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International Writers Inspiring Change featured book: Blessed Curse by Nancy Sartor

Updated: Oct 27



In Rugby, Tennessee, Jorie Wainright and the man she loves, Logan Mathis, grew up as two of the Rugby Six: a group of children so closely bound that they experience each other’s emotional and physical pain. And they have the power to affect others.

TO FEEL ANOTHER’S HEART

At twenty-six, tormented by a darker facet of her past, Jorie abandons love along with the desire to ever be a mother. The act plunges herself and the remaining Six into anguish, and it is all for naught. She is already pregnant with Logan’s child. When her father’s death forces her back to her hometown, she goes alone.

Logan’s love for Jorie forces him to obey her wishes. Still, for him there can be no other woman. And, like always, he can feel her pain...and her need. She waits in a rural Tennessee town on the edge of the spirit world, where a dark and sinister presence threatens all she never wanted. All that Logan knows she will never let die. All he knows they must save—together.


Our review of Blessed Curse


"An engrossing tale of love and friendship and the fight against evil. The Six are friends and they share a very unique challenge that is on the spooky side. United by a special connection since early childhood they all come together to help one of their own. This story was not my normal subject matter but it was so interesting and gripping that I read more than half of it in the first read - and the story had me totally hooked. It is well written and suspenseful. The Six are connected to one another in a special way, not dissimilar to the bond shared by identical twins. The main character in this story has suffered abuse as a child and connects to an unearthly presence while dealing with the threat to herself and her unborn child. If you like the unusual and being on the edge of your seat, holding your breath until you finish the book, then you will enjoy this one."

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About Nancy Sartor


iWIC Interview:


IWIC: Tell us about yourself.

Nancy: I am a native Nashvillian, a delicate southern flower sipping mint juleps on the front patio—oh, wait! That was my great grandmother. I am a native Nashvillian, far from delicate, the matriarch of an incredible family, the wife of a nationally-recognized composer and conductor of classical music, a recognized expert in transportation financing, an avid reader, an avid swimmer, and an author.


IWIC: What prompted you to become a writer? Nancy: According to my mother, when I was only a toddler when I heard a new word, I would crawl into my playpen (imagine a child crawling “into” a playpen!) and practice it until I could say it just right. She encouraged me to write letters to the editor. My teachers encouraged me to write short stories. I read everything I could get my hands on. My husband encouraged me to write a novel. I did.


IWIC: What do readers like about your writing? Nancy: My readers compliment the characters, the setting, imagery, and say the story compelled them to keep reading long into the night.


IWIC: Is there a message weaved into your writing? Nancy: Yes. I generally write a grand argument story where both sides of an issue are explored with one (the one I favor) winning in the end. It is sometimes difficult to find an opposing side, not because the subject is controversial, but because the subject seems cut and dried. How can one defend human trafficking, for instance?


IWIC: What is it that you want to inspire in others or change in the world through your writing? Nancy: For my paranormal novels: often what appears at first to be a threat is in reality a plea for help. Understanding others, even enemy-others is sometimes the solution to what at first appears to be a full frontal assault. For my suspense novels: Man’s inhumanity to man using the word “man” in the universal sense.


IWIC: Tell us about your most recent book and why you wrote it? Nancy: “BLESSED CURSE” is the story of Jorie Wainright’s battle to save herself, her unborn child and her life with the child’s father, Logan Mathis, from powerful other-worldly forces. This novel came after a visit to historic Rugby, Tennessee, a tiny mountain village established in the late 1800’s to provide a productive environment for the second sons of English nobility. The town is enchanting and has its own cast of ghosts, most of whom appear with regularity and perform their forever rituals. The story came to me almost whole (which, as most authors know, means I was only forced to revise it a hundred times rather than three hundred) after the visit. Jorie came first with a name I’d never heard before. She later said it was short for Marjorie and added that her middle name was Morningstar. Morningstar never made it into the final version because it did not fit the novel’s tone, but I got a good laugh from it, nonetheless. Logan arrived as Rodney, a name I eschewed in favor of something much more geared toward hunkdom. One by one, the characters arrived and took their perfect places.






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