: Speaking of other authors, do you have a favorite author
or authors?
A: I’m an avid reader, and I don’t have any major genre
preferences or hang-ups, so I tend to have a flavor-of-the-month thing when it
comes to authors. Right now, I can’t get enough of Amy Harmon. Her novels have
a depth to them that many NA/contemporary romances don’t. She writes about
ordinary people with extraordinary circumstances or gifts or curses in a way
that’s believable and culturally timely, and her ability to thread spiritual
elements through her stories is so refreshing. I have yet to read one of hers where
I don’t turn the last page with bittersweet relish. John Green always wins with
me, Rachel Marks, Jessica Parks, and I’m looking forward to seeing what they do
with the TV show “Shadowhunters” based on Cassandra Clare’s The Immortal Instruments… It would seem
my flavor of the month is YA/NA at the moment. I’ve also been a fan of Diana
Gabaldon for most of my adult life, some Stephen King I love (and some I hate),
and many, many others.
Q: I notice you call The
Fallout Series “Sweet New Adult Fiction.” Can you tell us a little more
about that?
A: Nothing like saving the tough stuff ‘til last. Okay. I
have this unquenchable belief that “coming of age” is not synonymous with “testing
all boundaries.” I love, love, love
the New Adult category, but I think it’s kind of gotten a bad rap since its
debut on the market. I’ve asked many NA authors what they consider is criteria
for NA, and the answer across the board is character age. That transitional
period between living at home and living independently. So they’re typically
set on college campuses or at new jobs, or around new experiences (such as
traveling alone, like Ani in All the Way
to Heaven). So often, the expectation is that the characters in these
novels will indulge in extreme sexual exploration (the covers alone do much to
propel this conception), among other
things, but many of these books are about so much more than that. And in
fact, many of these books include very little of it, dealing more with how
their characters handle new seasons in their lives, and sometimes get bypassed
because they’re lumped in with what is often considered “erotica.” Rumor has it
there’s a growing demand for “sweet” fiction about this particular transitional
period – by “sweet” I mean relatively mild in regards to violence, language,
and sex, even if the storyline deals with some of these very real issues--and I
want to be a part of that new subcategory of New Adult fiction.
Q: One last question. Is this why you’re publishing through
Clean Teen Publishing?
A: In a roundabout way, I suppose it is. I submitted to
Clean Teen Publishing NOT because my books are clean, but because Clean Teen is
known for the content analyses they do on all their books. They do not believe
in censorship, but in full disclosure. Movies and television are rated for
content, so why not book ratings?
Q: Thank you for being here today, Becky.
A: Thank you for having me. I appreciate the opportunity to
share a little about me and my books with you, and I hope you’ll find something
in my stories that resonates with you! I’d be happy to answer any other
questions you might have!
When in Italy… Learn Some Italian!
by
Becky
Doughty
I
love to travel. I grew up in the South Pacific on the island of Papua New
Guinea, in the area now known as West Papua. My father was a jungle pilot and
mechanic and we lived among the indigenous tribes there. My siblings and I made
unchaperoned two day, 3000 mile, flights to and from a boarding school in the
Philippines for high school, coming home for two and a half months in the
summer and about two weeks over the holidays. Every couple years, our family
would pack up and come back to the United States for a couple months. In other
words, traveling has simply been a way of my life, and I love it.
What
I don’t love, though, is the fact that I have a major mental block when it
comes to learning new languages. Which seems odd to me, since I make my living
with words. But for whatever reason, I’ve always struggled to learn new
languages. Even though I spent most of my childhood in countries where my
English was not even a second language, I bumbled and blundered my way through
on the bare bones of the native tongues, not because I was lazy, but because it
was the best I could do. In fact, I often taught my friends to speak English so
we could communicate, as it always came much easier to them than it did to me.
The
thing is, one of the most effective ways to endear yourself to people in
another country is to learn something about them, and in particular, to at
least attempt to learn enough of their language to show you’re not coming to
them with an entitled attitude.
