Get a Free Ebook

Five Inspirational Truths for Authors

Try our Video Classes

Downloadable in-depth learning, with pdf slides

Find out more about My Book Therapy

We want to help you up your writing game. If you are stuck, or just want a boost, please check us out!

Showing posts with label christian fiction author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christian fiction author. Show all posts

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Be a Voice, Not an Echo

by Rachel Hauck

Writing in the Christian market pushes us to go beyond the realm of this life to find meaning and purpose for our characters. While we are not writing sermons and devotionals set in fictional places with fictional characters, we are imitating life.

For the Christian author, Jesus is very much a part of our every day life. We want to express Him in some way in our stories, through the lives of our characters. But often our stories sound hokey, canned, full of Christianese. How we talk in the foyer at church, or in Sunday school class does not translate into fiction.

Monday, August 01, 2016

4 Platform Building Lessons from Ephesians - Guest Post by Joan Campbell

Joan Campbell lives in Johannesburg with her husband and daughters. She is inspired by South Africa’s vibrant mix of culture, language, music and folklore. Her country’s history also impacts her writing, with the themes of discrimination and reconciliation woven through her fantasy novels. 

 *** 

I’ll just come right out and admit it. The constant advice to ‘build a platform’ used to irritate me. A lot. I followed it not because I wanted to, but only in the hopes of impressing publishers. 

Once I signed a publishing contract my attitude shifted. With a greater incentive to build an audience interested in my books, I began to pay attention to how other authors tackled this. I saw plenty of creativity, audience engagement, powerful messages and savvy use of social media. 

Inspirational, right? 

 Well…no. Instead, I felt more discouraged and uncertain on how to improve my half-hearted efforts.

That’s when I began to pray about it. I hadn’t ever thought of seeking God’s guidance, mainly because I didn’t think of him as a modern ‘platform guru’. Yet almost immediately I received the direction I sought through a passage from Ephesians 4. These four keys to platform building are changing my outlook, turning something I’ve always done rather resentfully into a joyful part of serving God. 

 Engaging others is part of our calling 

“Therefore I… beg you to lead a life worthy of your calling for you have been called by God.” (Eph. 4:1) 

As a Christian writer, I have a message and ministry from God. I might prefer to huddle over my computer, working only on my manuscripts, but that’s not all God calls me to. He calls us to love others and speak truth into their lives. Our platforms are a powerful tool to do that, be it in the form of a newsletter, blog, Facebook post or speaking engagement. 

Work as a team to build God’s kingdom 

“Always keep yourselves united in the Holy Spirit, and bind yourselves together with peace. We are all one body, we have the same Spirit, and we have all been called to the same glorious future. There is only one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and there is only one God and Father, who is over us all and in us all and living through us all.” (Eph. 4:3-6) 

In the competitive world of publishing, it’s easy to lose sight of the fact that—as Christian writers—we are called to build God’s Kingdom. To do that we need to unite and pull together by encouraging and supporting each other, promoting each others’ books and doing all we can to get the message of Christ’s love into the world. We are a team. 

 Let our uniqueness and gifts shine through 

“However, he has given each one of us a special gift according to the generosity of Christ. He is the one who gave these gifts to the church: the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, and the pastors and teachers.” (Eph. 4:7,11) 

 As much as we are a team, we are also wonderfully unique. We have our own voice, own stories and message, own audience and own spiritual gifts. If our gift is teaching, this will be reflected in our posts and blogs. If it is evangelism or encouragement, that will be the thrust of our messages. Our platforms are not an end in itself, they are an extension of the unique ministry God has for each of us.  

Be authentic and vulnerable 

 “So put away all falsehood and tell your neighbour the truth because we belong to each other.” (Eph. 4:25) 

In our scramble for attention, it can be easy to project something other than the truth, but God calls us to be honest and authentic in our engagement with people. That is the vulnerable place where the real connection happens between us and our followers/readers, and where our words have the greatest impact. 

Ephesians 4:29 tells us that our words should be an encouragement to those who hear them. I love this verse in The Message, which says our words should be gifts to the world. What an honour that God has given us words to write and speak and share. We need the courage to do this not only in ways comfortable to us, but also in ways that challenge us. Platform building is not about us garnering readers and acclaim. It is about being true to God’s calling to bring words of truth, hope and salvation to the world. 

