Janet Sketchley is an Atlantic Canadian writer whose Redemption’s Edge Christian suspense novels have each been finalists in The Word Awards. She's also the author of the devotional collection, A Year of Tenacity. Janet blogs about faith and books. She loves Jesus and her family, and enjoys reading, worship music, and tea.
Fans of Christian suspense are invited to join her writing journey through her monthly newsletter: bit.ly/JanetSketchleyNews.
After I read Whose Waves These Are,
I went looking for more fiction from Amanda Dykes and was excited to find two
free ebook novellas.
One of those is Up From the Sea, a
prequel novella for Whose Waves These Are. Reading it later let me enjoy
recognizing details significant to the novel, which features the next
generation. It also made me want to go back and read the novel again with this
deeper understanding of the past.
Savannah Mae Thorpe was born and raised in
Georgia, but after her parents’ deaths in 1925 the young woman returns to her
mother’s family in coastal Maine. She doesn’t fit in with her aunt and uncle’s
ways, nor with her cousins, although Cousin Mary used to be a good friend.
A local legend from the 1700s captures her
imagination with a wild hope to save her inheritance. Local lumberjack Alastair
Bliss agrees to help, but Savannah’s quest sounds more like a fairy tale than
reality.
Favourite lines:
Lord, you created the dark just as you created the light. Help me find life there, and not fear. [Chapter 3]
“She was imagination itself.” It felt good to speak of her [Savannah’s mother] with laughter, to feel the jagged edges of grief gentled with fond memory. [Chapter 7]
Vague light seeped in through a window whose wavy glass dripped with time. [Chapter 7]
Amanda Dykes’ tag line is “spinning
stories, gathering grace.” As well as the historical fiction Up From the Sea
and Whose Waves These Are, she’s written the novella, Bespoke: A Tiny
Christmas Tale, and one of the stories in The Message in a Bottle
Romance Collection. For more about the author and her work, visit amandadykes.com.
Reunited in the Rockies by Mindy Obenhaus — For widow Kayla Bradshaw, restoring a historic Colorado hotel means a better life for her and her soon-to-arrive baby. But she needs construction help from Jude Stephens, the love she lost through a misunderstanding. Working with Kayla, the police officer finds himself forgiving her—and longing to rebuild her shattered confidence. But can they trust each other enough to forge a future together? (Contemporary Romance from Love Inspired [Harlequin])
A Man to Trust by Carrie Turansky — After years spent helping manage her family’s Christian bookstore, it’s time for Adrie Chandler to give her own dream of playing her flute with a symphony orchestra a chance. But can she really trust the beloved shop to new manager Ross Peterson? The man is too handsome, too charming….and too much a reminder of another dream Adrie had to let go of – marriage. Yet Ross surprises her by knowing a thing or two about making sacrifices. Suddenly, Adrie is questioning what she really wants. And whether the dreams she once thought unlikely are within reach after all. (Contemporary Romance from Flowing Stream Books)
Fall Flip by Denise Weimer — The tragic death of Shelby Dodson’s husband–her partner in a successful Home Network house flipping business–stole love, status, and career. Now a bungalow redesign thrusts Shelby into the company of a new contractor. Scott Matthews remembers high-and-mighty Shelby from high school, and her prissy, contemporary style goes against his down-to-earth grain. When the house reveals a mystery, will its dark secrets–and their own mistakes–cost them a second chance at love? (Contemporary Romance from Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas)
Listening to Love by Beth Wiseman — Lucas is Amish. Natalie’s Englisch. They are best friends—and friends only. Despite what the gossips say. Besides, they couldn’t be together even if they wanted to be. Lucas would never leave the Amish faith, and Natalie is pursuing a degree in veterinary medicine. But when a terrifying accident happens, Natalie and Lucas are forced to confront their true feelings and decide if they can stay true to themselves and each other. (Contemporary Romance from HarperCollins Christian Publishing)
General Contemporary:
The Christmas Portrait by Phyllis Clark Nichols — A family facing their first holiday season without Mama finds a way to celebrate Christmas. (General Contemporary from Gilead Publishing)
Historical:
