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Unveiling the Power of Spiritual Themes in Fiction with Laurel Thomas
Episode 9118th October 2023 • Writing Momentum • Christopher and Gena Maselli
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In this episode of the Writing Momentum podcast, Chris and Gena are joined by author Laurel Thomas to discuss incorporating spiritual themes into fiction. They explore how to find and craft a theme, the benefits of adding depth to a story, and the importance of emotional impact. Laurel shares her process of starting with open-ended questions and weaving spiritual themes into her fantasy novels. She also addresses the possibility of adding themes into a manuscript that has already been started. The episode encourages writers to explore universal themes that resonate with readers, regardless of their religious beliefs.

Transcripts

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Hey, and welcome to the Writing Momentum Podcast.

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I'm Christopher Maselli.

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I'm here with my wife Gena.

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How's it going Gena?

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Hello, it's going really well.

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We're so excited about this time that we get to spend with

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one of our favorite people.

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That's right.

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Laurel Thomas is back.

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How are you doing, Laurel?

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I'm good.

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I am glad to be here.

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Yay.

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But for those of you who don't remember, Laurel is a formal high

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school English teacher and she is also an award-winning author who has

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written for inspirational magazines like Guideposts and like Mysterious Ways,

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and she has ghosted nonfiction, and she also have multiple novels out like

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Rivers Call, When Stars Brush Earth.

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And what's the newest one that you have?

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Stones of Promise, right?

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Stones of Promise, yes.

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Yes, there it is on the screen, for those of you who are watching on YouTube,

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Stones of Promise, those can be found at Amazon wherever good books are sold.

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And your books are really, they play right into what we're gonna talk about today,

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which is spiritual themes in fiction.

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'cause I know you include spiritual themes in your books, don't you?

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You know, I do Chris, I was thinking about this morning and so what I

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do, and I know that this probably has more to do with Logline, but

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I think of a question, like a big question, and I'll just think about it.

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Like for Her Name is Gatekeeper.

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The question that I was thinking about was that, think of the unlikely gatekeepers

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or deliverers who have been positioned at historic moments like Winston Churchill.

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I re-watched part of Darkest Hour and I don't, that movie just was just so

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amazing to me that here is this man, that he was the lone voice and really

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at the darkest part or the climax of the movie, he's totally along with the

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weight of literally civilized world on his shoulders, and yet he was not the one that

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anyone would've chosen to take that place.

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So that, that question to me has been what I've based Her Name is Gatekeeper,

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my new novel on is just that question, what about these unlikely deliverers,

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the people you would never expect.

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Yes.

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And then all of a sudden history propels them into a place of action and into a

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place of what, visibility or spotlight?

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Not the good kind.

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Yeah, I think with themes, I've heard different authors talk about

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theme and different, some people say, I don't think about theme at all.

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I don't really deal with theme.

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It's not anything that's on my radar.

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I just try to focus on the story.

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There are other people that say I look at theme at the end.

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I finish a book and then I think, what is the theme here?

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And then I weave it back in.

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But for you, I love that your theme is really at the center of your

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foundation of creating your novels.

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So can you talk about that a little bit?

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And you've talked a little bit where you start with these questions

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and you go from there, but what makes themes so important for you?

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You for sure can get too heavy handed.

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That's why I like the whole question thing, because it's open-ended, right?

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So you're not forced into an outcome.

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And I think that's what people are saying when they don't want to be theme

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heavy or theme focused in the novel.

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They don't want the theme to take over in a way that makes like

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a predictable outcome or makes it too on the nose and so on.

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So I love the open-ended questions.

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But you still have to craft a good story out of them.

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Like when I was reading or writing Stones of Promise, so Alessandra,

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the main character, her mother is basically, sort of a mass murderer

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against the Magi, who are the good guys in the stories, the series.

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So my question is what if forgiveness is impossible but

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required for saving the world?

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Hey, I write up the fantasy.

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We don't go with the little questions.

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So it was the walk of forgiveness when it really is impossible.

