Monday, February 28, 2022

Ten Things I've Learned in Seventeen Years

Erica here. 

Seventeen Years! That’s how long it’s been since I first sat down to write a story with the aim of publication. There have been some ups and downs, with far more ups than downs. I’ve learned so many things, and met so many wonderful people in Seventeen Years! I thought I’d give a list of a few of the ‘learnings’ I’ve gathered.


 



1. One person’s success is not necessarily my loss. Knowing that God is in control of who gets what published means I can celebrate another writer’s success, whether it’s a contract, a glowing review, a contest win, or a best-seller list, without feeling as if I’ve somehow missed out. That doesn’t mean I don’t want to achieve these things, but it does mean I don’t have to be jealous or pining that I missed my shot.

2. When you sign with an agent who belongs to a multi-agent firm, you’re really signing with the AGENCY rather than the agent. If your agent decides to decamp to another firm, you are still signed with the AGENCY and must go through the proper severance if you wish to follow your agent, or be assigned to another agent within the AGENCY.

3. The writing community is quite helpful. If you’re looking for an answer to a research question, or for information about a particular contest, or need some grammar help, there is a writer out there who will help you out.

4. Writing is a solitary pursuit, but nobody does it alone. If you are traditionally published, you have a team of people helping you get your story into the hands of readers. Editors, Marketers, Publicists, Sales Team, and so many more.

5. Edits aren’t personal. Every manuscript benefits from editing. Your editor is on your team, and you have the same goal: to create the best product possible.

6. You do what you can, but ultimately, sales are in God’s control. Be willing to put yourself out there in blog posts, social media, radio interviews, etc. but it does little good to obsess over book sales.

7. Cross-marketing makes life easier. Doing everything yourself is hard. Joining with other authors to blog (Hello, Seekerville!) run a FB Group (Like the Inspirational Regency Reader Group) or have a contest/giveaway (Like the Fall Fiction Scavenger Hunt) means you can reach readers beyond your own circle and introduce your readers to the work of some fabulous authors!
Mary, Ruthy, Debby, and yours truly at the
Christian Fiction Readers Retreat in 2019.

8. Publishing changes quickly and moves slowly. In a nanosecond we saw an ebook explosion, and genres come and go in a flash. My first ACFW Conference, every editor and agent said “Don’t send me historical fiction. It’s dead. I want Chick-lit.” Fast forward twelve months, those same agents and editors said, “Lit is gone. Send me all your historical fiction.” And yet, it can take forever to get through the publishing process. It’s not unusual to sign a contract for a book that won’t release for 18-24 months.

9. Reviews are for readers not writers. Reviews do not exist to stroke the egos of writers…or demolish those same egos, though both can happen. Reviews are for readers, to tell other readers whether or not they may like a book. Some of my author friends refuse to read reviews, because they either soar with the eagles or crawl with the worms afterwards. If reviews knock you off balance as an author, just skip them altogether.

10. You will make lifelong friends. Just like the Seeker Ladies, where we all know about each other’s struggles, triumphs, prayer requests, inside jokes, sorrows, joys, and more. We share those things because writing brought us together. I have made dear friends, been supported in hard things by them, been lifted up in joy when something great happens, and the whole writing experience is better because of these writers in my life.

 

Me and Mary back in the day, with Mary holding her
Carol Award and me with my Genesis Award.



11. Bonus: I thought once I finally got a peek behind that curtain called “Publication” that my life would change dramatically. In one sense, it did. That tremendous accomplishment of “There. I did it. I worked hard and my dream came true.” However, most of my life didn’t change a bit. Except that I now had to work harder at things I never imagined, like marketing. The dishes are still there, the kids still needed to be homeschooled, laundry didn’t magically do itself…and there was no paparazzi lingering outside my house to see the famous author. I am grateful for the books I’ve been able to write, and that they found homes with publishers, but at my core, I’m the same Erica that I’ve always been…just busier!




 

Questions for you:

How long have you been seriously writing with a goal of publication?

What is one thing that surprised you along the way?

If you’re published, what changed for you once you held your book in your hands?

If you’re not yet published, did any of the items on my list particularly resonate with you, or was anything on the list startlingly new?


