Friday, August 31, 2012

DEVOTION: Of Lifejackets and Other Saving Things by Marcia Lee Laycock


I was raised smack dab in the middle of two of the largest of North America's Great Lakes, Lake Huron and Lake Superior. So I'm used to being in, around and on the water. I did a lot of swimming and boating as a child. These were activities that we all took for granted so there was very little supervision and safety precautions were non-existent. I almost drowned once. No-one really noticed. I almost drowned my nephew once. At the age of two he slipped off the bow of my tiny "sea flee." No life jackets in sight. When we returned home no-one questioned why his diaper was wet.

I realized I have a rather large blind spot in regard to the dangers of being in, around and on the water when my husband and I were in a small aluminum boat off the coast of Papua New Guinea. The wind had come up and the waves grew as we headed across the mouth of a wide bay. The boat was tossed about as huge waves splashed over us. I was loving it. My husband was white-knuckled as he clung to the gunwale and prayed. It wasn't until we reached shore that the word lifejacket was mentioned.

We were recently on a small sailboat and a similar thing happened. The wind made the craft heel over nicely and I was delighted. My husband was worried about an eight-year-old sitting on the bow with his dad. Neither wore a lifejacket. When he commented later that it would have been disastrous if that boy had slipped off, I realized, oh yeah, I guess a lifejacket would have been wise.

It seems familiarity can breed blindness and even, yes I'll admit it, stupidity.

Many of us go through life this way, almost daring fate to do its worst. Unfortunately, 'fate' often does. Many of us go through our spiritual lives this way too. There are precautions we are told to take, habits and disciplines that act like lifejackets and lifeboats. Things like reading the Bible regularly and praying often. It is wise to use them, wise to realize that familiarity can breed blindness and stupidity.

"Blessed are they whose ways are blameless, who walk according to the law of the Lord. Blessed are they who keep his statutes and seek him with all their heart." (Psalm 119:1-2)

Do you have a lifejacket on? Or is it gathering dust somewhere?



Marcia Laycock's devotionals have been distributed to thousands. Her devotional book, Spur of the Moment, won the Award of Merit at Write! Canada when it was released and her debut novel, One Smooth Stone won her the Best New Canadian Christian Author Award. The sequel,   A Tumbled Stone has just been released. Visit Marcia's website to learn more.


Thursday, August 30, 2012

The Old Brooch


Some years ago my mother inherited the contents of a farmhouse in England.  She found the antique brooch in the photo below in the old Devonshire house and, much to my delight, she gave it to me.

The brooch when we first saw it
Abigail, my geocaching character whom I wrote about in a previous blog, informed me that she'd love to have the brooch. I don't know if other writers have this problem, but sometimes my characters can be very demanding! However, after some thought, I agreed to give it to her. I'd recently read a blog post by C.S. Lakin about using symbols and motifs in a book, and the brooch would be the perfect symbol for Abigail's quest to find God.

I followed a set of instructions I found on Google and cleaned the brooch. I presented it to Abigail, who grinned her thanks as she pinned it to the backpack she used for geocaching. I know, don't ask, that's Abigail for you.  Did I really expect her to wear it on her clothes?

Clean brooch

We wanted to know more about the brooch, so we brainstormed a list of questions. Here are some of them:

How old is the brooch?

Who made it?

Where was it made?

Who was the original owner of the brooch?

Who gave it to her? Her beau? Her father? Her friend? Her employer?

Why did that person give it to her? A Valentine's present (Abigail vetoed that one as too obvious) To reward an achievement? A farewell present by a soldier going off to fight in a war and if so, which war? And did he return from the war? And if he did, was she waiting for him or did she go off with another?

Or did she pick it up in a country lane, and if so, who lost it? How did that person lose it?

Or maybe she stole it? Then why did she steal it?

Was she covering for a servant who stole it?

Did a magpie drop it down the chimney?

Did she find it in a highwayman's secret hollow tree?

Did she catch a fish and . . .

"STOP!" said Abigail. "This is getting way out of hand. Let's find out the facts before we speculate any more. Why don't you write a blog post about the brooch? Put some photos online too. Maybe someone knowledgeable about antique brooches will see it and tell you more about it."

"Good idea, Abigail."

So here's the blog post with photos as suggested by my bossy character. If anyone knows anything about it, we'd really appreciate it if you would tell us about the brooch in the comment section below. Many thanks.

