Happy Independence Day

As I was getting ready to write this post, I began to reflect on what this holiday means to Americans. We have a very rich history in our country. The signing of the Declaration of Independence ranks at the top of what we, as a country, take pride and great reverence in, namely our freedom. As Christians, we see how our forefathers looked to God in their decision-making.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” -Declaration of Independence

Many selfless men and woman have given their lives over the years because of a loyalty and respect for our land, the people in it, and the value of freedom. Even as we enjoy ourselves today, in the summer traditions of barbeques, picnics and fireworks, let us not forget the sacrifice those in the military here, and overseas, give every day.

In reading the Declaration, I also thought about our freedom as Christians. Our spiritual freedom came at a high price, the death of Jesus Christ. And while that would seem the end of the story, it is not, for we serve a mighty God who had a plan. A plan that would give us eternal life. When Jesus Christ rose from the dead, he changed history.  My history. Your history. All because of the love of a Father who wants to have a relationship with us.

“For God so loved the world he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have eternal life.” John 3:16

Two distinct passages from two distinct writings, both promising freedom to a people who listen and hold the truth close to their hearts.

So today, wave your flag with pride. Remember the cost of this county’s freedom and the spiritual freedom we have through Christ Jesus.

“Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom”. 2 Cor 3:17

What are your thoughts about our freedom?

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Living Free by Julie Arduini

I don’t know about you, but sometimes I wonder if Facebook is a barometer when it comes to our feelings about our country. Many of my updates from all walks of life (writers, Upstate NY friends, Ohio friends, family) are angry at the direction our government is taking, often naming specific politicians they are unhappy with. The criticisms come from both sides of the political fence.

Yet, when a part of our country is in trouble, whether a weather related event or man-created tragedy, my FB feed displays images showing our unity. We announce our prayers for Arizona in their unimaginable loss of 19 firefighters. That we won’t forget our neighbor to the north, Canada, with their flooding.

This week the US celebrates Independence Day on Thursday and I’m starting to see a new theme pop up in my feed updates, a sadness regarding our country where they don’t even want to acknowledge the true meaning of the holiday. To them, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of independence anymore, so why enjoy the day is their thinking. I understand their frustration, but I’m not ready to turn my back on my country or celebrating her independence.

Here are my ways, despite frustrations, to embrace everything about July 4th.

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1. Consider our forefathers. 

They probably didn’t want to leave their families to fight for freedom, but they did. They were pioneers in unchartered waters, and that always comes at a high price. When I think about pioneers, John the Baptist comes to mind. He forged new territory in sharing a message and he ended up beheaded. Freedom has a price, and I hate to think we’re surrendering the fight. Our forefathers fought for what we have, and it’s up to us to embrace those freedoms and protect them.

2. Consider our grandchildren.

Perhaps I’m too intense for you, but I think a lot about my actions and how they impact future generations. I want to lay down a foundation they can reap a harvest from. I want my kids to know what July 4th is about and why it is important so they can pass that appreciation down to their children and grandchildren. If I ignore the holiday because I’m not happy with current events, so many people lose out.

3. Consider our declarations.

When I’ve prayed everything I can think of over a situation and feel a freedom coming, I change course and start declarations. I think of these prayers as the ones that pull heaven down and bring agreement between the two places. No matter what vote in my country comes down, I start proclaiming the things I’ve prayed for our country. In Jesus’ name I celebrate the greatest awakening in Jesus people have ever known. One that is International and will set people free. I don’t look around for these declarations or I’d probably be too paralyzed by fear. I look up and believe in heaven they are already accomplished, and it’s time to believe it’s time to see that come to pass on Earth. Please know this isn’t me dictating God’s agenda. I’m agreeing with it, and that includes His ways and timing. But when the prayers have been said, time to start proclaiming. And for me, nothing feels freer.

How about you? Do you think your Facebook feed is a barometer for how people feel about your country? Have you heard any grumblings about people ready to ignore July 4th out of grief and frustration? What suggestions do you have to live free in your country even if you don’t feel it’s a guarantee as in years past?

Have a safe and blessed Independence Day. May you live free, and the freest life available is the one living for Jesus!

 

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A True Story–by Hannah Alexander

Once upon a time, when Mel and I were engaged and he was working a Halloween night shift, we agreed that I would sit at his house and pass out candy to all the children we knew would come in their costumes. Being in a small town, we expected that everyone probably knew he was a safe person–word spreads quickly in a tiny town of 1,000, even though he hadn’t been here long.

