Tag Archives: Saloma Miller Furlong

Your Story or Your Family? by Memoir Author Saloma Miller Furlong

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Saloma Miller Furlong/@SalomaFurlong

 

“My responsibility as a poet, as an artist, is not to look away.” ~ Nikky Finney

I am very please to introduce you to Memoir Author Saloma Miller Furlong. Saloma and I met in a LinkedIn discussion in the Women’s Memoir group. She has recently launched her second memoir, Bonnet Strings:An Amish Woman’s Ties to Two Worlds, which is about her struggles within her Amish community and her eventual decision to leave. Her first memoir, Why I Left the Amish,  was a finalist for the 2011 Forward Reviews “Book of the Year Award” (BOTYA).

My reviews can be found on Amazon ,Goodreads., Shelfari and LibraryThings:

BonnetStrings
Bonnet Strings: An Amish Woman’s Ties to Both Worlds

 

Welcome, Saloma!

 

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Memoir Author Saloma Miller Furlong

 

 Your Story or Your Family?

Finding a balance between censoring our life stories so as not to hurt the people we are writing about and “telling all” is a difficult one for memoir writers. None of us have the answers for anyone else, but if we feel called to writing our life stories for an audience, we must answer it for ourselves.

It requires that we search our souls for what is important in our lives and stories.

Having grown up Amish, I often felt I would be disbelieved if I told my story as it happened. If someone from almost any other insular culture were to write a story like mine, it would be believed. But for many people to believe my story, they first have to let the Amish people down off the pedestal they had them raised upon. And yet, knowing all this, I still felt compelled to write my story.

I did not grow up in an idyllic Amish family. My father was mentally ill and incapable of being a father. As we children grew older, he often became violent. And he was not the only one. I was often whipped by my mother, for “backtalk” when I tried to voice my frustrations for the injustices in my life. And I suffered physical, mental, and sexual abuses at the hands of my older brother, Joe.

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Saloma

Silence shrouds all abuse. And yet for those who are being abused, breaking that silence takes enormous courage. When I was growing up, I often felt like I had no advocates. Other Amish people were not equipped to deal with the dysfunction in our family, and they would have been seen as “interfering” with another family’s life, had someone tried to intervene, so I felt I had no choice but to endure the abuses.

When I wrote my first book, Why I Left the Amish, I felt the purpose of the book was to break the silence by telling my story truthfully and to make people aware that even within a culture that is often seen as a model of a good society, abuses do exist.

 

Sal and Linda
Saloma, the first time she left the Amish community

Years after I left the Amish for good, I was writing my memoir and trying to get it published. My mother (Mem) was losing her battle with cancer and she knew it. It was in this condition that she made a startling request. She asked that I “not write anything bad about Joe or me.” My jaw dropped. There was so much left unsaid in this request. It felt like she was almost admitting that if I were to tell the truth, it would not shed her or Joe in a good light. It seemed to say I could write whatever I wanted about my father. After all, it would perpetuate the family myth — that he was the cause of all our family troubles. I simply did not know what to say. Mem knew she was invoking guilt about whether I would honor a dying mother’s request, should I think about refusing. I knew that too.

When I read a story by poet Nikky Finney about her grandmother making a similar request when she read one of Finney’s books, I was moved to tears. She described how her grandmother made a stunning, fervent request after reading one of Finney’s books — she asked that it be her last. Finney wrote: “I would’ve promised to sail the seven seas in five days if I could have, for my grandmother. She meant that much to me. ‘Promise’ she said. But I couldn’t. Even for her, I couldn’t.”

“Even for her, I couldn’t.” That was how I felt when Mem made her request. And so I did not promise her.

Finney went on to write, “I too forgive, but I don’t forget. In the forgetting we miss something important about the climb, the loss of life, the loss of dreams.

My responsibility as a poet, as an artist, is to not look away.”

This was exactly my aim when I wrote Why I Left the Amish, though I would not have been able to articulate it so well at the time. And there were consequences. After it was published, none my siblings would talk to me. One of my five siblings finally began communicating with me two years later. The others have not.

Even though Why I Left the Amish dealt with the hefty issues around abuse and family dysfunction, my aim was to have readers understand that we humans are resilient creatures — we can overcome many adversities, even though we may lose hope for a time. And we can move out of that place of feeling stuck and beyond mere survival to actually thriving in our lives through intentional healing, forgoing the right to hurt back those who hurt us, and envisioning what we want in our lives. One of my favorite quotes is by Thoreau:

“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.”

When I wrote my second book, Bonnet Strings: An Amish Woman’s Ties to Two Worlds, I was doing exactly that. I had always envisioned continuing my story that Why I Left the Amish had started. Bonnet Strings begins when I was twenty years old and decided that I would no longer endure the violence and dysfunction in my family. It is a coming-of-age story that conveys my struggle of feeling torn between two worlds, of hurt and healing, of doubt and faith, of longing and love, and of the competing desires for freedom and belonging.

