CSFF Tour- Where the Map Ends

I missed last month’s Christian Sci-Fi and Fantasy blog tour, to my chagrin. This time around I’m happy to join with the gang to highlight WhereTheMapEnds.

This site is the brainchild of Jeff Gerke, former fiction acquistion editor for Multinomah, Realms, and NavPress. He has a love for speculative fiction and it shows in all he talks about throughout the site.

It is an impressive work and a good resource for budding fiction writers, particularly those who are working on speculative fiction. One impressive resource is the booklist, which is one of the most comprehensive lists of spec fic I’ve seen online. He even graciously gives a low speed and graphics version of the page, with Amazon links to the works he describes. If you’re looking for good Christian sci-fi or fantasy, this is a great place to start.

The design of the site is very good, although on smaller monitors there’s a little overlap with the newsletter registration sidebar that is noticeable. Picky, picky. Well, Jeff is running a pretty high-class setup there, so he needs to polish it up as nice as possible, IMHO.

I’ll point out some other great features presently, but check out these fine blogging folk below for more insight into WheretheMapEnds. Oh, and don’t miss my review of Abiding Darkness here.

Nissa Annakindt
Jim Black
Grace Bridges
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Karri Compton
CSFF Blog Tour
Gene Curtis
Chris Deanne
Janey DeMeo
Tessa Edwards
April Erwin
Kameron M. Franklin
Linda Gilmore
Beth Goddard
Marcus Goodyear
Andrea Graham
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Sharon Hinck
Christopher Hopper
Kait
Karen
K. D. Kragen
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia and The Bookshelf Reviews 2.0 – The Compendium
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Eve Nielsen
John Ottinger
Robin Parrish
Cheryl Russel
Hanna Sandvig
Mirtika Schultz
James Somers
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Daniel I. Weaver
Timothy Wise
Rachelle
D.G.D. Davidson
John W. Otte

CSFF Tour- Where the Map Ends

I missed last month’s Christian Sci-Fi and Fantasy blog tour, to my chagrin. This time around I’m happy to join with the gang to highlight WhereTheMapEnds.

This site is the brainchild of Jeff Gerke, former fiction acquistion editor for Multinomah, Realms, and NavPress. He has a love for speculative fiction and it shows in all he talks about throughout the site.

It is an impressive work and a good resource for budding fiction writers, particularly those who are working on speculative fiction. One impressive resource is the booklist, which is one of the most comprehensive lists of spec fic I’ve seen online. He even graciously gives a low speed and graphics version of the page, with Amazon links to the works he describes. If you’re looking for good Christian sci-fi or fantasy, this is a great place to start.

The design of the site is very good, although on smaller monitors there’s a little overlap with the newsletter registration sidebar that is noticeable. Picky, picky. Well, Jeff is running a pretty high-class setup there, so he needs to polish it up as nice as possible, IMHO.

I’ll point out some other great features presently, but check out these fine blogging folk below for more insight into WheretheMapEnds. Oh, and don’t miss my review of Abiding Darkness here.

Nissa Annakindt
Jim Black
Grace Bridges
Jackie Castle
Valerie Comer
Karri Compton
CSFF Blog Tour
Gene Curtis
Chris Deanne
Janey DeMeo
Tessa Edwards
April Erwin
Kameron M. Franklin
Linda Gilmore
Beth Goddard
Marcus Goodyear
Andrea Graham
Todd Michael Greene
Leathel Grody
Katie Hart
Sherrie Hibbs
Sharon Hinck
Christopher Hopper
Kait
Karen
K. D. Kragen
Tina Kulesa
Kevin Lucia and The Bookshelf Reviews 2.0 – The Compendium
Rachel Marks
Shannon McNear
Rebecca LuElla Miller
Eve Nielsen
John Ottinger
Robin Parrish
Cheryl Russel
Hanna Sandvig
Mirtika Schultz
James Somers
Steve Trower
Speculative Faith
Daniel I. Weaver
Timothy Wise
Rachelle
D.G.D. Davidson
John W. Otte

Book Review – Abiding Darkness

Book Review – Abiding Darkness

It is rare for me to come across a book that makes me fall in love with it. The first book in The Black or White Chronicles, Abiding Darkness, is that rare find.

