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Stockbroker-turned-missionary Jay Jarvis knows a balance sheet when he sees one and he truly believes in the equation, Woman + Australia + Ring with Big, Shiny Rock Attached = Good Plan. But as with many start-up companies and what is marriage if not a start-up? there are a lot of unexpected monkey wrenches that weren’t factored into Jarvis’ equation. Like a trip off the beaten path with no means of communication with the outside world. And a smashed oil pan that leaves Jay and Allie stranded with little water. And indigenous marsupials that seem happy to lead them on a wild ‘roo chase.

Lost in Rooville may not be as laugh-out-loud funny as its two predecessors (2003’s Flabbergasted and last year’s Delirious Summer), but it is consistently humorous, often poignant and ultimately a satisfying conclusion to Ray Blackston’s trilogy on the foibles of the Christian single life.

Mike Parker is a former pastor who writes from Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

Stockbroker-turned-missionary Jay Jarvis knows a balance sheet when he sees one and he truly believes in the equation, Woman + Australia + Ring with Big, Shiny Rock Attached = Good Plan. But as with many start-up companies and what is marriage if not a start-up?…
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LaHaye and Jenkins release a prequel to the best-selling series

There are few superlatives that could not be applied to Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins' Left Behind series it's the fastest-selling adult fiction series on the market; the best-selling Christian fiction series of all time; the most successful literary partnership ever. With sales of more than 60 million copies of the series and related titles, a seemingly permanent residence on bestseller lists and spin-offs that include major Hollywood films, calendars, greeting cards, audiobooks and a TV series, Left Behind has become more than a fiction phenomenon. It has become a cultural icon.

For the past 10 years and in 30-plus languages, fans have eagerly followed the exploits of airline pilot Rayford Steele, journalist Buck Williams, pastor Bruce Barnes and Rayford's daughter Chloe as they were left behind after the rapture; formed the tribulation force; battled the forces of the Anti-Christ, Nicolae Carpathia; and were ultimately hurtled toward the climactic battle of the ages at Armageddon before being swept up in the glorious appearing of Christ. There is no doubt that LaHaye and Jenkins have created a juggernaut series, and their legion of fans demand only one thing more, more, more! But what is an author to do when a series reaches its natural conclusion? Write a prequel, of course.

In The Rising, the authors trace the backstory of Rayford Steele and Nicolae Carpathia from their humble beginnings through their formative years, and into their ultimate callings. Once again LaHaye acts as the idea man while Jenkins puts the meat on the bones, fleshing out these two characters to give the reader a more complete understanding of why each reacted as they did in the rest of the series.

Steele is revealed as a gifted, yet terribly self-conscious young boy, very different from the cocky, self-assured airline pilot portrayed in the debut Left Behind novel. Athletically powerful as a child due to a growth spurt that propelled him far past his contemporaries, Steele later endures the fickle nature of popularity as his classmates first catch up and then exceed him in athletic prowess. Raised in a moral, but spiritually ambivalent home, Steele becomes first confused by and then antagonistic toward Biblical faith. The only thing that keeps him grounded is his desire to learn to fly.

Carpathia's story begins before his birth, with the seduction of Marilena Titi into the world of the occult. Possessed of a brilliant mind, Marilena marries her mentor, professor Sorin Carpathia, more for his mental prowess than any physical attraction. The union, while comfortable, is devoid of love and soon Marilena and Sorin settle into a routine of work, study and sleep. That is, until Marilena's biological clock starts ticking like a time bomb.

To take her mind off her yearning for a child, Marilena attends a lecture conducted by a clairvoyant, Viviana Ivinisova. Viviana displays an uncanny knowledge of Marilena's desire for a child, and when she offers her the chance to fulfill that dream, Marilena quickly accepts. Through genetic engineering and the intervention of the Prince of Darkness, Marilena gives birth to Nicolae Carpathia, the Anti-Christ.

Nicolae is given every conceivable physical, political and educational advantage. He is also steeped in the teachings of Luciferianism. Eventually he is tested in the same manner as Christ, but with a diametrically opposed outcome. After penning a dozen Left Behind novels, Jenkins could probably write the prequel in his sleep. To his credit, he continues to ratchet up the quality of his storytelling rather than sleepwalking to another paycheck. The Rising maintains a slow-burning intensity that compels readers to turn the page. The characters are as sharply drawn as they are in the other books, as are the values for which they will ultimately stand. The Rising is a compelling look at their lives before they were Left Behind.

