Friday, April 08, 2005
Writing Op - Marriage Topics
I recently recieved this request along with permission to pass it on to the NJCWG.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
I work part-time for a magazine and do freelance on the side.
I'm helping leaders of a marriage ministry gather non-fiction, upbeat articles on the topic of marriage. You're welcome to send articles of less than 600 words, for possible use in an e-zine and/or web site, to marriagearticles@yahoo.com.
Payment is $25 if your article is accepted. New pieces and reprints are welcome--but do explain where else your article appears/appeared. No queries.
Thank you and may God bless all of your various projects.
Colette Walters Walden
wordmeisters@sbcglobal.net
Marion Fairman Writing Contest
Editors evaluate manuscripts quickly; if the first 1,000 words don't hold their interest, they read no farther.
The Writing Academy's writing contest for 2005 asks you to introduce your work in progress to an editor. Works in Progress: these include short stories, essays, personal experience stories, books (fiction and nonfiction), and poetry.
Entries will be limited to the first 1,000 words of a longer manuscript. The judge will read only the first 1,000 words of a work in progress, a work in the planning stages, or a completed work, and offer constructive feedback as to how the manuscript might be revised to enhance its marketability.
The Writing Academy's annual writing contest is offered each year in loving memory of Marion Fairman--a former Executive Director of the Academy and a writing teacher par excellence. She was known as a tough critic of student writing, but her famous red pen helped countless students to become better writers.
First Prize: $100.00
Second Prize: $50.00
Third Prize: $25.00
CONTEST GUIDELINES
1. The entry should be the original, previously unpublished work of the person submitting it. New, Associate, Active, and Reserve members of the Writing Academy are all eligible to enter without a fee. Non-members must include the processing fee of $5.00 per entry.
2. The contest entry should represent the opening pages of a longer work--a short story, novel, article, or nonfiction book.
3. If prose, the entry should be no more than 1,000 words in length; if poetry, no more than two pages.
4. Entry should be titled.
5. Entry should be typed or computer-printed, double-spaced.
6. Please submit two copies—one without ID, the other with author's name, address, phone number and email address in the upper LEFT-hand corner of the first page.
7. In the top RIGHT-hand corner of page one on both copies, please state the type of manuscript you are introducing--for example, a novel, a memoir, a poetry chapbook.
8. The copy with ID becomes the property of The Writing Academy and will be considered for publication on-line in Showcase! and in print form in The Writing Academy News. (By entering the contest, you are consenting to publication.)
9. Mail-in entries only.
10. Postmark deadline: June 1st, 2005
11. Send to Kay J. Clark,
985 Clark Avenue,
Chesterfield, Indiana 46017-1437
12. The contest judge will be Holly Miller, an editor with The Saturday Evening Post for more than 20 years.
Spiritual Journaling
For those of you interested in journaling, there is a good book on the subject of spiritual journaling called: Journaling A Spiritual Journey by Anne Broyles
There is also a very interesting website by Dan Phillips, dedicated to the same subject: http://edge.edge.net/~dphillip/Journal.html
Quotable Quote
“Put it before them briefly so they will read it, clearly so they will appreciate it, picturesquely so they will remember it and, above all, accurately so they will be guided by its light.”
—Joseph Pulitzer
Glorieta Christian Writers Conference
Glorieta Christian Writers Conference
October 26-30, 2005
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Three members of the NJCWG will be attending Glorieta this year: Maude Carolan, Ann LeFevre and Louise Bergmann DuMont
There is still time to join us. If you want to attend, please contact me as soon as possible ( word.worker@verizon.net 551-427-3794 )
If you've reached the stage where your writing is ready for publication, this may be the conference for you. Glorieta is one of the largest Christian Writers Conferences in the country. Editors, Agents and Publishing Houses abound at this conference and the teaching... I can't even begin to expound on the level of expertise you'll encounter. This is THE conference to attend if you want to experience what professional writers are about.
Please note that this conference is HUGE. Large conferences can be overwhelming when you attend your first one alone. If you chose to attend this year, you have back-up (grin).
Hope to have a few more members join us!
Louise Bergmann DuMont
NEXT MEETING
NJCWG Next Meeting
Monday, April 11, 2005
6:15-7:00 - Chat Time
7:00-8:00 - Lesson
8:00-9:00 - Critiques
I will bring the latest Writers Digest Magazine with me. It contains five full pages of the Best Websites for Writers. Great Stuff.
