Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author Rachel Runya Katz to HJ!
Hi Rachel and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, Thank You for Sharing!
Please summarize the book for the readers here:
Fourteen years after their friendship fell apart at Jewish summer camp, Daniel and Liyah find themselves seated together on a plane. Daniel inadvertently offends Liyah; she bites his head off. At least they won’t have to see each other again…
Until Daniel’s firm is hired to market Liyah’s museum to young adults. Liyah’s promotion and Daniel’s freedom to choose his own account hinge on their success. If that wasn’t enough, their favorite coworkers rope them into starting a support (read: drinking and complaining) group that meets weekly at a speakeasy. Over this forced proximity, they confront their history and respective emotional baggage to save their working relationship. Finding comfort in their shared experiences as Jews of color, they become friends, then friends with benefits, and then maybe something more. There’s childhood friends, to enemies, to friends, to lovers! There’s only one bed! There’s found family! There’s (emotionally) hurt/comfort!
Please share your favorite line(s) or quote from this book:
I want to kiss her, he thinks, and he swallows the thought whole.
Please share a few Fun facts about this book…
- There is a running joke about Daniel being attracted to the wishbone of a dinosaur skeleton, and I used she/her pronouns for said dinosaur to make the joke work, even though the sex of the dinosaur is unknown.
- I wrote the epilogue while in line to talk to a JetBlue agent when my flight was cancelled.
- The title I queried with was The Speakeasy Survival Club but I never intended to keep it.
What first attracts your Hero to the Heroine and vice versa?
Daniel and Liyah are very opposites attract in terms of their personalities–it’s grumpy/sunshine or prickly/soft, with Liyah being the grump. They find each other physically attractive, but ultimately it’s all in the contrasts: they once knew each other very well but now they’re complete strangers, on paper they’re totally different but they’re both ambitious young people trying to find their way in the world. It’s about finding comfort in the last place you’d expect it.
Did any scene have you blushing, crying or laughing while writing it? And Why?
Something I found emotional to write was the pretend conversation Daniel has with his father who recently passed. His dad was always who he went to for romantic advice, and he tries to sort through his feelings by imagining the advice his father would give. But at the end, he stops being able to picture what his father would say.
“Sometimes, she looks at me in this careful way and I think she might, but she always says she doesn’t date and . . . I don’t know. I should talk to her, but I can’t figure out what to say. What do you think? What would you do?” Imaginary Dad’s answers can only go as far as Daniel’s imagination. It’s a quiet walk the rest of the way home.
Readers should read this book….
If you like the “only one bed” trope, or if you like your happy with your sad and vice versa (a brilliant friend of mine called it a rom-traum-com, and I’ve taken that and ran).
What are you currently working on? What other releases do you have in the works?
My second book is in my editor’s hands now for line edits! It hasn’t been announced, but I can tell you that it’s a sapphic road trip romance set to publish next fall, and it is just as rom-traum-com-y as the first. I may or may not be cooking up other projects, but that’s far to early to say 😉
Thanks for blogging at HJ!
Giveaway: Print copy of THANK YOU FOR SHARING by Rachel Runya Katz
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Excerpt from Thank You for Sharing:
CHAPTER 1
“COHEN-JACKSON, huh? That’s quite the odd combo.”
When Liyah looks up, her airplane seatmate is glancing at her full name in script on the cover of her planner before making eye contact. There’s a small smile playing at his lips, as if he finds her surname amusing. This reaction is not new to her, but she is simply Not In The Mood.
Liyah nearly missed her flight this morning. She managed to leave for the airport within a reasonable amount of time, an impressive feat for someone raised at the intersection of the Jewish Standard and Colored People time zones, but the fog had other plans. Karl (Neen informed her that the fog in San Francisco has a name) usually burns off around mid- morning but was thicker and slower to dissipate today. So she, Neen, and Ringo Starr (her best friend’s beloved VW Beetle convertible also has a name) found themselves trapped behind a seven-car pileup, Neen anxiously sticking their head out the window every forty-five seconds to assess the nonex- istent movement of traffic.
At the departures’ lane, Neen spared Liyah their usual teary goodbye speech. Instead, they wordlessly offered Liyah their right ear, which she met halfway, bumping together the matching star studs in their earlobes. Such had been the pair’s secret handshake since a drunken evening in Alien Piercing & Tattoo nearly seven years prior. Liyah wound up sprinting to her gate and, suffice it to say, she skipped out on the bagel she’d planned to purchase before boarding.