Mike Parker has a B.A. in Bible and philosophy from Hardin-Simmons University.

LaHaye and Jenkins release a prequel to the best-selling series

There are few superlatives that could not be applied to Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins' Left Behind series it's the fastest-selling adult fiction series on the market; the best-selling Christian fiction series of all time;…

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<b>An invitation to the Lord’s supper</b> When Nick Cominsky receives a formal invitation to dinner with Jesus Christ, he assumes it’s just another prank by the fellows at work. After all, Nick has demonstrated his indifference to religion for years. A married research chemist and environmental planner, Nick has enough trouble fitting his professional and personal lives together without extra complications. Nevertheless, curious to learn how the joke turns out, he bites. When he sees the thirty-something guy in a blue business suit waiting at the table in the upscale restaurant, he’s still not easily persuaded that the man is Jesus Christ. Cynical and mocking, Nick looks around for hidden mirrors and throws out the first challenge: sipping the wine (a mid-range white) he asks, Can you turn this wine into water? How his dinner partner deals with that and the far more important questions that come up is the theme of <b>Dinner with a Perfect Stranger</b>, a little book that touches on issues rarely dealt with in popular fiction. These include the comparison of Christianity to other religions (Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam this section is likely the novel’s most contentious), and such matters as the divinity of Christ, eternal life and the problem of evil. The co-author of two nonfiction books, David Gregory works for a nonprofit organization in Dallas. In this foray into popular theology, his answers skew more mainline than evangelical. They are not all deep, but the fact that they are touched upon at all is a step forward in modern debate. The novel format makes Gregory’s reasoning accessible, even if it only hits the doctrine’s high points. (More secular observations, that Jesus here is not a vegetarian, for instance, and that he dislikes ties, seem amusing and inoffensive.) Christians may respectfully agree to disagree on some points, and some might prefer a more substantive approach to explaining the tenets of their faith. Still, this light but intriguing novel, free of rancor or condescension, is a good place to start. <b>Maude McDaniel writes from Maryland.</b>

<b>An invitation to the Lord's supper</b> When Nick Cominsky receives a formal invitation to dinner with Jesus Christ, he assumes it's just another prank by the fellows at work. After all, Nick has demonstrated his indifference to religion for years. A married research chemist and…

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Ask anybody from Alabama and they’ll tell you there are only two things in life of any consequence God and football; it’s up to the individual to decide in what order they rank. This philosophy is at the center of Jerry Jenkins’ new novel, Hometown Legend, an inspirational look at a small town where faith and football converge. There are few authors better qualified to tackle the subject. Jenkins is the co-author of the best-selling Left Behind series, as well as a score of sports biographies. He’s a former newspaper sports reporter; he writes the nationally syndicated sports comic strip Gil Thorp; and he helped Billy Graham with his autobiography.

In Hometown Legend, Jenkins’ heart-warming story focuses on Cal Sawyer, a widower with a teenage daughter and a heavy burden of problems. His factory, the American Leather Football Company, is failing, and his hometown, Athens City, Alabama, is dying along with it. The local high school is scheduled to be closed, and its pitiful football team is facing a last, losing season. That is, until God and fate and Cal take a hand in changing the course of events. With the help of his daughter Rachel, his assistant Bev, a young loner named Elvis and a legendary coach who left town after the devastating death of his son, Cal tries to save the school, the town, his factory and himself. Though the book contains the requisite comebacks and miracle plays, Jenkins manages to avoid many sports book cliches to create a story that should charm his old fans and win many new ones. Already made into a film by Jenkins’ son, Dallas, Hometown Legend is one of the first titles from Warner Books’ new Christian line and is expected to have wide crossover potential for the general market. Jenkins writes with a down-home folksiness that brings to life his small-town characters hardworking, proud of their kids, sincere in their religious beliefs. It should not come as a surprise to learn that faith plays a big part in this book, but so does football. After all, it is set in Alabama.

James Neal Webb is a copyright researcher at Vanderbilt University.

Ask anybody from Alabama and they'll tell you there are only two things in life of any consequence God and football; it's up to the individual to decide in what order they rank. This philosophy is at the center of Jerry Jenkins' new novel, Hometown…

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Ask anybody from Alabama and they’ll tell you there are only two things in life of any consequence God and football; it’s up to the individual to decide in what order they rank. This philosophy is at the center of Jerry Jenkins’ new novel, Hometown Legend, an inspirational look at a small town where faith and football converge. There are few authors better qualified to tackle the subject. Jenkins is the co-author of the best-selling Left Behind series, as well as a score of sports biographies. He’s a former newspaper sports reporter; he writes the nationally syndicated sports comic strip Gil Thorp; and he helped Billy Graham with his autobiography.