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And so that's was the basis of the story.

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I can't say that I totally knew how all of that was gonna pan out.

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Because everyone has to walk out forgiveness in ways

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that are intensely personal.

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I wasn't really sure how that was gonna work out on the page.

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And you still have to have a structure.

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One of the things I've learned from YouTuber, Abbie Emmons, she taught that

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you take the truth that you want to shout from the rooftops and you turn it upside

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down and make it a lie, and that lie becomes what your protagonist believes.

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That's a great exercise.

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Isn't it?

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Because then you have that lie that will make a character arc possible.

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And what I've found is that you wanna make that lie really

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strong, especially in fantasy.

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You really wanna make it a vow because vows are such a big part of our paradigms.

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And yet to break down those paradigms, it requires really, pointed conflict

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and pointed obstacles that go right to the very heart of that lie.

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We're traveling in a lot of directions here.

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Keep me on course.

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It seems to me like a theme like that, especially when it's

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spiritual in nature, right?

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That gets into the deeper things of who we are, right?

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And all of that, it kinda gives teeth to a novel, right?

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You could write just a fun story, almost like a TV sitcom.

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That it may be a fun story, but it doesn't actually mean anything.

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But by incorporating that theme, it suddenly brings it to a new depth.

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Even if your novel is lighthearted, it still brings it to a new depth that

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you wouldn't otherwise have, I think.

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It really it makes all the difference.

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And you talked about how, you write a lot of fantasy.

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Does fantasy tend to lend more toward spiritual themes,

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those deeper things in life?

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Or is it any kind of story?

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It could be any story, Chris.

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For me, it became fantasy.

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For when Stars Brush Earth.

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I'd had a dream years ago that Tom and I were living in this mountain Chateau.

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It was a big chateau and it was full of children.

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And I remember realizing that we were protecting them.

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And so I did research and I realized, that the Jewish children were sent

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all over during Nazi German when the Nazis were really fueling World War II

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and the Nazis referred to children as useless eaters, and so they were sent

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to Mountain Chateau and to convents.

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But really, I didn't think I, I could write a story that big, I wasn't

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prepared to write like The Nightingale, which is, an incredible story about

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actual, Nazi occupation of France.

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From the point of view of two sisters and their dad.

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So I knew I had to narrow it down, but for me, I felt like I could

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say what I wanted to say about protecting children in fantasy.

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And my whole premise was what is it about ourselves that we disregard, that the

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enemy recognizes and that the world needs?

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Yes.

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Certainly to defeat the enemy.

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And so it, for me, that whole story began to unpack in, in fantasy where I

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could bring in a supernatural demon and I could bring in supernatural gifts in

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Mara that she thought were weird, but that she ended up really needing, in the end.

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Yeah, for me, fantasy is, has been a fun way to translate Perretti it translates

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spiritual things into story form.

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In a story, a good story.

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Yeah.

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And I would think it would lend to actually helping you create your

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story when you have that theme.

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Because I've written books, for kids before that I'm not exactly

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sure what the theme's gonna be when I start brainstorming it.

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But then once I come upon that theme, it gives it a grounding that I know that,

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okay, this is what the main character needs to overcome, which is what you were

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talking about in the beginning when you talk about how the protagonist now has,

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you want to have them to believe the opposite so that they can overcome that.

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And it just, it's it really helps you even plot your novel in a lot of ways, right?

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And inform your characters.

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I think so.

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Yeah, I was thinking when you were talking about the lie that your character

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believes, which I know you and I have been in a class before where we were

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working on that, what is the lie that the person that your character believes?

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But it's interesting that if that lie is tied to the theme, like what you're

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talking about, but that really helps put some meat on a character, doesn't it?

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It really helps flesh 'em out.

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They're not flat.

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There's reasons for why they do what they do and what they believe.

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Yeah.

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I'm imagining right now we have some people who are listening who are

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thinking, oh man, I've written half my book and I don't know what the theme is.

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Is it too late to incorporate the strong theme in their story?

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Or how can they go about that?

