Sunday, September 30, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION

Coming Up This Week

Monday

Marion Ueckermann: The Hook

Tuesday

Donna Fletcher Crow

Wednesday

Jennifer Rogers Spinola: Golden Leaves

Thursday

Sandra Orchard

Friday Devotion

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New Book Releases

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, is an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jo-Anne Berthelsen's non-fiction memoir, Soul Friend: The story of a shared spiritual journey, is an October 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Shirley Corder's book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for Your Journey through Breast Cancer, is an October 2012 release from Revell.

Kathi Macias' book, Unexpected Christmas Hero, is an October 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Upcoming Book Releases

Paula Vince's book, The Greenfield Legacy, a collaboration with Aussie authors Rose Dee, Amanda Deed and Meredith Resce, will be a November 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Victorian true-crime set in England, A Tincture of Murder, Book 4 in The Lord Danvers Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2012 release from Greenbrier Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Clerical mystery set in England, An Unholy Communion, Book 3 in The Monastery Murders series, will be a January 2013 release from Monarch Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's romantic suspense set in England, A Jane Austen Encounter, Book 3 in The Elizabeth and Richard Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2013 release from Stonehouse Ink.

To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.

Friday, September 28, 2012

DEVOTION: When God Is Silent by Ray Hawkins




Time…around lunch time
Place…A mountain lookout.

There are times, Lord, when I feel the heaviness of your silence.
Many times I would love to have you say something loud, clear, unmistakeable!. Your scriptures have been your signpost, your manual for living, still . . .

What has unsettled me lately is the claim by some that they regularly hear your voice. It sounds so spiritual. It gives authority. It impresses. The trouble is, so much of what they say is shallow, sometimes contradictory to your word. I also find it offensive when their life style is more in the grey areas than in the light thrown by your Word.
However, people are attentive, impressed by them.
Am I jealous Lord?
Do I want acclaim?
Authority?
No!
I do, however, want to know you in a deeper way.
Lord, at least speak to me from your word today as I read the life of Abraham.

Guess what I’ve noticed? In 175 years of his life it is recorded that you only spoke to him 7 times. In between he had to walk in your silences. Is that what’s meant by you directing our steps? To trust your integrity to move us, overrule, to fulfil your purposes. Your silences are then a statement of trust in your people.
Wow! 
Is that the wonder of faith which you call on us to exercise?
Maybe Lord, I need to spend more time hearing what your Scriptures say instead of worrying about what others are on about.
Thanks for ‘speaking’ to me.
Amen!
Ray Hawkins is retired after 30 years as a minister. 
He is author of three books of Biblical meditations;
for Children, Marriage, and the Cross. 
Check the website he shares with his wife, author Mary Hawkins.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Our Forever Family

As I write this I'm about to board a plane and fly off to teach at another writers' conference. I do this several times a year, so it isn't really a unique experience--and yet it is. At each conference I meet different people, all individuals with dreams and hopes and aspirations, all creatures stamped with the image of their Creator. As a result, I take my assignment as speaker/teacher seriously.

This is especially true as I find more and more conference attendees showing up from countries other than my own. It is fascinating to chat with these people and discover that though we have some differences, we have much more in common than not.

Why is that? True, we share a dream and passion to write, and I don't discount that connection. But because I teach almost exclusively at Christian events, the primary connection I find with others in attendance, whether from my country or otherwise, is that we share the same Father. Being part of that "forever family" goes beyond any cultural or racial or economic or political issues imaginable!

I fully expect to experience that same connection when I arrive at my next teaching venue and begin to meet and greet and connect with others who are even now flying or driving in from various locations. My prayer is that God will unite our hearts in a way that will supersede any differences the world might throw our way. I just wish you all could join us! Then again, it won't be long until every single member of our "forever family" will be together in that heavenly venue where our Father sits on the throne, waiting to welcome each and every one of us. See you there, my beloved brothers and sisters!

