Tuesday, October 31, 2006

I love these silly things . . . How Scary Are you?

I don't know why I can't resist these quizes, but I can't.

And the first two people to report back with their "scary score" will get a hot-off-the-press copy of THE NATIVITY STORY! Just leave your name in the comments with your email addy so I can get your address.

I'm not scary? And shoot, I checked the "big, barking dog" answer . . .

~~Angie

You Are Not Scary

Everyone loves you. Isn't that sweet?

Boo hiss on the automatic shower cleaner



I wait all year for the chance to post this doggie trick-or-treat picture!
A few months ago I raved about the automatic shower cleaner--I saw it advertised in one of those magazines that travels on every flight, so I ordered one and hung it up.
As soon as we go through our last bottle, I'm tossing it out. First--I just read in Consumer Reports that they did an official test. Not only does it not clean well by itself, in some cases it left a shower in worse condition than before. It does leave the walls sticky. It puts little bumpy dots on glass that I can see, and it leaves the tile streaked.
That's strikes one and two. Strike three is the fact that one of my friends was changing the bottle and splashed the stuff onto her skin, suffering serious burns. To be fair, I've splashed myself, too, but my skin must be like saddle leather, because it didn't hurt me. Still, if you have sensitive skin . . .
So, you read it here. Save your money and stick to the old fashioned scrubbing of the shower. It's not as much fun as watching the little thingamajig whirl around, but it's more effective. And cheaper.
(Come to think of it, I can't think of anything I've ever ordered from the Skymall catalog that actually worked. The bra baby? No. The water leak detector? Not good. The shower cleaner? No.)
Next time I'm on a plane, I should read a book instead.
~~Angie

Monday, October 30, 2006

The Nativity Story Production and Design

Can you tell that I am jazzed about this film? Here's a clip that tells about the care they took to make sure the film has an authentic historical feel. This is the last clip I'll be posting for a while, but tomorrow I'll give you a link where you can watch all of them or paste the code into your own blog.

Okay--I've deleted the clips (because they can't all play at once), but if you'd like to see any of them again OR if you'd like to insert them into your own blog, you can see them and get code here: http://www.nativityresources.com/video.html.

Enjoy!

~~Angie


Sunday, October 29, 2006

The Nativity Story Director

I'd also like you to meet Catherine Hardwicke, director of THE NATIVITY STORY.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Meet Mike Rich

I'd like to introduce you to Mike Rich, the screenwriter who wrote the screenplay for THE NATIVITY STORY. My novelization came AFTER his screenplay, and his work formed the basis for my novel.

Here's a video clip where you can "meet" Mike, who also wrote Finding Forrester, Radio, and The Rookie:

Friday, October 27, 2006

The Official Nativity Story Trailer

It occurred to me earlier today that I may have to delete previous video clips before posting a ew ne because Blogger wants to play all the videos on a page simultaneously. So be sure to check every day this week to see a different clip!

Here it is: the official trailer for The Nativity Story movie, which opens Dec. 1: (I had to remove it because of the simultaneous feature, but you can view it at http://www.thenativitystory.com.)

~~Angie

More Dog Stories


Someone asked the origin of Charley Gansky's name . . .

You might have guessed that novelist (http://www.altongansky.com ) Alton Gansky is one of my writing pals. Well, several years ago Al did me a favor and out of gratitude I said I'd name my next dog after him . . . never dreaming that there would be a next dog.

But there was. So Charley's official AKC name is "Windfalls Glorious Gansky." His breeder always called him "Chunky Charley" as a puppy, so around here he's known as "Charley Gansky."

"Charley Gansky" also makes an appearance in DOESN'T SHE LOOK GOOD? as an air conditioning repairman.

Babe is continuing to fit in well. The Daughter came home for a visit and remarked that Babe acted like she'd lived here forever.

I had to laugh this morning, though--hubby left the front door open and BOTH dogs ran out into the lawn--definitely a no no for my neighborhood. Charley came back in without too much trouble, but Babe insisted on racing to grab my neighbor's newspaper before she came in. Hmm, I thought, taking the paper from her, could someone have taught her to bring in the newspaper? I've never been able to teach that.