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Because I know you work with authors who come to you with stories who

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have been started, and I'm sure you have to talk about working a

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theme in how do you work that in.

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After you've already begun working on your manuscript?

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Yeah, you can because I did that with River's Call.

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Often your first novel is your laboratory.

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Oh my goodness.

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Everything I knew I would add into River's Call and then I go, oh my gosh.

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There's no theme.

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There's no lie there 'cause basically with River's Call I wrote it as scenes

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and I made the scenes as sensory as I could from a young girl's point of view,

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because I'd been, I was a stepdaughter who came to Georgia for the first time in the

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summer times, and I remember the sensory parts of a new experience in the South in

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a way that was just, it's never left me.

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And so I found that was, valuable with Missy's point of view because

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young people tend to be more sensory about the way they see the world.

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And yet I didn't know for sure how I was gonna weave the character

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arc in, and I had to do that.

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I had to add that in later.

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And I just inserted little bits of backstory about her mother.

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And then of course, the full realization of losing her mother and how it

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affected her comes out in the climax.

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So I think you can add it in.

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Hey, it's your story, right?

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You can go back and weave in what you need to weave in.

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Rene Gutteridge, our dear friend.

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She said writing a novel's being an artist, you paint the first picture,

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but then you don't have any details you're going to weave in life into

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that oil painting or that portrait.

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You're gonna add dimension and, I just had to get over the fact.

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Chris and Gena that the story's creation might be very messy, but

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that was okay because if I just kept going forward, I would learn

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what made it a really great story.

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I will say, Don't be a perfectionist about this.

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Look, if you have a good story, people read it and go,

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Hey, this is a great story.

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Boom.

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Let it go.

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You can write more novels, right?

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And I think it's important to, and this is a slightly different subject, but I think

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it's important to finish the book, right?

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I think sometimes we might hear things like this and think, oh, I didn't include

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that, so we want to go back and put it in, but we haven't finished the book.

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I think it's important to make sure you get that book done.

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Don't let things like this hold you up.

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But that said, if you're able to put in a spiritual theme into your

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book, you're probably going to find that it is so much deeper than what

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you originally thought it would be.

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It has so much more to it because now there's meaning now you're

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connecting with other people's hearts rather than just their heads.

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It's not just an enjoyable read, it's something that might

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grip them in a different way.

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I totally agree.

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I think that really it's the dividing line between a good story and a

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great story is that emotional impact.

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And I know Gena and I were learning that with one of our master

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classes that Robin Patchen did.

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You can say you need emotional impact, but how does that happen exactly.

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And I remember with Missy, the main character in River's Call her life

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and her heart began to speak things that I remember as a young person.

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And I remember that shift when I realized that the world was not a

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happy place, that there were times that it was a very painful place.

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But that didn't mean that life wasn't good or that life was over.

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That one definitely evolved.

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And I agree.

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Before you launch it, I would say be sure that you have that strong

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emotional element in your story because it doesn't have to be a complicated

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story to win the hearts of readers.

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Yeah.

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That's good.

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And you've touched on a few things, but what are some things that

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writers need to watch out for when we're talking about adding these

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spiritual themes into fiction?

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That is so interesting, Gena, because I don't write for the Christian market.

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I have many friends who do, and I love that.

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And I love the Christian market.

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I just don't write for it.

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So my books have to be picked up by secular agencies.

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So there's not any scripture in them and they're all principles that I don't know.

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Unless she would know them.

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I don't know.

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Would anybody really know about the Magi other than, the Magi

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who gave their gifts to Jesus?

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And yet that the whole concept of Magi was that they were doing more research,

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they were actually counselors to kings.

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They were feared when they came on the scene.

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Because of the weight that they carried.

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And none of that comes with scripture, but it's all true.

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And of course I love redemptive arcs.

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So basically that's a positive character arc.

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But I think that a negative character arc can also be very

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authentic and certainly, Redemptive.

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I've never written one, but does that answer your question?

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And I think you can write spiritual stories without having so much of a

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Christian theme that's very what plain or very what's the word I'm looking for?