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Home At Last


Over the past few weeks I have described my journey towards Christianity. I haven't included everything, particularly those events which were recounted to me by third parties. Members of my extended family have had many spiritual encounters ranging from "sensing" a presence in a room to actual physical contact. I don't want to scare anyone, but it is vital that we understand that the spiritual realm is a real place. The Bible makes it very clear that we "wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high [places]." Ephesians 6:12.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

A Kiwi Goes to ACFW Dallas



From left to right: Lucy Morgan-Jones from Australia, Valerie Comer from Canada, Me from New Zealand, Catherine West from Bermuda.

Love is traipsing around the entirety of San Francisco International Airport trying to find Peanut Butter M&Ms. At least, that's what I'll be telling my husband when I get home. To which he'll reply that love is letting his wife jet off to the other side of the world for nine days to pursue her writing dreams, leaving him with a too-busy-Daddy-no-time-to-stop ninja. He wins, but still, peanut butter M&Ms are harder to find than one might think in SFO!

I'm writing this sitting, waiting for my flight. Which kind of explains the ahem fact that this post wasn't up when it was supposed to be. Between having two Tuesday the 18ths, spending four days in conference land, and then a lightening quick shopping stop in San Francisco I had forgotten what day it was. Or more accurately, connected the day with writing something for here.

It would need about a ten part series to even start to cover ACFW (American Christian Fiction Writers') Dallas. Probably even more when you come from overseas and so have accent and language differences as well!

It was such a blast to get to catch up with some of the others from our blog in Dallas. The journey toward (hopeful!) publication is one that is full of challenges, especially when you are trying to get the foot in the door when you don't even live in the same country. So getting to have time in person with people who face the same thing themselves is so much fun.

The good news is that it looks like the market may be slowly opening up even further to considering international settings. With the reach of e-books growing, publishers are seeing new opportunities to target audiences that they ordinarily wouldn't be able to reach. I had one editor express an interest in seeing a manuscript I have that was originally set in New Zealand. Three years ago in Denver I was told that in order for it to even have a chance it would need to be rewritten to be set in the US!

I had some amazing meetings with agents and editors. Such an answer to prayer, since when I left New Zealand, I had a bit of a chat to God about how I really needed some sort of direction from Him as to whether this is something he wants me to keep pursuing or if it's something I should put aside for awhile. He opened a lot of doors so for now I'm taking it as a yes, keep going :)

How about you? Has God been opening or closing any doors in your life recently?

This is the "room with a view" Kara Isaac stayed in in Dallas, courtesy of the Hyatt Regency DFW. It would be fair to say the phrase means something slightly different in New Zealand :) When she's not writing, Kara loves hanging out with her husband and mile-a-minute one year-old affectionately known as the ninja, house hunting (ninja needs more space) and attempting to find things (ninja loves hide-and-seek).  You can find Kara on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/KaraIsaacWriter or on Twitter at https://twitter.com/KaraIsaac  

Monday, September 24, 2012

YOUR PERSONAL BLOG

Why blog? What do you really want to say?

If you are not well known as an author or don't really have a platform eg music or speaking then maybe it's not a good idea to use your own name if you want web surfers to find you. Now if you're only wanting to reach friends, family etc then that doesn't apply.

What is your passion or your expertise? A blog title which alludes to that would be a great help to help those interested in that to find you.
If possible address that subject. And do it regularly.

As I write romance, I figured my blog should be about that. Hah! As not many folk would find me by name, I decided I'd spell it out so, http://inspirationalromance.blogspot.com came to be.  But should I only stick with interviewing authors who write in that genre? Yes I do that, but decided I could also include real life stories of men and women who believed God had a real part in leading them together. And so many have opened their hearts and shared their unique situations. Some have even shared failed experiences, but where forgiveness and Christian grace rebuilt their relationship. These have been touching stories. I love stories that resonate, that we can relate to. I also ask experts in the field to share their advice on the expectations of marriage. These have been extremely helpful.

But with all this I felt discouraged because I didn't get many comments.Was I wasting my time? Who was I to write about such things? I weighed up the idea of quitting, but one day I hit the overview button and came across the stats. I could hardly believe what they told me! Viewers from all over the world were reading my blog; USA, Australia, England, Russia, Germany, and several Muslim countries were there. I'm up to 11,000 viewers in the past year. I gave thanks to the Lord in the discovery of an audience of real people out there.

That told me viewers read but don't always comment. What an encouragement. I hope this will encourage you as you share your thoughts, ideas, advice or stories. Who knows who will be uplifted by your blog?

