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Author
breaks free with first novel
By R. Scott Gerdes
(The Taos News - August 2003)
Ghosts
and wicked visions haunt Annamarie Iver's sleep. Like a video loop gone mad,
Annamarie's nightmares have followed her most of her life. Happenstance brings
her to Taos, N.M. counselor/dream therapist/shaman, Rosemary Quintana."
So begins the journey of a Northern New
Mexican woman who seeks release from her dark tormentors in the first novel
penned by Dixon resident Charmaine Coimbra.
Coimbra, a former journalist from
California, will read from her book, "The Gathering Basket," Monday
(Aug. 11), 7 p.m., at the Embudo Valley Library in Dixon, located about 26 miles
south of Taos. A library benefit will follow -- of which 10 percent of sales of
the book will go to the library.
Coimbra's writing career took off with The
Antelope Press in Palmdale, Calif., where she wrote features, columns and served
as assistant editor specializing in women's issues. The people she met along the
way and the stories she wrote about them have served as a composite to
illustrate some of the women's issues she raises in her novel. Coimbra also took
pieces from her own memories to enrich the story's characters.
"I've had a rich and varied life with
a wealth of life experience," she said. "I used my Catholic school
training as part of my character's personality. I was definitely around in the
'60s and I've lost many loved ones to untimely deaths. As 'The Gathering Basket'
story developed, I gathered my feelings and emotions to express what I thought
my characters would feel. That was an awesome experience in creativity."
The character of Rosemary -- who was born
from a combination of many people -- is the author's favorite, so much so that
Coimbra became emotionally attached to her.
"I cried when (Rosemary) finished her
work with Annamarie," Coimbra confessed. "She's a no- b.s. kind of
woman, intelligent, sage, well educated and highly sensitive."
While she admits her story has its dark
moments, Coimbra said there are positive images she attempted to engage:
"Faith and truth are two of the most important elements of healing and
survival."
Coimbra found that writing fiction created
some self-imposed obstacles of which she learned to break down over the five
years spent on the novel.
"My first drafts were very short. I
didn't think I had enough in me to conjure up a hundred million words or
so," she shared. "Then a former news colleague e-mailed me with
something like, 'You've already written a million words as a news person, so
what's a hundred million more?' My biggest challenge was making things up.
Journalism is about the truth, and crossing the line of truth was something I
had to work on. I can't begin to count the number of drafts and rewrites -- even
up to this proof. But once I broke out of the reporting box, this project became
so much fun that I can't wait to get into my next fictional tale."
Her next fictional tale will more than
likely include Rosemary. "I think she'll be back," Coimbra said of her
main character.
She is at work on a nonfiction book titled
"We Were the California Girls" of
which she admits to being more comfortable. The work is a collection of
Coimbra's newspaper columns, essays and opinions.
"It's the writing genre that I have
used for more than 20 years," she explained. "Back to my former
colleague who said I've all ready written a gazillion words, well, I kept all
those words (clips) in boxes. I spread them out on my dining room table and
found a story, an American story."
Her feature stories have been published my
many newspapers and magazines, including the Los Angeles Times. Coimbra also
spent six years as a public relations specialist for country music stars and
entertainment venues. A couple of years after getting married in 1986, she and
her husband, Clif, bought a Santa Fe bookstore and ran it until it was sold in
1994. It was then that Coimbra began writing what has evolved into "The
Gathering Basket."
Her book signing in Dixon will be followed
by an Aug. 16 book launch party in Santa Fe and another book signing at Hastings
Books and Music Aug. 23 in the DeVargas Center Mall in Santa Fe.
To get to the Embudo Valley Library, head
south on State Road 68. Turn left at State Road 75 and follow it to the Village
of Dixon. For more information, call the library at 505-579-9181.
FYI
Reading
Monday (Aug. 11), 7 p.m.,
Embudo Valley Library,
Dixon, New Mexico |