If My People Pray 2012 by Julie Arduini

About six weeks ago I posted my love of political news. With the election less than a month away, I thought I’d share an update of sorts.

There is a movement called If My People Pray 2012 where Christian leaders participate in a short video praying over a topic that lines up with 2 Chronicles 7:14.

14 Then if my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and restore their land. (NLT)

Leaders include Vonette Bright, Kirk Cameron, Ken Ham, Mike Huckabee, Anne Graham Lotz, and more. Topics include praying for marriage, sanctity of life, pastors, entertainers, revival, and other issues that should be on our prayer radar.

For the 40 days before the election people with a burden to pray commit to do so each day. The video features the leader that day praying. There are prayer points and a call to distribute the videos and prayer point to others through social media and e mail. In these tech savvy days there is also an app available for the iPhone, iPad, and Android.

For the United States of America, we appear divided, and that saddens me. The best course of action isn’t to stand, but to kneel.

I hope you’ll join me in praying for our nation.

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It’s a New Day–by Hannah Alexander

 

 

   I wish I did this every day, but when I think about it, the first thing I do when I wake up in the morning is thank God for another day. I love mornings when I wake up at just the right time without the help of an alarm clock. Being a full-time novelist without children in the home, I have this luxury. The decisions that come directly after that important prayer impacts everything that happens each day.

First of all, do I allow my email OCD to control me the whole day, or do I choose certain times during the day to address those in the outside world? Do I, instead, read some passages from the Bible and give the day to God? Even if I do this, it doesn’t mean I’m wise enough to let Him keep the day. I have a bad tendency to grab it back when things aren’t going the way I expect them to. Bad idea, I know, but still, it’s what I do.

Now that Mel and I are building that clinic in town, I’m not spending the time I need to on my writing. So even though the only income I bring to the family comes from my writing, I find myself doing anything but. Do you find yourself doing this, as well? It seems that the busy-ness of the day takes precedence over the vital business of the day. Please tell me you’ve struggled with this. It’s so easy to use the excuse that there were necessary to things to complete, but is that what I’ll tell my editor when I don’t meet deadline? Is that what I’ll tell God, Who has called me to write, when I meet Him face to face on judgment day? “Oh, sorry, Lord, I know you wanted me to write that novel, but I just had to make these decisions for the clinic first…yes, I know I could have had someone else do that, but it seemed so urgent at the time.”

Sometimes we let the day decide for us. But we can’t afford to do that anymore. What is your calling from God? Choose one or two, maybe three if you’re a superhero, and release the rest. Do what you’re called to do, exercise your spiritual gifts, and leave the other vital things for the person called by God to do them. That’s what I plan to do in the days to come. Will you join me?

 

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Reading the Bible for All Its Worth! by Sarah Goebel

You know if you have read my previous posts that I am back in school so I am mostly writing about my classes! I did consider perhaps it was too late for me to finish my degree at 58 years old; then I met a woman who finished her Master’s degree in her 80’s. I decided, “What to heck! If she can do it, I can do it too! I don’t think God is through with me yet!” So, I am working hard every day reading a lot of textbooks and my Bible. I love it, but I have to admit, I miss reading some good stories – you know the kind – those that keep you glued to the couch until you finish them. Some of those stories are found right here on this site, written by my really neat Christian brothers and sisters who write really awesome Christian fiction! I have found good Christian books balanced with reading the Bible to be the best recipe for my life. I hope you have too. Today, I want to share some things I have learned in one of my classes that help us to read the Bible for all its worth!

I think these interpretation rules can help achieve consistency in anyone’s biblical understanding. I pray you will find this to be true for you:  (1) The first rule addresses our starting point, which is what we call exegesis. Exegesis is what we do in trying to understand what was written to them back then and there. One does not have to be an expert to do the basics of exegesis. We just need to be aware of a few things. For instance, Fee and Stuart, authors of How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth, recommend that we set limits to what the text can and cannot mean today based on what it could mean when written to the original recipients. In other words, it cannot mean something to us today that the hearers then would not have understood. Remember, those that these words were originally spoken or written to didn’t try to interpret them in their present time according to a future understanding or future culture such as our western lifestyle in the twenty first century. It is we who have that task. We must look back and interpret according to their situation and culture, not according to our own.

