If this is Sunday, I'm traveling to Glen Eyrie and Colorado Springs for our annual writer's workshop. Nancy Rue, Al Gansky, and Kathy Mackel will join me there along with some regulars from this blog (Susan, Kay, and Clyde) for three days of fun and frolic (and some work).
In no particular order, Angela Hunt is a novelist, a nana, teacher, mother, wife, mastiff owner, reader, musician, student, aspiring theologian, apprentice baker, and bubble gum connoisseur. The things that enter her life sooner or later find their way into her books, hence "a life in pages."
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Traveling to the Springs
If this is Sunday, I'm traveling to Glen Eyrie and Colorado Springs for our annual writer's workshop. Nancy Rue, Al Gansky, and Kathy Mackel will join me there along with some regulars from this blog (Susan, Kay, and Clyde) for three days of fun and frolic (and some work).
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Intelligent Design and Darwinism
The other day I heard someone ask "What do you think is the biggest problem facing the world today?" Though I didn't have time to jump into the email discussion, as I privately considered the question, I have to say that I think most of the world's ills today evolve from something almost as insidious as sin: Darwinism.
Friday, April 25, 2008
That situation in Texas . . .
I'm beginning to be disturbed by the situation in Texas--you know, the one where the government took over 400 children from their mothers and has farmed them out to foster homes. I'll admit that I don't know everything about this situation, but it's beginning to look like the original "tip" that alerted authorities to possible child abuse and "child marriage" was a fake. If it was, then why in the world are we allowing the government to take toddlers from their mothers? They're not in danger of being married off.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Something new and fun!
Good News today
Heard some good news today! So many of you have asked about a DVD edition of THE NOTE, and today I spoke with a man who's been hired to produce the extras for the DVD. We're trying to compare calendars to see if we can catch up to each other at some point (I'm traveling a LOT in the coming month), and if so, they'll put an interview with me on the DVD.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
This and That
Monday I spent the day getting a proposal and three sample chapters of the WIP ready for my editor (she needs to know what I'm working on, naturally).
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
SAWR Update
Ahem. Because the Fairlawn series is getting an overhaul with new covers, etc., the publisher decided to postpone the release of SAWR by a few days in order to get the new copies of Doesn't She Look Natural? in circulation.
I planned a day of working at home yesterday so that I could enjoy in peace this wonderful book. As it turned out, yesterday was the first day above 70 in Chicago land in six months. I sat outside on my patio and cried like a baby as ******.
I am so excited about this book. I believe readers will find such hope and heart. While I am sad that *** didn’t ******, the reality is that many believers have to ***** with the **** that ***** had.
So, just wanted you to know that I’m just too proud that SIABP is a Tyndale book.
Angie here again: I know I'll have to make a few revisions--I always do--but I'm relieved that the last book seems to bring the saga to a successful close. And I'm sorry, but the asterisks are necessary to keep from spoiling the plot. :-)
So--Linda--have faith! The books are in the pipeline and on their way!
~~Angie
Monday, April 21, 2008
More on Elevators
Did you see Good Morning America today? They featured a story on a man who, years ago, was trapped in an elevator for 41 hours. Sound familiar? Here's a link to his story and his video. The poor man was being filmed on a security camera the entire time.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Check in with the CF hubby and his girls
Several months ago I pointed you to Nate's blog--he's married to Tricia, who has cystic fibrosis, and she was waiting for a lung transplant when they discovered she was pregnant. So Tricia had her baby--at great personal risk--and now the family is growing stronger. Nate writes a wonderful blog, and this entry is particularly funny (HT to Michael for the link!). Plus, it's about elevators. :-)
Saturday, April 19, 2008
True Elevator Story
Friday, April 18, 2008
Diving In . . .
You might think that writing gets easier after time. You might think that a woman who is beginning her 113th book would find it easy to sit down at the computer and dive into the novel she's been plotting and researching for several weeks.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Lars and the Real Girl--a must see!