She’d heaved a sigh of relief (she was not out of breath; her body just hated running) when she arrived at her assigned seat and found that her neighbor was someone her age. With her luck, she’d pictured a shrieking toddler or, God forbid, a chatty old man. She thought his presence meant a few hours of peace as she attempted to subsist off a free bag of pretzel mix and ginger ale.
Apparently, she thought wrong.
She gives him a long look, eyes skating over his high cheek- bones, the slight bend in the bridge of his nose, burnt honey- colored almond eyes. He’s white and East Asian. Korean, she guesses, before mentally kicking herself for playing ethnicity detective. She realizes he’s just done the same to her, and men- tally kicks herself yet again for feeling guilty. Her metaphori- cal shins are starting to bruise.
Where is he from? Someplace that would give him enough cultural literacy to spot a truth in her last name (Cohen being decidedly Jewish, Jackson being decidedly not) but not enough to remain unfazed or to know he should stifle his shock. Or, at the very least, not to say something to the effect of, “You’re quite obviously Black and apparently Jewish? How strange!” Never mind that a man his age has probably committed the bulk of Drake’s discography to memory.
She checks her watch. They’re not due to land at O’Hare for another hour and fifteen minutes. Maybe he grew up in the Bay Area. Maybe he went to a high school that was ma- jority East Asian where nobody said a damn thing about his name or his parents or so much as looked at him sideways. A pang of jealousy accompanies the thought. Regardless, he of all people should know better.
“What an original comment,” Liyah starts, voice saccha- rine. She pointedly looks down at the redwood tree sticker on his laptop before meeting his eyes. “Stanford must be proud to have such an observant alumnus.”
The man’s smile abruptly falls, and he makes a waving motion with his hands as if to erase his words as he opens his mouth. Liyah, still Not In The Mood, declines his attempt to backtrack.
She purses her lips. “Tell me, then, what is the right way to be biracial? You’re normal, but everybody else is a total freak?” He looks down at his hands, stunned. Liyah’s lips stretch into a smug smile, pleased that she’s hit her mark.
“That’s not—” He sighs strongly enough to sag both shoulders, apparently thinking better of what he was about to say. “I’m sorry,” he mutters, cheeks deeply flushed.
Liyah nods curtly and slips her planner back into her tote bag. She can no longer remember why she withdrew it in the first place. She turns away from him, the warmth of her an- ger creeping up her neck. As the minutes pass, her heartbeat slows, and her outburst settles around them. The anger shifts toward shame. She pulls up the shade at the window and looks out. The plane is suspended in a soup of fog, thick and white, all depth and dimension indiscernible. She closes her eyes and imagines herself floating out there, disembodied from her grumbling stomach.
This is so like her. Bored out of her goddamn mind (yet somehow still incomprehensibly busy) at work, she spent the last three weeks counting down the seconds until she could leave for Fourth of July weekend. She isn’t even off the flight home, and she’s already miserable again. Must be a new record. Maybe she should say something. Not because she’s in the wrong (she isn’t, although her general grumpiness hasn’t helped) but because the discomfort in the air is bordering on suffocating. She ventures her gaze over to him. His focus is bur- ied in a GQ magazine, a gentle crease formed at his brow. His jaw (sharp, freshly shaven) clenches and releases as he turns the page. The movement causes Liyah’s eyes to trail down his arms toward his hands. She spies a bit of ink peeking out from under his rolled sleeves. His fingers are long and sturdy, the littlest one on his left hand adorned with a silver ring.
She averts her eyes before he catches her staring. He’s un- deniably good-looking. If only he’d waited until they were deplaning to make an asinine comment, she might’ve been able to spend this final hour of her prison sentence appreciating the way his tongue swipes over his bottom lip as he reads instead of contemplating making use of one of the four emergency exits.
Maybe she should nap. The coffee and ginger ale sloshing in her stomach disagree. At this point, she’s not sure whether her need for food or fresh air will win out upon landing. It’s quite possible she’ll take a later shuttle to economy parking just to pay two dollars more than she should for a caprese sandwich.
She nearly shudders at the thought. Something feels so intrinsically wrong with buying food on the way out of the airport. No, she’ll stick it out, and hope her stomach doesn’t autocannibalize before she makes it to her apartment.
Context, Daniel. Context.
