Journey Thought’s Best Christian Books of 2010

What could be more encouraging for an author than to start the New Year off  by seeing their book nominated as a “Best Book of 2010“?!  Now I know I’m not the New York Times Best Sellers List or anything, but I thought I’d start my first Journey Thoughts list of ten of the books that I have really enjoyed over the past calendar year.  So here are my ten favorites for 2010.  I invite my readers to add to this list by telling me some of their favourites in 2010 too.  Just leave a comment below. 

Lynn’s Top Ten of 2010:

1.   Outlive Your Life : You Were Made to Make A Difference – Max Lucado

2.  Between a Rock and a Grace Place: Divine Surprises in the Tight Spots of Life – Carol Kent

3.   Her Daughter’s Dream  (Marta’s Legacy) – Francine Rivers

4.  Embraced by the Father:Finding Grace in the Names of God  – Susanne Scheppmann 

5.  Rabbit: Chasing Beth Rider – Ellen C. Maze

6.  The Waiting  (Lancaster County Secrets) – Suzanne Woods Fisher

7.  What the Bible Is All About for Moms : God’s Loving Promises for You and Your Family- Kathy Pride

8.   The Hole in Our Gospel: What Does God Expect of Us?  The Answer That Changed My Life and Might Just Change the World – Richard Stearns

9.   God’s Truth Revealed: Biblical Foundations for the Christian Faith – Kathy Howard

10.  Heal the Wounded – Lynn Dove (okay, I’m allowed to plug my own book aren’t I?)

Happy New Year!  Happy Reading!…and to all my author friends…Happy Writing!!

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Reflections: What is Christmas without Christ?

There is a very good reason why I write rather than speak.  When I write I have “do-overs”.  That means when I mess up, or when I don’t like what I’ve written I can just backspace or delete, and start again.  I can stop mid-sentence, and take some time, sometimes hours before I continue my thought on paper.  I can say exactly what I mean, correct at will, and edit, edit, edit until I’ve got it right.  Oh, and if I still don’t have it quite right, I can ask another person to fine tune it, so it’s perfect.  Yep, I love writing.

Speaking on the other hand, is not my forte.  I don’t ad lib well, I don’t have the gift of the gab, and I am paralyzed when I must speak in front of an audience.  I understand that public speaking is considered to be one of the most feared things people do and I totally understand why. 

My youngest daughter, Carmen is the actress in our family.  She is a natural.  She has stage presence, she can memorize lines with ease, she has comedic savvy, and she is not nervous speaking in front of large numbers of people.  I admire her gift!  I was already a member of the church choir but when I was also asked to be involved in the Christmas Drama because they were a few “actors” short, I got that “deer in the headlight look” but I thought, “How hard can this be?  I have seven lines to memorize. Piece of cake.” 

I practiced and practiced and practiced some more.  I was to be in the opening scene of the Christmas Drama with my daughter Carmen.  All the other actors were members of our youth group.  I was the only adult “actor” and for that reason the pressure was on me to set a good example for my youth.  Carmen had her lines memorized in ten minutes.  I was impressed.  We practiced together at home and she had MY lines memorized in another five minutes.  I was really impressed.  At the end of the week, she could practically recite EVERY line in the entire drama presentation!  I was still stumbling over my seven measly lines.  Anxiety started to creep in.  Of all the disciplines, memorization is the most difficult for me to do.  Why in the world did I agree to do this?  I attended the dress rehearsal and listened to the youth practice.  I was amazed at the ease with which they delivered their lines.  I still had to use a “cheat sheet” to get through my lines.  Carmen said I was “over-thinking” my lines as I haltingly tried to recall what to say.  It was true, it’s the writer in me, I WAS over-thinking them!  I was even trying to re-write them in my mind.  Not a good thing to do. 

On the night of the performance I thought I would be sick.  I was to be in the opening scene with my daughter, the idea was we would introduce the performance, set the stage if you will for the choir performance and Christmas Drama and then I would slip back to my place amongst the choir.  I knew my lines, but when the moment came for me to deliver them, stage fright washed over me.  My mind went blank and that “deer in the headlight look” was back, except now 400 people were watching.  I looked at my daughter.  She couldn’t help me.  I’d messed up my seven lines so badly with my ad-libbing I had single-handedly rewritten the Christmas Story!  I could just see my seminary professors in the audience wonder how they could have given me a diploma.  Then the angel of the Lord knelt before me and said, “Do not be afraid”…

The drama director, Mo, calmly prompted me with a correct line and MY comedic savvy cut in.  Looking at Mo, with her wide smile and calm demeanor I took a deep breath and drew upon HER strength.  I still messed up the lines but I somehow got through it.  The youth, who probably took great courage from the fact that they could in no way mess up as badly as Mrs. Dove, executed their lines flawlessly throughout the rest of the drama. 

