Novel Journey

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Monday, April 30, 2007

Who's Holding Your Trampoline?

Mike’s stories have appeared in Relief Journal, Forgotten Worlds, Alienskin, and Dragons, Knights and Angels, with articles in The Matthew’s House Project and Relevant Magazine. He was also one of ten authors picked for Infuze Magazine’s Best of 2005 print anthology. Mike is an ordained minister, has led numerous small groups and developed discipleship-training curriculum for several churches. He and his wife Lisa live in Southern California , where they have raised four children. Mike has written an unpublished novel entitled What Faith Awakes and is currently at work on a second. You can visit him at www.mikeduran.com.




By Mike Duran

It is not a coincidence that some of the greatest words ever written were chiseled. While on a mountaintop. Alone. Of course, Moses had some assistance. But if he’d stayed at home with the missus and the incessant bleating of his tribesmen, it’s doubtful that the Ten Commandments would have ever been penned.

For most writers, our best work is done away from others. We bring our laptop to the mountaintop, for it’s there that, on occasion, the heavens open. Seldom do the muses compete with the TV or iPod. “Writing is a solitary occupation,” said Jessamyn West. “Family, friends, and society are the natural enemies of the writer. He must be alone, uninterrupted, and slightly savage if he is to sustain and complete an undertaking.” Of course, convincing our "friends" and "family" that they are our "natural enemy" could get a bit sticky.

But while we create in isolation, we advance in community. Good writing communicates, which is the least solitary of endeavors. To communicate is to commune, to interact with other intellects. Likewise, a writer has not really succeeded until she has readers, someone who will “commune” with her material. Without the eyes and ears of others, our work is incomplete.


These two sides of writing—the “alone-ness” and the “together-ness”—are equally important, and I think, becoming a good writer means cultivating both halves. Even Lewis and Tolkien, now luminaries in the literary pantheon, yoked themselves to the Inklings. Who's to say what Narnia would have looked like had not the maker of Middle Earth cast a keen eye on the beloved tale. Could Aslan have acquired some genteel feature from someone other than Clive? Yes, we need a quiet place to develop our skills and sift ideas, but we also need Inklings, people who will read what we have written, encourage, correct, affirm, and ultimately propel us back to our quarters with renewed vision and vigor.

Donald Joy is Professor of Human Development at Asbury Theological Seminary. He's written numerous books on human relationships. The first chapter of his book Bonding is entitled, "Who is Holding Your Trampoline?" The basic concept is this: If you were trapped on the third floor of a burning building and only your closest companions—your most intimate, authentic relationships—could gather below to catch you, who would be there with the safety net? How many proven, reliable, unflinchingly honest friends do you have? Who's holding your trampoline? Joy suggests that the “healthy” individual should have at least twenty such people in this healing, supportive circle.

I wonder that writers have a unique need for “trampoline holders”—a band of people who will understand our quirks and passions, read our material and bring insight, get our creative juices flowing, lift us during times of depression and deflate us when our pride swells. And, maybe most of all, simply pray for us.

The day after I arrived home from Texas, still buzzing from last year's ACFW conference, I received a call from a very good friend whom I shall call V. Her story is a heartbreaking one, filled with tragedy and loss. But for the last 18 years, V has been "called" to intercede for me. I didn't solicit her prayers or swing a deal, make pacts or promises. Yet God prompted something in her, which I greatly covet. V is one of my intercessors; she has followed the arc of my spiritual life and graced me with her prayers. Her phone call was more than coincidence.

At the aforementioned conference, I attended Mary DeMuth’s terrific workshop entitled Inside Out Fiction. In it, Mary mentioned the need for intercessors in a writer's life. She currently has 48 people committed to praying for her writing ministry and encourages Christian authors to nurture their own intercessory circle. I have to admit, until then I hadn’t spent much time recruiting trampoline holders. In fact, I found myself wrestling with the rationale.

It seems odd that a "storyteller" needs so much prayer support, doesn’t it? I mean, fiction is make-believe; the spinning of yarns is anything but seriously spiritual, right? Now if I was writing about theology, apologetics or the mafia, I would need prayer. But the author of fiction hardly seems in need of such formidable backing. Sadly, many see the novelist as nothing more than a glorified jester, employed only for diversion, laughs or philosophical musing. No wonder the concept of prayer warrior seems incongruous with fiction writer.

The Bible does not maintain such distinctions. In fact, some of the most powerful stories in Scripture are fictional. The Good Samaritan. The Rich Man and Lazarus. The Parable of the Lost Sheep, the Unmerciful Servant and the Wedding Banquet. Jesus was a storyteller, and His tales were both entertaining and hauntingly relevant. He affirmed the unique power of story, the force of simple narrative, and the uncanny ability of common characters to wheedle themselves into our psyche, to spirit us away or stop us in our tracks. Maybe the fiction writer wields more possibility than, at first glance, we afford her.

As such, the most vital tool of the Christian novelist may not be the dictionary, thesaurus, or plot planner, but the intercessor. This is not to suggest we should neglect craft in favor of prayer, but that we balance both. No warrior is beyond needing a good blacksmith. In like manner, the stories that cut the deepest are often those that have whetted longest on the grindstone of prayer. Perhaps the writing life with its peculiar need for isolation, its roller coaster of emotion, its intangible spiritual drain, demands much more than just good grammar and a novel idea. As much as we want readers, we may need pray-ers and, just maybe, we can't have one without the other.

So the next time you find yourself stuck in rewrites or barraged by self-doubt, creatively dry or administratively overwhelmed, frozen at a career crossroad or meandering toward a dead end; when you’re sitting on the mountaintop waiting for lightning to strike or standing on the ledge of a burning building preparing to jump, I’ve got one question: Who's holding your trampoline?

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Sunday Devotion: Bull-headed? Me?

Cindy Sproles

We’ve always remained true to discipline in our family. With four boys all fifteen months apart, we had no other option. The odds were against us from the beginning. Since we were a combined family we had to be especially careful to maintain the same standards for all four kids. Therefore, we opted to use the counting method.

You know, “I’m going to count to three and if you haven’t done what I asked you’re going to…” Well, we modified the theory a bit, but before we refined the process my husband and I came to a mutual agreement. Regardless, we would stick to the plan. Discipline was as much an issue for us as it was the kids because we had to remain true to the agreement.

We agreed that three was the magic number. We’d count to one and explain the issue. Count two – the ball was in the boys’ court. They would be the deciding factor in whether they would obey or be punished. Count three – we executed the punishment, no exceptions.

We realized early on (since both of us owned a strong-willed son) that we couldn’t deviate. The hardest part of discipline for a parent is follow-through. Strangely enough, it only took a couple of incidents before our kids understood that mom and dad should never reach the third count because they would carry through. We rarely had to spank our boys because early on, they figured out we were parents of our word.

1 Samuel 15:23 guides us by saying, “For rebellion is like the sin of divination, and arrogance like the evil of idolatry. Because you have rejected the word of the Lord, he has rejected you as king.” Of course, this scripture refers to King David but the point is the same. God maintained a sense of discipline with His people. He forewarned them, and then He counted to three only to execute the discipline if His children refused to listen.

Obedience has always been a problem for the human race. Like small children we continue to test the waters God has told us to stay away from. Very few truly comply – even down to us. We know lying is wrong, still we lie. We know gossip is wrong, still we continue to gossip. When disobedient children continue to misbehave, then they must be disciplined.

As writers we sometimes have difficulty sticking to the task; for that fact, listening when God calls us to write. Our desire is to write the burning story on our mind but it may be that the Father wants us to write the burning story He places on our hearts. When we fail to follow His instruction, He gently disciplines us. Learning to lay aside our own will and bow to that of the One who has the plan takes a little practice. Thank goodness we have a loving God who understands us and knows our hearts.

We think discipline is only for our children, when in fact, it applies to all of us. Just as God continues to impress upon us the right way to do things, He also rewards us for the good that we do. And believe me; the rewards far out weigh the punishments.
One afternoon, we met head on with one of our strong-willed boys. “Son, don’t be so bull-headed about things.” His response was simple.

“Bull-headed – Me?” A grin parted his lips as he turned to perform the task he was asked to do. Unfortunately, we all harbor a little bull-headedness and God still has to discipline even His adults.

Would you like to know something funny? All four of our sons are fine adult men now. They all tower over the top of me in height. But you let me point my finger and say, “One!” They generally lean back and roar in laughter – but not until they’ve done what was asked of them.

Prayer: Precious Lord, discipline hurts but I am grateful You love me enough to follow-through.

DISCLAIMER: For the record, we were never mean to our boys. I know someone out there will think we were, but it’s simply not true. Our discipline was always fair, provided privately for each son, and followed up with great love and compassion. We never once pinched off a head! As they say down south, “Facts is facts!”


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Friday, April 27, 2007

Some Happenings in the book world . . .

Novel Journey is pleased to announce that fellow-blogger Mark Bertrand has picked up his first book contract—(Re)Thinking Worldview Learning to Think, Live, and Speak in This World. This book will be particularly appealing to those interested in writing from a Christian Worldview. Keep tract of the progress of the book (and read some awesome endorsements) at: http://www.jmarkbertrand.com/worldview/

I'm reprinting the e-blast sent out by Library Journal with permission. I hope our readers will choose to take part. As someone who worked as a publicist and now as a book clerk, Book Critics and Book Reviews play a big part in noteworthy book and noteworthy newcomers gaining attention.

National Book Critics Circle Launches Campaign to Save Book Reviews

April 23, 2007
For immediate release

Last week, the Los Angeles Times folded its book review section into an opinion section, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution eliminated its book review position. Not a good week for book criticism, but not a surprising one, either: in the past few years, newspapers from the Chicago Tribune to the Dallas Morning News to the Village Voice have seen book coverage shrink.

The National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) is not taking these developments lying down. This week, in an effort to support book reviews, book editors, book pages, and book culture, the NBCC is launching a Campaign to Save Book Reviews. During the last week in April and throughout the month of May, the NBCC is asking authors and editors, journalists and publishers—and in fact anyone interested in literary culture—to speak out on the value of books and book reviewing.

The campaign’s launch pad is an effort to save the book review position at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, held until last week by Teresa Weaver. Explains NBCC president John Freeman, “Teresa has the opportunity to apply for a job within the company, but it's not clear what the fate of the book page will be—whether it'll be reassigned to an existing editor, whether it will go entirely to wire copy, or whether it will be removed altogether.” A petition to save Weaver’s job has already secured nearly a thousand signatures, including those from luminaries as varied as Michael Connelly, Richard Powers, and Ian Rankin. Those interested in signing should go to
http://www.petitiononline.com/atl2007/petition.html.

Throughout the campaign, Critical Mass, the NBCC’s blog, will feature Q&As, posts by concerned writers, and advice on petitioning the media to assure continued book coverage. Current posts include a lengthy Q&A with David L. Ulin, editor of the Los Angeles Times Book Review. Check out
http://bookcriticscircle.blogspot.com/ to join in our efforts and to track developments in this ongoing and important campaign.

The National Book Critics Circle, founded in 1974, is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization consisting of nearly 700 active book reviewers nationwide who are interested in honoring quality writing and communicating with one another about common concerns. It is managed by a 24-member all-volunteer board of directors. For more information, please go to
www.bookcritics.org.

For questions, contact Barbara Hoffert, hoffer [a t] reedbusiness.com or 646-746-6806.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Interview with Tish Cohen

Tish Cohen is the author The Invisible Rules of the Zoe Lama, a middle grade novel forthcoming in July, 2007. She has edited an online women's magazine and contributed articles to some of Canada's largest newspapers, including The Globe and Mail and The National Post. She grew up in California, but currently lives in Toronto. Town House is her first novel. Visit her website at http://www.tishcohen.com/.




What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

My debut novel, Town House, is coming out May 8th from HarperCollins. It’s about the son of a legendary rock star who is too crippled by panic attacks to leave his Boston town house.

Tell us about your journey to publication. How long did it take before your novel was published?

It took me about three years to get published. I’d secured agents for two books prior to Town House, but neither book sold. The second one came close. I probably received about twenty or thirty rejections from editors for those two novels. Town House sold in a bit of an unusual way. My agent sent it out to editors, who then sent it off to literary scouts, who took the manuscript to Hollywood studios. By the time I found out what was happening, about a dozen studios had it. The film rights sold a week after the manuscript went out, and the book sold a week after that. The film interest was so unexpected, it launched me into panic attacks of my very own!

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

In the tough times, believing the odds in this business are insurmountable.

What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

Keep moving forward. As long as you take the next step, there’s hope.

What is the worst piece of writing advice you’ve heard?

Many new writers get bogged down by the rules – for queries, for manuscripts, for sentence structure. If you write the way you speak your natural voice will surface and your writing will be seamless and compelling. I did everything wrong in my query letters—from comparing my book to others to repeating what my mother thought of it—but I made sure my voice was heard. And the query letters brought in requests.
What is something you wish you’d known earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business? That the industry wants something different—but not too different.

What are a few of your favorite books?

A Prayer for Owen Meany by John IrvingThe Accidental Tourist by Anne TylerWater for Elephants by Sara Gruen
Sideways by Rex Pickett
I am Not Myself These Days by Josh Kilmer-Purcell

Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

I write every day, weekends included. Typically, I get up and do yoga, eat and sit down at the computer by 9:30 am. Other than a quick lunch break, I work until about 7 pm. If I’m working on a first draft, I may work after dinner—until my eyes get scratchy or my hand cramps. I have absolutely no balance in my life. I’m working on that.

If you could choose to have one strength of another writer, what would it be and from whom?

I’d love to have Alan Hollinghurst’s sense of social subtleties.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

My dream is for my characters and stories to really affect my readers, and to see some of my characters brought to life on the big screen.

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

The best thing about being a writer is being able to make up stories all day long. The worst thing is the angst that goes along with exposing your soul.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

I do a ton of marketing, everything from a MySpace page to website with interactive “What’s Your Phobia?” section, I blog with other debut authors on TheDebutanteBall.com, and I’ve hired an independent publicist. Another thing I did was contact as many sites that deal with anixiety or phobia I could find, and ask them to highlight Town House. Many did and my website gets quite a bit of traffic as a result.

Parting words?

The publishing world is made of ups and downs. Don’t let either distract you from what it’s all about—the words you’ll write today.


Novel Journey Critiques

Remember, our suggestions are just that—suggestions. The wise author will use discernment and pick up what works for him/her and ignore what doesn't. Our hope is you and this author, who bravely subbed his/her work, will benefit.

Our critique code is as follows:
( ) = suggest deleting
[ ] = sugges adding
** = comments
gws=goes without saying
rue=resist the urge to explain
im= interior monologue

Original Chapter

Houston, Texas – Three Years Earlier

Deborah crouched down in the bedroom closet behind the rows of hanging clothes. She could hear doors slamming and furniture being bumped around. She held her breath as the noises got closer to the bedroom. Suddenly, the knob on the bedroom door started to rattle.

“Let me in, baby. I promise I won’t hurt you again.” His words slurred as he begged for forgiveness.

Deborah remained quiet, hoping he would give up his quest and go away.
“Come on, honey. I said I was sorry. Let me in.” the door knob rattled with each word.

Deborah shifted her weight, trying to get comfortable among the shoes and other items on the floor of the closet. She knew from experience that she may have to stay in the closet all night. These little episodes were becoming all too familiar. If she weren’t so embarrassed, she would find a way to escape.

“Open the door, Deborah!” His voice grew louder. “You can’t lock me out of my own bedroom!”

Deborah jumped when he began to bang on the door. She hoped the lock and door frame were strong enough to prevent him from getting to her.

“You’re going to be sorry when I get in there.” He yelled.

Deborah was already sorry—sorry she had not heeded the warnings of her friends and family. They had not liked the way he had been controlling and possessive when they first starting dating and begged her not to marry him. But he had convinced her that he acted this way because he loved her so much. ‘I love you to death’ were his exact words. She hoped those words would not come true.

Livingston, Virginia – Present Day

Deborah was jolted awake in a panic. She held the covers under her chin as she listened in the darkness.

“Deborah, are you in there?” Derrick shouted as he knocked on the door.
Recognizing her brother’s voice, she went to open the door.

“What’s wrong? Why are you yelling like that?” she asked when she opened the door.

“I’ve been outside knocking for ten minutes. I was about to call the police. Didn’t you hear me?”

“I’m sorry Derrick. I took a sleeping pill. I haven’t been sleeping well lately.”
Derrick looked at his younger sister’s face. He had to admit that she looked haggard and drained.

“Is something bothering you? Is going to school and working too much for you?” Derrick asked.

Deborah didn’t want to tell her brother about the nightmares that had been haunting her for the past two months. She was getting very little sleep. They had become so real that she had become paranoid and jumpy with every loud noise. It was creating havoc on her school work and job.

“I’m sure I’ll be fine once we go on vacation. I just need a break from everything. I’ll be as good as new when we get back from Tennessee.”

Deborah, Derrick, and Ann were joining Tim, Leah and rest of the Sampson family for the Sampson’s family reunion. Since Tim and Leah’s wedding, Deborah had become a part of the Sampson family also. She was invited to family functions and on vacations and even baby-sat for Leah and Tim once a month, so they could have some time together without Tim II.

“Speaking of Tennessee, we’re leaving tomorrow morning at 6:00 A.M. Mrs. Sampson likes to get an early start and travel during the day, so she can see all of the sights.” Derrick explained.

“What sights?”

“Who knows…but what Mrs. Sampson wants, she usually gets.” Derrick said with a laugh as he left out of Deborah’s door.

###

Tim turned off the paved road onto a narrow gravel road.

“Just when I thought we couldn’t any further into the country. Give me the city any day.” Tim said half joking, half serious.

“Oh, Timothy, it’s not that bad,” Bettie Sampson said to her son-in-law. “It’s a wonderful place to visit and relax.”