Memories of Glass by Melanie Dobson — 1942. As war rips through the heart of Holland, childhood friends Josie van Rees and Eliese Linden partner with a few daring citizens to rescue Eliese’s son and hundreds of other Jewish children who await deportation in a converted theater in Amsterdam. But amid their resistance work, Josie and Eliese’s dangerous secrets could derail their friendship and their entire mission. When the enemy finds these women, only one will escape. Seventy-five years later, Ava Drake begins to suspect that her great-grandfather William Kingston was not the World War II hero he claimed to be. Her work as director of the prestigious Kingston Family Foundation leads her to Landon West’s Ugandan coffee plantation, and Ava and Landon soon discover a connection between their families. As Landon’s great-grandmother shares the broken pieces of her story, Ava must confront the greatest loss in her own life?and powerful members of the Kingston family who will do anything to keep the truth buried. (Historical from Tyndale Publishing)
Historical Romance:
Treasured Christmas Brides by Amanda Cabot, Rebecca Germany, Cathy Marie Hake, Colleen L. Reece, MaryLu Tyndall, and Michelle Ule — Six historical Christmas romances prove life’s most priceless gifts come not in the form of polished gold or silver—but from the vast riches of a loving heart. (Historical Romance from Barbour Publishing)
Thankful for the Cowboy by Mary Connealy — Hero Tom MacKinnon rides up driving a wagon with a second wagon trailing him. He and his sister want to be hired to build windmills. They’ll ask for very little money and, in exchange heroine, Lauren Drummond, newly widowed mother of four nearly grown sons, will help them learn to survive in the Sandhills of Nebraska. What to grow, what to hunt, how to build a sod house.
Tom’s windmills will save her ranch. Lauren needs three windmills on this drought year or her growing herd of cattle is going to die of thirst. She agrees to teach him the ways of the Sandhills, and to give him fifteen head of cattle. She’s not ready to think of another man. But Tom changes her mind. His little sister and one of her sons find love together before Tom and Lauren do. (Historical Romance, Independently Published)
The Return of the King’s Ranger by Angela K. Couch — The war is over…for everyone but him. The war for American freedom is over, and the British have gone back to England. Not knowing what has become of his family since he was forced into the Continental Army nine years earlier, Myles Cunningham wants to go home as well. He returns to the Mohawk Valley with the understanding that he is believed to have been shot for deserting—fiction that might be made real if anyone recognizes him as the son of a Tory and a King’s Ranger. Everything is wonderful in the growing community along the Mohawk River, except Nora Reid is still alone. With her brother happily settled and both her younger sisters starting families of their own, Nora feels the weight of her twenty-four years. A long walk leads her to the overgrown rubble of the Cunningham homestead where a bearded stranger begins to awaken feelings she’d lost hope of ever experiencing. With secrets abounding—including whether Myles even cares for her—Nora must determine what she is ready to give up and how far she will go to secure his affections. She begins to break through his defenses, but Myles can’t risk staying. Not if he loves her. (Historical Romance from White Rose Publishing [Pelican])
Christmas Next Door by Susan Page Davis and Vickie McDonough — Visit an Old West Texas town where a mysterious benefactor leaves gifts each Christmas, but also where four pairs of neighbors battle over hearsay, secrets, and mysteries. (Historical Romance from Barbour Publishing)
Under Moonlit Skies by Cynthia Roemer — Esther meets Stewart, her brother-in-law’s ranch hand, when helping her sister recover from childbirth. Any interest she may have in the cowboy is hopeless, since she must return home to Cincinnati and the man her overbearing mother intends her to wed. till reeling from a hurtful relationship, Stew is reluctant to open his heart to Esther. But when he faces a life-threatening injury with Esther tending him, their bond deepens. Heartbroken when she leaves, he sets out after her and inadvertently stumbles across an illegal slave-trade operation, the knowledge of which puts him, as well as Esther and her family, in jeopardy. (Historical Romance from Mantle Rock Publishing)
Mail-Order Misfire by Davalynn Spencer — Preacher Bern Stidham is a peacemaker—when he’s not carrying one on his hip. His little girl wants a helper for her widowed father and a mama for herself, so she writes for a mail-order bride. Without telling him. Recently widowed dressmaker Etta Collier is a half-step ahead of the banker who carries a lustful eye for her as well as the note on her home. When her pastor encourages her to answer an unusual letter from a little girl, hope opens an unexpected door. Running from one man’s lecherous pursuit into the home of another she knows nothing about, Etta may have to risk everything to ease a little girl’s loneliness and find a second chance at love. (Historical Romance, Independently Published)
