“I’m passionate about stories and the people who write them.”
Deborah Froese is on a mission: to spark change through the power of story. An award-winning fiction author with a broad portfolio of published nonfiction to her credit, Deborah has been working for more than twenty years with other writers who share her passion.
“Stories are important,” she says. “Fact or fiction, they have the potential to change moods and change minds, introduce new perspectives, and transport audiences to new worlds. They immerse us in ideas and circumstances we might not otherwise encounter.”
But stories don’t just influence audiences; they impact their creators too.
“Story ideas are usually prompted by what is going on in our subconscious minds,” Deborah says. “If we pay close attention to the characters we create and the kinds of themes we lean toward, we can gradually uncover matters we need to deal with. We can even learn to rewrite stories from our past. Telling them from a slightly different perspective, perhaps even tweaking the plotline, can help us see hope where we might once have seen only despair.”
Before focusing on the art and craft of writing, Deborah tried a number of jobs including waitressing, puppeteering, photography, and various forms of art. She spent ten years designing audio visual presentations and another ten years serving as news director for a church organization in Canada. Between the latter two roles, she raised three sons and began a writing career that eventually led to three published books, one of which she illustrated, and numerous published articles.
Since her first book was published in 1996, Deborah has facilitated countless writing workshops with people of all ages. For a few years, she explored writing and life in “Inkwell,” a column in WordWrap, a former publication of the Manitoba Writers Guild.
As well as serving her own clients, Deborah is the executive editor for Indigo River Publishing, a hybrid publisher located in the USA. And yes; she still writes.
“Light a spark by sharing your story,” Deborah says. “It might be exactly what someone else needs to hear.”