Tag Archive: lisa wingate

May
20

A Writer’s Parable (from Lisa Wingate)

Happy Monday everyone!  We’re sharing some great parables this week.   Just for reference, I looked up the exact definition:  Parable — a short allegorical story designed to illustrate or teach some truth, religious principle, or moral lesson. 

While “the Prodigal Son” and “The Servants And the Talents” get a lot of press in Sunday school circIMG_0155les, there’s one parable we don’t hear about in sermons and Bible studies very often.  It’s one of my favorites because it speaks to me on many levels, but especially as a writer.  In the Bible, it goes like this:

The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard

“For the kingdom of heaven is like a landowner who went out early in the morning to hire workers for his vineyard. 2 He agreed to pay them a denarius[a] for the day and sent them into his vineyard.3 “About nine in the morning he went out and saw others standing in the marketplace doing nothing. 4 He told them, ‘You also go and work in my vineyard, and I will pay you whatever is right.’ 5 So they went.

“He went out again about noon and about three in the afternoon and did the same thing. 6 About five in the afternoon he went out and found still others standing around. He asked them, ‘Why have you been standing here all day long doing nothing?’

7 “‘Because no one has hired us,’ they answered.

“He said to them, ‘You also go and work in my vineyard.’

8 “When evening came, the owner of the vineyard said to his foreman, ‘Call the workers and pay them their wages, beginning with the last ones hired and going on to the first.’ 9 “The workers who were hired about five in the afternoon came and each received a denarius. 10 So when those came who were hired first, they expected to receive more. But each one of them also received a denarius. 11 When they received it, they began to grumble against the landowner. 12 ‘These who were hired last worked only one hour,’ they said, ‘and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the work and the heat of the day.’

13 “But he answered one of them, ‘I am not being unfair to you, friend. Didn’t you agree to work for a denarius? 14 Take your pay and go. I want to give the one who was hired last the same as I gave you. 15 Don’t I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?’

16 “So the last will be first, and the first will be last.”

Of course, at its heart, this is a parable about grace — about the fact that we can’t earn our way there, no matter the amount of our works, but on a human level, there’s another lesson here.  How does this lesson translate into the life of a writer?  Like this:

A Writer’s Version:

An author submitted his manuscript with great hope.  Then one day in January, about nine in the morning, an editor called and gave the author the most wonderful news!  The author was being offered a two-book deal with a modest advance, and the book would be released in mass market paperback.  The author was thrilled.  After many years of writing and submitting, he would finally be published. He had achieved the dream at long last!

Some months later, the author went to a writer’s conference. This year, he was thrilled to be arriving with a .jpeg of his new book cover, safely stored in his iPhone.  It was a wonderful cover, and best of all, was emblazoned with his name in big, gold letters.  Life couldn’t get any better! 

While he was waiting in line for the big conference banquet, he ran across a woman he’d met on a writers’ loop two years ago when she was just finishing her first manuscript.  He was thrilled to tell her about his upcoming novel and show her the .jpeg of the cover on his phone. 

The woman congratulated him, then reached into her briefcase and handed him an advance copy with a glossy cover.  She had sold her manuscript right after the last conference, after only two years of rewrites and submissions.  She’d also secured a successful agent, who had negotiated a nice advance and good contract terms.  Her book was coming out in the fall in trade paperback, and her publisher was sending her on a small four-city tour.

The author felt the sting of disappointment as he let his phone go dim and tucked it into his pocket.  Why hadn’t his publisher printed beautiful, glossy advance copies of his book?  Why wasn’t he being sent on tour? What was wrong with his agent?  Didn’t the agent know they should have held out for a better deal?

376464_4617395987699_610718871_nThe questions weighed heavily as the writer entered the banquet hall and found a seat.  His companions at the table exchanged business cards and talked about their works-in-progress.  He mentioned his upcoming book, but didn’t bother getting out his phone.  After all, not having advance copies to throw around made him seem small-time.

He was relieved when the Master of Ceremonies took the podium to introduce the keynote speaker, and the table talk tapered off.  He tried to focus on the MC and enjoy the dessert the waiters had just served up, but it’s hard to enjoy anything when your publishing deal is so much lousier than someone else’s. 

Finally, it was too painful to think about it anymore, so he tuned in as the keynote speaker came to the mic.  The speaker looked young.  Very young, and nervous.