So when our newspapers arrived (I read the Tampa Tribune and the Wall Street Journal on weekdays), I put Babe on the leash and led her to the papers. Did she pick one up? No. She danced on them, grinned at me, and then tried to take them from my hand when I picked them up.

Oh, well. Given her penchant for newspapers, maybe this trick is within reach. She's good with sit, down, and belly. What fun it would be to send her out for the paper every morning--and it'd prevent me from scaring the neighbors by making a pre-makeup appearance!

~~Angie

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Babe Update


Okay, so I look like I've been run over by a train in this picture, but don't the dogs look beautiful? Babe and Charley Gansky, learning to enjoy each other's company.


~~Angie

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Meet Mike Rich, screenwriter for The Nativity Story



From the Los Angeles Times:

Although it often plays a crucial role in Hollywood's onscreen dramas, faith falls somewhere down between humility and obesity on the scale of the industry's most public traits. That goes for its literal definition and its theological one, especially if you're a screenwriter hoping to get a movie made. (No, yelling "Dear God, how did my gritty drama script become a romantic comedy starring Mandy Moore?!" doesn't count.)

But the story behind screenwriter Mike Rich's "The Nativity Story," a film that will have miraculously gone from script to screen in less than a year when it is released on Dec. 1, proves that some players in this unholy citadel of secular cynicism are still eager to take a major leap of, well, faith. Biblically inspired religious movies have been infrequent at best. As filmgoers, we think Monty Python as often as we do "The Greatest Story Ever Told" or Martin Scorsese's "Last Temptation of Christ." Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" should have changed all that, but despite grossing $600 million worldwide after it was released in February 2004, it was still interpreted as an anomaly. (If a film in any other genre had made as much, there'd have been a flood of knockoffs.)

But Rich and his UTA agent, Marty Bowen, saw potential. At the time that he read the dueling December 2004 Newsweek and Time cover stories on the birth of Jesus, the 47-year-old Rich had already carved himself a healthy screenwriting niche as a sports-adventure guy ( "The Rookie" and uncredited work on "Eight Below," "Miracle" and "Invincible"). Bowen suggested that his client bring his voice to some kind of biblical material. For Rich, going from pigskin and pucks to frankincense and myrrh had some parallels, if only in terms of the delicacy of the material.

"Sports fans are a demanding lot," Rich says. "But it's one thing to get something wrong with the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team. It's another thing to get something wrong with the Virgin Mary."Rich spent 2005 researching Jesus' birth. After five intensive weeks of writing (he did take Christmas off), Rich handed his first draft to Bowen just before New Year's Eve. Bowen, who had become restless in his agency role and hoped to create films that were an "antidote to cynicism," used Rich's screenplay as his springboard out of UTA, taking on the script as a producer with new partner Wyck Godfrey. With surprisingly little hesitation, New Line greenlighted the film in less than a month with the obvious stipulation that it be ready by Christmas. (Disney was actually going to co-finance, and had even shown Rich's screenplay to various clergy, before New Line decided to keep the high-risk, high-reward project.)

When director Catherine Hardwicke ("Thirteen," "Lords of Dogtown") came onto the project, she suggested that Rich add early scenes that showed Mary as the 14- or 15-year-old girl she likely was before having this monumental responsibility thrust upon her. In a remarkably selfless marketing ploy, 16-year-old Oscar-nominated actress Keisha Castle-Hughes ("Whale Rider"), who plays Mary, has just announced her own pregnancy.

Eleven years ago, Rich was a radio morning news anchor for KINK-FM in Portland, Ore., when his fourth spec, "Finding Forrester," won a Nicholl Fellowship and vaulted him into his second career. At the time, Bowen advised the green Rich to "make movies you'll be proud to show your grandchildren."

"That really resonated with me," Rich says. "There is still a place for earnestness."

*******

To read another, earlier article about Mike, click here: http://www.absolutewrite.com/screenwriting/mike_rich.htm

~~Angie

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Babe is Babalicious!