This seems like a basic idea; yet, we all can probably think of some times we have seen poor interpretation from ignoring this rule. For example, those who do not believe that spiritual gifts are for today sometimes use 1 Corinthians 13:10: “When the perfect comes the partial will be done away” as their theological basis for refutation of the spiritual gifts. They claim that the perfect has come in the form of the written Word of God, particularly the New Testament. They say, therefore, prophecy and tongues are no longer needed. With good exegesis, however, we know that First Corinthians 13:10 could not possibly mean this to the first century Christians; because, they did not know we would have the Bible in the form we have it today. By asking the question, “Could this have meant that to the first century reader?” when we are considering an interpretation, we can prevent ourselves from building a false theology. I am not trying to tell you what to believe concerning spiritual gifts. But I am saying that if you don’t believe they are for today, hopefully this isn’t the reason; (2) The second rule: When the situation surrounding the first century recipient is comparable to ours, then God’s Word to us is the same as it was to them. That’s easy enough. On the other hand, if it is not comparable, whether it is what we want to believe or not, we must accept that most likely it needs to be interpreted in view of cultural relativity. In other words, it is vital that we correctly reconstruct the circumstance of the hearer then in our exegesis, if we are to apply this rule with biblical accuracy. These things must be done before we can then determine what the Word means to us today in our present situation.

One such place in Scripture that is interpreted differently by different denominations is First Timothy 2:11 concerning the operation of the church and women. As I have studied the passages concerning this issue this past year, I have found that the Church at Ephesus was a church in crisis! This is important to know because a church in crisis may need different instructions than one that is not. One of their challenging issues involved some very specific women who were spreading wrong teachings (1 Timothy 5:11-15; 2 Timothy 3:6-9). When considering what they may have been teaching, consider the culture of Ephesus.

The Legend of Artemis & Amazon Warriors

Fertility Goddess Artemis

The culture was highly influenced by the goddess Artemis which encouraged women to dominate men. Her worship was fanatical and traced back to the Amazon (female warriors), of whom many in Ephesus claimed to be descended from. Having this type of knowledge about what was going on in Ephesus helps us to understand the situation, problems, and crisis Timothy was trying to handle which demanded drastic measures. It helps us to understand why Paul would write, “But I do not allow a woman to teach or exercise authority over a man, but to remain quiet” in one place and do the opposite in another. Paul was the founder of the church at Ephesus and had left Timothy there to handle the crisis. Paul was laying down some strict measures based on the situation present in Ephesus at this particular time in order to bring it out of a crisis situation. Paul wouldn’t allow a woman to teach or speak for that particular church at that particular time for that particular circumstance, and not for every church for ever.

 

An Amazon Warrior

An Amazon Warrior

After all, Paul writes to the church in Corinth (1 Corinthians 11) to help them sort out the issue of headdressings when women are… what?–when they are prophesying and praying in public worship services!  He didn’t command them to be silent. He gave instructions for them to pray and prophesy. One cannot pray and prophesy and keep silent! In other areas of Scripture we see women were involved in leadership roles in Paul’s ministry as well. Therefore, we must take the this Scripture and the one other used to prevent women from holding leadership roles in some churches today and consider them in light of all the Scriptures and references to women and ministry made by Paul. When we do, I believe the best conclusion is these two situations must be culturally relevant, meant for very specific situations, and not a universal mandate.

Again, I am not trying to change your doctrine about this controversial issue with this short post. However, I do hope I have heightened your sensitivity to specific problems inherent in Scripture, and helped you realize why different options exist. I share Fee and Stuart’s goal that as readers, we learn to discern between good and not-so-good interpretations and perhaps to know what makes them one or the other.

    Until next time…Happy Reading and may you be safe in our Father’s care!

Sarah

1Fee, Gordon D. and Stuart, Douglas. How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2003.

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WRITING AS WORSHIP

Recently I was engaged in an email discussion raised by another writer about whether our writing is worship. The general consensus was that our gifts are from God and our using them in a way that serves others is serving him. But what about worship? That got me to thinking about how I looked at it.

When I was in my 30’s, I taught in Sunday school, headed up mission programs, promoted special offerings, taught Bible studies, was in church every time the doors opened. That was good. I needed it. Was good for my family. Now, I get more depth by personal study and worship by having a faith message in my books. I have to think about the characters’ problems, and while solving them for the characters, I’m confirming my own faith, teaching myself, and giving the reader something to think about.

