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Christa Allan, author of not your usual Christian fiction

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April 30, 2007

INTERVIEW FUN WITH SHARON DUNN

Filed under: Uncategorized — Christa Allan @ 4:52 am

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1. I have to love a woman who admits she’s chronically unorganized; you give me so much hope. How, though, do you keep your writing life organized?

Thanks, I love giving people hope especially when it comes from my own ineptitude. As far as keeping my writing life in order goes, I have a fairly solid memory, so things are pretty well organized in my head. I keep a journal while I am writing a book to express my frustrations and brainstorm where the book will go next. Also, sticky notes are the unorganized person’s best friend. I have them all over my desk to remind me of things I need to fix in the book or research or whatever. My actual physical space where I write gets pretty cluttered. I’ll print research off the internet or pull books off my shelf and just drop them around the desk. I know where they are.  I clean my writing area up after each project (sometime before if it gets too bad).  

 

2. What is your writing process? Could you share, in microwave version, how you move from idea to fleshing it out to finished manuscript?

If I can write a good first line and a compelling first chapter or prologue, I can usually pull a book together. I revise and experiment with possibilities for the first line and first chapter until I get it right and then I write the book straight through. My first draft is really yucky, very little description or character development, lots of typed notes to myself in bold. The important thing with a mystery is that the clues and mini-climaxes are in the right place. Once I get the scene in place I clarify character motive, flesh out descriptions and plug my research holes.      

 

3. What drew you to humor and mystery writing or, maybe better said, humorous mystery writing?

With my first books, the Ruby Taylor mysteries, I didn’t sit down and say “I’m going to write really funny stuff.” It just came out funny. Even with this new Bargain Hunter series, I focus on getting a good story. The humor comes a result of the story, which is the best way to write funny.

 

4. Your website is eye-catching, kicky and bright; just like your books. We know that was by design, so could you share how you came about deciding on this “look” for yourself as an author? What about marketing?

My Ruby Taylor books were identified as chick lit mystery, and they were some of the first in that genre for the Christian market. Again, I didn’t sit down and say, I’m going to write a chick lit mystery. I just focused on writing a good story. By the time people figured out chick lit was trendy, the publishing pipeline was glutted with chick lit books. As a writer, you can’t chase trends. Just write what you like to read.

As far as marketing goes, once that label was given to my books, the website was a little more deliberate with color and style choice. My new book, Death of a Garage Sale Newbie and the other Bargain Hunter mysteries are not chick lit, but they are what I call humorous whodunits so the light, fun motif of the website fits.    

5. The ACFW conference is approaching. Any advice (wearing swimmies not included) for newbies like me who are plunging into the conference pool for the first time?

I have not been to an ACFW conference, but I have attended other major conferences, and I started attending before I had sold my first book. There is so much nervous energy in the air at a conference, everyone vying for editors’ attention; it’s easy to get overwhelmed and to be disappointed. I have had the best time at conferences when I focused on hanging out with other writers and just taking pitching opportunities as they came, but not pushing so hard that I was knocking other writers down to get to an editor. The other thing I recommend is to ask God why he wants you there. Some of the conferences I have gone to have been about moving forward professionally, but other times I have gone and spent most of my time praying through issues directly related to writing. I have three kids and a pretty full schedule, so extended prayer times don’t happen that much at home. Conferences can function as retreats. I have experienced lots of spiritual growth and revelation at conferences.        

 

6. What do you know now that you wish you knew then in terms of your writing and publishing?

I wish I would have known that getting that first contract wasn’t going to change my life that much. I’m still sweeping my own floors and cleaning toilets. Where is that maid? The limo service hasn’t shown up yet either. Okay, I knew I wasn’t’ going to get rich, but I expected some dramatic transformation. The truth is writing is a business, you build slowly. You build readership, you build skill level, and you build reputation.  

 

7. What advice do you have for those of us yet-to-be agented or published?

Be in this business for the right reasons. If you are writing for the fame or money or to have some childhood insecurity healed, get out now. You’re setting yourself up for lots of pain. You have to be in this business because you love being alone in a room listening to fingers tapping on the keyboard and creating worlds for readers to get lost in. 