Well, life is just too funny around here these days. Babe and Charley are trying to figure out who's doing to be beta dog (since Mom is alpha). The top dog usually is always the first dog through the door, you know. So, yesterday I had the dogs outside and opened the door for them to come in. Babe is usually the first through the door, but Charley saw his chance for supremacy and took it. Babe, desperate to hold her place, raced through the door, slipped on the tile floor, and crashed into a table and chairs.

She wasn't hurt . . . well, maybe her pride.

Since yesterday was our first official work day, they're vying for spots in my office, too. Charley usually sits right behind me, facing the door (protector of the realm, you know). But Babe wanted that spot, so Charley moved into the actual doorway. For some reason Babe thought that was too close, so she wandered off. After a few minutes, I found her in my bedroom, where she had discovered a perfect Babe-sized settee.

This is sooo funny to me because Charley NEVER gets on the furniture unless there's a beloved human in it, in which case he will try to get into the human's lap. But look at Babe. Is she queenly or what?

BTW, if you are interested in historical fiction, I'm talking about it over on PASTtimes: http://www.favoritepastimes.blogspot.com/ . Stop by and say hello!

~~Angie

Monday, October 23, 2006

Sisterhood of Faith

I recently discovered this little devotional book called Sisterhood of Faith, by Shirley Brosius. It's 365 "life changing stories about women who made a difference" and it features lots of names I recognize as well as names I don't.

I'm not a flaming women's rights sort of person, but I do believe that women are often given short shrift -- and I have run into some unfortunate attitudes in Christendom.

I'll never forget one day when I was in college. I was in chapel, sitting in the pew and minding my own business, when I happened to overhear the conversation of two young men behind me. One of them must have been looking around the auditorium, because he said to his friend, "You know, it's a shame about all of these girls here. If they get an education, none of them are going to want to be submissive."

Acccckk! As if only the ignorant can be submissive . . . or as if knowledge leads to stubbornness? (Well, maybe in does in some cases, but the wise woman knows the value of appropriate roles.) This was in . . . well, probably 1977. Things have changed a lot since then, but not in all circles.

(For the record, I do believe that in a head-to-head irresolvable conflict, the wife should let the husband's opinion hold sway. But in 26 years of marriage, I think we've had maybe one irresolvable conflict.) And outside of marriage, Scripture says we are all to submit to each other, each one of us esteeming others better than ourselves. )

In any case, it was a delight to find this little book. I look forward to reading about contemporary and historical Christian women who have made a difference in the world.

~~Angie

Sunday, October 22, 2006

What is Beauty . . . really?

This video is a must-see for all women of any age. It reminds me how "unreal" the pictures in magazines are.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=iYhCn0jf46U

~~Angie

Saturday, October 21, 2006

A new addition to the Hunt Family




Photo: Allison Bottke shows Charley her new book. Photo: BABE



We interrupt this regular blog to bring you exciting breaking news--BABE is on her way! We had our first meeting with Southern States mastiff rescue, and within the hour, we heard that BABE is on her way for a trial meeting. If she gets along well with the men and with Charley, she's our new girl.
Update: It's official, Babe is home. Babe needs to get used to men, but once we get her over that quirk, I think we'll be all settled in. She's two years old, Charley is almost four, so that's a good span.

It's so lovely to hear eight big feet again. How to describe a mastiff walking across a tile floor? My sister in law says it sounds like people walking through your house in slippers. shush-shush-shush. (VBG)

The rational part of my brain keeps questioning WHY I've brought another 200 pound drooly dog into my very clean house . . . . (she drools more than any mastiff I've ever had, but that might be because she's nervous).

But when it comes to animals, rational never wins. Good thing I have a swiffer wet mop . . .


~~Angie

What Sort of Writer Should You Be?

So I found this cute little quiz on the internet, and it says I should write science fiction? Well, some of my novels may have that "what if" element, but I prefer to do what I'm doing--which is pretty much indefinable, I suppose.

You can take the quiz through the link at the bottom. Enjoy!

P.S. Anybody have any recommendations for November's book of the month? We'll do THE NATIVITY STORY in December, so November is wide open.