Jane Austen meets Sherlock Holmes in this new Regency mystery series

Newly returned from finishing school, Lady Juliette Thorndike is ready to debut in London society. Due to her years away, she hasn't spent much time with her parents, and sees them only as the flighty, dilettante couple the other nobles love. But when they disappear, she discovers she never really knew them at all. They've been living double lives as government spies--and they're only the latest in a long history of espionage that is the family's legacy.

Now Lady Juliette is determined to continue their work. Mentored by her uncle, she plunges into the dangerous world of spy craft. From the glittering ballrooms of London to the fox hunts, regattas, and soirees of country high society, she must chase down hidden clues, solve the mysterious code her parents left behind, and stay out of danger. All the while, she has to keep her endeavors a secret from her best friend and her suitors--not to mention nosy, irritatingly handsome Bow Street runner Daniel Swann, who suspects her of a daring theft.

Can Lady Juliette outwit her enemies and complete her parents' last mission? Or will it lead her to a terrible end?

The Debutante's Code is now out in the world! You can get your copy HERE: https://amzn.to/3GQnoZt Or wherever you buy your fiction! 



Best-selling, award-winning author Erica Vetsch loves Jesus, history, romance, and sports. She’s a transplanted Kansan now living in Minnesota, and she is married to her total opposite and soul mate! When she’s not writing fiction, she’s planning her next trip to a history museum and cheering on her Kansas Jayhawks and New Zealand All Blacks. You can connect with her at her website, www.ericavetsch.com where you can read about her books and sign up for her newsletter, and you can find her online at https://www.facebook.com/EricaVetschAuthor/ where she spends way too much time!




Sunday, February 27, 2022

Sunday Scripture & Prayer Requests

The Parable of the Mote and the Beam, by Domenico Fetti, 1619.
 [PD-US]

Jesus told his disciples a parable,

“Can a blind person guide a blind person?
Will not both fall into a pit?
No disciple is superior to the teacher;
but when fully trained,
every disciple will be like his teacher.
Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye,
but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own?
How can you say to your brother,
‘Brother, let me remove that splinter in your eye,’
when you do not even notice the wooden beam in your own eye?
You hypocrite!  Remove the wooden beam from your eye first;
then you will see clearly
to remove the splinter in your brother’s eye.

“A good tree does not bear rotten fruit,
nor does a rotten tree bear good fruit.
For every tree is known by its own fruit.
For people do not pick figs from thornbushes,
nor do they gather grapes from brambles.
A good person out of the store of goodness in his heart produces good,
but an evil person out of a store of evil produces evil;
for from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks.”

Luke 6:39-45

The Seekerville bloggers are praying for YOU and for our entire blog community. If you have any special intentions that need additional prayer coverage, leave a request for prayer in the comment section below. 

Please join us in praying for our country!
God Bless the USA!

Also, please pray for peace in the world,
especially between Russia and the Ukraine, and
for the protection of our military deployed to that area.

We are so grateful for all of you—for your friendship and your support! 

May the Lord bless you and keep you safe.      

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Weekend Edition


  






If you are not familiar with our giveaway rules, take a minute to read them here. It keeps us all happy! All winners should send their name, address, and phone number to claim prizes.  Please send to Seekerville2@gmail.com. If the winner does not contact us within two weeks, another winner may be selected.


Monday: Jan Drexler was here talking about story structure. The winner of one of her Love Inspired Amish stories is Sandy Smith!

Tuesday: Jill Lynn dropped by to with some words of hope and a preview of her new release. Winner of The Veteran's Vow is... Lucy Reynolds!

Wednesday: Cate Nolan was talking about using children's books to learn craft.

Friday: Pam Hillman shared The 12 Stages of the Writing Contest Journey



Monday:  Erica Vetsch

Wednesday:  Mindy Obenhaus will be to talk about adding conflict to our stories.
  
Friday: Ruthy strolls in on Friday to talk about some new mystery-lovin' stuff going on in her life on both sides of the publishing street.... because the gal who thought she wasn't smart enough to write mysteries is having so much fun writing-- YOU GUESSED IT!!!-- Mysteries! And she's got a copy of her latest Guideposts mystery to give away to one very lucky person! 









Meet in the Middle is on Sale Now!
Click Here to Grab a Copy for Your Kindle



The Prize Vault is Open!

