Wanna Be on Team Roseanna?

Wanna Be on Team Roseanna?

I was so, so touched last week by the huge number of you guys who contacted me about helping out with A Soft Breath of Wind. I ended up with more beta readers than I could have dreamed, and exactly the number of influencers I was hoping for. Thank you, so, so much!
And so I thought I’d put out another call–this one isn’t so much work. 😉 Next week, from Thursday August 14 through Sunday August 17, A Stray Drop of Blood will be on sale on Kindle for A Stray Drop of Blood will be on sale on Kindle for A Stray Drop of Blood will be on sale on Kindle for $0.99.99.99. This marks the second occasion when it’s been on sale in all its long life, and I need some help spreading the word.

Now, as fate would have it, the sale begins on my birthday. I didn’t plan it that way–I turned in a list of titles we’d be running sales on, and the ad coordinator assigned the dates. But that’s what we call a happy accident. =) And I can think of no better gift for turning 32 than A Stray Drop of Blood having a weekend of superb sales!
If you’d be willing to help me spread the word next week, I would be eternally grateful. I’ll be posting Tweets you can copy right in or retweet from my feed, and also Facebook posts. I’ll have graphics and memes and photos you can post (like the one above). I’ll create a variety so that those who want to participate can post a couple times during the sale without it being the same thing over and over again.
If you want to help, you can do two things: check back here next Wednesday for tweetables and graphics, and/or ask for an email reminder. I know I have a hard time remembering when to post this sort of thing unless I get a reminder! So if you would like to be added to my list of folks to email the graphics and posts to, just shoot me a note at roseanna at roseannawhite dot com –if that address doesn’t work for some reason, try roseannamwhite at gmail dot com.
Thanks so much for all your support, everyone!!
Thoughtful About . . . Bad Guys