So I went downstairs into the basement for a basket for passing out candy and was happily filling it upstairs when an alarm went off in that same basement where I had just been. Now, Mel has always been safety conscious, and I knew he had alarms set up, which was why I felt safe alone in his big old house. But he and I still had a few things to learn about each other.

I called Mel, who had just arrived at work. I was suddenly not in a party mood, but for some reason, he was, so he hit the speaker button so all his coworkers and any passing ER patients or visitors could listen in on our conversation. In the first place, I’d always hated that. In the second place, it garbled our voices and we couldn’t hear each other as well, so when I said, “Someone’s in the house,” he laughed and said, “What?” And then I said, more loudly, “The alarm’s going off!” and he said, “What?

So I screamed, “Someone’s broken in!”

He was silent. I hung up, figuring I’d better take care of this by myself. I went into the kitchen and found Mel’s largest and sharpest butcher knife, and entered the basement to face the ear-destroying alarm. I turned it off and turned on all the lights. Huge basement, of course. Lots of rooms. I went through the whole basement, shaking so hard I could barely hold the knife, and thinking about how stupid I was not to just call the police.

I found no one, so I went back upstairs, closed and locked the basement door, and waited. The alarm went off again. I focused on my breathing to keep from passing out. About that time, while I had a death grip on the butcher knife, the front door flew open and hit the wall. I leapt to my feet, brandishing the butcher knife. It was Mel, wide-eyed and breathing hard.

“What are you doing here?” I asked.

“You screamed! What are you doing with a butcher knife?”

“The alarm keeps going off and I don’t have a gun!”

“Get out of the house.” He reached for me, and we both went out the front door into the waning light.

Because Mel lived a block away from a questionable neighborhood, the police cruised past his house often. It just so happened a policeman cruised past just as we were stumbling out onto the front porch and into the yard looking terrified, with me still brandishing my knife.

Mike, who is now police chief, pulled into Mel’s driveway and got out. Mel and I explained briefly, then followed him down the stairs into the basement, taking care to stay behind him. We went through every room, looked under every table and behind every door, and were just about to come back out when, to our horror, in the window of the outside basement door appeared a huge head covered by a ten gallon hat.

All three of us nearly wet ourselves.

Then Mike recognized the country sheriff, whom he’d called for backup. After finding no one in the basement or upstairs, we tried to figure out why the alarm kept going off every time the basement door was closed. One of us stayed downstairs to see what happened when the others shut the door. We saw a wall-hanging move with the draft of air caused by the shutting door.

The police still cruise past our house several times a day. Sometimes, when I need information about small town police work, I’ll hop in my car or head out on foot to find a cruiser and ask a few questions. They always oblige.

No kids have ever come to this house in all the time we’ve lived here. I no longer buy candy or goodies. We no longer use that particular alarm system. Now we depend on our trusty four attack animals, and have never had a problem since.

Ah. Small town life.

 

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The 2013 Christy Award Winners

Books are important to us here on the Christians Read blog, right? What better place to share the winners of this prestigious award–the most coveted award in Christian fiction. In my last post, I shared I was reading You Don’t Know Me by Susan May Warren. As you can see below, there’s a reason the book drew me in so easily—it was . . . in a word, excellent! 

Another close look at the list and yes, that’s right–our own Jim Rubart is among the winners. Congratulations to Jim!

THE CHRISTY WINNERS:

Contemporary Romance: The Breath of Dawn by Kristen Heitzmann (Bethany House Publishers, a division of Baker Publishing Group).

Contemporary Series, Sequels & Novellas: You Don’t Know Me by Susan May Warren(Tyndale House Publishers)

Contemporary Standalone: Not in the Heart by Chris Fabry (Tyndale House Publishers)

First Novel: Into the Free by Julie Cantrell (David C Cook)

Historical: Flame of Resistance by Tracy Groot (Tyndale House Publishers)

Historical Romance: Against the Tide by Elizabeth Camden (Bethany House Publishers, a division of Baker Publishing Group)

Suspense: Rare Earth by Davis Bunn (Bethany House Publishers, a division of Baker Publishing Group)

Visionary: Soul’s Gate by James L. Rubart (Thomas Nelson, a division of HarperCollins Christian Publishing)

Young Adult: Child of the Mountains by Marilyn Sue Shank (Delacorte Press, a division of Random House)

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What Sort of Reader Are You? by Kathi Macias

I’m never shocked (though certainly disappointed) by a negative review of one of my books. As the old saying goes, you can’t please all the people all the time. But I must admit that I am more than slightly surprised when people comment (or even post reviews) on one of my books that make me wonder if they even read it.

