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It’s Just the Spark

Laura DeNooyer Author Interview

The Broken Weathervane follows a woman trying to unravel a family mystery who takes a new job with an English professor who is working on a biography that he does not realize is tied to her family. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

My dad shared a family story about his father and uncle who were in business together with a younger brother who struggled quite a bit. The two older brothers did everything in their power to help him succeed in his own businesses and later let him work at theirs. I loved the way they cared for him despite all the difficulties they encountered.

This was the spark of the 1950s timeline in my novel. However, it’s just the spark. It’s not a story about my family, and the characters took on lives of their own. 

In the 2015 timeline, I needed two people at cross purposes with each other—both seeking the same information for different reasons.

I found Leslie to be a very well-written and in-depth character. What was your inspiration for her and her emotional turmoil throughout the story?

It was important for Leslie to have understanding of mental health issues, some from experience, some from study and observation. Having safeguarded her family’s identity and history her entire life, she wrestles with how to handle newfound information she’s been wondering about for years. 

Since her life had to overlap Greg’s at the university, I gave her an education background (previously a high school English and literature teacher) and made her a grants officer at the college so she’d have to work directly with Greg from time to time. 

Part of her turmoil comes from keeping secrets from Greg who doesn’t even know she’s part of the Buckwalter family that he’s been researching. While honoring her grandmother’s wishes for privacy, she could be putting Greg in jeopardy by withholding information.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

In the 1950s timeline, one of the characters deals with mental illness. My hope is to reduce the stigma of mental illness by learning about it, discussing it, and having empathy for those who suffer.

Directly related is the question of transparency and truth. When is it important to be transparent and when should privacy and protection of loved ones take priority? There are no easy answers.

The Broken Weathervane is conducive to great book club discussion. There are resources and nine questions at the back of the book and on my website. I’d be happy to visit any book club in person or via Zoom.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?

My next book is historical fiction, as usual, but it goes back further into time than my other books. Rain in the Wilderness is Biblical fiction set in the time of Christ. The main character is Rebekah, mother of three adult children. One son works for a Roman centurion; another despises all things Roman. 

In Jerusalem and beyond, the Jews writhe under the oppressive Roman Empire, longing for a political Messiah. At the center of controversy, Jesus of Nazareth seems an unlikely prospect. Ruthless debates unite his enemies while further dividing Rebekah’s family. 

After years of research and writing, I’m thrilled this novel will finally be published on October 13, 2026.

Author Links: GoodReadsWebsite | Bookbub | LinkedIn

Two co-workers seek the same information. One wants to publish it; the other has good reasons to keep it hidden.
As Leslie Wickersham, Raymond University grants officer, seeks information to unravel a family mystery, English professor Gregory Stafford seeks an elusive interview with one more Buckwalter relative for his upcoming author biography. While Greg and Leslie guard coveted details from each other, her goals are further complicated by letters of blackmail threatening to reveal all she has worked hard to hide.
In this dual timeline novel alternating between 2015 and the 1950s, loyalty is tested and secrets abound when family honor collides with truth. Leslie grapples with the trade-off: how far will a person go to help a loved one thrive?

The Broken Weathervane

The Broken Weathervane tells the story of Leslie Wickersham, a grants officer carrying both ambition and the heavy weight of family secrets. She steps into a new job at Raymond University, only to find herself working alongside the proud and difficult Dr. Gregory Stafford, a man intent on finishing a biography of author Fritz Buckwalter. Leslie, however, has her own hidden connection to Buckwalter, one she has been asked to keep quiet. The novel weaves past and present together, drawing on family turmoil, mental illness, hidden journals, and long-buried truths. It’s a tale of secrets colliding with the need for honesty, of pride giving way to humility, and of love tentatively growing in unlikely soil.

Reading this book felt like being drawn into a living, breathing world. The writing was rich without being fussy, and it held me with its rhythm. I admired how the author took big, heavy topics like mental illness, shame, and betrayal, and approached them with care. Some scenes made me ache because they felt so true to life. Leslie’s self-doubt rang true to me, and her push-pull with Greg had the kind of sharp banter and underlying tenderness that I didn’t expect at first but grew to enjoy. I found myself rooting for her not just to succeed in her career, but to make peace with her past and claim her own story.

Greg’s arrogance rubbed me the wrong way, but that seemed intentional. I wondered if he could have shown more cracks sooner. The family history sections fascinated me, especially the 1950s journal entries, yet I sometimes felt yanked between timelines. Still, I can’t deny that the mystery of what really happened to Leslie’s family kept me hooked. I would sit down, meaning to read for half an hour and end up lost for an evening, chasing one more revelation.

The Broken Weathervane is a book about secrets and how they shape us, about how shame passes through generations until someone has the courage to face it. It left me thoughtful, a little sad, but also hopeful. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy family sagas with layered characters, a dash of romance, and questions that don’t have easy answers. If you like Amanda Cox or Lisa Wingate, this will probably be right up your alley.

Pages: 424 | ASIN : B0FHDTSPH6

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