The CFBA is featuring the second book in the series, Wedgewood Grey, later this week, but I wanted to feature the very excellent first book in the series.

John Aubrey Anderson is a retired airline pilot who grew up in the Mississippi Delta. An old writing adage is “write what you know”. Now if we all listened to that, we wouldn’t have any historical, sci-fi, or fantasy fiction. But in Anderson’s case, it is a wonderful thing that he does. He recreates the Deep South of the 40’s and 50’s in such a way that I feel like I grew up there (instead of the intermountain West).

The story revolves around Amanda Allen “‘Missy” Parker, a spitfire 7 year old who is special and knows it! Missy lives by Cat Lake, and along with her older brother Bobby and their black friend Junior Washington, they embark on typical adventures of childhood. Typical, until dark forces conspire to destroy the local community and disrupt eternal plans by striking Missy Parker.

This sets off a tale of suspense that will pull you into its world and touch you with tales of heroism and tragedy. Anderson is masterful in drawing out scenes of tension, keeping the stakes high while slowly developing the material for all it is worth. The key incident of the book spans chapters, but at no time does he seem to be prolonging it artificially. It gives the effect of savoring the action, not being cheated by having it come to a head too quickly.

Part of the secret of his success comes from the delightful people and characterization he creates. His characters are rich and vibrant. The dialogue of the South comes across realistically without being forced. If I can create just one literary character that approaches the vitality of Missy Parker or Mose Washington, I will be well-pleased.

Anderson succeeds in one other area that takes Abiding Darkness from enjoyable to transcendent. He speaks on matters of truth and sacrifice that are deeply moving. I am not an emotional guy, but he had me in tears on the bus ride home from work one day. The next day, I was laughing out loud (my fellow travelers might think I’m a head case, LOL!). I don’t read read fiction to be uplifted in my spiritual life, but this tale has affected me in more than just an aesthetic way. The amazing thing is, all of this comes naturally in the story. The characters are real, so it is real to see them share their faith. To me, it almost always seems appropriate in how these truths are brought out.

No work is perfect. The main weakness I discerned in his writing was a habit to move around in point-of-view (POV) characters within a scene – sometimes I had to read back a paragraph to find who was thinking/doing something. One of his scenes of faith discussion loses the veneer of being there in the story and almost becomes preachy.

Overall, I am highly impressed with Abiding Darkness. As another reviewer wrote, it is the type of book you want to immerse yourself in, but you read slower as you approach the end so you don’t have to leave then denizens of Cat Lake. If you enjoy qualilty storytelling, read this book. If you aspire to write, get this book and study it. It will be time very well spent.

Check back later this week for my review of Wedgewood Grey and a further discussion of the writing of John Aubrey Anderson.

Book Review – Abiding Darkness

Book Review – Abiding Darkness

It is rare for me to come across a book that makes me fall in love with it. The first book in The Black or White Chronicles, Abiding Darkness, is that rare find.

The CFBA is featuring the second book in the series, Wedgewood Grey, later this week, but I wanted to feature the very excellent first book in the series.

John Aubrey Anderson is a retired airline pilot who grew up in the Mississippi Delta. An old writing adage is “write what you know”. Now if we all listened to that, we wouldn’t have any historical, sci-fi, or fantasy fiction. But in Anderson’s case, it is a wonderful thing that he does. He recreates the Deep South of the 40’s and 50’s in such a way that I feel like I grew up there (instead of the intermountain West).

The story revolves around Amanda Allen “‘Missy” Parker, a spitfire 7 year old who is special and knows it! Missy lives by Cat Lake, and along with her older brother Bobby and their black friend Junior Washington, they embark on typical adventures of childhood. Typical, until dark forces conspire to destroy the local community and disrupt eternal plans by striking Missy Parker.

This sets off a tale of suspense that will pull you into its world and touch you with tales of heroism and tragedy. Anderson is masterful in drawing out scenes of tension, keeping the stakes high while slowly developing the material for all it is worth. The key incident of the book spans chapters, but at no time does he seem to be prolonging it artificially. It gives the effect of savoring the action, not being cheated by having it come to a head too quickly.