 (Verses from The New Living Translation) 

 Connect with Joan on her Website, Facebook, Goodreads and Twitter (she says she's still working on her attitude towards tweets). 

 *** 

 Joan’s Books 

Chains of Gwyndorr is the first book of The Poison Tree Path Chronicles and published by Enclave Publishing. Joan started writing this book after she read The Chronicles of Narnia to her two young daughters and realised the powerful way in which a story can convey redemption. 
Buy it on Amazon

Legends of the Loreteller, the trilogy’s companion book, is a collection of short stories set in Tirragyl, the fantasy world of the The Poison Tree Path Chronicles. 
Available as a FREE DOWNLOAD on Joan’s website 

Encounters: Life Changing Moments with Jesus brings readers face to face with Jesus, through stories from the gospels told in the voice of those Jesus encountered. The book is enhanced with reflections, prayers and art work.

Buy it on Amazon.


* * * * * 
Ronie Kendig is an award-winning, bestselling author who grew up an Army brat. After twenty-five years of marriage, she and her hunky hero husband have a full life with their children, a Maltese Menace, and a retired military working dog in Northern Virginia. 

Find Ronie online:
     Website: www.roniekendig.com
     Facebook (www.facebook.com/rapidfirefiction)
     Twitter (@roniekendig)
     Goodreads (www.goodreads.com/RonieK)
     Instagram (@kendigronie)
     Pinterest (http://www.pinterest.com/roniek/)






Friday, January 16, 2015

NLB Horton's Adventurous Journey


How convoluted was your path to your first published book?

Eugene Peterson described my journey well with the title of his great devotional book, A Long Obedience in the Same Direction. I wrote all my life: for every school newspaper and while owning a marketing and advertising company. I am an avid reader. When I moved to a mountaintop after retiring, I gave myself the gift of finally sitting down to write fiction.


What is one of the more unique or strange life experiences that has given you an extra oomph in your writing?


I returned to Dallas Theological Seminary for my Master of Arts in Biblical Studies, and embarked on an archaeological survey as part of my degree. I was under heavy-artillery fire from Syria, machine-gun fire out of Lebanon, and a camo- painted Israeli Defense Force bomber. I stood at the edge of a dig pit in far northern Israel with my family at my side. Archaeologist Grace Madison was born that day in late May 2009, and we’ve been inseparable ever since. 


Do you experience self-doubt regarding your work, or struggle with writers’ block or angst driven head-banging against walls?


“No” to both. And my answer has nothing whatsoever to do with pride or self-confidence, but rather rests in the knowledge that God has pre-ordained my path, and my success is in His hands. My job is to apply all my gifts to every aspect of writing and publishing. The results are His.


What gives you the greatest buzz regarding your writing career?


When a reader responds to what I like most about my work, reviews are a blast. I am overjoyed when someone picks out Grace’s tenacity; her very daily, intimate, conversational relationship with God; or her fierceness about her beliefs and family.


I also love edits, believe it or not. My first edit was so rough it looked as if the editor spilled red ink down the right column of the document. That “edit” column went on FOREVER. But edits transform my manuscripts. They come alive and mature into the powerful, funny, encouraging, entertaining stories I want them to be. I could never do this on my own and am so thankful for a wonderful team. 


Describe where you write, your rituals or creative triggers, or other quirks about your process.


Even when the children were very young, and I was homeschooling them, I had a home office. My current perch overlooks a high mountain valley, and I watch seasons change and weather roll in from my desk chair. I do not write anywhere else. 

Because my work is international suspense, though, I take notes everywhere. This fall, I traveled to confirm details for manuscript three and shoot photography and gather marketing material for The Brothers’ Keepers. I came home with 1,489 photos and a notebook full of ideas that enhance in my writing process.


My only rituals are a small pot of tea and a neatly organized desk.

What is the most difficult part of putting together a book?

I only write about places I’ve been and know well, so I sometimes omit important bits and pieces. I subconsciously assume the reader knows what I know—and that’s a mistake. Getting just enough detail to move the story along without bogging down the reader is an instinct I still lack. (This is where the editors come in.)

The process of writing, editing, and polishing is manageable, but creating the title is a nightmare. In my old career, I dreaded writing photo captions and headlines. My literary version of that task is creating titles. “Lord, spare me the titles!”


Tell us about The Brothers’ Keepers.


