My Reading Life – Sarah Loudin Thomas
How My Reading Life Birthed My Writing Life
Harper Lee said, “Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing.”
I know just what she means.
As a kid, I literally wore out a set of Little House on the Prairie books. I read the covers right off of them and kept going until they were in pieces.
I LOVED those books. And I wanted to be Laura. I wanted to wear a sleeping cap when I went to bed in a loft. I wanted a sunbonnet (even though Laura refused to wear hers). I wanted to ride to town in a wagon and write on a slate. Shoot, I already had the freckles!
Today Sarah Loudin Thomas shares about her writing life. Share on XOf course, I also wanted to be Heidi. I still have the copy of that book my mother read to me over and over and over again. I wanted to eat toasted cheese and go to the pasture with the goats to pick flowers. I wanted to sleep on a bed of sweet hay (I asked Dad if I could–we DID have a barn full of hay. He said no). I also kind of wanted the nice clothes Heidi got when she was packed off to the miserable city, but I felt like a bit of a turncoat for that.
I didn’t just read those stories when I was a child, I lived them. I opened the books and disappeared inside, traveling to the prairie or the alps as surely as if I’d had a plane ticket.
Actually, those places were more than real because they lived in my heart.
As an adult, I don’t read books in the same way. Oh, I still enjoy reading stories, but I guess I’ve lost that feeling that what I’m reading could happen to me. The world of possibilities has narrowed as I’ve aged. I’m probably not going to head west in a covered wagon. I’m probably not going to smuggle soft, white rolls to the grandmother.
But then again . . . when I write stories, I get to flip through a world of possibilities and choose the ones that speak to me. The ones that touch my heart and stir my soul. I think that’s what I love best about being a writer. I create characters and then gift them with beauty, joy, hardship, and transformation.
And if I want one of them to sleep on a bed of sweet-smelling hay, there’s no one to tell me I can’t.
Sarah Loudin Thomas grew up on a 100-acre farm in French Creek, WV, the seventh generation to live there. Her historical fiction is often set in West Virginia and celebrates the people, the land, and the heritage of Appalachia.
Sarah is the director of Jan Karon’s Mitford Museum in Hudson, NC. She holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Coastal Carolina University and is the author of the acclaimed novels The Right Kind of Fool–winner of the 2021 Selah Book of the Year–and Miracle in a Dry Season–winner of the 2015 Inspy Award. Sarah has also been a finalist for the Christy Award, ACFW Carol Award and the Christian Book of the Year Award. She and her husband live in western North Carolina.
To learn more about her books, Appalachia, and her dog, visit www.SarahLoudinThomas.com.
The Conversation
We have a lot in common. I dreamed of being Laura or Heidi. I read those books until they were a mess. Only to buy more until I wore those out, too. I love historical fiction.