THE SECRET OF SNOW
Author: Viola Shipman
ISBN: 9781525806445
Publication Date:
October 26, 2021
Publisher: Graydon
House Books
Book Summary:
When Sonny Dunes, a So-Cal meteorologist
who knows only sunshine and 72-degree days, has an on-air meltdown after she
learns she’s being replaced by an AI meteorologist (which the youthful station
manager reasons "will never age, gain weight or renegotiate its
contract."), the only station willing to give a 50-year-old another shot
is one in a famously non-tropical place--her northern Michigan hometown.
Unearthing her carefully laid California
roots, Sonny returns home and reaclimates to the painfully long, dark winters
dominated by a Michigan phenomenon known as lake-effect snow. But beyond the
complete physical shock to her system, she's also forced to confront her past:
her new boss is a former journalism classmate and mortal frenemy and, more
keenly, the death of a younger sister who loved the snow, and the mother who
caused Sonny to leave.
To distract herself from the unwelcome
memories, Sonny decides to throw herself headfirst (and often disastrously)
into all things winter to woo viewers and reclaim her success: sledding,
ice-fishing, skiing, and winter festivals, culminating with the town’s famed
Winter Ice Sculpture Contest, all run by a widowed father and Chamber director
whose honesty and genuine love of Michigan, winter and Sonny just might thaw her
heart and restart her life in a way she never could have predicted.
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Excerpt:
“And look at this! A storm system is
making its way across the country, and it will bring heavy snow to the Upper
Midwest and Great Lakes before wreaking havoc on the East Coast. This is an
especially early and nasty start to winter for much of the country. In fact,
early models indicate that parts of western and northern Michigan—the lake
effect snowbelts, as we call them—will receive over 150 inches of snow this
year. One hundred fifty inches!”
I turn away from the green screen in my
red wrap dress and heels.
“But here in the desert...” I wait for
the graphic to pop onscreen, which declares, Sonny Says It’s Sonny... Again!
When the camera refocuses on me, I toss
an adhesive sunshine with my face on it toward the green screen behind me. It
sticks directly on Palm Springs, California.
“...it’s wall-to-wall sunshine!”
I expand my arms like a raven in the
mountains taking flight. The weekly forecast pops up. Every day features a
smiling sunshine that resembles yours truly: golden, shining, beaming.
“And it will stay that way all week long,
with temperatures in the midseventies and lows in the midfifties. Not bad for
this time of year, huh? It’s chamber of commerce weather here in the desert,
perfect for all those design lovers in town for Mid-Century Modernism Week.” I
walk over to the news desk. The camera follows. I lean against the desk and
turn to the news anchors, Eva Fernandez and Cliff Moore. “Or for someone who
loves to play golf, right, Cliff?”
He laughs his faux laugh, the one that
makes his mouth resemble those old windup chattering teeth from when I was a
girl.
“You betcha, Sonny!”
“That’s why we live here, isn’t it?” I
ask.
“I sure feel sorry for the rest of the
country,” says Eva, her blinding white smile as bright as the camera lights.
I’m convinced every one of Eva’s caps has a cap.
“Those poor Michigan folk won’t be
golfing in shorts like I will be tomorrow, will they?” Cliff says with a laugh
and his pantomime golf swing. He twitches his bushy brows and gives me a giant
wink. “Thank you, Sonny Dunes.”
I nod, my hands on my hips as if I’m a Price Is Right model and not a
meteorologist.
“Martinis on the mountain? Yes, please,”
Eva says with her signature head tilt. “Next on the news: a look at some of the
big events at this year’s Mid-Century Modernism Week. Back in a moment.”
I end the newscast with the same
forecast—a row of smiling sunshine emojis that look just like my face—and then
banter with the anchors about the perfect pool temperature before another
graphic—THE DESERT’S #1 NIGHTLY NEWS TEAM!—pops onto the screen, and we fade to
commercial.
