Monthly Archives: August 2006

No Books

I wasn’t able to find the books listed in my previous post at the bookstore. Or, I guess I should say that I called three local stores and none of them had those books. Looks like I’ll just have to order them from an online bookstore, have them delivered to my house, and then read them AFTER I get back from vacation.

I’m reading a book now called A Thousand Tomorrows by Karen Kingsbury. I’m about halfway finished, and I will post my thoughts about this story when I’m done.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Scouring Bookstores For Recent Titles

Since I’m attending the American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) conference in September, and I’m meeting with an editor or two, I thought it would be a good idea to find a few recent titles they’d recently published. Since I’ll be on vacation next week, I thought I’d actually go to a bookstore and get the books I’m searching for so that I can read them while on vacation. I used to go to bookstores often, however, now that I’ve got a child, life has just gotten harder and more complicated. Just doing the simplest things takes time and planning.

Over the last few years, I’ve gotten used to purchasing most of my books off of Amazon. Since I want these titles by Saturday, and don’t want to pay for overnight postage, I thought I’d look for the titles at local bookstores. Here are the titles I’m planning to buy this week:

Tracey Bateman – Claire Knows Best and Leave It To Claire
Shelley Bates – Pocket Full of Pearls

Just to make sure I didn’t waste a trip, I’d planned on calling the bookstores to make sure they had some or all of those titles. I didn’t feel like hauling my baby to the bookstore after work only to discover they did not have the titles. Unfortunately, it was a long day at work and I didn’t have time to call the bookstores. Hopefully, I’ll be able to make time to get the titles before Saturday so that I can read them while on vacation. I’ll check my library also.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Ain’t No River And More Conference Tips

I finished Ain’t No River by Sharon Ewell Foster today. Good book! Garvin, a lawyer is forced to take administrative leave from her job. She feels she’s being targeted due to the color of her skin. She is told to work on an EEO case during her “vacation.”

A workaholic, who is bitter and dissatisfied with her life, Garvin wonders why this is happening to her. Since she is off of work for awhile she decides to head back to Jacks Creek, her hometown. She is anxious to check on her grandmother who has a new, much younger, male workout partner named GoGo. She suspects Gogo is after her grandmother and she wants to protect her from Gogo, a former playboy.

Once she returns to Jacks Creek, her visit doesn’t go as planned. Her Meemaw(nickname for her grandmother) banishes her to the spare house out back. While Meemaw teaches Garvin to cook, she also tries to teach her how to love and accept the Lord.

Garvin reaches out to Monique, a Jacks Creek youth who is sad and depressed about life. Monique is treated like an outcast because of her mixed heritage, and because she has had a baby out of wedlock, whom has supposedly been given up for adoption.

As Garvin’s plan to “expose” Gogo for his wrongs against her grandmother unfolds, it is soon revealed that the younger man and older woman share a strictly platonic Christian relationship and Gogo is trying to live the life of one who has accepted Christ. He’s thrown away his old ways and is trying to live a new life. Meemaw is somewhat of a mentor to Gogo, teaching him all about the Lord.

Monique reveals to Garvin that her baby has not been adopted and is being held in an orphanage. Garvin campaigns, with Gogo and Meemaw by her side, to allow Monique to stay with her Meemaw(Monique is being raised by a dysfunctional, and emotionally abusive grandmother)as a foster child, and Garvin also manages to start the process, which allows Monique and Destiny(Monique’s child) to stay with Meemaw.

This book was excellent…very excellent! I especially liked the character growth of Garvin, and her friend Ramona(another minor character). Garvin started off a sad and bitter workaholic, but ended up loving and accepting the Lord. I also liked the way Ms. Foster showed the different personalities of the inhabitants of Jacks Creek.

I also want to focus on more conference tips. If attending a conference, be sure to do research for the editors and agents you have appointments with. If you have an appointment with a particular editor, read some of the titles published by the line/imprint that editor handles. Show that you have a good feel for what kinds of books fit this line/imprint, and impress the editor with your knowledge about his/her publishing house.

Although I do not have an agent, I’ve heard that similiar tactics should be used for an agent. You must research what type of fiction that agent handles before pitching your book to him/her. For example, you wouldn’t want to pitch a science fiction or fantasy novel to an agent that only handles mysteries.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Using The Five Senses

I had a writers’ meeting today with a local group in Bowie. We did a free write before we started the meeting. We wrote things that used the five senses. I think it’s important to make your reader feel what you’re writing through taste, touch, smell, etc. It was fun doing the exercise and if you are familiar with my writing, you may guess that I chose to write about food. I described the following three desserts (some of my favorites) in such vivid detail that the other members wanted some: chocolate cake, lemon pound cake, and chocolate chip cookies. I have a couple of my favorite recipes on my website if you want to take a look at them:

http://ceceliadowdy.com/_wsn/page8.html

Also, I’m reading Ain’t No River by Sharon Ewell Foster right now. I haven’t had time to finish it yet, but so far, I’m enjoying it. As soon as I finish this book, amidst taking care of my one-year-old son, running my household, spending time with hubby, going to worship services, etc., I’ll be sure to post my thoughts and praises about it on my blog.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Food For Thought

My previous post was about the Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference. I mentioned the book editor panel that I attended. I actually thought of a question that I would have liked to ask the editors, but I didn’t have the chance to do so. With the recent acquisition of Multnomah publishers by Random House, and Howard Publishing(now Howard books) by Simon and Schuster, I wonder what this means for the Christian book publishing market as a whole. Will a greater majority of the Christian publishing houses be under secular publishers eventually?

