Looking for a literary stocking stuffer? Youβre in luck. Michigan-based author Wade
Rouse β who writes fiction intended for women readers under his maternal grandmotherβs name, Viola Shipman, as well as memoirs under his own name β has just released (as Shipman) his most recent Christmas-themed novel, .
Wish (published by ) tells the story of Susan, a 40-year-old bookstore owner who lives in a tight-knit Michigan lakeside community. Having been raised by loving grandparents after her parents were killed in an accident, Susan is also heir to a unique family history, which causes the townspeople around her to believe sheβs destined to meet and marry a man dressed as Santa.
βItβs the funniest novel Iβve written,β says Rouse, whose work has been translated into 20 languages. βItβs also the most diverse novel Iβve written, because it has this incredibly quirky cast of characters from all walks of life. But it also talks a lot about loss in our lives and how weβre too often unable to forgive ourselves and move on. β¦ [Thatβs] inspired by my own life and having lost my brother when I was young. Itβs about what grief and loss do to us.β
Though Wish is Rouseβs ninth Shipman novel, itβs only his second holiday-themed one (following last yearβs ).This fact might surprise you if you were to drive by the home Rouse shares with his husband outside of Saugatuck.
βWeβre the Griswolds,β says Rouse, referencing the over-the-top family featured in National Lampoonβs Christmas Vacation. βWe put up seven themed trees. Weβre those people who put inflatables out, and neighbors are like, βStop.ββ
Yes, Rouse and spouse now flee to Palm Springs, California, for a couple of months after the holidays each year β they initially stayed in Michigan year-round when they moved from St. Louis in 2006 β but Rouse nonetheless loves enjoying a white Christmas in Michigan.
βI have to say that my first winters here, despite the darkness, I loved,β Rouse says. βI loved all of the goofy things I got to do that Iβd never done as a kid, like build snowmen and make snow angels and snow forts and all the stupid things that you love as a kid and forget or donβt allow yourself to do as an adult. That reignited my joy for the holiday season.β
Another recent Rouse release with great gifting potential is . This moving memoir centers around Rouseβs complicated relationship with his flinty, Ozarks-bred father, who desperately needed, in his last years, the help of his surviving son.
But this came after Rouseβs father had said and done a number of hurtful things, such as secretly circumventing Rouseβs acceptance into Northwestern Universityβs graduate journalism program.
βThere were years after that β and once I came out to my father β when I didnβt speak to him, and I thought that might be the end chapter,β Rouse says. βI always saw in my father a man who had no idea how to deal with me and swept everything under the rug. Thatβs how he was raised, and thatβs what he knew.β
One of the only easy points of connection between the two men involved watching and rooting for the St. Louis Cardinals, and the last baseball game the pair watched together provides the memoirβs narrative scaffolding.
βI try to write books that seek to understand and not blame,β Rouse says. βI think sometimes writing helps us. Itβs how I make sense of my life.β
Meanwhile, Rouseβs adopted home state consistently plays a starring role in his fiction.
βA few years ago, we went to Italy, and I was like, βMichigan is as gorgeous as the Amalfi Coast,ββ Rouse says. βI mean, every town that I feature in my books is not only stunningly beautiful but also has this quirky kind of resort history that just makes for a perfect setting. And Iβve been heavily influenced by a lot of writers β¦ who make the environments and settings in their books as much a character as the people. And thatβs what I try to do with Michigan.β
This past year, thereβs been talk of possible film adaptations of Rouseβs work (βWeβre nudging very, very close to having something happen,β Rouse says). It might make you wonder what Rouseβs grandmother β a poor, hardworking seamstress who didnβt get the chance to finish high school β would think of seeing her name on so many books and, perhaps one day, on a big screen.
βOh, thatβll make me cry,β Rouse says. βIβm sure sheβd be embarrassed in one way. Her face would flush. β¦ But I think she would be incredibly proud, especially because she used to push books into my hands. β¦ And those are the same kinds of books that I write now.β
This story is from the DecemberΜύ2022 issue of ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕ Detroit magazine. Read more in our digital edition.
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