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A Product of Creative Storytelling
Posted by Literary Titan

Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland follows a Norwegian immigrant family’s journey from the rugged valleys of Norway to the windswept prairies of Nebraska. What first drew you to transform your family history into fiction rather than memoir or nonfiction?
Though Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland is based on a true account with actual events taken from historical records, family journals, diaries, letters, and various personal collections, much of the dialogue and sensory detail is a product of creative storytelling.
I believe this blend of fiction and nonfiction became a more honest vessel for ancestral memory than the half-stories that are often passed down through generations. The split between fact and fiction wasn’t a chasm; it was a braid, the strands made stronger when entwined.
Faith steadies many characters, but it doesn’t spare them grief or moral difficulty. How did you approach writing spirituality without turning it into easy reassurance?
It was important to show how faith shaped the characters’ lives while also shining a tender light on their struggles, vulnerabilities, and gradual acceptance of their circumstances. This was never a story about an easy existence, but more about perseverance and resilience in the face of hardship.
The vignette structure richly details episodes across generations and suits the material but creates its own challenges. How did you decide what each vignette needed to do for the larger story?
I structured the vignettes to carry readers through the family’s joys, sorrows, struggles, and hardships. My hope was that these detailed scenes would draw readers more deeply into the story.
The temptation was always to linger, circle back and revise, but I forced myself to move chronologically, as if pacing out a timeline on some empty stretch of prairie. The result was a quilt of moments, each square stitched with its own sorrow and hope, but together forming a collective resilience.
Omer’s loss and the family’s final reckoning with love, silence, and truth give the book its closing weight. What did you want that ending to feel like — resolved, aching, or something harder to name?
For the ending, I intentionally avoided a neat, predictable closure. The true family story was marked by tragedy, and Omer’s death brought long-buried conflict to the surface. I wanted the ending to hold both the raw pain of loss and the quiet resignation that followed. There was no real resolution—only acceptance, or perhaps the illusion of it.
On a deeper, more personal level, my grandmother and father were never given the chance to be heard. She was judged harshly for betrayal and yielding to a forbidden love. My father, marked by this scandal and set apart from his siblings by the color of his eyes and the curl of his hair, endured his own exile. The family’s solution was silence: no confession, no forgiveness, just an unspoken pact to let the wounds heal over time.
I spent my childhood observing the subtle choreography at family gatherings, the practiced dance that ensued whenever painful topics entered the conversation. I learned early that stories had the power to heal, but also that the wrong story, or an incomplete one, could wound the very soul. In writing Voyagers, I was not only giving voice to my ancestors but also breaking the pact of silence that had defined my family for a century. Every word became a kind of restitution.
My goal was never to rewrite history, but rather to restore it: to take the faint, wavering outlines of my family and thicken them until they could be seen in all their flawed fullness. The book’s conclusion, though unresolved, felt honest. There was no final reckoning, only the hard-won acceptance that sometimes comes after loss.
What I desired most was for my grandmother and father to finally be heard—to have their true selves, in all their complication and contradiction, stand tall and unashamed. In the name of propriety, their stories had long been silenced—until now. I wanted to give them a voice; they waited nearly 100 years for the truth to be told.
Author Links: Website | Amazon
Rooted in the author’s own heritage, the story follows Kittil and Marte Dyrebu as they leave behind everything familiar-family, language, and homeland-to chase the promise of opportunity in America. Their passage across the Atlantic is only the beginning. What follows is a lifetime of perseverance: carving a home from raw prairie, enduring devastating storms, profound loss, quiet joys, and the relentless demands of frontier life.
Told through richly detailed vignettes, Voyagers weaves together the lives of parents and children, siblings and spouses, revealing how love, faith, and tradition are carried forward even as circumstances change. From intimate moments around a family table to life altering crossroads shaped by duty, sacrifice, and longing, each generation faces its own tests-yet remains bound by shared memory and resilience.
At its core, Voyagers is a tribute to storytelling itself: the way stories preserve identity, heal grief, and connect past to present. It is a novel for anyone drawn to historical fiction, immigrant journeys, and the enduring power of family legacy.
Both tender and unflinching, Voyagers honors the courage of those who came before-and the stories that continue to shape who we are.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, D L Norris, ebook, family saga, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Voyagers: Homeland to Heartland, writer, writing
Field of Memories
Posted by Literary Titan

Field of Memories is a memoir told through a long chain of short, self-contained stories. Childhood in 1950s California. The family moves to Idaho. A parade of neighbors, pets, cousins, choir trips, candy trucks, and church mornings. Later, marriage, grief, travel, Auschwitz, dementia, and the slow ache of saying goodbye to parents and friends. Each vignette is small in scope but big on feeling. Together they form a life story that leans hard into gratitude, faith, and the power of remembering.
I found the story to be very smooth and polished. The tone stays warm and steady even when the subject is painful. The language is plain, almost conversational, and that gives the stories a kind of kitchen-table honesty. I liked how often a scene hangs on one concrete detail. A blue Studebaker. The smell of Toni home perm solution. A chipped tablecloth chewed by the neighbor’s dog. Those small bits made the memories feel lived in, not staged. I appreciated how confidently the prose leans into sentiment, and how many of the endings clearly spell out the lesson, almost like the comforting moral at the end of a fable.
The ideas underneath the stories resonated with me in a gentler, slower way. The book circles again and again around kindness, the cost of cruelty, and how ordinary people carry each other through time. The chapter about Matthew and the teacher who says, “stay with your own kind,” made my stomach knot, because the racism is so casual and so early. The Auschwitz visit in “Never Forget” pulled the lens wide and dropped the whole earlier world of penny candy and Levi’s into a much darker frame. I appreciated that shift. It kept the book from drifting into pure nostalgia. I also felt a strong spiritual thread. It shows up in quiet moments, like the customer-service call that turns into a mini sermon about grief, or the way the author talks about her mother “changing addresses” instead of simply dying. I responded to that mix of tenderness and steadiness, even if now and then it brushed close to sentimentality for my taste.
I would recommend Field of Memories to readers who enjoy reflective, faith-tinged life writing, especially anyone who grew up in mid-century America or loves stories about close families and small towns. If you like to sit with a cup of coffee and dip in and out of short, heartfelt pieces that celebrate parents, grandparents, neighbors, and the strange beauty of getting older, this collection fits that mood very well.
Pages: 188 | ASIN : B0G72F556R
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, autobiographical, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, D L Norris, ebook, family, Field of Memories, goodreads, historical biographies, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, short stories, story, writer, writing