He wants to stick his head in one of the overhead bins and shut it. Repeatedly. The second she narrowed her eyes, the whites around her black irises all but disappearing, he realized his mistake. Had they been several other places—a synagogue for the High Holidays, say, or a conference where his neck would be adorned with a name tag reading Daniel Rosenberg in bold lettering—she would have at least had a chance to take his attempt at flirting for what it was. As is, he came off as a hypocritical jackass. Which is leagues below a regular jackass.
Staring down at the GQ issue he swiped from his college roommate this morning, he tries desperately to ignore the way her eyes periodically bore holes in the side of his head. Mo- mentarily, he wishes he were religious enough to be wearing a yarmulke and tzitzit on this flight. Maybe even some awk- wardly straight payes instead of his neatly trimmed sideburns. The desire is fleeting. He’d scarfed down a bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich immediately after takeoff and fully intends a repeat performance at a neighborhood café this evening—for Daniel, unkosher breakfast sandwiches are not reserved for any particular time of day.
He had been looking for a conversation starter since the moment he shuffled into the aisle to let her take her seat. Her mass of long, tightly wound curls was pinned back on the side closest to him, revealing her delicate nose and double piercings in her earlobe that seemed to match the set of moles situated high on her cheek. Once seated, she’d looked up at him through dark eyelashes and offered a small smile before turning to look out the window. He was no longer annoyed by the small plane; the lower ceilings also meant two-person rows, and he got his precious aisle seat with no third party between them.
He’s not enough of a lech to know how to go about flirting with a random woman on an airplane, so when she pulled out the notebook, his heart hammered in his chest. He couldn’t believe his luck: Jews of color aren’t exactly commonplace where he grew up—him, his mother, and his sister being the only ones at his shul in Madison—and there is no non-Jew on the planet with the last name Cohen. Here was a way to establish camaraderie presented on a silver platter, or rather embossed on a leather notebook. He could maybe even find an excuse to see her again.
Now, his luck has run out. He’s grateful that he at least shoved his foot in his mouth closer to landing than takeoff. He considers introducing himself—first and last name—or just ex- plaining bluntly that he’s a Korean Jew and is excited to have a kindred spirit. That might have worked as an immediate follow-up to his gaffe, but when she looked at him the way his cat, Sweet Potato, stares at a bug she plans to devour, he chick- ened out. Now, he’s waited about thirty minutes too long, and he resigns himself to never entering her number into his phone. It’s probably better this way. Daniel’s love life has been dormant for so long that it might be dead. Besides, she might live in San Francisco. He was only in town for the long week- end, successful in his single-minded mission to board his Sun- day flight home thoroughly hungover and equally sick of his college suitemates. Aliyah’s number would likely never do more than burn a hole in his contacts list. He feels a little odd thinking her name, since she hadn’t offered it, but he is
unlikely to forget it anytime soon.
When he no longer feels the heat of her gaze—or deathly glare, really—on the side of his face, Daniel risks a glance. Her eyes are closed eyelashes nearly grazing the moles on her cheek.
Wait, he thinks, panic rising as a scratchy lump in his throat, I’ve seen those before.
No, it couldn’t be. Her name was Leah.
He blinks slowly, swallows, feels his blood thicken. Her name was Liyah, as in Aliyah. Which means he’s officially gone from mildly idiotic to perhaps the unluckiest moron alive. All those years of summer camp, he never saw her name written out.
His memory of her, age thirteen, crystallizes: features softer and less defined, hair in cornrows that reached her col- larbone, face lit only by a camping lantern Daniel’s father packed him. That look of total trust in her dark eyes. Which morphed into naked contempt the very next day.
She doesn’t recognize him, he’s sure of it. A touch of insult sinks his stomach. He’s a good six inches taller than he had been, and the braces on his teeth and baby fat in his cheeks are long gone, but is he really that forgettable? Then again, every time she looks at him, he gets the sense that it’s more about shooting daggers than cataloging his features.
The universe must be conspiring against him. There’s no other explanation. Accidentally making a beautiful girl hate you once is one thing—but twice, a decade and a half apart? He’s cursed.
A flight attendant stops at their row, offering a chance to give up their trash. Daniel holds his breath as Liyah awk- wardly reaches over him to deposit her can-pretzel-bag-cup sandwich into the extended plastic bag. When she pulls back, her eyes flit across him, irritation plain as ever. But this time, they snag, widening slightly before she whips her head to- ward the window.
Widening, he decides, in recognition.
