10 Tips for writing your book

Brian Bailey from Fellowship Church in Dallas has several tips for writing your first, second or 100th book.
I keep meaning to sit down and work on my first attempt at fiction but I just haven’t been motivated. Maybe it will come later or maybe I’ll move in a completely different direction. Either way, here are his pointers. Anyone else have any ideas? What book would you write if you had all the time in the world?

Top 10 Steps to Writing a Better Book
10. Get more exercise
9. Allow time for editing and formatting
8. Have a regular place to work
7. Schedule rewards at each milestone
6. Disable wireless for long stretches
5. Write a small amount each day
4. Set aside time for book busywork
3. Develop one writing process and stick with it
2. Print it out
1. Schedule regular getaways to write

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Boost from big stores has religion books rising

“There’s no question American’s love to read about the Almighty.”
From NPR’s Morning Edition:

Sales of books on religion have sold to a wider audience since the Sept. 11 attacks. Now major retailers are creating much more room for religious titles, and writers are taking notice.

Why do you read religious titles? Is it because of “tribal dynamics,” to know why you’re faith is right, who the bad guys and good guys are, or why your world view is better than the others?

With The Prayer of Jabez, The Left Behind Series and The Purpose Driven Life is showing big box sellers that religious books can sale.

Wal-Mart doesn’t see the secular/spiritual split – they simply see books that sale.

It’s an interesting listen, including mention of Jim Wallis’ book.

Listen to this story

The Bible Experience

I’m all over this.

The Bible Experience is a fully-dramatized and symphonic-orchestrated reading of the New Testament performed by an unprecedented ensemble of distinguished African-American actors such as Denzel Washington, Blair Underwood, Angela Bassett, Juanita Bynum, Shirley Caesar, Samuel L. Jackson, Cuba Gooding Jr., Kirk Franklin, Dule Hill and many more. Visit www.zondervan.com/TheBibleExperience or Inspiredby.com for more info.
Also listen to the NPR story.

2007 Book Club

I finished Wild at Heart this weekend. I must say, it was decent but not the show stopper I kept hearing about.
I feel like I could have written the book – but I say that after hearing many people tell me about the book and probably read several reviews about it.
It was good. It challenged me to live for me and the calling God has placed on my heart, not on other people’s hearts. Not in a selfish way, but I should be living out the passions God’s given to me.
It also challenged me to consider taking more risks. Don’t know what all that might entail at this point in my life but we’ll see where God leads.
I really started Wild at Heart in 2006, so any suggestions on if I should count it towards my 2007 goal? Maybe I’ll chalk it up as 1/2 a book.
I did pick up two other books at lunch.
One that’s been recommended several times and a second I just found on the shelf.
I’m really looking foward to the second, Under the Overpass. I think I may end up reading it first.
Here’s a review from Publisher’s Weekly:

Yankoski’s parents were right: It was crazy to live as a homeless person in six American cities for five months; fortunately, this crazy idea makes for quite a story. Yankoski, a Christian college student, challenges the reader to learn about faith, identify with the poor and find “more forgotten, ruined, beautiful people than we ever imagined existed, and more reason to hope in their redemption.” The journey begins at a Denver rescue mission and ends on a California beach. Along the way, Yankoski and a friend learn the perils of poor hygiene and the secrets of panhandling. They meet unfortunates like Andrew, who squanders his musical talent to feed his drug habit, and hustlers like Jake, who gives the pair tips about how to look and sound more pitiful to get more money. Yankoski tends to moralize: “If we respond to others based on their outward appearance, haven’t we entirely missed the point of the Gospel?” Still, the book features fine writing (“I awoke, rolled over and saw beads of sweat already forming on my arms. Saturday, early morning, Phoenix”) and vivid stories, authentically revealing an underworld of need.

The other book I picked up was Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller.
I’ve heard several people talk about it. Some have loved it. Others have hated it. I’m thinking I’ll be closer to the first. But you never know.
Anyone else read these books yet? Wild at Heart, Under the Overpass or Blue Like Jazz? What’d you think? How were you challenged.
What books are you reading this year?

30 in 2007

Well I have 2 new goals for 2007, I’ve actually cheated a bit and started counting already.
But goal number one is to read 30 books in the next 12 months.
I started on one last night, Love for a Lifetime: Building a Marriage that Will Go the Distance, my parents bought it for Laurie and I for Christmas. I guess they think we’re getting married soon or something ;-).
It’s an easy read and I’m about halfway through it as of this morning.
If anyone has any great reads, let me know. I hope the reading will make me a better person overall, as well as a better writer and blogger.
Secondly, I plan to lose at least 30 more pounds by April 28. I’ve lost 25 solid pounds since late May last year and I’ve pretty much stalled out between 230 and 240 since going to Nigeria in October. My goal was to get to 210 or lower when I started so I need to lose at least 30 more pounds to be sure and I’d like to look my best for the above mentioned wedding on April 28, hence the goal. What are you’re goals/resolutions/hopes/dreams for 2007?

