Among her many novels, Nancy Thayer has penned The Hot Flash Club series, as well as HEAT WAVE, a perfect book for summer that's hitting bookstores on June 21st. Below, Nancy turns her attention to her father, from whom she learned the power of writing. Not only would her father run the car for her during blizzards, but he also inspired several characters in her novels.

After WWII, my father remained extremely involved in the American Legion and town politics. He was patriotic, he was always an usher at the Methodist Church, he loved his family and he adored my mother. He had sparkling blue eyes and he made us laugh a lot. He bought me a car during high school and, in the blizzardy Kansas winters, he went out while I was having breakfast and started the car so it would be warm when I got in it to drive to school. When I was twelve, in 1955, my father got me front row seats at the Orpheum Theater for my friends and me to see Elvis Presley. I got to run up to the stage and touch Elvis’s shoe --- and it was attached to Elvis! I thought our family was boringly average.
When I was in high school, my father became an officer for the Highway Patrol. He had a uniform, a squad car, and a gun. You can imagine the effect this had on the guys I brought home. Later, I discovered --- why didn’t I realize this before? --- that because of his law enforcement network, he always knew exactly where I was, in whose car with which boy, and for how long.

He wrote this about an enormous statue of a lion at the Barrage de la Gileppe: “The lion, at least 200 feet high, sits on a large dam and is looking out over a deep valley. On the other side is a large lake bounded by beautiful snow-capped mountains. I drove down from the mountain, across the dam, and down the other side with the old lion keeping watch. For miles he reared his head high above everything --- truly a watch lion.”
When I wrote SUMMER HOUSE, I clearly had my father in mind as the model for Nona’s husband, Herb. In fact, the letters that Herb writes to Anne when they are first married are taken directly from letters from my father to my mother. I still read his letters over and over again, loving the eloquence and modesty of his voice. He loved to read, but more than that, he loved people, all people, and it is that generosity of spirit and that keeping watch that I hope I have inherited from him to use in my writing. Certainly Carley’s father in HEAT WAVE and Jim Fox in BEACHCOMBERS are just like my father --- loving, goodhearted, oh, and did I mention, handsome?