Liyah says nothing. But the soft tap, tap, tap of her forehead against the windowpane tells Daniel all he needs to know.
Mercifully, the plane lands, the fasten seat belt light dinging off a few minutes later. He is a little too quick to his feet, half stumbling out into the aisle, but the past four hours of sit- ting in a cramped airplane row have rendered his knees nearly as sore as his ego. He opens the overhead bin and slings the strap of his duffel bag over his chest, rushing to make room for Liyah to stretch her legs while the first half of the airplane empties.
She leans up on her tiptoes to get to her small roller suit- case. He tries not to let his gaze linger on the bit of midriff her sweatshirt exposes as it lifts over her olive-green leggings. The suitcase appears to have shifted to the back of the bin, and she grapples with the wheels as she tries to pull it out.
Daniel steps forward and pulls it down for her with ease, depressing the button to raise the handlebar before passing it off to her. He smiles sheepishly, hoping that the convenience of his height has redeemed him slightly.
“I could have gotten it, Rosenberg,” she says, making eye contact with him for the first time in the better part of an hour, her murderous look only intensified.
His stomach, along with his smile, plummets. Daniel can almost hear the cartoon whistle and crash as it lands some- where near his lower intestine. There were three Daniels in their cohort at camp—each mononymously known as Rosen- berg, Schwartz, and Gross. But Liyah had always called him by his first name. Like if she said “Daniel,” any listener should know prima facie that she was talking about him. On any- body else’s lips, “Rosenberg” is a term of familiarity, even endearment. On hers, it means I know exactly who you are, and you are nothing to me. Maybe it was better when she didn’t remember him. “Liyah—”
“Thank you,” she mutters—compulsively, it seems, be- cause she frowns around the words like they’re bitter in her mouth. Daniel decides not to risk speaking and nods. The wave of moving passengers reaches them, and she turns to walk away without a second glance.
Daniel waits, motioning for the man in the row across from him to move first. A buffer between them, he finally exits this wretched flight.
From the book THANK YOU FOR SHARING by Rachel Runya Katz. Copyright (C) 2023 by Rachel Runya Katz Reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Griffin, an imprint of St Martin’s Publishing Group. Now available wherever books are sold.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Book Info:
Our new favorite trope: Childhood friends. To enemies. To lovers. In a chemistry-filled debut romance.
Daniel Rosenberg and Liyah Cohen-Jackson’s last conversation—fourteen years ago at summer camp—ended their friendship. Until they find themselves seated next to each other on a plane, and bitterly pick up right where they left off. At least they can go their separate ways again after landing…
That is, until Daniel’s marketing firm gets hired by the Chicago museum where Liyah works as a junior curator, and they’re forced to collaborate with potential career changing promotions on the line.
With every meeting and post-work social gathering with colleagues, the tension (and chemistry) between Daniel and Liyah builds until they’re forced to confront why they broke apart years ago at camp. But as they find comfort in their shared experiences as Jews of color and fumble towards friendship, can they ignore their growing feelings for each other?
With sexy charm and undeniable wit, Rachel Runya Katz’s sparkling debut, Thank You For Sharing, proves that if you’re open to love, anything is possible.
Book Links: Amazon | B&N |
Meet the Author:
RACHEL RUNYA KATZ is a contemporary romance writer living in Seattle with her partner, her cat, and far too many houseplants. She has a PhD in biomedical engineering, which is minimally helpful for this endeavor. Her books center queer Jews of color and their layered lives of joy, sadness, and love. Thank You for Sharing is her first novel.
Website | Twitter | Instagram | GoodReads |
Latesha B.
I enjoyed the excerpt. It made me grin at their reunion and had me waiting more of the story.
Dianne Casey
Sounds like a book I would enjoy reading.
Mary Preston
Forced proximity is always fun to read. Just sit back and watch the sparks fly.
Amy
Enemies to lovers and forced proximity are two of my favorites to read.
Debra Guyette
Thanks for the wonderful excerpt. I enjoyed it
Amy R
Sounds good
Rita Wray
Sounds like a book I will enjoy reading.
Janine
I really enjoyed the excerpt. I look forward to reading the book.
Susan C
I really want to know what happens!
Texas Book Lover
Sounds really great!
bn100
interesting
Daniel M
looks like a fun one
EC
It sounds like a book with interesting characters.
Bonnie
What an interesting book! Great excerpt. I’d love to read more.