Click Here for a Chance to Win One of the Ebooks Above


ON SALE NOW!

Order from AMAZON now!

Smugglers in Amish Country

  Uncovering secrets in this Amish town could deliver deadly consequences.

When the robbery suspect she’s tracking begins attacking delivery girls in Amish country, officer Marti Sommers must go undercover as bait. With ex-cop Luke Lehman’s niece as one of the targets, this case is personal. After all, Marti’s rookie mistake ended with Luke injured and another officer dead. But can the two former colleagues stop a deadly smuggling ring…before Marti becomes the next victim?


AMISH SPRING ROMANCE COLLECTION
Releasing March 1st!

Preorder the ebook NOW: 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09HL1Q39M


To hear Debby's interview on Buggy Talk Podcast

click here: 

https://tracyfredrychowski.com/podcast/debby-giusti-amish-spring-romance-collection/?fbclid=IwAR3Jn2nyf0R8DyCfdsTxlZDFycKFp-fVQmt2-GdBeasSvPfzH3mjv42kNyk


COMING MARCH 8th!!!! 

BOOK TWO OF RUTHY LOGAN HERNE'S 
"SOUTHERN TIER ROMANCE"
 SERIES!!!!



AVAILABLE FOR PREORDER ON AMAZON.COM!
RELEASES MARCH 8, 2022







9 Ways to Approach Relationship Dynamics in Fiction by KM Weiland at Helping Writers Become Authors

When is the Best Time to Publish a Blog and How to Test It by WPBeginner


How to Survive Book Marketing Burnout by Lewis Jorstad at Kindlepreneur

Lessons Learned from Publishing 16 Books in 6 Years by Kristine Adams at The Writers Cookbook

Tools of the Trade by Amanda Cabot at Historical Novel Society-North America

Imposter Syndrome by Deb Kastner at Inspy Romance

5 Tips for Social Media Detox by Lisa Norman at Writers In The Storm

5 Fresh Ways to Interact with Your Readers by Claire Bradshaw at Writer's Edit


21 Latin Phrases Every Writer Should Know by Steve Laube at Steve Laube Agency



Friday, February 25, 2022

The 12 Stages of the Writing Contest Journey

The Winding Road in front of Pam's House
by Pam Hillman

Do you enter a lot of writing contests? Have you ever wondered about some of your weird reactions to contest scores but have been too embarrassed to share them with friends and family because…well, you know, it’s just weird! lol

Having entered hundreds of contests before receiving my first contract, I put together the 12 stages of the Writing Contest Journey. See if you relate to some of these.

Stage 1: You enter your first contest. You’re absolutely terrified, hoping for a kernel of encouragement that you MIGHT have a tiny bit of writing talent.

Stage 2: You survive your first couple of contests and throw your hat in the ring a few more times. Still terrified, but you’ve used every bit of advice from the first few contests and are hoping to up your scores. Here is the time where you have to research POV, GMC, head-hopping, clichés, scene and sequel, sagging middles, black moments. Ack!!!

Stage 3: But you persevere and move forward for another round. The mechanics (punctuation/grammar) are much better, so now you can now concentrate on cliches and craft.

Stage 4: You still don’t know why one judge dings you for a cliché and the other one doesn’t, or why one judge loves your heroine, but the other thinks she’s too stupid to live, but your scores are better (most of the time) and you’ve got a pretty good handle on POV. Now you really have contest fever, and you’re dreaming of a finalist slot, but you’re still not sure if you’re ready yet.

The fenced in "lane" behind Pam's house going toward the hay field.


Stage 5: Finally, you snag a finalist slot!!! But was it a fluke? Can you do it again? With that first finalist slot, you’re just thrilled to final. If there are 4 finalists, you know you’re not ready to win (what would you DO if an editor asked for a complete????), but you’d rather not end up #4 either. 2nd or 3rd place would be perfect.

Stage 6: You are a star! You finalled in a writing contest. You’ve proved to yourself and the publishing world that you can write. It’s just a matter of weeks (or the next contest) where big name agent or editor discovers you. Then one of your manuscripts that has already finalled and/or won in a couple of contests crashes and burns and comes in dead last in a field of 52. You’re a has-been before you had a chance to be. Sigh.

The old Natchez Trace north of Natchez, MS. Wagons and travelers
wore this trail down over hundreds of years.


