Why I write Christian romance

Why I write Christian romance

I’ve been asked this before, why do I write Christian romance? It’s a fair question. With all the genres and subgenres out there that move way more copies, why do all my stories huddle together under the smaller, less lucrative umbrella of Christian romance?

It’s Simple

I write romance because our pursuit of human love, in some ways, mirrors God’s relentless pursuit of us. And I love writing stories that show God’s pursuit of His children. He never gives up on us. He never walks away. He never fails.

I believe our world needs clean, wholesome, and God-honoring narratives. It needs stories of purity, characters that honor the Lord, and illustrations of how true satisfaction comes from a right relationship with God and not from a human relationship. We need stories that showcase love thriving within the boundaries God has created and give hope to those who have only known broken love. We need stories of hope. Not hope in the right man, but hope in the Lord.



An Example of Love

In a culture that overflows with poor examples of love, I want to show readers what it looks like when someone cherishes you, what it costs to love sacrificially, and what it means to put someone else’s needs before your own. I want them to see love is worth it, and then set the bar high, refusing the settle for anything less than a partner who loves the Lord completely and loves others more than self.

I want readers to know what real love is so that when cheap imitations arrive with honeyed words and lofty promises, they are wise to its seduction. I want them to want more than crude jokes, filth, and stolen kisses.

When the apostle Paul penned 1 Corinthians 13 to the people of Corinth, he wasn’t penning a sappy Valentine’s Day definition of love. By the time the people of Corinth got to chapter 13, they all knew this was a correction. They were not loving well, so Paul was going to tell them how to change. I want to write stories that reflect this changed love that is determined to love as the Lord requires, no matter the personal cost.

HEA

In this genre, you can count on a HEA, your happily ever after ending—and I like that. But more important than finding her one true love is my heroine’s growth in her walk with the Lord. More important than saving the day, winning the girl, and defeating the villain is my hero’s surrender to God. Yes, I write romance. But the real story is exposing the lie my characters believe about themselves, the world, or God and proving that lie to be untrue. The real story is that God is the Hero, the pursuer of our hearts, and the lover of our souls. The real story is how human love, even the best love story, is only a shadow of the love Jesus has for His bride.

Happy Valentine’s Day.

Are We Ever Enough?

Are We Ever Enough?

Author Karen Malley writes about how we don’t measure up and her new release, Moonlight and Mystery. Welcome, Karen!

How much time and energy do we waste in life trying to measure up? Maybe we feel we don’t have enough money, we’re not attractive enough, or we don’t have the right title. If we’d just get that next promotion, everything would be ok. Or maybe we just need to lose ten pounds to feel better about ourselves. Many women who stay at home with their kids feel inadequate next to working women, where working women feel inadequate next to stay-at-home mothers. We’re constantly bombarded with advertising that tells us we need a nicer car, a newer phone, or fancier jewelry. In nearly every aspect of life, we hear we are not enough.

What do you want to hear first? The good news or the bad news?

And you know what? It’s true. Romans 3:23 says “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” In our own strength, we do fall short. But it’s not because of our looks or our job status or any of our possessions. It’s because God is holy and righteous and perfect, and we can never be good enough on our own. That’s the bad news. But the good news is, once we’ve turned over our lives to Christ, we are enough. Do you know what God has to say about us?

“The Lord your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves. He will take great delight in you; in His love, He will no longer rebuke you, but will rejoice over you with singing.”

Zephaniah 3:17

1 John 3:1 says, “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God!”

Our appearance fades. Our wealth and our jobs can disappear in an instant. But our true worth, our true identity is found in Christ. We are children of the Almighty God, who loves us so much He rejoices over us with singing!

The next time you start to feel unworthy, remember, the Creator of the universe rejoices over you!

Check out Karen Malley’s book!

In Karen’s newest novel Moonlight and Mystery, the heroine, Beth, has been told her whole life she has to meet certain expectations. She never feels she measures up. The story follows her journey of discovering her true worth in Christ. So if you’ve ever felt like you aren’t worthy, you might just enjoy reading her story!

Buy Moonlight and Mystery

Beth Tarrington has it all: a gorgeous fiancé, a lucrative career, the latest model car, and a high-priced condo. On top of that, the Tarrington name opens every door in town. So why is she so discontent? When everything falls apart in Beth’s life, will she finally find the strength to stand on her own two feet? Is God really willing to stand by her side, even after ignoring Him for so long?

When Jason Brooks meets Beth, his head tells him to run in the opposite direction. Beth is a high-society snob engaged to another man, and he’s not sure where she stands with God. So why does God keep bringing the two of them together? Can these two find love, in spite of everything that stands in their way?

Learn more about Karen Malley

If you’d like to learn more about Karen and her books, please stop by www.karenmalley.com. If you sign up for Karen’s newsletter, you’ll receive a free short story devotional in your inbox each week, and be the first to learn about new releases and giveaways!