Case in point. One of my most recent releases, Last Chance for Justice, was a major departure from my usual fare–international intrigue, suspense, murder, persecution, human trafficking, etc. Last Chance for Justice is just a nice, easy summer read–a small-town story that’s part of a larger small town (Bloomfield) multi-author series. The book/series blurb is quite clear on that, and I was even more clear when a social network friend asked about getting a copy. I specifically told her what it was about and how is was different from what she was used to reading from me. She bought it anyway, and then complained about being disappointed at the slow pace, saying it “wasn’t what she expected” from an author known for more intense books.

May I say that’s more than slightly confusing for an author? I know that sort of thing goes with the territory, but it’s made me wonder if readers are more locked in to what they expect from a particular writer than with just reading a good story, regardless of genre. As an author who tends to cross genres (and even color outside the lines) on occasion, I’d love to hear from readers. Are you strongly genre-focused when looking for a book, more author-focused, or just looking for a good read, regardless of genre? Do you want your favorite authors to stay on point, staying within expected genres, or are you open to an occasional deviation?

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The Future’s So Bright…I’ve Gotta Read a Book

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Happy first day of summer!

I don’t know about where you live, but it’s already felt like summer for quite a while here in Texas. Sunny. Bright. Hot. People are sharing photos of their vacation trips to the lake, beach, campground, and more.

Sometimes the vacation spot is as near as your own backyard, sitting in the shade with a book while burgers sizzle on the grill. 

Now more than ever before, readers have a wide variety of books to choose from. The question is: do you want paper or digital? Or both? 

Curl up with a mystery, a romance, a thriller, or a book that whisks you away to another time period. 

If you’re a reader, you might not know that in the last several years, some publishers have tightened their belts, canceled fiction book lines, or downsized them. Other larger houses have “bought out” smaller houses. For us authors, news like that makes us a little disappointed because this means fewer publishing “spots” through those avenus.

However, the news isn’t all bad. Especially for you readers. 

Reader friends, there are plenty of books for us all to read and plenty of ways for authors to share their words, their fictional worlds with anyone who wants to read. They can do it themselves.

Now, writers can (and do) squawk about quality, with good reason. There’s nothing worse than reading a book full of grammatical and formatting errors, punctuation, plotting plots, pudgy prose in need of discreet trimming. People in a hurry to get their work “out there” before it’s ready. But even the big guys who put thousands of dollars behind a book before it goes to press are fallible. There can be typos, printing errors, even–gasp–dangling participles!

However, all that aside, reader friends, the world of publishing is an exciting world to visit. You can still browse the shelves of a brick ‘n mortar bookstore, or click through the pages of the online bookstore world. You’ll find something exciting, uplifting, and heartfelt to read. 

One lament I hear about traditional bookstores (sometimes from a reader trying to find one of my books) is that “I can’t find a book by so-and-so to read. Why don’t the stores carry all of them?” Well, that’s impossible.

But did you know you can go to a regular bookstore and ask them to order a book for you, if you don’t see it on the shelf? They’ll find it. Just ask. 

So before you head to the mountains, beach, on a road trip, or even to the family reunion, load up on books.

What are you planning to read this summer? 

What new-to-you author have you discovered that you’d love to share about?

What excites you about this current world of books?

 

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Lynette Sowell writes fiction for the inspirational market, from contemporary romance to mysteries. She’s always looking for the perfect recipe for a story–or a great dish–and is always up for a Texas road trip.

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Those Super Feelings by Julie Arduini

I have a confession. I am a Superman superfan. Not quite in the Nicholas Cage department where I named my son Kal-El, but I remember watching the Christopher Reeve version as a child and becoming swept up in the story, romance, patriotism, and family themes before I really even fully understood them.

