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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

ACROSS THE CHINA SKY - C Hope Flinchbaugh - One Free Ebook


Readers, I met Hope through Linkedin and found we have a lot in common. I'm thrilled to introduce her to you.

Welcome, Hope. Tell us how much of yourself you write into your characters.
I sometimes call myself the rejected missionary. My mother is a wonderful storyteller and, as a child, I was deeply moved by my mother’s Child Evangelism Fellowship missionary stories. I loved to meet the missionaries who spoke at our church. My parents often hosted them in our home after services, and I thoroughly enjoyed the table conversation about all their exciting adventures and their passion for souls.

So at the end of the missionary’s message at church, he or she would invariably ask people to come forward if God was calling them to be a missionary. People quietly slipped out of their pews, sometimes tears streaming down their faces, reluctant to surrender. (Who wants to go to Africa and be eaten by head hunters?)

There I stood at my pew praying, “Pick me! Pick me!”

No call. No answer. One time in my adult years God finally spoke to me at the end of one of those altar calls and said, “Sit down, Hope.”

That was plain enough. I sat down. I sat down and began to write about the people I longed to meet on the mission field. What’s odd is that I never really included a missionary in my novels. I write about the indigenous people of China and North Korea, the people I wanted to meet, advocate for, and even emulate. And although I didn’t get to be a missionary, I interviewed countless people who ministered to orphans, widows, and the persecuted Christians in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.

In all three of my China novels, including Across the China Sky, I hope the readers can feel my heart through Mei Lin’s love for Jesus and for people to the point that she is willing to lay down her life for him. 

I so understand what you’re saying. My husband and I wanted to go to the mission field when the first YWAM Mercy Ship finally set sail. We really wanted to be support staff on the ship. And when we became very close friends with a missionary couple in Mexico, we wanted to go be support staff for them. But God wanted us to be support from the US. And that’s what we’ve done. Oh, we’ve been on missionary trips into Mexico and I was on one to Guatemala, but we’ve prayed, raised money, prayed, befriended, prayed, and helped missionaries all the rest of our lives. One of our dear friends has been serving in China for most of her adult life. What is the quirkiest thing you have ever done?
Two years ago I wrote a poem that I would only share with my mother. It was ridiculous, hilarious, and totally out of my norm. I didn’t even read it to my husband. I was mortified when God laid it on my heart to READ it over a microphone during my keynote message at the Montrose Christian Writers Conference. My mother has all the sense of humor in my family—not me. I was deliberating between saving face (a Chinese term for totally embarrassing myself) and obeying the leading of the Holy Spirit. I obeyed God.

People were in tears laughing. Many requested the poem afterward. I was relieved they liked it, but even more relieved that the whole ordeal was over. Okay, now you’re wondering about the poem. Here are four stanzas to “whet your whistle”:

This face that you see
Is not what will be
I’m destined for heaven
And eternity

St. Peter’s not standing
With scales at the gate.
Or writing down fat grams
Of all that I ate.

No one will complain,
“My nose is too big!”
Or want hair replacement,
Extender, or wig.

My teeth won’t need whitened,
Filled, or replaced.
That’s how I’ll be smiling
When I see His face!

Well, you get the idea . . .

When did you first discover that you were a writer?
About 10 years ago my mother gave me a box of all my school papers she saved. I surprised to discover a story that I wrote in third grade. At the top I wrote, “I want to write books.”
On the next few pages, I wrote a book complete with pictures that I drew about a dog that was on a raft going down a river in the middle of a terrible storm. I titled it, A Shelter in the Time of Storm.

Until that moment, I honestly didn’t realize that I wanted to write books since third grade!

Tell us the range of the kinds of books you enjoy reading.
The highest treasure to me in the world is my Bible, of course. I’ve smuggled Bibles into China and watched the delight and tears on the faces of our Chinese brothers as I handed a Bible to brothers and sisters in Christ who never owned a complete Bible before.

I also discovered ancient writings that are said to be written by the first century church called the Odes of Solomon. That little book is so rich and reads much like the psalms of David.

As far as modern works, I most enjoy historical fiction or biographies/autobiographies of men and women who are overcomers within the last century or so. Men and women such as Corrie ten Boom, Lester Sumrall, D.L. Moody, Billy Graham, Hudson Taylor, John and Betty Stam, Heavenly Man, Catherine Booth, Suzanne Wesley, Rolland and Heidi Baker, Dennis and Kathy Balcombe, and Reinhard Bonnke. These men and women are eagles on the earth and their testimonies encourage me greatly.