P.S.S. Guess what arrived today? My hot-off-the-press copy of THE NATIVITY STORY. It's beautiful!

~~Angie

You Should Be a Science Fiction Writer

Your ideas are very strange, and people often wonder what planet you're from.
And while you may have some problems being "normal," you'll have no problems writing sci-fi.
Whether it's epic films, important novels, or vivid comics...
Your own little universe could leave an important mark on the world!

Friday, October 20, 2006

“Tell Someone . . . the Entire Story.”


I've written another column for my newspaper gig. This is still rough, but I'd be interested in your feedback. (The youth pastor's wife part of me comes out in this one!)

Angela Hunt

For months now, almost every time I’ve opened a magazine I’ve seen a colorful ad, complete with postcards, urging me to “tell someone” that cervical cancer is caused by “certain strains of a common virus.” The ad, which is also featured in a nearly ubiquitous television commercial, might lead you to believe that science has just discovered that cervical cancer is caused by the human papillomavirus, or HPV.

The ads would have you believe that the HPV virus is common (it is) and lurking to assault the unwary at every turn (it isn’t). I visited a web page where one woman wrote in to complain that the ads led her to believe that “catching” HPV was as simple as picking up a common cold.
Wrong. HPV is a sexually transmitted disease, and its link to cervical cancer has been well-established. In a 1985 book, 1250 Health Care Questions Women Ask, Dr. Joel McIlhaney wrote, “This explains what doctors have known for years about the character of cervical cancer: it is more likely to occur in women who started having intercourse early and who have had many sexual partners . . . If she has had two sexual partners, she has doubled her chance of having this type of change of her cervix. If she has three sexual partners during her lifetime, she has three times the normal risk. This pattern continues up to as many sexual partners a woman might have . . .”
Why the sudden publicity about HPV? Simple. Merck, a pharmaceutical company, has developed Gardasil, a vaccine for four strains of the HPV virus, two of which cause 70 percent of cervical cancer cases. The company stands to make a boatload of money off the vaccine, which will cost between $350-500 per vaccination.
The fine print: in order for Gardasil to be effective, it should be administered before a woman becomes sexually active. A federal advisory panel recommended that the three-dose vaccine be given to all eleven and twelve year old girls. Never mind that the rate of cervical cancer is dropping; never mind that the virus is defeated by most people’s immune systems without causing any symptoms whatsoever.
Never mind that advocates want to vaccinate nearly four million girls to prevent a cancer that will affect less than ten thousand women this year.
Never mind that there are more than 100 types of HPV, and Gardasil only protects against four. Other strains of HPV can cause other cancers. I would list them, but if you’re like me, you’re reading this over your breakfast.
A few years ago, a friend and I had a discussion about our teenage daughters. We were both devoted mothers who did not want our children to be sexually active, but we chose completely different approaches. I gave my daughter advice and instruction. She gave her daughters advice, instruction, and the birth control pill.
In our friendly debate, I said, “Don’t you think that giving your daughters the pill is like saying: “This is a lovely car. I don’t want you to drive it until you are married, but here’s a seat belt and a crash helmet in case you decide to take it for a spin.”
She laughed and said, “I think that’s more realistic than saying, ‘Stay out of the garage!’”
Is it? Given our sexually-themed culture (seen any teen movies lately?), I can understand why a parent might think it logical to provide their children with contraceptives and vaccinations.
But what are we teaching by providing such things? We cannot remove all of the consequences—there are other strains of HPV and other sexually transmitted diseases--so we may be fostering a false sense of invulnerability.
I’m of the opinion that we get what we honor . . . and, to a large degree, what we expect. No mere human is perfect and we all have our weaknesses. But part of growing wise includes learning how to exercise self-control.
A 1952 biography of Dwight D. Eisenhower revealed that he had once been a heavy smoker. Due to health concerns, he quit. The book’s author asked Eisenhower if he found it difficult to be in a room filled with smokers. Was he tempted? Didn’t other people’s enjoyment make him yearn for the cigarettes he’d given up?
The President replied, “No, I just think, I had the will power to quit, and they haven’t.”
So yes, tell someone. Find someone close to you and tell them that you believe in their ability to make good decisions.
~~Angie
P.S. I couldn't fit this into the article seamlessly (and I had a word limit), but there are also risks to the vaccine. One, if a woman who receives it has been exposed to HPV (and she could have been without knowing it), it will cause a "cancer precursor"--in other words, her cervix will show abnormal cells, a flag for cervical cancer. Second, in the trial, five women who received the vaccination around the time they conceived a child gave birth to children with birth defects.
Oh, yeah. The federal agency stopped just short of REQUIRING this vaccine for female children, but it's on the list of recommended vaccines. Parents--keep an eye on this one. Everyone, spread the word.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Akeelah and the Sabbath Week


