Violet’s Mountain is a quirky, Magical Realism romance—think Chocolat without the food. Or Holes but with some steamy sex. I believe it was inspired by my love for Gabriel Garcia Marquez, but maybe inspired is too strong of a word. I haven’t read Love in the Time of Cholera or One Hundred Years of Solitude or Chronicle of a Death Foretold or No One Writes to the Colonel in about 25 years, so if I had to tell you what they were about…hmmmmm…can’t remember? And also, it must be said, Gabriel Garcia is a f*!cking amazing writer.
Violet is a mysterious young woman who lives atop a giant mountain of hoarded things. By day she is a heavy machine operator, piling more things up and up and up. By night she adorns the top of the pile with welded steel, sculptural whirligigs.
She builds, she creates, she welds, she lifts heavy boxes, she drives cranes, she’s a total bad ass.
But in the story you barely get to know her, before everything shifts.
Instead you get to know Lala, her cousin. Violet has been her guardian, but as Lala puts it, “I can’t leave her, she’s so arty that she forgets to eat.”
You meet Benjamin, the young man who falls in love and wants to charm Violet down from the hoard and take her away to the city.
And you meet Edmund, the surfing environmentalist, heir to an oil fortune, who wants to rescue her and doesn’t know how. He rocks her world.
The story is about love, duty, and rescue. Love in spite of our shortcomings. Duty to family over all else. And rescue in spite of ourselves. And whether, when your world comes crashing down, you can find forgiveness for the one who caused your collapse.
It is available now on Amazon. Here: amazon.com/Violets-Mountain-H-D-Knightley-ebook/dp/B017IZS1G4/