In Hometown Legend, Jenkins’ heart-warming story focuses on Cal Sawyer, a widower with a teenage daughter and a heavy burden of problems. His factory, the American Leather Football Company, is failing, and his hometown, Athens City, Alabama, is dying along with it. The local high school is scheduled to be closed, and its pitiful football team is facing a last, losing season. That is, until God and fate and Cal take a hand in changing the course of events. With the help of his daughter Rachel, his assistant Bev, a young loner named Elvis and a legendary coach who left town after the devastating death of his son, Cal tries to save the school, the town, his factory and himself. Though the book contains the requisite comebacks and miracle plays, Jenkins manages to avoid many sports book cliches to create a story that should charm his old fans and win many new ones. Already made into a film by Jenkins’ son, Dallas, Hometown Legend is one of the first titles from Warner Books’ new Christian line and is expected to have wide crossover potential for the general market. Jenkins writes with a down-home folksiness that brings to life his small-town characters hardworking, proud of their kids, sincere in their religious beliefs. It should not come as a surprise to learn that faith plays a big part in this book, but so does football. After all, it is set in Alabama.

James Neal Webb is a copyright researcher at Vanderbilt University.

 

Ask anybody from Alabama and they'll tell you there are only two things in life of any consequence God and football; it's up to the individual to decide in what order they rank. This philosophy is at the center of Jerry Jenkins' new novel, Hometown…

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The swampy, meandering waters of the Salkehatchie River that flow with oblivious urgency around the town of Digger, South Carolina, provide both the backdrop and the metaphor for Charles Martin's debut novel, The Dead Don't Dance. Life, for protagonist Dylan Styles, mirrors the uncertain currents, the peaceful surface and the inexorable flow of the river. As with fellow Southerner Daniel Wallace's Big Fish, the river is the ultimate representation of God. You can fight it and drown, or you can embrace it and be carried wherever it wishes to take you.

Martin's novel inspires without being overly religious, and should strike a chord with fans of  'The Notebook' and similarly emotive works.

Styles, a poor dirt farmer with a Ph.D., is in love with his wife, Maggie. The soybeans have peaked, the corn is high, the wisteria is in bloom. Maggie is gloriously pregnant. God is in His heaven, all's well with the world. Life is good until the delivery goes tragically awry. The baby is stillborn, and the doctors are nearly helpless to staunch the flow of Maggie's blood, leaving her in a coma. The river has become a raging flood.

A devastated Styles wrestles with God with all the fervor, anger, questions and demands of a modern-day Jacob, and gets his proverbial hip kicked out of joint for his trouble. Like Jacob, though he may limp for the rest of his life, every life he touches is changed including his own. As medical bills mount, Styles puts his Ph.D. to use as an adjunct teacher at the local junior college, and—in true Mr. Holland fashion—whips a ragtag group of grammatically challenged miscreants into a competent class of creative writers. Among the students is a shy, unmarried, pregnant girl, Amanda, who doubles as a nurse's assistant; a gifted athlete with a shot at the pros, if he can just pass this class; a Hemingway/Fitzgerald prodigy who hides her eyes and her pain behind dark glasses and an icy demeanor.

Martin's novel inspires without being overly religious, or even particularly faith-based, and should strike a chord with fans of Sparks' The Notebook and similarly emotive works. The Dead Don't Dance is a classic example of God-haunted Southern literature.

Mike Parker is a Southern writer from Texas, now living in Tennessee.

The swampy, meandering waters of the Salkehatchie River that flow with oblivious urgency around the town of Digger, South Carolina, provide both the backdrop and the metaphor for Charles Martin's debut novel, The Dead Don't Dance. Life, for protagonist Dylan Styles, mirrors the uncertain currents, the peaceful surface and the inexorable flow of the river.