Through the years I re-watched that version, along with Dean Cain’s version on TV with Lois and Clark. Although I didn’t quite fit their demographic, I watched every single episode of Smallville, right down to the finale when Clark finally donned the cape and flew off to save the world. Cry? No. Bawled was more like it.

man of steel photo: teaser man_of_steel_xxlg_zps2640a759.jpgI’ve tried to figure out what it is that gets me so involved and emotional when it comes to this nerdy journalist who flies around in tights to keep Metropolis safe. Although I’ve yet to watch Man of Steel, I believe former Governor Mike Huckabee has the answer.

Here is what he shared on his Facebook page:

The new Superman movie, “Man Of Steel,” reportedly shattered June box office records by raking in $125 million over the four-day Fathers Day weekend. That despite some worries in Hollywood after critics pointed out the film has Christian undertones. They noted that it’s the story of how a father in the heavens sends his only son to Earth to save humanity and stand as an example of goodness for all mankind. Some people in Hollywood apparently thought that might keep audiences away. How out of touch with reality ARE they?

I’ve learned over the years that I’m pretty sensitive spiritually. I believe even before I knew Christ in a personal way, He was wooing me in with messages that for most of the world, were clearly meant to entertain. Apparently Man of Steel has been overt in placing these themes for the masses to contemplate.

Even as a kid I knew Superman wasn’t God or a true, real Savior. But here’s what I continue to feel and get all weepy about when I watch any version:

-A baby arrives in this world, but not of it.

-A toddler adopted who has a strong connection to his biological Father, but very much loved by his adopted.

-His biological Father is the source of all wisdom.

-Clark’s true purpose is to come to Earth to save it.

-He steals away to the Fortress of Solitude for time alone with His Father, to re-charge and re-group.

-He’s going to choose good when tempted (I’ll conveniently ignore his private times with Lois, just go with me here) and have a showdown with evil.

-He will always win in the end.

I think even as a child those themes resonated with me and continue to draw me in not so much as a fan of a comic book hero, but out of thankfulness for the real Savior. I’m a true justice girl where I long for good to prevail, and Jesus is the ultimate good and victory. When I truly think about those things, I’m overcome.

And when I see it play out in fiction, I think my heart returns to those same themes, and gratitude.

How about you? Is there a fiction story, show, or film that always brings out your emotions that you believe has deeper meaning? I’d love to hear what you think. Also, if you saw Man of Steel, did the Christian overtones appear to you?

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Small Town Class–by Hannah Alexander

Still Friends

Still Friends

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After forty years, our small class from our small town where I still live today continues to love to get together for a weekend, laugh a lot, cry over those we’ve lost, play and bond once again over good food. In fact, many of us who live in the area, when we hear one of our class family is coming in from out of town, will have a small reunion any time of the year. Many of us have lunch several times a year.

Our spouses are always amazed, when we get together, by the love we still have for one another, and the laughter we share–our closeness, and how open we are with each other. Other classes have been as small as ours–in a tiny town of 1006, you could understand why our class only had about 44 graduates. But why us? Why do we still enjoy each other so much?

We were a wild class. Not only did I get suspended during my senior year for skipping school, but I also ran away from home eight weeks before graduation–and still actually graduated. Some of our poor teachers quit because we were so hard to control.  We didn’t do it intentionally, but there were a lot of brilliant kids in our class, and we got bored easily. Those teachers who could hold our attention were the good ones who challenged us. One of my dear friends was told by many teachers he would never amount to anything because he didn’t pay attention in class and he wore his hair long. He now owns his own extremely successful company, and uses his wealth to share with those who don’t have what they need to survive. He also puts us up for free in his and his wife’s vacation compound during our reunions.

We graduated to become librarians, farmers, medical professionals, landlords, farmers, paralegals, office managers, scientists, farmers, cattle barons (different from farmers) and business owners of many stripes. Oh, and we have a novelist among us. Yeah, we also have some who lost their way, but we have others who reached out and tried to show them the way back–right here  within our class. Though we’re a mixed bag of denominations, and though some attend church weekly and some don’t, we actually pray for each other by keeping in touch online. What a gift God gave this only child when I entered that class in sixth grade after a move from California.

We’re still trying to figure out why we have such a powerful connection. Maybe others have that, as well. We haven’t found another class with as much love for one another as we have, but you’ve gotta love the love, you know?

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WHY WE DO THE THINGS WE DO by Vicki Hinze

WHY WE DO THE THINGS WE DO BY VICKI HINZE

 

Honestly, I started to add an “or not” to the end of the title of this article.  What makes us do or not do anything?