For example, in my current WIP my author/character’s mentor had encouraged him from childhood to always have a “good” ending when he came up with his wild “bad” stories. In his mature, successful author years they have a discussion about opposites– bad/good, evil/good and concluded good is opposite of bad. One can do “bad” things and combat that with “good.” But being/doing good is not the opposite of evil. I loved that discussion, made me think about and present to my readers what is the opposite of evil.

I love it when I stop to realize (as the discussion reminded me) that I’m not just writing stories, but I’m learning more about my own faith and imparting that to readers who need to think about the faith message. God is teaching me as I write, and in turn I’m teaching the reader. I think when we’re experiencing that, it’s worship.

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Lifetime Readers

Maureen mentioned her non-fiction reader friends react somewhat negatively when she brings up a book she just read. Jim mentioned that he’s facing an empty-nest, but the good news is his wife is starting to read novels.

So where do lifetime readers come from?

In one of my previous posts, I talked about receiving a big box of books for my home schooling efforts.  I remember reading somewhere  that home schoolers are driven to produce readers. I know that’s true for me. Unfortunately, I’m in competition with the video gaming world, but the good news is—I think it’s working!

Life has interrupted a few times, and I had to put off reading to them. I wasn’t even sure they enjoyed our reading time, or if they were listening. But apparently all three of them have listened.  My middle son has been spouting off silly metaphors he learned from one of the books.

Imagine my pleasure when my oldest asked when we were going to read again—he really missed that particular story. I was ecstatic, too, that the kids groaned when I finished the chapter because they were anxious to hear what happened next.

Don’t get me wrong, they read a lot on their own, which I anticipate will also produce the desired results—lifetime readers.

If you’re an avid reader, never give up on your efforts to enlighten the non-readers around you.

 

Blessings!

Beth

 

Elizabeth Goddard is the award-winning author of Treacherous Skies, releasing November 27th.

 

 

 

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Non-Readers, Beware! I just finished a book . . . Posted by Maureen Lang

Do you have any friends who are dedicated non-readers? I’ve had some over the years, and one of the topics that can roll their eyes the fastest is if I try starting a conversation with “I just finished this book . . . ”

They just don’t get it. The whole imagination, sit in one place, turn the pages thing. Particularly if a story doesn’t get right to action or pique their immediate interest, the non-readers I’ve known are just not willing to invest the time it takes to connect with either the characters or the story itself. Or should I say, their priorities don’t include reading and there are plenty of other demands to fill up a day.

But if a movie can be made of a book, that’s okay to talk about. They can invest two hours in something visually compelling. My non-reader friend will likely refrain from the eye-roll if I want to tell them about a really great movie I enjoyed, because that’s an option for them to check out in the future. But for me to tell them about a book they’ll never read, well forget about it.

That’s what makes the free world a better place, all the choices available to meet our varied tastes and interests. I would no more force a book on a non-reader than I would want to sit through four hours of a sporting event on television. To each, his own.

But on the other hand, isn’t it great when we find “our people”? Those fellow avid readers who understand the quickened pulse, the laughter, the nodding along as we read something we’ve connected with. When we tell another reader we just finished a book—well, that’s just the beginning of a satisfying conversation. Not a single eye-roll in sight.

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Looking Down the Barrel of the Empty Nest Gun by James L. Rubart

If you’re an empty nester, or are soon to be, has your behavior changed because of this?

My oldest son, Taylor started his second year of college a few weeks back. Our younger son, Micah is buried in his junior year of high school with a number of honors and AP classes. Plus he’s ultra-social (no idea where he got that from) so Darci and I hanging out in the domicile just the two of us quite a bit these days.

  • The good news: Even after 26 years of marriage we’re still madly in love.
  • The bad: Our sons are outstanding and we love having them around. So the dwindling time together as a family is hard.
  • The good: Darci has never been a reader of fiction. Over the past five years she’s read four novels. Three of them have been mine. But now she’s decided to start reading fiction. Sorry for the pun, but she says it’s time for a new chapter in her life—which means diving into novels.

Your turn.

Has the empty nest syndrome made you read more? Or do something else you’ve never had time for? Hike? Bicycle? Take a cooking class? Travel? Read non-fiction (I’ve heard that’s what they call books that aren’t made up.)

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In God We Trust: A Lesson from Light by Vicki Hinze

IN GOD WE TRUST:  A Lesson from Light

Last night, I heard a very short snippet of a sermon made in a public forum.  I didn’t know the speaker and unfortunately do not recall his name now.  But what he said touched me.