* Rita Stella Galieh is an Australian author of two published novels with books II and III of a trilogy in the pipeline. She continues looking for more material for her weekly blog.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION

Coming Up This Week

Monday

Rita Galieh

Tuesday

Kara Isaac

Wednesday

Paul Baines

Thursday

Kathi Macias

Friday Devotion

Ray Hawkins: When God Is Silent

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Upcoming Book Releases

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, will be an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jo-Anne Berthelsen's non-fiction memoir, Soul Friend: The story of a shared spiritual journey, will be an October 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Shirley Corder's book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for Your Journey through Breast Cancer, will be an October 2012 release from Revell.

Kathi Macias' book, Unexpected Christmas Hero, will be an October 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Paula Vince's book, The Greenfield Legacy, a collaboration with Aussie authors Rose Dee, Amanda Deed and Meredith Resce, will be a November 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Victorian true-crime set in England, A Tincture of Murder, Book 4 in The Lord Danvers Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2012 release from Greenbrier Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Clerical mystery set in England, An Unholy Communion, Book 3 in The Monastery Murders series, will be a January 2013 release from Monarch Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's romantic suspense set in England, A Jane Austen Encounter, Book 3 in The Elizabeth and Richard Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2013 release from Stonehouse Ink.

To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.

Friday, September 21, 2012

DEVOTION: God's Plan B ~ by Shirley Corder

One night, I jerked awake and glanced at the clock. It was 3:10 AM. In my half-asleep state, I knew I had to phone Louis, a doctor friend. How can I phone him at this time of night? What if his wife answers? What will I say?

I lay for a while, debating what to do. Then I prayed, “Lord, if it’s you that woke me, please keep me awake. Don’t let me go back to sleep.” My mind started to clear, and I grew more and more concerned for Louis. I eyed the phone across the moonlit room. Seeking confirmation for my actions, I woke my husband.

He struggled to understand me in his groggy state, then muttered, “You can’t phone Louis at this time of night. Don’t be ridiculous. Go back to sleep” He rolled over on his side. Within seconds his deep breathing showed me he was again fast asleep. I sat propped on my pillows. 

Again I prayed. “Lord, is it you that’s keeping me awake? I want to be obedient to you no matter what. Please let his wife understand. In fact, if I’m wrong, let Louis understand too!” I clambered from my bed and headed for the phone. 

Suddenly, I experienced a strange sensation, as if the Lord was saying, “What are you doing? Go back to sleep.” 

Puzzled, but relieved, I responded, “Okay Lord, I’m going back to sleep, but if you need me to phone Louis later, wake me again!” I snuggled down in my bed and within minutes, I was sound asleep and didn’t wake until morning.

Throughout the day, I puzzled over the events of the night before. Should I have phoned Louis? Had I been disobedient?

Late in the afternoon, we received an unexpected visitor—Louis. As he sat sipping his coffee, I told him about the strong feeling I had that I had to phone him in the early hours of the morning. Chuckling, I said, “I wondered how you and Pat would have reacted when one of you answered the phone in the dead of night, and all I could say was, “The Lord wanted me to phone you, I don’t know why.”

Louis studied his coffee for a moment then looked up at me. “Who said you had to phone me? The Lord?”

“Well, no,” I admitted. “But what else could I have done at that time of night? He woke me—I’m certain of that. And He kept me awake.”

“You could have prayed for me,” he said. “I was called to the hospital last night to do an emergency appendectomy. When I opened the abdomen, I discovered it had already burst. I’m not qualified to do an operation of the magnitude that this woman required—but there was no one else. So I shot up an arrow prayer, asking the Lord to wake some of His children urgently and get them praying for me.” He looked at me, his eyes narrowed to increase the impact of his words. “I glanced at the wall clock before I continued. The time was 3:10 AM.”

After he left, I ran the scenario back through my mind. I imagined the Lord sending angels to earth to wake His children, with the message, “Get them to pray for Louis. Now.” The one that woke me felt good as I jerked awake.

“Louis!” he whispered. “Pray. Now.”

“Phone Louis?” I muttered as I tried to clear my sleep-fogged brain. “Why would I phone Louise? Do you know what time it is?”