By the way, the brooch is about 5 cms (2.75 ins) across and appears to be silver plated or made of silver. There are 4 sets of markings on the back, the first RJW, the second could be a lion with a raised paw, the third two parallel vertical marks and the fourth looks like an anchor lying on its side. They are very difficult to see properly even with a magnifying glass.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Treasured Possessions

This week I felt down about the non fiction writing project I’ve been working on. It’s started to feel like the never-ending story and still nowhere near being ready to send it off to a publisher. Of course the enemy chose that particular moment to inveigle himself in my feelings and tell me it was pointless and it would make no difference even if I finished it and got it published.

Discouraged, I looked at the cork board above my desk. That cork board, with letters pinned on it, hangs every day above my desk. Most days I hardly glance up at it. But this day I looked up and my gaze fell on a letter written to me several years ago. The letter came from the mother of a child who had read my first children’s book Chasing after the Wind.


The girl had been given the book as a birthday present. Only one problem, the girl was not a reader.
In fact, she was one of those students in the remedial reading group who had to read to someone for ten minutes each day. Knowing she had to read something, she reluctantly started on Chasing after the Wind.The novel co-incidentally starts with a girl who struggles with reading and is in a similar situation to this reluctant reader, until she encounters a friend and a book that changes her life.

It wasn’t long before the girl, like Chelsea in the story, found just reading that ten minutes a day wasn’t enough. The story had captured her and pulled her in. Probably initially because she could so relate to Chelsea, the main character in the novel. Soon, the girl was reading it every spare moment, her mother told me. For her mother and grandmother who watched this transformation it was heady stuff as this was the first book this girl had ever ‘got her in.’

This family was so excited, not only did the girl write to me a beautiful letter but her mother did as well and her grandmother came to visit when she was in the area. Reading that letter from the girl’s mother gave me a warm glow inside. I went back to the project I was working on thinking if a children’s book had that big an impact on one life, then I needed to continue to be obedient to God in what I write and that includes the current project, which is not really my project but God’s.

I was overwhelmed with love for God and how He encouraged me when I was feeling down. But why should I be surprised at that? Just as those letters to me are treasured possessions, I am God’s treasured possession. So are you.

Don’t take my word for it though. We know this because His Word tells us so. Isaiah 49:16 says
‘ See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands.’ Although this was originally spoken to Israel, it is also to all of us, who are the new Israel, brought into God’s kingdom by the death of our Lord Jesus. The Father loved each one of us enough to send is only Son to die for you and for me. If that doesn’t encourage and motivate us to continue in obedience even when we are feeling down, then I don’t know what will.
Streets on a Map, Dale’s latest novel was published by Ark House Press. Prior to that, Dale has had seven children’s books and Kaleidoscope a collection of poetry published. Many poems in Kaleidoscope have been previously published in Australia’s literary magazines. She has also written bible studies and Sunday school lessons.More information about Dale can be found at www.daleharcombe.com or on her Write and Read with Dale blog http://www.livejournal.com/users/orangedale/

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Trouble



collapsed farmhouse
      Ever notice how we're all fascinated by trouble?  Who doesn't slow down to look at an accident?  There's a reason newspapers lead with stories about disaster, scandal, heartbreak and war.  As a species, we humans are captivated by trouble.  No one wants to read a book where two nice people, meet, fall in love and live happily ever after. B-o-r-i-n-g!

       As a writer of fiction, i.e. a storyteller, I need to paste this reminder on my monitor. The story is in the trouble.  No one wants to invite trouble into her own life or those of our friends, yet that is where our interest is piqued.  It seems we want to like our heroine and hero, we want them to be good people, but we want them to go through the fire before allowing them to reach HEA.  
        I had a graphic illustration of this fact at a recent family reunion.  As part of the weekend, we went on a heritage tour, seeking out gravestones, baptismal certificates and a fallen in log cabin -- all in search of our roots.  It turns out, my ancestors, like most immigrants, were hard up.  They received a land grant on acreage that grew nothing but stones.  In the end, after two years of struggle, they were declared destitute and given a second piece of land.  Not much better as it turned out, but at least they didn't starve.
     One of my great great grandmother's had thirteen children and outlived nearly all of them.  Now, there's a tale of trouble that had us all shaking our heads and booking appointments with a cardiologist.  Seems heart trouble is endemic in that branch of the family. 
      This same ancestor, in her old age, was offered a comfortable home in town.  A place with hot water and central heating.  After a year or so, she went back to her homestead, a hard place, without running water, uninsulated against a Canadian winter.   She was afraid of fire, so wouldn't light the stove after 6:00 pm.  Icicles formed on the walls by bedtime.  Yet, this was the place she chose to live out her last days.
        That story sets my mind churning.  Why choose hardship?  Why do we admire her?  Did she demonstrate mulish folly or a determination to live life on her own terms?  Was she clairvoyant?  The house eventually did burn down, fortunately with no loss of life.  Apart from the important dates in her life and the location of her tombstone, I know nothing about this ancestor, yet her story excites my imagination.  Why?
          I think what appeals to us in these stories is the fortitude shown in the face of trouble.  None of us wants to sleep on a hard floor, or worry about growing enough food to feed our families through the winter, but we are drawn to the steadfastness of those who did.  It's true in every family.  Some may like to boast of finding an exalted member on their family tree, but the stories that get told over and over are of the black sheep, the awful aunt, and the great disaster.