The May, 2005 issue also has a great article on Telling, Not Showing, a continuous battle for many of us.
Anyone struggling with a particular writing issue right now? If so, email me at word.worker@verizon.net and I will see what I can do to present that topic at one of our next meetings.
Of Special Interest
I had a very interesting conversation with a young woman who may be joining our group. She is an accomplished playwright and a member of her church (who "may" be willing to teach a tract at our next conference) is the inspiration and creator of Dora the Explorer - one of the hottest new children's stories. I'll keep you posted on any developments in this area.
Louise Bergmann DuMont's Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 7, 2005
Contact Info:
Louise Bergmann DuMont
Day 973-487-2264
Eve 973-962-9267
Cell 551-427-3794
word.worker@verizon.net
MOTHER’S DAY ENCOURAGEMENT
As a young mother, author Louise Bergmann DuMont was disheartened every time she encountered the neighborhood Super-Mom. It was obvious that the word ‘perfect’ in no way described her own life and mothering skills. In Faith-Dipped Chocolate: Rich Encouragement to Sweeten Your Day, Louise exposes the sweet bits of wit and wisdom that grew from her personal foibles and failures. Mothers of every age will laugh, cry and take to heart the victories and disappointments Louise shares.
“Motherhood is like a wonderful roller coaster ride. Even as you hear the clickety-clack of the chains that are taking you to the top of that first hill, you know you’re going to scream all the way down the other side. You aren’t the first or the last to sit on that ride. There are others whose hearts race with the thrill and whose stomachs lurch with the discomfort that comes only with motherhood. Is it worth it? Absolutely. That’s why so many of us come back for more!” ~ Louise Bergmann DuMont
Faith-Dipped Chocolate: Rich Encouragement to Sweeten Your Day, was built on moments that embrace being a mom. From finger painting with chocolate pudding to embracing her lovely new daughter-in-law, Louise fills her reader’s day with bursts of energy that will encourage them through both the ordinary and the extraordinary tasks of motherhood. Each chocolate inspired bite of life is just sweet enough to make the corners of your mouth turn upward as you lick that last smidgen of chocolate off of your fingertips.
What others are saying about Faith-Dipped Chocolate:
"Louise Bergmann DuMont mixes up a smooth blend of 'slice of life' musings, recipes, quotes and fun facts in her newest release Faith-Dipped Chocolate. Served up with rich morsels of scripture, the reader gets a little taste of heaven on earth. This is the perfect, delicious companion to DuMont's first offering, Grace By The Cup." ~ Peggy Phifer, editor and publisher, Wordsmith Shoppe Weekly
“Her light touch, short inspirational messages, and sly warmth make this a delightful read. Like eating chocolate, you may say, "Okay, just one more and then I'll stop." That statement doesn't work with chocolates; it doesn't work with this book.” ~ Cecil “Cec” Murphey, the author of Gifted Hands, Committed but Flawed, 90 Minutes in Heaven, and over ninety other titles
Louise Bergmann DuMont is an author, teacher and speaker who uses inspirational humor and words of encouragement to help individuals get through today’s difficult times. In addition to her book, Faith-Dipped Chocolate, she is the author of Grace by the Cup: A Break from the Daily Grind, sixty caffeine-inspired stories that are the perfect compliment to your morning cup of Java. Published in numerous periodicals DuMont also writes an internet column, Coffee Nips And Chocolate Chips, that centers on of her favorite subjects – faith, coffee and chocolate.
###
74th Annual Writer's Digest Competition
Writer's Digest is once again hosting a writers' competition. To receive even an honorable mention in this contest of note is a big deal.
Categories Include:
Memoirs/Personal Essay & Magazine Feature articles: 2,000 Wd Max
Mainstream/Literary Short Story and Genre Short Story: 4,000 Wd Max
Inspirational Writing: 2,500 Wd Max
Children's Fiction: 2,000 Wd Max
Rhyming Poem & Non-Rhyming Poem: 32 Line Max
Stage Play Script or Television/Movie Script: First 15 Pages (Standard Format) & 1 page Synopsis
Deadline: May 16, 2005
Contest Fees:
First Manuscript $15, Additional Manuscripts $10 each
First Poem $10, Additional Poems $5 each
For contest rules, prizes, additional information and a copy of the entry form you can go to: www.writersdigest.com
Apology
I'm sorry that I haven't been posting to our blog lately, but it seems that recent weather conditions affected my ability to post. Even though the blog itself was visible, I was not able to post new items. I will be posting a number of things over the weekend. Keep your eyes open for them!