“PRAY for him. Now.”

“What will his wife say if I phone him at this time of night?”

“I said PRAY.”

“I’ll wake Rob.” That’s good, the angel may have thought. Now there will be two praying.
“Don’t be ridiculous,” muttered my sleepy husband. “Go back to sleep.”

I imagine the angel looking on in disgust as I clambered from the bed and headed for the phone.

“Oh forget it! Go back to sleep. I’ll go wake someone else . . .”

Instead of asking the Lord what He wanted me to do, I had grasped the beginning of the idea—Louis! Then I had gone my own way, coming to my own conclusions. Fortunately, the operation was a success and the patient lived . . . but it was no thanks to me.

The Children of Israel clearly heard God’s instructions. “Go and check out this land.” They followed God’s instructions and sent in spies. But then they stopped listening. 

When the spies returned, ten of them said, “No way. We can’t do this.” Instead of speaking further with God, the people made their own “logical” decision. The result? Forty years in the wilderness. 

Many writers have experienced a time when they’ve wanted their characters to do something, but the fictitious rebels seemed to take over the story and went in another direction. 

“Hey!” the author wanted to shout. “I’m the author! You can’t just go your own way. I want you here, not there. You’re not listening.” But the characters did their own thing and often changed the plot of the story.

It’s time we learned to listen. Really listen. When God gets our attention and perhaps lays a person or situation on our hearts, it’s time to say, “I get it Lord. You want me to do something about Louis. What is it you would have me do?” And then listen!

Fortunately, the author can adapt the story to fit the new subplot that’s developing around his disobedient characters. In the same way, when we don’t understand, the Lord has back-up Christians who are more awake or more attune, and He can resort to Plan B. But what if He didn’t? What if that person had died all because I shot off to obey without being clear of God’s request?

A QUESTION FOR YOU. Have you ever had to deal with disobedient characters? What happened? Or have you ever unwittingly made a wrong interpretation of an instruction from the Lord?

SHIRLEY CORDER lives on the coast in South Africa with her husband. Her book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for your Journey through Breast Cancer contains 90 meditations based on times when God spoke to her during the rough times spent in the cancer valley. Sometimes she listened, and other times He resorted to Plan B. But He never gave up. Strength Renewed (Baker Publishing House) launches on October 1 and is currently available for pre-order. Please visit Shirley at ShirleyCorder.com, where she encourages writers, and at RiseAndSoar.com, where she encourages those in the cancer valley. Follow her on Twitter or on FaceBook, or sign up for her newsletter.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Last Best West

Ask any editor what the sweet spot is for historical novels, and most will tell you the 1880s in the American West. But the United States isn't the only country with a history of western expansion in that decade. Just north of the 49th parallel, similar events were happening in Canada.

My husband and I visited the Bar U Ranch a few weeks ago. This Canadian Historic Site is nestled in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains about an hour southwest of Calgary, Alberta. It's one of a group of sites owned by Parks Canada, set aside as working monuments of a bygone era to keep history alive. The Bar U is the only one of these sites dedicated to Canadian ranching history.


I could tell you of the history of the place, but much of it can be found here if you're interested.

A few key points stand out:
* Cattle from the Bar U Ranch were shipped as far as Chicago, Montreal, and England.

* Two of the owners of the ranch were instrumental in underwriting the Calgary Stampede, a rodeo of world renown, in 1912.

* Starting with 3 Percheron studs and 75 mares from France, Bar U horses won almost every event they entered in the World's Fair in Seattle in 1909. This herd became very important when France's breeding stock was wiped out during World War I. France bought breeding stock from the Bar U, meaning that virtually all of the world's Percherons are now from the Bar U bloodlines.

* Edward Prince of Wales visited in 1919 and was so impressed with the Alberta ranchlands and the cowboys of the Bar U that he bought his own ranch, the E.P., next door.

At the National Historic Site, we were treated to a wagon ride among the ranch buildings behind a Percheron team.


We explored inside nearly every building on the ranch from the blacksmith and harness shops to the cookhouse and the barns. Very few places are off limits to visitors.