I’d love to! Grace Madison is in Brussels cataloging looted antiquities when her son’s bride is attacked in Switzerland. Her day careens from bad to catastrophic when daughter Maggie disappears in France. Because of recent family history (When Camels Fly), she suspects that mayhem is afoot.


She summons her family to Paris, where Maggie was last seen. Maggie’s love interests—one as all-American as a golden retriever, the other a movie-star handsome Mossad associate—join family and friends heeding Grace’s call for help. They follow Maggie’s trail, one that leads directly to an ancient relic that passed through King Solomon, the Emperor Constantine, and Reformist Martin Luther.


At the end of their four-thousand-year-old trail that crosses three continents, they discover that to save themselves, they must first rescue an old friend. If he’ll let them.


Can you tell us more about your lead character?


Espionage is an uncomfortable fit for my protagonist, Grace Madison, a middle-aged archaeologist who describes herself as “the plodding type.” Readers refer to her as Hercules in a burkha, Yenta-like, and hysterically funny. More than one has said she wants to be Grace.


Grace’s adult family is intelligent and educated, committed to God and each other, and protective of her. But because they use their God-given gifts to the extreme and have interesting careers of their own, she is thrust into life-threatening situations as she tries to save everyone she holds dear.


This woman of faith has survived two novels: When Camels Fly and The Brothers’ Keepers. I’m not letting her off the hook for at least three more.

                          
NLB Horton returned to writing fiction after an award-winning career in journalism and marketing as well as earning her Master of Arts degree in Biblical Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary. She has surveyed Israeli and Jordanian archaeological digs, tossed a tarantula from her skiff into the Amazon after training with an Incan shaman, driven uneventfully through Rome and consumed gallons of afternoon tea while traveling across five continents.

For more information about NLB Horton, visit www.nlbhorton.com, become a fan on Facebook (NLB-Horton) or follow her on Twitter (NLBHorton) or Pinterest (nlbhorton). 

Friday, February 21, 2014

Wisdom from the Multi-Pubbed. A Visit with Robin Lee Hatcher...

by Kelly Klepfer

Tell us a bit about your current project.

A Promise Kept opens as Allison Kavanagh arrives at the house her aunt Emma bequeathed to her — a log home in the mountains. Her marriage of more than twenty years has ended in divorce because of her husband’s alcoholism. She was so certain God had promised to save her marriage, but obviously she was wrong. Now she is moving from Boise to Kings Meadow to start life afresh and find a way to heal from her heartbreak.

Like Allison, my marriage ended in divorce because of my husband’s alcoholism. I was devastated because I’d been so convinced God had promised me He would save our marriage. I had believed His promise through many difficult times, but it hadn’t come to pass. I knew God didn’t lie. Therefore, I must have misunderstood.

But God had many things to teach me in the following years, including that He answers prayers in totally unexpected ways and in His own time, not mine. One of those unexpected ways was realized when my husband and I were remarried more than five years later. God used the divorce to save our marriage! How amazing is that!


What two or three things would you do differently if you were starting your publishing career today?


The first is an easy one for me. I would begin writing Christian fiction rather than having 30 general market books published first.


Second, I would start with a better publisher who actually edited my work before releasing it into the world.

What one issue makes you struggle the most as an author? How do you handle it?


Procrastination. It's so easy to let a million other things distract me when I should be writing. The only way to handle it is to put my behind in the chair, put my fingers on the keyboard, and begin writing. Like so many other things in life, it is an act of will, whether I feel like it or not.


What one issue ignites your passion? Does your passion fuel your writing? What would you do with your life if you didn't write?


When the characters come alive to me and begin telling me their stories. That fuels my passion.


If I wasn't a writer, I would want to be an actress. Although memorizing lines wouldn't be as easy for me now as it was in my twenties, the last time I performed in a play.

We are all about journeys...unique ones at that. How convoluted was your path to your first published book? Share some highlights or lowlights from your path to publication.  


It wasn't very convoluted at all. After a series of events conspired to make me realize I wanted to try to write a novel, I sat down with pen and legal pad and began. Eight months later, I finished it. I mailed out 21 query letters (this was back in the dark ages). Mostly I received rejections, but the first publisher who requested the full manuscript offered me a contract. Several months later, I signed the contract. Three months after that, the publisher went bankrupt. Another six months passed until I sold both my first and second books to another publisher. They were released in January and February of 1984.

