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Jen Braaksma (photo: Annemarie Grudën) |
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Betsy Pauly (photo: Charles Pauly) |
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Jen Braaksma is the author of two young adult novels, Evangeline's Heaven and Amaranth. Braaksma, a former journalist and high school English teacher, is now a book coach who helps writers develop their stories. She lives in Ottawa, Canada, with her husband, two daughters, and four cats.
Betsy Pauly earned her degree in business before taking on the corporate world. She began painting professionally in 1986, then turned to writing in 2010. Over the years, Pauly rescued more than 100 cats, at least 10 dogs, and one blind pigeon. She died in 2016.
Befriending Betsy (She Writes Press, Dec 9, 2025) is a memoir by Braaksma, who took on a job involving a half-finished manuscript of animal stories Pauly had left behind, and never expected to form a friendship with the woman on the page.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
How is it possible to befriend someone who died long before you even knew they'd lived? Through stories about compassion, connection--and cats.
On your nightstand now:
Well, the answer is a towering 42 books. On top, though, sits Audition by Katie Kitamura, Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki, What We Can Know by Ian McEwan, Jade City by Fonda Lee, and Wild Life by Amanda Leduc. Why these ones? The promise of these stories intrigues me.
Favorite book when you were a child:
That's such an unfair question! There are so many. If I was forced to choose, you know, because the world was on fire and my answer was the only way to save it, then perhaps it would be Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery. I love the protagonist, Anne Shirley! She's feisty and imaginative and loves with her whole heart. Even better, she's also Canadian, like me.
Your top five authors:
Should these questions be as hard as they are?? Fine, if the world is burning (again), and my answer is the only way to save it, then I'll say (in no particular order) Jeanette Winterson, Anne Michaels, Michael Ondaatje, Helen Humphreys, Maggie Stiefvater. They all write beautiful prose, with complex characters and an intensity of emotion that stays with me long after the last page.
Book you've faked reading:
Is that a thing? I'd be too afraid of getting caught out! I dutifully read (ahem, skimmed) all my reading lists in university, and after that, I came to the conclusion that life is too short to read books that don't interest me, so even if I turn down a classic that is on everyone's best book list of the geological epoch we're in, I'll stand firm in my ignorance.
Book you're an evangelist for:
My own? Actually that isn't even true because I'm all about accepting everyone has their own taste, which means that I always rein in my book fervor. I wax poetic about the books I love, absolutely, but I don't preach about them. It's self-preservation, actually. I'd be too emotionally wounded if someone ended up not liking the book I'd insisted they read.
Book you've bought for the cover:
I'm failing this exam! The short answer is, there isn't one; the long answer is, if a book looks pretty or striking or eye catching, then it's enough for me to read the back. But if I'm not into the story, even the cover won't cut it.
Book you hid from your parents:
Ah! A question I can answer! Though the answer is a common one, but nevertheless true: Forever by Judy Blume. A book on teenage sexuality when I was a pre-teen seemed horrendously risqué, but I think I learned more from that one book alone than any sex-ed class. I still lament our society where books with such important themes are fraught with unnecessary controversy.
Book that changed your life:
A Summer to Die by Lois Lowry, a middle grade novel about a protagonist whose older sister is dying of cancer. It's emotional, intense, heartbreaking, and extraordinarily endearing. There was no personal connection; no one I knew had cancer, but still the story of this beautiful, broken family stayed with me, enough that I even named one of my daughters after the main character. All those years ago, I borrowed it from my middle school library and never returned it. I never will.
Favorite line from a book:
"There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy." Hamlet says this to his friend Horatio in Shakespeare's Hamlet; I love it because it's a striking reminder about all the wonders and mysteries beyond our limited knowledge. That it's said by a character whose life--and death--are embroiled in tragedy makes the pathos--and Hamlet's message--more acute.
Five books you'll never part with:
Another impossible question. The books double-stacked on every bookshelf in every room of my house prove that I can't seem to part with any book, let alone narrowing it down to a top five I'd never part with. But, with the world on fire (for the third time, it seems) and needing my answer to save it, here goes:
A Summer to Die by Lois Lowry
The Passion by Jeanette Winterson
Held by Anne Michaels
Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Why? They're all gorgeously crafted books.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. I taught it for years and years and years as a high school English teacher and I adored the reaction from students who were reluctant to start (okay, that's a nice way to describe their grumbling hatred) but loved the novel by the end. I almost envied them that dawning excitement when they started to appreciate the beauty of Fitzgerald's language, the skillful characterization, and the tragedy that is Gatsby.