“You have no choice, but relax when there’s nothing around for miles.” Tim responded with a laugh.

Tim, Leah, Tim II, and Leah’s parents led the 850 mile caravan to Tennessee for the Hardin-Sampson family reunion. Leah was sure everyone was getting tired, including the Donald family, who was trailing them.

The trip had taken longer than normal, because they had to make frequent stops to pacify Tim II. Leah looked over at the sleeping toddler. He looked so peaceful. Who would think that he would have the energy of three children when he was awake? She was glad that Tim was in good physical condition, because she did not have enough stamina to keep up with Tim II twenty-four hours a day.

“Tim, the house is just around this curve on the right.” Clarence Sampson navigated from the front passenger seat.

Tim turned off the gravel road and maneuvered down the driveway through the huge oak trees toward the plantation style house that sat off the road. Even in the darkness with only the moonlight and the house lights, Tim could see the grandeur of the house. Mr. Sampson’s 83-year-old father shared the house with his 85-year-old sister, Bessie. The house had been in Bessie Sampson Hyatt’s late husband’s family for decades. Her brother Lawrence and his wife moved in after her husband’s death. Now it was just the two of them. Her sister-in-law, Clarence Sampson’s mother, had passed away ten years earlier.

“Wow, this house is gorgeous.” Tim remarked when he stopped in front of the two-story house. “I can’t wait to see the inside.”

“It’s been in the Hyatt family for years, but Aunt Bessie has lived here for forty years. I loved to come down here and play with my cousins. We brought Leah and Alex down here every summer. There’s nothing like the country to take your mind off the hustle and bustle of the big city.” Clarence explained.

Ane's Critique

This has the beginnings of a good tale. It made me want to read further. However (isn't there always a however?), a few things stand out to me. You need to study some books on the mechanics of writing, like Self-Editing for Fiction Writers, by Browne and King.

You overuse dialogue attributions. He said or she said should be an endangered species – save them. They "saids" pull the reader out of the story. Use action beats instead, unless there is a room full of people and you need one for clarity. But even then, a good action beat like: Derrick scratched his nose" works better than: he said as he scratched his nose. Remember – less is more.

Another thing that stood out is the overuse of names. When you only have two people, you can use he and she, but be careful you don't start every sentence with a pronoun.

You do a good job of writing then take away its power by over-explaining. Trust your reader to get it. Less is more.


There's a lot of red, but be encouraged. You're better than I was when I first started!

Houston, Texas – Three Years Earlier

Deborah crouched down in the bedroom closet behind the rows of hanging clothes. She [trembled, listening to] (could hear) doors slamming and furniture being [knocked](bumped) **knocked is more violent than bumped** around. She held her breath (as the noises got closer to the bedroom). Suddenly, the knob on the bedroom door (started to) rattle[d].

“Let me in, baby. I promise I won’t hurt you again.” His words slurred (as he begged for forgiveness).**gws**

(Deborah)[She] remained quiet, hoping he would give up (his quest) and go away. **RUE. Trust your reader to get it without spelling everything our**
“Come on, honey. I said I was sorry. Let me in.” (t)[T]he door knob [clanked](rattled) **or another sound, since you just used rattle** with each word.

Deborah shifted her weight, trying to get comfortable among the shoes and other items on the floor of the closet. She knew from experience that she may have to stay (in the closet) [there] all night. These little episodes were becoming all too familiar. If she weren’t so embarrassed, she would find a way to escape.

“Open the door, Deborah!” His voice grew louder. “You can’t lock me out of my own bedroom!”

(Deborah)[She] jumped when he (began to) bang[ed] on the door[, hoping](. She hoped) the lock and door frame were strong enough to prevent him from getting to her.

“You’re going to be sorry when I get in there.” (He yelled.) **I don’t think you need to say he yelled. The scene delivers that emotion just by its essence. You've shown the reader he's been drinking by his slurred words and I feel his anger. You've done a good ob at that, so don't go overboard. Trust yourself and your reader.**

(Deborah)[She] was already sorry—sorry she had not heeded the warnings of her friends and family. **Here is one of those places where you can use repetition to make a paragraph sing. If you said something like: [She was already sorry. Sorry she hadn’t heeded the warnings of her friends. Sorry she hadn't listened to her family.]** They (had not liked)[saw through him—saw how he manipulated her] (the way he had been controlling and possessive when they first starting dating) and begged her not to marry him. But he had convinced her (that he acted this way because) he loved her (so much). ‘I love you to death’ were his exact words. She hoped those words would not come true. **The changes I suggested are merely another way to do this. Any man who hurts a woman is controlling and possessive – it goes with the territory. I don't think you need to spell it out. It's obvious he's this way. Then you can also show this in later chapters instead of telling it here.**

Livingston, Virginia – Present Day

Deborah (was) jolted awake (in a panic). **Show her panic. How does panic feel? Does she break out in a sweat? Does her stomach churn? A reader wants to feel what she feels without being told she feels that way** She held the covers under her chin[, listening to] (as she listened in) the darkness.

“Deborah, are you in there?” Derrick shouted as he knocked on the door.

Recognizing her brother’s voice, she went to open the door.

“What’s wrong? Why are you yelling like that?” (she asked when s)[S]he opened the door. **It's obvious she asked the question. Use the action beat instead of a dialogue attribution.**

“I’ve been (outside)**gws** knocking for ten minutes. I was about to call the police. Didn’t you hear me?”

“I’m sorry (Derrick). I took a sleeping pill. I haven’t been sleeping well lately.”

(Derrick)[He] looked at [her](his younger sister’s face). (He had to admit that she looked haggard and drained.) **Major POV break. You've jumped inside Derrick's head to tell us how he feels.**

“Is something bothering you? Is going to school and working too much for you?” (Derrick asked.)

(Deborah)[She] didn’t want to tell (her brother)[him]**we already know it's her brother, you told us already. Trust your reader** about the nightmares that had been haunting her for the past two months. (She was getting very little sleep.)**gws** They had become so real that she['d] (had) become paranoid and jumpy with every loud noise. It was creating havoc on her school work and job. **Go through this chapter and count the number of times you use the word "had"**

“(I’m sure) I’ll be fine once we go on vacation. I just need a break from everything. I’ll be as good as new when we get back from Tennessee.”

Deborah, Derrick, and Ann **who are Ann and Tim and Leah? You're given us names without telling us who they are. And who are the Sampson's? If Deborah is one or her brother, their last names should be given when they are first introduced. This created confusion** were joining Tim, Leah and rest of the Sampson family for the Sampson’s family reunion. Since Tim and Leah’s wedding, Deborah had become a part of the Sampson family also. She was invited to family functions and on vacations and even baby-sat for Leah and Tim once a month, so they could have some time together without Tim II. **I think you can convey this information through dialogue much better. It feels like an information dump**

“Speaking of Tennessee, we’re leaving tomorrow morning at 6:00 A.M. Mrs. Sampson likes to get an early start and travel during the day, so she can see all of the sights.” (Derrick explained.)

“What sights?”

“Who knows…but what Mrs. Sampson wants, she usually gets.” Derrick (said with a) laugh[ed] as he (left)[walked] out (of Deborah’s)[the] door. **RUE-we know whose door it is – trust your reader to remember those things**

###

Tim **Tim WHO? When you fist introduce a POV character for the first time, use his first and last name** turned off the paved road onto a narrow gravel road.

“Just when I thought we couldn’t any further into the country. Give me the city any day.” (Tim said half joking, half serious.).

[Bettie Sampson chuckled at her son-in-law.] “Oh, Timothy, it’s not that bad[.](,”) (Bettie Sampson said to her son-in-law.) (“)It’s a wonderful place to visit and relax.”

“You have no choice, but relax when there’s nothing around for miles.” (Tim responded with a laugh.) **You identified it was Tim who she was speaking to, so you don't need a dialogue tag or an action beat here**

(Tim, Leah, Tim II, and Leah’s parents) **Too much information, too many names** led the 850 mile caravan to Tennessee for the Hardin-Sampson family reunion. Leah was sure everyone was getting tired, including the Donald family, who was trailing them. **With every sentence and paragraph you write, ask yourself, "Does this advance the story? Is it really needed?" I don’t think this paragraph is needed. Is the order in which they travel really important? If so, a simple car one lead the caravan. Period**

The trip (had taken)[took] longer than normal, because they had to make frequent stops to pacify Tim II. Leah looked over at the (sleeping) toddler [sleeping peacefully]. (He looked so peaceful.) Who would think (that) he['d] (would) have the energy of three children when he was awake? (She was glad that Tim was in good physical condition, because she did not have enough stamina to keep up with Tim II twenty-four hours a day.)

“Tim, the house is just around this curve on the right.” Clarence Sampson navigated from the front passenger seat. **GOOD! You used an action beat instead of a dialogue tag**

Tim turned off the gravel road and maneuvered down the driveway through the huge oak trees toward the plantation[-]style house that sat off the road. **I'd suggest breaking that last sentence into two. You'd get more impact out of it.** Even in the darkness with only the moonlight and the house lights, Tim could see the grandeur of the house. **This last sentence gives nothing. I don't SEE the grandeur of the house. All I see is that it's dark, no it's moonlit and the lights are on. SHOW me this grand house. Maybe have them come around the bend and stop. Bathed in moonlight, the large mansion appeared to float in the ground fog – or something like that. Let your reader SEE it with them.** **New paragraph here**Mr. Sampson’s 83-year-old father shared the house with his 85-year-old sister, Bessie. The house had been in Bessie Sampson Hyatt’s late husband’s family for decades. Her brother Lawrence and his wife moved in after her husband’s death. Now it was just the two of them. Her sister-in-law, Clarence Sampson’s mother, had passed away ten years earlier. **All this information has just stopped the flow of your story. I suggest you use dialogue for this. Is it Deborah's first time here? If now, I'd suggest you change it to be hers, then she could ask about it. But otherwise, this information is author intrusion and broke the spell of the story.**

“Wow, this house is gorgeous.” Tim remarked when he stopped in front of the two-story house. “I can’t wait to see the inside.” **There you go – Tim hasn’t been there. So have him ask about it and someone give the info in dialogue. Then it won't be intrusive.**

“It’s been in the Hyatt family for [generations](years), but Aunt Bessie has lived here for forty years. **Oh my word. Here you did use dialogue to tell us what you told us above. Put it all in dialogue. The info will then be interesting.** I loved to come down here and play with my cousins. We brought Leah and Alex down here every summer. There’s nothing like the country to take your mind off the hustle and bustle of the big city.” (Clarence explained.) **To have Clarence deliver this speech, I'd suggest you put an action beat after the first sentence: ....forty years." Clarence pointed to the side yard. "I loved .....

Gina's Take

Thanks for submitting. You've got the elements of a good story but have some story mechanics to work on which we've all had to learn, one step at a time.

I suggest you concentrate first on learning to show vs tell. This story was mainly telling. "She could hear" is telling. "Footsteps slammed down the hallway" would be showing.

"Heard", "Saw", "Felt", "Tasted" etc. words are telling. Be on the look out for them in your writing. Also "was" tends to be a telling word and passive.

Another thing you could focus on would be being specific. Instead of "noise got closer", you'd say what the noises were and show them getting closer.

One last thing I'd have you look at would be showing and telling. You don't need to do both. ie. "I won't hurt you again" his words slurred as he begged her. You show us him begging, don't also tell us.

Don't be discouraged. We've all had to learn these basics. It's a predictable path of the novelist and you're on your way.

Jessica's Take

I would consider this submission not to be ready to pitch yet but still needing work. Some areas that need to be improved:

--Shifting of POV. It's my opinion this writer isn't ready to write omniscient. Ex: Second scene, the shifting from Deborah to her brother. "Derrick looked at his younger sister’s face. He had to admit that she looked haggard and drained."

--Dialogue that sounds unnatural. Ex: “Speaking of Tennessee, we’re leaving tomorrow morning at 6:00 A.M." It's hard to believe she went to bed not knowing that.

--Information drops. "Deborah, Derrick, and Ann were joining Tim, Leah and rest of the Sampson family for the Sampson’s family reunion. Since Tim and Leah’s wedding, Deborah had become a part of the Sampson family also. She was invited to family functions and on vacations and even baby-sat for Leah and Tim once a month, so they could have some time together without Tim II." That could have shown rather than told.

--not capturing the reader's emotions they way I think the writer intends. I was not afraid for Deborah after the first paragraph. "Deborah shifted her weight, trying to get comfortable among the shoes and other items on the floor of the closet. She knew from experience that she may have to stay in the closet all night. These little episodes were becoming all too familiar. If she weren’t so embarrassed, she would find a way to escape." This does not sound like the mindset of someone in the state of panic. She seems rational and a little annoyed and somewhat embarrassed.

To the writer, don't lose heart. That is the struggle all writers face 'how to show not tell'. It takes work and practice. Don't forget to layer in the five senses. It sounds like the first husband is coming back to stalk his wife, which is always an interesting plot.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Author Interview ~ Linda Nichols



Linda Nichols, a graduate of the University of Washington, is a novelist with a unique gift for touching readers' hearts with her stories. She is also the author of the acclaimed novels If I Gained the World and At the Scent of Water. She and her family make their home in Tacoma, Washington.

I loved At the Scent of Water. What new book or project do you have coming out?

In Search of Eden came out in February. It’s the story of a restless young woman who decides to find the child she gave up for adoption. All she has to go on is a baby picture of the child and a postmark on a faded envelope. Her search puts her on a collision course with a broken family and their guardian, a police detective who suspects her of being up to no good.

How did you come up with your stories? Is there a specific “what if” moment?

There’s usually a “what if” moment that gets the story started. After that there are many other questions that I ask myself, and answer with varying degrees of success. What kind of person would make this decision? Why would they make it? Who else would be there? And I think the most important questions for plotting are what do they want and what’s keeping them from getting it? If you create lovable characters with flaws and put their hearts’ desires at odds with one another, a good story will follow. Provided you can figure out how to end it!

Tell us about your publishing journey. How long had you been writing before you got a contract? How did you find out and what went through your mind?

I had been writing seriously for about six or seven years when I sold my first book, Handyman. Although I’d been attending a workshop at the community college and had written articles for a local parenting magazine, Handyman was my first completed novel, and I sold it pretty quickly. I sent out query letters and three weeks later had an agent who had sold the movie and publishing rights for what seemed like an overwhelming sum of money to me. The agents involved told me a little about their plans for the movie, and I was more than hesitant. I had seen some of the director’s work and thought it was pretty raw. In fact, I had walked out of one of his movies. When I made the decision to accept their offer I remember thinking, “Well, I guess everyone has their price.”

The next few years were strange. Although we had plenty of money, our family became troubled. By the time God helped relieve us of that money through some financial reversals, I was more than ready to turn back to Him. At that time I began thinking about why God had given me the gift of writing. Things came clear to me one day when I was touched by the words of a song, and a quiet voice reminded me, “Linda, someone wrote that.” I realized then that if I could write for Him it would be a great honor. He’s been gracious enough to allow me to do that. I wouldn’t go back for a million dollars!

Do you ever struggle with writer's block? If so, how do you overcome it?

As a matter of fact, I have struggled a great deal with writer’s block, especially over the last few years. I wish I had an easy answer, but for me the key to moving past it was in a wonderful book by Victoria Nelson, On Writer’s Block. I think the causes of my problems had to do with self-criticism and pressure to produce on a deadline. I still struggle, but I think the key has been to try to approach writing as play, to be gentle on myself as far as criticizing content, to let go of trying to make things perfect, and staying at it instead of quitting when I hit an obstacle. It comes down to faith—believing that if I show up God will help me.

Where do you write? Do you have a dedicated office or a corner or nook in a room?

I write in the corner of the bedroom. I’ve tried renting an office and for a while had a writing room, but I really enjoy my little corner the most.

Do you have a word or page goal you set for each day?

No. For me that’s not helpful at all.

What does a typical day look like for you?

I wish I were different, but when I’m writing hard, I usually get up late and stay up late. I may not start writing until afternoon, but I may write until ten or so at night. Which means I’m too wound up to get to sleep until very late (or early) which virtually guarantees that the next day will be on the same schedule. I also tend not to get out much when I’m writing hard, which in the long run is not good for my mental health. I’d like to build healthier patterns of writing so that life wouldn’t be completely on hold, but that’s an area I struggle with.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve heard?

My first writing teacher, Kathy Keller, listened to me tell her that I was a little embarrassed that I didn’t have the desire or apparently the ability to write literary fiction. “I like characters like Andy Griffith, and I can get into a Matlock.” After we shared a laugh she said, “Write your stories, Linda.” Whenever I lose my way as a writer I remember that. I have to write my stories, not the ones I think are going to sell or the ones better left to someone else.

What do you wish you’d known early in your career that might have saved you some time and/or frustration in writing? In publishing?

I wish I’d known a couple of things. That publishing is a business, and I shouldn’t take things personally. Also I wish I’d understood that I could spend a lot of money and time and emotional anguish trying to make success happen, but ultimately, it’s God who determines my portion. I also wish I had known that money and success shouldn’t be confused with contentment and fruitfulness.

How much marketing do you do? What have you found that particularly works well for you?

I’m fortunate to have a wonderful hands-on agent, Theresa Park, and a fantastic marketing team at Bethany House. In conjunction with them, I have a Web site and a newsletter. I occasionally speak to reading groups or women’s groups and do occasional book signings. One new idea we’re pursuing is conducting telephone interviews with reading groups around the country. I believe we’re also planning to give copies of the book to reading groups to see if they would like to choose it as a selection.

Do you have any parting words of advice?

Yes, two things, actually. First, I see something like desperation in writers who desire to be published, and although I’m so grateful for the privilege, I would say that having your book published won’t make you happy. It still comes down to the writing process. If you enjoy writing, write. Don’t allow the publishing world’s verdict to determine your joy. Sometimes I think there’s more joy in writing before publication than after. And that’s where the best writing comes from—that well of joy.