I had a few free hours yesterday, so I watched two movies I'd been dying to see: Lars and the Real Girl and Juno. I was ready to love both movies, but I only loved one.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Gin, the Wonder Dog
I don't know why this makes me cry--it's not at all sad, in fact, it's beautiful and happy. But still, I think of the evident bond between girl and dog and all the hours of work and play that went into this performance . . . and I just start sobbing.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Do Bears Have Rhythm? You bet!
Happy tax day! I hope you got your taxes done!
Monday, April 14, 2008
The Baby Has Two Faces
I'm sure you heard last week about the little girl born with two faces in India. If she had been born in the U.S., I'm sure doctors would be trying to figure out how to merge the two into one, but this little girl's parents say that as long as she is healthy (apparently she can eat and breathe with no problems), they're fine. In fact, many of the people in her village are revering her as the incarnation of a goddess.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
New titles for this week
Announcing . . . Chapter-a-Week has a new sister Yahoo! group called Chapter-a-Week Chat. If you'd like to talk to others about the great books featured on Chapter-a-Week or if you'd like the inside scoop on the book from the authors themselves this is an excellent place to start. Each week's featured authors will be on hand to answer questions and give readers an intimate look at the writing life that inspired their works and readers can discuss all the books. Check it out at Chapter-a-Week Chat . --The moderators of Chapter-a-Week
Now for this week's featured books...
The Voice
By Bill Myers
"Bill Myers writes a crisp, express train read featuring 3D characters, cinematic settings and action, and, as usual, a premise I wish I'd thought of -- and succeeds splendidly! Two thumbs up!" -- Frank E. Peretti
Summary
Burned out Special Forces agent Charlie Madison has his reclusive life turned upside down when his thirteen-year-
When the Heart Cries
By Cindy Woodsmall
"Fans of Beverly Lewis and the Amish genre will be thrilled to discover this new author . . ." Tamera Alexander, author of the best-selling Rekindled and Revealed
When Hannah dares to love across the boundaries of tradition, will she lose everything?
Despite being raised in a traditional Old Order Amish family, seventeen-year-
To read an excerpt of these new titles go to Chapter-a-Week and to join our deeper discussion go to our new site Chapter-a-Week Chat at http://groups.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
The Rocks Will Praise
I had a little epiphany this morning in my reading. I was reading in Jeremiah, and this passage jumped out at me: "But afterward I will return and have compassion on all of them. . . . And if these nations quickly learn the ways of my people, and if they learn to swear by my name, saying, "As surely as the Lord lives' (just as they taught my people to swear by the name of Baal), then they will be given a place among my people. But any nation who refuses to obey me will be uprooted and destroyed. I, the Lord, have spoken!" (Jer. 12:15-17)
Friday, April 11, 2008
If you have some time to kill . . .er, crash
I've been busy at work planning the next book, and I'm trying to write it in Scrivener--a new word processing/research/database program for Macs. So far, so good--it has this really cool feature where you can create "virtual" notecards on a cork board and move them around, plus you can pin up virtual photos of your characters . . . very cool! If you'd like to try the free trial version, just click here.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
New books for your nightstand . . .
Amber Morn
By Brandilyn Collins
Just released--Amber Morn, the climactic conclusion to Brandilyn Collins' bestselling "Kanner Lake" series.
As the nationally read "Scenes and Beans" bloggers gather at Java Joint coffee shop for a special celebration—chaos erupts. Three gunmen burst in and take them all hostage, shooting one person and dumping the body outside. Police Chief Vince Edwards must negotiate with the desperate trio. What they demand, he can't possibly provide. But if he doesn't, over a dozen beloved Kanner Lake citizens will die…
"Best Christian suspense of 2007." –Library Journal for Crimson Eve, previous release in the series
Awaken My Heart
By DiAnn Mills
AWAKEN MY HEART by DiAnn Mills tells the unlikely love story between 18-year-old Marianne, a wealthy rancher's daughter, and the infamous Mexican rebel leader warring against her father.