It was interesting, but when I humbly returned to sing with the choir after my fiasco at “acting”, every song that we sung that evening, and every word that was spoken, (by the much more capable youth actors), took on renewed meaning for me.  It was like I was hearing the Christmas Story anew.  All the words in the songs we had been practicing for months in choir, now came alive with profound significance.  I worshipped rather than just sang the words!  All my focus until that point had been on practicing songs for choir, and then learning lines.  All my Christmas preparations had been me-centred and to some extent prideful.  Then as the day neared, and I realized that I may not pull off saying my lines with perfection, my focus shifted to my personal fears, and particularly on whether or not I would fail!  Then the moment came and in front of 400 people …I did fail

The opening scene in the play was supposed to have been all about how we have been so caught up in the busyness of the season with Christmas dramas, shopping, baking, and the like that we have forgotten the true meaning of why we celebrate Christmas at all. The lines I should have said that night, that I had so much trouble memorizing, I suddenly recalled with absolute clarity afterwards because I had in fact been living those lines right up until that moment!   

“We forget to stop and remember the real reason we celebrate Christmas.  The presents, the trees, the lights, the baking…that’s all good stuff, and I really enjoy it, but the real reason we celebrate Christmas at all is because the Lord of Lords humbled Himself and came to earth because He loved us so much!  But He didn’t come as the King He is… but as a baby born in a stable, and laid in a manger.”

Hallelujah!

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My Interview with the Rocky View Weekly

Lynn Dove poses with her two books Heal the Wounded and Shoot the Wounded. The books deal with teen issues such as teen pregnancy, bullying and gossip.

Cochrane author releases second book in trilogy

Dec 07, 2010 06:00 am | Trevor Bacque

A life of working with youth has inspired a Cochrane mother to turn her experiences into a book trilogy.

Lynn Dove’s fictional books series parallels the struggles of students she witnessed during her 30 years in education.

She began the three-part series by penning Shoot the Wounded, a book she started in 1999.

“It covers some of the angst of some of the real serious issues, particularly with bullying and gossip,” said Dove, a part-time teacher at Bearspaw Christian School.

Dove experienced her own trials when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2001, relegating her novel to the shelf.

In 2003, Dove beat her cancer and enrolled at the Canadian Southern Baptist Seminary in Cochrane where she procured a Masters of Religious Education.

“After I graduated seminary and re-evaluated and saw what God wanted… suddenly God opened doors for me,” said the mother of three. It was a conversation with her husband in 2009 that encouraged her to pick up the pen.

After finishing Shoot the Wounded in November 2009, it took Dove less than a year to write the follow-up, Heal the Wounded, published by Word Alive Press.

“I thought Shoot the Wounded would be the end, but young adults and teens especially, seem to really like sequels,” said Dove. “Teens kept asking ‘when are you going to come out with the next one?’”

The series centres around three main characters and their adolescent battles, said Dove, who noticed teens tend to bully peers if they are going through hardships rather than build them up.

“I really wanted to point out a message to my young readers that that kind of behaviour isn’t tolerated,” said Dove. “My daughter was bullied something fierce when she was in high school but she still has the scars from those bullying incidents.”

For Dove, writing is more of an organic process, but when she gets on a roll, there’s no stopping her.

“With Heal, it took more thought and preparation because I wanted the characters to continue their journey,” she said. “Once it started going, it was nose to the grindstone for a couple months.”

Dove inserted herself into Heal the Wounded when main character Jake’s mother is diagnosed with breast cancer.

“I’ve elected to share a bit about my journey,” she said. “It took me 10 years to write about my experience.”

Dove is currently writing the final book of the trilogy, Love the Wounded, and hopes to release it next year.

Comments

Lynn Dove said:
Thanks for the opportunity to showcase my books! Just a note of correction. I am a substitute teacher at BCS, I do not work there part-time. Oh, and for those who are interested, my books are available on Amazon, on my blog and can be ordered through local bookstores and Chapters.
Blessings,
Lynn
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