Second, I would say, don’t write what you think will sell or what everyone else is writing. Just write your stories.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Book Award Series ~ ECPA

A wife, mother, and grandma, Yvonne Anderson lives in rural Ohio. She's a former legal secretary, currently a professional Virtual Assistant, and writes a daily Bible study blog. She creates fiction just for fun, but sometimes entertains fantasies about real remuneration.




By Yvonne Anderson


When you hear the phrase "Christian books," a variety of images might come to mind. The New Testament, perhaps. Or a vision of cowled monks toiling over parchments by flickering candlelight. Perhaps you recall the plodding progress of Pilgrim through the Sea of Despond, hear the roar of Aslan the metaphorical lion, or remember a scene from a breezy prairie romance. Frank Peretti's angels and demons might lurk in your subconscious, or the bestselling Left Behind series might linger in your mind.

Although Christian writings have filled libraries for centuries and comprise some of the world's most beloved literature, at first the disciples carried Christianity orally, not literally, into the world. Its founder wrote nothing, and His earliest followers continued this course. Expecting His imminent return – and perhaps because they believed the current scriptures (our Old Testament) pointed toward Christianity and needed no supplement – they didn't seem to give writing a thought for the first fifteen years or so after the resurrection.

Eventually, though, the written gospels appeared, and along with the letters of Paul, a new force gathered strength until it became a great tide. The volume of Christian writings flooding the world in the second century AD reached amazing proportions, and helped turn the Greco-Roman world upside-down. Though most of this literature is lost to us today, we're aware of its quantity due in part to the writings of Eusebius, a bishop of Caesarea and a prolific writer. Also a voracious reader and avid chronicler, he kept a record of everything he read. The list of "Christian books" he waded through is overwhelming. These writings ranged from apologetics, scripture interpretation, works on doctrine, and letters by the early church fathers.

Christian fiction came late to the scene. For centuries, most fiction was based on Christian ideas. Early examples include Paradise Lost, Dante's Inferno, and The Pilgrim's Progress. But after the emphasis of literature shifted from edification to entertainment, fiction took a different direction. People wanted to be tickled, not tutored, and that left Christians with a hunger for fiction that didn't offend.
The specific genre of the Christian novel arose some decades ago, first written by and for Christians and sold only in Christian bookshops. But in the late 20th century, Christian-themed fiction began to be welcomed by general audiences, giving believers a new venue for introducing the unchurched masses to scriptural truths in a non-threatening way.

The Evangelical Christian Publishers Association was founded in 1974 for the purpose of supporting quality and integrity in Christian publishing. As a part of this mission, they began in 1978 to present yearly awards for excellence in Christian publishing. The ECPA Christian Book Awards (formerly Gold Medallion Book Awards) selects winners in six categories: Bibles; Fiction; Children & Youth; Inspiration & Gift; Bible Reference & Study; and Christian Life. The winners are announced at the CBA and ECPA Awards Celebration held in conjunction with the Christian Retail Show each summer.

Last summer, awards went to the modern Bible version, The Message, and to the stuffy-sounding Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible; to Teen Virtue by Vicki Courtney, A Sacred Sorrow by Michael Card, and to Wooden & Carty's Coach Wooden's Pyramid of Success. The fiction award went to Joel Rosenberg for The Ezekiel Option. Fiction winners of past years include Oceans Apart by Karen Kingsbury and Love's Long Journey by Janette Oke. R.C. Sproul's Johnny Come Home and The Water Is Wide by Elizabeth Gibson shared the honors in 1985; and Joyce Landorf's I Came To Love You Late took the first fiction award, in 1978.

Books are submitted by publishers, not individuals, and entries must be published in the year preceding the year in which the awards are presented. (That is, for the 2007 Awards, all entries must be published for the first time in 2006.)

Each category has its own description and judging criteria. More information is available at
http://www.ecpa.org/christianbookawards , including the complete official rules and an entry form for 2007. But if fiction is what you're interested, I'll save you the trouble of looking it up: This award is for full-length, narrative writing whose source is the imagination of the author and whose intended audience is adults. Submissions are judged according to characterization, plot, theme, writing style/mechanics, cover design and layout, and the impact on the reader, including whether or not all story elements are consistent with a Christian worldview. Judges are asked to determine if the reader's mind and spirit are stimulated and enlightened by the experience of reading the novel in question.

I don't know about you, but my mind and spirit feel stimulated to write something worthy of this award! See you in 2008?

Monday, April 23, 2007

Author Interview ~ Christy Scannell



Christy Scannell is the associate editor of The San Diego Metropolitan, a monthly business magazine, and the North Park News, a community newspaper. She is also a freelance editor and writer. She is a mentor for the Christian Writers Guild and a staff member of The Christian Communicator. She has developed and edited over a hundred books including The Christian Girl's Guide to... series.



What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

Desperate Pastors’ Wives, the first in the three-book “Secrets from Lulu’s Café” series by moi and co-author, Ginger Kolbaba
(Howard Books/Simon & Schuster)

Tell us about your journey to publication. How long had you been writing before you got the call you had a contract, how you heard and what went through your head.

If you are a frustrated, unpublished writer, you might want to skip my answer to this question because our road to publication was embarrassingly easy. We conceived of the book idea in March 2005 and wrote the proposal, which we presented to a prospective agent in April. He rejected it, but his comments helped us reevaluate our proposal. Then a fiction editor friend offered to take a look at it. She made further suggestions, and also said she heard Howard was looking for a new fiction series. After we redid the proposal, we sent it to Howard. An editor responded within a few weeks. We had a contract for a three-book series before summer ended.

Now, before you start looking for my Cinderella slippers, let me add some explanation to this story. First of all, Ginger and I both had worked in CBA publishing for around ten years — she as a magazine editor and me as a book editor. With that came frequent travels to writers’ conferences where we networked and learned from our colleagues. So that editor at Howard already knew us before she read our work, and we knew how to present it in such a way that it would be attractive to a publisher (the catchy title and marketing potential were paramount).

Plus, we had both been writing for years. I had written for many magazines and newspapers, and Ginger had published three non-fiction books. Still, this was our first fiction effort, so we were floored when the first publisher we approached not only contracted for one book, but three!

Do you still experience self-doubts regarding your work?

Oh, my goodness, yes! I keep telling friends who find out about our book not to expect Steinbeck or anything! I have so much respect for fiction writers and I never dreamed I would be in their ranks, so I’ll probably have to write twenty novels before I ever consider myself a novelist. Literary fiction authors in particular just slay me with how they craft their characters and stories.

That said, I think there is room for all of us out here, and as long as people continue buying what I write, I’ll keep producing it. If that ever stops, I’ll know it’s time to finally go clean out the garage and keep my “stories” to myself!

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

We handled our contract negotiations ourselves because we were familiar with contracts and knew and trusted the acquisitions editor. I thought Howard was quite generous considering we were unknown fiction authors, but I do wonder sometimes what an agent would have done differently.

What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

“Keep a notebook and pen every place you go.”

I heard this from a speaker at a journalism event my senior of college, and I’ve tried to follow his advice. I have something to write on next to my bed, in my purse, in my car and next to my chair in the family room. You never know when you’re going to hear a cool word you want to use, or want to jot down an idea, and while you think you’ll remember it later, if you’re scatterbrained like me you probably won’t. I love looking through my notebooks.

What’s the worst piece of writing advice you’ve heard?

“Write what you know.”

If I only ever wrote what I knew, I’d never have a byline! There have been periodical stories I’ve dreaded doing that ended up being some of my favorites because of the engaging sources. I love learning about new people and things. But, there are definitely topics — such as finance — that I find to be a real yawner and probably would avoid depending on the slant.

What’s something you wish you’d known earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business?

Having come from the business, I was prepared for how the publishing process would proceed. I understand the peculiarities of CBA book publishing.

Is there a particularly difficult set back that you’ve gone through in your writing career you are willing to share?

When my former employer moved across the country, I decided to go freelance. However, after ten years of mostly editing children’s books, I had to reestablish a network for getting writing and editing jobs. This was frustrating at first (and sometimes still is) because I know there are publishers and publications out there looking for writers, but making that connection can be difficult. Still, freelancing is one of the best decisions I ever made.

What are a few of your favorite books? (Not written by you.)

As a child, my absolute favorite was Harriet the Spy — and that may be why I’m so comfortable carrying around notebooks! I’ve enjoyed all kinds of books over the years, but lately I’ve been focusing on non-fiction because I can’t read fiction when I’m writing it. (Don’t want to unintentionally plagiarize!) I loved Julia Child’s My Life in France and Ruth Reichl’s Garlic and Sapphires.

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

I hate to state the obvious, but Desperate Pastors’ Wives is a real achievement for me on so many levels. It’s my first published book, my first fiction, and my first collaboration. Knowing I have the perseverance and skill to write a novel has opened up a whole new world of opportunity for me.

Do you have a pet peeve having to do with this biz?

CBA has copycat syndrome. Right now, everyone is dashing to get their anti-The Secret books out. A couple of years ago, it was anti-The Da Vinci Code. I’m not saying that as Christians we shouldn’t respond when the world strays, but I wish we could lead the curve more than follow it.

Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

Ah, there is no typical day and that’s what I love about it! If you visit my Web site, you’ll see I am a night person, so I do the bulk of my work after 4 p.m. But I also have responsibilities with the magazine and newspaper where I am associate editor, so sometimes I have to leave the house as early as 10 a.m. (I know, the horror!) to head downtown to our publication offices. I often end up working way more than forty hours per week, but the advantage is I can structure my own schedule around housework, errands, and social activities.

If you could choose to have one strength of another writer, what would it be and from whom?

I would love to have Truman Capote’s ability to write about his childhood so vividly without resulting to precious images. There is a fine line between classic memoir and a family journal.

I wonder how he saw through the tears to get anything on paper.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

Yeah, make enough money to retire! Seriously, I hope I can continue to create work that touches people in meaningful ways even if I never can afford to remodel my kitchen. It is an honor to have a skill that brings so much joy and understanding to people. If my life’s work causes just one person to grow closer to God, then I’m happy. What better results could I ask for? (Well, sure, I’d take the new kitchen, too, but that just means I have to cook more, right? There’s always a bright side!)

Was there ever a time in your writing career you thought of quitting?

Every time I am on deadline! I often wonder why I don’t go do something “normal” instead, like push papers in an office. But then someone e-mails me a compliment on something I wrote and I vow never to leave this profession. It’s a vicious cycle of exhaustion and exhilaration!

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

My favorite part is talking to sources. We spoke to many for our series, and I regularly interview people for articles. I find people absolutely fascinating, and I’ve never met a person who does not have at least one interesting tidbit to share, although some do require more prodding than others. My husband has to remind me at parties that I’m not working, otherwise I question people to death!

My least favorite part is the financial insecurity. Jobs and profits seem to ebb and flow. I have to remind myself constantly that this is where God wants me and he will take care of me.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

I have a Web site and I always carry business cards because you never know where you might meet a potential client (I’ve met a few on planes, for example). I periodically send reminder e-mails to editors I know who look for freelancers, just to remind them I’m still around.

It is important to think like the person who might be interested in you rather than the person you are. Ask yourself questions such as:
Why would publication X want to do a story on my new book?
Why would this magazine want me to write this story? What is the take-away for the readers?
What makes me stand out from all the others looking to get published?

Parting words?

Thanks for reading this far! :)

I think the best thing an unpublished writer can do is attend writers’ conferences. These conferences are unique chances to meet with editors, network with colleagues, and enhance your skills. Even advanced writers can benefit from conferences such as Mt. Hermon. It is money well spent, believe me!

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Sunday Devotion: Reality Verses Dreams

Janet Rubin


Why is it that the idea of things is often so much more attractive than the actual doing of them? The romantic picture as opposed to reality?

The way learning seems so exciting when shopping for school supplies in late August, for example. How easy it was growing up, once armed and adorned with new stuff, to envision myself hunched over books, studying, making careful notes on the thin blue lines of my notebook with my sparkly pencils, or writing A+ papers and working out difficult math problems. How could someone not excel with a Bon Jovi binder or a Garfield lunch box? But how quickly my enthusiasm waned the first night I had to actually sit down and do home work. In spite of everything, it was after all still just work—reading, studying, memorizing.

Or when I was pregnant with my first child, how sweet was the picture in my mind as I decorated the nursery- me, rocking in a chair, nursing my infant by the moonlight that would stream in the window. Several months later I grew to dread those midnight squawks that came from that pink, lacy crib and dragged me from the warmth of my own bed. Caring for baby in the middle of the night was bleary-eyed misery. I wanted to sleep!

Likewise, there is great discrepancy between my ideas about the writing life and the reality of it. I have romantic images stored up in my mind of what an author does. I envision scribes of old, dipping pen in ink by lamplight at antique desks, those of more recent past pounding out stories on typewriters, lost in the passion of creating. My perfect writing fantasy involves me in a secluded mountainside cabin in Maine, typing the days away, breaking only to brew more coffee or take a morning hike.

When I first decided to get serious about my writing, I outfitted myself with all the necessary tools—a desk and computer, stacks of how-to-write books, a thesaurus, dictionary, and a little notebook I thought I’d carry everywhere to record all of my creative thoughts. I thought I’d write character sketches in waiting rooms, practice writing description on the playground, and think of profound metaphors in the grocery line. After spending my mornings cleaning and home schooling my children, I imagined myself typing away the afternoons, producing fiction as fast as my family produces dirty clothes.

Like the first night of homework, reality hit me as soon as my behind hit the computer chair. Writing is work. It’s rarely romantic. There are distractions and boredom and a never-ending temptation to check email. I’m too lazy to look anything up in the thesaurus, I don’t know where that little notebook is and all I think about in the grocery line is whether I should get the regular or king-sized Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups for the ride home.

But. When I push past the laziness, ignore the email and the dirty clothes, and type until the flow begins (this may take an hour or a week), I find myself lost in an experience that is exciting. As the story unfolds, my excitement builds. And when it is done, I am filled with satisfaction. The satisfaction has nothing to do with how cute my writing corner is or those books on writing I haven’t read. It’s all because of the act of creation. And when I look at the finished product, I know the making of it wasn’t all passion and romance, but part misery.

My idea of Christianity can become skewed as well. I listen to some preacher on the radio or get all worked up at a women’s conference, pumped up by powerfully delivered sermons, enthusiastic worship, and joyous crowds. Yes, I think, I’m going to do it. I’m a’livin’ for Jesus from now on. Ain’t nothin’ gonna get me down. Caught up in the euphoria, I can imagine the rest of my life to be some kind of continual praise-fest.

Then I go home. Sweeping the floor, breaking up bouts of sibling rivalry, picking up the clothes my husband leaves on the floor, staring at a blank computer screen with nary an idea in sight—in the midst of these mundane things of daily life, I realize living for Jesus is work. Sitting to pray and read the Word is something I need to force myself to do some days. There are dry spells when my prayers are not passionate, when my heart is not thankful, when I feel like giving something less than joyful, humble service to my family.

Jesus said, “Take up your cross and follow Me.” While our lives may not involve the persecution some Christians around the world experience, this Christian life is a cross. It isn’t all halleluiahs and amens. It’s discipline, faithfulness, endurance, resisting temptation, and seeking. But it isn’t a cross without reward. When we seek, we find. When we follow, we are lead. When we resist Satan, he flees. When we are faithful, we grow. When we trust and obey, we are filled with joy.

I think that ultimately the idea of things is deceptive. Most things worth having don’t come free. Education, good writing, and a godly life are very good things. Not easy, not dreamy and romantic, definitely not free. But very worth having.

Hebrews 12:2Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

Lord,Please help me to let go of my unrealistic notions and to be willing to live out the reality of what You’ve set before me. Thank You that there is joy before me. I admit that I don’t have what it takes to carry this cross. Please make me strong, fill me with Your Spirit, and walk with me every moment. I need You. I do want to write well, and more importantly to be godly. Have Your way with me, Lord. Amen

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Saturday, April 21, 2007

Some Happenings in the Book World

We are pleased to report that The Road by Cormac McCarthy (Alfred A. Knopf) took the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. To see the full list of the 2007 Pulitzer winners (you mean there are other books besides fiction?) please visit: http://www.pulitzer.org/

This past week, the shortlist for Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction was announced. Here they are:

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Half of a Yellow Sun (Fourth EstateRachel Cusk Arlington Park) Faber and FaberKiran Desai The Inheritance of Loss (Hamish Hamilton)

Xiaolu Guo A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers (Chatto & Windus)
Jane Harris The Observations (Faber and Faber)
Anne Tyler Digging to America (Chatto & Windus)

Winners will be announced in London, June 6th

Book Festivals:

The 12th Annual Los Angeles Times Festival of Books is upcoming (April 27th) For more info visit:
http://www.latimes.com/extras/bookprizes/

For those of you in PA, the Philadelphia Book Festival starts tomorrow ( Saturday & Sunday, April 21-22) for more information visit:
http://www.philadelphiabookfestival.org/index.htm

Friday, April 20, 2007

Novel Journey's Interview with Dog Eared Design





Tell us about Dog Eared Design, how you started and what you do.

Dog Eared Design is a small design studio which focuses almost exclusively on book cover design. The name represents a well-cherished book, one that has the battle scars to show for it’s numerous readings. I also have two golden retrievers that lay at my feet as I work, so there’s a double meaning. I’ve been working in the publishing industry since the early 90’s as an art director/designer at two publishing houses and a design firm. I made the scary but correct decision to fly solo three years ago.








How do you choose the theme of the cover to best describe the book? Do you send a questionnaire to the publisher/author? If so, can we post it?