This is just food for thought. Feel free to post your comments.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference

I had the pleasure of attending the Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference on Saturday, August 12, 2006. Although this was a three-day event, I only attended for one day. After staying Friday night in the nearby Radisson hotel, I started Saturday off early with breakfast in the campus dining room of Philadelphia Biblical University. The food was bland, but the fellowship was great! I met a table full of wonderful women, and one lady in particular spoke with me a long time. We connected since both of us were targeting the same publishing house. I was able to tell her a few little-known facts about this publisher, and the news I was able to relay to her made her happy. She hopes to publish soon, and I told her that I hoped she did too. Since I spent a great deal of time socializing Saturday morning, I missed the Worship and Prayer and the Bible Study in the campus Chapel.

The first session I attended was a Book Editor’s Panel in the Chapel. A group of book editors answered a variety of questions from attendees, including: Why does it take so long for you to respond to submissions? If we submit something to you, can we say that it’s requested material since we’ve met you here? Does it help to have an advanced degree in order to get our manuscript published?

Since I did not take notes during this session, I can only paraphrase the responses. Most of the editors agreed that they are NOT overstaffed, so it will take awhile to get a response to the myriad of submissions they receive. Also, they are working with their contracted authors, which takes a great deal of their time.

A few of the editors and agents did agree to allow us to submit to them as requested material since we’d met them at the conference.

One of the editors/agents responded that he only had a high-school education and a VERY low GPA, so having an advanced degree wasn’t necessarily required to submit to him, or to make it in this business.

After the Book Editor Panel, I had an editorial appointment with Cynthia Ballenger of Moody’s Lift Every Voice imprint. Since my submission had already been received by the publisher, we spent time talking about the changing Christian market in general, and about Moody as a publisher.

I had lunch with a group of other attendees in the cafeteria. We talked about our writing, and although the food was bland again, I did enjoy the delicious cookies they had for dessert! My favorites were chocolate chip and peanut butter!

After lunch I attended a workshop called What’s Love Got To Do With It given by Jennifer Peterson. Jennifer Peterson is part of the Peterson Ink group, which consists of her mother(Tracie Peterson), and her father(Jim Peterson). Up until recently, Peterson Ink handled the acquisitions for Barbour’s Heartsong Presents line. She gave a basic course on what consists of a romance novel, and she also gave examples of great works of fiction, and we had to tell her if we thought the examples could be considered romance novels or not. Although the workshop was basic, I felt it was perfect for those who are very unfamiliar with the romance genre, especially the Christian romance genre.

The next session I attended was a Continuing Session. Since I did not attend the conference Thursday and Friday, I can only comment on the last segment of the continuing session that I attended. I chose to attend Book Proposals That Sell given by W. Terry Whalin, editor of Howard Books, a division of Simon and Schuster. He basically focused on marketing tactics that authors can use to promote their books. It was interesting, and someone even asked if he could give an amount as to how much a book earns out. He said he could not since it varies from author to author. Someone else also asked what could be considered great sales numbers for a novel. He said if a novel sells about 25,000-30,000 copies, it could be considered a decent selling book.

The last segment of the day was the worship and awards. There was also an inspirational sermon given by Cec Murphey entitled Living and Proclaiming The Way, the Truth, and the Life. Afterward, there was prayer, and we were told to make our commitments, write them down, and place them into the basket in front of the chapel.

Overall, I was quite pleased with the one day that I attended this conference. I’d highly recommend the GPCWC to all, and sometime in the future, I might go back for the entire three days.

Stay blessed,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com

Nothing But The Right Thing

I just finished this book this morning and it’s fantastic! I had the pleasure of meeting Stacy Hawkins Adams, the author of Nothing But The Right Thing, at the 2006 Faith-Based Literary Arts Weekend. She can sure write a story that will stay with me for a long time. Erika has been abused by her husband, Elliott, for the last four years. This is a story about her struggles in dealing with abuse.

Meanwhile, Serena, Ericka’s best friend, along with her husband Micah, are dealing with fertility issues.

This story shows how we need to lean on God and trust in Him while dealing with our issues.

This is the first book I’ve ever read by Ms. Adams, but I do plan on reading more in the future.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com
www.blackchristianfiction.com