 

8. Complete the following: If I couldn’t write, I would………………..

If I couldn’t write, I would die slowly inside. On the days when life gets in the way and I can’t write, even to do a journal entry, something is missing.  It really is what nourishes me. Once you get into the writing groove, it’s a little like exercise. You  hate having to do it, like yourself better when you are finished, and miss it if you don’t do it.

 

One more thing. I am running a contest on my website to win a free copy of Death of a Garage Sale Newbie. If you go to www.sharondunnbooks.com and click on bargain hunters or bargain hunting tips, leave a tip and your email and your name will be put in a hat for the drawing. The more tips you leave, the more times your name goes in. This contest ends May 30.

  

 


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April 29, 2007

Couture Chocolate

Filed under: Issues — Christa Allan @ 11:30 am

21_114_thumb.jpgMy writer friend Camy Tang is in BIG trouble for having info on her blog about this amazing source of chocolate and other exotic delights. The one pictured here is a Red Fire Bar, with Mexican ancho and chipotle chilies, cinnamon, and dark chocolate.


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Filed under: Faith — Christa Allan @ 2:40 am

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April 28, 2007

Warning: for word nerds

Filed under: Writing — Christa Allan @ 8:12 am

These words first plopped into my email from a someone on my AP English loop (I know, nerd-alert) as attributed to a Mensa contest. The ”contest” was to replace a letter in the word, thus creating a new word, and then provide a definition. The blog Take Our Word For It, says these were actually published in the Style Invitational column of the Washington Post.

Enjoy.

 1. Intaxication: Euphoria at getting a tax refund, which lasts until you realize it was your money to start with.

2. Reintarnation: Coming back to life as a hillbilly.

3. Bozone (n.): The substance surrounding stupid people that stops bright ideas from penetrating. The bozone layer, unfortunately, shows little sign of breaking down in the near future.

4. Cashtration (n.): The act of buying a house, which renders the subject financially impotent for an indefinite period.

5. Giraffiti: Vandalism spray-painted very, very high.

6. Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn’t get it.

7. Inoculatte: To take coffee intravenously when you are running late.

8. Hipatitis: Terminal coolness.

9. Osteopornosis: A degenerate disease. (This one got extra credit.)

10. Karmageddon: It’s like, when everybody is sending off all these really bad vibes, right? And then, like, the Earth explodes and it’s like, a serious bummer.

11. Decafalon (n.): The grueling event of getting through the day consuming only things that are good for you.

12. Glibido: All talk and no action.

13. Arachnoleptic fit (n.): The frantic dance performed just after you’ve accidentally walked through a spider web.

14. Beelzebug (n.): Satan in the form of a mosquito, that gets into your bedroom at three in the morning and cannot be cast out.

15. Caterpallor (n.): The color you turn after finding half a worm in the fruit you’re eating.

And the pick of the literature:

16. Dopeler effect: The tendency of stupid ideas to seem smarter when they come at you rapidly.


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April 26, 2007

You just can’t make this stuff up

Filed under: Issues — Christa Allan @ 5:17 pm

According to recent news reports, Katie Holmes (aka Mrs. Tom-I’m-taller-than-my-husband-who-is-supposedly-holding-me-hostage-in-my-own-house Cruise)  is secretly talking to Catholic priests.

Katie, millions of Catholics do this; they call it confession.

And, anyway, if I know what you’re doing, (and I’m so far down on the Cruise news food chain I’m not even a one-celled thingy), then———it’s NOT a secret.

And for more fun:

Hugh Grant was arrested in London and, no, not for another one of those driveby requisitionings of a female. For allegedly assaulting a photographer with…are you ready…frozen baked beans.

Obviously, the photographer does not realize his fortune. The beans could have: a) still been in the can, and if Grant’s frugal, a large can, b) been recently removed from the oven where they’d been baking at 400 degrees for ten hours, or c) been frozen along with the large order of ribs that they’d snuggled along side of when served.

But, Hugh, really. All that money, and the best you could do was baked beans?