Thoughtful About . . . Bad Guys

One of the lessons I heard taught in one of the first writing classes I took at my very first conference touched on bad guys–and how a writer’s job is to look inside them and find a redeeming quality to make them three-dimensional.
Good advice. Except sometimes, in a book, I get pretty sick of bad guys with redeeming qualities that come off as excuses. He was abused, he thinks this will get him love, he’s motivated by the death of his true love, yada yada yada. I guess in my head there are two different kinds of bad guys–the antagonist, who’s just working against the hero but may not be bad, and the villain. The villain has evil in his heart. The villain desires destruction. The villain has systematically squashed all the good in himself.
Personally, I like a story with both.
As I’m digging (slowly) into my second Edwardian book, I realized that I have quite the team of baddies in this one. I’ve got my ultimate villain, who’s still playing it cool and quiet, who no one will realize yet was the mastermind behind the whole series (mwa ha ha ha). I’ve got my secondary baddie who everyone will think is the ultimate one, who continues through the whole series. I’ve got my seriously-hurt-my-heroine, for-this-book-only dude, who’s violent and a liar and yet thinks he’s acting out of love (see, redeeming quality! LOL).
Then I’ve got my heroine’s father. It would be easy to make him a cookie-cutter abusive dad. He beats her. Not blinded-by-rage-and-nearly-kills-her kind of beating, but the methodical, make-sure-it-doesn’t-show kind. The won’t-you-ever-learn-this-lesson? kind. Wrong, yes. But does he hate her? Is he just cruel? Is there more to him?
I’m rather sick of excuses for sin and evil in our world. Sure, people get carried away. Sure, people are affected by earlier traumas. Sure, we all have reasons for our mistakes–but they should never be a crutch. They should remain reasons, not excuses. We can’t excuse sin. So I don’t ever want to pardon what my characters do. I don’t want to justify it. I don’t want to make it right.
But I do want to dig deep enough into their fictional psyches to make them make sense. And sometimes that’s hard.
Digging into Douglas (the abusive father) the other night, I realized that he isn’t trying to make his daughter weak, to get his own way. He’s trying to make her strong. His abuse began when her mother fell out of his favor, and the thing he came to despise about his wife was that she was weak. Not strong enough to deserve his name. Not strong enough to deserve their heritage. And Gusty is his only child, heir to his estate and title (this is Scotland of 1912, remember). The last thing he wants is to pass everything to a weakling who will lose it. So when he sees Gusty acting like her mother, he punishes her. He sees it as hardening steel in a fire.
She sees it as hatred, cruelty, a tyrant trying to break her. So of course, she reacts by trying to avoid the punishment. Trying to please him–or more, stay out of his way. She draws in instead of acting out. And so appears ever weaker to his eyes. When the book opens, though, she’s reached her breaking point–she’s about to explode, and she’s finally about to take a stand. She expects his all-out rage.
Instead, she’s going to earn his respect for the first time.
Now I would never, ever, ever excuse such violence. It’s not right, and it’s never going to come across as right in the book. But it’s also going to turn out to be pretty important that her father doesn’t hate her. (Don’t know that I would say he knows how to love her, but…) It’s going to be important to realize that these people misunderstood each other for a decade. It’s going to be important to see that, when it comes down to it, her father chooses the path that will protect her–more, that will enable her to protect herself.
And hopefully, it’s going to make us all stop and wonder what’s really driving that person in reality whom we just don’t get. The one who never seems to react like we think they should. The one who gets angry too quickly, who holds grudges too long, who can never see the “reasonable” (aka our) side of an argument. 
It’s going to make us pause, I hope, and ask ourselves if we are that confusing person to someone else. If what we think we’re doing to help someone is actually driving them away.
In my life, I take after my dad. I lapse into silence when I’m not sure what to think, or when I fear saying something that I’ll regret. In an argument, I’m not the shouter–I’m the brooder. To my mind, that’s the wise way to be. Better to think about it and come back later with a well-thought-out response than to say something that could hurt someone I love, right? Right?
My husband is a shouter. A throw-something-er. I always say “He’s Italian. Need I say more?” He’s demonstrative, and that goes for anger as well as love. And I’m still learning that in those rare times we fight, my silence doesn’t help him. My silence makes it worse. He doesn’t really care what I say, he just wants me to say it. To engage. To his mind, when I bite my tongue I’m shutting down. Turning off. Keeping him out–and all he wants is to know what I’m thinking. Whether he agrees or not doesn’t really matter to him. What matters is that we’re communicating.
See, the thing is, there’s rarely a right way to be in life. We’re all different–and that’s good. We don’t have to all react the same way. Yes, we need to keep our reactions holy, but there are even different kinds of holy. There’s the measured and calm responses of Ezra, there are the violent and quick reactions of Nehemiah. Both were right in the eyes of God. But man, I imagine they may have had a few clashes when facing each other!
This is just one more lesson I’ve learned through story. That when I’m dealing with the “characters” who populate my life, I’d better be willing to dig deeper. To understand why they do the things they do. To accept them for that. And to never assume that I’m the protagonist in their story–it could very well be that, in that moment, I’m antagonizing instead…no matter how much “better” I think my way is.

Queen of Hearts photo credit: Express Monorail via photopin cc

Readers Needed

Readers Needed

We’re less than four months from the release of A Soft Breath of Wind. Aaaaaggghhh! Exciting, but also a little panic-inducing. See, it’s been a long time since WhiteFire has put out one of my books. And as I’m one of WhiteFire’s editors, I’m a little paranoid about the editing on this one, LOL. Because we all know authors can’t find all the mistakes in their own books. And while I trust our other editors implicitly, having many sets of eyes on a book is still vital.
So I decided that this book needs some beta readers. Beta readers are folks who agree to read a digital version of the book and note any mistakes they find. I’m also, of course, going to need some endorsers and influencers.
Are you interested in reading an advance copy of A Soft Breath of Wind (you can find a blurb of the book at the bottom of this post)? If so, email me at roseanna at roseannawhite dot com and let me know which role you’d like to fill. The breakdown and time requirements are as follows:

August – Endorsers

In just a few weeks, I’ll send
out copies in your choice of format (digital or paperback), for you to
read (either partially or in full) and consider for endorsement. To
endorse, you must be:
  • A published author with a decent following (preferably in historical fiction)
  • A high-profile reviewer
Endorsements will be due back by September 1. There will be space for one or two on the cover of the paperback version, and the rest will go on an interior fly page. If you also wanted to post a review to websites and blogs after release, you wouldn’t hear me argue. 😉

September – Beta Readers

These spots are filled – unless you’re such a fabulous editor that I just can’t pass you up. 😉
In early September, I’ll send out digital copies of the book (your choice of format) and you will:
  • Find typos
  • Let me know any places that aren’t clear
  • Mark any other mistakes you see
  • Give me your overall impressions
  • (Optional) agree to post a review once the book releases, if your opinion is favorable
Beta readers must agree to have a list of things to be fixed emailed to me within two weeks of receiving the book, to give me time to input these final changes before finalizing the manuscript.

October – Influencers

Spot left only for digital copies!
In late October, I’ll send out your choice of format (digital or paperback) of final copies of the book. In return for this free book, you agree to read it and do at least a couple of the following:
  • Post reviews on retailer and review sites (Amazon, B&N, Goodreads, etc.)
  • Buy a copy for everyone you see in the grocery line
  • Blog about it (assuming you have a blog)
  • Have the cover tattooed across your forehead
  • Talk it up to all your friends (and book clubs!)
  • Take out an airplane banner ad for it
  • Request your Library stock it
  • Invest in a giant blinking sign for your roof that says “Buy A Soft Breath of Wind!””
  • Request your bookstores stock it
  • Leave some bookmarks/postcards with libraries or stores or in waiting rooms
Now, all those influencing suggestions (ahem) hinge on you liking the book. As a reviewer who gets copies through the publishing house, you are welcome to post a negative review. But an influencer is not meant to be unbiased–an influencer is meant to be Team Roseanna. So if you read the book and hate it, just don’t ever breathe a word, LOL. If you like/love it, please spread the word!
While it’s obviously best if you can do some of these (the reviewing at least) as close to the November 15 release date as possible, there’s no time limit on this one–a positive review and word-of-mouth is helpful at any time! So while I appreciate you getting right on this, I’m not going to get mad if life gets in the way and you don’t get a review up for a couple months. =)
Are you interesting in taking on one of these roles? Or a couple (you could both beta and influence, for example)? Please let me know ASAP! (Influencer space is limited) Again, my email address is roseanna at roseannawhite dot com, or you can leave a comment below with your email address and I’ll contact you. =)

About A Soft Breath of Wind

A gift that has branded her for life.

Zipporah is thirteen when the
Spirit descends upon her, opening her eyes to a world beyond the
physical goings-on of the villa outside Rome she has always called home.
Within hours, she learns what serving the Lord can cost. Forever
scarred after a vicious attack, she knows her call is to use this
discernment to protect the Way. She knows she must serve the rest of her
life at Tutelos, where the growing Roman church has congregated. She
knows her lot is set.

Yet is it so wrong to wish that her
master, the kind and handsome young Benjamin Visibullis, will eventually
see her as something more than a sister in Christ?

Samuel
Asinius, adoptive son of a wealthy Roman, has always called Benjamin
brother. When their travels take them to Jerusalem for Passover, the
last thing he expects is to cross paths with the woman who sold him into
slavery as a child the mother he long ago purged from his heart. His
sister, Dara, quickly catches Benjamin s eye, but Samuel suspects there
is something dark at work.

When Dara, a fortune-teller seeking
the will of a shadowy master determined to undermine the Way, comes into
the path of Zipporah, a whirlwind descends upon them all.

Only the soft wind of the Spirit can heal their scars…with a love neither divination nor discernment could foresee.

 

Thoughtful About . . . A Year

Thoughtful About . . . A Year

Well, I’ve done it. I finished my read-the-Bible-in-a-year program. A smidgeon late, I grant you–those weeks of working on the old house happened to fall during a stretch with looooong assignments that I could never finish, so I got behind.  But I finished my Chronological Bible in a year and 3 weeks.