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Jay Jarvis, a rising star stockbroker from Texas, is on his way from heaven (Dallas, Texas) to hell (New York City) by way of purgatory (Greenville, South Carolina). On Saturday his Dallas-based girlfriend dumps him (via e-mail ouch!). On Sunday, following his real estate lady’s advice about the Greenville singles scene, he goes to church. (“If you really want to meet people, try the Pentecostals. They’re very outgoing.”) Jarvis’ new life in Greenville revolves around his profession of hawking stocks to an eccentric bunch of investors and his personal life, which includes the singles class at North Hills Presbyterian Church. While chasing after a pair of brown eyes that happen to belong to the missionary daughter of one of the church’s elders, Jarvis finds himself on a weekend beach retreat with 50 other singles, all equally intent on catching a date or a mate. In a series of often-hilarious encounters, Jarvis meets Ransom, a surfer-dude who, although married, heads up the single men’s group; Darcy, 5’11”, blonde, beautiful, rich and in love with her lime-green convertible; Nancy and the Numericals, each with their books on dating and relationship in tow; and Steve, the token sane and normal guy. There is seafood, marshmallow roasts, spray-painted mosquitoes, ghost stories and a couple of near-death experiences that force Jarvis to re-examine his outlook on life in the here-and-now, and life in the hereafter.

Rookie novelist Ray Blackston captures the easy ebb and flow of Southern culture complete with all-day-singin’ and dinner-on-the-grounds with grace and charm. He is equally adept at describing the loneliness of single life and finding humor in the absurdities of American dating rituals while weaving a healthy dose of religion and romance through both. Published by a Christian publishing house, Flabbergasted pokes fun at the Christian singles scene without making fun of Christianity and should have great crossover appeal. Blackston’s light and breezy style makes Flabbergasted an ideal reading choice for a lazy summer night. Mike Parker is transplanted Texan who writes from his home in Nashville.

Jay Jarvis, a rising star stockbroker from Texas, is on his way from heaven (Dallas, Texas) to hell (New York City) by way of purgatory (Greenville, South Carolina). On Saturday his Dallas-based girlfriend dumps him (via e-mail ouch!). On Sunday, following his real estate lady's…
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The devil is really getting his due these days. With wide-screen exposure in the new Star Wars blockbuster The Phantom Menace, the confrontation between good and evil has reached fever pitch as we approach the millennium. In this atmosphere it’s altogether fitting that Frank Peretti’s new adult novel, The Visitation, should appear. The battle against the demonic has always been Peretti’s principal theme, starting with the publication of his first novel, This Present Darkness, in 1986. The book’s thrilling battles between angelic warriors and demons charted a new course in Christian fiction, but it took more than a year for readers to recognize that the spiritual battleground could be their own home town. In 1987 the book reached the top of the Christian bestseller list. Piercing the Darkness, published in 1989, spearheaded the strong interest in spiritual warfare fiction just as conservative Christians were beginning to read fiction in large numbers.

Now, with more than eight million novels in print, including The Oath (1995), Peretti is a bona fide publishing phenomenon. His intriguing stories convince readers of the reality of evil forces and their ultimate defeat.

In The Visitation, however, Peretti may be directing us down a different road. While he maintains his vintage trademarks of fast action and multiple scene changes, signs of a more thoughtful maturity appear in this new novel.

The book chronicles events in the small town of Antioch, Washington, which convince many people that Jesus has reappeared. A custodian and member of the local Catholic church is healed of arthritic pain in his hands by tears from a statue of Christ. A wounded Vietnam veteran, who has operated his hardware store from a wheelchair for years, is suddenly able to walk. A motel owner with faulty vision can now see clearly without glasses. "A wildfire had begun in Antioch," and each flame is linked to a newcomer — a young man with olive skin and long hair. It must be that Jesus has returned.

Into this ever-increasing turmoil, Peretti casts his principal character, Travis Jordan, the former pastor of a Pentecostal mission church. After 15 years in this vocation ("15 years, 93 souls saved, 23 weddings, 14 funerals, a small retirement account, and no real estate"), Travis is suffering a bad case of burnout. He has resigned from the church with a variety of physical and emotional ills and plays the uncaring skeptic, especially with the young enthusiastic pastor who has succeeded him at the church. Travis’s story, told in first person, becomes the main thread throughout the book. As he encounters Brandon Nichols (the Jesus figure) and Antioch’s growing frenzy of response, he recalls the ups and downs of his life as a pastor.

"I’m not writing about spiritual warfare here," Peretti explains. "This book is more the story of a crisis of faith. It deals with the deeper unspoken things that most Christians face at one time or another and points back to the heart of the reader, rather than being a battle out there somewhere."

For The Visitation, Peretti used his personal experience in the ministry. He points out that he grew up in a church culture. In his youth he even assisted his father in pastoring a small church. This book is more autobiographical than his earlier novels and includes "eclectic, gathered things from my own life."