I personally don’t have a questionnaire, but instead, work from the material that publishers provide. Different publishers provide different amounts of information but generally I’m given a brief synopsis from one paragraph to numerous pages long, told who the target reader is, and I’m given similar titles in the genre. For fiction it’s helpful to have character sketches and a chapter-by-chapter breakdown of the book, highlighting the key moments, which could be used for the cover. Sometimes I’m given specific design directions and suggestions, but usually simple adjectives like “edgy,” “nostalgic,” or “romantic” are given to describe the book. Now and again I get a manuscript, but the cover is often designed before the book is completed. That way it can be marketed before it’s printed.


Cover-wise what sells a book?

The best covers create a mood rather than tell the whole story. Simple and impactful is better than busy and overworked. As a designer I’ve learned that if a book sells it’s well written, but if it doesn’t sell it must have been the cover. I’m obviously kidding, I’d like to say that when a book I’ve designed is on the NY Times best-sellers list that the cover had something to do with the success. But then again I’m humbled when bad designs do equally well or better. So what am I saying? I have no idea what sells a book.










Does it help when publishers or authors have examples of other books in their genre that appeal to them?

Absolutely. Knowing what a client likes, and equally as useful, what they don’t like, helps substantially. Because I work in so many genres, I like to reference Amazon for the design trends in specific markets before I start a project.


What colors are more marketable than others?

I’m sure the success of Good to Great had a lot to do with the powerful red cover.
However, I don’t usually start a design thinking what color I need to make it. Color flows out of the design process. It’s always good to be aware of color trends and be appropriate for the genre.




Do certain colors go better with certain genres?

Yes. Business books are often bright and arresting. Horror is dark, romance and historical fiction is generally warm, but there are no clear-cut rules, thank goodness.

How do you keep covers from looking cliché?

I try not to be too obvious in my work. I’m constantly on the lookout for good photography, typefaces, textures, and designs. When the muse doesn’t show up I’ll go to these folders for inspiration.

Over the years I’ve worked on a number of books with similar subject matters such as marriage, prayer, dating, etc. It’s a challenge to approach each cover from a different perspective. Two years ago Narnia was very popular because of the then upcoming movie. During this time I was assigned four different books about Narnia from four different publishers. A couple of them are shown. The obvious challenge was to make each one unique and not upset the publishers by having designs too similar.









What was your most challenging book cover and why?

I don’t want to be too specific, but the most difficult covers tend to be the ones that are very important to the publishers. Often these covers don’t turn out as well because too many people get involved. The end result can be a cover that no one hates, but no one particularly loves either. The fun covers are the ones that I’m given a lot of freedom with. So, ironically, most of my favorite covers are for smaller named authors with lower print runs. Take Landon Snow for example. A book that was a lot of fun and very low pressure, but became a best-seller.






What book cover have you received the most response about? Tell me about the process of making this cover.

I love reading historical biographies, so I was excited when a Civil War series was sent my way. The challenge was to make the cover look authentic to the time period and visually represent how opposite the two generals were. Lee, the noble leader of the South, vs. Hooker, the not so noble leader from the North, from whom the term “hookers” was derived. Their opposition is shown by each man facing the opposite direction and is reinforced by the oval vs. square frames.

I really like the subtly of it. The publisher printed the jacket on an uncoated paper stock, which really added to the antiquity of the design. I immersed myself in the time period by doing a lot of research on the web and looking through a number of books on the subject. The images of the generals came from the Library of Congress, the textures and panel came from istockphoto.com. Letterheadfonts.com and Archivetype.com are great resources for antique fonts.


How expensive are the royalties on art?

The easy answer is “that depends." Getty Images , for example, offers three ways to purchase image usage; Royalty-Free (preferred!), Rights-Managed (Evil), and Rights-Ready, which is somewhere in between. The cost is dependant on factors such as print-run, domestic and or international, and how much real-estate the image takes up on the cover. I always try to use Royalty-free which is cheapest and, as the name implies, has limited restrictions. I often create “original” art by messing with multiple images. The teen fiction cover “In Between” is an example of using numerous photos to create a unique image.




Once a cover is completed, is the picture or image used on the cover copyrighted?

The publisher owns the design but not the image. In rare cases the image can be purchased as an exclusive, but that is amazingly expensive. Some stock houses will not allow images to be used more than once for a specific market.






Where do you find the images you use?

My favorite place to find imagery is

http://www.istockphoto.com/. Though there’s a mix of good and bad imagery the price and selection is unbeatable at $4 to $12 a pop. They also have a designer spotlight area where designers can post their work showing how they used istock images. I’ve posted some of my work at: http://www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=326702
For the price, I also like
http://www.photos.com/, and http://www.shutterstock.com/.
Super Stock is great to work with. Getty and Corbis have wonderful imagery but you’d need a pretty healthy photo budget to use them.


How do you avoid looking like other covers on the market?

I like to design outside the box, but not too far out. Generally when I give a publisher design options I’ll give them something that I like, something I think they’ll like, and something in line with what’s selling in the genre. It’s up to them how “edgy” they want to be. I’ve learned that keeping publishers happy is more important than keeping myself happy as a designer. Of course it’s wonderful when both occur.


We've noticed that the model featured on the cover, often has similar features to the author (ex: length and coloring of hair.) Is that to make the cover more palatable?

That’s an amusing observation! Personally I rarely meet or e-mail authors directly, but almost always work through the publishers. So if a character looks like the author, it’s purely coincidental.


How often (in your experience) does the author have say over the final results?

Very often. And as you would expect, the bigger the name the more pull an author has.
I like to know up front if an author has something specific in mind.


How many hours go into a book cover?

It’s hard to break it down into hours, because there is a lot of back and fourth tweaking this and changing that, but it’s good to have two full working days into the first round of comps. I like to have three weeks or more to develop them which allows me time to juggle other projects in different stages of production.

If an author is planning on self-publishing, how much doe it cost to hire you to do a cover?

Ah, the question that scares much of my potential work away. Because I’m a one-man shop I can only take on so much work and still have time for family and have a life. I do ask a premium for cover design. I’m always happy to quote on a project-by-project basis. How’s that for not answering directly? I’ve been thinking about going into politics.

How many times on average does the cover go back for changes?

More often than not. Hopefully a client will at least choose a general direction from the first round, and then tweak and modify from there. There are times, however, when I do have to go back to the proverbial drawing board. I don’t nickel and dime clients for each design direction or modification, but try to stay within the original budget until they’re happy.

Often we see votes for a book cover? Is it standard to create several covers for the publisher to choose from among?

Yes, publishers expect to see three to five completely different options. This can be a challenge when I feel I’ve nailed it on the first try (rare). It’s usually not the first design I’ve done that ends up being the chosen cover. There have been a few cases where a publisher will hire me along with another design firm in competition for the same project. Those are always nail biters with my fragile ego in the balance.


To see more covers, visit:
http://www.dogeareddesign.com.

Kirk DouPonce graduated with a BFA from Kendall College of Art & Design and was able to find employment shortly afterward designing for companies such as Young Life, International Bible Society, and Multnomah Publishers.


Over the years Kirk has designed thousands of book covers, won numerous awards, and has had his work featured in the Fresh section of Communication Arts Magazine. Kirk lives at 8,500 feet within the Rocky Mountains of Colorado with his wife Claudia, their sons Jackson and Eli, and their golden retrievers Rupert and Chowder.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Author Interview ~ Lori Wick


Lori Wick is a multifaceted author of Christian fiction. As comfortable writing period stories as she is penning contemporary works, Lori’s books (more than 5 million in print) vary widely in location and time period. Lori’s faithful fans consistently put her series and standalone works on the bestseller lists. Lori and her husband, Bob, live with their swiftly growing family in the Midwest.

What new book or project do you have coming out?

White Chocolate Moments came out in December 2006. It’s a contemporary story set in Chicago. It’s a departure from my usual writing since there’s almost no mention of God or Christianity for many chapters into the book. I ended up having a great time writing the story. I love Chicago and the characters were very fun. My current writing project is a trilogy set in Montana Territory in the early 1880's. Cassidy, the first book is done and should be at convention this summer.

How did you come up with this story? Was there a specific ‘what if’ moment?

My husband and I were in California for a wedding and went shopping in Penney’s. The woman who waited on us was named Arcie. I asked her about it and she said it was short for Arcineh, and that the name was Armenian. I fell in love with this name, and from it I developed Arcineh’s character in White Chocolate Moments.

I knew I wanted her to be a dancer, and that she would be raised by her grandfather. Her grandfather’s character came more slowly, but it was fun to go into the business world for a while. The dynamic of Arcineh’s relationship to her grandfather was very fun to write. I enjoyed the fact that the grandfather was a successful business man. It was interesting looking into who he was and the sacrifices that it took to accomplish what he did, but also to see that where his granddaughter was concerned he was a vulnerable man.

Tell us about your publishing journey. How long had you been writing before you got a contract? How did you find out and what went through your mind?

Things moved very swiftly for me. I did not pay my dues in the usual fashion. I began writing in March of 1988. Originally Harvest House rejected me. So did Bethany, but Bethany wrote me a personal note. They said my book was too much like a Gilbert Morris book they had recently published. (I think it’s great that they were protecting their author.) They suggested I go to HH, so I resubmitted my book.

It took some months to come together, but I was picked up by Harvest House less than a year after I’d started writing. The phone call came when I was at home. I was on bed rest with a dicey pregnancy. (By the way, the baby was fine, she’s 17 these days.) Anyway, the phone rang and someone said it was HH and asked me if I would hold. I’d never been asked to hold for someone important before and I thought that was pretty fun. Then a woman I’d spoken with in the past came on, and she asked me to hold again.

I started to get excited, but it still didn’t sink in. Not until the then editor-in-chief - some time into the conversation - said she was sending a contract did I know it was real. I would have jumped around in excitement, but the order for bed rest prevented that. I called my husband at work and he came right home. It’s a great memory.

Do you ever struggle with writer’s block? If so, how do you overcome it?

I don’t know if my answer will encourage anyone, but I come against a wall on nearly every book. I can’t pretend that the story is going well, my readers would see right through that, so I walk away. If I have a short story in my mind, I might work on that. I do not start another book. I don’t write at all if I’m not in the mood, and when the current story comes back, I go back to work.

I might lose a few weeks, but it’s never lasted more than two months. Sometimes when the story comes back we’re talking about a trickle, and sometimes it’s a nice steady flow. At times words pour out of me, and there are not enough containers in the house to catch it all. I just write as fast as I can and hope to catch all the mistakes during editing. There are times when I’m stuck and I see the days rushing away - with no words to show for it - that I just sit at the computer until something starts. Sometimes it works.

Where do you write? Do you have a dedicated office or a corner or nook in a room?

I have an office in our home, and that’s where most of my writing takes place. It’s wide open to the living room and even let’s me see into the kitchen. Unlike today’s golfers, I do not need quiet to write. If the story is coming, the roof could be falling around my ears, and I would just keep typing. I recently got a laptop, so I can wander around all I want, and even travel with it. If it’s football season, I’ll probably be in the living room cheering for Brett Favre and typing at the same time.

Do you have a word or page goal you set for each day?

I don’t have a goal, but I love getting out between 30 and 40 pages in a day. That makes for a great sense of accomplishment. My top page count in a day is 50, but the words have to be pouring out of me to make that happen.

What’s the best writing advise you’ve heard?

I have to answer this one in a backhanded manner. The worst advise I’ve heard is - Write what you know. That’s not something that makes sense to me. I write what I’m excited about, even if I don’t “know it”. I don’t think you have to experience everything to write a story that someone else could enjoy. I’ve never been a dancer or run a large company, but I was excited about those components in White Chocolate Moments and I went for it.

What do you wish you’d known early in your career that might have saved you some time and/or frustration in writing? In publishing?

To simply do what I do best and am comfortable with. Early on I wanted to be very involved in the artwork for the covers of my books, but I learned that that’s not my strong point. It was a relief to finally give that over to Harvest House. Also, I’m not a speaker. It plays havoc with my life to even schedule a book signing. I’m good with words on paper and in informal settings. I wish I’d realized earlier on that someone buying my book does not give them a right to me. No matter how much they want to talk to me or hug me, if I can’t be at their gathering, it’s all right. I can’t feel guilty about saying no. One last thought. When I got that first rejection notice, the wording was very helpful. It said they could not publish the book with success. I appreciated that. It reminded me that this is a business, and not to take it personally.

How much marketing do you do? What have you found that particularly works well for you?

The answer to this ties into knowing what I’m good at and not trying to do other people’s jobs. I go to convention every summer. While there, I do everything Harvest House asks me. I love seeing the Harvest House folks, it’s like a family reunion. I also love meeting people, hearing about their stores, and signing my newest book. Beyond that, I do not travel to promote my books. If I can do something over the phone, HH will send it my way, but I rarely make public appearances.

Do you have any parting words of advice?

Have fun with the writing. I write a story that I want to read. I write it for myself. I have a wonderful readership, and I care about those dear folks and pray for them, but when I sit at that computer, I write the story I’m excited about. Even if my books didn’t sell well, I would keep writing for myself. I’m just thankful and blessed that there are others who want to read the same stories I do.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Author Interview ~ Lynn Austin

Lynn Austin resigned from teaching to write full-time in 1992. Since then she has published twelve novels. Three of her historical novels, Hidden Places, Candle in the Darkness, and Fire by Night have won Christy Awards in 2002, 2003, and 2004 for excellence in Christian Fiction. Fire by Night was also one of only five inspirational fiction books chosen by Library Journal for their top picks of 2003, and All She Ever Wanted was chosen as one of the five inspirational top picks of 2005.




(Interview conducted by Kelly Klepfer)


What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

The novel I just finished writing is called “A Proper Pursuit.” It takes place in Chicago in 1893 when society was changing from the Victorian era to the age of modern inventions. My heroine, Violet Hayes, is a very imaginative and unconventional young woman who is wrestling with her limited choices as a proper young lady. I decided to write a light-hearted (and I hope amusing) story because I wanted a change from my usual historical fiction. The novel will be released in September 2007.


Tell us about your journey to publication. How long had you been writing before you got the call you had a contract, how you heard and what went through your head.

I started writing after my third child was born in 1984. I was a stay-at-home mom living in Canada, so writing was my creative outlet. I began with the novel now entitled “Gods & Kings.” I simply set up my typewriter one day and began to work while the kids played at my feet. By the time that baby was ready for kindergarten, I had completed the book and I began sending it away and receiving rejections. Finally, one publisher became interested, and held the manuscript for nearly a year. I was very hopeful, but when they finally rejected it I became so discouraged I quit writing and accepted a teaching job.




Eventually, my family relocated in the U.S. and I began sending the manuscript to publishers again. In the meantime, I honed my writing skills (and earned a little money) by writing magazine articles and doing a column for “The Christian Reader.”




Once again, a publisher said they were interested and held the book for nearly a year while they considered it.


I happened to be grocery shopping when the phone call came, saying that I had a book contract. My children took the message, and they were so excited for me that they decided to decorate the house with banners and posters, announcing the good news. When I came home from shopping I could hardly believe what they were saying. I had to phone the editor back and hear the good news for myself. Then I began thanking and praising God. The book was published in 1995, eleven years after I began writing it.


Do you still experience self-doubts regarding your work?

Yes—every time I start a new book and every time I finish one (and sometimes in between!) I always think: “I can’t write a book!” especially when I’m in the beginning stages. I have to talk myself into writing by saying, “You don’t have to write an entire book today; just write one scene.”


I also have a lot of insecurities when I’m finished. I always hold my breath, hoping the story is okay, until my editor and several family members and friends have read the manuscript and have pronounced it “good.”

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

I gave up writing when I became discouraged and took a fulltime teaching job. Then I realized that I was only a failure if I quit trying. I probably would have been published sooner if I had persevered instead of pouring my energy into a very stressful job that didn’t suit my gifts at all.


What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?


Follow your passion when deciding what to write. Write the kind of book that you would like to read.

What’s the worst piece of writing advice you’ve heard?


“Study the markets, find out what publishers are looking for, and write that kind of book.” It doesn’t work. Your lack of passion for the subject or genre will leak through.

What’s something you wish you’d known earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business?


I wish I’d known that the struggle to get published is only the beginning. I thought that once I found a publisher, they would sell thousands of books for me and I would be on my way.


But the biggest hurdle is getting readers to actually buy your books, especially when you are unknown.


There are so many factors that contribute to whether or not a book sells—and most of them are out of a writer’s control. It takes patience (and good writing) to become known.


Do you have a scripture or quote that has been speaking to you lately?

“He who speaks on his own does so to gain honor for himself, but he who works for the honor of the One who sent him is a man of truth; there is nothing false about him.” John 7:18


Is there a particularly difficult set back that you’ve gone through in your writing career you are willing to share?

My first six books were published by a small company that didn’t have a very large sales force. Needless to say, I didn’t sell very many copies. I was very discouraged when the books eventually went out of print. I had to look for a new publisher and it was like starting all over again from scratch.

What are a few of your favorite books? (Not written by you.)

Some of my favorite authors are Rosamunde Pilcher (“The Shell Seekers”), Maeve Binchy (“Copper Beech”), Barbara Kingsolver (“Bean Trees”), Geraldine Brooks (“March”), Anne Perry (“The Face of a Stranger”), Anne Rivers Siddons (“Outer Banks”).

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

My novel “Hidden Places.” It was made into a Hallmark movie starring actress Shirley Jones. I had the honor of meeting her during the filming and gave her a copy of the book. She recently told me that it was a beautiful story. Miss Jones won an Emmy nomination for her performance as Aunt Batty.

Do you have a pet peeve having to do with this biz?

My pet peeve is the way in which the “bestseller” lists are tabulated. They don’t count actual sales as reported by the publishing houses, but only the sales reports from certain, select bookstore chains. I think the term “bestseller” would be more accurate if they included sales figures from other sources such as book clubs, Amazon, and a publisher’s own direct sales in their statistics. In other words, how many copies of the book have actually sold.


Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

I start my mornings with a trip to the gym at least twice a week, followed by my personal quiet time. I spend this time reading the Bible, praying, and reading non-fiction works by some of my favorite Christian authors. Then I go to work in my home office. I usually check my e-mail and take care of any unfinished business, then start writing where I left off the day before.