Louise Bergmann DuMont
Author of -- Faith-Dipped Chocolate: Rich Encouragement to Sweeten Your Day
Louise Bergmann DuMont
Author of -- Faith-Dipped Chocolate: Rich Encouragement to Sweeten Your Day
Tuesday, April 05, 2005
Short Story Contest
THE CHRISTIAN FICTION REVIEWER SHORT STORY CONTEST
Christian Fiction Reviewer is sponsoring a writing contest for Adult Christian fiction short stories. All entries must be previously unpublished, with a 5000 word maximum. Each submission will receive comments and feedback from our judges. Contest begins April 5 2005, closes July 1 2005 and the winning entry will be announced on August 15 2005.
First prize is $500*
There is a $25 entry fee per short story. (If submitted by email there is an extra $2.50 printing charge.) The winning entry has the opportunity to be published on the Christian Fiction Reviewer Website. Go to the www.christianfictionreviewer.com website for contest rules and submission form. Please subscribe to the newsletter so you can receive periodic updates on the contest. Entries may be submitted by snail mail or by email. (Email submissions must be paid by PayPal)
*The winning entry will receive $500 cash prize.(The contest must draw at least 20 entries in order to award the $500 prize. In the event the contest does not draw sufficient entries, the amount it does draw, will be awarded to the winner.)
Tuesday, March 29, 2005
Learning
People usually remember
* 10% of what they read;
* 20% of what they hear;
* 30% of what they see;
* 50% of what they see and hear;
* 70% of what they say; and
* 90% of what they say and do
Our spring workshop (held last Monday evening) took the time to reinforce good writing skills. Instead of simply reading about, listening to, or talking about good writing advice - we practiced what we learned. Putting our lessons to work (by reading, hearing, seeing, saying and doing) make remembering the lessons and implementing them easier.
OUR NEXT MEETING:
Monday, April 11, 2005
6:15-7:00 Chat Time
7:00-8:00 Lesson
8:00-9:00 Critiques
Indian Valley Christian Writers Fellowship
The Indian Valley Christian Writers Fellowship (a member of the fellowship of American Christian Writers) is hosting a One-Day Conference.
May 21, 2005
Sharpening The Word
1-Day Conference
8:00 am - 3:00 pm
Includes Boxed Lunch
Harleysville Activity Center
312 Alumni Avenue
Harlesville, PA 19438
Cost $40.00
10% Discount for
Teens (ages 12-18)
& early registrants (postmarked before 3/21/05)
Main Speaker: Joan Esherick
Esherick is the author of twenty non-fiction books, a part-time freelance writer, and the Chief Writer for Lighthouse Network, a non-profit organization specializing in a biblical approach to mental heath, substance abuse,and life skills issues.
http://www.joanesherick.com/pages/481402/index.htm
Workshop One: Sharpening Your Foucs (Esherick)
Workshop Two: Sharpening Your Image (Esherick)
Workshop Three (Break Out Session):
Sharpening Your Manuscript (Esherick)Workshop Four: Sharpening Your Endurance (Esherick)
Sharpening Your Writing Life (Gardocki)
Sharpening Your Writing Skills (Schirmer)
Louise DuMont (word.worker@verizon.net) has a few registration forms.
For more information you can contact P. Gardocki
Email: pgardock@usadatanet.net
Phone: 215-453-0415 or 610-222-9363
Monday, March 28, 2005
One More Inspiring Poet!
Notice: One more inspiring poet, Nancy Baker, has been added to the roster at the Reading of Contemporary Christian Inspirational Poetry to be held at Christian Publications Bookstore, 620 Route 23 North, Pompton Plains, NJ, Saturday, May 21, 2005, 1-3 p.m.
Mark your calendar!
NJCWG WORKSHOP - TONIGHT
MARCH 28, 2005 (tonight)
Please try to arrive at 6:15
WE WILL BEGIN PROMPTLY at 6:30
Ringwood Baptist Church
30 Carletondale Road
Ringwood NJ 07456
BRING: Writing Utensils (pens, pencils), sufficient paper for a number of re-writes (notebook, pads) and most important of all, bring a willingness to work.