The intriguing heart of this book is that both Travis Jordan and the young man portraying himself as Jesus are wrestling with the same problem: "Religious life can swallow us up. It’s the same thing but to different degrees," in Peretti’s words. In the end the responses of the two characters take absolutely different turns, but not until Travis stirs from his apathy toward the church and fully investigates his antagonist’s past. The horrors he finds suggest what is to come in Antioch at the book’s end.

That conclusion, and Peretti’s bent for the supernatural in all his writing, led me to ask how he would compare his novels with those of Stephen King. "Well, I’m not as wordy, for one thing," and you can hear the smile in Peretti’s voice. "At the root of it is King’s fascination with character and detail. He gets inside people . . . but he never passes up an opportunity to portray Christians in a negative way. In my writing, I present angels and forces of good as well as the demonic. There is great spiritual conflict, but there are solutions to spiritual problems."

Peretti is a quiet man who wears his fame well. He lives a simple life that includes carpentry, sculpturing, bicycling, hiking, and banjo making. In his early years, he played banjo with a bluegrass group and toured with a pop band. An avid pilot, he often flies his Cessna 182 to gather details for his books. These incidental details give the supernatural elements more impact. "I find out whatever I need to," Peretti says.

He also has a gift for naming his characters, which he developed early in his writing. The name Travis Jordan may remind some readers of the Jordan River and of biblical meaning; a woman named Florence Lynch is mean-spirited, as her name suggests; Justin Cantwell is full of deception; and Morgan Elliott is a female pastor with a man’s name in a role usually associated with males. Upon reflection, such names seem to suggest the personalities, and they add to the story’s impact.

From his mid-life perspective, Peretti feels Christian discernment has a lot to do with maturity. "This book is a fly-on-the-wall observation of growth as a Christian. Through all his ups and downs, Travis’s relationship to the Lord remained the same. Jesus is the constant. He will still be there, no matter what happens. I want this book to be one that helps people sort out the difference between relationship and religion."

Asked about his future writing plans, Peretti said it’s back to children’s books. The author of eight titles in the Cooper Kids series, he plans now to develop a series with different characters. First, he will be touring across the country to promote The Visitation.

The devil is really getting his due these days. With wide-screen exposure in the new Star Wars blockbuster The Phantom Menace, the confrontation between good and evil has reached fever pitch as we approach the millennium. In this atmosphere it's altogether fitting that Frank…

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What marks the start of the holiday season for you?
Christmas is the most special time ever at our house. We mark the start of the season by decorating our house, transforming it into a Christmas wonderland the day after Thanksgiving. Pretty soon after that we have a gingerbread house-making competition for our six kids. They form teams of two and spend an afternoon working on their houses and listening to Christmas music. It's always a day we look forward to, and the resulting creations become part of our decorations. We also start on December 1st with our Advent calendars.

Does your family have one very special holiday tradition?
We have so many! One favorite is going Christmas caroling every year. We take a day and bake platefuls of Christmas cookiesóall the old family recipes that have been around for generations. Then we decorate them with festive wrappings and bows and take them to friends and family. We never go in or accept other gifts, but rather we stand on the porch and sing a few songs, then we're on our way. It's always a great time, and part of our what makes Christmas the most special time of year for us.

What are you most looking forward to during the holiday season?
I look forward to the atmosphere of Christmas, and the traditions that make it so memorable. Baking cookies, playing special Christmas music, reading books aloud, doing the Advent calendar, Christmas moviesThe Preacher's Wife, It's a Wonderful Life and Scrooge; and spending more time with family. Here in the Northwest, it gets dark before five o'clock during the Christmas season. This is always a wonderful thing, because it invites cozy nights near the fireplace.

What ís your favorite holiday book or song?
Every year we read The Greatest Christmas Pageant Ever. We read it out loud over five or six nights, and the kids hang on every word. We also love reading my Christmas book, Gideon's Gift. The kids love the part where old Earl has a change of heart because of the gift from sick little Gideon.

Why do books make the best gifts?
Books bring people together. They create moments and special family bonding times along with memories of shared togetherness. Also, books give us a way to connect our emotions and feelings through the words of someone else.

What was the best book you read this year?
Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller. I love his approach and voiceóvery authentic.

Whatís your number one resolution for 2010?
As always, it'll be to make a plan and stay with it.