       And let us not forget that Jesus told stories of trouble for their impact, The Good Samaritan, The Lost Sheep, The Parable of the Talents, . . .  trouble figures large in all these stories, and they are so powerful that even those who do not know the scriptures, recognize them as part of our culture.
        The great hymn "How Firm a Foundation" contains these lines:
When through fiery trials thy pathways shall lie,
My grace all sufficient, shall be they supply;  
The flame shall not hurt thee; I only design,
Thy dross to consume and thy gold to refine.
Memorable characters survive trial and hardship with integrity.  Their gold shines through the dross of trouble.                                                                                                                   In practicing the art of story telling, remember to look for trouble.  That's where the interest lies, that's where character is built and that's what lingers in the memory long after the book is closed.            
Alice Valdal is Canadian through and through but she may be spending some time on ancestry.ca checking out her European roots and finding story ideas from her intrepid forebears.   www.alicevaldal.com

Monday, August 27, 2012

Taking a Break - M. Laycock


We've had two young men and my mother-in-law staying with us for the past while. We're running a soccer Bible camp, hence the young men, and it was my mother-in-law's 89th birthday, hence her visit. It's turned out to be a fun time. We have three daughters, all grown and away, so having some guys around has been great, even if they do eat a bit more. Well, okay, a lot more. "Grandma" has been teaching them to play dominoes so there's lots of laughter happening around the kitchen table.

I'm on the run, doing registration, being the "go-fer," making meals, cookies, doing laundry, etc. etc. etc. I don't mind it at all, but trying to get to my computer for some extended writing time has been a challenge. I was getting rather stressed about that when I remembered something that happened a while ago in the parking lot of a local bookstore. My husband and I were heading for our car when I heard my name being called and looked back to see one of my favourite writers, a mentor and friend for some years, Sigmund Brouwer. I was pleased to bump into him because I'd sent him an email some time before about speaking at a writers' event and he hadn't replied. When I mentioned it he explained that when he's writing he doesn't do email. After chatting for a while we went our separate ways and I commented to my husband, "I wonder what would happen if I ignored my email for that long?" 

"The world would stop spinning and fall of its axis," he said. His sardonic reply made me grin and I realized there was a lot of truth behind his response. Having just gone through a whole year during which I could neither do much writing nor involve myself in most of the other endeavours in which I usually engage, I have come to realize that I'm not totally indispensible and a break in routine doesn't necessarily mean disaster. The world didn't stop spinning. Life did go on even if I had to take a break from some things. And the slower rhythm of life gave me time to ponder and listen and sometimes just enjoy.

So, with this week getting more and more busy I gave myself permission to take a break from the writing regimen I'd set out for myself to finish my latest w.i.p. The pause will throw the schedule off a bit, but it won't stop the world from spinning. As soon as I made that decision the week immediately became less stressful and a lot more fun. It reminded me of one of my favourite verses from The Message my Eugene Peterson - “I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me – watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (Matthew 11: 28-30)

"The unforced rhythms of grace." Words to ponder, words to build into our lives, as we take the time to "keep company" with the Lord, draw closer to those around us and closer to the interior workings of our thoughts and emotions, motives and dreams.

How about you? Is it time to give yourself permission to take a break? 
****
Marcia's new novel, A Tumbled Stone can now be purchased online, through her website and as an ebook at most retailers. Her devotional book for Authors, Abundant Rain, is available here

Sunday, August 26, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION

Coming Up This Week

Monday

Marcia Laycock

Tuesday

Alice Valdal

Wednesday

Dale Harcombe

Thursday

Ruth Ann Dell

Friday Devotion

Marcia Lee Laycock: Of Lifejackets and Other Saving Things

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Contest News

Christine Lindsay's book, Shadowed in Silk (Whitefire) is a finalist in the Christian Historical category of the 2012 Readers Favorite Awards - Congratulations Christine!

