Yearly Archives: 2006

ACFW Annual Conference In Dallas

I attended the ACFW Conference last week in Dallas! I had a truly awesome time! When I arrived on Thursday morning, I spoke with a few people on the shuttle. When we entered the hotel, we were told that our rooms were not ready, so me and a few other conference-goers enjoyed a tasty pasta-bar lunch before check-in.

After lunch, I picked up my registration and went to my room. There were a lot of people who who a part of this conference. I’d heard there were over four hundred, which is an awesome number since the membership is about 1,200. So, roughly, about one-third of the members came to this conference.

On Thursday night, there was a welcome reception. We had chicken, rolls and vegetables while we got acquainted with one another. The editor and agent panel was also great. Many people in the audience asked questions of the editors and agents and they responded. Barbour Publishing also awarded letters of intent to those unpublished authors whom they are planning to publish.

I also attended a late-night chat about blogging.

Friday, after a continental breakfast, I attended the professional track with Chip McGregor. He shared some really great information about the publishing business, and he also gave tips about budgeting your cashflow over time. He also have some statistics about the publishing world.

Liz Curtis Higgs was our keynote speaker during most of the conference. She’s really a humorous lady and she definately has a deep faith in the Lord.

I also had a few appointments with editors and agents this weekend. If I couldn’t get an appointment with an editor or agent, I would learn to find that person to speak with him/her.

All in all in the conference was a great experience. I also purchased the following books from the conference bookstore:
Family Guardian by Laurie Alice Eakes
Murder, Mayhem, and a Fine Man by Claudia Burney
Made Of Honor by Marilynn Griffith
Fresh-Brewed Love – a novella anthology by Barbour Publishing

Also, we received the following books as freebies:
Sands of Time by Susan May Warren
Embrace Grace by Liz Curtis Higgs
The Wedding Caper by Janice A. Thompson

I know the details about my trip are pretty sparse, but I have LOTS to do as a result of the outcome of my editor and agent appointments at the conference. If you want more details about a certain event at conference, feel free to email me or place your comment on this blog.

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

Dallas Or Bust!

I’m heading to the American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) Conference tomorrow! Hopefully, and God willing, I’ll be able to make some great contacts that’ll help me out with my writing. I’ll post a full report on my blog when I return! Or, if I can, I may post blog entries during the conference!

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

Thr3e And Other Things

Well, I got a LOT of responses about the novel, Thr3e. I also discovered that this book will be made into a movie for Fox Faith. It’s due to come out January 2007. Here is the link if you’re interested in finding out more information.:

http://foxfaithmovies.com/

I’ll try to remember to watch the movie and perhaps do a discussion on my blog, comparing the movie to the book and see which one people liked better.

I’ve started reading Leave It To Claire by Tracey Bateman. It’s a chick lit book told in the first person. So far it’s interesting, and I want to finish it to see what happens to Claire. I will post about this book when I’m finished with it.

As far as my own writing is concerned, I’m focused on getting the first draft done of one of my novels. I plan on pitching it when I attend the annual American Christian Fiction Writers conference in Dallas. I leave on Thursday and return on Sunday. I’ll be sure to do a day to day blog about my experiences at the conference.

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

Thr3e By Ted Dekker

THREE by TED DEKKER PODCAST
This blog post is sponsored by Divine Desserts Publishing, LLC. Come check out our Christian fiction titles at ceceliadowdy.com/books. The link is at the end of this blog post.

Okay, I’ll admit it. I finished this story the day before yesterday, and I
can’t get it off of my mind. If anybody has read this book, will they
please post comments to this blog? I want to discuss this book with
somebody so bad that it aches. You know what I mean? I wish I was still
in a book club and this was the pick of the month!

MAJOR SPOILER! READ AT YOUR OWN RISK!

This book had a surprise ending, an ending that I’m still trying to
grasp and make sense of. Kevin, a divinity school student has suddenly
been plagued by disturbing phone calls by a man named Slater. Slater
asks a riddle, giving Kevin an amount of time to respond. If he doesn’t
respond, Slater retaliates by setting off a bomb. Slater accomplishes
his bomb threats in the book, and when the FBI gets involved, things get
pretty heated since Slater does not want cops involved with his “game”
with Kevin.

Jennifer, an FBI agent, is attracted to Kevin. She finds his childlike
curiosity, and his quiet nature to be appealing.

As Jennifer works on the case, she encourages Kevin to try and uncover the
real identity of Slater. Slater says he’ll stop his threats if Kevin
will confess his sin. Kevin assumes Slater is a boy he knew many years
ago, whom he’d left in an abandoned building to die. Kevin assumes
Slater is back to get revenge on him since he tried to “kill” him by
leaving him in the building with no means of escape. Kevin did this act
only to save his best and only friend Samantha(Sam). Sam also comes to
Kevin’s rescue when he contacts her, telling of how his car exploded.