“I never really thought about writing a book,” the kid admitted, “But I had a dream one night, and when I woke up, I remembered all of it, so I sat down and wrote it straight through in three-and-a-half weeks. 

“I never thought I’d show it to anybody, but my mom’s housekeeper read it, and that day she was cleaning for a literary agent next, so she offered to take my book along.  The agent was at home sick, so she read my manuscript.  She called me the next day and said she’d been up all night with my book.  She’d already talked to five publishers that morning, and she thought we could get mid-six figures at least, for just the book rights.  So, while the auction for the book rights was going on, a film producer called the publishing house and asked if they had anything with dogs or weddings in it, and my book is about dog weddings, so then we sold the movie rights…

The writer pushed away from the table, tossed off his napkin, and headed for the door. Staying in the room any longer was pointless.  When life is so ridiculously unfair, it’s impossible to enjoy anything.

Even your own slice of chocolate cake.

– Lisa

Blue Moon Bay one of BOOKLIST’S 10 Must Reads Of 2012!

Firefly Island on shelves now!

 PrayerBox-standingSmall Click for peek at The Prayer Box

 Click for sneak peek at Firefly Island 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital graphics by Teresa Loman

Click here to Bling Up Your Blog with her digital scrap kits!

May
05

That’s Some Shoutin’ Ground! (from Lisa Wingate)

Happy Monday, Everyone!  Wherever this day finds you, I hope it finds you springing into spring with a smile on your face and a little bounce in your step.  Here in Central Texas, the weather has been cooler than usual, so the wildflowers are still blooming.  The birds look happy.  The butterflies are definitely happy.  The sky is blue and there’s not a cloud in it.

So in church on Sunday, the pastor took a minute to congratulate our boys’ baseball team on winning their playoff series over the weekend and advancing another round.  Being the mom of a senior and the short-stop, that was a sweet moment.  There are seven seniors on the team this year, and I’ve been watching them play together since their mamas walked them through the kindergarten door thirteen years ago, so it’s fun to see them stretch their last baseball season together, just a little longer.  As the pastor said when he congratulated them on their big win, “That’s shoutin’ ground, right there!”

I hadn’t heard that old saying in years, and it caught my ear.  I turned the words in my mind for a minute or two.  Doesn’t it feel good to celebrate shoutin’ ground?  Wouldn’t it be a great world if every day as we come and go from here to there, we’d look for the shoutin’ ground in our lives and others lives, and cheer all that’s good, and right, and special, instead of focusing on what’s wrong?

So, with that in mind, I’m celebrating a little shoutin’ ground around BelleView today:

1.  Shoutin’ out to these baseball players and fans, looking happy after the big game over the weekend.  Good job boys, and you gotta love friends who care enough to show up and cheer the team on.

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2.  Shoutin’ out to our own Belle Wednesday, Julie Cantrell, whose book When Mountains Move has a sneak peek offered on iBookstore right now.  I read this book early, and fans are in for a treat, let me tell you!

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Click here to get to the sneak peek of Julie’s book!

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3. Shoutin’ out to Belle Thursday, Rachel Hauck, whose new novel, Once Upon a Prince, is coming out (isn’t that cover adorable?).  Rachel also celebrated The Wedding Dress winning RT Magazine’s Book of the Year last week. This girl is on a roll.  Congratulations, Rachel.  We’re so proud of you!

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4. Shoutin’ from my own little patch of shoutin’ ground, too.  The graduation invitations are all packaged and addressed, the galley pages for The Prayer Box have gone back to the editor, AND I just learned that part of this fall’s book tour will include a return to the Outer Banks to celebrate the book release and stay in the beach house we enjoyed so much while researching the book!

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Now THAT’s some shoutin’ ground, right there!  Yes, it is!

Lisa

What about you?  What’s your shoutin’ ground this spring?  Leave a comment and let us celebrate with you here on the porch!

Blue Moon Bay one of BOOKLIST’S 10 Must Reads Of 2012!

Firefly Island on shelves now!

 PrayerBox-standingSmall Click for peek at The Prayer Box

 Click for sneak peek at Firefly Island 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital graphics by Teresa Loman

Click here to Bling Up Your Blog with her digital scrap kits!