Stage 7: This is where you get serious. You get a little bit mad at how hard this is, how subjective, and you get a lot hardheaded. This is where you decide to fish or cut bait. All these thoughts run through your mind as you’re shredding your latest masterpiece. Breaking in is too hard! There’s too much to learn! But there’s something there that makes you want to try for one more rung of the publishing ladder. So you do. After all, that manuscript just won 3 contests. By this time, you’ve developed some writing buddies who can help pull you through this stage.

Stage 8: You pull up your big girl panties, grit your teeth and declare you’re going out there again. You’ve realized this is BUSINESS, not just fun-and-games, and that it is subjective, and everyone isn’t going to like what you do, but you’ve got enough feedback under your belt to know that SOME people do like what you do, and that’s enough to keep you going.

Stage 9: Now you get strategic. You develop a plan. You figure out which genre you’re most passionate about, you figure out what houses you’re best suited for, you figure out which of the half-dozen manuscripts you’re working on are the best you’ve got, and you run with that. Here you start finalling and winning more and more contests.

Beautiful shaded lane between Pam's house and her mother's house.

Stage 10: You’ve got a lot of contests under your belt, maybe even signed with an agent. Editors are requesting your stuff. Here, you’re likely to cut down on the number of contests you enter, just entering the big ones, and maybe a couple just because a certain editor or agent is judging. If you have an agent to send your stuff out, entering lots and lots of contests isn’t as critical.

Stage 11: You’re still in contest mode, but you’re very selective, and you only enter your absolute BEST work. It’s not exactly smart to enter a half-baked idea that MIGHT get in front of that editor who’s already got one of your best stories sitting on his or her desk.

Stage 12: Well, since these stages were about entering CONTESTS, I guess this is the last stage. At some point, an editor is going to pick up the phone and call you or your agent and offer a contract, and when you accept, you are ineligible to enter contests for the unpublished. And you enter a whole new set of stages as a published author.

Like the hero’s journey, these stages can be reversed, you can go through the same stage more than once, and you might even skip some of them, but for most of us, they’re probably much the same. And I’m going to go out on a limb and say that if you make it to stage 12, the odds of you crossing the bridge to publication are pretty high.

Pam's mother-in-law's bridge to nowhere. lol Actually, it goes to a
delightful island in the middle of their pond. Great fishing
spot and her yard is filled with gorgeous flowers and photo opps.



Meet in the Middle
is on Sale
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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Learning Craft from Children's Books

 

I remember years ago someone imparting the advice that if you need to do research on something, start with books written for children. They'll give you the basics which might be as much as you need to know, but if not they will at least make the subject understandable so you can pursue it more easily.

I was reminded of that advice a few weeks ago when I picked up a book I am supposed to use with my Jr. High ELA classes. It's called How to Read Literature Like a Professor: For Kids.



Full confession - my husband bought a copy of the original How to Read Literature Like a Professor years ago. It sat on a shelf that I passed many times a day. I often thought I should read it. I never did. Now I wish I had.




As I was reading the children's version to prepare to teach lessons from it, I realized that many of the points made for children are a good craft reminder for writers.

The Amazon blurb says:

In How to Read Literature Like a Professor: For KidsNew York Times bestselling author and professor Thomas C. Foster gives tweens the tools they need to become thoughtful readers.

With funny insights and a conversational style, he explains the way writers use symbol, metaphor, characterization, setting, plot, and other key techniques to make a story come to life.

 As I read that, I was amused to think that some writers (like this one) may benefit from a reminder of what we are doing. 

I'll digress for a moment to talk education. As a teacher, I usually deplore the kinds of questions on standardized tests that ask about the author's purpose or author's craft. It seems futile to ask a 12 year-old to try to step inside the mind of an author to figure out what they were trying to accomplish. I could go on at length with some ridiculous examples, but that doesn't help us become better writers. The reason I bring it up is that this book, in helping students understand what a writer is attempting, can also help writers better understand what is behind many of the things we do intuitively. 

I really do believe that writers who are avid readers naturally absorb many of the tenets of storytelling.  But I also believe that it's good to sometimes stop and reflect on what we are doing and how we can do it better. This book actually helped me to be more aware of what I'm doing when I write. And if I'm aware, I can be more intentional.