Sam and Kevin have deep feelings for one another, but they never
pursued a relationship because they don’t want to mess up their
friendship by having a romance.

After many twists and turns, threats by Slater, and probing by Jennifer
and Samantha, it’s discovered, over a four-day period of time(and a
little over four hundred pages) that Kevin, Slater, and Samantha are all
one person! Kevin has multiple personalities and he assumes that Slater
and Samantha are people he’s known from his past, but they actually
don’t exist.

I keep thinking about this book because I’m trying to piece together
how plausible it was to have such extended scenes and conversations
between Sam and Kevin and Kevin and Slater. It’s hard for me to picture
this, however, I guess, once the truth has been revealed, the reader
would just need to assume that all of the details of the events happened in
Kevin’s head. I know this type of mental disorder does indeed exist, and it’s hard for me to imagine seeing people, having conversations with them for extended periods of time, and they’re really not there. I guess it’s kind of like when you are dreaming, it seems real, but you wake up and know it’s a dream. With this type of mental disorder, I’d think it would be like you were dreaming, except it happens when you are awake, and you are not aware that the people you are talking to are not real?

This story reminded me of a Sidney Sheldon title I read years ago
called Tell Me Your Dreams. In Sheldon’s book it was a woman who was the main character, and she had two other personalities. There is a string of murders involved in this book. It’s hard for me to remember all of the details of this book clearly since I read it several years ago.

If anybody reading this has read Thr3e, feel free to post your comments.

If you like religious, wholesome fiction, then read my novel Shades of Chocolate! Over 150 Amazon 5-star reviews! Join my email list and receive fantastic updates about new releases! Enjoy other titles released by Divine Desserts Publishing LLC.

Until next time,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com/books

Top 50 Christian Titles

Here is a link to a list of the top 50 Christian books. The link was posted on one of my fiction writers listservs. It was pointed out that many of the titles are fiction. If you are curious, then take a look:

http://www.cbaonline.org/TrackingLists/top.jsp?w=b

The only fiction title on the list that I’ve read is Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers. I have at least one of the non-fiction titles, but I don’t really read much non-fiction these days(except for my Bible.)

Anybody read any of the fiction titles on the list? If so, what did you think about them? Why do you think they are listed as part of the top fifty?

I love Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers. I guess because it showed how anybody, no matter what sin you have committed, can change and accept God’s grace. The heroine(can’t recall her name) has lived a hard life and she doesn’t get to know the Lord until she meets the right man. I read this book years ago, and I’m assuming it’ll continue to sell for many years to come. I still see it gracing the shelves when I go to Christian bookstores.

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

Deborah Bedford And Karen Kingsbury


SPOILER ALERT!

A Morning Like This by Deborah Bedford

A Thousand Tomorrows by Karen Kingsbury

Here’s a summary, and my opinions about my vacation reading:

I recently finished a thousand tomorrows by Karen Kingsbury. I have another question about this title, similar to my questions about Ted DEKkER. Anybody know why the title of this novel was in lower case?

Karen Kingsbury is a very well-known Christian novelist. However, this is the first book I’ve read by her. I thought the book was good, and well-written, however, I wanted to place more thoughts and references to God into her story. Cody, a bull rider, is bitter and angry at his father for abandoning him, his mother, and his Down-syndrome stricken younger brother Carl Joseph. He releases his anger by riding bulls, becoming a top-notch bull rider in the process.

Ali Daniels is a successful horsewoman on the rodeo circuit. Ali and Cody cross paths over the years at rodeo shows. However, they never acknowledge one another. Ali has a secret: she suffers from cystic fibrosis. Finally, after years of silence between them, Cody and Ali do begin a relationship, they fall in love, and eventually, Ali convinces Cody to forgive his father, who, during the course of the story, returns to Cody’s mother and remarries her.

I could see the message of Christianity interwoven throughout this story. However, I still felt that the characters could have made more references to God, and to Christianity. Cody does forgive his parents, which is the Christian thing to do. However, I felt that he should have mentioned how the Lord worked through him, making him see that the right thing to do would be to forgive his parents.

An example of where I think God should have been mentioned was when Cody was alone with Ali, far from her house, and she has an asthma attack. He yells for her to “breathe, make her breathe.” I felt that he should have called directly upon God to help Ali with her asthma attack.

It was sad when Ali did die in the end, after Cody, and Ali’s father, both donated a lung to her so that she could gain a few more years of life.

This book was published under Warner’s/Hatchette Book Group’s Center Street imprint, NOT the Faith Words imprint. My research indicates that the Center Street imprint is NOT an inspirational imprint, per se, but it was “designed to build around the values and sensibilities of heartland America.” And “the titles ‘are’ written from a values-based perspective that is not necessarily a religious one.” – according to Publisher’s Weekly. This explanation may explain why this Kingsbury novel wasn’t very religious.