Jeanette Windle's book, Freedom's Stand (Tyndale) is a finalist in the Suspense/Thriller category of the 2012 Carol Awards (ACFW) - Congratulations Jeanette!

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New Book Release

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego and Mexico, The Deliverer, Book Three in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, is an August 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

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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, August 24, 2012

DEVOTION: Why Are You . . . ? by Ray Hawkins



Why are you smiling”? My wife asked
As I sat there daydreaming.
Why? Good question!
I was wandering down memory lane
And met happy times old and new,
Some with children, many with you
Dress ups, family fun and holidays
Precious pictures from the mind!
Memories transcending time
Made me smile!

“Why are you crying”? Grandson asked
As I read the mission magazine.
Why? Good question!
African Mission trips relived
Emotions again restirred. 
Slum dwellers, desperate, diseased
Not forgotten by Christ’s Church
Calvary’s precious testimonies!
Memories coloured by eternity
Made me cry!

“Why are you sighing”? Asked daughter
As I nibbled my toast!
Why? Good question!
I was thinking of yesteryears
Successes, failures, joys and fears
What might have been and what is!
Stories to tell, songs to sing
Christ’s providence and discipline.
Memories formed by our history
Made me sigh!

“Why are you praying”? Asked my heart
As in silence I meditated!
Why? Good question!
I couldn’t help it as I reflected
On my life, wife, kids and ministry
The journey we’ve had with Jesus
Sharing His faithfulness and mercy!
Prayer is my gratitude for
Memories time can never erase
Made me pray!
                  ©Raymond n. Hawkins June 2012.


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, August 23, 2012

WISDOM


If it’s true you gain wisdom through mistakes, well then, I must be a sage. In fact, I think I’ve earned the golden chalice for acumen in this past week alone. The reality is, I’d go back and relive the last several days if I could, where yearning exists for a do over.

I said and did a few things that left me eating crow. Most often I’m a disciplined person, but if somebody is incessant enough and pushes long and hard enough on the right buttons I have the potential to explode like that unpleasant loose cannon where anything goes. This is not something I’m proud of, and, writing with an open and honest heart, happens rarely. However, if/when it does it is dreadful.

After tossing and turning at night over a particular incident that caused an unsolicited chain reaction, I called two go-to people hoping to glean a bit of the old, “It’s okay, that’s not so bad” solace. Instead, I heard, “Oh, wow, you shouldn’t have said that. You did what?” along with detecting through the receiver a hiss of air sucked between clenched teeth. I hung up feeling worse.

Droopy, I began missing my dad. If my dad still lived, he’d first hear me out over the episode. Though he was a Godly man, he possessed an irreverent sense of humor (something he passed down to me in good measure thank you very much). So then he’d proceed with, “Here’s what you should have said. . . .” At that point, he’d paint a much worse (ridiculous) picture of the scenario and my specific role in it, bringing the both of us to roaring laughter at our humanness. Then he’d wipe the tears of amusement from the corners of his eyes and finish with, “Ah, you’re all right kid. Just do better next time.” I always walked away as if I could face life again, somehow redeemed.

Not able to correct the mistakes I’ve made, even after profuse apologies (sometimes you just can’t take back what you’ve said or done no matter what), I crawled under a rock, as they say, feeling its weight on my back. Then I remembered the voice of my dad, much like the unconditionally loving and forgiving Heavenly Father, hearing it again as if right there beside me: “Ah, you’re all right kid. Just do better next time.” It caused me to resurface. I stood, and today my knees aren’t as wobbly as they seemed yesterday.

You’re right, Dad. I’m gonna be all right - and I promise to do better next time.

Today, I am wiser than I was yesterday. Tomorrow, perhaps I’ll prove wiser than I am today. I could keep wishing for the obliteration of past mistakes, but where would the wisdom be in that?



A former dancer turned novelist, Tessa is the author of (appropriately), The Unforgivable, and the upcoming fantasy romance novella, Wind’s Aria, with more in the works. To see just how many times she can put her foot in her mouth, stop over at www.TessaStockton.com paying special attention to her Blogette.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Healing