When I undertook this last year, it was because I knew my daily reading had slacked off, and I knew I wanted to spend more time with Him. As I sat in a service at my church’s association meetings and listened to the conversation on how we should set aside time for Him, the conviction settled in that this was something I could and should do. So I went home, got out my Bible, and edited the schedule in the back of it to begin in July rather than January.

I’ve read all the way through my Bible several times before, but it’s pretty amazing to realize how much of it I’d totally forgotten. Or just never registered perhaps. I’ve learned a lot. About history, about God, about faith. I can’t hope to put it all in one blog post, but I want to dwell on some of those lessons, if only a few right now.

God is Deliberate

He doesn’t direct us randomly. He doesn’t say “Yeah, do whatever. I’ll make it work.” He has a very particular plan, and when you don’t obey it, then you can’t expect His blessing. We might not always understand why says “do this” one day and “don’t do this” same thing the next day. But there’s a reason. And we need to seek Him first, not after we’ve already made our decisions.

Details Matter

That’s the thing I took most from all the descriptions of the ark (Noah’s), the ark (of the Covenant), and the temple. Each detail was given with precision. Each detail was carried out with precision. Each detail was worth recording with precision. We as readers millennia removed might find some of those details boring. But they matter. Every detail of our lives matter. And we, as living temples of the Lord in this day of the Spirit, need to remember that. If God was so particular about the articles brought into the temple and how each was to be used, don’t you think it matters what we fill our hearts and minds with?

Obedience is a Sign of Our Hearts

Sometimes we might be confused by why Cain’s offering was refused. Or why the sons of Aaron were struck dead for getting a few details wrong in the sacrifice. Why touching the Ark of the Covenant to steady it killed a guy. But it’s like this–God tells us very particularly what to do and what not to do. If we disobey knowingly, it means we think our way is better than God’s way. Talk about pride! I’ve gotten over thinking God was cruel to do what he said he’s do–I’m more amazed that it doesn’t happen more often.

God Cares About our Little Things

Like the ax head, for which He rewrote the laws of physics. The missing coin of the woman at the well. The short man who just wants to see over the heads of the crowd. He cares. He meets those needs. Sometimes in simple ways–“Come down, Zachias, I will dine with you today.”–and sometimes in miraculous ones. But no matter how, He answers.

God Is Everywhere

We learn about His omnipresence as kids, right? God can be everywhere in the universe at once. Sure. But what really matters is that He’s where we are. In exile in Babylon. In the depths of our sorrow. In the bottom of a lion-filled pit. In a fiery furnace. In a depleted storeroom. In a drought-choked field. In a flooded valley. God is there, in whatever problem we’re facing. He’s there, in the shouts of victory. He’s there, waiting for us to reach out, to call, to cry for Him. He’s there, waiting to tell us when and how and where to move.

God Knows Us by Name

Maybe that sounds silly. But this read-through also reminded me of the power in names. Exactly twice in the Bible we hear that God told His true name to someone. First an angle who was given leave to slaughter the disobedient in the camps of Israel, and a few chapters later, to Moses. His name gave those two creatures power to do what no one else in history has done. The name of Jesus will make knees bow in all the universe. The names He gives to his servants signify their hearts and their purpose. And He knows us by name. Not just the name our parents chose for us, but the name that encapsulates all we are. All we can be. All we will ever do. He knows that name. He whispers it to us when we need it most. He calls us Rock when we feel pretty tempestuous. He calls us Deliverer when we feel like a coward who has run away. He calls us Wise Teacher when we feel like an outcast in a strange land.

Sometimes I wonder what my true name is…or where He’s leading me next…or if the small details of my life are pleasing to Him. Sometimes I wonder if I’ll ever conquer my weaknesses…or learn to fully, truly, always obey. Sometimes I wonder if I can ever be what I know I should be.

But you know, reading through those old stories…I learn anew that whatever I am, if I lay it at the feet of God, if I cling to the hand of the Savior, then it’s enough. Whatever I have, it’s enough–so long as I give it back to Him. Not just my extra, but my best. All for Him…because He is all to us.

Thoughtful About . . . Right and Wrong

Thoughtful About . . . Right and Wrong

There is absolute Right. There is absolute Wrong.

