Showing posts with label Christian spec-fic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian spec-fic. Show all posts

12/04/2007

Check out What's Happening with Carole McDonnell

Thought I'd take a moment and a liberty . . . it isn't my blog day but I have an important announcement!


The Christian Fiction Review Blog (CFRB) and friends are touring Carole McDonnell's Wind Follower this month.

Now, I have to admit that I wasn't able to read Wind Follower, thus don't have a review to provide. However, other good folks at the CFRB have done so. If you visit the Blog Tour Central, you can read more about the tour . . . oh yes, and the novel Wind Follower!











10/26/2007

And, the winners are . . . .

We have two winners to announce this evening!

The first is the winner of the FLASHPOINT: Book One of the UNDERGROUND virtual tour


And the prize goes to someone who commented on a couple different blogs and her/ his ShoutLife name is Reborn Butterfly! Yeah!

RB, please send your name and mailing address to admin@thewriterscafe.com and your prize package will be in the mail once I receive this information. Congratulations.



The second winner tonight is from The UNDERGROUND Flash Fiction Contest. We received many really fine entries to choose from and two of the authors deserve special mention:
  • Caprice Hokstad
  • Cathi Hassan

And, the winner of the gold ribbon, publication in the next issue of The UNDERGROUND (Nov. '07), publication at www.fanfiction.com AND, the prize: a signed copy of Flashpoint and a $20 Starbucks gift card is the entry "Bear Feat" by Stephen Rice! Congratulations Mr. Rice.

Thank you everyone for participating in this virtual book tour and the writing contest. The bloggers are most appreciated. And, there is one more blog to highlight . . . a review of Flashpoint and interview with Frank Creed at Pastor James Somers' blog.

10/25/2007

Day 3 of the Flashpoint Tour

Final day of the virtual book tour for Frank Creed's FLASHPOINT: Book One of the UNDERGROUND is upon us and it has been a fun ride. I've read some pretty impressive posts from readers of Flashpoint, and today is no exception. As usual, I have listed the day's highlights (and there are links attached to each; just run your cursor over each highlight to find the link).

Below the highlights, a fun Frank Creed video (editing is purposely cheesy).

Highlights:

"Flashpoint: Action Heroes without a License to Kill," is the name of Terri Main's article at Wayfarer's Journal.

Murray T. Alchemist is at it again at Back to the Mountains with the latest installment: Stopping a Goliath Part II.

"Frank Creed is one of my favorite people. He has a heart for God and is, in my opinion, one of a new generation of spiritual warriors," writes MaryLu Tundall at her blog Cross and Cutlass. MaryLu's post today is all about Frank: his bio, which is fascinating in itself.

Cathi Hassan and Frank Creed have had many conversations over the past couple of months about writing Flashpoint. Her blog post yesterday was a compilation of all of these creatively packaged as an interview. I even learned from reading it!
And, then today at Cathi's Chatter, another post: "Meet Legacy." Here we read Chapter 2 of Flashpoint where Legacy, almost everyone's favorite character, makes his entrance.

Timothy Hicks has three great posts at Fantasy Thyme. His last discussion about Flashpoint gives insight into the novel's strengths.

Christine Deanne has posted the interview she did with Frank Creed at Write and Whine.

Remember, comment on any of the participating blogs on tour and your name will be entered for a prize--plus, I encourage you to show each blogger appreciation for their work!

Some more links to check out:
a. Reviews
Stephen Rice's review of Flashpoint: Book One of the UNDERGROUND, "Crouching Matrix, Hidden Christians."
Queen of Convolution
Hoshi to Sakura
Daniel I Weaver
Disturbing Reviews
Grace Bridges
Virtual Tour de 'Net
Christian Fiction Review Blog
Yellow30 Sci-Fi
The Sword Review
Teen Life
Karri Compton
More reviews at Frank Creed's website and at Amazon

b. Interviews

Wayfarer's Journal
Joseph Ficor
"The Farthest Frontiers"
Yellow30 Sci-Fi
Fantasy Thyme
The Stiltskins
Write and Whine


And, here is a video for your viewing pleasure . . .

10/22/2007

Flashpoint Virtual Book Tour Day 1




It's time to begin Frank Creed's FLASHPOINT: Book One of the UNDERGROUND virtual book tour! and over the course of the tour there are a LOT of things to show you: reviews, blurbs, book trailers, interviews and some really fun posts by some super creative minds!


We even have a prize package for the winner of the Flashpoint tour drawing! How to win it? Simply leave a comment on one or more of the participating blogs . . . or leave one here telling about your favourite blog post!

