Thursday, March 26, 2026

Darkfell

Reading Fiction through the Eyes of Faith:

Darkfell (Book #1) by Amanda Wright

Genre: YA high fantasy

The Story: A librarian-mapmaker is sent to find and close the door between the human realm and a realm of evil.

Content Notes: War violence, gorier violence perpetuated by the villain; romance is sweet and clean; strong supernatural elements with minimal explanation of type/source.

Why I loved this book: Likeable characters with fun brother banter, engaging plot, beautiful spiritual threads and allegory, the perfect soul-satisfying climax.

Pair with John 15:12-14.

Ponder where your priorities lie.

Pray for a heart that loves God with obedient submission.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

What Is Right

Doing what is right in our own eyes does not always manifest as evil.

In fact, many times what is right in our eyes can appear quite good. Obtaining a better job that increases financial freedom. Volunteering to serve in a ministry. Living in a neighborhood deemed safer for our kids. Getting married. Protecting those we love.

In and of themselves, none of these are evil. Desiring them is not sinful. But if they are not what God has asked us to do, then doing them is wrong.

Because we don't get to define what is right or wrong. That is the exclusive prerogative of God, and what He defines as right is obedience to Him. Obedience first to His commands as revealed in Scripture, then obedience to His Spirit's leading (which will always fit within the framework of the biblical commands). Anything else is disobedience and therefore wrong, no matter how good it seems.

It is a difficult lesson to live, as my heroine Yosi learns in Perplexity, because sometimes what is right in God's eyes doesn't seem good in ours. But when we follow Him in obedience, it will always lead to what is best.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Learning from Perplexity

~from Perplexity by Chawna Schroeder

Writing, for me, is more than just telling a fun story. It is also a venue through which I explore my faith. It is a way God teaches me truth. The Sceptre & Stylus series has been no different this time.

Perplexity and really this entire series has been challenging me to reconsider what it means to follow Christ and depend on Him completely. It isn’t that what I believed before was wrong. Rather, it has shown me that my application to my life was incomplete. That I have often lived, inadvertently, with a dependence-plus mentality. “I trust Him—but I’ll also do xyz.” In the course of writing these books, it has almost become a mantra in my life to ask, “How much do I really trust Him?”

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

The Gift of Perplexity

In just a little over a month, my next novel, Perplexity, releases. And though it has been almost a year since I submitted that manuscript to the publisher to begin the editing process, I still find myself shaking my head in wonder over it. 

For you see, I'm a terribly slow writer.

Before starting this series, the fastest I had ever completed a book was 18 months. So when I reached three months before the deadline and still only had a little over half a book (and a fragmented one at that), panic set in.

I considered reaching out to my publisher for an extension. But I felt very strongly God said no.

When I signed this contract, I prayed awhile about the deadlines. At the time, I felt that He would provide what I needed when I needed it. I pretty much told the publisher the same when I signed. Now, with three months to go, did I trust God? Did I believe that He would provide?

So I kept writing. Editing on the side when I was too tired to create. I finished the first draft 12 hours before deadline. I turned it in less than an hour before, without a chance to read the thing through.

But the story was all there. Not perfect. But complete and solid, with no major plot holes that the editor found. Something my past experience with writing would have said was impossible.

Thus the dedication to this book begins:

"For My All-Sufficient Lord

From the start You promised me

All I needed I would see;

Right on time it would be."

For God is never late, but always on time.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Gelato at the Villa

Reading Fiction with the Eyes of Faith: 


Gelato at the Villa (Suitcase Sisters #2) by Robin Jones Gunn

Genre: Adult Contemporary Women's Fiction

The Story: Best friends travel to Italy looking adventure and find a pilgrimage.

Content Notes: Reference to past sexual assault (off the page, no explicit details)
Why I loved this book: The sense of travel, the quiet beauty of wandering and wonder and discovery on every level, with bubbles of humor and times of quiet reflection, free from life's chaos. Quote, "The bride of Christ is not beautiful. But, you see...today is not her day."

Pair with John 15:1-17.

Ponder where you might need to trust God more.

Pray for the ability to trust Him in that area.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

An Unexpected Award


A few weeks ago, I received an unexpected email form my publisher: Illuminary had won the Tome Society Award.

I admit, my first thought was, This must be a scam.

I had never heard of this award or this organization. But sure enough, when I checked them out, they appeared to be a legitimate nonprofit promoting literacy in schools through clean, age-appropriate fiction. A neat little program actually.

But for a book to be selected for their list, it has to be submitted for consideration. Neither my publisher nor I had entered Illuminary. Which meant someone else had to find and nominate my book for me.

That was astounding enough. But the timing made it even more significant.

In the week preceding I had been struggling with the area of results. I know I need to trust God’s provision there as much as in money and time. But many days I feel like I see very little fruit from the work I do, in writing and otherwise.

When that email arrived, however, it felt like little tap on the shoulder from God. It was if He was saying, “I have this under control. I can do what wish, bring about whatever I wish, and I don’t need your help to do it.”

So, yes, Illuminary won an unexpected award, and that is cool and exciting. But even more, I was reminded of a very important truth: I can trust God is at work, even when I can’t see it.

And that was the sweetest reward of all.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Winners of the Sceptre & Stylus Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the Sceptre & Stylus giveaway:

Elly

Hailey H.

Ashton R.

And because I felt like it, two bonus winners:

Paty H.

Rose A.

Thank you all of you who participated and showed interest in the Sceptre & Stylus Trilogy. I had far more enter than I expected, and your participation was quite encouraging!