You may or may not remember that I was going to write about something that God and I were going through last month, but chose not to because I wasn't completely sure about it. Of course you remember and I'm sure you've been on pins and needles just dying to find out what it was.
So here's the thing. This has been a very weird year.  An 'all about me and my health'year.
I'm generally very healthy. I workout regularly, I eat well, blah blah but ... I'm tired all the time. Like, all the time. I'm itchy. All the time. And I have bad knees. All the time.
Which led to many doctors' appointments, many physiotherapy appointments and a lot of praying for wisdom.
And through all the trials and frustrations and tears and being very very angry because I am 38 for goodness sakes and I am far too young to feel this old we got to the bottom of it. For now.
Turns out I have gluten issues. Sigh. Once I stopped the gluten, I was no longer itchy. Or looking six months pregnant.
And I have no cartilage or tissue left in my kneecaps. Due to years of landscaping without knee protection, not wearing orthotics and choosing always to be barefoot and having really high arches. Which means my I.T. band and my right knee cap are usually hurting. Sharp pains, long lingering cramps. Fun stuff. Throw in a few weeks where I couldn't walk, yeah. That's fun. Oh and the conversations with people! That was the best. 'I have arthritis/tendonitis/knee surgery blah blah and if you keep moving constantly, you'll be fine'. To which I smile and say, 'yes' and then go home and stomp around like a petulant child and say to the skies (usually  my ceiling fan) 'Why? Why? Why?'  because I do NOT have cartilage left! Which means my kneecap is always rubbing against my bone. ???? Seriously??? Wha?  So now I get to wear a knee brace. Forever. It's made out of some carbon fiber blah blah and it's held together with velcro for crying out loud and when I don't wear it, I get sore. Fun, right? I can have knee surgery when I'm 70.
And then on top of all that. On top of not being able to enjoy grilled cheese sandwiches or white bread slathered with butter and peanut butter or my favourite pesto pasta ( do NOT get me started or gluten free bread or pasta - it is disgusting) I find out through a sleep study that I have narpoleptic tendencies.
Seriously?
Yes. I hallucinate when I sleep. I dream too much. I move too much when I sleep. I yell out at things when I sleep. And this is just hilarious: I'm not fully awake during the day. What? Yeah. So, apparently my synapses blah blah don't react with each other so I'm not awake. Which means I'm exhausted all of the time, need to nap, can't remember anything etc... So now I'm on these magical little pills which totally freaked me out but I bit the bullet and I've been taking them for six weeks and dude... Wow. I'm awake. I am never tired. I never need a nap. No more morning headaches, body aches, screaming nightmares and I remember who you are! It got so bad with the memory that I am now having conversations with my husband where he is asking me if I remember driving out to some snowmobile camp nine years ago way past Algonquin Park because we were going to work there full-time and I was going to cook and I was all like, 'what on earth are you talking about?????'
Yeah.
So.
Some people are lovely and say, 'you poor thing. let me give you fair trade chocolate'. And some people have said, 'oh, just let God heal you', and it took everything in me not to counter with 'really? Like God grows people new arms and legs when they are amputated?'  (I can tell you like me even more now.) So since those lovely six weeks ago, every single devotion I have read, whether in my bible, my child's bible, proverbs 31 ministries, d365 and whatnot, has ALL BEEN ON HEALING.
???
So, I'm all like, Ok God. Let's see what You can do. Because I am at my wit's end and this is no life for me and I want better. So please, heal me.
And then I got worse. I couldn't walk. I couldn't stop taking pain killers/ice/heat/massages/physio.
And then I got a bit better.
This past weekend was my 12th wedding anniversary with my gorgeous man.
We planned a trip to New York City.  Do you know what you do in New York City?
You walk.
Everywhere.
So I packed my leg (as I call it), lots of A535, orthotics, two different shoes and ice packs. And tylenol.
We landed Friday and I threw on my leg and we started walking. Ten minutes later I took it off because I couldn't get comfortable. Hubby was kind enough to carry it around for the next ten hours in his backpack.
Day two: no leg. We walked ten hours.
Day three: no leg. We walked ten hours.

Did I have pain? No. Well, just in my calves from overwalking. Oh, and my back was killing me the first day.
Did I need pain killers, ice, rub? No.
It was in fact, a brilliant, fantastic, beautiful trip. (No, we didn't do any shows. We enjoyed Central Park and the Met - you MUST go. The Van Gogh's are exquisite)
And today when I woke up?
Pain. The normal, everyday kind of knee pain that I endure every single day.
So was I healed?  Kinda.
I realized that my God is one awesome God and for three beautiful days, I experienced true health and rest. I even ate pizza. And I didn't get itchy. Not once.
So while He may choose or not choose to fully miraculously heal me, I got to see some Amazing Grace because I had no pain for three whole days.
And I got to see what it will be like, when I am fully new, fully healed, and fully happy.

It was so worth it.