Do you ever turn to children's books for research? 

Do you consciously use literary devices such as allusions, symbolism, metaphors, motifs, imagery, etc. when you write (or does it seep in there unconsciously)?

FYI - If you prefer an adult take on this, Here's a link to 45 Literary Devices and Terms That Everyone Should Know. 

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Hope by Guest Jill Lynn


 by Jill Lynn

Sometimes I pick a word for the year. I haven’t in the last couple of years, but when 2022 rolled around, the word HOPE came with it for me. I wanted that word and the meaning behind it to be present in my life, so I latched on.

But then…2022 did not start easy for us. I’d planned to come out of the gate full of hope and ready for new things, for setting and meeting goals, for success. Instead, numerous things derailed those attempts. It felt like every time I turned around, something new was slapping at me like those scrubbers attacking my vehicle when I run it through the automatic wash.

I kept trying to stay afloat—to trust and hope—and I kept failing. I don’t know about you, but once I begin to fail, the slope is slippery. I can inch toward depression quite easily, and that is what I feared was happening.

But then one morning I opened my Jesus Calling devotional, and in the very week where my struggle had become huge, I read these words: Whenever you feel inadequate, remember that I am your ever-present Help.

Hope in Me, and you will be protected from depression and self-pity.

Those last two words—depression and self-pity—were what had been weighing me down. It had felt like having a boat anchor tied to my waste and with every step, I had to drag it around behind me.

How could God—infinite and quite busy with all that’s going on in the world—have known that I’d read those words on exactly that day? I wasn’t even on the correct day of the devotional. (I never am!)

It impacted me so much that what I was going through was exactly what God was speaking to me about.

The end of the devotion reads: Heaviness is not of My kingdom. Cling to hope, and My rays of Light will reach you through the darkness.

I love the imagery of light and dark, heavy and light.

I love that God cares about us so much that He’s constantly sending us messages and reminders of His love.

Sometimes it feels scary to hope. Does anyone else experience this? Like it’s easier to stay in the trenches and work hard and not expect too much…because expectations can be followed by such disappointments. As I was hanging up the phone with my parents the other day, we were talking about something important but not life and death. Something big but not overly huge. And my dad said: We’ll just pray for a miracle.

It made me pause. Aren’t miracles reserved for the big things? Should we “waste” a request for a miracle on the thing we’d been talking about?

And then I realized that HOPE says there are enough miracles to go around. Enough miracles for the big and the small things. What an amazing thought!

Ever since my dad’s comment, I’ve been praying for miracles. Wildly, without abandon. Without picking and choosing what to use my “miracle requests” on. It is so freeing. It is so full of HOPE.

How amazing to think that a devotional and an offhand comment can come together like that to remind me that not only is it okay to hope, it’s okay to hope about all the things all the time!

This month I’m celebrating my tenth Love Inspired book being in stores. It is also a story of HOPE: A man who believes he’s broken and not enough. A woman who is working so hard to honor her late brother that she’s losing herself along the way. A teenage boy who has lost his father and is seeking to fill the void. And a dog who’s ready to assist…as long as that assistance is accepted. One might even say a miracle takes place in the story. 😊 One of those middle-of-the-pack miracles that doesn’t register as life or death but that does register as life-changing.

If you happen to grab a copy of The Veteran’s Vow, I hope you enjoy it. 😉 Thanks for letting me be here today. It’s always a pleasure to stop by Seekerville!

Jill Lynn

Jill is giving away a copy of The Veteran's Vow. Simply leave a comment to be entered. (US mailing addresses only, please)


A little about The Veteran’s Vow: When service dog charity head Ellery Watson learns that Behr Delgado suffers from war-induced trauma regarding dogs, she determines to heal that trauma with the one dog who can change his world and assist with his physical disabilities. But she never expects that Behr's assistance with her nephew and impact on her life will heal her in return.

Get your copy here!


Jill pens stories filled with humor, faith and happily-ever-afters. She’s an ACFW Carol Award-winning author and has a bachelor’s degree in communications from Bethel University. An avid fan of thrift stores, summer and coffee, she lives in Colorado with her husband and two children, who make her laugh on a daily basis. Connect with her at Jill-Lynn.com or via her social media outlets.

https://www.instagram.com/jilllynnauthor/

https://www.facebook.com/JillLynnAuthor/

https://twitter.com/JillLynnAuthor

https://www.pinterest.com/JillLynnAuthor

 

Monday, February 21, 2022

Deepening the Impact of Your Story With Chiasms

 



Let’s talk about story structure.