The Witness Tree by Denise Weimer — Past betrayal has turned John Kliest’s passion to his work as a builder and surveyor in the Moravian town of Salem, North Carolina. Now, to satisfy the elders’ edict and fulfill his mission in Cherokee Territory, he needs a bride. But the one woman qualified to record the Cherokee language longs for a future with his younger brother. Clarissa Vogler’s dream of a life with Daniel Kliest is shattered when she is chosen by lot to marry his older brother and venture into the uncharted frontier. Can she learn to love this stoic man who is now her husband? Her survival hinges on being able to trust him—but they both harbor secrets. (Historical Romance from Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas)
Romantic Suspense:
Don’t Give Up On Me by Jodi Artzberger — When Cragge Automotive Group’s heiress, Amanda Cragge is left for dead, the only man she’s ever loved finds her. As the threats continue, will she accept help from the man who left her eight years ago without explanation? When Ryker Scott returns to Otter Bay, he is brought face to face with his past. He thought he could handle coming back but he might have been wrong. As a trained Army Ranger, he’s going to have to use his skills if he wants to keep the only woman he’s ever loved alive.
Will their past become their future or will their futures be destroyed forever?(Romantic Suspense, Independently Published)
Breaking Point by Marji Laine — Ever since her father’s death, Alynne Stone has had a series of strange “accidents.” Police Lieutenant Jason Danvers believes her father was murdered. He tries to connect the attempts on Alynne’s life, but things just don’t add up. Even in a small town, the mere rumor of treasure can change lives, end friendships…maybe even kill? Still dealing with the pain of his own wife’s death, he can’t allow an innocent woman’s life to be snuffed out on his watch. Especially one who shines as bright as Alynne. (Romantic Suspense, Write Integrity Press)
Fatal Strike by DiAnn Mills — FBI Agents Leah Riesel and Jon Colbert team up to track down a killer on the loose in Galveston, targeting law enforcement officials and using a fatal injection of snake venom to take them down. (Romantic Suspense, Tyndale House)
Thriller:
The Gryphon Heist by James R. Hannibal — Talia Inger is a rookie CIA case officer assigned not to the Moscow desk as she had hoped but to the forgotten backwaters of Eastern Europe–a department only known as “Other.” When she is tasked with helping a young, charming Moldovan executive secure his designs for a revolutionary defense technology, she figures she’ll be back in DC within a few days. But that’s before she knows where the designs are stored–and who’s after them. With her shady civilian partner, Adam Tyler, Talia takes a deep dive into a world where only criminal minds and unlikely strategies will keep the Gryphon, a high-altitude data vault, hovering in the mesosphere. Even Tyler is more than he seems, and Talia begins to wonder: Is he helping her? Or using her access to CIA resources to pull off an epic heist for his own dark purposes? (Techno-thriller from Revell – A Division of Baker Publishing Group)
Catherine West writes with skill and
compassion, tackling hard issues with honesty and sensitivity and enough humour
that this is not a hard read. She gives us real characters to care about,
flawed people who are doing their best and fear it may not be enough.
Her voice is true, whether writing from
the late-twenties/early-thirties central characters of Liz and Matthew,
15-year-old Mia, or the elderly Drake.
And Drake… how many novels include a
character with Alzheimer’s in a positive light? Drake’s voice opens the novel,
and it hooked me from the beginning. This isn’t a victim, but a man navigating
a hopeless situation with grim humour. He may be losing his memory, but his
will is strong. And despite his limitations, he can still make a difference.
Readers who enjoy stories about family
relationships, gentle love stories, and finding healing for past hurts will
love this book.
Favourite line:
I see a restlessness in her eyes today, churning like a stormy sea. Like she’s carrying something too heavy but doesn’t have a place to put it down. [Kindle location 3791]
As the Light Fades is a clean
contemporary read with a subtle faith thread and a theme of forgiveness and
grace. Set on the US tourist haven of Nantucket, it features the Carlisle
family readers first met in The Things We Knew.