 

Not in the soft, gentle knowing kind of way.  No, what he said struck me like a thunderbolt.  It resonated so strong and deep that it carried the force of a physical blow that rocked me back in my seat and left me with the sensation of blown out eardrums.

 

You know the kind of reaction I’m talking about.  You’ve no doubt had it, too.  When something so profound, so significant bears down on you and says, “Hey you, hear this.  Know this.  Be certain of this!”

 

Maybe you got that feeling on being told a loved one had unexpectedly passed away.  Or when the person you loved asked you to spend the rest of your life with him/her.  Or when you were told you were going to have a baby, or that you couldn’t ever have a baby.  Or when you were told that you had a lethal disease for which there was no cure.  Or when you read—or wrote—something in a book.

 

I’ve experienced all those things and this was that kind of moment.  That important and significant and carried that kind of weight, only . . . more.  And still this morning it reverberates and applies itself to everything else that goes through my mind, to everything upon which I focus.

 

IN GOD WE TRUST.

 

We’ve seen the phrase a million times.  We’ve noted it being used in all kinds of context on all kinds of subjects.  And yet in his simple delivery, those words will never be viewed the same—at least, not by me.

 

His sermon was a short, simple one based on Genesis 1:3:  And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light.” (NIV)

 

Then he went on to speak about light and how fast it travels and has traveled without ceasing or slowing or easing, or growing weary or faltering through time and distance for a minute, hour, month, and year.

 

“Light is because God said, and light obeyed.”

 

That’s the part that knocked me to my knees.

 

Now the reverend or pastor or whatever this bearer of truth was, stopped there.  My mind and heart and spirit didn’t.  I had been profoundly impacted, and am still processing.  I have a feeling I will be processing for a long time to come.

 

Some thoughts on this that I know are significant, but not all the ways this is significant (there is much more to be learned):

 

Light didn’t question its purpose, its identity.

 

When God created Light, Light didn’t spark and fizzle or fade in and out.  God created it and—boom!—Light was and it shone.  It knew what it was and did what it did.  Light was, is, and will always be Light.  It shone then, since then, and will shine forevermore.

 

Light didn’t and hasn’t experienced an identity crisis.  It doesn’t wonder if it’s on the right path, fulfilling its intended purpose.  It is, and it is because God spoke it into creation and deemed it good.  Light knows what it is and whose it is, and that it is good.

 

That’s a powerful, powerful knowledge, and in it is a wealth of wisdom.  Light is a mentor to us, if we choose to be mentored.  Like Light, God spoke us into creation.  He fashioned us with His own hands, infused us with gifts—abilities, insights, skills or the ability to attain them—and breathed life into us, claiming us as His own.  He gave us the wisdom of His Word, revealing His character and traits which prove to us that He cannot abide evil or that which isn’t pure, and because we know that, we know that He considers us good.  We’re flawed, yes.  No surprise to Him; he created us exactly as we are.

 

He gifted us with free will, knowing that we would goof up and make mistakes and burden ourselves and our souls but also with His promise to be there with us every step of the way and giving us His instruction book—the Bible—revealing how we can make less of a mess with our lives by following His ways.  He was for us the ultimate trailblazer, and when we muddied things up anyway, He sacrificed His son to show us the way.  By grace, not works, we’re saved and remain His forever.

 

These days, as in many days gone by, remembering at all times who and whose you are isn’t popular.  Some will demonize you.  Satan will let loose with all the demons in hell to oppose you, tempt you, do any and everything to pervert and dissuade you.  Spiritual warfare is the worse warfare because the ultimate prize is your soul, your eternity.

 

Think about it.  We’re here in this life for such a short time.  But eternity is, well, eternity.  It lasts a lot longer.  So whatever trials we face in life pale to those of battling for our eternity.

 

Mixed messages and muddled directives from other human beings can manipulate or confuse or deliberately steal our eternities—but only if we neglect to take this lesson from Light.  And that lesson is:

 

We are the children of God.  We are and always will be children of God.  We might choose to ignore it, to rebel against it, to deny it, but we are who we are.  We are whose we are.

The closer we walk with our creator, the better able we are to endure and face constructively life’s challenges and trials.  We’ll have them, but we’ll also have the tools to cope with them.

