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Christa Allan, author of not your usual Christian fiction

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October 21, 2011

WHAT ARE THE TOP THREE QUESTIONS ASKED OF WRITERS? GUEST POST by RICHARD MABRY

Filed under: Blog,Guest Post,Writing — Tags: Abingdon Press, ACFW, Carol Awards, Medical Fiction, Richard Mabry — Christa Allan @ 1:47 am

Note from Christa: I first met Richard four years ago when we were both on the verge of publishing our first novels with Abingdon Press. He now serves as Vice-President of the American Christian Fiction Writers. His novel, Lethal Remedy, was nominated for ACFW’s Carol Award. Richard gives generously of his time and talents.  He is an encourager and supporter, and I have appreciated and enjoyed his friendship.

When people discover I’m a published author, they always have questions. “How much money do you make from this?” Not nearly enough. “Is it difficult to get published?” No more difficult than swimming the English Channel with one hand tied behind your back and an anchor on your leg. And the number one question, “Where do you get your ideas?”

I hadn’t given much thought to the origin of my ideas until I’d been asked that question a number of times. And as I considered it, I realized that sometimes these things just seem to materialize in my brain and take on a life of their own.

My first novel, Code Blue, is about a young doctor who flees from her big city practice when her life falls apart, going back to her hometown only to find that some of the people don’t want her there, and at least one wants her dead. The book begins with a black SUV running her vehicle off the road, and I had that scene in my head when I began writing, but frankly, beyond that, I was totally winging it. I’m a seat-of-the-pants writer anyway, and for this one, I just let my imagination take me forward. My characters surprised me at times, and I honestly didn’t know who the villain was going to be until I started writing the last few chapters of the book.

The books that came afterward had varying origins. The focus of Medical Error is medical identity theft—that is, someone stealing an identity and using it to obtain medical treatment. I began pursuing this because one of my family members is almost paranoid about identity theft, having been a victim. The third book, Diagnosis Death, features a doctor accused of the mercy killings of several patients. I started writing that one after a similar charge was leveled at a colleague (who was subsequently exonerated). My most recent novel, Lethal Remedy, centers around a “what-if” scenario: what if one or more of the people involved in researching a new drug decided to falsify data and hide side effects in order to get the drug on the market?

There’s not a lot connecting these books, is there? The common thread is that they sprang from my day-to-day experiences, resulting in ideas I thought were worth pursuing. Do I have other ideas? I have a number of them, preserved on my hard disk and in my memory, and I’ll pursue them one at a time in novels as long as I’m able.

So, back to the question, “Where do you get your ideas?” The answer is simple. They’re the product of life, experience, circumstances, and an active imagination. What more does a writer need?

MORE ABOUT RICHARD:

Author of Prescription for Trouble series
Lethal Remedy, Abingdon Press, Oct 2011
http://www.rmabry.com
http://rmabry.blogspot.com

http://facebook.com/RichardMabry

RICHARD’S  BIO: Dr. Richard Mabry retired from medicine after a distinguished career as a respected clinician, teacher, writer, and researcher. He entered the field of non-medical writing with the publication of his book, The Tender Scar: Life After The Death Of A Spouse, written after the death of his first wife. Richard is the author of the Prescription For Trouble series of medical thrillers. He and his wife Kay make their home in North Texas.

 

 

 

 


Comments (4)

October 20, 2011

Why I write

Filed under: Blog,Writing — Tags: writing — Christa Allan @ 6:29 am

I write because there is no one left in my life who knew me before I knew myself.

I write because I can talk to the paper and not be interrupted or misunderstood or frozen mid-sentence by a quizzical stare from a listener’s eyes.

I write because I can’t (nor would you want to watch me) sing or dance or paint or sculpt or provide anything else of artistic value to the universe other than what I can create with my paper and pen.

I write because my days are numbered; I have less days to live than I have already lived, and the abstraction of mortality is waning, replaced by the very concreteness of careening years.

I write because I kept my mouth shut for too many years of my life. I write because I could exorcise the ghosts of the past, the goblins of the present, the amorphous fears of the future wielding a cheap plastic-barreled pen and a college-ruled notebook.

I write because words spoken are swallowed by time. Words written are meals cooked today for a banquet to be held later. I write because I have lived an unexpected life and the surprises–both full of dread and full of awe–would otherwise drift uncharted.