Jenn Kelly is an author who is working on a brilliantly plotted/fantastically written dystopian/romance for teens because she freely admits she loves YA. This is her gorgeous man of 12 years in front of some fountain near Ground Zero.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Seasons


"To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven." - Ecclesiastes 3:1



Autumn is touching western South Dakota already. Gone are the blazing days of over-a-hundred-degree temperatures, settling into soft warmth for cricket-filled night. No, the minute the calendar switched to August, a coolness crept into the evening air. A crispness, like a one of the season's last melons. Stars burn clear and bright in the night sky--thousands of them--thick as glittering morning fog. When my son goes out to play in the golden-hued late afternoon, he pulls on a jacket. Goldenrod pokes up in yellow beacons along a roadside choked with empty raspberry bushes, fallen wild roses, and elm leaves tinged the color of late squashes.

Even our ginger-striped tabby cat, christened "Charlie Broccoli" by my three-year-old son (don't ask; I don't know why, either, except it had something to do with Veggie Tales and Charlie Brown) is reluctant to slip out the door at nightfall as he's done for months. Last night I scooped him off the sofa at nearly ten o'clock, a warm ball of purring fuzz, and set him on the front step. "Go catch mice," I said, or something to that effect. "Good night." He gave the moon a chilly look, then me, and slipped back inside between my ankles.

Even I am changing as I try to fit my bulging belly into shirts and jeans that once skimmed a smooth waistline. I toss them wistfully one-by-one into the "after-December-when-I-can-finally-bend-over-again" box and thumb through my shrinking closet for something, anything, that will button or fasten or whatever it's supposed to do without gapping or making me hold my breath.

We are all changing. Nothing, no matter how permanent it may seem, usually is.

One of the biggest changes I've noticed lately is in my own writing habits--which have been a part of me since even before I could pen (or crayon) correct sentences. I've spent far more time staring at a blank screen than I have in years, and my idea list looks more like a grocery list gone insane: "...how about that historical fiction novel?... don't forget to pick up peaches at the grocery store... holy cow, you forgot to pay the trash company again... the Colorado peaches, not the California ones that ripen to the consistency of wrinkled softballs... so... what am I supposed to be writing about again...?"

I have almost no ideas--or no good ideas--and my brain feels like the Cream of Wheat I ate this morning as I put my hands on the keys.

It's bothering me. A lot. HELP!! When was the last time I didn't write... anything? Really? I mean, I just pumped out four full-length novels in less than three years--one of which finaled in the Christy Awards, for pity's sake--and have edited galleys, critiqued, proofread, worked on cover art, written interviews and articles, posted on blogs, and made a general nuisance of myself to the writing world. 

Oh, and all of this took place after we 1) adopted a preemie with health issues; 2) raised said preemie to a running, jumping, bilingual, always-yakking, always-smiling three-year-old (how I'm not really sure; I know nothing about babies or children); 3) went through a harrowing process of brain surgery with Ethan to correct a malfunctioning shunt for hydrocephalus, and 4) underwent the grueling immigration process for my husband and son and moved to the U.S. after eight years abroad. So it wasn't like I was sitting around knitting for those three years. (If I knew how to knit, which I don't). We were busy. Our lives were upside-down. We barely slept.

So what's my problem now??!

Why can't I write? Why won't the words and ideas flow like they used to? Especially now that I'm not doing night feedings (yet) or running to the American Embassy with more paperwork or trying to explain to my annoying, rude neighbor why the U.S. supports Israel over Iran all in Portuguese. We speak ENGLISH in South Dakota, for crying out loud!

I've been praying about this problem for a while, and the thing that floats up to the surface of my thousand thoughts are this: seasons.

We are always moving and breathing and living in seasons. Life changes. Moods change. Pregnancy saps brain cells and productivity (so it seems for a lot of women)--especially when running after a three-year-old who is probably either trying to climb to the top of a huge feed tank, spray himself and everybody else with the garden hose, or ride our friends' chocolate lab like a horse. (Yes, all of those things actually happened, and recently).

Perhaps for me, the season to furiously write is passing. Fading. Melting into a season of quiet patience and reflection that I, having never been pregnant before, have never known. 

Perhaps now is the time for me to put down my pen and my laptop and just watch my curly-haired son play in the afternoon sun, the gold of the light turning his hair glorious rusty brown. Perhaps now is the time to gather him up in my arms, all laughter and dirty knees and joyously kissable cheeks, and hold tight the little body that doctors once said might never walk or never talk, and praise the Lord for His mercies--for "they are new every morning."