Jordan Valley Roundup by Susan Spess

Jordan Valley Roundup by Susan Spess

Today’s post comes from author Susan Spess, and Susan touches on the difficulty of naming her new book and her love for the “golden rule” in Matthew 7:12. Welcome, Susan Spess!

I had a difficult time naming my storybook town. First, I thought, Skinner, and then another unworthy suggestion, but my critique partners weren’t pleased with the names. So, I threw out “Jordan Valley.”

Yes!

They loved it.

But the name wasn’t original to me. It’s what my hometown was called a long time ago.

From okhistory.org: Before the Cherokee Outlet Opening on September 16, 1893, John W. Jordan as well as other Cherokee had taken allotments in the outlet. Soon after the opening, Jordan and others formed the Jordan Valley Townsite Company.

I’ve lived here (off and on) since I was five years old. I’ve read that my town had tons of saloons and brothels before statehood when oil was discovered, and men flocked in to work in the oilfields.

My hometown isn’t like that anymore. We have very few bars and no brothels! And we have lots of churches.

In ROUNDUP, Mitch puts his life on the line when Jessie’s horse, Buck, falls, and her foot is stuck through the stirrup. Afterward, his family takes Jessie home with them and gives her a place to live and work while Buck heals.

While she’s there, they introduce her to Christ by living for Him.

That always makes me think of the first scripture (or partial scripture) I learned. “Do unto others . . .” The Golden Rule says:

So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets.

Matthew 7:12, NIV

I really like how The Message translates the Golden Rule: Here is a simple, rule-of-thumb guide for behavior: Ask yourself what you want people to do for you, then grab the initiative and do it for them. Add up God’s Law and Prophets, and this is what you get.

Mitch Tanner, his red-headed brothers, and his mother live as true Christians, doing what Jesus said. Loving and sharing, they gently lead Jessie to Jesus, but they don’t force her.

 That’s the essence of the Christian life, isn’t it?


Check out Susan Spess’s book, Jordan Valley Roundup!

While barrel racing to earn enough to pay her uncle’s debts, Jessie Cobler’s horse falls. She cries out to God, certain she’s about to die, but the quick action of Mitch Tanner saves her life. She accepts an offer to stay on the cowboy’s family’s ranch so she and her horse can rest and heal. It’s the perfect place to hide from those who threaten to tear her dreams apart.

Bull rider Mitch Tanner is determined to earn professional status to honor his deceased father, but running a ranch and helping with his younger siblings leaves time for little else. Having Jessie on the ranch is a distraction he can’t afford. After all, he doesn’t have time for love.

As Mitch and Jesse work together to rescue abused animals will Mitch discover there’s more to life than earning a status? Will he be able to help heal Jesse’s broken heart and spirit and lead her to the Lord?


You can buy Jordan Valley Roundup at Amazon or directly from the publisher. Connect with Susan Spess through her website or on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter.

The Proverbs 31 Woman and a Florida Christmas by Fay Lamb

The Proverbs 31 Woman and a Florida Christmas by Fay Lamb

As a Floridian, I am Christmas challenged. I see the Hallmark stories with the cold weather and snow at Christmas Eve, and as one who has never experienced snow, I somehow felt that my Christmases didn’t measure up.

But, hey, I have had Christmases where the upside-down thermostat strip on my AC/heater would cut off the contraption when it dropped below forty degrees. Even with those occasions being rare in Florida, I have spent nights when the temps dropped into the teens wrapped in a full-winter coat to sleep. Oh, and alligators. I’ve seen alligators on lawns, basking in the sunshine to stay warm in the winter chill.

Attention-Grabbing Alligators

Now that I have your attention, I can tell you that, while a perk, the setting of the swamp town of Mullet Harbor in All I Want for Christmas was simply a perk for me. I had another reason for writing this story.

Abigail Brewster is my favorite type of character: unassuming and under-estimated, a David hidden by the misconceptions of others. Her meekness is mistaken for weakness, but take a stance against the people she loves, the town she holds dear, or the God she loves more than anything, and her light shines.

Sheriff Remy Arneaux is the boy, now a man—and a handsome Cajun at that—that Abigail, or Abby, as Remy calls her, has always loved.

In their relationship and the pitfalls that they face, Abigail presents herself as the pre-married Proverbs 31 woman, the one who has set her sights on the man she loves and intends to present herself chaste before him. She’s not perfect, and she has to backtrack sometimes, because, after all, Abigail Brewsters in today’s society are very real.

All I Want for Christmas is meant to shine a light on their attributes and their failures, to show others that their efforts will never be fruitless when they place their trust in God, and well, those quirky folks of Mullet Harbor made the pathway to Abigail getting her man a hilarious adventure. And you won’t want to miss the antics of Abercrombie: the alligator on the lawn.

Check it out!

Fay Lamb is the only daughter of a rebel genius father and a hard-working, tow-the-line mom. She is not only a fifth-generation Floridian, she has lived her life in Titusville, where her grandmother was born in 1899.