I will re-read the last chapter or two and then move forward into whatever happens next in my story. I will work until my husband comes home at 5 o’clock, taking a lunch break somewhere in the middle. I’ll also check my e-mail again in the afternoon if I’m procrastinating. If I am close to my deadline, I will often return to my desk and write some more after eating supper, working until I’ve completed my quota of pages. I only work Monday through Friday (with an occasional Saturday thrown in if my husband is busy elsewhere). I always take Sunday off.


If you could choose to have one strength of another writer, what would it be and from whom?


I wish that writing descriptions came easier for me. I have to work at it. Anne Rivers Siddons, Anne Perry and Rosamunde Pilcher are all excellent at this.


Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

I would like to write Christian fiction in such a way that non-Christians would be attracted to it and would read my books (and, of course, come to faith!).

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

My favorite part of being a writer is living in my imagination, making up stories, and creating new characters. It’s like being a child again and playing make-believe all day. I get to decide who lives and who dies, who lives happily-ever-after and who doesn’t. I can make believe I am all sorts of different people, men and women, old and young, and “live” new and exciting lives—and I get paid to do it!



I often say that the hardest thing about being a writer is the chair. Sometimes it is very hard to stay seated and work when life is going on all around me. My deadlines have come in January for the past several books, which means I am usually hard at work during the Christmas holidays when my husband and children are home—having fun without me! Being self-employed and working at home takes a great deal of discipline, which I often find very difficult.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

I will do radio interviews, book signings and any other marketing opportunities that my publisher finds for me, but I rarely do any marketing projects on my own. I feel that my time is better spent writing the best book I possibly can. I have never been any good at sales—I couldn’t even sell Girl Scout cookies when I was a kid—and self-promotion just isn’t my thing. I do speak at retreats and other events, but my speaking topics aren’t related to my novels at all. I have my books for sale at these events, but they aren’t my main reason for speaking; I enjoy sharing the Gospel.

You’ve won three Christy Awards. Many Christian novelists name you as an encouragement in their writing careers. Share your thoughts on these “successes” and the difference they’ve made in your own life and writing career.


I approach my writing with the attitude that God is my boss and I’m working hard, doing my very best to serve Him. I am a slow writer, writing only one book a year, because I want to make it the very best that it can be. When I won each Christy Award, I felt as though God was smiling down on me, saying “Well done.” The awards were a huge honor to me because there are so many excellent authors and so many wonderful books to choose among.




I honestly don’t think of the term “successful” when talking about my writing career. My goal has always been to write a book that will make a difference in someone’s life. I feel “successful” if I hear from a reader that this is true. If I start looking at awards or sales figures or good reviews to gauge my success, I will soon get off track. For me, success is all about using my talents to serve God.


What would you write if there were no rules, barriers, or limitations in CBA?

I have never felt any barriers or limitations with my writing. I write the kind of books I love to read and they seem to fit perfectly in the CBA market. I do like to try new things with my writing (a lighter, more humorous tone with “A Proper Pursuit,” for example), so I won’t rule out anything unusual in the future.

If you could live in any time period, any location – what would you choose?

Probably America in the late 1800’s. I would love to be able to wear long dresses with beautiful, swishing skirts and ride around in horse-drawn carriages.

Who is your all-time favorite fictional character and why?

I would have to say Jo in “Little Women.” Like her, I also grew up as the middle sister in a family of girls (there were only three in my family, however.) I think I was a lot like her in that I always lived in my imagination and was always making up stories and writing plays. I admired her willingness to be unconventional (and unladylike) and to follow her dream of writing.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Author Interview ~ Michael Palmer


Michael Palmer, M.D., is the author of The Society, Fatal, The Patient, Miracle Cure, Critical Judgment, Silent Treatment, Natural Causes, Extreme Measures, Flashback, Side Effects, and The Sisterhood. His books have been translated into thirty-five languages. He trained in internal medicine at Boston City and Massachusetts General Hospitals, spent twenty years as a full-time practitioner of internal and emergency medicine, and is now an associate director of the Massachusetts Medical Society's physician health program.


What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

THE FIFTH VIAL, my 12th medical thriller was published in February, 2007 by St. Martin’s Press. It deals with the theft of transplant information from each of the millions of clients having blood drawn from the world’s largest lab.


THE FIRST PATIENT, my current project deals with the president’s college roommate and current physician, who has good reason to believe that his friend is going insane. I expect it to be done soon, and out early in 2008 (an election year!!)
Tell us about your journey to publication. How long had you been writing before you got the call you had a contract, how you heard and what went through your head.

My story in this regard is somewhat unusual in that I wrote a book no one wanted to represent, but that was interesting enough to get an agent to offer to guide me through the development of something else. She’s still my agent 28 years later. I started writing THE COREY PRESCRIPTION in November 1977, and finished it in February 1979. By April, I had my agent and a “new” book idea, which would become THE SISTERHOOD. In early 1980, THE SISTERHOOD was sold to Dell as an 80-page outline. I never had to write a word until I was assigned to an editor, the late, legendary Linda Gray.

The night I got “the call” from my agent that THE SISTERHOOD outline had been bought, I was hoping for an advance of $5000 . . . $10,000 tops. She reached me at 2:00 AM and began a guessing game. “Guess how much you got . . . guess how much you got.” I started (with fingers crossed) at $5000. By the time I learned I would be paid a quarter of a million dollars (1980 dollars!!) I was in tears. Of course, looking back, I realize that the only word I heard clearly was “million!” Now I automatically take any number and go: minus 15% for the agent, minus 40% for the IRS, spread over the length of time it takes to write the book.

THE SISTERHOOD was on the Times list for 8 weeks, has been translated into 37 languages, and is in its 36th printing.

Your first eleven novels made the NYT best-seller list. Wow. What do you attribute your phenomenal success to?

A lot of luck.
A great agent and great editors.
An open mind and a willingness to listen to criticism and make changes.
Fearlessness.
My imagination.

You’re a father, work with the Massachusetts Medical Society as an Associate Director of their physician health program, write full-time, etc. How do you manage it all?

One day at a time. My motto of life is: YOU CAN ONLY DO WHAT YOU CAN DO. My motto for writing is: BE FEARLESS.

From what I’ve read. your day job as Assoc. Director of the Massachusetts Medical Society seems more ministry than job. Can you share a little of what you do there?

My medical job has basically three parts (aside from education the medical and lay public)

Help a doctor with physical or mental illness, behavioral problems, or substance abuse come to grips with the fact that he/she is sick and in need of help.
Design an appropriate treatment program for them, including finding the right therapist or in patient program, the right support meetings, and the right workplace monitors.

Where appropriate, sign them up to a legally-binding monitoring agreement. Then, for 5 years, I supervise that agreement, meeting with the doctor at least monthly to discuss their progress and review their monitor reports.

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

Believe it or not, I really haven’t made any. I have implicit faith in my agent and follow her advice without fail. My biggest “mistake” is not writing faster, but that was an active choice so that I could keep working as a doctor. Now times have changed and I must alter my approach to production or risk being left in the publishing world’s dust.

What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

Be Fearless (Is this a theme?!!). Be willing to listen to those you trust. Be ready to do the extra draft.

What’s something you wish you’d known earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business?

Find someone you trust, hopefully your agent, and discuss your writing project with him/her before diving in.

What are a few of your favorite books? (Not written by you.)

All the Pretty Horses (Cormac McCarthy); Illusions (Richard Bach); Great Expectations and others (Dickens); Anything by Tess Gerritsen; Longing (J.D. Landis)

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

Each book just because I know how hard it is to start, hang in, and actually finish.
Do you have a pet peeve having to do with this biz?

A book a year. Also, there is just too much product flooding the stores, so that usually, within a month or less, a book is “gone”, buried under an avalanche of new arrivals.

Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

I get up at 5, meditate, floss, make my kid and me breakfast, make his lunch, feed the cats, catch up on e-mail and bills, then fall asleep at my desk. After I wake up, I try and get 4 hours of good writing in. Four pages (1000 words) each day would make me very happy.

Take us through the process you use when writing a novel.

I start with a “heavy” outline (see
www.michaelpalmerbooks.com for details). Then, after my editor has approved it, I write the book. The last half I do by outlining 5 or so chapters at a time—not in as much detail as I did the first half. I try and perfect each chapter before moving on to the next—as long as it takes.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

Somewhere along the line I would love to find an ongoing character who I, and my readers, enjoy. I would also love to have another couple of movies made from my books.

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

Favorite: Having written a book.
Least Favorite: Coming home and discovering that no one has stepped in while I was gone and written a chapter.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

A writer’s main job is to write. I have yet to be convinced that book tours or other marketing by the author does as much to forward their career as does writing and completing another book.

Parting words?

Be Fearless!!!

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Here's a Look at Some Happenings

Upcoming this week, interviews with bestselling authors: Michael Palmer, Lori Wick and DogEared Design, a small design studio which focuses almost exclusively on book covers.

The winner of Susan Davis' FRASIER ISLAND book give away is:
Sally Bradley. (Sally, please contact Gina through her profile with your address.)

We've learned that Lauren Winner is to keynote the 2007 Christy Awards.

This past month, Man Booker prize-winner John Banville published Christine Falls, his first foray into crime fiction, under the pen name Benjamin Black.
Newsweek.com has just posted an exclusive interview between Banville and his alter ego. Follow the link to read it.

We all remember in September when the launch of Avon Inspire, an imprint of HarperCollins, was announced. In the coming months, watch for their first releases:

Defiant Heart (Book One in the “Westward Hearts” series,) by Tracey Bateman
ISBN 0-06-124633-6; $12.95 (trade paperback); on-sale 5/8/07



Wedding Bell Blues (Book One in the “Piper Cove Chronicles,”) by Linda Windsor
ISBN 0-06-117137-9; $12.95 (trade paperback); on-sale 6/26/07

Blessed Assurance, by Lyn Cote
ISBN 0061349941; $9.95 (trade paperback); on-sale: 8/21/07

The Trophy Wives Club, by Kristin Billerbeck
ISBN 0061375462; $12.95 (trade paperback); on-sale: 9/25/07

Friday, April 13, 2007

Novel Journey's Interview with-- Tasha Alexander

Tasha Alexander's first book And Only To Deceive was first published by William Morrow in 2005 and was greeted with enthusiasm by both Suspense/Mystery and Historical readers. It has since been re-released in paperback with multiple printings. Her second book, A Poisoned Season, released this Tuesday, April 10. There is a third Lady Emily Ashton book still to come, and Tasha has agreed to write a companion novel to the upcoming film, THE GOLDEN AGE, sequel to the movie ELIZABETH. She lives with her family in Tennessee.



What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

My latest novel, A POISONED SEASON, was released by William Morrow this week. It’s the second in my series about Lady Emily Ashton, a young Victorian widow with a flair for solving crimes.

Tell us about your journey to publication. How long did it take before your novel was published?

I always feel like I should make up something more interesting when asked this question! I finished writing the book and knew it was time to query agents. But I was rather unenthusiastic about writing a query letter. In the end, I sent a pretty casual email to the agent on the top of my list. She requested the full manuscript about an hour later, and before the end of the week, we were working together.

After doing some revisions, the book went out on submission and sold in a couple of weeks.

What mistakes have you made while seeking publication?

I was incredibly lucky that my absolute ignorance about all things related to publishing did not hold me back. There’s a wealth of information available to writers—web sites like Backspace (
http://www.bksp.org/) are invaluable for finding out the inside scoop on writing queries, finding an agent, what to expect during the publication process. Initially, I was entirely alone—it would have been better to have been less isolated.


What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

Write a book you would want to read and don’t include any parts you would skip.

What is the worst piece of writing advice you’ve heard?

I bristle whenever people get too caught up in absolutes: that you have to write a certain kind of book, or in a certain POV, that sort of thing. Find a compelling story and tell it well. There aren’t rules that, if followed, will guarantee success.

What is something you wish you’d known earlier that might have saved you some time/frustration in the publishing business?

Early on I didn’t realize how long everything took. You’re so excited after your first book sells—you want everything to happen all at once—and don’t understand how much goes on behind the scenes getting a novel into print. From catalog copy to cover art to interior design. I’m much more zen about waiting for things now that I know what to expect.

What are a few of your favorite books?

CATCHING GENIUS by Kristy Kiernan
CLOUD ATLAS by David Mitchell
FINN by Jon Clinch
PRIDE & PREJUDICE by Jane Austen

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

I couldn’t begin to tell you! First, I’m a terrible judge of my own work. Second, it would be like having to pick a favorite child. There’s a reason I only had one...

Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

After I walk my son to the school bus, I crawl into my office, check my email, play online for a little bit reading blogs and that sort of thing, and then I get down to work. My goal is to write two thousand words a day—and I like to start by reading what I did the day before, revising as I go. I could probably write three thousand if someone took away my email and instant messenger...

I stop when my son comes home (unless I have a looming deadline) and like to read at night. Don’t like writing without reading.

If you could choose to have one strength of another writer, what would it be and from whom?

Oh gosh; there are so many. Where to start? I’d love to have Jane Austen’s wit.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

I want my work to be successful enough that I can keep doing this until I drop dead from exhaustion.

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

I love the writing; there’s nothing I’d rather be doing. Least favorite? Proofing first pass pages. You’re still too close to the book at that point, and it just all seems awful. Ann LaMotte has a great bit about reading galleys in her fantastic BIRD BY BIRD. Read it—you’ll laugh out loud.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

It’s important to be out there supporting your book. I work with a fabulous publicist who’s helped me enormously with this. You want to meet as many booksellers as you can, to talk to readers, to spread the word about your book—but it’s important to keep in mind that the most significant thing you can do is to write a good story. You can’t let the marketing distract you from that.

Parting words?

Thanks so much for having me!



You can learn more about Tasha at: www.tashaalexander.com or http://www.good-girls-kill.com/


Thursday, April 12, 2007

DiAnn Mills ~ ACCELERATE YOUR WRITING CAREER

The 6 Cs of Professional Writing

1. Colorful – Making sure your writing is colorful does not mean filling your story with flowery description and boring description. It means making sure every aspect of your writing contains sensory perception. Try using all of the senses in every scene. Blend this tool with the natural flow of your writing. A writer invites a reader to be a part of an adventure. What better way to hop on a magic carpet ride than to use sensory perception. List three ways to make your manuscript colorful.

2. Compelling – Have you done your homework with your characters? Strong characterization is what drives any story. If you need help in developing your characters, look to personality tests, psychology books, character sketches. Study people and listen to dialogue. Interview your characters and discover motivation. If this is an area of your writing in which you need assistance,
e-mail me, and I will send you a character sketch. List three ways to make your manuscript a page-turner.

3. Concise – Why use two or three words when one will do? Pack your story with punch by using powerful nouns and verbs. A good exercise is to list all the words that mean a common verb – like walk. The different ways a character walks gives a unique word picture. List three ways to make your manuscript more concise.

4. Conflict – This is a vital ingredient in every manuscript. Without tension and conflict, the writer has no plot. A compelling story is one that contains conflict and tension on every page. This doesn’t mean earth-shattering events but differences in goals, emotional conflict, spiritual conflict, physical conflict, or conflicts with nature. Donald Maass says that every page should have some type of conflict. If yours doesn’t meet the test, delete the page and head back to the computer.

5. Creative – As writers, we are creative people. Our stories must take twists and turns that are totally unexpected by the reader, but the events must be in character. All the plot lines have been written. It is up to you to make your stories distinct. List three ways in which your story can be more creative by utilizing more creative attributes for your protagonist and your antagonist.
Here is a tip: write your story outline in your antagonist’s point of view.

6. Credible – Our stories must be believable. Consider the fantasy and sci-fi genre. Those stories engage us because we believe what is happening. Consider facts, characterization, setting, and dialogue. For additional help with this portion, view movies such as Lord of the Rings, Spiderman, Star Wars, or The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. List three ways in which you can incorporate credibility into your manuscript.




Click on the cover to learn more about DiAnn's latest release, Lightning and Lace.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Welcome Guest Blogger ~ DiAnn Mills

When Characters become Friends

A mixture of emotions swept over me last week when my third and final book in the Texas Legacy Series stepped into the marketplace. I’ve grown to love these characters – everything about them. I love their stubborn moments, their victories, their defeats, the way they love, and even the way they hate. They fight for what they believe in, and God is always right. For the past two years, I’ve wakened to the sound of their voices ringing in my head and to their problems. I watched the women slip into their dresses and bonnets, and the men tug on their boots. Actually, the women sometimes wiggled into a pair of boots and pants too. I rode the gentle mares and the wild broncos and held my breath. I lifted my Winchester, tensed my body for the kickback and sent bullets flying into targets, some of which were human. I celebrated with them, and I cried with them. I cheered when they triumphed and wanted to shake them when they made poor decisions.

In short, my characters have become my friends, and it’s hard to let them go. Unfortunately, I experience this grieving period every time I finish a book or series. I feel abandoned and lost, since too often I’m thinking about them just after I say my prayers and before I drift off to sleep. Dare I say that I worry about my characters? Hope they are not quarreling with their spouses or their children? That life hasn’t given them another dose of bitter herbs?


This bizarre and sometimes eccentric habit of mine is not much different from the habits of many of my other writer friends. How else can a writer create a character unless he/she first understands their motivation? And while these characters are on a journey called life, I realize the many reasons why I enjoy them.

I also realize their problems and issues. The storms of life that beat against our doors today have been happening since time began.

I consider Leather and Lace. Casey O’Hare didn’t start out life wanting to be an outlaw. Quite the contrary, she had hopes and dreams like every little girl until life slapped her in the face, and she chose to survive in the only way she knew. Many women today have made poor choices when faced with the dredges of life. We all have. I wrote that book for those women.

