Shana Hammaker

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Shana Hammaker

Goodreads Author


Born
in The United States
Twitter

Genre

Influences
Stephen King, Amy Tan, Agatha Christie, Anne Lamott

Member Since
March 2011


Shana Hammaker grew up reading Judy Blume and Beverly Cleary, unsure whether she related more to Ramona Quimby or Ralph S. Mouse.

It turns out that she had more in common with their creators. Shana wrote her first story for a fourth-grade assignment. It was a tragic tale of a young person born with rubber bands in place of bones, and it didn't end well, either for the characters or the readers. Thankfully, Shana has had a lot of practice with the literary form since then. She has gone on to write a slew of short thrillers, a couple of memoirs, and a YA novel.

Shana writes with warmth, with a clear-eyed love of humanity, and with a healthy dose of HOPE.

Shana's latest work, The Santa Strike, will be out in the fall of 2023.
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Shana Hammaker For me, getting inspired to write is a different matter than having an enticing story idea. The two things are related, sure, but they are fundamental…moreFor me, getting inspired to write is a different matter than having an enticing story idea. The two things are related, sure, but they are fundamentally different things.

Writing is about craft, and about the joy of playing with words and screwing around with sentences. It's about the hum you feel in your heart when the phrases just pour out of your mind and onto the page in a glorious rush.

The tricky part is that getting inspired to write like that is not always accompanied by a grand story idea. So you can sometimes wind up with an itch to write but no words to write with. Man, is that an uncomfortable feeling.

When that happens I tend to turn to my husband for writing prompts. I call Brandon the idea guy, because although he doesn't consider himself to be a writer, he is a bountiful wellspring of story ideas. I don't know if he pulls them all out of a hat, or if he has a secret Narnia-style wardrobe from which he retrieves his prompts. All I know is that I can count on him to give me the goods when I need them!

It was Brandon who gave me the prompt that turned into my first novel, The Road to Nowhere. And it was Brandon who had the original idea that became my next novel (out fall 2023), The Santa Strike!

We make a good team. (less)
Shana Hammaker I grew up in and out of foster care, which means that I grew up knowing precious little about my biological family. I did, however, learn early on an …moreI grew up in and out of foster care, which means that I grew up knowing precious little about my biological family. I did, however, learn early on an extraordinary story about my paternal grandfather. It's a story that sounds so outlandish, so cinematic, that I long assumed that it had to be made up.

But it seems that it is likely true. At least, mostly true.

The story, as originally told to me by my father, goes like this:

My paternal grandfather was conceived by a pair of young lovers during World War One. His father was a soldier on leave from the front. His mother was a lovely young local woman from the Tacoma, Washington area. They hooked up and he went back to Europe. She gave birth while he was away. Then, either because she was disinterested in motherhood, or unprepared, or both, she abandoned the infant in a Native American reservation.

My grandfather was born with a headful of red curls. As my father told the story, the red hair his father sported was cause for great consternation among the Native Americans on the reservation. "They thought he came from Hell," my dad told me. Now, I don't know where Judeo-Christian beliefs factor into this. But I do know that the family lore contends my infant grandfather, although fed, was largely neglected on the reservation. No one wanted to touch him. The story goes that when the social workers eventually arrived to take him, they found my grandfather in the middle of a giant puddle of blankets that had been wound and wound and wound around his teeny body, because no one would change his diapers, for fear of touching his Satanic body.

"When he soiled a new blanket, they would just wind another one around him," my dad said.

My grandfather was adopted by a nice childless couple. They lived an uneventful life for a time before the mom died. Then a short while later his adopted dad began to date a woman who had two sons of her own. Their courtship was brief and then they married. The woman and her sons were always cold to my grandfather, which my father said remained a mystery to him until he was grown and looked into the situation a little deeper on his own.

That woman, my grandfather's adopted dad's second wife, actually turned out to be HIS BIRTH MOTHER. And her sons were my grandfather's BIOLOGICAL BROTHERS. And, get this: they ALL KNEW. That was the reason they were cold. They knew the truth and didn't want him to know!!(less)
Average rating: 4.12 · 102 ratings · 44 reviews · 14 distinct works
The Cookie Dumpster

4.19 avg rating — 21 ratings — published 2011
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The Santa Strike

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 17 ratings2 editions
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Charlie (Twelve Terrifying ...

3.92 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 2011
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North of Forks (Twelve Terr...

4.50 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2011
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Hieroglyphs

4.25 avg rating — 8 ratings — published 2012
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Teeth: A Fable (Twelve Terr...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 2011
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Souls, Inc. (Twelve Terrify...

4.20 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2011
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Border Crossing (Twelve Ter...

4.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2011
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The Road to Nowhere

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2014
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Sliver (Twelve Terrifying T...

3.50 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2011
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More books by Shana Hammaker…

Holly

So my Husband and I embarked on fun duel reading path this year. We decided to read mostly Stephen King books, either ones we have never read or have not read in so long that with changing tastes and outlooks the book may read different.

He reads faster then me so he has gotten through more but I have been focused on the novels with Holly in them as I liked her a character on the Outsiders tv show. Read more of this blog post »
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Published on March 27, 2024 06:18 Tags: holly, king, reading, rereading, stephen-king, stories
Charlie North of Forks Border Crossing Metamorphosis Souls, Inc. Teeth: A Fable Sliver
(9 books)
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4.10 avg rating — 50 ratings

Chocolate Chip Co...
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Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder by Joanne Fluke
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How to Set a Fire and Why by Jesse Ball
How to Set a Fire and Why
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Shana Hammaker and 4 other people liked Brandon Roy's review of A Land of Ash:
A Land of Ash by David Dalglish
"a collection of stories of different people, groups, cities, and countries all dealing with a major eruption that devastates the United States.

We have stories of Hope, loss, terror, and people doing thing just to survive. There are lots of stories s" Read more of this review »
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You May Now Kill the Bride by Kate Weston
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How to Set a Fire and Why by Jesse Ball
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You May Now Kill the Bride by Kate Weston
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Split Second by David Baldacci
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Lots of fun!
More of Shana's books…
L.M. Montgomery
“Isn't it nice to think that tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it yet?”
L.M. Montgomery

Oscar Wilde
“Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.”
Oscar Wilde

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