Thursday, June 20, 2024

Thanks to Shannon Ainslie of Kamloops

If you look up Shannon Ainslie on the Internet, you'll probably find a guy who (thankfully) survived an attack by two sharks. You'll also find Kamloops writer and reporter Shannon Ainslie. Big thanks to her for this article about my novel Song for Susie Epp in iNFOnewsKamloops, June 19, 2024. https://infotel.ca/newsitem/kamloops-authors-latest-novel-is-set-in-a-city-much-like-her-own/it105315

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

New novel features Mennonite wallflower, bossy mother-in-law, and shocking secret

I'm pleased to report that my new novel, Song for Susie Epp, is out! It's set in a city like Kamloops, British Columbia and a village like Elbow, Saskatchewan (near where I grew up). The story features a Mennonite wallflower whose confidence grows as she contends with a bossy mother-in-law and a shocking secret. The book is 264 pages, available in paperback or e-book. Ask for Song for Susie Epp by Elma Schemenauer in a bookstore or library. It's also available online from Amazon in many countries. Other online sellers include—IN CANADA: Kobo or Indigo. IN THE US: Smashwords or Barnes & Noble. IN THE UK: Brown's. IN SPAIN: Casa del Libro. IN MEXICO: Librerias Gandhi. IN GERMANY: Thalia. IN FRANCE: Vivlio. IN AUSTRALIA: Booktopia. For more information, please see my website, https://elmams.wixsite.com/elma . Thank you.

 



Sunday, June 16, 2024

The Covenant of Water reviewed by Elma Schemenauer

The Apostle Thomas had a tough time believing in Christ's resurrection. But once he did, he took his faith and ran with it. Tradition says he went to India and shared it with people there. A number of them believed and "Saint Thomas Christians" (who also go by other names) eventually numbered in the millions. Some of those in Kerala State are main characters in Abraham Verghese's novel The Covenant of Water.

 

The novel follows three generations of a family from 1900 to 1977. I enjoyed their story for its human interest. Characters find love in unexpected places. They struggle to communicate. They rejoice in the births of children. Some are selfish, others breathtakingly unselfish. Some are Christ-followers. Others are Christians only because they were born into their particular ethnoreligious community.

 

At one point in the story, a physician named Mariamma sees a mural on a hospital wall. "It depicts gowned, masked surgeons bent over a patient, under the halo of the theatre lamp. In the shadows, figures observe the surgery. One of them is Jesus, his hand resting on the surgeon's shoulder." Mariamma doesn't have that kind of faith, but she wishes she did.

 

There's lots of medical content in the novel, not surprisingly since the author is a physician. I didn't understand nearly all the medical stuff, but I enjoyed it. Verghese makes it interesting. He sees medicine as a passionate pursuit, even a spiritual calling. His viewpoint comes through strongly.

 

Reading this novel made me think about my own ethnoreligious community. I'm a first-generation child of Mennonite immigrants from Russia to Canada. As I was growing up., I sank deep roots into the beliefs, stories, and traditions of my extended Mennonite family. They've inspired some of my writing, especially my novels Consider the Sunflowers and Song for Susie Epp.

 

Abraham Verghese was born in Ethiopia to Christian parents from Kerala, India. He's now a professor of medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine in Stanford, California. His novel The Covenant of Water has given me new insights on how to write fiction based on one's personal background and experiences. Now I plan to read his earlier novel Cutting for Stone.