This workshop, if offered to the public, would cost anywhere from $60 to $150. At our NJCWG meeting it will cost you NOTHING. Take advantage of this opportunity!
If you have questions, please drop me an email at word.worker@verizon.net
Hope to see you this evening.
Louise Bergmann DuMont
word.worker@verizon.net
*GRACE BY THE CUP: A BREAK FROM THE DAILY GRIND*, (Revell) October, 2003
*FAITH-DIPPED CHOCOLATE: RICH ENCOURAGEMENT TO SWEETEN YOUR DAY*, (Revell) January, 2005
Coming Soon -
*LISTEN FOR THE WHISPER* Fourteen women hear the whisper of God. Seven respond with virtue - seven resort to vice.
Conference / Poetry Competition
JUNIPER CREEK PUBLISHING INC. ANNOUNCES ITS 2005 JUNIPER CREEK WRITERS CONFERENCE, July 15-17 in beautiful Carson City NV (Reno/Tahoe area). Also, the Juniper Creek/Unnamed Writers National Poetry and Short Story Competition.
Featured speakers include Poetry Magazine editor, Christian Wiman; award-winning author/poets Gayle Brandeis and Bill Cowee; award-winning young adult novelist Ellen Hopkins; children’s book authors Suzanne Williams and Susan Hart Lindquist; songwriter/poet Richard Elloyan; editors Renee Sedliar (HarperCollins), Mark MacVeigh (Dutton Children’s Books) and Christopher Bernard (Caveat Lector); Hollywood script agent Howard Meibach; literary agent Elise Proulx; writing professors Marilee Swirczek and Michael Seltzer; publicist Elizabeth Kemper. Plus, a panel of literary magazine editors including Sam Pierstorff (Quercus Review), Rich Logsden (Red Rock Review), Joyce Jenkins (Poetry Flash), Ho Lin (Caveat Lector), Monika Rose (Manzanita) and June Sylvestor Saraceno (Sierra Nevada College Review).
This fun, informative, affordable three-day event will take place at Western Nevada Community College in Carson City. Workshops are offered for all levels of writers of poetry, song, fiction, nonfiction, screenplay and children’s literature. In addition to Saturday and Sunday workshops, enjoy a Friday evening keynote (Chris Wiman), poetry reading, ice cream social and wine tasting; and Saturday literary editors’ roundtable; book sale and author signing; Western style barbecue and performance by Richard Elloyan. There are also optional manuscript critiques, website design reviews and script pitches.
This year, in conjunction with the conference, Juniper Creek and Unnamed Writers announce their National Poetry and Short Story Competition. Prizes in each category: First, $500 plus publication; Second, $250 plus publication; Third, free Juniper Creek Writers Conference for 2005 or 2006, plus possible publication. Christian Wiman (Poetry Magazine) will serve as poetry judge. Short stories will be judged by Gayle Brandeis, Rich Logsden and June Sylvestor. Writers do not have to register for the conference to enter the contest! Submission guidelines on our website.
Special room rates are available and Tahoe is only a half-hour away, so bring a friend and make it your summer vacation! Register by June 15 for a $25 discount off the $175 registration fee. Register by May 1 for a chance to win great prizes, including signed copies of books by our speakers and a 2006 Juniper Creek Writers Conference! Details: www.junipercreekpubs.com/events or call 775 849-1637 or e-mail ellenhopkins@charter.net for more information.
How to Present Your Best Work
How to Achieve Your Best Work
Presented by Louise Bergmann DuMont At the NJCWG Meeting – 2/14/05
1. First and Fired-up – Your first words need to create the maximum impact. Jump into the action and leave the explanation for later. Start where the story is most interesting.
2. Powerful Authors Write Powerful Prose – Leave the passive voice to the timid (and the unpublished) authors. Use direct speech. Write in active voice.
3. Write Regularly – If you want to be a published author, you must practice your craft. Don’t think about writing. Don’t dream about writing. WRITE.
4. Scary Stuff – Figure out what stops you from writing and remove those obstacles. No worthy goal is without a challenge.
5. Know the Rules of Writing – Grammar and spelling are not optional skills You don’t have permission to break the rules until you use them effectively.
6. Long Range Plan – Accept the fact that no matter what your degree, no matter how much you want to be a writer, you must learn the game before the pros will let you play.