Part of the secret of his success comes from the delightful people and characterization he creates. His characters are rich and vibrant. The dialogue of the South comes across realistically without being forced. If I can create just one literary character that approaches the vitality of Missy Parker or Mose Washington, I will be well-pleased.

Anderson succeeds in one other area that takes Abiding Darkness from enjoyable to transcendent. He speaks on matters of truth and sacrifice that are deeply moving. I am not an emotional guy, but he had me in tears on the bus ride home from work one day. The next day, I was laughing out loud (my fellow travelers might think I’m a head case, LOL!). I don’t read read fiction to be uplifted in my spiritual life, but this tale has affected me in more than just an aesthetic way. The amazing thing is, all of this comes naturally in the story. The characters are real, so it is real to see them share their faith. To me, it almost always seems appropriate in how these truths are brought out.

No work is perfect. The main weakness I discerned in his writing was a habit to move around in point-of-view (POV) characters within a scene – sometimes I had to read back a paragraph to find who was thinking/doing something. One of his scenes of faith discussion loses the veneer of being there in the story and almost becomes preachy.

Overall, I am highly impressed with Abiding Darkness. As another reviewer wrote, it is the type of book you want to immerse yourself in, but you read slower as you approach the end so you don’t have to leave then denizens of Cat Lake. If you enjoy qualilty storytelling, read this book. If you aspire to write, get this book and study it. It will be time very well spent.

Check back later this week for my review of Wedgewood Grey and a further discussion of the writing of John Aubrey Anderson.

Relief

Relief


There’s a fresh wind blowing in Christian fiction. Relief Journal is a new quarterly fiction journal that has high aspirations for bringing new literary works in fiction, non-fiction, and poetry to people. An acquaintance from Faith*in*Fiction, J. Mark Bertrand, is the fiction editor.

From the look of their site, they have professional aptitude to match their ambition. I have ordered the first volume, and am anticipating its arrival. I will let you know more after I get it.

Check it out if you have any interest in Christian fiction.

Relief

Relief


There’s a fresh wind blowing in Christian fiction. Relief Journal is a new quarterly fiction journal that has high aspirations for bringing new literary works in fiction, non-fiction, and poetry to people. An acquaintance from Faith*in*Fiction, J. Mark Bertrand, is the fiction editor.

From the look of their site, they have professional aptitude to match their ambition. I have ordered the first volume, and am anticipating its arrival. I will let you know more after I get it.

Check it out if you have any interest in Christian fiction.

Kingdom of Heaven

I saw a fairly disturbing snippet of Oprah yesterday. On the show they were talking about a book called The Secret. Some attractive and well-meaning people were talking about it earnestly. I don’t fault any of them (don’t know ’em, didn’t watch long enough to find out), but the part that I saw had a flawed concept, and I wanted to address that.

Apparently the book in question talks about the law of attraction, saying that we receive what we think about. If we think about the obstacles in our path, that’s what we’ll get. If we think positively, and think about-say, the promotion we want, that’s what we’ll receive.

This all comes from the worldview that people are basically good, and we just need to think/do good and everything will be alright. Nevermind that this bedrock of postmodern society doesn’t work and isn’t changing life as we know it. There was a quote on the show that was the main kicker for this topic.

As a Christian, Maureen says she believes in heaven and hell, and she’s concerned that The Secret’s promotion of free will and personal choice imply that you do not face a final judgment.

James says that while he honors Maureen’s Christian belief system, he suggests looking at the concepts of heaven, hell and judgment in a different way. “Jesus the Christ said the kingdom of heaven is within. He didn’t say it was out there somewhere—[he said] within. And so is it possible to consider that the kingdom of hell is within as well?” he says.

“The kingdom of God is actually in us, and what comes out of your mouth, what you think about, how you express—you’re either participating in the realm of ever-expanding good or you’re cutting yourself off from the realm,” Michael says.

Michael suggests that instead of living a life preparing for some ultimate reward, you should live in the now. “When you’re anticipating some future good, you’re preventing that good that is all around you from expressing through you,” he says. “[Don’t] put life on the layaway plan and try to anticipate that it’s going to get good in the future.”