 

Conversely, if we exercise our free will to walk away from God, we’re closing the proverbial toolbox.  He won’t stop us from walking the wrong path, but He’ll walk it with us, patiently waiting for us to return to Him, to call upon Him, so that He can remind us of who we are and that we’re His.

 

As people, as a society, as a nation, we are in a spiritual war over our purpose for our identity.  Over and again, we hear the problems.  We know them.  We live them and they manifest in our lives every day.

 

Over and again, we hear they’re complex, and intricate, and too big to handle.  But if we look at Light, we know that’s simply not true.  We know that anything man does is a flawed bandage and to solve the problem we must go to the root source.  That’s where the lesson from Light offers the solution.  We need only remember who and whose we are.

 

Embrace that, and we have the tools we need to resolve our issues no matter how complex or tangled.  Reacquainted with our instruction manual, we rediscover that He specializes in making crooked places straight.

 

We don’t have to struggle with identity or who we are or how to fix what’s broken.  Like Light, we just have to be who and whose we are.  In that are all the answers to all our questions.  To claim them, in God we trust.

There’s so much more, but more must wait for another day and another post.  For now, I’m holding on to the lesson in, “Light is because God said, and light obeyed.”

Blessings,

 

Vicki

P.S.  The first book in my new Lost, Inc. series of Love Inspired Suspense novels has been released, SURVIVE THE NIGHT.  Wanted to mention it in case that’s a type of book you enjoy. FMI visit vickihinze.com or the Lost, Inc. website.

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Change by Kristen Heitzmann

As I sit in this first cold snap and see hanging baskets with darkened, withered leaves and tiny pellets of brittle snow skittering across the balcony, I feel change coming. The geraniums are still blooming pink and unfazed. The grass is still green. Some of the trees are yellow and red. Some are bare from the wind. There is no synchrony, but rather singularity in the parts of nature as the season begins to change. Why is this one staunchly blooming while another has faded away? Like middle school kids, awkwardly entering the next phase at various rates and in unlovely ways.

It strikes me that life is a solitary path, a series of changes that may or may not coincide with anyone else’s readiness to change. I have often spoken of seasons in my life, years in which my creativity took wing through music, through art, and through writing. And within those seasons there were seasons, times of growth, times of drought, times of dormancy and rejuvenation.

Sometimes my husband claims he wants to go live where it’s always summer. I can think of many such lovely places, but then there’s a day like today when I feel the unease of change coming. When I know they’re calling for snow Saturday, and at first I think I need to cancel the mountain hike we planned for my birthday, then imagine hiking it in the snow instead. Excitement springs up. Change.

Without change, I’d grow dull. I need the dissonance that resolves. I think that’s at my core as a writer. Strife, strife, more strife, then resolution. And with that dissonant resolution comes wonder, comes beauty. I rejoice that God in his great wisdom didn’t give us a static world.

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Banned Book Week: Have You Read These Challenged and/or Banned Classics? By Julie Arduini

This week is Banned Book Week. I thought I would share, courtesy of the American Library Association, the classic books that have most often been challenged for removal or outright banned.

Have you read any of these?

The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Catcher in the Rye, by JD Salinger

The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck

To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee

The Color Purple, by Alice Walker

Ulysses, by James Joyce

Beloved, by Toni Morrison

The Lord of the Flies, by William Golding

1984, by George Orwell

Lolita, by Vladimir Nabokov

Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck

Catch-22, by Joseph Heller

Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley

Animal Farm, by George Orwell

The Sun Also Rises, by Ernest Hemingway

As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner

A Farewell to Arms, by Ernest Hemingway

Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston

Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison

Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison

Gone with the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell

Native Son, by Richard Wright

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey

Slaughterhouse Five, by Kurt Vonnegut

For Whom the Bell Tolls, by Ernest Hemingway

The Call of the Wild, by Jack London

Go Tell It on the Mountain, by James Baldwin

All the King’s Men, by Robert Penn Warren

The Lord of the Rings, by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair

Lady Chatterley’s Lover, by D.H. Lawrence

A Clockwork Orange, by Anthony Burgess

The Awakening, by Kate Chopin

In Cold Blood, by Truman Capote

Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie

Sophie’s Choice, by William Styron

Sons and Lovers, by D.H. Lawrence

Cat’s Cradle, by Kurt Vonnegut

A Separate Peace, by John Knowles

Naked Lunch, by William S. Burroughs

Brideshead Revisited, by Evelyn Waugh

Women in Love, by DH Lawrence

The Naked and the Dead, by Norman Mailer

Tropic of Cancer, by Henry Miller

An American Tragedy, by Theodore Dreiser

Rabbit, Run, by John Updike

What’s your opinion on banning books? We live in a free country but most of these challenges come from wanting to protect students from objectionable themes. Are there any titles above that you would refuse to have in your home? Any contemporary novels you would like to see banned?