7. Industry Standards – Writing is the easy part, understanding the industry that will allow you publish your writing is a whole other matter. To play this game you need to know the rules, gather your gear, use your writing tools effectively, and practice, practice, practice. Only then will big boys let you play.
8. Visual Sells – SHOW, don’t TELL your story. We live in a movie hungry society. Your writing needs to reel itself out; one frame at a time, image after image.
9. Conflict Makes the Story ‘Pop’ – Everything is built on conflict. Life is a study in conflict. Your manuscript may involve internal conflict or the conflict may be produced externally – but there should always be conflict.
10. Tags – use the invisible tag “said” whenever possible.
11. Mix It Up – Use both narrative and dialog as is appropriate.
12. Narrative – Strong nouns and active verbs are the key to good narrative.
13. Dialog – Listen to people talk and write real conversation. Condense the dialog where necessary but make sure it flows naturally. Read it out loud to see if you stumble over words or phrases.
14. The Rule of Three – The triangle provides the simplest and one of the strongest structures in nature, and in writing
15. Outline – always, Always, ALWAYS outline before you start writing. Your outline can be as simple as three sentences that produce the opening, the body and the closing – but you must have some knowledge of the structure of your piece before you begin writing. Once you know where you are going, you have a better chance of achieving your goal. The five minutes you take to sort out your story will save you an hour’s worth of rewrites.
16. Ebb and Flow – Stories and articles must rise and fall like the tide. Start with the hook, back-up with some explanation, build toward a climax, let the pace fall back slightly, and then place another hook to get the reader to turn the page or continue to the next chapter.
17. Everything must have a purpose – Don’t throw a clue into a mystery if you aren’t going to have the detective follow up on it. Don’t add characters that are not important. Don’t allow the plot to take rabbit trails that lead nowhere. If it has no purpose – toss it.
18. Don’t feed the reader – Forced dialog that is used simply to convey information, is bad writing.
19. POV (Point of View) – pick your point of view before you start writing. Stick with it throughout the piece. Head popping (moving from one POV to another) gives the reader a headache.
20. Reality Isn’t Just for TV – Make sure your characters ring true. Would your heroine REALLY do or say what you’ve asked her to?
21. Negatives – Don’t overuse negative statements or words.
22. Questions – When you ask a question; be sure to answer it. Rhetorical questions only work on occasion. Use questions sparingly.
23. Antagonist / Protagonist – No one is all good or all bad. To create believable characters, allow your protagonist some bad habits and give your antagonist some redeeming qualities.
24. Know Your Character / Your Setting / Your Story – Don’t try to write a story about things you don’t know (unless you are willing to do a LOT of research). It will only make you look foolish. Stick with what you know until you get a better handle on what you don’t know.
25. Avoid Commentary – Give your reader credit for being an intelligent human being. Avoid explaining everything and telling the reader what they should think, feel, do and believe. Lay out a good story and allow your reader to draw their own conclusions.
26. Entertain – Even individuals who read nonfiction want to be entertained to some extent. You can make your nonfiction interesting by quoting authorities and using descriptive narrative.
27. Repetition – Do not repeat the same word (or similar sounding words) in connecting sentences and be sure to vary the length of your sentences. Use ‘he’, ‘the boy’ and ‘Charlie' instead of constantly referring to your character by name. Buy a thesaurus and expand your vocabulary. Use language exercises to teach yourself how to say the same thing in a dozen different ways.
28. Audience – Know your audience. It is always about the reader.
29. Facts Factor – When you can’t offer facts or answers – offer hope. Never simply ask questions or contemplate problems. Never offer a list of facts. The author must offer something to the reader that they can’t get on their own.
30. First and the Last – Never believe that your first draft is your last.
31. Critics vs Critiques – There is a difference between a critic and a critique. A good critique will encourage you and make your writing better. A critic will simply tell you that you are no good, and leave you without hope. Accept what critiques say, do not accept the critics.
32. Rejection’s Lessons – Learn from rejection. Reread the guidelines. Did you follow them to the letter? Were you pitching to the right audience? Was your piece tight? Was it carefully edited? If so, remember that a “rejection” may only mean, “not now.”
Thursday, March 24, 2005
Writing Contests
Here are a few the writing contests you can enter this spring.