“It depends” is as close to the truth as I’ve managed to get.  Something motivates us—we nix desserts to lose weight; we add vitamins and/or exercise to get healthier; we read to learn, to understand, for the comfort of knowing someone else is in a similar fix and they’re surviving it.  Or maybe we read because life is hard, weighing on us and bruising our faith, and we need a break for entertainment or reassurance that bruising and breaking are poles apart.

And then there are habits.  Bad ones are hard to break.  Good ones are hard to keep.  It takes more than discipline and will and desire—that much, I know.  What more depends on the person, but I’m confident saying if a hard head or stubbornness would do the trick, in my case, it’d be done.  It isn’t.

One of the habits I’ve most enjoyed is reading the Bible first thing in the morning. It set the tone and my mood for the day, and I started even the most hectic days feeling serene. That worked well for me until I had to insert ointment in my eyes at night (eye strain is tough stuff) and on awakening, I couldn’t see clearly for the first hour or two.  That nixed that enjoyable habit.  With my routine broken, so too did my daily infusion and time with the Word.

That led to a feeling of being rudderless and asking (Sooner or later, we all ask ourselves some rendition of this) “Why am I here?  Is this what I’m supposed to do?”

I’ve asked the “Supposed to do” question a lot, particularly with all the surgeries on the eyes and such.  I thought, if God wanted me to write, He’d give me the ability to read and write at will.  That was wrong, of course, and my idea of the way things should be versus His way and His will.

It took me a while to figure that out.  Namely, it took sitting with my eyes sown shut for three days after a surgery to realize that sometimes when we can’t see at all, we see most clearly.  It had to do with dependency.

We’re taught to be self-reliant, to take responsibility for ourselves and our actions, and we have to come to understand that we’re always to rest in God.  To rely on Him.  To be dependent on Him.  That’s what those three days taught me.

If, in my Bible reading, I’d read 2 Corinthians 9:12 (NIV) with an insight I lacked at the times I’d read it previously, I might have gleaned the wisdom offered and needed and been able to skip that 3-day lesson.  The verse reads:  “This service that you perform is not only supplying the needs of the Lord’s people but is also overflowing in many expressions of thanks to God.”

And there it was.  The answer to my “Is this what I’m supposed to do” question.

Which of course brought to mind another verse—“Be still and know that I am God.”  That’s one of my favorites and when my world begins to lose its luster, and I see evil winning over good, it remains my go-to verse.  I don’t just want it.  I need it.  And that dependency brings me full circle to relying on God.

My point when I started this article was to talk about Bible reading and why it is so important to read every day.  To get a constant infusion of the Word is the armor needed for serenity in life.

Do you read your Bible each day?  If so, what is the impact of reading it on you?

And, I have to ask this one:  Do you ever re-read a verse you’ve read before–often dozens of times–and see it in a whole new light?  (Then think, How in the world did I miss that so many times?)

 

Blessings,

 

Vicki

 

 

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Que Sera Sera, or… by Yvonne Lehman

Que Sera Sera
Or as Doris Day (back in my day!) sang it, “Whatever will be, will be.”

I’m not sure that’s theologically sound, but that’s not the point of this anyway. What I’m getting at is, some things just seem meant to be…even if it seems we sometimes are waiting…forever.

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Lori Marett

That’s how my daughter, Lori Marett, felt through the years as she dabbled in writing while working and raising a family. A few of her articles were published in Focus on the Family but her interest lay in screenwriting. She said, “Mom, I’m going to write a script adapted from your novel, In Shady Groves.”

My eyes were stuck on her and my voice choked my throat and I couldn’t say what I was thinking, which was, “That’s impossible. You don’t know anything about scriptwriting.”

Fortunately, I couldn’t get the words out and she began to read books, teach herself, and wrote the script which placed and then won in contests, but was told it would be too expensive to produce. That just wasn’t meant to be.

Daunted but not defeated, she continued. She met faculty at writers conferences who were involved in movies. Then she began to think somebody should start a conference to bring all those in the arts together—writers, scriptwriters, producers, actors, musicians, etc.

But who? Well, after much praying and pondering and encouragement it seemed meant to be that she and her husband, Rodney should give it a try. I didn’t tell them how difficult it is to be founder and director of a conference. After all, I had started the Blue Ridge Writers Conference over 25 years ago and God showed how he could use a willing person, who didn’t have enough sense to know they couldn’t do it, and make it a success.