I also read A Morning Like This by Deborah Bedford. The premise of this novel reminded me of Truth Be Told by Victoria Christopher Murray. In Deborah’s novel David Treasure has a loving wife, Abby, a wonderful home life and a son named Braden. His mistress from several years ago, Susan, comes to town unexpectedly, practically forcing David to meet with her.

David discovers Susan has a daughter (named Samantha/Sam) that is his, who is around the same age as Braden. Sam is sick with leukemia, and she needs a bone marrow transplant. Susan wants David tested to see if he’s a match. When it’s discovered that he isn’t a match, Susan begs David to let Braden be tested since siblings are the most likely bone marrow transplant donors to be a match.

Her request forces David to tell Abby about his affair. Abby is floored, and their marriage goes through many trials and tribulations throughout the story. After he is tested, it is discovered that Braden is not a match, either.

Sam is not aware of the contact her mother has with her father. When Sam accidentally finds out where her father (David) lives, she runs away to meet him. She stays with David, Abby, and Braden for a week, and during that time, she grows close to her brother, but is bothered by Abby’s cold attitude towards her. Sam feels better when she discovers that Abby is upset about David’s affair, not about her presence in her home.

Sam and Braden surprisingly go to the altar and ask the church to be tested to see if they have a matching donor among the crowd. A perfect match is found and Sam is healed from her disease.

Abby discovers that David’s affair, which occurs during her pregnancy and for a short time after their son is born, was partially her fault. She realizes that she shut David out of her life, and she apologizes for the part she played in his indiscretion.

The reason why this book reminds me of Truth Be Told is because a life-threatening illness forces a former mistress to come forward with the husband’s illegitimate child, forcing the husband to tell his wife about his indiscretion. Murray’s novel had the former mistress to have AIDS, which prompts her to contact the father of her son so that he could raise him since she was going to die soon.

I thought both books, A Thousand Tomorrows and A Morning Like This were very good.

Right now, I’m reading Thr3e by Ted DEKkER. I’ll post about that one as time permits.

Stay blessed,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com

North Carolina Christian Bookstores

Well, during my vacation, I managed to read a couple of books. I also managed to go to a Christian bookstore and a secular bookstore. When I visited the secular bookstore (Barnes and Noble at Southpoint Mall in Durham) I purchased the following titles: Claire Knows Best by Tracey Bateman and Saved Folk In The House by Sonnie Beverly. I don’t believe I’ve included Sonnie Beverly on my Black Christian Fiction site: www.blackchristianfiction.com so I will be adding this author shortly.

I also visited the Family Christian Bookstore in Charlotte North Carolina. This bookstore had a totally awesome Christian fiction section….one of the largest I’ve ever seen in a Christian bookstore! I chatted with one of the associates, telling her that I was an author, and asked for insight as to why they don’t carry category Christian romance titles such as the ones from Steeple Hill Love Inspired. She said they don’t re-stock the shelves monthly, so they would not be able to update the titles in a timely manner. (For those of you who don’t know, Steeple Hill Love Inspired titles are released each month.) They re-stock their shelves quarterly. She also stated that since Steeple Hill is under the Harlequin umbrella, they do not carry them in their store since Harlequin is secular. I reminded her that there were other Christian publishing houses that were owned by secular publishers, like Random House (I believe they own Waterbrook, and they now own Multnomah). She said that this was true, however, in those cases, they usually keep the Christian arm of the publishing business as a totally separate entity, whereas Steeple Hill doesn’t appear to do that. I did tell her that the LI books sold very well, and I told her my recent sales figures! I just wanted to place a bug in their ear about the category romances, hoping to get them to change their minds about carrying the SHLI titles….eventually!

While at the Family Christian Bookstore, I purchased the following titles: Leave It To Claire by Tracey Bateman, A Sounding Brass by Shelley Bates, Violet Dawn by Brandilyn Collins, Web of Lies by Brandilyn Collins, and Thr3e by Ted Dekker. Anybody have any idea why the book title is spelled like this: Thr3e, or why Ted Dekker has the second K in his name smaller than the first K, like this: DEKkER? Just wondered. If anybody has read any of the titles mentioned in the first or third paragraphs, feel free to post comments or drop me a line about how much you liked (or disliked) the titles.

I also visited another Christian bookstore while in Charlotte. New Creation bookstore is large, and they also have a fantastic fiction section. Although they had no category romances, they did have one title published by Steeple Hill Café, which is a women’s fiction single title line by Harlequin. It was nice seeing a Harlequin/SH title at a Christian bookstore. I can’t recall the name of the title or the author. Since I’d already spent enough money on books during our trip, I didn’t bother to spend any money at New Creation!

Read my next blog entry to see what I read while on vacation!

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

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