2005 Pilgrimage Writing Award seeks true stories of hope in the midst of challenging times.
Cash prize
2,500 words max
$15 reading/entry fee
Deadline: July 1
For guidelines, go to:
http://pilgrimagepress.org/award.html
Middle English Literary Group of Tennessee seeks novellas for their annual contest.
40,000 words max
Cash prizes
$35 entry fee
Deadline: October 31
For guidelines, go to:
http://home.earthlink.net/%7Emiddleenglish/id1.html
FLASH US IN YOUR BRIEFS!
www.LongStoryShort.us
Do you have an excellent story anguishing in your files begging to be noticed? Dust it off, smooth its wrinkles, give it a final tweak and send it to Long Story Short -it might be worth a chunk of change! The topic? We'll leave that to you, creative soul that you are. Fiction, non-fiction, funny, sad, romantic--we'll read them all. Brevity is a virtue, and we intend to reward the best of the briefs with $50! Make it your best! Knock our shorts off. The deadline is April 25, and getting closer every day. Don't miss out, don't be the only one in your neighborhood not to enter. Get that story in the e-mail today! You'd be amazed at the relatively small number of entries most contests receive-- yours just might win! Follow the submission guidelines on our web site http://www.LongStoryShort.us and you could find your name and story published for all to see and revere. We'll also publish your bio and an interview with you. You'll be famous! Now who wouldn't want that?
The MFA Program in Creative Writing at California State University, Fresno, announces the 2005 Philip Levine Prize in Poetry. Winner receives $1500 prize and publication by Anhinga Press. Philip Levine will be the final judge.
Entry fee is $25.00
Deadline: September 15, 2005
For details go to
www.csufresno.edu/crwr for details,
or email
levineprize@listserv.csufresno.edu .
Writing Op - Power of the Pen
Forwarded from Terri Pilcher
PowerPen Marketing
www.powerpenmarketing.com
I am looking for personal essays of 800-1500 words for use on a website and in an upcoming self-published anthology. Payment is $20 for one-time rights, which covers use both on the website and/or ezine and in the anthology. Writers accepted for publication will also receive one free copy of the book and will be able to buy unlimited copies at 50% off the cover price. You may choose to remain anonymous (as long as I know who to send the check to).
I am looking for heartwarming first-person stories that show the power of God to overcome "impossible" circumstances in the defense of life. They may be heartwrenching, but must end with a positive tone. They may also be humorous, sweet, or miraculous.
Stories may fall in the following categories:
1. Mothers who almost aborted their children, and how God helped them to survive the "impossible" situation. For example, one woman almost aborted her second child, because she didn't think there was any way she could raise a second child alone and without any support. Instead kept her son and named him Phoenix, because God used him to save her life.
2. Mothers who did abort their children, and how God healed them from the pain and led them to grace.
3. Children who were almost aborted, and the difference they've made in the lives of others. For example, a seventh son was almost aborted by his Christian mother, because there was no money to support another child. She changed her mind, and he recently graduated medical school with an MD/PhD.
4. Fathers who chose to raise the children their girlfriends wanted to abort.
5. Other personal stories about the importance of unborn children.
Please submit stories to chooselife@powerpenmarketing.com
Thank you for passing this on,
Terri Pilcher
Wednesday, March 23, 2005
Contemporary Christian Poetry
You're Invited
to a Reading of
Contemporary Christian Inspirational Poetry
Saturday, May 21, 2005
1 to 3 pm
Christian Publications Bookstore
620 Route 23 North, Pompton Plains, NJ
Participating Poets:
Maude Carolan
Gloria Healey
Barbara Williams Hubbard
Ann Lefevre
Elizabeth Marchitti
Valerie Schermerhorn
Nancy Stoppelkamp
Thursday, March 17, 2005
Writing Op - The Heart of a Father Vol 2
The Heart of the Father, Volume 2
Wayne Holmes is looking for submissions for his newest book project for Bethany House Publishers. They must be true stories about earthly fathers who’ve done something that reflects the image of the heavenly father. Stories should be 500 to 2000 words in length.
Subjects for each chapter might include the following: Wisdom, Love, Discipline, Teaching, Forgiveness, Perspective, Provision, Comfort, and Fellowship
He will accept stories from March 1 until May 31. You may send E-mail submissions to wwriter@fuse.net (no hard copies). Word documents are preferred (attachments), but he will also accept WordPerfect files. You may also paste your story into the body of an e-mail.
Wayne Holmes: www.WayneHolmes.com
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