You don’t have to have read the previous
novel, although I highly recommend them both.
Catherine West writes contemporary women’s
fiction about hard times and hope. For more about the author and her work,
visit catherinejwest.com.
[Review copy provided through NetGalley. My opinions are my own.]
True Confections, by Ruth Hartzler (Clean Wholesome Books, 2019)
Unexpectedly divorced, 50-year-old Jane
Delight moves into the apartment above her twin sister Rebecca’s cupcake store
near Pennsylvania Amish territory. Rebecca commutes daily by horse and buggy,
but Jane has long since left their Amish ways behind (she does, however, still
have a personal faith).
When an unpleasant customer collapses in Rebecca’s
store and dies, Jane decides to divert suspicion from herself and her sister by
finding the murderer. Some of the comedy that ensues is a bit over-the-top,
like when Jane literally falls into the handsome detective’s arms, but it’s a
light-hearted mystery after all.
Jane’s quirky roommates are part of what
makes this book fun: 80-somethings Matilda and Eleanor Birtwistle and their
mischievous cat.
The narrative has a distant feel and I did
find it a slow start, especially since Jane’s ex-husband’s dialogue doesn’t
match his role as a successful lawyer. Once he was out of the picture, the
story started to work for me.
Another aspect of the story I enjoyed was
the Amish/non-Amish (English) dynamic, with the perceptions of outsiders and
their awkwardness of knowing quite how to treat Rebecca as an Amish woman.
True Confections is the first
novel in the Amish Cupcake Cozy Mystery series. Ruth Hartzler writes cozy
mysteries, Christian romantic suspense, and Amish romance. For more about the
author and her work, visit ruthhartzler.com.
Know your why … we’ve all heard it. But what does it mean?
We don’t want to become self-obsessed, but it really is good
to know why we do what we do … and why we want to pursue certain interests and
passions.
If we work outside the home, one reason may be to earn a
steady income. As much as I enjoy working in the church office, one of the
primary reasons I continue to do so is to earn that paycheque every two weeks.
There are plenty of people who work from home who earn far
more than I do, and I know I could do the same if I put into practice what I’ve
been learning. But should I?
Before we decide to hand in our resignation, we must get to
know not only the business / creative endeavour we want to pursue but also
ourselves.
Why You Might Want to Work from Home
It may be more cost effective. When you consider
wardrobe, transportation, and childcare costs, sometimes, it makes more sense
to work from home.
Your day job is far too stressful. Just remember, it
can also be a strain on your mental health if you don’t have a clear business
plan, a good support system, and significant self-discipline. All three are
needed to work from home.
You need the flexibility of setting your own hours. Are
you caring for children or aging parents? Is your most productive time outside
of regular work hours? Do you have health concerns that make it a challenge to
work outside the home?
You are committed to lifelong learning. What it takes
to have a successful home business is always changing. If you’re not committed
to staying current and learning from those with more experience—who, in many
cases, are significantly younger—working from home may not be for you.
Can you afford a dip in pay for a time? Granted you
don’t have to get the most expensive tools of the trade when first starting
out. So, start-up costs may be minimal, but it’s likely you’ll make less than
you do for a while, even if you currently have a minimum wage job. That’s why
what I suspect is the majority of people make the shift gradually, working at
their day job and establishing their home business at the same time.
Why You Need a Support System When Working from Home
For the good of your mental health. Even introverts
need to personally interact with people from time to time. But for extroverts
such as myself, it’s lifegiving. And if we don’t have that stimulus on a
regular basis, we may look for it by listening to podcasts and hanging out on
social media far too often. (Ask me how I know these things. <grin>)
To both encourage and challenge you as needed. When
we’re uncertain if we’re making headway, it’s important to have someone in our
corner to encourage us. When we’re not pouring enough time and energy into our
business (there are countless distractions when one works from home), we need
someone to lovingly challenge us to press on. Setting our goals and sharing
them with an accountability partner who will check in with us regularly can be
a big help.
To come alongside you in various areas. Maybe you
need help with childcare. Or maybe it’s housework. Or maybe it’s in
business-related areas, such as tech support and legal counsel. Maybe running a
successful home business means you have to install an app that prevents you
from getting lost down the rabbit hole that is social media while you sit in
front of your computer, wondering what you’re missing in the big wide world.
