Today, I welcome Eileen Enwright Hodgetts to the blog with a short post for my readers. I hope you’ll enjoy it! (And, check out the associated Kindle Fire giveaway for this blog tour at the bottom of the post.)
I went through a period in my life when I wanted to be famous; to be precise I wanted to be a famous writer. I wanted to be interviewed on the Tonight Show and be invited to speak at conferences. I wanted to be talked about as someone who had achieved great things. Well, with time and effort I did eventually achieve a certain amount of limited name recognition as an up and coming playwright and that was when I made the disappointing discovery that whatever fame we achieve is never enough because fame is a moveable target. There will always be someone who is more famous than you are and there will always be a new hill to climb.
This is the problem encountered by Evangeline Murray, the heroine of my new book Whirlpool. The year is 1923 and the world has gone crazy. Lured by the opportunity of achieving fame, fortune, and maybe a Hollywood career, Evangeline agrees to risk everything, even her own life, by going over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Everything she thinks she wants can be achieved if she will just allow herself to be nailed down into the barrel, and towed to the brink of the Falls. Characters in novels sometimes write their own story and the writer loses control of them. As I was writing Evangeline’s story I kept asking her “Will fame be enough for you; will fame make you happy?” It took her six years and twenty chapters to answer me.
ABOUT EILEEN HODGETTS
Eileen Enwright Hodgetts is the author of Whirlpool. She is a much traveled writer. Brought up in England and Wales, she has also lived and worked in South Africa and Uganda and now makes her home in Pittsburgh, PA. Her life experiences allow her to use exotic backgrounds for her novels and to understand how an adventure can begin with just one small incident. For ten years she directed a humanitarian mission in East Africa and is also involved in a Ugandan Coffee Farm. Much of her writing reveals not only her great fondness for the British Isles, but also her British sense of humor which still sees the funny side of most situations.
In addition to writing novels, Eileen Enwright Hodgetts is also an accomplished playwright with a number of national awards to her credit. Her novel, Whirlpool, began life as a stage musical playing at the Niagara Falls Convention Center in Niagara Falls, New York. In 1993 the Mayor of Niagara Falls, NY, proclaimed the summer of 1993 as Whirlpool Theater Days in honor of the production.
The author’s award-winning courtroom drama Titanic to All Ships will open at the Comtra Theater on April 13 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. The drama, created under a Fellowship Grant from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is a dramatic re-telling of the Senate Hearings into the tragedy. The play has won several national awards.
ABOUT WHIRLPOOL
The year is 1923 and the jazz age is in full swing. Evangeline Murray, a young widow from Ohio, is recruited by the Women’s Freedom Movement to represent the spirit of modern womanhood by going over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Evangeline eagerly embraces her opportunity to achieve fame and fortune, until she sees the power of the River and begins to understand the risk she is taking. Joshua McClaren, an enigmatic battle-scarred veteran of World War I, and the best boatman on the river, reluctantly agrees to launch the headstrong Evangeline. Joshua has seen hundreds of bodies surface in the Whirlpool below the Falls, and has faced death on the battlefields of Flanders and has no respect for the charming, impetuous Mrs. Murray, and her desire for fame. Before the barrel can be launched, each of them will have to face their own demons, painful secrets will be revealed and the Niagara Rivers will claim two more lives. Inspired by true stories of the Falls, Whirlpool is a romance, an adventure, and the closest that most of us will ever come to taking the fateful plunge over the Falls.Whirlpool is a fiction that is based on reality. Seven people have tried to ride over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Four have succeeded and three have died. The first person to make the attempt was Annie Taylor, a middle aged school teacher from Michigan who made a successful journey in 1901. Barrel riding at Niagara Falls is now forbidden by law, but at the beginning of the 20th century Niagara was a haven for daredevils of all types, and many of their exploits are included in the novel.
Get your copy of Whirlpool by Eileen Hodgetts at Amazon
Pick up your ebook copy at Barnes & Noble
Find out all about Whirlpool at Goodreads

Kindle Fire Giveaway for Whirlpool Tour
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I loved reading this! I don’t really desire to be famous, but just to receive VIP treatment anywhere I go. A girl can dream.
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Angela,
I’d be happy for VIP treatment in my house some days ;o)
I’ve always wanted to be famous, not in the actress fame way, but in the social influencer way to hopefully do good with my social influence!
Same here, Isra! The celebrity kind of fame is not something I’d want as people poke and prod way too much into your life.