--What Reviewers are saying:
"AWAKEN MY HEART is a terrific early nineteenth century Texas Colonial romance starring two caring protagonists who in many ways seem like a North American Romeo and Juliet. The story line is fast-paced and loaded with action . . . DiAnn Mills provides a delightful historical that brings to vivid life a time and place that rarely if ever has served as the background." - Harriet Klausner
"AWAKEN MY HEART is a colorful inspirational tale of romance and adventure! - Diana Risso
Romance Reviews Today
To read an excerpt of these new titles go to Chapter-a-Week .
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Bridge Builders
We have a lot of long bridges in Florida--there's a three-mile bridge we drive over every time I have to go to the airport. Fortunately, they usually build these bridges very well.
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Elephant Art
Photo: Marilyn Martin and the books she won in our "Spring Fling" drawing. Isn't she cute? Thanks to everyone who submitted an entry.
Monday, April 07, 2008
BOM: Questions and Answers
Linda also asked: how do you decide which books are going to turn into a series - whether it's with the same character, other characters, or subsequent centuries even like Heirs of Cahira O'Connor - and which ones are just stand-alone books?
Sunday, April 06, 2008
BOM: The Reviews/Reader Reaction
I dreamed a plot last night. It involved a drug store and a wall telephone. :-) I dream strange things all the time, and when I wake up my memories are all utter nonsense, but last night the story I dreamed actually made sense. Enough that when I looked at it in the light of day and began to consider it a little further, I think it'll work!
I received several reader letters about this book--and expect to get a few more on the new edition (though now they'll probably be emails!).
Here's a sampling of reader mail:
"Just finished reading your Gentle Touch. It's a wonderful book . . . in your handling of cancer. At the age of 40 I was a mastectomy patient, and you covered the feelings of a patient extremely well (I hope that doesn't mean you've also had breast cancer). You were also very realistic about the reactions of others. Bless you for using your storytelling ability for giving women a positive viewpoint." --Lois
"Thanks for writing Gentle Touch. I first read it for the plot. However, I have read the book again, this time paying close attention to the medical things (since being diagnosed with breast cancer). I want you to know this has helped me ever so much. I really didn't know where to begin with what I need to ask the doctor, so your book gave me plenty of food for thought. I sat down with it and wrote out my questions." ~Helen
"I just finished reading your novel GENTLE TOUCH. When I was not quite eleven years old, my mother died of Hodgkins Disease, a form of cancer. I was the oldest of three children, so my childhood effectively ended then. . . . The character who really touched me was Daphne. In so many ways, she reminded me of my mother. My mother was not quite 29 when she died, but she had lived such a full life. . . . Her passing was quick. One day she was getting us ready for the last day of school, and then next day she was in a coma and then gone. I never really got to say goodbye to her because the adults believed that we kids were better off not really knowing the seriousness of her condition. As an adult now, I can almost understand their reasoning, but as a child, I felt as if something very precious had been stolen from me.
"Then last night as I was reading the final chapters of your book, I came to Daphne's letter to Jacqueline. And there it was--the goodbye from my mother! As I read and re-read the letter, I could hear my mother's soft voice and feel God heal the hurt places in my heart that I had covered up for so long . . ." ~~Diana
And, my friends, the reward doesn't get any better than that.
If you have any questions about the writing of GENTLE TOUCH/A TIME TO MEND, please post them in the comments section today . . . and I'll answer them in the next blog.
Next month's BOM? SHE ALWAYS WORE RED which should be in full release mode by the time May first rolls around!
~~Angie
Saturday, April 05, 2008
BOM: The Editing
Joella slips the blood pressure monitor onto her arm, presses the power button, and waits until the mechanism applies steady pressure to her wrist. After a minute, the pressure eases and the result flashes in the digital display: 165/93.
She presses her hand to her chest and swallows hard. What on earth is going on? She did forget to take her hypertension medicine last night, but would missing one dose shoot her pressure this high?
Maybe it’s the slice of pepperoni pizza she just ate for lunch. Pepperoni is loaded with sodium.
