I recently reviewed Marcia Moston's Call of a Coward: the God of Moses and the Middle-Class Housewife. Marcia was graciously agreed to an interview for my blog. I'm super excited to share it with you, because the story behind the publication of her book is as exciting as the book itself! And don't forget to stop by here and leave a comment for the chance to win a copy!
Please tell us about yourself.
Although I hold degrees in sociology and Christian education, most of what I’ve learned has been by the proverbial seat of my pants. I’ve taught English in a Christian high school, worked with orphans in a Mayan village, led mission teams to Central America, delivered Yellowbooks, stuffed vending machines, and lived in everything from tepees to parsonages.
I love to share the stories and lessons I’ve learned along the way about what a very real God can do with the smallest of our offerings. My first and most dear word from the Lord is Be still and know that I am God—Psalm 46:10.
Your writing experience is unusual in that until 2008 you’d never written anything, but by 2011 you had a book contract with Thomas Nelson. How did that happen?
I am grateful to have experienced such abundant grace and blessing on my work. When we moved to the South a few years ago, I had a singular image in my mind: buy a house with a pool where I could sit and write. Although I didn’t know what I would write, nor did I know how to write a book, it was as though my story’s time had come, and I needed a nesting spot.
wallpaper
Showing posts with label Marcia Moston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcia Moston. Show all posts
Monday, August 6, 2012
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Call of a Coward: a Review and a Giveaway
"When this life doesn't make sense, it's good to remember you are just traveling through." - Marcia Moston
I first heard an excerpt from Marcia Moston's Call of a Coward: The God of Moses and the Middle-Class Housewife in a writing group a year and a half ago. Through a series of random events (isn't it always), I found myself sitting at a table in Barnes and Noble with a group of writers. Marcia read aloud chapter 8 "What's a Woman to Do with All Her Time," and asked for feedback. All I could do was underline beautiful, telling sentences and think about what a powerful book it would be.
Thomas Nelson obviously agreed, and the moving account of a family's journey from New Jersey to Guatemala to Vermont has now been published.
Call of a Coward is beautifully written. While there is no attempt to glamorize the third-world living conditions, Marcia has a trick of seeing and describing the beauty of even the most mundane.
On initially seeing the village, Marcia writes, "In retrospect, Hernando was the best possible person to show me the village for the first time. He loved the land, and it was through his love I saw past the unlovely." In turn, Marcia shows us the village, and it is through her love that we too see past the unlovely.
In Chapter 10, Marcia recounts a local woman asking her to give up her only bag of carefully hoarded chocolate chips. Although torn, Marcia hands them over for the sake of the bigger picture - eternity: our true reality. To this day, I am reminded of that when I reach casually into my pantry for my chocolate stash. It is difficult to pinpoint what I'm hoarding when I have so much, but I have many things in my life that are as precious and jealously guarded as Marcia's chocolate chips.
Perhaps the strongest element of the book is the lack of sentimentality. Oscar Wilde wrote "A sentimentalist is one who desires to have the luxury of an emotion without paying for it." The book is powerfully emotional, but there is payment for the luxury - it is seen in the gut-wrenching accounts of self-doubt, the stark self-evaluation, and the daily sacrifice of even the most basic comforts taken for granted by the United States middle class.
I would happily share all my chocolate chips and a copy of the book with each of you. But for now, I will be giving away one copy. For a chance to win Marcia Moston's Call of a Coward, just leave a comment below. A simple "hello" will suffice or share the title of a non-fiction book that impressed you. A winner will be drawn at random and announced August 8, 2012.*
You can read more from Marcia at her blog: On a Write Journey Following God.
For my upstate readers, Marcia will be signing copies of her book at the book launch August 4, 1:00 at Fiction Addiction behind the Haywood Mall. More information can be found on the Fiction Addiction website.
*Entries available only for readers with a US or Canada mailing address.
Permission link: All excerpts from Call of a Coward: The God of Moses and the Middle Class House-Wife. Thomas Nelson ©2012. Used by permission of Thomas Nelson, Inc. www.thomasnelson.com.
I first heard an excerpt from Marcia Moston's Call of a Coward: The God of Moses and the Middle-Class Housewife in a writing group a year and a half ago. Through a series of random events (isn't it always), I found myself sitting at a table in Barnes and Noble with a group of writers. Marcia read aloud chapter 8 "What's a Woman to Do with All Her Time," and asked for feedback. All I could do was underline beautiful, telling sentences and think about what a powerful book it would be.
Thomas Nelson obviously agreed, and the moving account of a family's journey from New Jersey to Guatemala to Vermont has now been published.
Call of a Coward is beautifully written. While there is no attempt to glamorize the third-world living conditions, Marcia has a trick of seeing and describing the beauty of even the most mundane.
"These strong, hardworking women emerged from their dirt-floor adobe houses dressed in their colorful village wraps and elegantly plaited headdresses - statuesque princesses in plastic flip-flops, seldom stumbling on the dirt paths or cobblestone streets although laden with babies on their backs, and baskets of tortillas or bundles of wood on their head."
On initially seeing the village, Marcia writes, "In retrospect, Hernando was the best possible person to show me the village for the first time. He loved the land, and it was through his love I saw past the unlovely." In turn, Marcia shows us the village, and it is through her love that we too see past the unlovely.
Marcia strikes the right balance with her honesty and humility. Her conversational tone works well for the transparency and poignancy of her book. It never pretends to be more than it is: a memoir of God's faithfulness in one woman's life. But that, in and of itself, is a powerful story that resonates across time and cultures.
In Chapter 10, Marcia recounts a local woman asking her to give up her only bag of carefully hoarded chocolate chips. Although torn, Marcia hands them over for the sake of the bigger picture - eternity: our true reality. To this day, I am reminded of that when I reach casually into my pantry for my chocolate stash. It is difficult to pinpoint what I'm hoarding when I have so much, but I have many things in my life that are as precious and jealously guarded as Marcia's chocolate chips.
Perhaps the strongest element of the book is the lack of sentimentality. Oscar Wilde wrote "A sentimentalist is one who desires to have the luxury of an emotion without paying for it." The book is powerfully emotional, but there is payment for the luxury - it is seen in the gut-wrenching accounts of self-doubt, the stark self-evaluation, and the daily sacrifice of even the most basic comforts taken for granted by the United States middle class.
I would happily share all my chocolate chips and a copy of the book with each of you. But for now, I will be giving away one copy. For a chance to win Marcia Moston's Call of a Coward, just leave a comment below. A simple "hello" will suffice or share the title of a non-fiction book that impressed you. A winner will be drawn at random and announced August 8, 2012.*
You can read more from Marcia at her blog: On a Write Journey Following God.
For my upstate readers, Marcia will be signing copies of her book at the book launch August 4, 1:00 at Fiction Addiction behind the Haywood Mall. More information can be found on the Fiction Addiction website.
*Entries available only for readers with a US or Canada mailing address.
Permission link: All excerpts from Call of a Coward: The God of Moses and the Middle Class House-Wife. Thomas Nelson ©2012. Used by permission of Thomas Nelson, Inc. www.thomasnelson.com.
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