 

Apr
28

Finding the Inner Urchin (from Lisa Wingate)

Happy Monday, Everyone!  It’s the start of the “crazy month” around our house.  The last weeks of the school year are beginning and graduations loom.  I’m finishing the final edits on the book that will come out in September. For the last few days, I’ve been checking the research, tweaking the words, tracking every last detail.  Fussing and fretting and staying up late.

Worrying.  Because that’s what grown-ups do.  We worry.  We obsess.  We wonder.  We fear.

And that’s why this week’s topic on the porch was exactly what I needed.  This week, Beth asked us: “What’s a part of your childhood self you’d like to find again?”

I read a great story about this the other day — this need to reclaim some part of childhood lost. Author Yona Zeldis McDonough returned to her childhood dream of ballet at the age of fifty. I hope she’ll indulge me by letting me quote her beautiful words here “I feel as if I am slipping, like Alice through the looking glass, past a membrane that is not impervious but gauze-like and permeable.  Behind it is the realm of girlhood.” The story of why she left ballet as a girl and why she came back (you can read it by clicking here) inspired me to ponder this week as I took my evening walk.

What part of myself — that girlhood self — do I miss most?  If I could reclaim one piece of that girl, what would it be?  And then I came across this as I was working through edits to The Prayer Box this week:

PrayerBoxLRUnlocking the window over the kitchen sink, I let in a spray of cool spring air and thought of that one perfect summer on Hatteras. The scents outside were the scents of that summer, the air of that twelve-year-old girl who walked in Rodanthe, hand-in-hand with her grandfather.

You know things about yourself when you’re twelve, before your body changes, your hormones surge, and in the space of six months the whole world seems to be looking at you differently.

That summer on Hatteras, I knew I was made for something good. I knew the world was limitless…

Maybe it wasn’t too late for me to dig around and find some piece of that summer girl. Maybe there was a bit of her left here on Hatteras Island. Maybe there was a bit of her left inside me.

And that, I realize is my answer.  It’s strange how the people on the pages can speak to the questions of the heart.  The part of my childhood I’d reclaim — the one I seek and hope to find as graduations pass, and boys move away, and “Mom” changes its meaning — is that twelve-year-old summer girl.  The one teetering on the brink of the year that will change everything.  The year that changes everything for most girls.  There’s nothing tragic about it.  It’s just life.

But then, in its own way, life is tragic.

This little urchin doesn’t know that yet.spiritandme-1 In fact, she isn’t worried about a thing, except how fast and how far she can ride before the day is spent, and the streetlights come on, and she has to return that horse to the stable or risk being grounded.  That little girl is sweaty and dirty, she smells like a horse, every pair of shorts she owns is stained from riding bareback, and her hair is slowly forming into a mat of dirt and grass that her mother will later spend hours combing out.

The best thing about her is, she doesn’t care one iota. She doesn’t worry, obsess, wonder, or fear. She is sure. Of. Everything.

Including herself.

It hasn’t yet occurred to her to walk into a room and wonder what people think of her. She still walks into a room deciding what she thinks about the room and everybody in it. It hasn’t yet crossed her mind to be anything other than what she is. Why would she want to?  The world is her oyster.  She hasn’t yet experienced the day when she looks around in gym class and thinks for the first time, Maybe my legs are too fat, too thin, too knobby. Maybe I am ‘too-much-This’ or ‘not-enough-of-That.’ Maybe everyone else has already seen it.  Maybe they’ve talked about it…

Just the day before, she was happy to run after life full-force, to jump into the competition. Now she hangs back.  Now she’s embarrassed. Now she’s worried.

Year, after year, after year will go by, and the urchin will retreat as the woman grows, as maturity sets in.  It’s not a conscious choice.  It just happens. Once again, it’s life.

And then… this week’s question on the porch, and those paragraphs about the summer girl, the girl “before.” And there’s my answer.  If I could reclaim a part of my childhood self, any part, I’d find my inner urchin.  She’s under there somewhere, I know it.

Maybe, as life turns a new corner, my next big discovery is actually just a rediscovery.

Lisa

What about you? Is there a part of your girlhood self you’d like to rediscover… or have you already? Leave a comment and tell us about it.

Blue Moon Bay one of BOOKLIST’S 10 Must Reads Of 2012!

Firefly Island hits shelves in February, 2013!

 PrayerBoxLR Click for peek at The Prayer Box

 Click for sneak peek at Firefly Island 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital graphics by Teresa Loman

Click here to Bling Up Your Blog with her digital scrap kits!

 

 

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