Perhaps now is the time to fall on my knees in prayer for that same little one who is scheduled to undergo brain surgery once again next month--to fix that shunt that saved his life last year, now starting to malfuction--and thank God for every day of his life, and for protection and peace as we go through such a traumatic process all over again. And yet grateful that we, and not someone else, are called to the task.

Perhaps now is the time for me to close up my notebooks of half-baked ideas and circle my belly with my hands in wordless wonder. For who would have thought that after eight years of nothing, this womb would hold a child? A fluttering, kicking, healthy growing baby whose rounded head and limbs we watched, with rapt disbelief, on the fuzzy black-and-white ultrasound screen? I am not as old as Sarah (yet) but like her I laugh--and cry--at this miracle called life, and how it has been granted to me not once, but twice--to hold and nurture and give back to the Creator.

Perhaps now is a new season for me. A new dawning of responsibilities and priorities. An autumn of sorts, blooming out its golds and rusts before a quiet winter of birth and motherhood, and a family made four from nothing--like the inhabitants of Eden formed from earth and a single rib.

But what about writing? Will it vanish, too, like so many other things in my life?

Of course not.

"Life has its seasons," author Valerie Comer wrote to me just yesterday. "Sometimes it's okay to go with them... (Remember that) God has given you a gift as a writer and author. He hasn't removed it, but your body and brain are busy with other things right now. It's okay. It'll come back."

It'll come back.

I promise. 

Just like green grass after winter snows, and tender shoots where the dried winter grasses lay cold and blond across the field. The clamor of meadowlarks and robins, and the lowing of cattle as spring-young calves leap in green pastures.

I know because I saw it; I lived it. We watched the frozen white fields and mountains of South Dakota turn gold and then green, and spring came once again.

Just as it will in a few short months.

For while our worlds change around us, our Lord will not. He is the rock immovable, the fortress that will never be shaken. "The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God stands forever."

He will not fail, and He will not fade. Just sa He transitioned me from missionary to international wife and then to mother and author, He will not forget me--or you. Our times are in His hands, and He alone holds our future.

And while season after season may shake our private thoughts and fears, we can hold fast to Him, knowing that He puts the words in our mouth and pen in our hand--and will bring everything in our lives to fruition to give Himself glory.

--

What season are you in now? Have you ever felt like you're in transition and out of control? What holds you in place when the world around you shakes?

--

Jennifer Rogers Spinola lives in Belle Fourche, South Dakota, with her Brazilian husband, Athos, and three-year-old son, Ethan. She has lived in Brazil for nearly eight years and served as a missionary to Japan for two years. Jenny is the author of Barbour Books' "Southern Fried Sushi" series and an upcoming romance novella collection based on Yellowstone National Park (also with Barbour Books). Her first novel, “Southern Fried Sushi,” was a Christy Award finalist in 2012. Right now Jenny is sharing her side of the bed with Charlie Broccoli and hoping Ethan sleeps a little longer this afternoon so she can put her feet up.

Monday, August 20, 2012

A Conversation Across the Water







Donna: My guest today is Claire Dunn from England, a friend I made through the Association of Christian Writers. Congratulations, Claire, on publishing your first novel. Tell us about yourself.


Claire: With a degree in history and a career in specialist education, writing a novel is not so divergent a choice of occupation as it might at first seem. My all-abiding love of history, language and learning came together in my debut novel: Mortal FireThe Secret of the Journal - the first of a series of romantic thrillers with a twist published by Monarch Books in the UK in May, 2012, and in August in the United States.

Mortal Fire grew out of a desire to weave the sort of story that kept me enthralled – multi-layered, dark, with an evolving tale that packs a punch, but it might never have been written if the predictions of my headmaster at primary school had proved correct. Struggling to learn to read and write, school represented a hurdle to be overcome. I nonetheless loved literature, and it wasn’t until I left school that dyslexia was diagnosed.

Refusing to be daunted, I went on to study history at university. On graduation, and building on my own educational experiences, I established a school for children with dyslexia, autism, and communication difficulties, which I still run.    

Now I divide my time running my school in Kent and writing in the south west of England, a life I can only describe as living between the here-and-now and the never-never.

Donna: And I’ll bet you’re never bored, Claire. Can you share some of your story without giving too much away, of course?

Claire: Mortal Fire follows Emma D’Eresby a 29 year-old, independent and self-contained professor of history – who leaves her Cambridge college for a post in an exclusive university in Maine, USA. It is meant to be the culmination of her obsession with a curious journal – the diary of a long dead Englishman - a portion of which was left to her by her grandfather; instead the legacy leads her to a head-on collision with history and a secret that should never have been uncovered. But, most diverting and disconcerting of all, is Emma's growing attraction to the strikingly handsome Dr. Matthew Lynes, whose kind but deliberately distant demeanour puzzles her. And the mystery surrounding Matthew only deepens when Emma discovers a link between him and the journal. What is Matthew trying to hide?

