One Alpen Day Book Tour

Posted February 6, 2026 by Julie S. in Blog Tours / 0 Comments

Sometimes a story unfolds through small, life-altering moments rather than dramatic turning points. In One Alpen Day, Michele Davenport-Dutton focuses on how personal grief, private responsibility, and unexpected connection can quietly reshape two lives moving in very different directions.

Angela Sutton is attempting to steady herself after divorce and repeated pregnancy losses leave her questioning what her future can hold. Returning to help her aunt run the family bakery offers familiarity and purpose, though it does little to answer the larger questions she carries with her each day. Her routine shifts when Mason Glade, a well-known Hollywood actor, unexpectedly enters her world.

Mason is seeking relief from the strain of his public life and the collapse of his marriage to Camila, whose alcoholism has drawn constant attention and disrupted their family. When Camila enters rehab, Mason takes his two young children and their nanny away, hoping distance will give them peace. As Angela becomes part of their lives, Mason notices her natural connection with his children and begins to imagine a future shaped by stability and care. Still, unresolved ties complicate every step forward.

 

Michele Davenport-Dutton has loved reading since childhood and was once the top reader at her Montessori school in Garmisch, Germany. A lifelong fan of heartfelt love stories with happy endings, she finally brought her own story to the page with this debut novel. Michele earned her bachelor’s degree in Business Management from CSUB before putting her career on hold to raise her family, spending nearly 30 years as a stay-at-home mom. Now fulfilling a long-held dream of becoming an author, she lives in Shafter, California, with her husband, Chris. Together they have eight adult children and seven grandchildren, with hopes for many more. Visit Michele on Instagram.

 

Amazon: https://amzn.to/460BAhC

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/206186582-one-alpen-day

One Alpen Day
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Author Interview

What’s a detail, theme, or clue in your book that most readers might miss on the first read—but you secretly hope someone notices? 

Mason’s estranged wife always wears gold- glittered costumes for her rodeo shows. Angela, the protagonist, has Emerald green eyes. The last line of the book has Mason thinking, All that glitters isn’t gold. All that glitters is Emerald green. 

When did this story or idea “click” into place for you—was there a single moment you knew you had to write it? 

My sons went on a weekend  Boy Scout camping trip with their dad. He took our five-year-old daughter with them. I was all alone at home (a rare treat) and thought, “I want to write a book.” I grabbed my notebook and a pen and the characters just came to me. The setting unfolded and yet it took years in the making of writing this novel, having been a stay-at-home mom was my top priority. I’m happy to see my little novel finally come into fruition. 

Which character or real-life person surprised you the most while writing this book, and why?

Opa, my grandpa. Although he passed on many years ago, at the ripe old age of 93, every time I read the last two chapters of my book pertaining to him, I cry. No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader, right? 

If your book had a soundtrack, what three songs would be on it and what scenes or moments would they pair with? 

“Everything that Glitters is Not Gold,” (sung by Mason, while he’s strumming his guitar in the alps. That song hits me hard) 

“Edelweiss” and “The Sound of Music,” because of the majestic alps in the background. 

What’s one belief, question, or emotional truth you hope readers carry with them long after they finish your book? 

Finding healing from loss. Love and connection help people grow. Love is better the second time around. 

If your protagonist (or the central figure in your nonfiction) could give the reader one piece of advice, what would it be? 

Love triumphs over fear. Love conquers all. 

What real-world place, object, or memory helped shape a key element in your book? 

The setting in the Garmisch/Grainau is where I lived as a young girl. My Opa would hold my hand as I skipped to the train station where we’d watch the trains coming and going. 

What’s something you had to research, learn, or experience to write this book that genuinely shocked you? 

Researching miscarriages and how it affects women deeply, the trauma they endure. 

If your book were invited to join a shelf with two other titles, which ones would make you happiest—and what would that shelf say about your story?

Jane Porter’s Christmas at Copper Mountain and Julie Olivia’s If it Makes You Happy. The shelf would say “Come over, stay a while. Let me take you on an armchair adventure you won’t want to miss.”

 


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Posted February 6, 2026 by Julie S. in Blog Tours / 0 Comments

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