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You said earlier on the nose do you find that sometimes authors get too

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preachy or too in your face with these spiritual themes to where they

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override just even the story themselves?

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Probably.

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Yeah, I don't know Chris.

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I'm sure they could.

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The fiction that I read is pretty much across the board and I thought

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Hunger Games has a incredible spiritual message that we were putting our

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children on the altar of entertainment and living a life that was like

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totally sensual and totally whatever.

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But our children were on an altar and they were ready to be sacrificed.

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And so to me, even though Suzanne Collins did not write that, the Hunger

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Games as a spiritual novel, I heard a spiritual theme in that trilogy.

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Yes.

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Yes, exactly.

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And I think that's what, as we're talking about spiritual themes for those of us

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who are Christian, we recognize that the, there are these themes that are very near

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and dear to our hearts and to our faith.

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But for the person who is not a Christian, there are still those spiritual themes.

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The message of forgiveness is fairly, is universal.

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The message of even hope in the midst of tragedy or horror is a universal message.

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When we use the word spiritual, we are obviously thinking about in light of

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our faith, but for the person who may be holds a wider view or just a different

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view, some of those themes are still, they're just so core to humanity.

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They're core to humanity.

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But I do love when redemptive themes and redemptive messages are worked

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into fiction, because that just gets me excited and I just love it.

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Me too.

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Because I think it would be hard for me to write a story that didn't

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have it, a redemptive theme, because I believe that redemption can

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touch the deepest and the darkest.

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So if I couldn't write that, then it wouldn't be me.

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I just finished Tosca Lee's book about, it's a thriller and I

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noticed that her themes that she weaves in are very redemptive too.

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So that was a fun read.

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That's good.

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Tell us a little bit about, you've got a book here that's out right

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now called Stones of Promise.

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Does that have a spiritual theme in it?

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Yes.

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Stones of Promise was the one that was all about forgiveness.

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What about when forgiveness is impossible?

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Yes.

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Yes.

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I love that.

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What about when it's your mother?

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So it, it touched on so many deep levels and so then putting it in that

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fantasy, that kind of epic fantasy where if she doesn't forgive, her

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gift is not released in a way that it needs to, for her world to be saved.

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That's like a one-liner, but it was a lot of fun to write and I, Tom and I

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lived in the desert for oh four and a half years in Midland, and so there's

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a lot of the desert in Stones of Promise that I remember with clarity

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not having been raised in the desert.

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Again, I remember the sensory things about the sky and what a

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dust storm looked like when it was approaching and things like that.

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So it was a lot of fun to write.

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That's so good.

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Just drawing from what you know.

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I love that.

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That's so good.

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I love that.

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And where can people find you, they can find your books on Amazon.

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Where do they find you?

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Yes, you can find me at www.writewithlaurel.com.

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I'm also active on Facebook.

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Laurel A.

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Thomas is my author page.

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Also Write Your Heart Out is my business.

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So you can find, Write Your Heart Out on just about everywhere,

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Facebook and Instagram.

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And we have a weekly, on Tuesdays at noon, a weekly community that meets

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called Writer's Round Table, and it's just a fun hour long community where

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we talk about a craft tip and then share how that affects our writing, so.

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I love that.

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I love it when we're writing together, we're building that community and

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as we talked about before, not making it a solitary venture, but

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it's something that we do together.

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And so thank you so much for being on the podcast this week.

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Laurel.

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Thank you, Laurel.

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It's always good to have you.

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Thank you.

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Thank you.

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I've enjoyed it.

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All right.

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We hope you enjoyed this podcast.

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If you did, would you please rate, review, subscribe, and share it with someone else

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who might want to know about incorporating spiritual themes in their fiction,

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'cause it can make all the difference in that book that they're writing.

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This is what we do.

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We get together with other writers because we know that alone, it's

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hard to get our writing done, but writing can be something that we do

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together because together what Gena?

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We have writing momentum.

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All right.

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Bye-bye.

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