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April 25, 2007

Filed under: Uncategorized — Christa Allan @ 3:21 pm

This kid is…so cute
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRtj2sZOqS8]
Cute doesn’t require a translation.


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April 24, 2007

Mommy guilt to Mommy innocent

Filed under: Issues,Limbs on the Family Tree — Christa Allan @ 7:21 pm

Thank you Harvard Medical School. One less reason for mommy-guilt.

They just released a study that breast-fed babies do not necessarily grow up to be thinner adults.  So, I’m now free to practice some revisionist history in my kids’  baby books.

According to the AP article, researchers believed that the women’s recollections of breastfeeding (they’d been sent a survey) were reliable.  ” A mother knows whether she breast-fed her child,” said Karin Michels, the lead study author and an associate professor of epidemiology.

One would hope.


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April 23, 2007

Enjoy the carnival

Filed under: Writing — Christa Allan @ 10:23 am

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Click here to start the rides!


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April 21, 2007

Conundrum: living the definition

Filed under: Issues,Writing — Christa Allan @ 8:16 am

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I’ve reached the sad conclusion that some days I spend more time writing about the fact that I’m not writing than I do writing the writing that I am writing about not writing.

And now I am going to drink my coffee and read about writing. Then, I will return to write about my reading.


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April 19, 2007

Convicted by our words

Filed under: Faith — Christa Allan @ 9:33 pm

When I was yet a babe in bloggerland, I found a button on someone’s site that tracked the number of abortions per day and the number of deaths in Iraq per day. Not exactly politically correct.

I decided to delete it since I wasn’t yet sure of the “direction” of my blog. Would it be a blog for me to blather on about family, school, and life in general? Would it be a blog about my writing, my journey to the abodes of agents and paradise of publication? Would it be a blog about some or all of these, plus my struggles to be the woman God intended be to be?

My categories (see far right) now reflect what some, perhaps, would say is a marketing platform not yet nailed tightly to a foundation. I write about all of these, and recently added interviewing authors and reviewing books.

Growing up in the New Orleans area, I suppose I just feel comfy in a gumbo. All those varied ingredients find a way to blend to create something distinct, something with soul. And if you don’t like the okra, you just pick it out and leave on the plate (real etiquette hounds we are in the South).

And now to the point———-I’ve discovered that I don’t have to be politically correct.

Today, the United States Supreme Court upheld states’ rights to ban partial birth abortions. I am truly glad.

If you have chosen to not know exactly what is involved in a partial birth abortion, then you might just want to cruise to another blog now.

The procedure (links to diagram) is performed from 20 weeks through six months or later. First, the baby’s leg is grabbed using forceps. The baby’s leg is pulled out into the birth canal. Then, the baby’s entire body is delivered, except for the head. Scissors are then jammed into the baby’s head and used to create a hole. A suction tube is inserted. The brains are sucked out, causing the skull to collapse, then the dead baby is removed.

So, that’s “partial” birth. We’ve become adept at euphemisms and political correctness to diminish and divert attention from the painful reality of situations. Tidies up all the mess. Hitler didn’t kill; it was “special treatment.” The elderly are senior citizens. The poor are economically marginalized. My car isn’t used; it’s previously owned. I’m not short; I’m vertically challenged.

The universe is disenfranchised. We’ve stopped calling things what they really are because our threshold for dealing with pain is sometimes limited only by the number of prescriptions physicians write.

I just would like for us to pause and not only see things are they are, but be brave enough to label them what they are. Has anyone even tried to figure out how one is partially born? Can you be partially dead? If it’s “partial” birth, then that’s not “total” is it?

Just for the record, I included this from the MSN article about this ban:

“Still legal are procedures in which the fetus is removed in pieces from the womb. The Supreme Court ruling also noted that use of chemicals to kill the fetus before its removal would be legal.

“If intact D&X is truly necessary in some circumstances, a prior injection to kill the fetus allows a doctor to perform the procedure, given that the Act’s prohibition only applies to the delivery of ‘a living fetus,”’ the ruling said.”

There’s just nothing else for me to say.


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