I've been trying to take a "sabbath week" every seventh week--this is my first, and I'm enjoying it. I purposely decided to take the week after my deadline, which has been a much-needed break. I'm not sure I'll be able to take one every seven weeks, but one between projects feels really good. I have cleaned out files and watched movies and played with the dog . . . Much more of this and I will be BORED.

I just watched Akeelah and the Bee . . . and it's a good thing I didn't see this one in the theater, because I would have cried all my makeup off. No, it's not a sad movie. It's a happy movie, with a great upbeat ending, but the themes just moved me so that I sat here and sobbed through all the good stuff. Even as I sat here blowing my nose, I knew my crying made no sense. I was sobbing while Akeelah prepped for the spelling bee, which is sort of like weeping through the scenes where Rocky is running up and down the beach before the next big fight. Illogical, I know. But this is a sweet movie, and I heartily recommend it.
I also love Angela Bassett, who plays the Mom, and I'd seen the star, Keke Palmer, in Medea's Family Reunion. She's a wonderful child actress.

Enjoy!

~~Angie

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

A heart for Jerusalem


As the current Palestinian leader continues to vow that Hamas will never recognize Israel's right to exist, I watched a video on the web. I'm also currently reading Joel Rosenberg's EPICENTER, which correctly interprets the prophet Ezekiel--we are heading for a clash in the Middle East which was predicted long before Christ. Russia and the Arab nations, minus Iraq and Egypt, will come against Israel . . . and God will intervene. It's all in the Scriptures. (It's also portrayed in one of my novels, BY DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT, co-written with Grant Jeffrey.)

(BTW, Joel's book EPICENTER is a nonfiction book in which he explains how he came to write his prophetic novels. It's great reading!)

If you have a heart for the place and people of Jerusalem, visit this web site and watch the video yourself: http://films.izfone.com/.

Pray for the peace of the Holy City!

~~Angie


Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Have You Seen Juanita?


This is a GREAT idea!

Photo: Steve, Angie, Wayne of the CWG.

AUTHOR TAKES ON CHARACTER’S QUEST

My pal Stephen Bly of Winchester, Idaho, award winning author of 100 books, has so gotten into his newest character’s life, that he’s caught up in the search to find Juanita, the girl of rodeo cowboy Hap Bowman’s dreams. “An idiot obsession,” Hap’s roping partner, Laramie, chides. But Hap and Steve keep looking anyway. And so does Bly’s family, friends and fans. He’s listed her description on the home page of http://www.OneStepOvertheBorder.com :
raven dark hair, dark eyes, has a petite birthmark the shape of a horse’s head under her right ear. She lived in sight of the Rio Grande and spent time with 12-year-old Hap Bowman in Central Wyoming, summer of 1988 and is 31 years old now.


Bly’s hoping to see “Have you seen my Juanita?” signs pop up everywhere—on websites and message boards, in waiting rooms and bulletin boards, on car bumpers and t-shirts, at rest stops and stuck to magnetic surfaces. “Maybe we really will find her,” Bly says, “If so, she’ll be featured on our website for sure.”

One Step Over the Border is a romp, a road adventure. It's CowboyLit that has inspired a blog by Hap Bowman, a Juanita Sightings page, and an audio poetry reading. Bly’s three sons are working on a video for the site and they’ve gotten the whole family involved in the production. There’s even a free “Have You Seen My Juanita?” Search Kit ready to send to those who e-mail cowboy Hap at HapBowman@yahoo.com with their snail mail address.