There are more eagles of faith in the earth today whose lives have not been documented—and I hope to write their fascinating stories for the next generation.

How do you keep your sanity in our run, run, run world?
The Tree of Life. There are still two trees in the garden of our hearts. When we need answers or we need help, we can run to knowledge (information highway) or go to the Tree of Life. Every day I sit beneath that Tree of Life and give my Lord the first hours of our day. It’s a delight to be near Him, to journal my questions, to journal his thoughts and sometimes sketch a picture that comes to mind. And God has a sense of humor—that’s where I was when I got the poem, “The Me that You See” that I shared earlier. In sorrow or joy, laughter or tears, He meets me there.

“I come to the garden alone . . . and He walks with me and He talks with me and He tells me I am His own! And the voice I hear falling on my ear, none other has ever known!” Glory!

I love that hymn. I want it sung at my funeral. How do you choose your characters’ names?
For my first China novel, Daughter of China, I researched many children from China who had died in state-run orphanages in the ’80s and ’90s. I decided to choose a few actual children whose names were posted beside the pictures of starved children (corpses oftentimes) and commemorate their lives by including them in my novels.

What is the accomplishment that you are most proud of?
Truly my greatest accomplishment is hearing God’s voice. “My sheep hear my voice and the voice of another they do not follow.” It takes discipline and passion to still your soul on a daily basis until you can truly “hear a word behind you saying, this is the way, walk in it.”

My goodness, Hope, I’m finding that we love many of the same things. The verses you’re sharing are also some of my favorites. If you were an animal, which one would you be, and why?
I remembered when my husband and I got married and I prayed, “Oh, Lord, if I could walk down this aisle like the humble donkey that carried you into Jerusalem, I would be so honored. Hide me so they all can see your glorious beauty!”

What is your favorite food?
Food. Food has started a lot of problems from the Garden of Eden to the manna and quail. It’s started problems with me, too! I try to stay out of it but I keep coming back! Haha! I love seafood and the Irish girl in me gravitates to potatoes in any culinary format.

I made a pot of potato soup for us. That’s what we’re having for lunch today. What is the problem with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you overcome it?
Time. Writing can be difficult, meticulous work. I began my first novel when I was pregnant with my third child. Monday through Friday I put my babies down for a nap for an hour or two and interviewed people who had been to China over the phone. After we put the babies to bed at night, I went back to my writing to check the interview and glean the material I needed for the novel. And I hadn’t even started writing yet!

I’ll never forget meeting Francine Rivers at Sandy Cove Christian Writers Conference. I talked to her after she spoke and I asked her, “Did you write when your children were small?”

“Oh, yes.”

“How did you do it?”

“I put their toys on the floor in my office, and they played while I wrote.”

I was shocked! “Really?”

She smiled. “Really. It is possible.”

I thought if Francine Rivers can do it, then I can, too. So I learned to glean another hour of writing out of my day when the children were awake. It’s easier now that they’re growing up and moving on with their lives.

Tell us about the featured book.
I was invited to go to China in 2002 and I took my dad with me. It was the best trip of my life! He was thrilled to preach in the underground seminaries and I delighted to interview Chinese Christians from the underground house church movement.

My translator set up a meeting for us in a hotel. All of our meetings had to be done discreetly and without raising attention of the Religious Affairs Bureau or Public Security Bureau Police in China.
I stood outside the hotel room where we would meet and saw a man with a cane walking toward me. My interpreter told me his leg was injured years ago in prison when he refused to submit to Communist pressure to recant his faith.

Inside the hotel room, this man told me the incredible story of how he and his Christian house church leaders were kidnapped and tortured by an evil cult in China called The Eastern Lightning Cult.

He asked me to tell our president and the American people about this cult and warn them. After my dad and I boarded the flight out of Hong Kong to go home, the Lord impressed it upon my heart that his story would be the content of my second novel, and I began writing there on the plane with paper and pen.

Across the China Sky is that story.

Please give us the first page of the book.
Chapter One
Chen Liko tugged at the yoke, signaling the old gray water buffalo to stop. The animal snorted and pointed his horns to the ground.

“That's the last row for today, Old Gray.”

The animal raised his head up and down with pleasure as his young master rubbed him hard on the neck.

Liko pulled a handkerchief from his back pocket and wiped away the sweat that had trickled into his eyebrows. Instinctively, he searched for her. His eyes scanned the watery rice paddies in the distance, then stopped on a figure still bent over in the murky water. Kwan Mei Lin worked tirelessly, as always, thrusting green rice shoots into the mud below the water.

