
Meet Liz Tolsma
Liz Tolsma is one of those amazing women that you don’t realize JUST how amazing she is until you get to know her. It’s been a rough year or two for her, and it’s been an honor to pray for her over that time. Just as is her generous nature, Liz is offering a copy of What I Left for You to one lucky person. You can find out the details on how to enter for your chance to get a copy at the end of this blog post. Now I’m glad to give you the chance to get to know this wonderful author, mother, Christian, and friend.Â
Liz Tolsma is the author of several WWII novels, prairie romance novellas, a romantic suspense, and an Amish romance. She is the host of the popular podcast Christian Historical Fiction Talk and is also an editor. She resides next to a Wisconsin farm field with her husband and their youngest daughter. Her son, daughter-in-law, and daughter are all U.S. Marines. In her free time, Liz enjoys reading, walking, working in her large perennial garden, kayaking, and camping.
You can connect with her through: Website  | Newsletter | X | Facebook | Instagram | Pinterest | BookBub | Goodreads
Now for the fun stuff! I have to admit I am partial to my Fast Five. 🙂 So settle in as I hit Liz with rapid-fire.
CC: Pineapple pizza or candy corn?
LT: Is neither an option? I really don’t like either one.
CC: Test the waters or dive in the deep end?
LT: Test the waters
CC: Guacamole or salsa?
LT: For this one, I’d like both!
CC: Silly hats or silly socks?
LT: Silly socks. I can be silly, but I do it in private rather than in public, so the socks make sense.
CC: Passwords or secret handshakes?
LT: Hmm. Probably passwords, especially if I can use face recognition because I can’t remember my passwords.
CC: I am so thankful for password apps and face recognition. LOL, so let’s dive in to getting to know you a little better.
What fiction book has most impacted you?
LT: “Love Comes Softly” by Janette Oke. It’s the first Christian novel I read, and it opened my eyes to the genre. After I discovered it, I read all I could find, and one day, decided maybe I could write a book too. It’s the one that got it all started.
CC: Janette Oke has had such an impact on so many. She to had a major impact on my life and my eventual writing journey.
What does your writing process look like from beginning to end?
LT: It depends on the book. Sometimes I have no deadlines or longer ones, so that allows me to do more research and story and character development on the front end. When I have a tight deadline, I have to do all that on the fly and often have more rewrites. Overall, I don’t work off an outline. I love to see what develops much the way a reader would. That’s the most fun part of writing to me.
CC: I admire you for being able to do it that way. I used to be like that, but I feel like I prefer to have an outline more often than not, even if very loose.Â
What has been your biggest struggle on this writing journey?
LT: The marketing part of the job has been the hardest. I never went to school for it and never took any classes. I’m learning as I go, and I’m still learning, especially with the way marketing and social media are ever-evolving. Sometimes I wish I wrote forty years ago when the publishers did all that for you!
CC: Boy do I feel you on this one. It all feels like so much and so overwhelming. There just aren’t enough hours in the day.
How have you seen God work through your writing journey?
LT: He has always brought the right story and the right publisher to me at the right time, even when I doubted it would ever happen. Throughout, he’s taught me to rely on him more and more and less on myself. It’s a lesson I have to keep learning. Trust isn’t an easy thing, and letting go of the way I have my life laid out so God can work is difficult. But he has proven himself faithful, and that’s what I lean on.
CC: I feel like I must not be learning this lesson very well, because I have to keep learning it over and over and over and over again. LOL but He has and does prove Himself faithful.
Do you have any advice for those who might want to write their own stories?
LT: Write. This is supposed to be a longer answer than that, but that’s the first step. You can’t learn how to be a better writer unless you’ve tried it, just like you can’t learn to be a better skater if you’ve never stepped on the ice. So get out there and write. And work hard to improve. This applies to aspiring authors and those who are already published. Even the world’s best figure skater continues to go to practice and work with a coach. So it is with writers. We can always strive to be better.
CC: I agree! May we always strive to be better and grow as writers.
Before we dive into your inspiration, etc, for What I Left for You, allow me to introduce my readers to the story itself.
What I Left for You by Liz Tolsma
A Family’s Ties Were Broken in Poland of 1939 Â
1939 Helena Kostyszak is an oddity—an educated female ethnic minority lecturing at a university in Krakow at the outbreak of WWII. When the Germans close the university and force Jews into the ghetto, she spirits out a friend’s infant daughter and flees to her small village in the southern hills. Helena does everything in her power to protect her family, but it may not be enough. It will take all of her strength and God’s intervention for both of them to survive the war and the ethnic cleansing to come. Â
2023 Recently unengaged social worker McKenna Muir is dealt an awful blow when a two-year-old she’s been working with is murdered. It’s all too much to take, so her friend suggests she dive into her family’s past like she’s always wanted. Putting distance between herself and her problems might help her heal, so she and her friend head on Sabbatical to Poland. But what McKenna discovers about her family shocks everyone, including one long-lost family member.Â
Purchase your copy at Amazon | Baker Book House | Barnes and Noble | Christianbook
CC: Where did you get the idea for this story?
LT: Anyone who enjoys war or WWII novels will love this, and anyone who enjoys genealogy, because it delves into that. Since it’s dual time, set both during WWII and the present day, readers who like historical novels and those who like contemporary will enjoy it. It would also be great for anyone who loves little known facts because this book is filled with them.
LT: My daughter and I were blessed to be able to travel to Poland to research What I Left for You, and it was an amazing experience. We visited the villages where my ancestors were from and saw the church my great-grandmother was baptized in. In the strangest way, I felt so much like I belonged there, that I had come home at last. Having my daughter along made the entire experience that much sweeter. And then we spent time researching in Krakow and eating plenty of really good Polish food! I could go on and on, but you can read more about my trip at the end of the book. If you ever have the chance to go to Poland, jump on it.
CC: I am more than a little jealous tha you got to travel to Poland and do all that amazing research. I look forward to reading more about your trip in the back of the book.Â
How did this story affect you as you wrote it?
LT: Because I was writing about my people, it definitely affected me. It was so deeply personal, and I cried for all they suffered when they wanted nothing more than to be left in peace to live the lives they had for over six hundred years. God showed me all my ancestors endured, and I’ve come to appreciate all they fought so hard for to give me the life I have. They would stare in amazement to see my “big” house (all that room for five people) when they lived with as many as eleven people in a two-room house. I try not to take my life and my blessings for granted.
CC: It is SO easy to take what we have for granted. I know I do.
What do you hope readers will take away from your story?
LT: I hope that I will learn where “home” is, and that is with the Lord in glory someday. This earth and its charms are fleeting, but that is where our permanent residence will be.
CC: Amen and praise the Lord for that. This poor broken world is not what I want for my home.
I always like to end with a fun question so . . .Â
Reader, do you know any little known historical facts?
Giveaway
Liz Tolsma is generously giving away one copy of What I Left for You to one contiguous U.S. resident, 18 years or older. Just complete the Rafflecopter entries below for your chance. Entries close 11:59 p.m. EST on 10/29/2024.