Jenny in Lanterns and Lace desperately wanted someone to love her. Is that such a bad thing, since we were created with a deep desire to be loved? The problem is, where do we go for love? Jenny thought unconditional love was a myth until the great Lover showed her differently.



Bonnie abhorred the disease that ravaged her beloved husband and left her a widow in Lightning and Lace. But she is determined, and alcohol is not the answer. Substance abuse is not native to today’s world. Wherever there is pain and suffering, people will look for a way to manage their sorrow.

Oh my, I do hope my darlings will be fine. They will be back next fall in a Christmas Legacy book, and then that is truly the end.

So today, I’m creating new friends. Already I know they won’t behave in every instance, but I wouldn’t want it any other way. I’m on my way to a new adventure. And, by the way, this is a contemporary.

Tomorrow, DiAnn shares Accelerating Your Writing Career.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Writing Awards Series ~ The Edgars

A wife, mother, and grandma, Yvonne Anderson lives in rural Ohio. She's a former legal secretary, currently a professional Virtual Assistant, and writes a daily Bible study blog. She creates fiction just for fun, but sometimes entertains fantasies about real remuneration.




By Yvonne Anderson


Do you like puzzles? See if you can tell what genre I'm thinking of.

Here are the clues:

*The longest continuously running play in the history of theater is in this classification.


*This kind of TV series was the first in America to star an African-American.


*Twenty-three of the 100 highest-earning films in history were this kind of movie, and films of this type received 62 nominations for major Academy awards from 1990 through 1998.


*Critics and historians alike consider the first "strong" female role model for young girls in fiction was first introduced in this genre in 1930.


*There were 1500 new books in this category published in the U.S. in 1998.


Have you figured it out? Elementary, my dear reader – the answer is "mystery," of course.

(Concerning the above: Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap debuted on November 25, 1952 and is still playing in London's West End. The TV series I Spy ran from 1965 through 1978, and starred Bill Cosby as a secret agent. The first Nancy Drew mystery, The Secret of the Old Clock, published in 1930, featured a sports-car-driving girl with a quick wit who faced dangerous situations with courage and tenacity. The perennially-teenaged Nancy Drew continues to entertain her readers with new adventures each year.)

Who doesn't love a good mystery? Organized in 1945, Mystery Writers of America (early motto: "Crime Does Not Pay – Enough") bestows the Edgar Allan Poe Awards (alias: "the Edgars") for the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction, television, film and theater published or produced in the last year.


The award, a ceramic statue of Poe, was first given in two categories: Best First Novel (the 1946 winner was Watchful at Night by Julius Fast) and Best Mystery Movie (winner: the movie Murder, My Sweet, with awards going to John Paxton for the screenplay; Raymond Chandler, author of Farewell My Lovely, on which the movie was based; and Dick Powell, for his portrayal of a private detective).




Since then, additional categories have been introduced. The Edgars now also include Best Mystery Novel; Best Paperback Original; Best Fact Crime; Best Critical/Biographical; Best Short Story Mystery; Best Young Adult Mystery; Best Juvenile Kids Mystery; Best Mystery TV Episode; Best Mystery TV Feature; and Best Mystery Play.


The award, of course, is named for Edgar Allan Poe, patron saint of the MWA and originator of the first mystery story. With its publication in Graham's Magazine in 1841, Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" introduced readers to a new genre, and the style took off like a bandit. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created Sherlock Holmes, the most famous literary character in history, in a serialized novel, A Study in Scarlet, published in The Strand magazine in 1887, and the world has been hooked on mystery ever since. Mystery books come second only to romance in number sold. Readers purchased over 60 million mystery/detective books in 1997, for 11.3% of the popular fiction market.

Best Novel Edgar winners include Jess Walter, for Citizen Vince in 2006; Jan Burke, for Bones in 2000; Mary Willis Walker, The Red Scream in 1995; William Bayer, Peregrine, 1982; Ken Follett, The Eye of the Needle, 1979; Frederick Forsyth, The Day of the Jackal, 1972; and John le Carre, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, 1965.

Other Edgar-winning works include the TV series Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Dragnet, Colombo, and Law & Order; musicals, The Mystery of Edwin Drood and City of Angels; the documentary, The Thin Blue Line; and films such as Silence of the Lambs, Psycho, Hopscotch and Les Diaboliques.
If you're a writer aspiring to place this little ceramic statue on your shelf, there's no mystery how to go about it.
First, of course, you must write a dynamite mystery story. It must be published the same year it is submitted to the judges. And it must explode in a judge's hands within the first fifty pages – hundreds of novels are submitted, and the judges grow bored quickly.
A committee for each category is chosen by the Awards Committee chairman, who tries to reach a balance of gender, geography and genre. Each subcommittee is comprised of five judges, all active members of the AFW. The only exception is the committee deciding on Best Novel. Because of the sheer volume of submissions in that category, the workload is distributed among eight.
Books, short stories, television shows, films, and plays are submitted to each of the designated judges throughout the calendar year. Although publishers and producers are solicited to submit books, short stories, films, scripts, and videotapes, any writer may submit a work to a committee. The names and addresses of the committee members are available from AFW Headquarters.
As the work comes in, the judges read (or watch) and take notes on each submission. The committee chair checks that all members have received all the work, and at the end of the year, the chair determines who the five nominees and the single winner will be.
When the chair sends the list of nominees to AFW Headquarters, the list is checked to make sure all the criteria have been met. Nominees are announced at the February meeting of the national board, and MWA sends press releases to the media and publishers/producers. Strict secrecy is maintained by the committees so that all nominees may have two months in the spotlight.

True to any good suspense story, press releases announcing the winners are prepared in advance, but are not sent out until after the annual awards banquet in April. At the ceremony, each committee chair plays with the audience until the right dramatic moment arrives to announce the winner of the current year's Edgar.

(I'm thinking of a story right now... mystery writers convene at the banquet... amidst the polite banter, nerves are taut as a violin string... a love triangle figures in somewhere, of course... and just as the chairman slits the envelope, a shot rings out and the leading contender, rising to accept his award even before the name is announced, falls across the table... I've even got a title: And The Winner is... Dead!)
Okay, so maybe I'll never see an Edgar on my bookshelf (unless I cut out the picture and frame it). But we can all watch the results of the awards this year, and applaud the talented writers that keep us on the edges of our seats.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Current Research ~ Keeping Up with Your Topic

(And a book give away.)

By Susan Page Davis

Susan Page Davis is the author of seven historical romances from Heartsong Presents, two romantic suspense novels from Harvest House, and Feather, a young adult fantasy from JourneyForth, with more on the horizon. She’s the mother of six homeschooled children and wife of a newspaper editor.





Research is part of the writing of every book, no matter what genre. I always spent large chunks of time researching my historicals, but I’ve found that I do as much research for a contemporary mystery or suspense book.

In writing seven historical novels, I gathered a library of books on many topics—among them the U.S. Cavalry, American Indians, colonial times, and Maine statehood. I also used the Internet and visited historical places.

For my romantic suspense novel Frasier Island, I immersed myself in military Websites, called every person I knew (and some I didn’t know) connected to the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard, studied the atlas, read up on surface-to-air missiles, whales, and helicopters. I found that I needed to know things I’d never paid attention to before—when to salute, Pacific fauna and flora, types of ships plying the northern-central pacific, uniform colors and insignia.




When Frasier Island was bought, I of course did a final run-through before handing in the final draft. It had been three years or so since I initially wrote the manuscript, and as I read through it, several things struck me. I began jotting down topics to check on.

Hadn’t I just read in the newspaper something about sonar hurting marine mammals? I couldn’t let my readers think my heroes were hurting whales. The topic was much “hotter” than it had been when I wrote the rough draft. I pulled out my old research notes and began searching the Web for the very latest information. Then I called my brother, a retired Coast Guard officer, and had a lengthy discussion of sonar with him. We talked about “signatures” and “arrays” and other terms I’d come across in my reading. I mulled the new data over for a while and felt ready to revise.

The next step was a careful word search in the manuscript. I studied each reference I’d made to sonar, especially in sections where the equipment played a major part in the story. Passive sonar picks up incoming sounds, while active sonar sends out a signal and reads the reverberations off objects. Those active signals have been thought to cause physical damage in whales, porpoises and other marine mammals.

I decided to make it clear throughout that my heroes were using passive sonar, not active sonar. It worked just as well, perhaps better, for my story, since my characters wouldn’t want to put out signals an enemy could intercept. This also meant I didn’t have to worry about letters from animal lovers protesting my characters’ cruelty.

The sonar was just the beginning of my renewed research, however. I had made up a name for an aircraft carrier in the book—the George W. Bush. To my chagrin, I learned that a real carrier was under construction, but it was named for the other President Bush—George H. W. The new ship would go into service shortly after my publication date. I decided to use it in the book, though I couldn’t find out before my deadline whether the real Bush would serve in the Atlantic or the Pacific. My fictional ship is on duty in the Pacific.

I also realized that I needed to reflect new technological advances in the book. The characters use helicopters, rocket launchers, underwater cameras, automated reloading machinery for missile launchers, and tons of other equipment. Those things change fast.

Okay, so you can’t stay right on top of everything. I did the best I could, naming equipment in use at the time I wrote the book and fudging some other things. For instance, in the battle at the end of the book, Rachel starts to describe an enemy helicopter, gives up and says, “It looks like an antique.”

I even did some last-minute checking on Navy regulations for required service and retirement options. Finally I knew I’d done all I could, and it was time to let it go. But I knew I’d done as much, if not more, research for that book than for any of my historicals.

Next up was Finding Marie, another romantic suspense. I hoped that one would require less research. Let’s just say I now know more about time zones and our naval presence in Japan than I ever imagined. I called the post office to make sure Express Mail was guaranteed. My husband and I took the kids to Mystic Seaport in Connecticut for an overnight outing. I bothered my brother again about sailing vessels and flare guns and what the Coast Guard officer says to the bad guys in the boat they are chasing. (For starters, “This is the U.S. Coast Guard. Heave to and prepare to be boarded.”)

It’s a different kind of research than I use for historicals, but it’s just as rewarding. It’s also introduced me to many wonderful people. Finding a live person in the occupation you’re writing about gives the writer a huge advantage. I’ve met police officers, military personnel, attorneys, and medical workers who willingly shared their expertise with me. All it takes is a little boldness. A few have said no to me, but the majority were eager to help.


~Gina here: To enter to win a copy of FRASIER ISLAND, leave a comment below.~

Sunday, April 08, 2007

He is risen!

Happy Easter everyone.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Saturday, April 6, 2007

This past week, there was an interesting discussion on the ACFW loop. The topic was 'how not to look like a newbie' and it caught my interest. I enjoyed the advice that so many took the time to give, and I wrote a few of the authors for permission to use their comments.

"At conferences, don’t talk too much. I’m not trying to imply you have nothing worthwhile to say, because you DO. But as others have pointed out, you learn so much more by listening."

--Meredith Efken,
http://www.fictionfixitshop.com/ has an entire post dedicated to the subject. To read it [click here.]


"I just returned from Mount Hermon where I met someone I instantly knew was a newbie. During a meal, this person grilled me and several other published authors about how much we make. Newbies, DO NOT DO THAT!."

--Kathleen Miller Y'Barbo,
http://www.kathleenybarbo.com/

"When you’re in a conference environment it’s very tempting to always be “on” wanting to discuss your WIP at every turn. But we have to remember the editors and agents that are at the conference need downtime just as much as we do. If you see someone at the swimming pool or hot tub or even just taking a breather on a sofa in the hotel lobby, keep the pitch for later unless they give you a signal it’s okay to discuss your current project."

--Pam Myers,
http://www.pammeyerswrites.com/


"This may seem counter-intuitive but it's true. New people want to show how much they know and have practiced so they tend to spout off, alot. . . My husband has a marketing business and he said the person who is talking "looses". You need to learn to listen. You need to ask questions."

Tiffany Colter,
www.shoutlife.com/TiffanyColter

"Don't try to accomplish every goal in your career at one conference (or one 15 minute meeting.)

-Dan Case,
http://www.dancaseblog.com/

"I had some newbies come pitch me at a recent conference. How did I know they were newbies? Fancy art on the front of the proposal, colored fonts and big type, strange formatting. They might as well have worn a sign.

I told them the object was for their submission to look the same as the one being sent by the seasoned pro, the one who has no time for these bells and whistles. Things which were intended to make their submission stand out, did, but for the wrong reasons. A newbie should never hide the fact that they are short on writing credentials if that is the case, but it shouldn't be advertised either. If the submission is neat and clean and follows the submission guidelines EXACTLY then by the time the agent or editor gets to the writers bio and discovers that it is a first effort they are very pleasantly surprised, not going into the appraisal biased up front.
"

--Terry Burns, agent Hartline Literary Agency,
http://www.terryburns.net/

These were some of the answers that I found interesting. Thanks to everyone above who allowed me to quote them. I greatly appreciate it.

Any readers willing to share their embarrassing story about being a newbie or offer other advice?

Tess Gerritsen on Second Drafts

Some great advice from NYT bestseller, Tess Gerritsen.

Tess Gerritsen is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Stanford University. Tess went on to medical school at the University of California, San Francisco, and was awarded her M.D. in 1979. After completing her internal medicine residency, she worked as a physician in Honolulu, Hawaii. In 1987, Tess's first novel was published. CALL AFTER MIDNIGHT, a romantic thriller, was soon followed by eight more romantic suspense novels. She also wrote a screenplay, "Adrift," which aired as a 1993 CBS Movie of the Week starring Kate Jackson. Her thriller, Harvest was released in 1996, and marked Tess's debut on the NEW YORK TIMES bestseller list. Film rights were sold to Paramount/Dreamworks, and the book was translated into twenty foreign languages. Now retired from medicine, Tess writes full time and lives in Maine.

~Used with permission~

In some ways, the second draft is much harder work. Which is why I’m dreading it.

For me, the very worst stage in the novel-writing process is when I’ve finished the first draft and I finally give it a front-to-back read. That is invariably when I get that sickening feeling that I’ve written the worst book in the world and there is no way I can fix it. I give myself a day to be depressed. I mean truly, deeply, depressed. I contemplate the end of my career. I try to think of alternate jobs I might be able to do instead. Organic farmer or itinerant fiddler. Heck, sometimes the job of donkey pooper scooper starts to sound like a more enjoyable career. (I’m serious here. My husband and I just acquired five donkeys, and I so dreaded working on my manuscript yesterday that I jumped at the chance to muck out the barn instead.)
So yes, John S. I know what you mean when you say second drafts are much harder work.




Since this is the 20th time I’ve been through the process, I’ve learned what to expect. I know I’ll be depressed. I know I’ll despair of ever fixing the mess. And then I’ll get to work and fix it. Tackling it gets down to some pretty basic issues.



First, make the plot hang together — make the story’s set-up match the story’s resolution. In VANISH, I started off with a hostage crisis. In the first draft, the hostage taker was a man, whose motives remained a mystery to me. By a third of the way through the book, I ditched the guy and turned him into a gal. That’s when her motives became clear to me. By the end of the book, I knew what the hostage crisis was all about. My first priority, when I wrote the second draft, was to revise the first third so that it was the logical set-up to the rest of the story.



Second, refine and deepen the characters. My first drafts tend to be somewhat bare-bones. I’m so busy trying to figure out the plot and the mystery that I shirk a bit on the character development. My second drafts add detail and more introspection. I get inside the characters’ heads, elaborate on their emotions, and find ways to deepen the conflicts they face.



Third, heighten the poetry. I know you’re thinking, “but you write fiction, not poetry!” But in many ways, I think I am writing poetry. An important part of narrative writing is reaching the next level of description, a level that goes beyond the mediocre and strives toward the artistic.



Fourth, clean up all the inconsistencies. Make sure the names and genders and eye colors have stayed the same from beginning to end.



Fifth, re-order the scenes to heighten the tension. I’m one of those writers who doesn’t write the story in chronologic order. Since I’m often juggling several subplots, I will often write one subplot from beginning to end, and then write the second subplot from beginning to end. Then I’ll weave them together. In VANISH, for instance, I wrote the Jane and Maura hostage crisis story first. When I’d almost finished that part, I went back and wrote the Mila subplot. Finally, I intercut the two subplots, figuring out the most dramatic sequence in which to vary them. But I didn’t do that until the second or third draft.



Sixth – and this may surprise some people — figure out your chapter breaks. My first drafts are continuous. I just go scene by scene, without chapter breaks. It’s only late in the process, usually my third or fourth draft, when I decide where to end the chapters. I look for cliff-hanging endings, for chapter breaks that will make the reader say, “I can’t stop here! I’ve got to read just one more chapter!”



I’ve yet to face all these tasks. I’m still working on the first draft of THE BONE GARDEN, and already dreading my initial read-through. But I also know that somehow, I’ll find a way to fix it.


Thursday, April 05, 2007

Novel Journey Critiques

Remember, our suggestions are just that—suggestions. The wise author will use discernment and pick up what works for him/her and ignore what doesn't. If you think we're wrong, please comment. We don't mind at all.

Our critique code is as follows:
( ) = suggest deleting
[ ] = suggest adding
** = comments
gws=goes without saying
rue=resist the urge to explain
im= interior monologue

Original Chapter

Prologue
“Hurry, hurry! The head . . . crowning.”

Slap, slap. Someone running. Flip flops? Rubber soles?

“Shh!” Another voice, male this time, “don’t alarm . . . .”

“Paging Dr. Oglethorpe. Please return to nursing station nine.” Tinny voice. Crackling.

Loudspeaker?

She squeezed her eyes shut tight and tried to concentrate on the words being whispered around her, but they got mixed up with other hospital sounds – announcements, bells, and doors whooshing open. Was something wrong? Was her baby in trouble? A clammy hand grasped hers and squeezed it hard.

“Breathe, Traci, breathe.” Mom’s voice? Where was Tom?

She heard a voice scream. Hers?