She tiptoes to her bedroom doorway and glances down the hallway, then closes the door and locks it. Jen and Gerald are working downstairs, so they shouldn’t mind if she takes a little nap. Heaven knows she needs a break.
She reclines on the bed, props her feet on a pillow and folds her hand across her stomach. Deep, slow breaths, that’s the ticket for hypertension. Steady, even breathing in and out, in and out. Close your eyes and think of sunny beaches, swaying palm trees, handsome men serving lemonade on golden platters . . .
She’s about to settle into a sun-warmed imaginary beach chair when she remembers the squash—Gerald’s nutritionist suggested lots of yellow vegetables, and she forgot to get squash at the grocery. That means she can’t afford to lie here daydreaming; she needs to go out and pick up fresh vegetables.
I did remember some more research I did--I read lots of books on cancer, plus I had just finished a book on the link between abortion and breast cancer, so I was "up" on the disease. As I look through my folder on this book, I see several articles on treatment of breast cancer, too.
Tomorrow--results/reaction from the Book of the Month.
~~Angie
Friday, April 04, 2008
BOM: The Writing
I can tell you this about the revising--I did not go into it intending to completely rewrite the manuscript. I have this feeling that each novel is as good as I can make it at the time I write it, so I didn't want to go overboard and do major surgery on the work. I did, however, want to clear up any glaring things that I've learned to do better since 1996. So I went through and cleaned up interior monologue in italics (ick! The book was filled with it, and now I really, really dislike it except in short, abrupt thoughts), as well as scrapping unnecessary adverbs and useless speaker attributions. I kept thinking, What if my students read this? They'd think I don't practice what I preach!
My Steeple Hill editor also had a couple of questions and concerns, and it was a simple matter to address those things to both our satisfaction. The updated medical information was easy to switch out, too.
It wasn't out of laziness that I didn't want to do a complete rewrite--it was more a matter of thread pulling. I've learned that if you pull a thread in a tightly-woven book, you're going to end up with a snag, a snarl, or a gaping hole if you're not careful. So I didn't want to tug on anything that was working just fine.
Tomorrow: The editing
~~Angie
Thursday, April 03, 2008
BOM: the Research
How does one begin to research a book on breast cancer? I started with my heroine's occupation: Jacqueline Wilkes is an oncology nurse, and one of my friends, Beth Dalessandro, happens to have that exact job.
Beth invited me to the clinic where she works, so I spent a morning visiting her workplace, looking around, and talking to the doctor for whom she works. Beth taught me about protocols, videos for entertainment during chemo drips, and all the lingo that nurses need.
I also had to research the setting: Winter Haven, Florida, which happens to be the town where I was born. I chose Winter Haven because it's a lovely place with mild winters and more than one hundred lakes--something different. Fortunately, my aunts have lived in the area for ages, so they helped me insert area lakes and landmarks.
The dog? Jacqueline has a mastiff, and that's easy because I have one, too. I've had four mastiffs, and they are great dogs. Jacqueline's love for her dog is the same love I feel for my own gentle giants.
When Steeple Hill decided to reissue the book, I had to call Beth again. I pulled out the pages of the manuscript that had medical information and she took them to the doctor she works with. He updated all the protocols and statistics so we'd be sure we were dealing with cutting edge material.
The spiritual aspects? The book reflects where I was ten years ago spiritually . . . and what I was learning about life and death and our approach to them. I hope the peace I feel about living and dying comes through.
I did a lot of reading on breast cancer, but I had already done a lot of research on that disease when I wrote THE PROPOSAL (that's a novel, not a synopsis and three sample chapters). Sometimes you can get two books for the research of one. (VBG).
Research did require some time, but probably no more than a week. When you have a good source, you can cut through the unnecessary details and get to the information that matters. You want good information, you want it to sound complete, but you don't want to weigh your reader down with extraneous details.
Tomorrow: The writing
~~Angie
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
BOM: The Idea
Okay . . . so what prompted the writing of A Time to Mend? Quite simply, a phone call.