Her and Rodney’s efforts seem meant to be since they’re now in their sixth year of directing the Gideon Media Arts and Film Festival, held in Orlando, FL this year. http://www.gideonfilmfestival.com.

After years and years of trying, maybe it just wasn’t meant to be that she’d ever get a movie produced. But she continued learning, writing, networking, entering contests, and lo and behold, this year her first DVD was produced.

This is what Dove Worldwide had to say about it: If you want to see a powerful drama about abortion and one which features compassion for the young girls making life-changing decisions, this is the one to see. … The viewer will experience a few surprises along the way. … Due to the sophisticated theme, we are recommending this movie for ages twelve plus. This one entertains and makes one think, a pretty rare combination.”

Viewers have said this is not like most movies about abortion, but has that twist and difference which makes it unique. It’s now being used as a ministry in organizations and churches.

After years of trying and seemingly no results, it’s beginning to look like Meant to Be was…meant to be.

Yvonne latest novels are three Harlequin Heartsongs set in Savannah, GA. The Caretaker’s Son (April 2013), Lessons in Love (August) and Seeking Mr. Perfect (November).

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What Are You Reading? by Elizabeth Goddard

ImageSince I turned in my novel at the first of this month, I have a little extra time to catch up on reading. Funny that reading voraciously is what drove me to write, and now with writing, I hardly have time to read!

Finished reading Submerged by Dani Pettrey, and immediately downloaded another book that someone recommended—Susan May Warren’s You Don’t Know Me. Just got my copy of Rachel Hauck’s Once Upon a Prince. We won’t even talk about what is already on my Kindle and overflowing on my bookshelves and next to my bed that I haven’t read yet.

I’ve mentioned this before but nowadays I often read the sample chapters first to decide if I want to buy the whole thing. I can’t tell you how many novels I’ve started that I wished I hadn’t bought because I just can’t keep reading. Can’t finish.

I read the sample chapters of You Don’t Know Me and was immediately pulled in by the writer’s voice and attention to detail. I totally related to this character. I read that book in about two sittings and cried my eyes out at the end. It’s one that resonates with me for a lot of reasons, particularly the whole mother/daughter teenager angst thing. Now, to start on Once Upon a Prince this week. I love Rachel Hauck’s writing as well, and I’m looking forward to the journey.

What are you reading this week in June of 2013?

Elizabeth Goddard is the award-winning author of Riptide and North Dakota Weddings, new July releases.

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Last night in a dream . . . by Maureen Lang

Every day, I receive in my email inbox a lovely, colorful, compelling, or fascinating photo enhanced by a Bible verse. Although I set aside time to read the Scripture on a daily basis, this is one email I always, always open. For one thing, I just love the pictures. I’m not sure who selects them, but I do know many of the photographers (some are author friends of mine!).

However, it’s the verse that more often than not makes me stop a moment, consider its meaning, and be uplifted. It’s that one extra moment in the day I’m reminded of my creator, and that he loves me. Sometimes, like today, the theme even matched something I dreamt about last night. Here’s the story on that:

Yesterday I’d mentioned to my husband that a friend of mine who had moved away was having trouble finding the same sense of community she enjoyed while living here in the Midwest. I felt so bad for her, because the obvious result is loneliness.

Later, I read about an upcoming court hearing for the man who killed one of our neighborhood children in a boating accident last summer (alcohol + boat is never a good combination).

Obviously the two incidents made an impression on me, because last night I dreamt of seeing a large group of people laughing and enjoying each other’s company, on their way toward a boat. They seemed to be having such a great time, and in the dream my thought was the same as my lonely friend’s: I wanted to be in on their sense of community.

However, after this happy group boarded their boat, the police arrived to arrest everyone because they had too many people aboard for the size of the boat. Too much community!

It’s always interesting to me how the brain works, and I guess the origin of this dream is fairly obvious. But then this morning, one of the first emails I opened was from Clash Entertainment, my daily dose of Scripture. With a backdrop of some lovely horses, it read:

If either of them falls down, one can help the other up. But pity anyone who falls and has no one to help them up. (Eccl. 4:10, NIV)

The Scripture reminded me to raise my friend in prayer, and I can’t think of a better thing an email can do.

If you’d like a daily dose of Scripture, click here to sign up for Clash Entertainment’s Verse of the Day. No matter what we’re going through, it’s addressed in one form or another in the Scriptures! See how often the verse chosen for any given day goes with something God knows is on your mind.

