
My newest novel’s advance copies arrived in a great big box at the post office that I hefted on my shoulder. The postmistress said, “You wrote another book? How cool is that.” Indeed. Then she wondered if I could carry out this box that she described as nearly large as myself. I laid the box on the passenger seat and then walked across the street to the co-op where I bought an orange and peeled it and ate the sweet sticky fruit in a drippy wet snow.
Call It Madness? A novel about a young woman who realizes her mother had spun lies all her life—a grandfather who hadn’t died, a beloved house that hadn’t sold, only tumbled apart with rot and rodents. How does she get out of the madness-making of family and salvage some shreds of happiness?
June 30 the book will be released from Regal House Publishing. You can find it at my beloved local bookstore, the Galaxy Bookshop, or from the big A here.
Here’s the opening page….
White Quartz
2016
I didn’t know what made my parents drive from Bellingham to faraway Vermont the summer I turned four. I had never met my great-grand-father Opa until that afternoon my mother rolled our station wagon down Breadseed Lane. Earlier that day, a stranger had helped my parents change a flat tire on the New York turnpike, but the spare was a misfit. For hours, our car had been thumping while I stared through the backseat windows at the trees and fields passing by, pondering the puzzle of that strange word breadseed. Could seeds blossom into loaves?
We hadn’t stopped for lunch, and I was hungry. Was this Opa character cooking us dinner? Turned out, he was not.
In a rain that was just beginning to let up, the old man stooped in his yard beneath an enormous pine tree, fists curled behind his suspender buckles. I was not quite yet four, remember, and I knew suspenders only from picture books. In a strange coincidence, I had asked my mother for a pair the last Christmas. She had laughed and said suspenders only existed in fairy tales about grandfathers who were woodcutters and chased away starving wolves.
I loved that trip so much that the next summer I begged to return to Opa and his house that smelled of sugary rotting apples. I whined, Please, Mama, please. Which apartment we lived in then I’ve long forgot-ten, but in my memory, I’m sitting on the floor. At the end of the galley kitchen, a glass door streams in cloudy light. I’m watching the hem of my mother’s skirt graze her bare knees. The polyester skirt is one she wore for years, zigzag black lines over white. The hem has opened and hangs down, its frayed edge unraveling into threads. She’s smoking, the cigarette held impatiently in her teeth, and ashes drift down in the murky light. That morning, my mother tells me that Opa died soon after we left. The house was sold.

Congratulations! Can’t wait to read it.
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Wonderful! Hard work, come to fruition. Can’t believe we have to wait til June to read. 🤗
Thank you! So much work to write a book!
Living with the aftermath of family lies is so difficult! Trying to parse the truth from the lies even more so. Anyway, huge congratulations of the new book!
Much appreciated!
Sounds wonderful! Congrats! 👏🌷
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Congrats! I will be wanting a signed copy. Sounds like something right in my wheelhouse. But first, I have to resettle, away from that special kind of madness you’ve written about. Looking forward to it!
Thank you so much!!
Congratulations! What a great cover!
The cover does fit the text. Thank you!
Wonderful news!
And, I expect to be alive to greet my book in the world. 💕
Even better!
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I’m curious, when you reflect on the moments you or others called something “madness,” was it because it defied expectation, challenged comfort, or revealed something deeper about human drive or passion?
Maybe all…. Great question.
Anticipation heightens the reward and the Holahans anxiously await your latest works.
Thank you so much! I hope all is well with your family.
Can’t wait to read it! 🩷
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A mysterious-flavored beginning, Brett. Breadseeds indeed.
I love that word: breadseed.
Congrats, Brett. I’m looking forward to reading it.
Thank you, Ben. Always nice to hear from you!