Readers and writers both know when a story feels “right.” What is it that gives us that feeling?

It’s when a story is constructed in a way that resonates with our souls.

Basic story structure is simple.


And it is the same pattern, no matter the genre.  

In a romance: boy meets girl, love blooms, conflicts happen that lead to near death of the relationship, a pivotal change happens in both characters, love grows, they face a major conflict together, they live happily ever after.

In an adventure story: the hero is called to action, he/she makes mistakes pursuing the quest, he/she has a virtual death/rebirth experience, faces the quest with renewed vigor, slays the virtual (or real) dragon, he/she lives happily ever after.

In a mystery: the sleuth is faced with a crime, the sleuth pursues the bad guy without success, the sleuth has a pivotal change happen in his/her life, the sleuth tracks down the bad guy and wins, he/she lives happily ever after.

Basic story structure! It works!

But…how can you deepen your readers’ experience? How can you add depth to your story that will make it resonate even more fully?

This literary device is key.

A literary device sounds like it might be a trick, but it isn’t anything sneaky. It’s a smart and subtle way to add substance to your story. If you’re a word-geek like me, take some time to study classical rhetoric. You’ll be blown away by the possibilities when you consciously add literary devices to your writing.

The Greek term for this literary device is “chiasm.” (pronounced ki-AZ-um)

Basically, it’s a form of writing that states a truth or tells a story in a structure we can describe as
 A-B-C-B-A.

The Bible is full of chiasms, and this illustration might help you understand what they are - Let’s take Jesus’ statement in Matthew 11:18-30. I’m using the NASB, but the structure is the same in any translation.

            A. Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden

                B. and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you,

                    C. and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart;

                B. and you shall find rest for your souls.

            A. For my yoke is easy, and My load is light.
 

Do you see how the A statements are related? The same with the B statements?

The connected statements reflect and reinforce each other, then the C, or central statement, is the pivot point.



How does this relate to our writing?

Take a look at this expanded story diamond:


 
See the arrows that connect the plot points? If I wrote this out using the same method as the Bible passage above, it would look like this:

                A. Inciting Incident

                    B. Plot Pivot One

                        C. Twist One
    
                            D. The Pivotal Scene, or Moment of Grace

                        C. Twist Two

                    B. The Black Moment

                A. Plot Pivot Two, or the Final Battle



So, what does this look like when we’re writing a story?

These are the major plot points to start with when we construct our story.

        A - A  The Inciting Incident reflects and reinforces the Final Battle.

        B - B  Plot Point One reflects and reinforces the Black Moment.

        C - C  Twist One reflects and reinforces Twist Two.



Let’s see how this works using two of the connected plot points in our chiasm. We'll use a romantic plot:

In the Inciting Incident, Benjamin and Heather meet at a county planning commission meeting. He’s there to ask permission to build a playground on Lot A at the edge of town, and she’s there to convince the planning commission to deny permission.

So, what happens in the Final Battle? Benjamin and Heather, now firmly united in love, join forces to convince the planning commission to give permission to build the playground on Lot B on the other end of town (rather than on top of the toxic former battery plant location on Lot A.)

Do the two plot points reflect and reinforce each other? Yes!

Do you see how when these two plot points are related to each other, the story comes around full circle and closes the circle? 

Do you see how closing that circle gives your reader the satisfying story conclusion that makes her get all teary-eyed and smiling at the end?

Plotting a story isn't easy, but then, what part of writing is? I like to look at plotting as a puzzle - a puzzle that lends speed and ease to the actual writing process because when you have the plot points laid out, you know the story is going to work.

So let's play with this puzzle in the comment section. How would you connect the other two plot-point-pairs in our story about Benjamin and Heather?

When you play the brain-storming game with us (or make any comment,) you'll be entered in a drawing for one of my Love Inspired Historical Amish romances. Your choice of title!


Thanks for playing with us today!