A Christian publisher, Herald Press, is publishing Bonnet Strings. In the parts of my story that shed others in a negative light, the editors helped me to sort out whether that “scene” is central to the story, or whether it is something I could omit. If it was central, they helped me frame the material to be more sensitive to the people I’m writing about. We also chose to change some of the names and identities. The guidance I received was crucial in this book, and it was true to Anabaptist principles.

So in my first book, I aired more on the side of “tell all” than in my second book. I likely will not heal any relationships with Bonnet Strings, but at least I hope to prevent the hurt that people may have felt with my first book from going any deeper. It was a hard balance, and Nikky Finney’s articulation of forgiving, but not forgetting is a good way to describe the balance I tried to bring into writing Bonnet Strings.

I often think about the fact that from the time I started writing for an audience until the time my first book finally made it into print was seventeen years. By that time both my parents’ journeys on this earth were at an end. I now think it happened as it was meant to. As much as I wanted at the time to see the book make it into print, both the story and I needed to evolve. And at the end of their lives, my parents did not need to be reminded of the mistakes they made.

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Thank you Saloma for addressing a topic that is germaine to anyone who writes their truths then faces objections from their family or close friends.

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Author’s Bio:

Saloma Miller Furlong inspired millions with her story when she was featured in the PBS documentary The Amish that aired on American Experience in February 2012, She is also featured in the sequel, The Amish: Shunned premiering on February 4. She is one of seven people whose story this film follows. Her books, Bonnet Strings: An Amish Woman’s Ties to Two Worlds and Why I Left the Amish, offer an authentic rendition of what it was like to be born and raised in an Amish community. Furlong’s coming-of-age story is simultaneously a rare look inside her Amish community and universal story of overcoming adversity.

She offers hope to people in difficult life situations to call on their inner resources to make necessary changes to alter their lives.During her thirty-year inner struggle of coming to terms with her Amish past, Furlong has gleaned a better understanding of herself and her heritage. It is this perspective that she brings to her reflections about her life and her heritage.

Her story is featured in the PBS documentaries, The Amish and The Amish: Shunned on “American Experience”:

 

Author Contact Information:

Website: http://salomafurlong.com

Blog: http://aboutamish.blogspot.com/

Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Saloma-Miller-Furlong/e/B004SXYJXE

Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorSalomaMillerFurlong

Goodreads Author Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4487564.Saloma_Miller_Furlong 

Twitter:@SalomaFurlong

 

 

 

How about you? Have you had to deal with resistant family members who try to talk you out of writing your truths?

 

Saloma has graciously agreed to give away a copy of her memoir to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

ANNOUNCEMENT: Congratulations, Janet Givens! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Frances Caballo’s book, AVOID SOCIAL MEDIA TIME SUCK.

Next Week:

Monday,    4/21/14:  “Why I Decided to Go with  a Small Publisher for My Memoir”

Thursday, 4/24/14:   “Journaling as Seed for Memoir: A Memoir Moment”

How a Chance Encounter Sealed My Reason for Writing Blush a “Real-Life Plain Life” Story by Shirley Showalter

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with Shirley Showalter/@shirleyhs

 

” We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand fibers connect us with our fellow man.” Herman Melville

 

I am thrilled to feature Shirley Showalter in this guest post on her new memoir, Blush: A Mennonite Girl Meets a Glittering World. Shirley and I met online several years ago and have been following each other ever since. Her blog is an excellent writing resource as a well as a source of ongoing inspiration and motivation for writers.

 

 

On June 4, 2013,  100 days before her book publication,she launched “The 100-day Challenge”, inviting her readers to participate in a “New Beginnings Challenge” where we shared a new beginning we had experienced each day. In doing so , she led us all gently , yet enthusiastically by the hand into her own personal journey to publication.

 

My reviews of Blush can be found on Amazon and Goodreads

 

 

 

Blush: A Mennonite Girl Meets a Glittering World Book Cover

 Excerpt of Book Description from the back cover:

“Little Shirley Hershey grew up in  a plain Mennonite home, yet she was named for a movie star. With her nose pressed to the window of the glittering world, she felt intensely the gap that existed in the 1950s and 60s between Mennonites and the larger world. This is a story of how a rosy-cheeked, barefoot Mennonite farm girl prepared to enter the glittering world and learned to do it on her own terms.”

 

Welcome , Shirley!

 

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Memoir Author Shirley Showalter

 

 

A Chance Encounter…

 

Do you believe in divine providence? Or in destiny?

 

Here’s an author/reader story that confirms my belief in both.

 

My husband picked a surprise destination for our 44th wedding anniversary: Tangier Island. To get there, we traveled by boat—the Chesapeake Breeze ferry. By chance we met another couple. Eventually the topic of my book entered the conversation.