I look forward to dialoguing with you on this.

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Readers, Writers, and Book Clubs

As my speaking engagements explode and I find myself on the road nearly as often as I’m home writing my next book, I must admit that of all the groups I speak to–writers’ conferences, women’s retreats, church and civic events–there’s nowhere I’d rather go than to a book club. Granted, many of them have only a handful of members, but those members are avid readers and absolutely LOVE to buy autographed books from authors. I recently had an opportunity to speak to a HUGE book club up in Fresno, CA, and it was such a wonderful experience that I wrote a feature article about the event for The Book Club Network’s magazine. (You can read it and check out the magazine at http://www.bookfunmagazine.com.)

The more I thought about how much I enjoy dropping in on book clubs as a writer/speaker, I thought I’d love to get some feedback on the topic from readers–and that would be you! So chime in, please. I’d love to hear your experiences regarding these groups. Are they still relevant today, since the advent of e-readers and online social interaction? What to do you think, dear book lovers?

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A “Perfect” Book

I’m going to piggyback my post with Beth’s from yesterday. The ACFW awards gala was amazing. It was a special evening to recognize winners in published and  published fiction. The air felt weighty with anticipation: whose work will win the top awards?

This year one book in particular that won the Carol Award for women’s fiction, Dandelion Summer, by Lisa Wingate. What distinguished it this year is that it’s the first book that received a perfect score from all five judges. Perfection.

When they closed the book, I’m wondering what went through their minds. Were they tired, or exhilarated? Did they wipe the tears away? Did certain turns of phrase resonate in their minds, even when they laid the book aside and went about their business?

I had the opportunity to interview Lisa on my online radio show, The Flashlight Reader, on Tuesday evening. She was stunned, thrilled to win, but also equally pleased that her book touched readers.

When I asked her about how she developed the characters for the book, she told me that the elderly male character in the book was based on a very-real character who was involved in the Howard Hughes space program. He’d become a fan of Lisa’s books and one day, while she was away researching, he told her his own story. One of the things he told her was he’d never told his story because he didn’t think it mattered to anyone.

Of course it did. Of course ours do.

His story went on to become the genetics of Lisa’s character. To think if she’d never heard his story or took the time to listen.

We all have stories, maybe none of them perfect. But our own stories can resonate with someone.

What’s the best true–or fictional–story you’ve read lately? Anything “perfect?”

———————–

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. You can listen in to the Flashlight Reader on Monday nights here.

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Novel Recommendations by Elizabeth Goddard

I can’t believe I’m the first one to post on this!  I returned from the American Christian Fiction Writer’s Conference on Sunday with an armload of books to read. Usually, I don’t bring too many books back because it’s tough getting them into the luggage for my flight home. But this time I drove to the conference so I could take as many books as I wanted.  One of the fun things about the conference is there are a lot of free books.

Thomas Nelson gave out copies of The River by Michael Neale, and Zondervan shared copies of Falling to Pieces by Vannetta Chapman, for starters.  I came home with many more books that I’m eager to start on but I also purchased a few from the Carol Award Winner’s list, including a book the earned a perfect score in the contest–Dandelion Summer by Lisa Wingate. I also plan to read the finalists, too.

While my TBR (to be read) pile is growing, I’m working hard on getting the books read and loving every minute of it. In case you haven’t seen the list, I’m sharing the 2012 Carol Award Winners here.

Be blessed with some of the best that Christian fiction has to offer.