What marks the start of the holiday season for you?
Christmas is the most special time ever at our house. We mark the start of the season by decorating our house, transforming it into a Christmas wonderland the day after Thanksgiving. Pretty soon…

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Though he's no stranger to the bestseller list, TV and radio personality Glenn Beck ventures into new territory with his latest book, The Christmas Sweater, a heart – wrenching holiday story drawn from a painful episode in his boyhood.

Beck's two previous books, including the New York Times #1 bestseller, An Inconvenient Book, deal with the political and social issues he explores on his radio talk show and during his two – year prime – time stint on CNN's Headline News. (The conservative host is moving to the Fox News Channel early next year.)Beck's new book follows the anguished journey of 13 – year – old Eddie, who is bitterly disappointed with his mother's handcrafted gift. When his mother is killed in a car accident shortly after Christmas, Eddie is forced to re – evaluate his life and priorities. Though the tale is presented as fiction, Beck, whose mother died when he was 13, acknowledges that the story was drawn directly from his own life. BookPage recently asked the author to reflect on his holiday traditions and plans.

What was the best holiday gift you received as a child?
The best gift I ever got was the sweater my mom made for me shortly before she died. I didn't know it was the best gift at the time – in fact I hated it. I wanted something cool like the other kids got. I tossed it in the corner of the room and left it in a crumpled mess. Looking back, I realized that the sweater was all my mom could give and that she worked really hard to make it for me. To me it's a reminder of how much she loved me.

Did you have a favorite holiday book when you were young?
My favorite books as a child were magic books. Yeah, yeah – I didn't have a lot of friends. But the worst part is I wasn't even really good at magic either. Aspiring magician with no talent for magic – not a recipe for coolness.

What are your favorite books to give as gifts?
Of course I like to give out the books I have authored – but aside from those I'm the guy that people dread getting books from – because I give them the tough stuff. America Alone by Mark Steyn, The Forgotten Man by Amity Schlaes and The 5000 Year Leap by W. Cleon Skousen. Sure, they may take a couple of months to read – but when they are finally done they will have a really firm understanding about what is going on in the world – and how we can avoid repeating the mistakes of our past.

What are you reading now?
At the moment I'm reading Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong. If I ever had another career it would be in teaching (scary to many, I'm sure) because I feel that slowly but surely our nation's history is being carefully edited to fit an agenda. I don't want to let my children grow up getting an education that's left out key parts of our nation's history, so I'm reading as much about history and education as I possibly can.

What books are you planning to give as gifts?
I'll probably buy people books from some of my favorite fiction authors – Ted Bell, Vince Flynn, Brad Thor, Daniel Silva and others like them. I feel many of these authors are taking real news events and intertwining them with fiction – and that's the best kind of entertainment. You can learn about what is going on in the world yet be completely entertained at the same time.

What would you like to get from Santa this year?
Actually, I'm very blessed – there's nothing I really need. For me, Christmas is a time to be with family and also volunteering out in the community and helping those who are less fortunate. That's the best gift I could ever get – the feeling that comes when you've helped someone you have never met, that lonely person in need. Nothing compares to helping someone else. No gift could ever feel better. Well, a 100 – inch plasma would come pretty close.

 

Though he's no stranger to the bestseller list, TV and radio personality Glenn Beck ventures into new territory with his latest book, The Christmas Sweater, a heart - wrenching holiday story drawn from a painful episode in his boyhood.

Beck's two previous books,…

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God is a plump African-American woman with a broad smile who knows Her way around the kitchen; Jesus is a Middle Eastern man sporting jeans and a tool belt; the third component to the trinity is a wiry-looking woman who "was maybe of northern Chinese or Nepalese or even Mongolian ethnicity" although it's difficult to tell because "she seemed to phase in and out of his vision."

A bare bones description of the plot to William Paul Young's novel, The Shack, sounds more like a Monty Python skit than a serious story. And after getting turned down by 26 different publishers, no novel could have seemed less destined for success. However, this little book is packing a huge wallop with millions of readers around the world, and sparking a great deal of controversy along the way. Some Christian theologians have attacked it as heresy. Others are singing its praises from the pulpit. It all makes Young, a former office manager and hotel night clerk from Gresham, Oregon, grin as broadly as his depiction of God does.