I write because I want my children to know me, not mother me or wife me, or sister me, or aunt me, or grandmother me. But Christa Me. The deep and the shallow places. I want them to have access to bits of my soul, perhaps slices of me that they may not hunger for until I am no longer here to feed them.

I write because, in doing so, I shape the memories, give them words that will be my eternal life breaths.


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October 11, 2011

What closet are you coming out of?

Filed under: Blog,Blogroll,Faith,Issues,Limbs on the Family Tree,Relationships — Tags: Ally for GLBT Christians, Canyonwalker Connections, Christians, gay, GLBT, I:28 Mission, National Coming Out Day, The Edge of Grace, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, The Nate Berkus Show — Christa Allan @ 1:12 pm

 

Today is National Coming Out Day, and I intended to write a post about its significance because I am the sister of a gay brother, and because my second novel, The Edge of Grace, is partially based on our experiences.

In looking for a picture to use with the post, I tripped across the one you see above. It brought me to Canyonwalker Connections, an I-58 mission by Kathy, who states on her site her mission is: “Loosen the chains of injustice, untie the cords of the yoke, set the oppressed free and break every yoke. Then you will be called Repairer of the Breach.” Isaiah 58. To educate and create dialogue between the Christian Church and the glbt Christian community.” 

In thinking about the idea of “coming out,” it occurred to me that not only is the closet not limited to gender as in gays, lesbians, transsexuals and bisexuals; it’s crowded with straight people too. Only they’re closeted in their racism, discrimination, prejudice.

For example, the ones who look around and, not seeing faces of color, begin telling jokes about people of other races or religions. As the wife of a Jewish husband, whose daughter’s husband is black, you’d be amazed (or maybe, sadly, not) at what I hear from people who do not know my family. Pillars of the community on the outside, but their mortar is crumbling on the inside.

People with alcohol, drug, gambling and other addictions are smashed into the closet as well. Doing their best to maintain the facade of “Biff and Buffy” with all their friends and family, they hope the closet door doesn’t have a window.

And, smashed in the closet are straight Christians as well.  I’m not just talking about the ones who secretly watch The Ellen DeGeneres Show or The Nate Berkus Show.  There are Christians who struggle with all sorts of issues who fear revealing the dysfunction in their own families. And sharing that closet are Christians who tell me things like, “You know, my (insert name of family member) is gay, and I’m okay with it, but….”

Kathy is clearly a brilliant woman because she read my mind about the post I intended to write today, only she wrote it a year ago. In her post, “I’m Coming out as an Ally for GLBT Christians,” Karen writes:

“Yes, I run into closeted Christians all the time.  And no, they are not gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. They are straight, like me. But, they love their GLBT friends and family and are coming to a realization that what they’ve been told or thought they understood may not be the heart of God.  They see honor, integrity and even Jesus and the Holy Spirit in their GLBT friends.  Evidenced in the very same group they have been told cannot possible be Christian because they are queer.    In some churches, it is not safe to even ask questions about homosexuality, about any thing. So, how can they dare openly dialogue about this issue, this hot button topic  in most Christian congregations?”

I’ve paid a price for writing The Edge of Grace, especially because it’s published under a Christian publisher’s imprint. There are those Christians who have not confronted me or my publisher directly, only in thinly veiled references to my novel, suggesting any critical acclaim for it came from sycophantic Christians. Some who would be content if my Christian baptism could be retroactive. I know my novel brings up questions, and I never claimed to be an authority on psychology or theology. I’m a storyteller, and I know my experiences and my characters’ experiences. I believe Jesus called us to love. Period.

As Karen so aptly stated: “Is there a cost to coming out as affirming?  Yes, there can be.  Most likely not as extreme as my upfront price. You may get labeled as ; heretic, unbeliever, unrepentant, tool of Satan, words I don’t say or write (and that is by Christians!), lesbian, “at minimal” bisexual or gay.  People will argue with you over non-related topics because surely you must now be misguided, stupid and have never studied the Scriptures. Others will unfriend you, unfollow you, unlike you.  All because you think Jesus was telling the truth when He said to love your neighbors unconditionally and that “whosoever” really does mean whosoever.”

I encourage you to read the rest of her post HERE.

Overwhelming though, I’ve also been blessed, even by those who may not agree with the message of the book, but who respect the relationship my brother and I share, and who acknowledge that it gave them cause to consider “the other side” as it were.

I hope in 2013, we can look at National Coming Out day as one that gives us pause and cause to consider what we’re holding on to that we fear may cause us to be judged by others.

What closet do you need to come out of?

 

 


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