Sunday, January 19, 2014

New Song Available! Check it out!

Our church has a song! How cool is that?!

It was such a blessed experience having that sung to us (by Jason Perry), then singing it ourselves, and having the genesis of it explained by Alex Enfiedjian, Wayne Rodriquez, Jason Perry, and pastor Ben Sobels.  Brings tears to your eyes.  Wow.


It's based on our church mission at Cypress:  



Here's the link to it.  Download it for free today.

http://www.cypressmusic.org/


Jason Perry is the Dove Award-Winning member of the band Plus One (old photo below).  The word is their band is getting back together and will soon produce a new song of their own!



Saturday, January 18, 2014

Tips for Aspiring Young Writers: #1


I'll be placing these tips in the Appendices of the next four Jake Sloan Adventures.

They are intended as personal encouragements and coaching tips for anyone who might be thinking of writing stories of their own.  They are observations and personal mantras for your consideration:

#1.

Success in writing is less about intelligence and more about diligence.  The general experience of writers is that great stories tend to not come fully-formed out of the head, but come forth in parts and pieces which are thoughtfully arranged for the best impact on the reader.  That goes to intelligence.  Meaning, artful products are more about composition.  The brilliance we see in good literature, well-constructed stories and the like are a function of aptitude applied over time, rather than some flash-in-the-pan production during one afternoon of brainstorming. 
The second part of this is diligence.  In order to produce this kind of synthesis of concepts it takes regular work.  A person must stay at it, become regular about their effort.  Success is more dependent upon this perseverance through the process.  Moments of inspiration will come, but they usually only make themselves available to the diligent.
One of my favorite author quotes comes from Stephen King, in his On Writing (2002), when he describes how he regularly sits down at his desk, placed in a certain location in his home so that he can concentrate and be free of distractions for a few hours at a time.  He talks about the classical Muse, the Greek god of artful inspiration.  But his Muse is a slightly different character, styled just for him, “Traditionally, the muses were women, but mine’s a guy; I’m afraid we’ll just have to live with that”:

“There is a muse,* but he’s not going to come fluttering down into your writing room and scatter creative fairy-dust all over your typewriter or computer.  He lives in the ground.  He’s a basement kind of guy.  You have to descend to his level, and once you get down there you have to furnish an apartment for him to live in. You have to do all the grunt labor, in other words, while the muse sits and smokes cigars and admires his bowling trophies and pretends to ignore you. Do you think it’s fair?  I think it’s fair.  He may not be much to look at, that muse-guy, and he may not be much of a conversationalist, but he’s got inspiration.  It’s right that you should do all the work and burn all the mid-night oil, because the guy with the cigar and the little wings has got a bag of magic.  There’s stuff in there that can change your life.  Believe me, I know.”  (pp. 208-209)

Friday, January 17, 2014

A Visit to Mark Coker's Smashwords Blog



Just visited Mark Coker's Smashwords blog (http://blog.smashwords.com/).  Looked at one article in particular, 2014 Book Publishing Industry Predictions - Price Drops to Impact Competitive Dynamics, his predictions for this year. 

This statement caught my attention:

"Once a writer - any writer - comes to the realization that the power in the publishing industry has transferred from publishers to writers, it opens up a new world of possibilities."

What a hopeful frame for writers and the prospects of publishing.  I can't help but think of all the good writing that is going unseen, unread, unappreciated because of the strangle-hold of the modern market.  It's a shame the way publishers have behaved over the last decade or more. 

The Christian market has followed suit, sorry to say.  I recall my first contract offer for Trident's Flame -- I was shocked by the self-protective, profiteering language in it.  They wanted rights to things having nothing to do with them or their current capabilities as a publisher.  I was amazed.  It took me a couple days to recover from that reading. 

I was shocked a second time by the abrupt and dismissive reaction by the "Christian" publisher.  Afterward I found myself thankful I did not sign up with them.  They were a train-wreck about to happen, and I managed to avoid it.