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Recording Your Own Book is Dang Cool by James L. Rubart

Recording the audio version of my novels is so cool, and so incredibly exhausting.

Last week I was in Nashville laying down the audio version of Memory’s Door (e-book, print, audio on pre-order now, will officially release August 6th).

memorydoor.indd

This was my fifth time (I’ve recorded my previous four novels as well) and while this time was the least tiring so far, it still felt like I’d run ten miles at the end of each day. So I slump into a chair, babble incoherently for a few hours, go to bed, and I’m ready for the next session.

 

Recording MD

 

The recording process is pretty straightforward. Most times I simply read till I screw up. The engineer backs up the recording five or six words, I hear it in my headphones and when it gets to the point where I stopped, I jump in and keep going. It usually takes four days to voice the entire novel.

 

For 3Men

Producer Gabe Wicks, me, engineer Ben Holland

Some narrators read books straight. Me? It would be a lot easier, but I’ve chosen to do different voices for each of my main characters and 90 percent of my minor characters. And I love that my publishers have me read my own books because I know where the beats go, what should be emphasized and what shouldn’t.

Do you listen to audio books? If yes, does it make a difference if the author reads them or not?

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Growth Pains by Kristen Heitzmann

Well, friends, I am finally revising my very first historical series that has been out of print for some time. I’ll be bringing them out as e-books, with possibly a print-on-demand option. I’m really excited, but let me tell you, when I say revising I mean seriously revising. I’m hoping in a big way that those who read the original print version will barely recognize this iteration.

I know there are those of you who enjoyed, even loved, that series as it came out. But fifteen novels later, I’m so glad they went out of print and I have a chance at a do-over. I freely admit I’m a perfectionist. It’s possible to be that while recognizing nothing you do will ever be perfect. However that drive toward perfection is what makes me grow as a writer–and what makes it painful to see where I started.

I’m enjoying the process of ripping out the “I wrote THAT?” parts and refilling the scenes with more seasoned, better crafted writing. On the Myers Briggs personality scale, I’m entirely P and void in J, which means I would process and perfect ad infinitum if we didn’t depend on my finished product for food on the table and gas in the car. Because somewhere down the road, I’m going to look at this version and say, “I wrote THAT?”

But there is pleasure in having a better way to word something, in recognizing gaps in the plot and details that add richness. There is satisfaction that at this point of my journey, I’m not groping along (as much). In writing, as in life, I rarely wish I could go back. It’s that thrusting toward perfection that drives and inspires me. The knowing that He who began his work in me is completing it, that God will perfect in me not only my skills and talents, but my faith and my future.

I’m giving the work on this series the attention it deserves, because these tales were a gift to me. I honor that gift, and most of all the Giver, by making them the best they can be now. It seems a good way to approach anything. Learn from the past, find joy in the present, and anticipate what comes. And when a chance comes to polish up the past, grab it with both hands and run.

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The Finished Manuscript by Tara Randel

There is nothing more rewarding to an author than sending the finished manuscript to the editor. After months of living in the world I’ve created, agonizing over word choices, scene placement, pace, creating believable characters, and reading the manuscript through a dozen times, I finally let it go. Sure, there is an editorial process that continues until the book is released, so there will be more work to do in the future, but the book is written. I get a break. For now.

So, do I go back to real life afterwards? Hardly. Just as soon as I send the finished project to my editor, I’m already thinking about my next story. But before diving in, I take a little break.

Whoever thinks the life of a writer is glamorous, keep reading!

First, I decompress. Writing is exhilarating, but exhausting work. Usually, sleeping in a couple days helps get my energy level back on track.

Next, I clean the house. Yikes. Time to sort through the accumulated clutter that collects about the last month before the deadline date. Then I need to go grocery shopping. What a crazy time for the family, but everyone survives.

Optional activity, yard work. This is actually nice, getting outside for a few hours to enjoy the sunshine I haven’t seen for months.

Activity not an option, catching up with friends. My friends and family are awesome, but I have to admit I miss them after months of working on a book. Believe it or not, I have them trained not to call me until after the deadline. Well, the last two weeks before submitting the manuscript anyway.

Once all the above is done, I start the next book. No rest for a storyteller. I may take a week to rest and catch up on life, but then I dive back in. New story. New characters. New adventure. I can’t wait!

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