Half a dozen or more park employees were on hand in various parts of the ranch to explain life from 1882-1942, the era the historic site represents. All were willing to answer questions and chat about the history of western Canada and how it helped shape the world of its time. We visited with the leatherworker for a time. He'd just completed a guitar strap. One thing led to another until he invited my husband to pick up the guitar in the corner and play for a while. When other visitors went on their way, he serenaded us with a couple of songs he'd written.




Round-up Camp provided visitors with 'cowboy coffee' and fresh bannock, cooked over a fire while we watched, and served with handmade Bar U butter and jam. The campfire cook gave us more details about chuckwagons and home on the range while we enjoyed these treats.


Back in the day, the Bar U provided all the food needed for its hands from its large gardens, fields, hogs, chickens, dairy herd, and beef cattle. That's a self-sufficiency lost to our modern world! They still have a large (very well kept) garden.


A day poking around a historic site can provide all kinds of fodder for stories, even for one who writes contemporary genres. My inner wheels are certainly grinding!

When's the last time YOU visited a historic site? What memories stick out for you?

Valerie Comer's life on a small farm in western Canada provides the seed for stories of contemporary inspirational romance. Like many of her characters, Valerie and her family grow much of their own food and are active in the local food movement as well as their church. She only hopes her creations enjoy their happily ever afters as much as she does hers, shared with her husband, adult kids, and adorable granddaughters.

Her first published work, a novella, was released in the collection Rainbow's End from Barbour Books in May 2012. Visit her website and blog to glimpse inside her world.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

A Good Year


It’s great to be back in the ICFW writing seat after so many months of absence. This year, life has consisted of four weddings and a funeral. Yep, I know that sounds like a movie, as does the title of this blog, but seriously, that really has been 2012 for me.
When both my sons got engaged last year, I knew 2012 would be the year of weddings. Sadly though, a month after my brother’s mother-in-law was diagnosed with cancer in January, she passed away and so the funeral that I so dreaded when I joked about having four weddings, happened.
On April 23rd, my youngest son, Kyle, married his Finnish sweetheart. This was only a marriage on paper however, done to aid the process of his Finnish residency application. Kyle and Tiia determined to wait for their church wedding on July 7th, which my husband and I planned to attend ... in Finland!
 
So, between arranging two August weddings merely three days apart in South Africa (from florist to wedding co-ordinator, and everything in between), I now also had to arrange an overseas trip, with an outreach to Romania thrown in for good measure. Thankfully, I had nothing to do with any arrangements for the Finnish wedding – I just had to be there.
January to August passed in a blur of tuxedos, satin, roses, horse-drawn carriages, the luxurious colours of burgundy, olive green and silver, and a twelve-metre veil that needed beading stitched on both sides for Ryan and Amy’s fairytale wedding, to the earthy browns of hessian, baskets, picnic blankets, origami flowers, chinos and Jesus sandals for Kyle’s missionary wedding. Two totally different weddings, but equally fun to plan and execute.







 
 The wedding in Finland was beautiful. Azure skies formed the chapel roof, tall green pines its walls and a grey lake reflected behind the bridal couple like a gigantic window looking into forever. Finnish weddings are quite different to what we’re used to with games played, songs and dances performed by family children, and a ritual kidnapping of the bride and her subsequent rescue by the groom.

 
 
Noel and I definitely amassed beautiful memories from our sons’ weddings and emerged from this hectic time as very proud parents.
 
After the wedding in Finland we were privileged to spend ten tranquil days with friends at their summer cottage beside an enormous lake in the southeast of Finland ... along with a dozen fabulous young adults who had been on missionary training in South Africa with Kyle last year. Here we were immersed in the cultures of sauna and roasting makra. What fun it was to row on the lake, find new islands to explore – some not much bigger than a very large rock; watch my hubby fish while I settled down on the wooden jetty with the Ted Dekker novel I’d packed (The Bride Collector ... wonder what inspired that choice); or head off into the forest blueberry picking! 
 