Do you still experience self-doubts regarding your work, or struggle in a particular area such as writers block or angst driven head-banging against walls? Please share some helpful overcoming hints that you’ve discovered.


I experience self-doubt all the time. Even after more than seventy books, I still have the feeling that my career is a fluke. I've learned to accept these feelings as part of my creative personality. I don't have to like it, but it doesn't make me afraid as it once did. Another thing I learned is that around the halfway mark in every book I start muttering that I don't have enough story and I'll never be able to make this all work out in the end and whatever made me want to write novels when selling shoes at the mall would be so much simpler. LOL! Again, the only way to overcome is to keep moving forward. Sort of like life.

Have you ever had one of those awkward writer moments you’d like to share with us, the ones wherein you get “the look” from the normals? Example, you stand at a knife display at the sporting goods store and ask the clerk which would be the best to use to disembowel a six foot man…please do tell.


Many, many years ago, I had been struggling all day trying to come up with a particular phrase. It stayed just beyond my conscious thought. In the middle of the night, it came to me. I was awake in an instant, bolted upright in bed, and blurted the phrase aloud, startling my husband out of a sound sleep. He has never doubted the strangeness of his wife from that night on.

What event/person has most changed you as a writer? How?


The Sunday I knew God was calling me out of my general market publishing career and into writing Christian fiction as a means of pleasing Him.


What piece of writing have you done that you’re particularly proud of and why? (Doesn't have to be one of your books or even published.)


While I don't have favorite books—each one was written because it captured my imagination at the time—there are a few books that have touched large numbers of readers in a special way, probably because they came from a deeper corner of my heart: The Forgiving Hour, Ribbon of Years, and Beyond the Shadows. Those stories have opened doors for ministry and allowed me to pray for hurting people all around the country and the world. I believe A Promise Kept will join those other three in that respect.


What aspect of writing was the most difficult for you to grasp/conquer? How did you overcome it?


I used to try to plot out my books the way I heard other people did it. You know. Writing detailed synopses and using charts that showed goals and motivations. Trouble is, I am a total seat of the pants writer and those things made me want to bang my head against the desk. If I figure out the story ahead of time, I don't want to write it because I already know how it ends. So then I want to write a different story instead.


I had to get to the place where I accepted my process as legitimate. Part of that process is that I want to get up each morning wondering where my story and where my characters are going to take me next. I'm on a journey of discovery as I write, just as I hope my readers will be as they read.


There is no right way to write a book. Every writer has to discover what works best for him or her.

What is the first thing you do when you begin a new book?


Set up Scrivener for the new novel. Name my characters. Write first person autobiographies of the main characters.

What is the most difficult part of pulling together a book? Ex. Do you have saggy middles, soggy characters, soupy plots during your first drafts…if so, how do you shape it up?


I had to laugh as I read this question. I'm pretty sure I have saggy middles, soggy characters, and soupy plots during my first drafts. How do I shape it up? Allow me to share a few lines from the movie, Shakespeare in Love.


Philip Henslowe: Mr. Fennyman, allow me to explain about the theatre business. The natural condition is one of insurmountable obstacles on the road to imminent disaster.
Hugh Fennyman: So what do we do?
Philip Henslowe: Nothing. Strangely enough, it all turns out well.
Hugh Fennyman: How?
Philip Henslowe: I don't know. It's a mystery.


So right there in that last line is my answer to your question about how I pull my books together: "I don't know. It's a mystery."


I guess that's part of what keeps me writing story after story. Some of what I do remains a mystery, even to me.

Best-selling novelist Robin Lee Hatcher is known for her heartwarming and emotionally charged stories of faith, courage, and love. She discovered her vocation after many years of reading everything she could put her hands on, including the backs of cereal boxes and ketchup bottles. Winner of the Christy, the RITA, the Carol, the Inspirational Reader’s Choice, and many other awards, Robin is also a recipient of the prestigious RWA Lifetime Achievement Award. She is the author of 70 novels and novellas with over five million copies in print.


Robin enjoys being with her family, spending time in the beautiful Idaho outdoors, reading books that make her cry, and watching romantic movies. Her main hobby (when time allows) is knitting, and she has a special love for making prayer shawls. A mother and grandmother, Robin and her husband make their home on the outskirts of Boise, sharing it with Poppet, the high-maintenance Papillon, and Princess Pinky, the DC (demon cat).