Liko was grateful for her presence in the fields. Any moment of the day he could search for her and draw pleasure just knowing Mei Lin was next to him in the rice paddies of Tanching, far from the awful prison life she endured two years before.

He leaned over and unhooked the lines from the yoke and dropped the heavy wooden plow into the dark soil where it would stay until the next day’s work. Tired but satisfied, he slapped Old Gray on the backside with his stick.

“Back to the shed with you.” Old Gray plodded home beside Liko, the lead rope slackened between them.

Mei Lin stood then and waved at him, sending a flood of warmth through his middle. He waved back and pointed toward her family's cowshed.

The old cowshed was on the hill behind her house, and during spring planting Mei Lin often met him there to help him bed down Old Gray for the night.

How can readers find you on the Internet?
Amazon Author Page

Thank you for sharing your new book, and your life, with us today.

Readers, here is a link to the book. By using it when you order, you help support this blog.
Across the China Sky (Daughter of China Series)

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17 comments:

  1. mongupp7:18 AM

    Wow, sounds so interesting!
    Monica, Ontario

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  2. Anonymous8:00 AM

    The Christian Library Journal said that this book is "...like traveling to China and experiencing...the underground church..." I want readers to enter the world of Mei Lin and Liko. One young adult wrote to me and said, "Now when I am faced with a decision, I ask myself, 'What would Mei Lin do?' And I do that."

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  3. That was a great interview, Hope. I'm halfway through this book on Kindle, and have a hard time stopping! It's a great read, and I'm thankful to better understand how you managed to write it. Keep writing, my friend.

    Jean

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  4. Anonymous12:22 PM

    Any homeschoolers on the blog? I'm in my 10th year of homeschooling. My "baby" is in her junior year studying psyche, anatomy, geometry, etc. Teenagers have picked up this novel to read, but I would not recommend Across the China Sky to middle schoolers unless you are reading the book with them. There is a scene where a cult member tries to lure Liko (a godly young pastor age 20) into a sexual encounter. Liko hides his face and runs out of the room, so it shows a positive way to respond to sexual pressure. And this book is based on true stories! But I want to give homeschool families a forewarning. Other families are using this book as a guide on how cults can infiltrate a church and how to handle ourselves with immoral people.

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  5. Anonymous3:55 PM

    My Great-Grandpa was a missionary to South America and so my Grandpa grew up there (along with his brothers and sisters), so I've always been interested in missionaries spreading the Gospel overseas. Sounds like a great book!
    J.C. -Indiana-

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  6. Anonymous3:56 PM

    My Great-Grandpa was a missionary to South America and so my Grandpa grew up there (along with his brothers and sisters), so I've always been interested in missionaries and spreading the Gospel overseas. Sounds like a great book!
    J.C. -Indiana-

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  7. Anonymous3:58 PM

    Sorry accidentally published that twice...really sorry about that...

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  8. I am impressed with your courage to write about Communist suppression and oppression of believers in China. I pray for several prisoners there and am also impressed with the growth of the church in China, amidst all this persecution. Love to win and read your book. Sharon, CA wileygreen1(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  9. What an incredible story. I know I am going to be inspired.

    Mary P

    QLD AUSTRALIA

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  10. Anonymous8:40 AM

    I love to fellowship with people who have missionary hearts. There is a sweetness there that is unique to those who love the gospel and are not afraid to say so!
    Hope

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  11. Anonymous8:45 AM

    Sharon, your prayers mean EVERYTHING to your Chinese family. Don't stop! When interviewing Chinese pastors, one of them said Americans have a "buffet" of seminaries, churches, and Bible colleges. He admitted that in China the Christians have so little. He said, "So, we would ask--would you please pray for us?" Prayer truly releases Christians from tormentors and persecutors. God bless you for praying.
    Hope

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  12. Hope I found this post interesting. Loved your analogy of The Tree of Life. Thank you
    Ohio
    mcnuttjem0(at)gmail(dot)com

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  13. Sounds great!

    Jean K
    West Palm Bch., FL

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  14. This looks like a pretty good book!

    Rebekah TN

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  15. Anonymous3:18 PM

    Lena, you have such a neat group of followers here. LOVE the hunger for God! I think of what Jesus said, "The road is narrow and few there be that find it." You have a special few here.

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  16. Across the China Sky looks like a very interesting book. Loved the interview!
    Beth from Iowa

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  17. I enjoyed the first page of Across the China Sky, and I enjoyed the interview.

    Tonja in Virginia

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