It would be stretching a point to suggest Tucson author Sarah T. Dubb wears her heart on her sleeve.
Itâs actually on her arm, a white-crowned sparrow that was tattooed above Dubbâs left elbow years ago and now seems more comfortable than ever âĻ especially since Dubbâs debut novel, âBirding with Benefits,â has become one of the summerâs most surprising hits.
Released June 4 by Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, âBirdingâ was quickly applauded by NPR, Publishers Weekly and Audubon Magazine.
As fast as you could say âyellow warbler,â Dubb was under contract to write two more novels, and the design on her arm looked almost prescient. Clearly, her career has taken flight since she married her affinity for birds with her dream of writing a romantic novel.
âItâs been a fun summer,â she confessed last week. âIt still feels a little unreal. We went back east to visit family and saw my book in the Philadelphia airport. Somebody sent me a picture of it from a library in Melbourne. Itâs crazy to think about my little book being out in the world.â
âBirding with Benefitsâ is a joyful, sometimes-steamy love story that follows an unlikely couple who team up for a major bird-watching contest.
The tale is set in Tucson and features Celeste, a 40-something divorcee who teaches in a local middle school. Her daughter, Morgan, is a high school senior headed to Northern Arizona University. Then thereâs John, an expert birder who looks great in T-shirts.
Will Celeste and John find birds? Will they find themselves? Will they find they are made for each other?
Fun and easy to read, âBirdingâ is another sparkling example of why romance fiction has become the best-selling genre in American literature.
Thank Dubb, a full-time mom and part-time librarian with the Pima County Public Library.
Born and raised in Tucson, she became a writer who worked with a variety of nonprofits here and in Washington.
Dubb has always been a writer. But an author?
She could not imagine seeing her name on a book jacket until five years ago, when she began studying for a degree in library science at the University of Arizona.
As part of the curriculum, students would read a book or two from each major genre. When Dubb read her first romance, she fell in love.
âUntil I went to library school, Iâd pretty much read literary fiction,â Dubb said. âItâs one of the reasons I didnât think I was cut out to be an author. I didnât know what I would say. But I loved romantic fiction right away. I read one, then another, then another. Itâs a genre where youâre rewarding hope, youâre celebrating joy. You have to have a happy ending.
âRomance novels fit my personality a lot more than what Iâd read before. If I was ever going to write a book, I thought this might be something I could do.â
The final nudge came from a college friend in the spring of 2020.
âI reached out to Rachel and confessed I was loving romance books,â Dubb recalled. âShe said, âOhmygawd, I am too!â When I told her I was thinking of writing one, she loved the idea. That got me started. For a long time, she was the only person who knew.â
âBirding with Benefitsâ was actually Dubbâs second full-length manuscript, written while waiting for word on the first âĻ a small-town story set in Patagonia.
âIt was a about a spunky woman running for mayor and a former baseball player coming back home,â Dubb said. âWe never did find a buyer. Publishers said it was too light, not hooky enough.â
Dubb found all the âhookyâ she needed when she asked Celeste to step outside in âBirding.â
Already a casual bird-watcher, Dubb went on several guided bird walks and studied an assortment of guides to sharpen her grasp of the sport. The completed manuscript went out on submission in the spring of 2022.
Interestingly, Dubb self-published three novellas under another pen name â Eliza McLane â while waiting to hear back from publishers. âHaunted Hookup,â âSanta Babyâ and âPerfect Matchâ are still available on Amazon.
âThey were great fun to write, they were exactly what I wanted them to be, and they were getting readers,â Dubb said. âFor a while there, I thought I might switch over and be Eliza McLane. Then, finally, the phone rang.
For the record, that was Feb. 6, 2023, and Eliza hasnât been seen since.
Readers of modern romance will see that âBirdingâ is a rare bird on several fronts. The key characters are in their 40s. One of them is divorced. Middle-age characters with middle-age problems are rarely found in romance novels, but Dubb was not trying to plow new ground.
âLook at me,â she laughed. âI was 39 when I started writing the book. Several of my friends were starting over after a divorce. I live with those things every day.â
Her best decision was to give her characters binoculars and field guides. As well-received as it has been by mainstream media, âBirdingâ has drawn even more attention from the American outdoors.
Audubon Magazine sent a writer to Tucson to profile the author. The American Birding Association featured Dubb and her book in a full-length podcast.
âI always thought birding could be romantic because so much of it is paying attention,â she said. âItâs all about discovery, and the desire to find some magic in our everyday world. Arenât we all looking for that?â
Poor Eliza never had a chance.
FOOTNOTES
âSarah T. Dubbâ is a pen name chosen for the simplest of reasons. âMy agent said my name wouldnât fit on the coverâ she said. âMy last name is long, and hyphenated. Since the two names start with a âTâ and a âW,â people had called me T-Dubb my whole life. It sounded real natural to me.â
The University of Arizona Poetry Center is again co-hosting the annual âSealey Challenge,â a nationwide challenge to read a book of poetry every day in August. To encourage readers locally, there will be poetry read-alongs Aug. 14 and 28 at the Tucson Hop Shop, 3230 N. Dodge Blvd. Both will begin at 4 p.m. Learn more at tucne.ws/uapcsc.
âHaunted Ever After,â the newest romance from Tucson author Jen DeLuca, will be released Aug. 13 by Penguin. DeLuca will celebrate that afternoon with a pub party at Mostly Books, 6208 E. Speedway. It will begin at 6 p.m. Get more info at tucne.ws/mbhea.
The Scott's oriole like this one filmed near Vail is one of several birds that might be renamed. More of Jason Miller's wildlife videos can be found at Jason Miller Outdoors on YouTube.