Since an early age, storytelling has been Fay’s greatest desire. She seeks to create memorable characters that touch her readers’ hearts. She says of her writing, “If I can’t laugh or cry at the words written on the pages of my manuscript, the story is not ready for the reader.” Fay writes in various genres, including romance, romantic suspense, and contemporary fiction.

If you’d like to catch up with Fay, visit her at her website, on Amazon, Goodreads, and Twitter. Also, Fay has become a “novel” gardener, and she shares her adventure in her newsletter, Tales from the Azalea Garden. You can sign up for her newsletter, here.

Links to Social Media:

Website, Twitter, Newsletter Sign Up, Goodreads, Amazon Central

To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill

To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill

Today is the big day! To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill releases! This is the first fiction title for Grace and Love Publishing, and I am giddy with excitement. To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill is a short story sequence (also known as a short story cycle). This is different than a short story.

A short story sequence is a collection of short stories, but each story can stand alone while also building to an ending best understood and appreciated when you read the stories as a collection or group. There is an increasing tension as the reader makes story connections. This is the first short story sequence I’ve written, and it was a fun challenge.

In the sequence, To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill, you’ll meet Owen and Gloria, Ethan and Kathryn, Ben and Emma, Eli and Meg, and Jackson and Kim. (Each couple has an entire short novel dedicated to them that will release within the next 12 months. The first, The Sycamore Standoff, is up for preorder now!)

During a time when life feels a bit chaotic and out of control, I find escaping to Sycamore Hill a sweet reprieve. A few second chance romances develop that warm your heart, some family drama plays out, the past resurfaces, and tensions get high, but—SPOILER—every couple finds their happy ending because right now, we could all use a happy ending.

Read To Sweet Beginnings in Sycamore Hill, be encouraged, entertained, and filled with hope. Not hope in the right earthly relationship but hope in the Lord.


Owen and Gloria: Thursday 2:00 p.m.

Sycamore Hill’s prodigal daughter returns, shaking up the small town, righting a wrong, and finding the faith and family she’d lost along the way.
Gloria hasn’t returned to Sycamore Hill since her university declared her guilty of cheating. She’d lost more than her home that day; she’d lost her faith in humanity. But when a questionable drug study with ties to the university endangers the residents of a Sycamore Hill ministry, Gloria can no longer remain quiet. She returns to town, and Owen—the town’s unmarried pastor and the only person who believed in her innocence—helps her to finally and truly come home.

Ethan and Kathryn: Thursday 11:59 p.m.

When you mix two former sweethearts, one missing recipe, and a dash of secrecy, what do you get? A recipe for romance!
Kathryn took something that belongs to Ethan. Correction. It belongs to his family. Taking it back isn’t stealing, and letting himself into Kathryn’s house to get it is not breaking and entering if he has a key. However, Kathryn’s not a thief. She’d found Ethan’s recipe. But when her actions threaten to spoil Ethan’s bakery, they whip up a solution on Kathryn’s internet morning show, Sycamore Hill at Sunrise.


Ben and Emma: Friday 3:00 a.m.


God closes a door, but He opens a skylight, entwining Ben and Emma’s future in the twilight hours of a winter’s eve.
Nursing school made dating impossible for Emma, and now that she finally had time to think about a relationship, the pickings were slim, especially in a small town like Sycamore Hill. She’d begun petitioning the Lord to drop Mr. Right into her life, ideally before a black-tie gala fundraiser. She couldn’t bear the idea of attending alone—again.
When Ben—a local reporter—chases the scoop of a lifetime, he falls painfully into Emma’s kitchen. With a whistleblower about to rip the lid off a scandal that’ll put the small town on the map, Ben needs Emma’s help to follow the career-making lead and protect the residents of Sycamore Hill.


Eli and Meg: Friday 7:35 a.m.


At some point, a girl has to stop running and fight. Eli is willing to help Meg, but how can he fight an unknown enemy?
Eli and Meg trained together every morning to prepare for an annual road race. When Meg is uncharacteristically late on race day, Eli knows in his gut that something is wrong. He finds Meg facing her greatest fear, and Eli thrusts himself between her and an aggressive dog. However, when Meg passes up an opportunity to escape to safety, he realizes no one in Sycamore Hill really knows Meg at all.


Jackson and Kim: Friday, 6:00 p.m. and Saturday morning


Kim didn’t want to like her ex’s twin brother, but how could she not like the man returning her son?
Kim doesn’t have the mental headspace to host the black-tie gala on the eve of her abducted son’s homecoming, but she must. As she grapples with conflicting emotions about the morning reunion, she clings to the message of Christmas: God with us.
Returning his nephew to Canada destroyed Jackson’s relationship with his twin brother. And after all his brother had put Kim through, she might not welcome the continued presence of Jackson or his parents in Sycamore Hill. Sorting out the legalities won’t be easy, but the right thing rarely is. Jackson will do what is right, whatever the personal cost, trusting the message of the season.