Donna: That sounds gripping, indeed. Congratulations on being endorsed by Colin Dexter (Inspector Morse) and Fay Sampson (The Hunted Hare)). Those are two of my favourite authors. Now, tell us how you came to write Mortal Fire.
Claire: Hanging on my bedroom wall is an excerpt from the poem ‘God Knows’ written by Minnie Louise Haskins in the early C20th, and used for King George VI’s Christmas broadcast in 1939. You may know it from the opening lines:
And I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year: “Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.”
And he replied:
“Go out into the darkness and put your hand into the Hand of God. That shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way.”
It is undoubtedly easier to put this into practice when the way is clear and the light shines brightly on your road ahead. Sometimes, however, your way is not clear until you are on it, and this is the path I found myself treading one spring in 2009. First, a bit of backstory...
Although a career in writing and history had been my ambition from my earliest years, the twin revolutions of finding Christ and a diagnosis of dyslexia took my life in a different direction.  I fully believed – and still do – that the dyslexia was  both a gift (in the way that only God is able to turn a negative into a positive and so much more) and a command to direct my life in service to others with the same condition. The setting up and running of a school for children with a range of specific language difficulties was therefore a straightforward, unquestionable act of obedience. It wasn’t easy, in fact there were many obstacles over a long period of time that threatened to stop the project in its tracks, but not once did I question the validity of what I had been asked to do.
So what has this to do with writing, you might ask? Well, quite a lot really. I had long put aside any desire to write, and the development and running of the school dominated life for a considerable number of years. Content with this, I didn’t look for anything else. It came as something of a surprise, therefore, when a thought became a niggle, and the niggle became an itch. In 2009, I resisted no longer, and scratched the itch until it became a book. But what sort of book and who was I writing it for? Herein lay my dilemma.
Although Mortal Fire is primarily a book about a developing romance and the mystery that surrounds the central characters, I introduced elements of faith because it is important for my heroine, and has a bearing on the unfolding story. Emma is a Christian but in this first book of the Secret of the Journal series her faith is almost dormant as she hides in a bubble created in an attempt to protect herself from her past. Emma is not seen praying on a regular basis, does not attend church – yet faith underlies her life and the choices she makes and, gradually, as she is shaken from her somnolence, she wakes. Nonetheless, I would describe Mortal Fire as a secular book, albeit written from a Christian perspective. How could I justify the amount of time spent writing a story and one not intended to enlighten or comfort, but merely to entertain? Where was this in God’s plan for me? How did it serve Him?
I discussed it with Christian friends, read how other authors and singers juggled secular and non-secular aspects of their work, and, of course, I prayed, bending God’s ear repeatedly over the months it took to complete Mortal Fire. And each time I prayed for clear direction I had the same message to keep going and I would ask ‘but why?’, because I couldn’t quite believe there could be any purpose in it. Non-Christian friends didn’t see the problem – ‘write because you want to’, they said. But it was difficult for me to see how I could serve God through writing this book, whereas the purpose of the school had been abundantly clear from the outset.
There came a point when I had a completed manuscript – well two, but that’s another story – and I set off to find a publisher. To cut a long story short (and what a story) I entered into negotiations with a Christian publisher in the UK. We discussed what they were looking for, I explained my perspective - toning down some elements, and highlighting others - until we had a balance and I had a contract.
I had accepted the directive to write; but I still didn’t understand why? Then a friend said to me “Write for God in the best way you can and He will find a purpose for it”, and someone else said, “It’s not what you do that matters” and at last I understood that it wasn’t up to me to decide God’s purpose in this, all I had to do was to let go.
It came down to trust. The lesson I learned when writing The Secret of the Journal series is echoed by one of the characters who, taking from Isaiah 55:8, quoted:  
 For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, says the LORD.’  (King James 2000 Bible)
Mine is not to reason why; mine is to do and write. Stepping out of our comfort zone is a matter of trust, stepping out into the unknown – at whatever level – is a matter of faith.
Donna: So true, Claire. Obedience is a lesson we just have to keep on learning, isn’t it? Where can we find you on the web?
Claire: The Mortal Fire video is on YouTube at: http://ning.it/MNRTNQ     
            And the book is on AmazonUK at: http://ning.it/MNSSO1