"One of the things I would love to ask one of these [detractors] is 'What exactly is it that you're afraid of?' " Young says during a call to a hotel room in Denver, where he's scheduled to do a book signing. "Are you afraid that we're going to start worshipping large African-American women? Are you afraid people are going to stop reading Scripture or that they're going to mistake this book for Scripture? What part of 'fiction' do you not understand? Overall, I think the controversy is a great thing. I get a couple of hundred emails a day, saying this book has been a way for people to move deeper or back into a relationship with God. I really believe that this is something God has stirred up."

Mackenzie Philips, Young's protagonist in The Shack, has spent the past four years grieving the apparent murder of his youngest daughter, whose body has never been recovered. One cold winter day, he receives an invitation to return to the isolated shack where the girl's bloody dress was found. The invitation is from God, who chooses to manifest Him/Herself to Mack as a genial black woman. Over the course of a weekend, participating in a kind of spiritual therapy session/group retreat, Mack learns to rid himself of his Great Sadness and embrace God's grace and love through his conversations and experiences with the Holy Trinity.

The 54-year-old Young willingly discusses his own personal "shack."

"The Shack is a metaphor; it's my soul. . . . It's where you store all your addictions, all your secrets in this house of shame. It's everything you don't want anybody else to know exists. And it's held together by lies. I had a thin veneer of perfectionism and performance covering up an ocean of shame."

It was a veneer that blew completely apart on January 4, 1994, when Young's wife, Kim, discovered he was having an affair with one of her best friends.

"The Shack is a metaphor . . . It's everything you don't want anybody else to know exists."

"All I had left was the shame," he recalls, "and I had to make a decision to either kill myself or face Kim. So I chose Kim. For the first two years, she beat the crap out of me, every dig, coming after me. The intensity of her fury, that anger—that drove me to the edge to feel every single piece of garbage in my history. Then it took another nine years to heal up. So that's 11 years of experiences that Mack gets in one weekend at the shack."

Initially, Young had no plans to write a book. Then Kim asked him, as a gift to their six children, to write down the lessons on spirituality and life he had come to believe in so strongly—lessons that were very different from the ones he had learned from his rigid missionary parents or while he was studying theology.

"She said, 'Put in one place how you think, because you think outside the box and it's really wonderful.' I wanted to do a story because story has a way of communicating with the heart. I'm not thinking anybody else is gonna read this. So I can do whatever I want, try and communicate the things that are most intensely real and precious to me," he says.

When Young finished writing The Shack in 2005, he had 15 copies printed at Office Depot, which he gave as Christmas gifts to family members and several close friends. Soon those friends were asking if they could share the book with others, and Young began to believe his novel could have a larger audience. His pals Bobby Downes, Wayne Jacobsen and Brad Cummings helped him rewrite the book. When no publishers were interested, Jacobsen and Cummings formed Windblown Media to publish The Shack themselves. Their first print run was 10,000 copies in May 2007, and after Young and the book were featured on a few podcasts, they managed to sell about 1,000 copies. 

"So those 1,000 went out and in 10 days I'm getting emails from Australia and Africa and Ireland, and New Zealand and Canada—people whose lives were getting royally messed with in a very good way through the book," Young says.

Over the next six months, The Shack went through three printings almost solely through word of mouth. "We spent less than $300 on marketing and promotion through the first 1.2 million books. So anybody who hears about this almost always says, 'This has to be a God thing.' "

Windblown Media now has a cooperative agreement with Hachette Book Group, which makes things much easier—Young's son, Nicholas, doesn't have to take book orders or ship them out of a rented warehouse, for example. Hachette is also spearheading the campaign for a greater international market. The book's popularity continues to grow, with more than 4 million copies in print; The Shack has had the top spot on the New York Times paperback fiction bestseller list for most of the past six months.

Money from the book sales means Young no longer has to work three jobs to make ends meet. But the financial rewards mean less to him than the joy and insights many readers say The Shack has given them.

"What this book has given me is an ability to look from the outside into thousands of people's lives; people who are so hungry for authenticity of relationship that this book just blows open their hearts. All of a sudden I'm finding myself in a place with a platform that I never prayed for or asked for or thought about. And I'm comfortable because I didn't put me here. Every bit of this is the grace and the affection of God."

Rebecca Bain writes from her home in Nashville.

A bare bones description of the plot to William Paul Young's novel, The Shack, sounds more like a Monty Python skit than a serious story. And after getting turned down by 26 different publishers, no novel could have seemed less destined for success. However, this little book is packing a huge wallop with millions of readers around the world, and sparking a great deal of controversy along the way.
Interview by

What marks the start of the holiday season for you?
In the past, I've started listening to Christmas music in early September! It's some of the most incredible music ever written and there are so many terrific offerings, both old and new. Since our children are grown and we have young grandchildren, more recently we've waited until the weekend after Thanksgiving to plunge into all the trappings of the season.