Why Working from Home May Not be the Best Choice for You
You need more money than you can currently generate from
home. If your goal is to make enough money to quit your day job, you may
have to do extra work for a time, establishing your business in “the margins”
left by your current employment and other responsibilities. And, if you’re
committed to working from home fulltime, you’ll have to practice saying no when
other opportunities come your way. You may very well have to back away from
some of the things you are currently doing in your “downtime.”
You don’t have the support of your spouse. If you do
your research and lovingly build a case for working from home, it will likely
go over much better than if you come home from work one night and tell your
spouse you’ve quit your day job—especially if your current income goes toward
paying the bills.
You need the stimulus that comes from working with others.
Someone I know has fairly recently realized that the quiet is far too loud
to work from home exclusively. Yes, that someone is me. I process things
verbally. (Big surprise to anyone who knows me, I’m sure.) And when someone I
work with asks for my counsel because they value it … Wow! I am humbled and
blown away.
That’s why I watch too much TV and listen to too many
podcasts when I’m on my own. I need company. That, more than actual laziness,
is what keeps me from accomplishing all I’d like to do in my home office.
Right now, all you introverts are confused and scratching
your head, I’m sure.
There are too many distractions at home. Whether
you’re an extrovert or an introvert—or somewhere in between—perhaps you would
find it difficult to work from home because the housework is calling. Or maybe
it’s the kids or your spouse. You may find it difficult not to answer the door
or respond to that text that just came in. Maybe it’s a beautiful day and you
decide to go for a walk and get your work done later. Or maybe the covers are
just too warm and your pillow much too soft. See what I mean about
distractions, especially for someone like me … SQUIRREL!
Most importantly, as a Christian, you may not feel it is
what God is calling you to at this point. Recognizing who God created us to
be is an important process, one that takes a lifetime. Praying and seeking wise
counsel in this area, and in all others, is very important.
We are all created different—and that’s a good thing. I
would love to have a successful home business, but, for now, I acknowledge that
there are several reasons I will continue to divide my time between working
outside the home and working from home.
Know your why. Know yourself. And go from there.
Photo credit: Jaime Mellor Photography
As an editor, Steph Beth Nickel has the honour of coming alongside writers to help them polish their work. As the coauthor of Paralympian Deb Willows’s memoirs, Steph has been blessed to work with this amazing woman. And as a future self-published author, with the Lord’s help, Steph has taken brave steps toward publication.
This is the most beautiful and
heartwarming novel I’ve read in a long time. Satisfying. Peace-inducing and
hope-whispering. Amanda Dykes writes with a gentle, lyrical quality that
invites readers to linger in this tale and savour every page.
Annie Bliss and her great-uncle Bob
(“GrandBob”) have shared a special bond since the summer she spent with him in
coastal Maine as a child. Now his need calls her back to the struggling town of
Ansel-by-the-Sea, away from the soul-drying big-city job where she’s been
hiding.
The novel follows two timelines: Annie’s
in the present and Bob’s in the past, weaving together to tell a story of great
loss and greater hope. Of light in the darkness and faith in despair. Of
breaking and mending.
The town and its inhabitants add a
richness, evoking the best attributes of small fishing communities where the
locals stand together, no matter what.
See some of the evocative description:
There’s a strength in his stance, as if his feet are putting roots down into the very granite. [page 25]
The past uncoils like a fiddlehead fern, a tender ache with it. [page 81]
This part of Maine was a place like no other spot in the universe, and being back was like finding an old patch of sunlight in a long-lost home, and settling in. [page 86]
I won’t share my favourite line, because
it’s too near the end. You’ll need to find it yourself. It’ll mean more to you
that way.
I admit the present-tense narrative jarred
me at times, but even with that, Whose Waves These Are has claimed a
special place in my heart. I’m grateful for the experience.
Amanda Dykes’ tag line is “spinning
stories, gathering grace.” Whose Waves These Are is her first novel, but
readers may know her from her novella, Bespoke: A Tiny Christmas Tale,
or from The Message in a Bottle Romance Collection. For more about the
author and her work, visit amandadykes.com.