“Anyone want to go get a drink?” Cliff
asks within seconds of the end of the newscast. “It’s Friday night.”
“It’s always Friday night to you, Cliff,”
Eva says.
She stands and pulls off her mic. The top
half of Eva Fernandez is J.Lo perfection: luminescent locks, long lashes, glam
gloss, a skintight top in emerald that matches her eyes, gold jewelry that sets
off her glowing skin. But Eva’s bottom half is draped in sweats, her feet in
house slippers. It’s the secret viewers never see.
“I’m half dressed for bed already
anyway,” she says with a dramatic sigh. Eva is very dramatic. “And I’m hosting the Girls Clubs Christmas breakfast
tomorrow and then Eisenhower Hospital’s Hope for the Holidays fundraiser
tomorrow night. And Sonny and I are doing every local Christmas parade the next
few weekends. You should think about giving back to the community, Cliff.”
“Oh, I do,” he says. “I keep small
business alive in Palm Springs. Wouldn’t be a bar afloat without my support.”
Cliff roars, setting off his chattering
teeth.
I call Cliff “The Unicorn” because he was
actually born and raised in Palm Springs. He didn’t migrate here like the older
snowbirds to escape the cold, he didn’t snap up midcentury houses with cash
like the Silicon Valley techies who realized this was a real estate gold mine,
and he didn’t suddenly “discover” how hip Palm Springs was like the millennials
who flocked here for the Coachella Music Festival and to catch a glimpse of
Drake, Beyoncé or the Kardashians.
No, Cliff is old school. He was Palm
Springs when tumbleweed still blew right through downtown, when Bob Hope pumped
gas next to you and when Frank Sinatra might take a seat beside you at the bar,
order a martini and nobody acted like it was a big deal.
I admire Cliff because—
The set suddenly spins, and I have to
grab the arm of a passing sound guy to steady myself. He looks at me, and I let
go.
—he didn’t run away from where he grew up.
“How about you, sunshine?” Cliff asks me.
“Wanna grab a drink?”
“I’m gonna pass tonight, Cliff. I’m wiped
from this week. Rain check?”
“Never rains in the desert, sunshine,”
Cliff jokes. “You oughta know that.”
He stops and looks at me. “What would
Frank Sinatra do?”
I laugh. I adore Cliff’s corniness.
“You’re not Frank Sinatra,” Eva calls.
“My martini awaits with or without you.”
Cliff salutes, as if he’s Bob Hope on a USO tour, and begins to walk out of the
studio.
“Ratings come in this weekend!” a voice
yells. “That’s when we party.”
We all turn. Our producer, Ronan, is
standing in the middle of the studio. Ronan is all of thirty. He’s dressed in
flip-flops, board shorts and a T-shirt that says, SUNS OUT, GUNS OUT! like he
just returned from Coachella. Oh, and he’s wearing sunglasses. At night. In a
studio that’s gone dim. Ronan is the grandson of the man who owns our network,
DSRT. Jack Clark of ClarkStar pretty much owns every network across the US
these days. He put his grandson in charge because Ro-Ro’s father bought an NFL
franchise, and he’s too obsessed with his new fancy toy to pay attention to his
old fancy toy. Before DSRT, Ronan was a surfer living in Hawaii who found it
hard to believe there wasn’t an ocean in the middle of the California desert.
He showed up to our very first official
news meeting wearing a tank top with an arrow pointing straight up that read,
This Dude’s the CEO!
“You can call me Ro-Ro,” he’d announced
upon introduction.
“No,” Cliff said. “I can’t.”
Ronan had turned his bleary gaze upon me
and said, “Yo. Weather’s, like, not really my thing. You can just, like, look
outside and see what’s going on. And it’s, like, on my phone. Just so we’re
clear...get it? Like the weather.”
My heart nearly stopped. “People need to
know how to plan their days, sir,” I protested. “Weather is a vital part of all
our lives. It’s daily news. And, what I study and disseminate can save lives.”