 

Shirley’s husband Stuart waits to board the Chesapeake Breeze. He had the romantic idea of planning a surprise. “Pack your bags. We’re going to celebrate” was his only instruction.

 

I discovered that the woman in our shipmate couple loved to travel to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, the setting for most Amish and Mennonite romances, and that she was one of the millions of readers of fiction depicting this subculture. Like many of those readers, she identified herself as an evangelical Christian.

 

I was very excited to meet her, because I wanted to know if the interest in Anabaptist (a term that includes both Amish and Mennonite) fiction translates into an interest in Anabaptist memoir. In my new friend’s case it did! She has ordered two copies of Blush, and I plan to autograph them before my publisher sends them to her. She should have them by the time you read this story.

 

Background: I had read my first Amish romance novel as I prepared to launch my childhood memoir Blush: A Mennonite Girl Meets a Glittering World.

 

I chose Harvest of Hearts by Laura V. Hilton. The plot consists of a romance between a “drop-dead-gorgeous Amish man” Matthew Yoder and an Amish girl runaway Shanna Stoltzfus, who has to eventually choose where her true home is.

 

I chose this book because the Amish Fiction Group on Goodreads made it their selection. In my own youth I enjoyed Christian fiction, especially romance, so I understand the appeal of a love story that confirms one’s own belief system yet offers an intriguing window into a different culture – and enough conflict to make the pulse quicken.

 

In the year 2012 there were 85 Amish romances published, most of them to an excited, loyal readership. Valerie Weaver Zercher’s book Thrill of the Chaste explains the amazing growth of this publishing phenomenon. I carried Amish memoirist Saloma Miller Furlong’s review of this book on my blog, and a stimulating conversation ensued.

 

One of the many reasons I wrote Blush is that for a long time I felt a connection between the story of my childhood and the longing that brings tourists to Lancaster County (and to a half dozen other Mennonite and Amish communities, mostly in the East and Midwest). I described that longing as an element of finding my own voice as a writer in this post on Susan Weidener’s blog:

Writing to Find Authentic Voice

 

Now here’s the truly amazing part of this story. I was taking a course from marketing expert Dan Blank: Master Class :Roadmap to Readers at the time of this trip to Tangier Island. He had asked all of us writers to describe our ideal reader.

I had just constructed this picture of “Rachel,” my ideal reader.

 

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“Rachel”, my ideal reader

 

 

Now, here in front of me was a “Rachel.” She was a woman I knew I would enjoy getting to know better. As she reads and responds to my memoir, this is what I hope to learn:

 

  • Where were you moved, inspired, challenged as you read?

 

  • Who else might enjoy this book?

 

  • Where do those people congregate?

 

  • Will you help me connect with them?

 

 

Was meeting “Rachel” on the boat to Tangier a chance encounter or was it God having fun, stirring up a few waves in the Chesapeake?

 

You decide.

 

I know what my answer is.

 

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Author Bio: Shirley Hershey Showalter grew up on a Mennonite family farm near Lititz, Pennsylvania. The first person in her family to go to college, she eventually became the first woman president of Goshen College in Indiana. After six years as an executive at the Fetzer Institute, Kalamazoo, Michigan, she became a full-time writer living in Harrisonburg, Virginia.

 

Shirley can be reached at:

Twitter @Shirleyhs.

Her Facebook fan page : https://www.facebook.com/ShirleyHersheyShowalter.

Her Google + profile is here: https://plus.google.com/u/0/117720879252864367816/about

Her website

Amazon ordering link

 

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Thank you Shirley for transporting us into your publishing journey as well as into your “real -life plain life.” You have shown us how connecting with your purpose for writing helped you find your readers.

 

 

 

How about you? Who is your ideal reader? Have you ever had a chance encounter that changed your life as a writer? Do tell!

 

Shirley has graciously offered to give away a copy of Blush  to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

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Stay Tuned: Every  Friday in October Memoir Author, Coach, Editor Denis Ledoux of  The Memoir Network will present  four posts on Memoir Writing Tips in preparation for “November is Life Writing Month”

10/4:   Action is Essential in Memoir Writing

10/11: Describing Characters in Memoir Can Be Easy

10/18: Establish Your Setting

10/25: Conveying Theme Effectively

 

Denis has generously offered to give away his Memoir Starter Package at the end of the series to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

Next Week:

Monday, October 7:  I will be participating in The Memoir Network Blog Carnival with “What Memoir Writers Have in Common with Sculptors.”

 

Wednesday, October 9: Memoir Author Paige Strickland will discuss ” How I Found my Memoir While Searching For My Roots” in conjunction with the release of her memoir, Akin to the Truth: A Memoir of Adoption and Identity.

 

Friday, October 11: Memoir Writing Tips byDenis Ledoux as above.