Love, Secrets, and Second Chances—February’s Must-Read Books Await!
Natalie Bishop
In 1975 Nancy Bush bumped into a fortune teller
celebrating St. Patrick's Day at a popular Irish bar in
Portland, Oregon. Always intrigued by the unexplained,
Bush dared the woman to read her palm. The fortune teller
informed Bush that she would someday be a writer and have
one child, who would be the single most important thing in
her life.
At the time both writing and children were the
furthest things from Bush's mind. A graduate of Oregon
State University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Foods
and Nutrition, Bush was working at a bank and honing her
business skills. She was dating her husband-to-be, Ken
Bush, but at the time they had no plans to marry. She
thought the palm reader's prediction was little more than a
clever act.
Little did she know how close to the truth the
fortune teller's vision of her life would become. She
married Ken Bush in 1976 and gave birth to her only
daughter, Kelly, in 1980. A year later, Bush read an
article in Time magazine about young mothers who, after
their last child was put to bed and the final diaper
washed, pulled out their typewriters and began penning
romance novels--for money! Bush told her sister, Lisa
Jackson, "I think we could do that," and overcoming
Jackson's arguments that they were both mystery readers,
not romance readers and therefore didn't have a snowball's
chance in Hades of writing one, Bush began developing her
first romantic novel. Jackson eventually agreed to be a
part of the project.
The sisters and a friend spent half a year
creating, writing and rewriting a book they titled STORMY
SURRENDER. Bush retyped the work and sent it to many New
York publishing houses, which all rejected the novel as
being "too suspenseful", "not romantic enough" or "having
too much mystery." The team of three split up, and Bush,
reading that Young Adult romance novels were the next big
thing, turned her attention to the teen scene. Though she
complained to a friend that she didn't think she
could "roll back the years to the senior prom," her friend
disagreed and, sure enough, she was soon pounding the keys
of the typewriter again, this time focusing on teenaged
angst. ABBY'S CHANCE was finished a few months later.
Retitled DARE TO LOVE by Silhouette Books, Bush's first
novel was published in November 1982.
From the moment of the first sale, Bush was hooked
on writing. In the ensuing years she wrote more than
thirty novels, the bulk for Silhouette Books' Special
Edition imprint; plus a series of historical romance novels
set in 1880s Oregon for Pocket Books, several young adult
series and five Nancy Drew Mysteries.
During this time she also turned her attention to
script writing. Through perseverance Bush was awarded a
chance to move to New York and be part of a soap opera
writing workshop. There, with her husband's support, she
eventually worked as a breakdown writer for "All My
Children," developing a storyline into daily scripts. She
ultimately returned to Oregon to write a mystery series of
her own.
In 2003, at home with her husband and Pug puppy,
The Binkster, she penned GINNY BLUE'S BOYFRIENDS, a "chick
lit" novel that chronicles the life of Ginny Bluebell, a
commercial film production manager in Los Angeles, who
reviews the list of men she's dated and wonders "what was I
thinking?".
Bush moved from chick-lit directly to mystery,
selling a mystery series to Kensington Publishing. CANDY
APPLE RED is the first of the Jane Kelly mysteries. In
CANDY APPLE RED Jane answers the question, "Whatever
happened to Bobby Reynolds?" a family annihilator missing
for four years. Along the way Jane inherits a Pug,
reconnects with an old love and wonders if she'll ever be
able to swim in Lake Chinook again now that a dead body's
been found floating in its green depths.
Bush couldn't be happier finally being able to
write the kind of books she loves to read. The Jane Kelly
character is an amalgam of herself and her daughter,
Kelly. The idea for Jane's Pug was actually conceived
before Bush bought her own dog, three year's ago. The
Binkster originally came to life within the pages of CANDY
APPLE RED but now is an entertaining member of the Bush
family.
Bush, always an avid reader, loves to work
crossword puzzles, read mystery novels, walk around a
nearby Oregon Lake, and spend time at the beach with her
husband, daughter, sister and dog. Glimpses of her life
sometimes appear in the pages of her books. She has
several more Jane Kelly Mysteies in the works and is
considering writing a sequel to GINNY BLUE'S BOYFRIENDS.
Thirty years after the fact, she looks back at the
chance meeting with the fortune teller in the Irish bar and
realizes it truly was fate. As it turns out, the palm
reader was right on the money.