Here's an interesting story about how Aura and Jane became Transylvanian "sisters."
Aura Imbarus grew up in Romania under the oppressive rule of Communism. Her life in the city of Sibiu, in Transylvania, was restricted by fear. Shots were fired. People mysteriously disappeared. Neighbors became informants for the government. As a girl, Aura had few people to trust. She felt that even the windows called "eyes" built into the German-style homes in her city were watching her.
Aura was smart and ambitious. She had a dream to go to America--to California--and have the kind of life she'd seen in the movies.
A few years earlier, another girl was growing up in America. One day when she was 13, she saw a Dracula movie. Right then she knew that one day she would go to Romania to find the mountains and castles of Transylvania that she'd seen in the movies.
Aura moved to America to pursue her dreams. She became a teacher in California and wrote a book about leaving Romania titled "Out of the Transylvania Night." The American girl pursued her dream to see Transylvania. She was working on a book titled "It Started with Dracula."
Jane was that American girl, now grown and still unable to resist a book with "Transylvania" in the title, so she bought Aura's memoir. After she read it, she wrote Aura a note telling her how much she liked it. Complimenting other writers is one of the things we do as part of the writing life.
Aura wrote back. One thing led to another as we compared our stories. "If not for the difference in timing, our planes could have passed in the sky," Jane said in my e-mail to Aura. We declared ourselves "Transylvanian sisters." Aura introduced Jane to her publisher--a generous offer from a generous person. And that's how two young girls with dreams influenced by the movies found each other as adults.
For a bit of related trivia, see the latest Transylvania Trivia on Jane's website: http://www.janecongdon.com
And, to find out more about an American Dream in Transylvania, check Aura's website at www.auraimbarus.com.
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