The pains came close now. She had no relief. She felt something bulky between her legs. Some kind soul mopped her forehead and whispered “Just a few more minutes, Little Mother. Hang on.”

A face masked in green hovered over her. Green again. A bell chimed signifying the birth of a baby. It was the last thing she remembered.

Chapter One

Nineteen Hours Earlier

Good grief, how much longer do I have to do this?

Traci Michaels glared at the bottom step leading up to her condominium. A ragged sigh caught in her throat. Multi-colored pebbles encrusted in concrete glinted back at her in the hot Arizona sun. Threads of sweat oozed from under the hairs at the nape of her neck and trailed their way down her back like the erratic edges of a jigsaw puzzle. She tried to get rid of them by scrunching up her shoulders and twisting her thrown back head. She could put the grocery bags down and wipe the wetness away with a hand. But if she did, would she be able to pick them up again?

The wet rivulets tickled her skin and reminded her of fingernails skipping lightly on a blackboard. Like the time that Samantha girl tapped a staccato sound on one in the high school newsroom to draw attention to herself. Why, on God’s green earth, had that memory surfaced? Maybe to escape? To remember happier times? Oh, God, please help me. Please get this agony over with.

She heard herself groan as she hefted the bags bulging with groceries from the wire granny cart, as her mom laughingly called it, and rested them on her bulging stomach, then started counting. One, two, three . . . . She paused to grip the green metal rail at step number eight. Thankfully, the rail was shaded from the intense heat of the sun by the feathery branches of a tree, so it was only warm to her touch. The tree that Tom planned to trim because its branches obscured the view of his beloved mountains. The letter from the United States government had come the same day he’d bought the long-handled trimmer. Their lives switched immediately from tree trimming to chaos. Like so many other chances, he never got the chance to trim the tree. She took a deep breath sucking in hot, dry air, and felt a nudge inside her belly. Maybe Michaela hates stairs as much as I do. Her curled her lips into a sneer and forced her foot up the next stair.

Finally eighteen. Hating stairs to begin with, she had compulsively counted them when she first moved in. Now she was glad. Counting gave her a goal, just as marking the days off the calendar helped her focus on Michaela’s impending birth. She laughed inwardly at her compulsiveness. Tom would have teased her about that. Tom would have, if he could have. Tom is gone. And I am all alone.

The plastic bags slipped from her fingers onto the green-painted cement porch. She stood for a few seconds gripping the porch rail until the dizziness passed.

Her legs shook from the weight she carried in front of her. She fished in her purse for her key. Her fingers grasped the metal ring, and she realized she was sobbing. Tears plopped onto the package of chicken that had escaped to lay at her feet forming a puddle of pink condensation. Will this ever end? There was no sense praying or asking God her question. He hadn’t stopped
Tom from dying, and he certainly hadn’t comforted her since.

The green metal door finally swung open. Green. Why is everything in my world green? She gathered the bags up and sucked in the chilled air like a guppy gulping food granules from the surface of the water. The sudden relief from heat in the air-conditioned room dried the sweat and tears to a film on her clammy skin. Still trembling, she collapsed in the room’s only chair that would accommodate her bulk. Staring at the pale green walls, she wept openly. For what, she wasn’t sure. For loneliness, for love lost, for the life she carried inside of her?

Tugging off her shoes, she rubbed her swollen ankles until her fingers ached, but no relief came. Why had she worn tennies when flip flops would have allowed her puffy feet to expand? She heaved herself out of the chair, pushing on the padded arms with sweaty palms, then transferred her hands to the beach ball-sized protrusion below her tender breasts knitting her fingers under her expanding belly to support it. Her knees locked for a moment and almost snapped from the effort. Maybe she should call Mom to come over. Or maybe just go to bed. She recalled Nana’s frequent complaining about her bones aching. As a teenager, she had scoffed at the old lady’s whining. Now, she wondered if it was possible for bones to ache. The tiredness she felt seemed to penetrate beyond her muscles to the core of her bones. Suddenly, Michaela kicked so hard Traci almost doubled over. Just one big kick, like an announcement, a declaration.

She was more than exhausted. If only Tom were here, he’d know what to do. There were plenty of American soldiers in Iraq without wives and children waiting at home.

Gina's Critique

I guess I'm in the hot seat this week with the full critique. This is tough because I do have a lot of suggestions for you. I read this and didn't think this was where your story began. In chapter one, there's not much going on except backstory and her going up the stairs and massaging her swollen feet. What is the incident in this story that turns your protag's life on its head? What forces her to act? I think that's where your story begins. If it was her husband's death or being shipped off, than maybe you should begin there. If it's the birth of the baby, then we don't need the backstory of chapter one right up front. You c0uld show us in real time that he's gone. She could hold the baby and wish he was there to meet his son... or it could be done through dialogue with the baby or those around her.

This seems like women's fiction, which I'll admit, is not something I read much of. So, consider my suggestions with that in mind. There's promise here but you may need to cut a bit to get to the heart of this. Thanks so much for sharing it with us.


Prologue
“Hurry, hurry! The head . . . crowning.”

Slap, slap. Someone running. Flip flops? Rubber soles? *I don't think she'd be worrying about whether the moving feet were wearing flip-flops. I'd think she'd be very inward focused--on pain-thirst-fear-that sort of thing.**

“Shh!” Another voice, male this time, “don’t alarm . . . .”

“Paging Dr. Oglethorpe. Please return to nursing station nine.” Tinny voice. Crackling.

(Loudspeaker? ) *if this birth is going bad, I'd be more blatant about letting the reader know that. It would make it more interesting to have more panic going on in this room if that's the case. Right now it reads as if maybe there's a nuchal cord which is very common and doesn't really make me worry for mother or baby or force me to turn the page*

She squeezed her eyes shut (tight )and tried to concentrate on the words (being )whispered around her, but they (got mixed up with ) [bled? into ]other hospital sounds – announcements, bells, and doors whooshing open. Was something wrong? Was her baby in trouble? A clammy hand grasped hers and squeezed it hard.

*Is she feeling pain here? I'd think she would be. Smells? Nausea? Panic?*

“Breathe, Traci, breathe.” Mom’s voice? Where was Tom? **Why is she so far out of it that she forgot her husband was gone? I'd need to know before I bought it**

She heard a voice scream. Hers? *Try to avoid "She/he "heard". Just say: Someone screamed or a scream pierced her ears or whatever. I also find it difficult to believe she doesn't know if the scream was her own, particularly because she calmly asks herself in IM if it was her own. Didn't ring true to me.**


The pains came close now. **this is very vague. What pains? In her abdomen? Describe them. [Her stomach balled up rock hard, ?accompanied by excruciating pain. It couldn't be another contraction already. It hadn't been a minute since the last one...] She had no relief. (She felt ) *Avoid telling words like "felt, saw, smelled, heard, etc. when you can. It removes us a bit from the pov we're in. Better to say: something bulky [pressed down] *or whatever* between her legs. Some kind soul **When I was in the transition part of labor, I wasn't thinking this much. I wouldn't think "some kind soul" did whatever, just "someone mopped her brow with a cold rag. I think the "kind soul" part is too much***

mopped her forehead and whispered “Just a few more minutes, Little Mother. Hang on.”

A face masked in green hovered over her.**The previous sentence rings true to how I think she'd be thinking, in very basics***
Green again. A bell chimed signifying the birth of a baby. It was the last thing she remembered.

Chapter One

Nineteen Hours Earlier [...]

Good grief, how much longer do I have to do this? *this is in italics? If not, I'd put it in.*

Traci Michaels glared at the bottom step leading (up) *gws* to her condominium. A ragged sigh caught in her throat. Multi-colored pebbles encrusted in concrete glinted back at her in the hot Arizona sun.**I like that detail. Good job.**

Threads of sweat oozed *oozed paints a gross picture, though it's accurate enough. Is that the feeling you want me to have?**

from under the hairs at the nape of her neck and trailed their way down her back like the erratic edges of a jigsaw puzzle. She tried to get rid of them by scrunching up her shoulders and twisting her thrown back head *twisting her thrown back head? I'm seeing Linda Blair for some reason :)*
. She could put the grocery bags down and wipe the wetness away with a hand. But if she did, would she be able to pick them up again?

(The wet rivulets tickled her skin and reminded her of fingernails skipping lightly on a blackboard.) **adds nothing in moo**


(Like the time that Samantha girl tapped a staccato sound on one in the high school newsroom to draw attention to herself. Why, on God’s green earth, had that memory surfaced? Maybe to escape? To remember happier times?) *adds nothing* Oh, God, please help me. Please get this agony over with.

She heard herself groan **why did she hear herself groan and not just "She groaned as she...] ? as she hefted the bags bulging with groceries from the wire granny cart, as her mom laughingly called it, and rested them on her bulging stomach, then started counting. **If she's having painful contractions, I don't think she'd stop to have the im of "the wire granny cart as her mom laughingly called it." that serves no purpose to have there and actually, in moo detracts from what's important here**

One, two, three . . . . She paused to grip the green metal rail at step number eight. Thankfully, the rail was shaded from the intense heat of the sun by the feathery branches of a tree, so it was only warm to her touch. The tree that Tom planned to trim because its branches obscured the view of his beloved mountains. The letter from the United States government had come the same day he’d bought the long-handled trimmer. Their lives switched immediately from tree trimming to chaos. Like so many other chances, he never got the chance to trim the tree.**try to avoid backstory in the first few chapters of a book. It makes the reader want to skim it to get to the exciting here and now.**

She took a deep breath sucking in hot, dry air, and felt a nudge inside her belly. Maybe Michaela hates stairs as much as I do. (Her) [She] curled her lips into a sneer and forced her foot up the next stair.

Finally eighteen. Hating stairs to begin with, she had compulsively counted them when she first moved in. Now she was glad. Counting gave her a goal, just as marking the days off the calendar helped her focus on Michaela’s impending birth. She laughed inwardly at her compulsiveness. Tom would have teased her about that. Tom would have, if he could have. Tom is gone. And I am all alone.

The plastic bags slipped from her fingers onto the green-painted cement porch. She stood for a few seconds gripping the porch rail until the dizziness passed.

Her legs shook from the weight she carried in front of her. She fished in her purse for her key. Her fingers grasped the metal ring, and she realized she was sobbing. Tears plopped onto the package of chicken that had escaped to lay at her feet forming a puddle of pink condensation. Will this ever end? There was no sense praying or asking God her question. He hadn’t stopped
Tom from dying, and he certainly hadn’t comforted her since. *backstory*

The green metal door finally swung open. Green. Why is everything in my world green? She gathered the bags up and sucked in the chilled air like a guppy gulping food granules from the surface of the water. *This really the picture you want to paint?*

The sudden relief from heat in the air-conditioned room dried the sweat and tears to a film on her clammy skin. Still trembling, she collapsed in the room’s only chair that would accommodate her bulk. Staring at the pale green walls, she wept( openly) gws*. For what, she wasn’t sure. For loneliness, for love lost, for the life she carried inside of her?

Tugging off her shoes, she rubbed her swollen ankles until her fingers ached, but no relief came. *Until her fingers ached is a really long time* Why had she worn tennies when flip flops would have allowed her puffy feet to expand? She heaved herself out of the chair, pushing on the padded arms with sweaty palms, then transferred her hands to the beach ball-sized protrusion below her tender breasts knitting her fingers under her expanding belly to support it. Her knees locked for a moment and almost snapped from the effort. Maybe she should call Mom to come over. Or maybe just go to bed. She recalled Nana’s frequent complaining about her bones aching. As a teenager, she had scoffed at the old lady’s whining. Now, she wondered if it was possible for bones to ache. The tiredness she felt seemed to penetrate beyond her muscles to the core of her bones. Suddenly, Michaela kicked so hard Traci almost doubled over. Just one big kick, like an announcement, a declaration.

She was more than exhausted. If only Tom were here, he’d know what to do. There were plenty of American soldiers in Iraq without wives and children waiting at home.


Ane's Take

I made these notes as I read. I didn't care for the prologue, too fragmented. Does it really need to be there? I think (and this is only my opinion – worth about two cents) if you cut the Slap, slap line, it would read a whole lot better.

You use some wonderful descriptions in here and some good similes. You tend to overdo some, like the sweating. Remember less is more. That said, your similes are good ones; just don't use so many they lose their punch.

I'd like to see this start a bit later that it does. I got really interested when she was climbing the stairs and thought about Tim and the tree being trimmed. I loved how her legs shook from the weight of her pregnancy. Great description. You do a bit too much telling instead of showing. Like when she realized she was sobbing. Not realistic. Sobbing doesn't sneak up on a person. A stray tear might, but not sobbing.

I was a bit confused about Tom. In one part I thought he was dead, then at the end, it appears he's in Iraq.

All-in-all, I think this has the bones of a good story, but it needs a lot of work. I really want to encourage you to keep refining this. It needs tightening and focus. I wasn't sure where it was going or what your heroine's goal is—something to make the reader invest in her. What does she want? You might get a copy of GMC, Goal, Motivation and conflict by Debra Dixon.

Jessica's Take

My critique is the last one submitted, so I've had the benefit of reading both Ane and Gina's critique. I had made a note, like Ane, to mention that the prologue was very jarring to me. I would not have known from the opening that this author could write as well as he/she does later on.

When I read Gina's comment, I was surprised that I missed the obvious. The opening does indeed strikes me as needing to be improved. I had already thought the prologue was weak and planned to mention that chapter moved too slow for me. My eyes kept skimming to find the action. Unless the author is telling the story backwards, I agree that the opening would be improved for starting elsewhere. Like Gina, however, I rarely read women's fiction, so balance our comments against the genre.

Lastly, I planned to commend the writer on putting us firmly in the protagonist's POV. I felt the unease of being pregnant and weight of the groceries. I suggest shortening the scene in the first chapter. There's an entire novel where characters –such as the mom—can be introduced.

Thanks so much for submitting!

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Author Interview ~ Amy Wallace



Amy Wallace is a wife, homeschooling mom, freelance writer, youth Bible study leader, and self-confessed chocoholic. She is a graduate of the Gwinnett County Citizen's Police Academy and serves as the liaison for the training division of the county police department. Amy is the president of an American Christian Fiction Writers local chapter and a contributing author of God Answers Mom's Prayers, God Allows U-Turns for Teens, Chicken Soup for the Soul Healthy Living Series: Diabetes, and A Cup of Comfort for Expectant Moms. She lives with her husband and three daughters in Georgia. Come enjoy a taste of Heart Chocolate, click on Amy's picture.

Plug time. What book or project is coming out or has come out that you’d like to tell us about?

Ransomed Dreams, book one in the Defenders of Hope series, is due out April, 2007. It's the story of: A tragic accident. An international plot to kidnap the Ambassador’s daughter. And two people with shattered dreams~ one a Crimes Against Children FBI agent. The past is key, but forgiveness unlocks the future.

Please check out www.defendersofhope.com
for more insider info on the stories behind the stories in the DOH series.

To read a review of Ransomed Dreams, click here.


Tell us about your journey to publication. How long had you been writing before you got the call you had a contract, how you heard and what went through your head.

I began my writing journey oddly enough. In searching for good stories to share with my girls Christmas 2001, I came across some grown-up novels. Devouring my first taste of fiction since my college years, I'd then hand the books to my husband and tell him how I'd change them. After about seven, my husband handed a book back and said to write my own. I shook my head. But then a dream about FBI agents and a mom in trouble wouldn't be dismissed.

So I wrote the story in January of 2002 and got involved in an awesome writer's group called the American Christian Fiction Writers. I spent a little over three years learning the heart and craft of writing, all the time working on a number of novels, short stories, and proposals. I was thrilled to have four short stories accepted for publication in two God Allows U-Turns books, a Chicken Soup book, and the book A Cup of Comfort for Expectant Moms. I received a recommendation for an agent who loved my first book and we signed a contract. Eighteen months later the publishing house I dreamed of working with offered me a three-book contract.

I heard about my novel contract through my agent’s email. The wonderful people at Multnomah were so encouraging and it was awesome to start receiving emails directly from them welcoming me into the family. From the first emails, I truly felt like I’d found a home. Even so, my first reaction to learning I had a contract offer was an overwhelming desire to throw up. I can’t believe I’m letting anyone but my best friend know this! ;-)

I think the realization my dream was coming true and all the work I knew was ahead, as well as the heavy responsibility I felt knowing my words were going out to people I’d never meet really weighed heavy on my heart. But God was so good to remind me this weight rests on His shoulders. I can’t write to glorify Him and touch hearts on my own. I need Him. And He promises to take every step alongside me. That and the fun I had celebrating with friends and all the well-wishers who emailed made my apprehension turn to excitement.

All that sounds so nice and easy. But I'd only be telling half the story if I didn't add that this journey has been anything but nice or easy. It's more closely resembled a difficult pregnancy than a walk in the park. Lots of rewrites, deadlines, missing my kids, stress related illnesses, and a whole lot of wrestling with God have kept my feet from floating up to cloud nine.

But God returns me to a few basic things and reminds me that He's given me the amazing privilege of living my dream. Here are a few foundational remembrance stones I go back to during the hard days: He called me. He promised to equip me. And I rise and fall to Him alone. The other big thing God reminds me of often is that writing is an act of worship. True worship is costly, so says 2 Samuel 24:24. It's my constant prayer that with every step of this writing journey I'll offer up to God a pleasing sacrifice, an offering that has indeed cost me something.

Do you still experience self-doubts regarding your work?

Most definitely! The enemy is always prowling around trying to twist those self-depreciating lies deeper. The best way I’ve found to deal with them is hanging out with my Heavenly Daddy and letting Him tell me the truth about who I am and Whose I am. That’ll trump the doubts most times. And when that doesn’t seem to work, God graciously reminds me of the truth through my hubby, daughters, best friend, awesome mentor group partners, and my wonderful editor.

What’s the best advice you’ve heard on writing/publication?