It is too bad that this is the idea Michael has about the Kingdom of Heaven. I’m afraid to say that Christians can give support to the idea that all we’re doing is putting “life on the layaway plan” by focusing on eternity rather than what is going on today.

The truth is that Jesus came to proclaim that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. As Christians, we are to live a life by faith. According to Romans 8, we live a resurrection life. In short, we look ahead to the life we will have when we are with Jesus, and by faith walk as if we were there now. According to Francis Schaeffer:

It means that, through faith, I am to die to all things both good and bad, but then to take my resurrected body, as though I had already been raised physically from the dead, and step back into this present world, to serve in the power of the indwelling Spirit.
(The Finished Work of Christ, pg 188)

As we walk as children of God, we are to bring light and life to those around us. Jesus said that “no man knows the hour” of His return. Keeping our head on a swivel trying to see if He’s come back yet isn’t going to help this world. By showing the love of Jesus in living out the example AND telling them about His great gift of salvation. The Kingdom will grow as we work with what God is doing to bring people to Himself. The Kingdom is invading this present age, but not as those on Oprah would suggest. It is only through people submitting to Christ as Lord that it is here. There is still a future aspect of the Kingdom, when it is fully revealed at His second return.

So I take the Oprah episode in two ways. In one way it is a rebuke. Christians need to be about loving people, and loving is not just an attitude but action as well. If we are seen as “too heavenly minded to be any earthly good”, that isn’t how we are commanded to live.

On the other hand, the world won’t understand that the true “heavenly minded” will be the ones who make the most difference in this world, because we see the light of God and reflect it, helping others to see the Way. On Amazon The Secret is described as an ideal that permeates all cultures and religions, being brought forth all together for the first time now, although people like Plato and Jesus walked in it. Um, not my Jesus, sorry. My Jesus was the Son of God who was and continues to be rejected by the world. He was not just one of many great teachers in history. Without revelation, man cannot understand Jesus, the Kingdom of Heaven, or His followers.

It is incumbent on us who call on His name to show the Way as best we can, knowing that it is Jesus that will ultimately draw people to Him.

Kingdom of Heaven

I saw a fairly disturbing snippet of Oprah yesterday. On the show they were talking about a book called The Secret. Some attractive and well-meaning people were talking about it earnestly. I don’t fault any of them (don’t know ’em, didn’t watch long enough to find out), but the part that I saw had a flawed concept, and I wanted to address that.

Apparently the book in question talks about the law of attraction, saying that we receive what we think about. If we think about the obstacles in our path, that’s what we’ll get. If we think positively, and think about-say, the promotion we want, that’s what we’ll receive.

This all comes from the worldview that people are basically good, and we just need to think/do good and everything will be alright. Nevermind that this bedrock of postmodern society doesn’t work and isn’t changing life as we know it. There was a quote on the show that was the main kicker for this topic.

As a Christian, Maureen says she believes in heaven and hell, and she’s concerned that The Secret’s promotion of free will and personal choice imply that you do not face a final judgment.

James says that while he honors Maureen’s Christian belief system, he suggests looking at the concepts of heaven, hell and judgment in a different way. “Jesus the Christ said the kingdom of heaven is within. He didn’t say it was out there somewhere—[he said] within. And so is it possible to consider that the kingdom of hell is within as well?” he says.

“The kingdom of God is actually in us, and what comes out of your mouth, what you think about, how you express—you’re either participating in the realm of ever-expanding good or you’re cutting yourself off from the realm,” Michael says.

Michael suggests that instead of living a life preparing for some ultimate reward, you should live in the now. “When you’re anticipating some future good, you’re preventing that good that is all around you from expressing through you,” he says. “[Don’t] put life on the layaway plan and try to anticipate that it’s going to get good in the future.”

It is too bad that this is the idea Michael has about the Kingdom of Heaven. I’m afraid to say that Christians can give support to the idea that all we’re doing is putting “life on the layaway plan” by focusing on eternity rather than what is going on today.