I believe this, absolutely.

There are things we should never, ever do, and things we always should. There is sin. There are consequences. There is righteousness.

Then there’s the gray. Sometimes it blurs up against the edges of Right and Wrong, but most of its existence lies spanning the fuzzy gap in between. The gray doesn’t deal with sin, just with…life. With our own decisions. Our relationships. Our countless day-to-day, minute-to-minute being.

I shouldn’t have changed my cat’s food–now she has a UTI. I shouldn’t have yelled at my kids before I realized what the problem was. I should do the dishes. I should make that phone call.

Things, good and bad, but not Right and Wrong.

Years ago, when Rowyn was nearing a year old and still waking up every couple hours through the night, I was nearing wits’ end. I was exhausted, sleep deprived, and had no energy left. I felt snappish and cranky through much of the day. There were times when the constant little hands grabbing at me made me want just five minutes without being touched. I was burned out. And in my mind, someone should have seen it and helped me. My husband should have gotten up more with the kids. He should have given me a morning now and then to sleep in. A grandmother should have seen how I struggled and volunteered to take the kids for an hour–without me asking.

My head was full of should-haves and should-not-haves. And eventually, I accused. I don’t honestly remember how the argument started, but it was linked somehow or another to my exhaustion. To my frustration with no one helping. With my total and complete conviction that I was right to want what I wanted, and the rest of the world was wrong not to give it to me.

My husband disagreed, LOL.

I don’t remember what he said, or what I said in response. I just remember seeking solitude in the night-darkened living room and deciding I would pray. Desperate for peace, I started out kneeling by the chair and ended up stretched across the floor, with my face to the rug. I cried–rare for me. And I begged God to show him, them, anyone. To show them where they were wrong.

That’s when the whisper came, in the recessed of my being. The one that said, And what about where you’re wrong?

I went still. The tears slowed. My breath eased out. And that’s when the epiphany came. That in much of life, it doesn’t matter who’s right-er or wrong-er. It doesn’t matter which side of the argument is most compelling.

What matters is that I cannot make another person’s decisions. God does not choose to make another person’s decisions. They are free to do what they will. They are free to be who they are. I can’t change it.

All I can change is me. My reactions. My responses. My heart.

My heart.

My heart wasn’t pretty at that point in time. It was tired and stressed and felt so alone in my exhaustion. But God showed me that night that He was there. That my family was there. That just because no one was doing what I thought they should, it didn’t mean they weren’t doing what they needed to. They had their own reasons, their own frustrations, their own exhaustions.

I could choose to be resentful–or I could choose to be thankful.

I made a conscious decision that night to choose gratitude. To choose not to be resentful when I didn’t get what I thought I should. I chose to find peace in the quiet mornings with my ever-wakeful little guy. I chose to find Joy in granting my night-owl hubby those morning hours to rest before a stressful day at work. I chose to do what I could in where I was rather than always wishing for something more, or less, or different.

I chose surrender.

There are so many days when I still think of that shadowed living room floor and the realizations that filtered in that night. So many days when I choose not to argue because I know it’s not worth it. That even if I think my opinions the better ones, that doesn’t mean I’m Right. It doesn’t mean the other party is Wrong.

I don’t have to be the victor in the argument. Most times, I don’t even have to argue. I just have to stop. Take a breath. Ignore the glaring, blaring insistence inside that says BUT I’M RIGHT! and ask, “But where am I wrong? Where am I hurting them by insisting? What will I actually lose if I put aside my pride and stop arguing?”

The answer is usually “nothing.” Maybe a bit of comfort now and them, and a sliver of that pride–but I have more than enough of that to sustain me, LOL.

But what I stand to gain…that’s something different altogether. I’m not a pushover, but I’m often silent in a conflict–because I’d rather not fight than hurt someone I love. My husband often pushes me to talk through things when I’d rather not–because he knows relationships stall in silence. God often whispers in those recesses when I’m being stubborn–because He knows that there are things that matter a whole lot more than clinging to my own determination.