Bly’s no stranger to getting heavily involved into his characters. In Paperback Writer a distracted detective rides along with his author, serving as alter ego and companion in troubles on the road. “Life imitates art, they say,” Bly muses. “I care so much for my characters I find it hard to let them go. But also my desire is for the reader to find their own real life discoveries, to be encouraged in their own struggles, by the vicarious ‘entering into’ the quests of my fictional characters.”


The story of Hap’s search to find his Juanita, in the book One Step Over the Border, releases June 2007, by Center Street/Hachette Book Group, USA. Pre-orders are now available through www.blybooks.com and soon will be via

www.amazon.com or your favorite online bookstore.

CONTACT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:

Stephen or Janet Bly, P.O. Box 157, Winchester, ID, 83555

ph: 208-924-5885

e-mail: stephen@blybooks.com or janet@blybooks.com

website: www.blybooks.com

Monday, October 16, 2006

IT IS FINISHED!


Fairlawn #1, aka "Doesn't She Look Good?" was promised on October 15th . . . and about ten minutes ago, at 8:08 p.m. on Sunday night, I clicked "send" and off it went to my editor.

Now I feel like collapsing. I feel like I've run a marathon. This last week has been filled with ten hour days, and I've been editing in my sleep. Now I'm so dizzy that I can't honestly tell you whether the book is good or if it's pure garbage, but at least it is now out of my hands and into my editors'.

I got tickled watching the word count at the end. The book flirted with the 100,000 number constantly. It'd be 100,300 words, then dip down to 99,9979, then rise up to 100,232, then go down . . . all because I was cutting snippets here, adding snippets there. I think the final word count was just over 100,000. Or maybe it was 99,999. I don't remember (and right now, I don't care.)

Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go collapse. Tomorrow I'm going to clean off my desk. And then I think I'll read . . . for fun. Maybe surf the web. Maybe sit outside and breathe the nice fall air . . .

I'm done. Until the next round or revisions, this one from my editors.
P.S. About the photo . . . want to guess who it is? Hint: both guys are novelists. (And the tattoos aren't permanent.)

~~Angie

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Nichole Nordeman


A few years ago I traveled a bit with the Women of Faith team. That's where I met and heard Nichole Nordeman for the first time. Nichole is a lovely young lady who sings like an angel, but it was her music that blew me away. She's a true lyricist, and her words are not only profound and lovely, but they are spiritually deep and show real maturity.

She charmed us all with stories of how she bought a "space bag"--you know, those plastic bag vacuum gizmos shown on TV that can flatten a comforter to a pancake?--and got a little carried away, then she sang songs that just brought me to tears. Even now, I love to start work with a couple of Nichole's songs--they lift me right up to the throne room of heaven.

Here are a couple of the songs that move me to the center of my being (well, snippets from the songs):

From "Tremble:"

Have I come too casually? Because it seems to me
There's something I've neglected
How does one approach a Deity with informality
And still protect the Sacred?
Oh, let me not forget to tremble . . .

This one, "Legacy," is so convicting:

I don't mind if you've got something nice to say about me
And I enjoy an accolade like the rest
And you could take my picture and hang it in a gallery
Of all the Who's Who's and So-and-So's
That used to be the best at such and such
It wouldn't matter much

I want to leave a legacy,
How will they remember me?
Did I choose to love?
Did I point to You enough
To make a mark on things . . .
I want to leave an offering
A child of mercy and grace
Who blessed Your name unapologetically
And leave that kind of legacy . . .

And finally, this is now my favorite worship song. So simple, so elegant and profound--"Holy":

How many roads did I travel
Before I walked down one that led me to You?
And how many dreams did unravel
Before I believed in a hope that was true?
How long? How far?
What was meant to fulfill only emptied me still
And all You ever wanted . . .

Only me, on my knees, singing Holy, holy
And somehow all that matters now is You are Holy, Holy . . .

If you haven't heard Nichole, be sure to check out her music. You'll be blessed. (All songs above written by Nichole Nordeman.)

~~Angie