<----- oops, wrong prize - -
This is the prize ---------------------->
OK, it may arrive in different wrapping





Meanwhile, here are some highlights to check out:
Hoshi to Sakura Interview with Frank
Back to the Mountains Some craziness only Steve Rice is capable of: here he has a real surprise! but make sure you read the conversation carefully . . .
Fantasy Thyme Tim at Thyme got a head start and has already made a couple of posts! including yet another interview with Frank.
Cathi's Chatter Cathi is a one-person cheerleading squad who has sent the Dallas Cowgirls back to training camp. Oh yes she has a review posted, plus some hip hip hooray stuff for y'all.
Back to the Mountains II Yup, Mr. Rice is at it again! with the "Genuine Fake Interview" --again, read very carefully . . . . . . . . . . did you get it? This is cool stuff.
MaryLu Tyndall one of Frank's all-time favourite authors joins the tour with some good info on Flashpoint

Over the course of this tour: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday check out these blogs to see what is happenin'

jamessomers.blogspot.com
Write and Whine
Wayfarer's Journal
BlogCritics Interview
Daniel I Weaver
Disturbing the Universe

9/06/2007

Tell the Story!

When I first started writing in college, I sent a story to Marion Zimmer Bradley's Fantasy Magazine. I got back a personal rejection letter. Not realizing how rare those were, I've since lost it, but I do remember one line, a piece of advice she said she received as a novice writer that she now passed on to me:

Stop showing me how good you can write and tell me a story!

As writers of Christian fiction, we need to keep in mind the corollary to that:

Stop showing folks how good a Christian you (or your characters) are and tell a story!

Tonight on FabChat, I interviewed publisher Lida Quillen of Twilight Times Books. Twilight Times is a growing publishing company, which moved from eBooks to print in 2004 and has about 50 titles to claim, many of which are award winners and some of which are in national bookstore shelves. Several of her titles, like Infinite Space, Infinite God, are Catholic and Christian in nature. I asked her if religious content influences her in any way.

"I'm looking for a great story," she insisted. Not a great message. Lot a life changer. A great story.

Certainly, there are niches for message works--but if you want to write spec fic, you find a way to make the story demonstrate the message, not fit a story into your message. Genre fiction has with it certain expectations: fantasy had better have an adventure and elements of the fantastic--whether magic or fairy creatures or stepping into a make-believe world. Sci-Fi had better have some internally consistent and legitimized science. (Has anyone read some of the early "Christian SF" novels which read like Pilgrim's Progress with a spaceship or dismiss science as inherently evil when it's all that's keeping them from the vacuum of space? No wonder it's a hard sell now.) Horror better, as Daniel Weaver puts it, scare the Jesus into you.

And no matter what, you'd better have a character who feels conflict, doubts, grows and eventually meets his challenges in a "realistic" and meaningful way. To suddenly have all their troubles solved--or have their ability miraculously empowered, simply because they "accept Jesus as their personal savior" is as much a cheat as having the Good Witch Glenda send Dorothy home at the start of the book. Faith gives us strength for the struggle; it doesn't remove it. Not in real life. Not in a well-crafted story.

As one writer put it, the only difference between secular fiction and Christian fiction should be that when evil is done, the protagonist doesn't rejoice--and neither should the reader.

The really incredible thing, however, is that if you do write a really incredible story, the message will come through more powerfully than if you concentrate on message first and story second. We've seen that with Infinite Space, Infinite God. When Rob (my husband) and I solicited stories for ISIG, we wanted stories that entertained first, made you think, second; and showed the Catholic faith in its complexities but with a positive light, third. As a result, not only was it picked up by a secular publisher like Twilight Times, but it won the 2007 EPPIE award for best electronically published sci-fi. Not religious or Christian. Just sci-fi. But even better are the reviews it's getting. Even readers who are not Catholic say they are enthralled by the book. I've been told it should be required reading for teens because of the issues covered in many of the stories. One reviewer called it a terrifying and invigorating read. Some have been led to reconsider what they thought they knew about Catholicism; others are considering anew the moral issues of progresses like genetic engineering.

We're seeing a gentle upsurge in "Christian" spec fic--or should I say spec fic with Christian values? If we are to build this gentle upsurge into a tidal wave that sweeps our readership, we need to keep in mind what spec fic readers want. They can get "message" on Sundays or from their Bible or from any number of non-fiction testimonials. When they come to spec fic, they are looking for story.

So stop showing them what a great Christian you (or your characters are) and tell them the story! Do it right, and they'll get the message.

8/31/2007

Name that Christian SF Title!

Current Christian speculative fiction: how many 2007 titles can you name? Did you ever wonder what new SF has hit or about to hit the market? There are certainly lists of Christian spec fiction around. Jeff Gerke at Where the Map Ends has a great annotated list of titles and earlier this year, the folks at Spec Faith and A Christian Worldview of Fiction compiled a list of the 2006 titles they could recall. But what about a current listing of new fiction?

Johne Cook said earlier this week, "It would be cool if there was a clearinghouse of the latest new fiction in a database, sortable by date, author, genre, etc. As it is, if I don't see it in front of me, I lose sight of what I was waiting for."

The Lost Genre Guild is going to take on this little job and develop a database of the latest in Christian SF, beginning with 2007 titles. But, we need your help! Please list any 2007 Christian SF titles, preferably with date of release, publisher, and short synopsis!