“Ratings party if we’re still number
one!” Ronan yells, knocking me from my thoughts.
I look at Eva, and she rolls her eyes.
She sidles up next to me and whispers, “You know all the jokes about
millennials? He’s the punchline for all of them.”
I stifle a laugh.
We walk each other to the parking lot.
“See you Monday,” I say.
“Are we still wearing our matching Santa
hats for the parade next Saturday?”
I laugh and nod. “We’re his best elves,”
I say.
“You mean his sexiest news elves,” she
says. She winks and waves, and I watch her shiny SUV pull away. I look at my
car and get inside with a smile. Palm Springs locals are fixated on their cars.
Not the make or the color, but the cleanliness. Since there is so little rain
in Palm Springs, locals keep their cars washed and polished constantly. It’s
like a competition.
I pull onto Dinah Shore Drive and head
toward home.
Palm Springs is dark. There is a light
ordinance in the city that limits the number of streetlights. In a city this
beautiful, it would be a crime to have tall posts obstructing the view of the
mountains or bright light overpowering the brightness of the stars.
I decide to cut through downtown Palm
Springs to check out the Friday night action. I drive along Palm Canyon Drive,
the main strip in town. The restaurants are packed. People sit outside in
shorts—in December!—enjoying a glass of wine. Music blasts from bars. Palm
Springs is alive, the town teeming with life even near midnight.
I stop at a red light, and a bachelorette
party in sashes and tiaras pulls up next to me peddling a party bike. It’s like
a self-propelled trolley with seats and pedals, but you can drink—a lot—on it.
I call these party trolleys “Woo-Hoo Bikes” because...
I honk and wave.
The bachelorette party shrieks, holds up
their glasses and yells, “WOO-HOO!”
The light changes, and I take off,
knowing these ladies will likely find themselves in a load of trouble in about
an hour, probably at a tiki bar where the drinks are as deadly as the skulls on
the glasses.
I continue north on Palm Canyon—heading
past Copley’s Restaurant, which once was Cary Grant’s guesthouse in the 1940s,
and a plethora of design and vintage home furnishings stores. I stop at another
light and glance over as an absolutely filthy SUV, which looks like it just
ended a mud run, pulls up next to me. The front window is caked in gray-white
sludge and the doors are encrusted in crud. An older man is hunched over the
steering wheel, wearing a winter coat, and I can see the woman seated next to
him pointing at the navigation on the dashboard. I know immediately they are
not only trying to find their Airbnb on one of the impossible-to-locate side
streets in Palm Springs, but also that they are from somewhere wintry,
somewhere cold, somewhere the sun doesn’t shine again until May.
Which
state? I wonder, as the light changes, and the car
pulls ahead of me.
“Bingo!” I yell in my car. “Michigan
license plates!”
We
all run from Michigan in the winter.
I look back at the road in front of me,
and it’s suddenly blurry. A car honks, scaring the wits out of me, and I shake
my head clear, wave an apology and head home.
Excerpted from The Secret of Snow by
Viola Shipman. Copyright © 2021 by Viola Shipman. Published by arrangement with
Harlequin Books S.A.
About the Author
Author Bio:
Viola Shipman is
the pen name for Wade Rouse, a popular, award-winning memoirist. Rouse chose
his grandmother's name, Viola Shipman, to honor the woman whose heirlooms and
family stories inspire his writing. Rouse is the author of The Summer Cottage, as well as The
Charm Bracelet and The Hope Chest
which have been translated into more than a dozen languages and become
international bestsellers. He lives in Saugatuck, Michigan and Palm Springs,
California, and has written for People,
Coastal Living, Good Housekeeping, and Taste
of Home, along with other publications, and is a contributor to All Things Considered.
Social Links:
Facebook: @authorviolashipman
Instagram: @viola_shipman
Twitter: @viola_shipman
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