So
with every trip I take, I make a point to learn a few catch-phrases and carry around a pocket
English-to-Italian (or whatever language is spoken) dictionary, like the one
Rick Steves puts out. (Rick Steves’ pocket travel guides, by the way, are
BRILLIANT! Packed full of useful info; not just the dictionary!) The following
list is never quite adequate, especially not when you’re slightly
accident-and-blunder-prone like I am, but when I show that I’m trying, it never
fails that someone will notice and take pity on me and offer to help.
Hi/Goodbye! (Informal) - Ciao/Salve!
Goodbye! (Formal) – Arrivederci!
Hello/Good morning! – Buon giorno!
Good afternoon/evening! – Buona sera!
Good night! - Buona note!
Welcome! – Benvenuti!
What is your name? - Como se chiama?
My name is Becky. - Mi chiamo Becky
It’s a pleasure (to meet you). – Piacere.
How are you? - Come va?
Fine, thank you! - Bene, grazie!
So-so – cosi-cosi
Please - Per favore
Thank you - Grazie
You’re welcome (Everything is fine. It’s
all good. Etc.) – Prego!
Nothing/It’s nothing/Never mind - Niente
Excuse me - Mi scusi.
I’m sorry - Mi dispiace
I don’t understand - Non capisco
I don’t speak Italian - Non parlo Italiano.
Do you speak English? - Parla inglese?
How do you say “___” in Italian? - Come si dice in Italiano “__”?
Repeat that, please. - Ripeta,
per favore.
Speak slowly, please. - Parli piano, per favore.
You are very kind. - Lei è molto gentile
“Hello” when answering the phone – Pronto!
My goodness!/Wow!/etc - Ai vello!
How much does it cost? - Quanto costa/costano?
Is the tip included? - Il servizio è incluso?
Can you help me? - Mi può aiutare?
Wait! – Aspetta!
Where is Fillunga Street? – Dove è via Fillunga?
Where it the train station? - Dove è trova la
stazione?
Where is the bus
stop? – Dove è la fermata dell’autobus?
Where is the public bathroom? – Dove è la toilette?
What is in this entrée? – Ciò che è
nel antipasto?
There were several fun Italian terms,
endearments, and phrases used in All the
Way to Heaven. Here are a few of the yummy ones:
Tesora – My darling (literally: treasure – a term
of endearment)
Un
altro glorioso giorno! –
It’s a glorious day!
Caffé
y colazione – Coffee and
breakfast
Alla
Dolce Vita – The sweet life
(This is the name of the guest house where Ani stays)
damigella
in pericolo - damsel in
distress
passerotta - sparrow (a term of endearment)
Vorrei
baciarti. - I would like
to kiss you.
Voglio
baciarti! – (more urgent
or informal) I want to/I must kiss you!
Brindiamo
alla vita, all’amore, alla felicità. Salute! - We toast to life, to love, and to happiness. Cheers!
Cin
cin! – Hear, hear!
(informal response to a toast)
Sei
ubriaco - You are drunk
Buonanotti
e dormire bene - Goodnight
and pleasant dreams
Cucciola
- puppy (a term of
endearment)
Invaiatura
– The changing of the
color of fruit as it turns from green to ripe.
Mi
lasci senza fiato! - You
leave me breathless!
Va
con Dio – Go with God.
How I wish I could say I have these all
stored on the memory files of my mind, but I’d be lying. There is one phrase I
do know by heart; one I used often as I traveled from place to place during my
stay in Italy. I leave you with this:
Mi
sono divertita! (I had a
wonderful time!)
Thanks for having me today!
Cat - Thanks so much for having me here today and for sharing about me and my books with your readers.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate you!
Becky Doughty
It is my pleasure!! :)
Delete"All the Way to Heaven" sounds like an extremely interesting read, that I intend on getting my hands on, really soon!!!
I just loved the Italian Glossary that you provided, too!!
Thank you so much~~