Sunday, February 20, 2022

Sunday Scripture & Prayer Requests

The Lord's Prayer (Le Pater Noster), by James Tissot, 1886-1894,
 Brooklyn Museum. [PD-US]


Jesus said to his disciples:
“To you who hear I say,
love your enemies, do good to those who hate you,
bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you.
To the person who strikes you on one cheek,
offer the other one as well,
and from the person who takes your cloak,
do not withhold even your tunic.
Give to everyone who asks of you,
and from the one who takes what is yours do not demand it back.
Do to others as you would have them do to you.
For if you love those who love you,
what credit is that to you?
Even sinners love those who love them.
And if you do good to those who do good to you,
what credit is that to you?
Even sinners do the same.
If you lend money to those from whom you expect repayment,
what credit is that to you?
Even sinners lend to sinners,
and get back the same amount.
But rather, love your enemies and do good to them,
and lend expecting nothing back;
then your reward will be great
and you will be children of the Most High,
for he himself is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked.
Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.

“Stop judging and you will not be judged.
Stop condemning and you will not be condemned.
Forgive and you will be forgiven.
Give, and gifts will be given to you;
a good measure, packed together, shaken down, and overflowing,
will be poured into your lap.
For the measure with which you measure
will in return be measured out to you.”

Luke 6:27-38

The Seekerville bloggers are praying for YOU and for our entire blog community. If you have any special intentions that need additional prayer coverage, leave a request for prayer in the comment section below. 

Please join us in praying for our country!
God Bless the USA!

Also, please join us in praying for peace in the world,
especially between Russia and the Ukraine, and
for the protection of our military who have been deployed to that area.

We are so grateful for all of you—for your friendship and your support! 

May the Lord bless you and keep you safe.     

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Weekend Edition


  






If you are not familiar with our giveaway rules, take a minute to read them here. It keeps us all happy! All winners should send their name, address, and phone number to claim prizes.  Please send to Seekerville2@gmail.com. If the winner does not contact us within two weeks, another winner may be selected.


Monday:  Kristi Ann Hunter taught us a super-helpful editing trick!

Wednesday:  Debby Giusti gave us a sneak peek at the AMISH SPRING ROMANCE COLLECTION, releasing on March 1st. Two lucky commentors won a digital copy. Congrats to Elaine Meyer and Marilyn Rushing. Send your contact info to Seekerville2@gmail.com!

Friday: Naomi Craig gave us some great tips on the use of Canva in creating graphics and videos. The winner of a digital copy of her book Rahab's Courage is Winnie Thomas!  




Monday:  Jan Drexler delves into the fascinating world of story construction with a look at a literary device that will add depth to your reader's experience. 

Tuesday: Jill Lynn will be our guest and she's sharing some thoughts on hope, as well as a glimpse of her new release, The Veteran's Vow.

Wednesday:  Cate Nolan will be talking about how we can learn writing skills from a children's book.
  
Friday: Pam Hillman







ON SALE NOW!

Order from AMAZON now!

AMISH SPRING ROMANCE COLLECTION
Releasing March 1st!

Preorder the ebook NOW: 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09HL1Q39M



Click here to enter for a chance to win a copy of





COMING SOON! BOOK TWO OF RUTHY LOGAN HERNE'S 
"SOUTHERN TIER ROMANCE"
 SERIES!!!!



AVAILABLE FOR PREORDER ON AMAZON.COM!
RELEASES MARCH 8, 2022





How Writers Can Mine Emotion with Music by CS Lakin at Live Write Thrive



If You're Still Wondering If Facebook Controls You by James Rubart at Learn How To Write A Novel

The 4 Traits of Successful Writers by Lewis Jorstadt at The Novel Smithy

Stoking Your Story's Fire by David G Brown at Writers Helping Writers

How I Used Book Brush to Support a Chirp Deal by Nicole Burnham at Book Brush Blog

How to Find Pictures and Photos for Your Writer's Blog by Kelley JP Lindberg at Rocky Mountain Fiction Blog

Rules? Who Needs Rules? by Terry Odell at The Kill Zone Blog

Learning to Love Book Research with Savannah Kade by Kristina Adams at The Writer's Cookbook

Best Promo Sites 2022 by David Gaughran

How to Write to Inspire, Not Condemn, Pt 1 by Edie Melson at The Write Conversation