Write and keep writing! Also to have a blog. That’s really helped me stick with writing when the going gets tough because with a blog, I see immediate fruits of my typing. I get to connect with lots of people and write to encourage them by sharing what I’m learning in my walk with the Lord. That in turn keeps me motivated to write and keep writing.

Is there a particularly difficult set back that you’ve gone through in your writing career you are willing to share?

There have been so many times I wanted to quit. Times when a rejection cut deep or a story received really tough critiques and I just didn’t want to bleed onto the paper anymore. But I’d say the hardest time was the summer of 2005 when my husband and I were separated. We’ve gone through so much in the eleven years we’ve been married, and it came to a point of no return in 2005. We attended a marriage intensive with the Smalley Marriage Institute and learned a lot of great tools about growing up in Christ and letting Him heal our hearts. But we had to be separated for a time to really get it through our heads that we needed to focus on God and not the other person’s changing.

During that very long, painful time period, I couldn’t write. But from that time, with the help of an awesome marriage counselor and a lot of forgiveness and grace, we’ve come to a place of healing. And like the writer I am, I’ve seen God use all that hurt to bring good through my keyboard. Earlier this year I completed the first of a three-book series that address some of the specific issues that nearly destroyed our marriage. It’s been both healing and encouraging to see the response from those who’ve read the manuscript who've said it pointed them in a better direction and gave them hope for their marriages.

What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why?

The letters I write to my daughters and my husband on birthdays and Christmases. These four know me best and love me anyway, so when I get to use the gift God has given me to write and touch their hearts, that thrills me. To see their eyes light up reading words where I express how much I love them and what I see God doing in their lives is such an awesome thing.

Can you give us a view into a typical day of your writing life?

I write mostly on Saturdays. I do some research and blogging during naptimes Monday through Friday. But because I homeschool my kiddos, my focused writing time is kept to Saturday. I get up and do a writer’s devotion and spend some time praying before I get busy hammering out the story I’m currently writing. I typically work 10-12 hours and am able to get about 8,000 words I’m happy with done. I edit as I go and redo a few chapters I’d previously written to get back into the flow of the story.

When I started writing, I’d try to do a chapter a night at least twice a week. But writing on Saturdays gives me a long stretch of uninterrupted time to focus and let the words flow.


I think you have to do what works best for you and be faithful with the time you’re given. When a story is clamoring to be told, it’s hard to focus on school. But I wouldn’t trade that time with my girls for anything in the world. Writing on Saturdays gives me the best of both my favorite places to be~ in my writing world on Saturdays and in the every day world with my family most of the remaining time.

Do you have a dream for the future of your writing, something you would love to accomplish?

I would love to see some of my women's fiction published as well as write more non-fiction. But the power of a story keeps me firmly in the fiction world and probably always will. Multnomah was my dream publisher when I started writing and still is. It would be the continuation of a great dream to remain a Multnomah author.

Was there ever a time in your writing career you thought of quitting?

About every other writing day. ;-) Okay, maybe not that bad, but I have tried to quit a number of times. But I couldn’t. The call of God on my life and the stories He’s given are far too loud to ignore. So I don’t quit… for long anyway.

What is your favorite and least favorite part of being a writer?

I love being carried away in a story and going deeper with God and watching Him work through what I type.

Least favorite? Hum…the first major edit when all my flaws and places to improve glare back at me and I wonder for the umpteenth time what my editor saw in my writing in the first place.

How much marketing do you do? Any advice in this area?

I’m not a salesperson. But I am passionate about what God has called me to do. So when He provides an opportunity to share my heart, I do. I think the best advice I can give here is pray and have people praying with you. Ideas like my websites, blog, and speaking engagements that drop out of nowhere, have come from praying friends and family and have given me a lot of opportunities to encourage others.

Being who you are and doing what God puts on your heart to do resonates with people and I think they’re drawn to that. I guess what I’m saying is being real is your best “marketing tool.” And when your heart is to glorify God, He’ll give you plenty of opportunities to do that.

Parting words?

Enjoy the journey. No matter what you do, look up and see God smile as you do what He created you to do. Find your passion and watch God work in and through you to accomplish more than you can dream.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Awards Series: Pulitzer Prize

Kelly Klepfer writes from the lovely state of Iowa. She tends to live in the even lovelier state of Denial. She is the mother of teens and young adults which may have something to do with the denial thing. Her husband loves to listen to her endless writing tales and he smiles and nods, a lot. She currently works on two novels and scads of articles and short fiction.





What do the sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial and President Kennedy have in common, beyond the Washington D.C connection? Now toss in Harper Lee, Marilynne Robinson and Annie Dillard.

Stumped? Now check out the title of this article, if you haven't already done so.

John F. Kennedy, the only president to win a Pulitzer Prize took the award in 1957 for "Profiles in Courage." Daniel Chester French designed the honor's public service gold medal. Harper Lee won for 1961's "To Kill a Mockingbird", Dillard for "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek" (1975), and " Gilead" earned the 2005 Pulitzer for Robinson.

After studying the origin and many details of the lofty Pulitzer Prize, my head aches from cramming the gained knowledge into my gray matter. Fascinating facts surround the Queen Mother of writing awards.

Though most of us wouldn't scoff at the US$10,000 prize, or the certificate, there are prizes offering more money. But none carry the weight of the Pulitzer reputation.

The word distinguished is used to describe a Pulitzer worthy piece. I veered off to check out the actual definition for distinguish. The
http://onlinedictionary.datasegment.com/ states it thus: To recognize or discern by marks, signs, or characteristic quality or qualities; to know and discriminate (anything) from other things with which it might be confounded; as, to distinguish the sound of a drum. [1913 Webster's]

Twenty-one categories make up the annual Pulitzer Prize opportunities. A public service category awards a gold medal to the nominating newspaper. The other twenty categories award a certificate, which is, no doubt, a great ice-breaker, "Hey, baby, wanna come up and see my Pulitzer Certificate?" as well as the cash prize of US$10,000.

Several sitcoms and movies have "awarded" fictitious characters a Pulitzer including Lois Lane and Homer Simpson. Homer puts a whole different spin on distinguished, but it gives me hope. If Homer can pull it off, we all have a chance, right?

One of the most common errors when referring to a Pulitzer Prize is the mispronunciation of its founder and namesake's name. Pulitzer is pronounced "PULL-it-zer" not "Pew-lit-sir" like I've always referred to it. I have trouble with nuclear also. My problem may result from the lack of a Hungarian bloodline, but that would only be an excuse for Pulitzer, so I suppose not.

The second common mistake with a Pulitzer is the claim of being a nominee. Publishers "enter" work but the Pulitzer juries choose the nominated finalists from all the entries. Usually only three finalists or nominees are chosen per category. So should you ever meet a person claiming to be a Pulitzer Prize nominee, you may want to check it out before agreeing to let him be your agent especially if he quotes you a cost to read your words.

Months of reading, watching performances and jury meetings go into the award of a Pulitzer Prize. After the initial June 4, 1917 ceremony, the recipients are chosen by an independent and anonymous board, and announced each April. Very few changes have occurred over the years, with most original category changes being category mergers or name changes. Internet reporting was added in 1999 and music was broadened in 1998. Though a work may not be popular, several plays have been off-Broadway, once a Pulitzer Prize is awarded, the popularity of a work increases. A simple ceremony is held in the law library rotunda every May, on the campus of Columbia University. The Pulitzer Prize board has refused paid offers to film the event, and suggestions to grow the event into a grander presentation.

More than 2,400 entries for the 21 available awards are submitted each year. Each entry requires a $50.00 fee. In the beginning of the prize year 102 judges are appointed. Seventy-seven editors, publishers, educators and writers meet in early March to judge entries in the 14 journalism categories. Early April brings the entire board together to the Pulitzer World Room. In the weeks prior to this meeting, each board member has read the nominated works, listened to the nominated music and attended the performances or watched videos of the plays.

The discussions commence and last for two days. At three o'clock in the afternoon, on the scheduled day, a conference is held, and the announcements are made, while the media world waits and watches, hoping to be able to celebrate the honor of writing a Pulitzer Prize winning piece.

If a category lacks prize winning entries, nothing is awarded in that category. Apparently 1964 was a dry year in the creativity department because fiction, drama and music awards were not given.

Controversy is not absent from the released list of winners.

Nor was Joseph Pulitzer, the man, without controversy. A tireless political and human rights activist, he slipped into "yellow journalism" for a short season. Mr. Pulitzer's "the World" entered a circulation war with William Randolph Hearst's "Journal." Four months after swaying Congress to respond to their pressure in 1898, Pulitzer and his newspaper became more restrained.

Pulitzer's 1904 words share his thoughts on journalism, and they end up being little bit prophetic. Were these words really spoken a full century ago? "Our republic and its press will rise or fall together. An able, disinterested, public-spirited press, with trained intelligence to know the right and courage to do it, can preserve that public virtue without which popular government is a sham and a mockery. A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will produce in time a people as base as itself. The power to mould the future of the Republic will be in the hands of the journalist of future generations."



Further information and primary source. http://www.pulitzer.org/
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulitzer_Prizeand other internet and print sources were consulted.

Monday, April 02, 2007

Alton Gansky~ Revisited

Alton Gansky is a fulltime writer living in the High Desert area of southern California. His work has been a Christy Award finalist and an Angel Award winner. Alton also served as senior pastor for three Baptist churches in California, serving over twenty years in pulpit ministry. Prior to entering the ministry, he worked as a firefighter, spent a decade in architecture, and been a business man. A popular speaker, Alton has taught such diverse groups as pastors, churches, church planters, and budding writers. He holds a B.A. and M.A. in biblical studies and was granted an honorary doctorate.



You have two projects just released. Tell us a little about each.

In January, RiverOak released CRIME SCENE JERUSALEM, a sorta crime novel. The story behind the book is interesting. Mike Nappa, who was with Cook Communications (the umbrella organization over RiverOak and several other imprints) contacted me with an idea. It’s unusual for an editor to call and say, “I have this idea and I think you’re the man for the job.” He described the basic idea and asked if I would consider writing it. I said, “Of course not. That story will never work. I can’t see a way to make the premise believable.” Mike is nothing if not bulldog persistent. “I bet a man of your sizable talent could do it.” (Okay, Mike knows I’m a sucker for flattery.) “It won’t work, Mike. It’s an impossible scenario.” He paused. “So you’ll try. I can expect a proposal?” Sigh. “I’ll give it some thought.” “Great,” says he. “We’re going to bill it as ‘apologetic fiction.’” “Great. I’ve been apologizing for my fiction for years.”

I let the idea marinate for awhile, asked a few what if questions, then pulled together a proposal with a couple of chapters. They liked it. Bought it. That put me on the hook. A couple of chapters is one thing; a whole book is another. Long story made short: I fell in love with the character, the setting, and challenge.

In a nutshell, Max Odom is a troubled forensics cop who is sent to Israel to teach at a forensics academy and pick up a few tips from them. He doesn’t want to go. He has unfinished business that may cost him his career, but he goes when it’s made clear he has no other choice. He walks from the lobby of a 21st century Jerusalem hotel and exits onto a 1st century Jerusalem street. He assumes he’s had a stroke and is imagining everything. His guide presses him into service looking at a first century crime. Of course, the crime is the arrest, trial and crucifixion of Jesus. Like a cat on a leash, he’s towed from place to place where his detective instincts take over.

Then his life gets tough.

The fun part was also the most challenging. I had to figure out how Jesus would speak to a 21st century man. We know how He spoke to 1st century people, but what would (and how would) He say things today? That turned out to be the most significant thing for me. It changed my view of Jesus,

The other book you mention is a nonfiction work: 40 DAYS—ENCOUNTERING JESUS BETWEEN THE RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION. The publisher, Broadman Holman, initially planned to release it last year but postponed shipping. It came out a few weeks ago and on its heels the Discovery Channel debuted the documentary The Lost Tomb of Jesus. It may be the best marketing my book could receive. I’m doing a host of interviews over the next few weeks talking about my book and challenging the erroneous conclusions of the documentary.

40 DAYS takes a close look at the twelve recorded appearances of Christ after the resurrection and the lessons behind them. So far, it’s getting a good response from readers.

On your website you mention the release of your nonfiction work on the heels of your latest novel, CRIME SCENE JERUSALEM, turned out to be an unexpected blessing. How so?

When my editor told me that they were delaying the book, I began a pity party complete with whining and cat kicking (the cat kicking part is made up). I complained to my agent. I complained to my editor. Nothing doing. It was delayed almost a year. Now it seems that the Discovery Channel documentary may be setting up a need and hunger for the material in my book. And to think I wasted all that good whining.

Which gives you more satisfaction, writing fiction or non?

If I answer quickly, I’d say fiction. Nonfiction is difficult for me. Partly because it uses a different part of the brain; partly because I fear misleading people; and partly because I tend to sound like a professor. I have to work hard to set aside my predisposition for pretentiousness. My goal is to enlighten and encourage. Hoity-toity doesn’t cut it for me. I aim squarely at the person in the pew.

Does writing fiction help you to write better non-fiction? If so, how? Is the opposite true as well?

In some ways, but they’re not the same art form. Certainly, writing is writing, but there are differences. In nonfiction, I’m not free to make up towns and people. In fiction, I can do whatever I want as long as it rings true and doesn’t contradict known facts.

What’s odd is this: I always thought I’d be a nonfiction writer. Early on, I tried to sell some short stories and met with phenomenal failure. I did sell articles, but no fiction. Now, years later, I produce far more fiction than nonfiction. Of course, in school, I hated typing and English. Go figure.

Now, I try to write a nonfiction book every twelve to eighteen months. If I’m being transparent in this interview, then I should tell you I promise myself I’ll never again write a nonfiction book. Then I do. Go figure again.

Is it true it's more lucrative to write non-fiction than novels?

Give me a sec. I have to look up “lucrative.” Back. No. In the CBA, publishers offer smaller advances on nonfiction than fiction (usually—there are always exceptions). If you have a bestseller, say THE PURPOSE DRIVEN LIFE, or you name is Max Lucado, then yes. For we mere mortals, it just ain’t necessarily so.

When I think of your novels, what stands out is the tight writing, unusual twists and more than anything your penchant for frequent and unusual metaphors. Can you give some tips on how to come up with good metaphors for our own WIPS?

Probably, but I shouldn’t. The thing professional reviewers ding me on is the metaphors. For some reason, they don’t like anything that’s a tad different. Fortunately for my sanity, I don’t care what professional reviewers think. I care what reader’s think.

I’m not sure where my “fear crawled up her spine like spiders” metaphors come from. I try to find new ways of saying the same old thing. “Her heart raced in her chest” is fine, but “Her heart stuttered” is stronger. The danger is going so far it becomes laughable: “Her heart shook like Jell-O in an earthquake.” At that point, the believer stops trusting he writer.

Is there an up and coming novelist you're particularly excited about?

Brandt Dodson (Original Sin; The Root of All Evil) has a unique voice and is reviving the PI story. T.L. Hines (Walking Lazarus). Those two come to mind.

What are you reading right now?

I’m reading a couple of books I’ve been asked to endorse. On my to-read list are Michael Crichton’s Next, Dean Koontz’s Forever Odd, and in nonfiction, Samuel Chand/Cecil Murphey’s Furturing. I also have a three foot high stack of magazines to peruse.

What do you think is the biggest mistake aspiring authors make in their pursuit of publication?

Writing for what they think the market wants. Many writers want to be the next Peretti, Jenkins, or Blackstock. We don’t need more Peretti’s—we have one. And we have a Jenkins and a Blackstock. What we need are new and fresh voices. Write what moves you. Everything else is just work.

If you could go back to the adorable little Al Gansky just starting out as an aspiring novelist, what advice would you give him?

I’d say, “Sit down, squirt. You think your natural good looks and genius level IQ is going to get your through life. They won’t. Thing one: Start something new. Thing two: Finish what you start. And always remember, no one ever hit a homerun from the dugout. Oh yeah, one more thing: Words change the world.”

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Sunday Devotion: Spit Shined

Cindy Sproles

Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything. – James 1:2-4

As a child, I had a friend whose dad was a retired military man. If the truth be known, he was probably a little OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder) as well, but either way it was such fun to go to their house. He’d join us outside as we played in the field and oversee our games. He made sure everyone played fairly and if we happened to be short a person, he’d join the fun.


One day his daughter and I ran into the house to retrieve a baseball glove. “It’ll be in the back left-hand floor of the closet.” he shouted as we ran up the front stairs. Jill threw open the closet door and dove in head first to find the glove. To my surprise, hanging in a shoe rack on the closet door were these beautiful black leather shoes. I could see my reflection in the shine.


“Are these real?” I asked as she pulled the glove from the closet.
Jill laughed hysterically. “Weird, huh? Dad spit-shines ‘em. It’s something he learned in the service.” I had never seen a pair of shoes that held such beauty. It was a picture to behold and at every angle you looked, they glistened.

“Dad’s freaky about his closet. Look at his clothes.” Every shirt was aligned perfectly according to color and sleeve length and every pair of shoes sported that glossy look. “He likes everything in order and shined. He calls it spit-shined. We tease him all the time.”


When we craft our words on paper, we continually buff and polish them until they glisten. When we’re finished the pages hold a work of art – beautiful to read and see. God does the same for us. He is constantly rubbing us to bring out the shine. I suppose for a lack of better words – “ We’re spit-shined.” Daily, we run upon odds and ends that stress and frustrate us. If only life were only that simple our troubles would be over. Unfortunately, it isn’t and if it were, we’d never be brought to the shiny luster which lies beneath the surface. Our Father knows what we’re capable of – after all, He created us. He knows what it takes to make us shine. Sometimes it may be a simple bump in the road while other times, we need to experience some prodding before we figure out the ability lies within us. In order to achieve that perfect glow, we have to be polished; rubbed and rubbed until the shine appears.

Won’t you allow God to work on your luster and bring you to the point where you reflect Him beautifully? Spit-shined.