When their widowed father announces that
he’s sold the family home and bought an island off the coast of Maine, Cam
Grayson and her sisters are afraid he’s losing his mind. Partly due to this
fear and partly due to life circumstances, each of the women decide to spend some
time with him on Three Sisters Island.
Their father, Paul, plans to renovate the
rustic island camp where he first met his wife. He hopes the family project
will draw his daughters closer together. In the beginning, this is a family who
don’t listen to one another, who may work together but without sharing any
depth of relationship.
The daughters are widely different in
personality and goals. I feel they’re perhaps too much defined by their
dominant traits, to the point I didn’t really connect with any of them. We have
Cam the driven businesswoman, Maddie the counsellor-in-training who analyzes
family members at every opportunity, and Blaine the 19-year-old who can’t
decide on her future path.
Despite a bit of disconnect, I enjoyed the
story. The setting is isolated and beautiful, and I enjoyed watching the camp
restoration. There’s a nice romance between Cam and Seth, the island’s
schoolteacher. Seth’s gentle conversations with Cam about faith are a good
example of natural ways to engage with non-Christian friends in real life.
There are flashbacks sprinkled throughout
the novel and I don’t think they added anything that wasn’t (or couldn’t have
been) conveyed in straight story time. For me they were more of a distraction
than a bonus. The bonus was watching the interaction between teacher Seth and
Cam’s son Cooper.
Favourite lines:
The driveway unfurled in a lazy curl through strands of trees until it reached the clearing where the old house sat against a windbreak of pines. [page 69, Cam’s first sight of their father’s new house]
“It’s okay to start with a small faith. We’ve got a big God.” [page 220, Seth to Cam]
On a Summer Tide is book 1 in the
Three Sisters Island series, and since Cam was the central sister in this
story, I expect Maddie and Blaine will each be the heroine of their own book as
the series continues.
Suzanne Woods Fisher is a multi-published
author of contemporary and historical novels. For more about the author and her
work, visit suzannewoodsfisher.com.
Author Christine Dillon’s third novel, Grace in Deep Waters, released in July, and I caught up with her for a few questions. You’ll find her author bio and the details of her book below, but first, let’s hear from Christine herself.
Janet:
You’ve lived in a number of countries. Where are you based now? And what’s
something you love about where you live?
Christine:
I’m currently back in Taiwan where I’ve worked as a missionary for the past
twenty years. As my parents were also missionaries, I have also done most of my
schooling in Malaysia and the Philippines. However, my passport country is
Australia.
I
love using my life to tell people about Jesus. People here are friendly and
hospitable.
Janet:
You’re a Bible storyteller, verbally recounting events from Scripture. How did
writing novels come about?
Christine:
As a Bible storyteller I couldn’t fail to be impacted by the response that
people had to stories and the fact that they often learned far more than they
would if I’d taught them the main points. The stories lingered.
I
had also been strongly impacted by certain stories like the Narnia series and
Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. However, I didn’t think I could ever write a
novel. Non-fiction yes, but novels were well beyond me.
It
seems that God has other ideas because he literally dropped the initial ideas
and title into my head for the first novel which went on to start a series. It
was kind of Him not to give me too much up front because I would have been
overwhelmed. I spent nearly five hard years learning to write fiction. Some
things get easier but it is still the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
Janet:
Grace in Deep Waters is book 3 in the Grace series, each one tackling some heavy
issues in a character-driven, thought-provoking way. Do readers need to begin
with book 1, or can they dive right into the “Deep Waters” of book 3?
Christine:
I’ve written each book as a ‘stand alone’ story but it would be much more
beneficial to read from book 1.
Janet:
Each book in the series features a different member of the Macdonald family. Do
you have a favourite character, and if so, why?
Christine:
You spend so much time with the characters so they grow on you. Most of my
favourite characters are the minor characters. I loved Joy from book 1 and Dr
Paul Webster. I am planning a separate book for him. In book 2, I loved Josh
and Dirk at the plant nursery. Throughout the series I also love Naomi,
Esther’s grandmother. In book 3, one of the main characters is quite hard to
like. I am thankful God doesn’t give up on him because most of us would have.
