Forthcoming Thriller set in the Middle East

When I work on books, there’s a moment that I’ve come to recognize. It’s the moment when I discover one plot point that solidifies the whole story. With Life of Secrets, it was, “Don’t kill him, forgive him.” And the rest of the story fell into place. With Sons of Thunder it was, “They’re sisters,” and everything else came right out onto the page after that.

I hit that point this morning with my next thriller. I know what the story is, and I’m ready to start talking about it publicly. It’s a brand new story, with no connection to the Sons of Thunder or Secrets universes.

It’s the story of an American tourist in Israel who volunteers on an archaeological dig and makes a discovery that will change history and alter the balance of power on the world stage. It could tip all of civilization into global war.

The title “Relic of an Ancient Vision” has been kicking around in my head, but I’m not satisfied with it.

Book Review: One Night in Tehran

I just want to recommend the work of another author working in the same field as me. Luana Ehrlich’s book One Night in Tehran is a great spy thriller. It has chases, kidnappings, shootouts, suspense, romance, and everything fun in a thriller.

It’s also easy to read with no gratuitous sex and no profanity. The main character had a powerful encounter with fugitive Iranian Christians and is trying to work out what that means for his life as an officer in the CIA.

The author is also very good at making the reader feel like he’s getting an inside look at how the CIA works. I don’t know if Ms. Ehrlich actually worked in the CIA or not, but as a writer she is very skilled at making it seem like she must have.

Check out One Night in Tehran while you’re waiting for me to finally finish another book!

Prizewinning Holocaust Essay

I wrote the following essay shortly after visiting the Holocaust museum in Israel. I won second place in a Bethel Writers Conference contest with it, which was awesome.

Sowing Without Speaking

In the early 1990’s, Jan Karski was a professor at Georgetown University when I was a student there. I didn’t really know much about him at the time. Among the other 19-year-olds, the word was that he was an important figure in the history of the Holocaust, and had been one of the good guys. That was all the general student body knew. His subject wasn’t of interest to me, so I never investigated further.

Jan Karski played a crucial role in the Polish resistance during World War Two. He tried to get the word out to the wider world about the extermination of the Polish ghetto. He begged America to help. But it was many years before I learned those things.

I never took his class. I ignored professor Jan Karski.

In the book of Isaiah, God promises the barren that he will given them a name and a remembrance which are better than children. In Hebrew, “Name and remembrance” read as “Yad Vashem.” Those words are taken as the name of the Holocaust museum in Israel. “A name and a remembrance.”

I toured Yad Vashem and, to my shame, I found it relatively unmoving. Amidst the educational material about the depths of human evil, I could not muster so much as a catch in my throat. The holocaust has been covered to death, of course. We have all heard the horror stories. None of it was new.

At Yad Vashem there is a term: The Righteous Among the Nations or, more colloquially, the righteous gentiles. It refers to non-Jewish people who risked their lives to save Jews during the holocaust. Listed among them are such famous names as Oskar Schindler. Each of them gets a tree at Yad Vashem, on the “Avenue of the Righteous among the Nations.” It is a place to remember those who saw evil and did something about it.

I told myself, as I saw the trees on the avenue, that I would have been one of them. I would not have ignored the evil before me. I would have done something.

And who among us doesn’t feel the same? Who doesn’t believe that, put in the same situation, we would do the right thing?

I felt that way until, two-thirds of the way through the museum, I saw the video of Jan Karski.

Professor Karski merits his own display at Yad Vashem. There’s a video of him. In it he talks about his meeting with Franklin Roosevelt, in which America’s great World War Two President declined to show much interest in the plight of the millions of tortured and murdered Jews, except as it related to America’s war aims. And as Professor Karski talked on the video about this great American who did nothing, I faced a terrible revelation.

I hadn’t even noticed him, when he walked beside me.

I, who was sure I would have been among the righteous gentiles, did not even bat an eyelash when a hero of the Holocaust was teaching.

I, who just knew that I would be one of those who risked his life to save Jews if anything like the Holocaust happened again, I realized that when I had the chance to learn from professor Karski I didn’t care.

His efforts to bring the plight of Polish Jews to the attention of America were heroic. They were worthy of recognition in the Jewish State’s great museum. And I had ignored him.

His exhibit in Yad Vashem changed my whole experience of the museum. What before had not touched me, began to hit very hard indeed.

After Karski’s exhibit, the rest of the museum had more meaning.

It was Jan Karski’s exhibit that prepared me for the last chamber of the museum. Without him, I would not have been ready.

One approaches the final room of the museum – not enters, simply approaches – and one perceives its subject matter.

Books.

Uncountable, immeasurable, innumerable books. They stack to the ceiling, in perfect ordered rows, numbered, documented, and arranged. Each of them is black. There are so many of them, together they form a wall. It’s a physical presence. It stares down at people who enter the room like a challenge.

Given the subject matter of the museum, the content of the books is obvious before one enters the room.

They are names. Hundreds and hundreds of thousands and thousands – millions – of names. Those who died in the Holocaust. Every page of every innumerable book contains a name and a testimony of who they were.

From outside the room, I saw them, and I was physically stopped from entering. I couldn’t do it. I, who had been unable to feel much through the majority of the Holocaust museum, could not – not casually – step into that room.

I checked myself. I prayed. And fortified by that, I took the step. I walked into the domain of the books. I entered the room.

At once my emotions were out of control. I wanted to weep. I wanted to shake my fist at the devil. I wanted to rage.

Of all those things, there was only one that worked. There was only one thing I could do in that room.

I could only pray.

“Lord, please use me. Please use me to prevent evil. Please use me Lord.”

With tears in my eyes, I begged the Lord that I should never again ignore people like Jan Karski. I prayed that, where there is evil in this world, He would strengthen me to fight it.