The truth is that Jesus came to proclaim that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. As Christians, we are to live a life by faith. According to Romans 8, we live a resurrection life. In short, we look ahead to the life we will have when we are with Jesus, and by faith walk as if we were there now. According to Francis Schaeffer:

It means that, through faith, I am to die to all things both good and bad, but then to take my resurrected body, as though I had already been raised physically from the dead, and step back into this present world, to serve in the power of the indwelling Spirit.
(The Finished Work of Christ, pg 188)

As we walk as children of God, we are to bring light and life to those around us. Jesus said that “no man knows the hour” of His return. Keeping our head on a swivel trying to see if He’s come back yet isn’t going to help this world. By showing the love of Jesus in living out the example AND telling them about His great gift of salvation. The Kingdom will grow as we work with what God is doing to bring people to Himself. The Kingdom is invading this present age, but not as those on Oprah would suggest. It is only through people submitting to Christ as Lord that it is here. There is still a future aspect of the Kingdom, when it is fully revealed at His second return.

So I take the Oprah episode in two ways. In one way it is a rebuke. Christians need to be about loving people, and loving is not just an attitude but action as well. If we are seen as “too heavenly minded to be any earthly good”, that isn’t how we are commanded to live.

On the other hand, the world won’t understand that the true “heavenly minded” will be the ones who make the most difference in this world, because we see the light of God and reflect it, helping others to see the Way. On Amazon The Secret is described as an ideal that permeates all cultures and religions, being brought forth all together for the first time now, although people like Plato and Jesus walked in it. Um, not my Jesus, sorry. My Jesus was the Son of God who was and continues to be rejected by the world. He was not just one of many great teachers in history. Without revelation, man cannot understand Jesus, the Kingdom of Heaven, or His followers.

It is incumbent on us who call on His name to show the Way as best we can, knowing that it is Jesus that will ultimately draw people to Him.

Musical Minstrel of Ministry

I was blessed yesterday and today by a visiting speaker, Dick Williams. This man of God travels around with a gentle prophetic ministry of encouragement and exhorting the body of Christ. If you’ve never heard him, he’s unlike any speaker I’ve ever heard.

He usually ministers with guitar in hand. As he talks, he strums gently on his 12-string, and often launches into song. He is poetic and lyrical in how he presents the truth of God. He is also quite gifted in how he gives personal words of edification to people in the audience. He doesn’t know me from Adam, but he spoke a word to me yesterday that was spot on.

He talked about the ministry of the prophetic, which can be a controversial topic. However, he presented it with grace and making it understandable without a “Twilight Zone” factor. To quote Dick:

The testimony of Jesus (Rev. 19:10) is what He Himself communicates to people and prophetically through people. Therefore, truth spoken prophetically will be permeated with who Jesus is. He is majesty, might, light, and love. One or more of all of these ingredients will characterize true prophetic communication.

I could really launch into a lot of posts regarding what he taught, but that’s not my intention. But if anyone is curious and wants to ask questions, leave a comment and we’ll discuss it privately.

Musical Minstrel of Ministry

I was blessed yesterday and today by a visiting speaker, Dick Williams. This man of God travels around with a gentle prophetic ministry of encouragement and exhorting the body of Christ. If you’ve never heard him, he’s unlike any speaker I’ve ever heard.

He usually ministers with guitar in hand. As he talks, he strums gently on his 12-string, and often launches into song. He is poetic and lyrical in how he presents the truth of God. He is also quite gifted in how he gives personal words of edification to people in the audience. He doesn’t know me from Adam, but he spoke a word to me yesterday that was spot on.

He talked about the ministry of the prophetic, which can be a controversial topic. However, he presented it with grace and making it understandable without a “Twilight Zone” factor. To quote Dick:

The testimony of Jesus (Rev. 19:10) is what He Himself communicates to people and prophetically through people. Therefore, truth spoken prophetically will be permeated with who Jesus is. He is majesty, might, light, and love. One or more of all of these ingredients will characterize true prophetic communication.

I could really launch into a lot of posts regarding what he taught, but that’s not my intention. But if anyone is curious and wants to ask questions, leave a comment and we’ll discuss it privately.