And it was good

I finished Rob Bell’s Velvet Elvis the other day. Wow.
I told a friend, this puts my faith (or what I want it to be) into words.
I think I underlined the entire last chapter of the book.
I loved the comparison between Adam in the garden and Jesus after his resurection.

“Thinking he was the gardner, she said…”
“John wants us to see a connection between the garden of Eden and Jesus rising from the dead in the garden. There is a new Adam on the scene and his is reversing the curse of death by conquering it.”

When we think about creation, remember that God calls it “good.”
The word is used throughout the Creation narrative to say that God perceives his creation as “good.”

“The God said, ‘Let the land produce vegetation: seed bearing plants and trees on the land that bear fruit with seed in it, according to their various kinds.’ And it was so. The next verse is significant: The land produced vegetation. Notice it doesn’t say, ‘God produced vegetation.'”

God empowered creation to do something.
We are empowered with loads of potential. All of creation is.
And this is for all you “tree-huggin-haters” 🙂 (who I admit, I used to be one of you):
“God then makes people whom he puts right in the middle of all this loaded creation, commanding them to care for creation, to manage it, to lovingly use it, to creatively order it… They are in intimate relationship with their enviroment. They are enviromentalists. Being deeply connected with their enviroment is who they are. For them to be anything else or to deny their divine responsibility to care for all that God has made would be to deny something that is at the core of their existence.
That is why litter and polution are spiritual issues.
And until that last sentence makes perfect sense, we haven’t fully grasped what it means to be human and live in God’s world.”
DOH!

Bell also talks about the Roman way of life during the early church.
Caesar Agustus believed that he was the son of a god. He inagurated a 12 day celebration called Advent to celebrate his birth. Wait a minute? That sounds familiar.
He used slogans like, “There is no other name under heaven by which men can be saved that that of Caesar.”

“It was at this time, in the world, that the Jesus movement exploded among an ethnic minority in a remote corner of the empire. These people claimed their leader was a rabbi who had announced the arrival of the kingdom of God, had been crucified and had risen from the dead and appeared to his followers. One of their favorite slogans was, ‘Jesus is Lord.'”
“They took political propaganda from the empire and changed the words around to make it about their Lord.”

Another interesting aspect was that the church didn’t try to argue or prove Jesus’ resurrection. For one, most people had seen him resurrected or knew of someone who claimed to have seen him. Another reason, many other people had claimed to rise from the dead at that time. “Julius Caesar himself was reported to have ascended to the right hand of the gods after his death.” Also, the church realized that arguments rarely persuade people, but experiences do. “Living, breathing, flesh and blood experiences of the resurection community. To the outside world, it was less about proving and more about inviting people to experience this community of Jesus’ followers for themselves.” People were changed not by arguments, but by the lives they saw Christians living.
Oh how I wish others would see that in me.

“And God’s grace was so powerfully at work in them that there were no needy persons among them. What was the result of the resurrection according to Luke? ‘No needy persons among them.'”
“To be a part of the church was to join a countercultural society that was partnering with God to create a new kind of culture, right undr the nose of the caesers.”

And for the church to continue today, we have to learn to give ourselves away.

“The church is at its best when it gives itself away.”
The church doesn’t exist for itself; it exists to serve the world. It is not ultimately about the church; its about all the people God wants to bless through the church. When the church loses sight of this, it loses its heart.”

One more great point and then I’ll wrap up (I sound like a teacher or preacher – ha).
“Another truth about the church we’re embracing is that the gospel is good news, especially for those who don’t believe.”

Woah. Where are we going with that.
Bell uses this illustration. Lets say Person X becomes a Christian. She’s surrounded by neighbors of other faiths and backgrounds. Person X should be becoming a better person now that they are a Christian. She is becoming more generous, more compassionate, more forgiving, more loving. Her neighbors should all be thrilled with her new faith.

“The good news of Jesus is good news for Person X. It’s good news for Person X’s neighbors. It’s good news for the whole street. It’s good news for people who don’t believe in Jesus. We have to be clear about this. The good news for Person X is good news for the whole street.
If the gospel isn’t good news for everybody, then it isn’t good news for anybody.
And this is because the most powerful things happen when the church surrenders its desire to convert people and convince them to join. It is when the church gives itself away in radical acts of service and compassion, expecting nothing in return, that the way of Jesus is most vividly put on display.”

I’m going to stop there. I’m anxious to read your comments. Chew on it. I’ve been chewing for a couple days.