I never took a class from Jan Karski. He never spoke a word to me. And yet, by his mere presence, he planted a seed. That seed was watered at Yad Vashem, and I will never be the same.

Five Pictures of Life In Modern Israel

I’m back from three weeks in Israel. For someone who’s into Jesus, it was pretty intense to walk where he walked, see things he saw, and understand his world better.

I also had a chance to look at modern Israel a little bit. I picked up enough material for a completely original political thriller set there. Watch for it this summer, I’m working on it now!

Merkava tanks
Merkava tanks at an IDF armor training facility
2015-05-22 15.05.23 HDR-2
The crowd at the Jewish market in Jerusalem on Friday afternoon — right before the Sabbath starts. On Saturday, aka Shabbat or The Sabbath, Observant Jews do no work whatsoever. So any food you’re likely to need, you must get on Friday. Correspondingly, a vendor who sells perishable goods must sell them before sundown on Friday. The result is the biggest mob scene I have ever personally witnessed. It was insane to be inside this. I’ve never been in a larger throng of people.

 

Israel-Egypt Border
The Israel-Egypt Border
UN Vehicle
The white with black letters “UN-Mobiles” were a ubiquitous sight.
UN Peacekeepers near the Syrian border
UN Peacekeepers near the Syrian border

 

 

Get the entire Secrets Series of political thrillers for just $0.99

Today, tomorrow, and Tuesday, the entire boxed set of my Secrets Series of political thrillers will be available on Kindle for just 99 cents!

Get it by clicking here.

This e-book is a collection of three separate e-books: Death of Secrets, Life of Secrets, and Born with Secrets.

Death of Secrets

Kathy Kelver nearly trips over a murder victim on her way back to her dorm room late one night. In his last words, the dying man gives her stolen data about a secret project that could blow the lid off a shocking conspiracy. From the halls of Congress to the National Security Agency and beyond, Kathy must run for her life from shadowy forces who want her dead, while trying to build a relationship and hang on to her faith. The secret she’s carrying could end the right to privacy forever, if she doesn’t survive to warn the world.

Life of Secrets

Alyssa Chambers is rich and privileged by birth, but a criminal by choice. She steals secrets from the powerful and influential, and sells them to whoever pays – and they pay very well. But when someone assassinates a Presidential candidate in an office Alyssa just robbed, she’s framed for the murder and her whole life goes up in smoke. Now she’s running for her life, hunted and alone. The last man she can trust is the one she can’t stop betraying; a man busy struggling with a religious conversion when she needs him to focus on the here and now. To survive, clear her name, and uncover the assassin, Alyssa will learn about trust and faith, while facing the truth about her past, the truth about her family, and the truth about her Life of Secrets

Born with Secrets

Convicted professional thief Alyssa Chambers longs to forget her past and start a new, cleaner life. She’s reading the Bible, going to chapel, and doing her best to live clean. But when a mysterious woman disappears from federal prison, the government offers Alyssa a deal she can’t refuse: freedom, in exchange for one last job. Now Alyssa must find the escapee before a shadowy conspiracy of spies and politicians can use her secret to shock the world. With her new life hanging by a thread, Alyssa must learn who to believe, how to trust, and what it really means to be born with secrets.

If you bought all three books separately, you’d pay over $10! But today you can read all three for just 99 cents.

Get yours before time runs out!

Five Miraculous Powers You’ll Find in Sons of Thunder

Sons of Thunder is a contemporary Christian fantasy about ordinary people with miraculous abilities. A group of young people discover these abilities in themselves and begin to use them as they come to understand that the powers are gifts from God. At the same time, an opposing group rejects that idea. Calling themselves The Legion, they believe their power comes from strength of will, and wanting the power bad enough to do anything for it.

Here are five of those miraculous abilities you’ll find in Sons of Thunder:

1) Moving objects without needing to touch them. “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move.” — Matthew 17:20. The Legion understands this as telekinesis, but the Sons of Thunder know it’s about faith in God.

2) Moving from one place to another. “The Spirit of the Lord suddenly took Philip away, and the eunuch did not see him again, but went on his way rejoicing. Philip, however, appeared at Azotus.” — Acts 8:39-40. Anna Wales, one of the Sons of Thunder, can move from one place to another, no matter how far away, just by asking the Lord to put her there.

3) Controlling the weather. “He got up, rebuked the wind and said to the waves, “Quiet! Be still!” Then the wind died down and it was completely calm.” — Mark 4:39. One of the Sons of Thunder calls himself Spark, because lightning comes down where he wants it to.

4) Healing. “they will place their hands on sick people, and they will get well.” Mark 16:18 One of the Sons of Thunder can heal the deadliest wound just by laying her hands on it.

5) Invulnerability. “They stoned Paul and dragged him outside the city, thinking he was dead. But after the disciples had gathered around him, he got up” Acts 14:19. Connor Merritt is the protagonist of Sons of Thunder. His skin can’t be broken. It makes him bulletproof, and more.

Check out Sons of Thunder today!

Brilliant Christian Movie Idea

Darren Wilson of WP Films is making a film version of Pilgrim’s Progress. Learn more about it here:

http://www.kickdriver.com/r/bIELW9Tc

I’ve loved every one of Darren Wilson’s films that I’ve seen (Father of Lights and Holy Ghost). He’s made more, I just haven’t gotten to them yet. In the past, he’s always made documentaries. This next movie will be his first attempt at fiction. It’s called Heavenquest: A Pilgrim’s Progress.

When I did my own Kickstarter campaign to help publish Death of Secrets and get started as a writer, folks were super generous in supporting me. One thing I always wanted to do was find a good project of someone else’s that I could back in return. Now I’ve found it.

I hope you’ll check out Heavenquest and consider supporting the making of the movie. I can’t wait to see it.