I’m not perfect. I’m still tired sometimes. Still stressed, still exhausted. I still have occasional moments where I just want a bubble around me for an hour or two, with no demands on my person to feed someone or clothe someone or teach someone or even talk to someone.

But never, since that night, have I ever felt that despair again. Because I let go of a stumbling block when I said, “You’re right, God. Please, show me where I’m wrong.”

I never like the answers when I ask that question. But oh, how I cherish the results.

photo credit: gato-gato-gato via photopin

Thoughtful About . . . Lightning

Thoughtful About . . . Lightning

A couple weeks ago, my hubby showed me a video of a truck driving along a street. From the open fields on the other side of it, I’d guess it to be in the Midwest. Truck’s just driving along, when wham! A fork of lightning comes searing down and hits the truck. Not the telephone poles, not the building that the security cam is attached to. Not the highest point in the area. The truck.

The people were fine. The truck…not so much.

As I watched that video, it hit a nerve. I used to be terrified of lightning, of storms. So sure that it was going to strike my house, catch it on fire (the real phobia), and devour me. I was known a time or two to go hide under the blankets when a thunderstorm rolled through. I knew that those blankets wouldn’t keep me safe. But they provided a barrier. Insulation. Comfort.

Even today, when the phobia has been forgotten and I enjoy a good rousing summer storm, some of the old instincts are still there. A couple times recently I’ve been driving home during a storm severe enough to send my phone chirping with tornado or flash flood warnings. A couple times, I’ve been watching the clouds for swirling motion or lightning when I pass through the forests along my road and hit the open stretch where the farm fields take over.

And each time, I can’t help the feeling of vulnerability that hits me when I’m out in the open like that, in a metal cage of a car, with the storm clouds overhead. I’d blame it on the video, but the experience actually came first, LOL. I feel exposed. In danger. I press a little firmer on the gas pedal and head for the tree line. It feels safer there.

But it isn’t. I know that. Well I remember the lessons as a child that say that in a thunderstorm, do not take shelter under a tree–trees are the things most often struck by lightning, and you could be putting yourself in danger by being under them when branches snap off from the surge of electricity. I know it–but it’s counter-intuitive.

It feels safe. It feels better.

But that feeling is a lie. And the truth is, we can’t totally predict what lightning will do, where it will strike. It’s a force of nature. Not always the highest point. Not always the metal.

It’s got a life of its own, it seems. One a lot like life. Troubles don’t strike where we expect them to either. Stress and controversy and attacks don’t always come from the likely source. But come they do. And they leave us smoking and sizzling a lot of times, wondering where that came from.

It’s human nature to seek shelter in the things that feel safe. In our friends. In our family. In a good book. A warm blanket. In food. In a crowd. In our anger.

But those are just the trees. They provide a feeling of shelter…but they’re not.

Shelter is in the shadow of His wings. But here’s the thing–it might not always feel like it. Because to go before God, we have to lay our souls bare. We have to make ourselves vulnerable. We have to go before Him on the plain, where there’s nothing else to overshadow us and distract from us…and that’s scary. We’re afraid it’ll hurt. We’re afraid of what it will cost us.

We’re afraid His lightning will strike us…or at least that His light will make us too aware of our failings.

We serve a God who sends the wind forth from His treasuries. Who makes lightning for the rain. Who makes the earth tremble and the seas to swell. We serve a God who puts His finger on the smallest amoeba. Who strokes the wing of a butterfly. Who cares about our every little worry.

His infinity stretches both to the vast and the infinitesimal. To the storm and the slightest breeze. The lightning and the lightning bug.

He is our shelter, and it isn’t deceptive like that forest I want to hurry to in a storm. He’s true. And though our feelings might make us hesitate, though that shadowy whisper might say it will be too hard, too painful, we’re called to trust in Him. Yes, He might ask something hard of us. But we can trust it will be for our good.

We can trust that He is in control. That he knows where every bolt of lightning will land. And that He can tell us when to seek the fields and when the trees. When to stop and when to go. He has it all in His hand.

And He has us there too. Whether we feel it or not.