During our time there we visited the quaint town of Savonlinna. Every year  the internationally renowned Savonlinna Opera Festival is held inside the walls of the medieval Olavinlinna Castle. 2012 was the centennial celebrations. It was awesome to have a backstage tour tagged onto our castle tour ticket, where we got a peak into dressing rooms, prop rooms, costume wardrobes, seating inside the opera and stage set-up. Five operas held over a month with two stage changes every day. The Magic Flute, The Flying Dutchman, and Aida were matched with two world premieres: La Fenice and Free Will, the first ever opera born on the Internet and created by an online community.
We also visited the world's largest wooden church in Kerimaki.
After a great time of rest and boosting ourselves on tiny blue super fruit  in the form of blueberry pancakes, blueberry pie, or just plain blueberries and cream - sadly we ran out of time to make blueberry jam - we headed south. Armed with one small 10kg bag, we boarded a Ryan Air flight to Budapest. It took a good portion of our three hour layover to find the big orange midnight bus headed for Cluj-Napoca, Romania. 
The week in Romania, working in the gypsy village, Dallas, with ProRoma was hard but rewarding. Our team of ten demolished a shack and built a new two-roomed home in its place, finished another home built by a previous team, painted the prayer room (decorative sponge painting and all), played with the children, mixed cement and dug trenches. It felt really good to hand over a new home to the father and mother of three lovely young girls. How humbling to know God has used you to make a difference in someone’s life. You can read more at http://romania.the-rebirth.com/
And in Romania we learnt all about Romanian hospitality in new friends, our hosts. I hope someday we will be able to return their kindness in true South African style.
From the time we landed back on South African soil, I had nine days to finalise Ryan and Kyle’s weddings. Between returning to work, final venue meetings, bridal showers, bachelors’ parties, collecting hire items, making bouquets, finalising seating arrangements, final printing, buying food items, etcetera, etcetera, life was a flurry of activity. Suffice it to say, I literally vegetated for the rest of August and well into September, as I tried to catch my breath after this rewarding, albeit hectic year.
 
 
But all through the hustle and bustle of weddings on two opposite ends of the world, bride kidnappings, initiations, children, gypsies, castles, cathedrals, street markets, shacks, forests, lakes, and not forgetting blueberries, my writer’s mind was like a sponge. I absorbed every sight and smell, every landscape and face, every cultural difference, every new friendship, every piece of history, storing them away as I wait for that one new story to emerge from any of these experiences.  Will it be set in the forests of Finland, or within the solid walls of an ancient castle, or in the dirty streets of a gypsy village? Will my protagonist be a medieval knight, or a cagey gypsy with an attitude as large as the gold earring that dangles from his right ear, or a scantily clad child living off the garbage dumps? Will the story be historical, telling of unending feuds between Russians and Swedes, or will it tell a tale of murder and mystery when a bride goes missing after a traditional wedding prank? Who knows? I, for one, cannot wait to find out!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

LIKE CINDERELLA


I’m counting the hours, polishing the zircon tiara, buffing up the glass high-heels, and pulling out my paste jewelry circa the 1940’s. Tomorrow morning I’m boarding the plane to fly to Dallas for the ACFW Conference. 

Okay, maybe I’m not really planning on wearing glass shoes or a tiara for the gala banquet, but I still feel like Cinderella preparing for the ball, and I do have paste jewelry that belonged to the mother of one of my mother's friends.

It’s so nice to be able to go to the conference this year—first time since 2008. But my what a difference in me from that year to now. I was a nervous wreck as I prepared to go then—worrying about my pitch . . . my one-sheet . . . my appointments with agents and editors. 

This year I’m not worrying about any of that. It’s not that I don’t need an agent. I’d give my eye-teeth to get literary representation. Okay, maybe a slight exaggeration there. I need to keep my teeth. And I really would love to sell a story to an editor and gain a nice big fat contract.

But the reason I have no stress in preparing for this conference is that I simply do not have anything ready to pitch.

Instead, I’m looking forward to meeting up with many of my writing peers and friends that I’ve made on-line since I attended my first Christian Writers’ Conference. I’m looking forward to squealing like a teenage girl when I see one of the many people I will recognize and who will recognize me. I’m looking forward to sitting up late in coffee shops or in another woman’s hotel room, crammed with a writing group from on-line, and yacking like a bunch of high-school girls. All we’ll need will be a place to sit on the floor, a crate of coke’s to drink, and gum to chew and blow bubbles with. We’re all a clean-living bunch.