Does your family have one very special holiday tradition?
We have several I love. One is making (and eating) a birthday cake for Jesus to be served on Christmas Eve. It's His birthday, after all. Another is setting out a variety of nativity scenes—from a teensy wooden one purchased when our married daughter was just a baby, to the large paper mache one for under the big tree in the living room. We also go a bit overboard in that we put up a tree in every room in our house, including the laundry room! And we make gingerbread houses as a family every single year, complete with picture-taking before, during and after. Don't even ask to see all the scrapbooks of this event.

What are you most looking forward to during the holiday season?
Having our special needs son and daughter home for Christmas again this year.

What’s your favorite holiday book or song?
Stories: “The Gift of the Magi” and “The Little Match Girl.” Songs: “Jesu Bambino” and “What Child Is This?”

Why do books make the best gifts?
Books have the power to live on in your memory . . . to motivate, inspire, educate and heal. They transport us to places of the heart and beyond.

What books are you planning to give to friends and family?
The Missing, my latest novel, as well as Lynn Austin's new novel, Though Waters Roar. Levi's Will by W. Dale Cramer, Gold of Kings by Davis Bunn and several old classics.

What was the best book you read this year?
Dewey by Vicki Myron with Bret Witter—absolutely loved it!

What’s your number one resolution for 2010?
Living with purpose and focus is my life mantra. I'm not very big on New Year's resolutions.

What marks the start of the holiday season for you?
In the past, I've started listening to Christmas music in early September! It's some of the most incredible music ever written and there are so many terrific offerings, both old and new. Since our children…

Interview by

Kim Cash Tate went from law partner to novelist when her first book, Heavenly Places, was published in 2008. Her second novel, Faithful, has just been released by Thomas Nelson and tells the story of three successful best friends facing personal, work and romantic challenges. Tate took the time to answer a few questions about writing from her home in St. Louis.

What's the best writing advice you've ever gotten?
I think the best writing advice I’ve gotten is to write from the heart. It can be tempting to look around and see what’s hot and trending, and try to conform. But true passion and satisfaction flow when I write the stories of my heart.

Of all the characters you've ever written, which one is your favorite?
My favorite character is Treva from my novel, Heavenly Places [read our review]. I had such a heart for her because I knew women like her, women who’d been treated in an inferior manner by their mothers and grew up trying to find self-worth wherever they could. I loved taking her on a journey where she would begin to see herself, not through her mother’s eyes, but through God’s eyes. And it was just plain ol’ fun writing her because she had attitude and would say things that many of us might think but never give voice to.

What was the proudest moment of your career so far?
The proudest moment of my writing career thus far was being signed by Thomas Nelson Fiction. I had always admired them as a premier publisher, but because I didn’t see any fiction by African-American authors coming from them, I didn’t think it was a “natural” path for me. When they expressed an interest in signing me, I was elated! And the experience of partnering with them has far surpassed what I imagined.

Name one book you think everyone should read.
Definitely the Bible. That’s the one book that has completely changed my life. I’m also a HUGE Lord of the Rings fan. I love the epic story of good versus evil, of the unlikeliest of people being used to do great things. There are so many life nuggets I’ve taken away from that story. But I admit I kind of cheated—that story is actually contained in three books.

What book are you embarrassed NOT to have read?
The Help is staring at me right now, so that’s what comes to mind. So many have told me that I need to read it, and I’ve had it in eye-shot for the longest. Admitting my embarrassment might be the very motivation I need to crack it open!

How would you earn a living if you weren't a writer?
I practiced law for a number of years as a civil litigator, so if I had to earn a living outside of writing, I’d probably return to that. Or not. I’ve always wanted to start my own business, so maybe I’d throw caution to the wind and make some crafty little thing and sell it . . . except I’ve never really been the artsy-crafty type. Hmm . . . guess I’d better hope this writing thing works out.

What are you working on now?
I’m editing my Fall 2011 release, Cherished, and beginning work on the novel that will follow that one. I’m really excited about what’s on the horizon.

Kim Cash Tate went from law partner to novelist when her first book, Heavenly Places, was published in 2008. Her second novel, Faithful, has just been released by Thomas Nelson and tells the story of three successful best friends facing personal, work and romantic challenges.…

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