Thankfully NavPress responded, and within months of the first offer.

I tend to believe Coker's statement.  The publishing industry is being redefined.  Right now.  It's an exciting thought.  And when you consider where it may take the reading and writing world... well... wow. 


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Posting from the International Spy Museum (13Jan2014)

International Spy Museum posted this recently.
 
THIS DAY IN SPY HISTORY -- On January 13, 1898, famed novelist Émile Zola's writes an open letter "J'accuse" to the President of France, accusing the government of anti-Semitism and the unlawful jailing of Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish Army General Staff officer who was sentenced to life-long penal servitude for espionage.
 I got me to thinking about anti-Semitism and current history.  It prompted me to write this as a FB "Share" entry:

 Anti-Semitism in espionage. History never seems to be without a gap in time where Jews were not targeted in some fashion. It was a curse of their Diaspora (scattering throughout the nations).

Now that they're back in their own land (since May of 1948), well, it doesn't seem to stop. Now they've got heads of state calling for their destruction as if it came from the lips of Hitler himself. "Wipe them off the map" was the last such phrase I recall hearing from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (Iran's sixth president from 2005 to 2013).

At his 2012 United Nations address he even called for the arrival of their 12th Imam, known as the Mahdi, which entails the destruction of all non-believers, including Sunni Muslims.

Jerome R. Corsi of World Net Daily reported back in Sept. 26, 2012, "With the U.S. and Israeli delegations absent in boycott, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressed the (United Nations) General Assembly on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur in a rambling, apocalyptic speech in which he declared his confidence that the table already is being set for a 'new world order.'

What Ahmadinejad means by 'new world order,' however, has nothing to do with the globalist economic and political integration envisioned by President George H. W. Bush.

Known internationally as 'Twelvers,' radical Shiite Muslims like Ahmadinejad believe the new order will come with the return of their messiah, the Mahdi – the child imam who supposedly went into seclusion at the bottom of a well more than 1,000 years ago."

Corsi continues, "What Ahmadinejad neglected to explain is that Shiite Twelvers believe a global apocalypse will mark the Mahdi’s return, leading to the annihilation all non-believers, including Christians, Jews and Sunni Muslims.

Many who have examined Ahmadinejad’s beliefs fear that Iran sees its buildup of nuclear-weapon capabilities and the destruction of Israel as the key apocalyptic event that will hasten the Mahdi’s return."

Just amazing. But real politics in today's world.



Thank you to our latest Trident's Flame reviewer!

Thank you, David Campbell.

Dave is a former Navy Captain and Naval Postgraduate School professor, who lives up in Seattle, Washington! (He MUST like those Seahawks these days!)

It was a pleasure to meet Dr. Campbell as
he passed through Monterey on his way to visit family down south.

Here is his posting on Amazon back in December 2013:
For
Trident's Flame: A Jake Sloan Adventure (Kindle Edition) 




Good, Clean, Adventure, December 18, 2013
"The story line has lots of action which is targeted at a younger audience. The faith of the main characters in Jesus Christ serves as a great model for practical living out of one's faith."

Rating 4 out of 5 stars


http://www.amazon.com/Tridents-Flame-Jake-Sloan-Adventure-ebook/product-reviews/B008DM2RCG

Saturday, January 4, 2014

International Spy Museum posting of interest...

The International Spy Museum recently posted this observation about Ian Fleming.

SPY FACT -- Ian Fleming chose the name James Bond for the character of his spy novels because "it was the dullest name I had ever heard."

I responded,

Well, yes, but it was lifted from the cover of a book in my grandfather's area of expertise: Ornithology, the study of birds. James Bond was a published ornithologist back in the 50's. That's where Fleming found the name.

Bond used the ornithologist role as a cover in a mission that took him to Havana, Cuba. Anyone know which film that was (Clue: it was one of Pierce Brosnon's films)?

(Second clue: Bond meets up with the NSA's Giacinta "Jinx" Johnson)