I’m going to have fun, fun, fun, encouraging others in this journey to publication.
And it all feels so right. If there is one thing that I’m learning in my—ahem—mature years, it’s that relationships are everything.  

The Lord reminds me of that in His word. He wants the focus of my life to be that blissful one-ness that I experience in my relationship with Him through Christ Jesus. It’s not what can accomplish for Him, but what 

He does when I’m totally yielded to His plans, His timing. Somehow when I focus on that love-relationship with Him, He sees to all the engineering of my life and career.

So, I’m boarding the plane tomorrow. My hubby will kiss me goodbye for the 4 days I’ll be away. My husband knows I’ll be in good hands, and will safely return, because it’s as though I’m going away on an intimate holiday with my Heavenly Father. Together my Lord and I will have a time of bliss getting together with my fellow writers.

I know this because I can feel it when I pray—His smile over my enjoyment of getting together with others whom He has blessed with the great desire to write for Him.

Dallas, here I come!!!

Christine Lindsay is the author of Award-winning Shadowed in Silk. Book II of the Twilight of the British Raj Series, called Captured by Moonlight will be released by WhiteFire Publishing Feb. 2013.

Drop by Christine Lindsay's website and blog www.christinelindsay.com 

  
  

Monday, September 17, 2012

Names and Faces

(Me with two of my authors in Florida, Kat and Ryan. I'm the short one.)

I've been putting names to faces for over a month now. It may not be the first time, but it is absolutely amazing. There are no words to adequately describe what it is like to work with someone online for years and years, to be so attuned to each other in a team without meeting...and THEN, to meet.

It is one thing to fill our chatter with work talk and know each other on that basis. Even reading each other's books is a doorway into the soul, but it is still at a certain distance between author and reader, or author and publisher. It is another thing entirely to walk beside someone, to observe their quirks, snuggle their pets, learn how they drive, eat, socialise. In many ways it is the fulfilment of what went before; it rounds out that partial picture we have seen through our screens, darkly.

Getting closer to the issues we knew about but had not seen in the flesh. Tickling their kids, chatting with spouses, discovering what their taste in music is like to live inside, how fast they type, how their homes are laid out and decorated, how they relate to those around them. Note to self: Do NOT mimic mannerisms, even out of curiosity. It can be quite disconcerting! I guess I'm fascinated by how a real person differs from their online persona, just from the limitations of the Internet experience.

I'm not dissing the Internet at all. Most of the time, it's all I have. But I am definitely loving the strangeness of moving from that to reality, of letting the environment sink in and getting used to being in the actual presence of people I have known from afar. I'm not surprised that conferences are so overwhelming for many, as this transition effect is multiplied.

Of course the goodbyes are all the harder when we don't know how or when or even where we will meet next. Yes... thank goodness for the Internet!

For more thoughts in this direction, please see the companion blog post, Circle of Life, at Speculative Faith.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION

Coming Up This Week

Monday

Grace Bridges: Names and Faces

Tuesday

Christine Lindsay

Wednesday

Marion Ueckermann

Thursday

Valerie Comer: The Last Best West

Friday Devotion

Shirley Corder: God's Plan B

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Upcoming Book Releases

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, will be an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jo-Anne Berthelsen's non-fiction memoir, Soul Friend: The story of a shared spiritual journey, will be an October 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Shirley Corder's book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for Your Journey through Breast Cancer, will be an October 2012 release from Revell.

Kathi Macias' book, Unexpected Christmas Hero, will be an October 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Paula Vince's book, The Greenfield Legacy, a collaboration with Aussie authors Rose Dee, Amanda Deed and Meredith Resce, will be a November 2012 release from Even Before Publishing.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Victorian true-crime set in England, A Tincture of Murder, Book 4 in The Lord Danvers Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2012 release from Greenbrier Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's Clerical mystery set in England, An Unholy Communion, Book 3 in The Monastery Murders series, will be a January 2013 release from Monarch Books.

Donna Fletcher Crow's romantic suspense set in England, A Jane Austen Encounter, Book 3 in The Elizabeth and Richard Mysteries series, will be a Winter 2013 release from Stonehouse Ink.

To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.