The side characters of Reg (modelled a bit on my grandfather) and Davy are my
favourites. Writing an eight-year-old was fun.
Janet:
I know you’re here to talk about fiction, but could you give us a quick intro
to what Bible storytelling is?
Christine: Of course, I love to talk about Bible storytelling. It is a way of simply telling Bible stories so that people not only hear God’s word but can then interact with it. I mostly tell stories to adults and most often with non-Christians. Storytelling has a unique ability to get under people’s defences and allow us to communicate with people who wouldn’t usually listen. I have two non-fiction books on storytelling and you can find out more at storyingthescriptures.com. There are many training posts/videos and video stories there, plus testimonies of people using storytelling around the world.
Janet:
Christine, thanks for taking time to chat today, and all the best with your
writing!
More about the book:
William Macdonald is at the pinnacle of his career. Pastor of a growing megachurch and host of a successful national radio programme. Clever and respected, he’s a man with everything, including a secret. His wife has left him and he can’t risk anyone finding out.
Blanche Macdonald is struggling. Her once rock-solid
marriage is showing cracks. She promised to love her husband for better or for
worse, but does loving always mean staying? Blanche desires to put God first.
Not William. Not her daughter. Not herself.
When is a marriage over? When do you stand and
fight?
Christinenever intended to become an author. The only kind of writing she wondered if she might do was biography. However, it was a surprise to her to write poetry, non-fiction and now fiction.
Christine was a
physiotherapist but now she writes ‘storyteller’ on any airport forms. She can
legitimately claim to be this as she has written a book on storytelling and
spends much of her time either telling Bible stories or training others to do
so from her base in southern Taiwan.
In her spare time
Christine loves all things active – hiking, cycling, swimming, snorkelling. But
she also likes reading and genealogical research, as that satisfies her desire
to be an historical detective.
Should Blanche go home? But how can she
resume life with her legalistic husband now that her growing faith conflicts
with his dogma? And while he denies their shared grief over their daughter’s
death?
William didn’t even go to the funeral. And
he denies the existence of their other daughter, Rachel, who left home many
years ago at 15.
Grace in Deep Waters is book 3 in the
ongoing Grace series (there are more books to come). New readers can start here
and not feel lost, but I’d recommend starting at the beginning with Grace in
Strange Disguise.
The women in this series develop a faith that’s
nothing like the showy façade William has drilled into them. When life
circumstances hit—and hit hard—Esther, Rachel, and Blanche each discover a
truer Christianity and make the hard choices to live for God’s honour instead
of living to satisfy or defy William’s rules.
William is proud, self-centred, and
unyielding. Author Christine Dillon does a fine job of letting readers into his
head to understand him and develop enough compassion to hope he’ll change.
Part of the novel is his story: will he
change or harden himself further? Can he change, even if he wants to?
Another part is a beautiful observation of
Blanche, a fallible woman growing in her faith and trying to find a healthy way
to grieve.
Is this a depressing novel? Not at all.
It’s heartwarming, inspiring, and it can challenge us to prayerfully make
better choices in our own lives.
Favourite lines:
She’d let fear bind her. What might life be like if she walked free? [Kindle location 288]
The kid turned around and gazed at him with a piercing eye a high school principal would die for. [Kindle location 2159]
Anyone who thinks Christian fiction is
light and fluffy or dry like a dusty sermon needs to read Christine Dillon’s
Grace series. The faith message is strong and clear yet presented organically
through the characters’ thoughts and decisions, leaving readers free to draw
their own conclusions. The questions are real and deep.
In Grace
in Strange Disguise, the challenge was “what happens when the prayer of
faith doesn’t heal?” In Grace in the
Shadows, it’s “how—and why—would God love me, after what I’ve done?” In Grace
in Deep Waters, characters wrestle with grief, marital breakdown, and that
contentious issue, submission.
As the characters wrestle, readers can
wrestle, too. This isn’t a series that hands out easy answers. Discussion
guides are available on the author’s website, for book clubs or individuals who
want to dig deeper.
Christine Dillon is a missionary whose
tag-line is “multiplying disciples one story at a time,” and the author of the
Grace fiction series. She has also written non-fiction books about the Bible
storytelling approach. For more about the author, visit storytellerchristine.com.