2012 Carol Award Winners

Debut Novel
Fairer Than Morning by Rosslyn Elliott (Thomas Nelson)

Long Contemporary
The Search by Suzanne Woods Fisher (Revell)

Long Contemporary Romance
My Foolish Heart by Susan May Warren (Tyndale)

Long Historical
Fairer Than Morning by Rosslyn Elliott (Thomas Nelson)

Long Historical Romance
To Win Her Heart by Karen Witemeyer (Bethany House Publishers)

Mystery
Falling to Pieces: A Shipshewana Amish Mystery by Vannetta Chapman (Zondervan)

Novella
An Accidental Christmas from A Biltmore Christmas by Diane T. Ashley/Aaron McCarver (Barbour Publishing)

Romantic Suspense
Lonestar Angel by Colleen Coble (Thomas Nelson)

Short Contemporary
Lakeside Reunion by Lisa Jordan (Love Inspired)

Short Contemporary Suspense
Nightwatch by Valerie Hansen (Love Inspired Suspense)

Short Historical
The Deepest Waters by Dan Walsh (Revell)

Speculative Fiction
Broken Sight by Steve Rzasa (Marcher Lord Press)

Suspense/Thriller
Fallen Angel by Major Jeff Struecker/Alton Gansky (B & H Fiction)

Women’s Fiction
Dandelion Summer by Lisa Wingate (Penguin Praise/Berkley)

Young Adult
The Merchant’s Daughter by Melanie Dickerson (Zondervan)

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The Writer-Reader Relationship posted by Maureen Lang

When I finish a book I’ve really enjoyed, I usually go online to check out a few things. First and most importantly, I look to see what else this writer has published. Secondly, I want to take a peek at their website.

I’m not sure why I look for the website when all I really want is the title of another good book to read, and I can find that on Amazon or any other online book site that offers an Author’s Pages. Liking one book by an author gives me a certain amount of trust that I’ll like another. So I guess what I’m looking for on the website, or perhaps Facebook, is a glimpse into the author’s life, to see if the online presence seems to match the person I would expect to have written the kind of book I just enjoyed. Someone who could be my friend, albeit in the most distant sort of way since it’s unlikely I’ll ever meet them, unless they’re a fellow Inspirational writer.

I do have a confession to make, though. If I haven’t liked a book, or if it is filled with elements that either surprised me in a negative way or includes things I disagree with, I’ve looked at author websites for negative reasons too. And as the old adage goes, if you’re looking for faults you’ll usually find them. One author of a book I didn’t like was filled with photos of this author – positioned from different angles in front of a very ornate (i.e. expensive) fireplace. It didn’t give me much insight into him as a person, only that he thought it would be valuable for his readers to see him pose in a very author-ly manner, complete with smoking jacket. That is, I’m happy to say, the extent of my negative stalking. I guess I was looking for a clue as to why this author might have disappointed me.

On a more positive note, I’ve also made the effort to attend personal appearances by favorite authors. I’ve “met” a couple this way – well, I should clarify if meeting someone hints at an exchange of introductions I really just stood in line to tell authors like Lief Enger (Peace Like a River) and Kathryn Stockett (The Help) how much I enjoyed their work. But prior to the signing, I listened to them give a talk about their writing life, and it was wonderful. It made that connection between this reader and that writer just a little bit deeper, and made me look forward to future work.

So how about you? What do you do to make a connection to your favorite author, if anything beyond just reading their books? Do you even want any kind of connection, or is experiencing their work enough for you? If you’re a website visitor, what kind of things do you look for? Friendly, personal ones, or more professional ones that may have been created by the publisher rather than the author? Does it matter? And what about Facebook? Do you look there to keep up with them, or is the website or checking their products on a site like Amazon enough?

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How Long Does It Take You To Decide? by James L. Rubart

You’re in a bookstore. A cover reaches out its hands and grabs you. (Yes, of course metaphorically, we’re not doing a Stephen King thing here.)

How long before you decide to buy it or put it down and keep looking? Before reading further, think about it. Got it?

Last week I was at the ACFW conference (American Christian Fiction Writers) and I bumped into my friend, literary agent Steve Laube. I commented on a long ago talk I heard him give where he demonstrated how long the typical shopper takes before deciding if a book is right for them or not. He said stats hadn’t changed.

The length of time frame surprised then (before I was published) and depresses me now.

Twenty. Not minutes. Seconds. That’s it. The average shopper looks at the front cover, turns it over and reads the back cover, then opens the book and read a few lines. That’s it.

Books we authors have taken sometimes years to write are given twenty seconds of consideration by the typical potential customer. That’s why the cover and back cover copy are so critical—cause people do judge a book by its cover.

How ‘bout you? How long do you take? And do you take longer when shopping on line?

Posted in Honored Alumni, James L. Rubart, Uncategorized | 4 Comments