In 1995, Barb Lilland, an editor at Bethany House, called to tell me about the Portraits line, a new line of inspirational romance novels. "Far from the formula romance," Barb said, "we will be looking for manuscripts that weave together an intriguing plot with compelling character development and spiritual growth."
Hmm. I had never written straight romance, though my historicals had a romantic thread in them, so I told Barb I'd be interested as long as I could make sure it was romance plus something else. (Technically, a romance is a story in which the hero/heroine plotline is central to the story, and I'd never written one of those--my books had central plots of wars, survival, and Crusades, along with extremely high body counts.) But I was intrigued by the possibilty of exploring the characters of a hero and heroine, so I proposed a story about an oncology nurse who falls in love with the aloof doctor who is trying to save her life.
My tentative title was FROM THIS DAY FORWARD, which got changed to GENTLE TOUCH. When the book came out, some friends said the gal on the cover looked like me . . . well, maybe they were exaggerating.
GENTLE TOUCH was released in 1996 and gradually went out of print. Recently, though, I thought it might benefit from a reissue, and the editors at Steeple Hill agreed. So a "refreshed" and updated edition, A TIME TO MEND, released in 2006.
Why write what I call a "breast cancer romance?" First, my husband's mother died from breast cancer the year before we married. I only knew her a few months before she went home to heaven. Second, I'm at the age where many of my friends are being diagnosed with breast cancer. Some of them beat the disease, some of them do not. Current statistics indicate that one out of every seven women will have breast cancer at some point, so I wanted to write about the hope with which Christians can face whatever the future holds.
I don't think I would ever have written the book without that phone call from Barb . . . but I'm so glad the Lord led me in that direction. It has given me a great peace about living and dying . . . a peace that carries over into the work I'm doing in this funeral home series.
~~Angie
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
CONGRATULATIONS to Marilyn Martin!
Congratulations to Marilyn, who won the big bag of Angela Hunt books! We had 105 entries, so I asked my friend Stella to choose a number between one and 105. She chose 74, her age, and so Marilyn (entry #74) is the winner!
Book of the Month: A TIME TO MEND
From Romance Reviews Today
A TIME TO MEND - Angela Hunt
Steeple Hill Single Title
ISBN: 0-373-78564-X
March 2006
Inspirational Fiction
Winter Haven, Florida - Present day
Jacquelyn Wilkes became an oncology nurse after living with her mother's breast cancer and then watching her die after five years of agonizing pain. When a new doctor, Jonah Martin, comes to the Chambers Wyatt Hospital where Jacquelyn works, her calm and ordered world is tipped on its axis. All the patients adore the young doctor, but Jacquelyn despises his decidedly rude and unfeeling attitude toward the nurses on the ward. Dr. Jonah may be drop-dead handsome, but his heart is cold as ice.
Working as a nurse in the cancer unit is a job filled with pain, heartache and elation. Pain and heartache when she watches a patient die, and elation when another patient triumphs over the horrific disease. Jacquelyn questions Dr. Jonah's methods and bedside manner. But her heart starts to melt just a little when Jonah saves the life of her beloved pet mastiff, Bailey. Soon afterward, she confides to him that she has found a cyst in her breast, but she balks when he urges her to get a physical immediately. Slowly, little by little, Jacquelyn begins trusting Jonah's medical advice, and their relationship blossoms as she faces her own future with breast cancer.
A TIME TO MEND is an updated and revised reissue of a poignant story about the many struggles faced by women with breast cancer and the men who fight to find a cure. (Previously published as GENTLE TOUCH, Bethany House, 1997.)
Jonah and Jacquelyn's relationship faces many obstacles as they build trust in each other and fall in love. The secondary characters tell their stories of breast cancer in heartrending ways and often bring tears of sadness as well as laughter to the tale. Both Jacquelyn and Jonah are strong characters, and A TIME TO MEND is an inspirational story of love and God's healing grace.
Diana Risso
Romance Reviews Today
Tomorrow: how the idea germinated