Review: When Emily Went Missing: My Haunted Garden Book 1 by Michael Weems – A 2023 Indie Author Review Selection

Review: When Emily Went Missing: My Haunted Garden Book 1 by Michael Weems – A 2023 Indie Author Review Selection

When Emily Went Missing
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DescriptionThe ReviewAuthor InterviewMore About the Author

Description (from Amazon.com)

“It was the flowers that killed the farmer’s wife. I dreamed about it after getting shot in the head.”

Ruth Gonzales introduces us to her strange world where a haunted flower garden is her best friend, she hears thoughts that are not her own, and she dreams the memories of the dead in the small town of Foxglove, Texas. Ruth has a rule. The Rule of the Dead is a simple one – Ruth doesn’t tell anyone about the thoughts she hears or the memories of the dead she dreams. But when a classmate disappears and Ruth begins to dream of a world in oil paintings, she realizes she may be compelled to break The Rule to do what is right. Young adult to adult fiction. Book has mild profanity (no f-bombs, but a few cuss words are used sporadically). Book does contain some violence, particularly the first chapter. Reader discretion is advised.


5 stars

The Review

Certain books have certain “feels” or colors that they come in. Some are black or brown and “feel” claustrophobic. Some are yellow or pink and airy and “feel” light. Their colors and their “feel” motivate me to keep reading in many ways. So it was with When Emily Went Missing: My Haunted Garden Book 1 by Michael Weems. If I had to apply a color, it would be green. If I had to say what the “feel” was I would say “complicated.”

The green is all about the garden that the main character has as “a friend.” The word “complicated” is used in a good way. This speculative fiction story is one of those I would put in the literary fiction category. Ruth, injured in The Incident, is a strange girl growing up in the rather quaint but relatable, small town of Foxglove, Texas. After her injury, Ruth is able to hear and dream about the memories of the dead, which could in fact be a bit traumatic since she’s living with her father in a graveyard.

The book moves at the perfect pace, not too fast and not too slow. With each chapter I found myself trying to unravel the mystery of her missing friend (the Emily in the title), and when it was revealed in the end, I was not disappointed. There are distinct themes within this book of coming-of-age, bullying, depression, and hope. It is the hope with which Weems leaves the reader and for that I am thankful.

When Emily Went Missing: My Haunted Garden Book 1 is one that I may return to again, and I really (sincerely) hope that Weems is working on Book 2. I would dive right back into Ruth’s world in a heartbeat.

Available at Amazon: https://amzn.to/44lk4lk


Author Interview

Where did the idea for Ruth’s “talent” come from? And did your thoughts change during the writing process?

The brain damage Ruth suffers from The Incident unlocked part of her brain which allowed her to be more open and perceptive to the spiritual undercurrent of the world which then allowed her to sense ghosts and the consciousness of the garden.  For this particular book, I knew this was the Talent I wanted Ruth to have and started with the premise of someone surviving a traumatic event and becoming something a bit more than she was.  

The setting of Foxglove, Texas is unique as is the graveyard where Ruth lives with her father. Did you have a particular place in mind when you wrote about this?

Yes, the fictional town of Foxglove, Texas was based on the actual town of Sweeny, Texas, where I lived a short time and graduated high school.  My parents retired to that small town and often remak it fits them as it has its own slow, southern way about it which gives them comfort.

What was the hardest part of writing this book?

The hardest part was trying to figure out how to handle the death within the plot.  It needed to be something that wasn’t murder, but not a total accident, either, something with a bit of complexity to it that leaves one wondering about which way the moral compass points after something like that happens.  It leaves a reader wondering, perhaps, how they would feel about it or what they might have done in Ruth’s shoes.

What did you enjoy most about writing this book?

I really enjoyed coming up with the garden.  The more I played with the idea, the more into the garden I got.  As I wrote, I often pictured myself sitting in the garden, listening perhaps to the flowers.

Were there alternate endings you considered?

Yes, I had a whole other alternative ending with a real bad guy who was going to come after Ruth and perhaps meet the garden and find a surprise or two.  But I settled with the current ending as I liked the of someone closnig the book but then taking a moment to think, “Wow, not sure what I would have done there.”

Do you have a writing routine?

Not a solid one, but I acknowledge this is probably why I only have four books so far.  I hack away at ideas until one clicks, then that usually ends up a full story.  But I have many that have sat for years simply because I didn’t feel they had clicked yet.

Did you edit out anything you wish you would have kept in?

I trimmed down the story as we all try to do, removing what might be considered too much superfluous information or plot ideas with no substance, but all in all the story came together as I had it in mind, so I’m happy with the end result.

How has this writing journey been for you?

Cathartic – no other word for it.  I get anxiety (kind of like Ruth), and to be able to escape into any book, whether one I’m reading or one I’m writing, helps me find a brief respite of mental calmness.  I tried to incorporate my appreciation for the benefit an escape into a book can provide in Ruth’s character.  She went through a very traumatic event and is socially distanced by her own design due to her anxiety, so the books she loves are her mental happy places.  And we all need a mental break now and then.


More About the Author

Michael Weems is the Amazon Best Selling author of The Ghosts of Varner Creek, Border Crossings, When Emily Went Missing, and Redeemer. He is an attorney during the day and a hobby novelist by night. Over half a million copies of his books have been sold to date.


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