Christian Retailing

Christian Book Expo Coming Thursday Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 16 March 2009 03:13 PM America/New_York
altWell, this is the week- the first-ever Christian Book Expo starting Thursday in Dallas, Texas. If you're just tuning in, you should know the event, which is open to the public, will feature more than 200 Christian authors who will present workshops, participate in panel discussions, speak in evening worship sessions and do book signings in the event's exhibit hall. For more information about the show, read some of our previous stories here and here or the official event Web site – www.christianbookexpo.com.

I'll be there, attending the workshops and panel discussions, walking the floor and keeping my ear to the ground for the latest news in the Christian book world. I also hope to say hello to any of you faithful CR readers who are attending. If you're not going, keep checking our CBE coverage here to find out the latest.
 
Actress Demi Moore calls 'The Shack' 'life-changing' Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 09 March 2009 09:27 AM America/New_York
altActress Demi Moore (Ghost, G.I. Jane, A Few Good Men) is the newest voice endorsing William P. Young's The Shack (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA). On her Twitter account, Moore praised the book, relaying quotes and telling the author she was “tremendously moved." She said she'd “definitely recommend” the “powerful” and “life-changing” novel for those with issues with God or Jesus, also pointing out it's not about “religious dogma.” Moore's husband, Ashton Kutcher, also said it sounded like a “must read” based on her comments and quotes. Finally, the actress also introduced Young to her Twitter followers by his Twitter account, telling her followers to give him “a warm welcome.”

After finishing the novel, Moore also solicited follower suggestions for her next read. By marking “favorite” on response posts (one of which was a suggestion for Frank Peretti's Monster), the recommended books are now collected on her page, easily creating her own Twitter book club.
 
'17 Children and Counting' meets 'Fireproof' Print Email
Written by Eric Tiansay   
Friday, 20 February 2009 05:38 PM America/New_York
Stars of the hit reality TLC show 17 Children and Counting, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar as well as their multiple kids, recently met their favorite movie star--Kirk Cameron.

While they may not watch much television, the Duggar family traveled to the San Antonio Independent Christian Film Festival in San Antonio to take in the films and chat with Cameron, star of the surprise pro-marriage hit Fireproof. Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, www.duggarfamily.com, have 18 children-eight girls and 10 boys, all having names starting with the letter "J."

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Exclusive Preview of 'Good & Evil' Graphic Novel Print Email
Written by Staff   
Thursday, 19 February 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
Graphic novels have become more popular in recent years, as Hollywood has mined their pages for ideas for blockbuster movies like 300, Sin City and the upcoming Watchmen. Comic books haven't typically intersected much with Christian publishing and are rarely found in bookstores. In recent times, however, more creators and publishers are lining up to provide a wider selection to Christian readers, including Head Press Publishing's Eye Witness series, Vida Entertainment's David and Daniel and a growing selection of Manga offerings from Tyndale and Doubleday.

One new entry is Good & Evil, which released in November from No Greater Joy Ministries and distributed through Anchor, a 336-page full-color depiction of biblical scenes written by Michael Pearl and Marvel Comics artist Danny Bulanadi (Fantastic Four, Micronauts, the Incredible Hulk). The new release is a full-color rendition of an earlier black and white release, which has 100,000 copies in print.

Christian Retailing readers can get an exclusive 23-page full-color preview of Good & Evil by clicking here.

In other graphic novel news, Ted Dekker's Circle Series graphic novels (Black, White, Red), along with two Lost graphic novels, have garnered “positive reviews,” according to Allen Arnold, vice president and publisher, fiction, for Thomas Nelson. Arnold told Christian Retailing the company is releasing two additional graphic novels this summer and including the entire graphic novels of Black, Red and White free in the back of the upcoming 5th Anniversary editions of Black, Red and White. Dekker's Green (Book Zero in the Circle Series), releases in September.

Recently released sales figures from pop culture researcher Icv2 show that graphic novels sales rose 5% from 2007 to 2008, its slowest growth since 2001 and their growth occurred more in general bookstores than specialty comics shops. It was also reported that Manga sales fell 17% during the year.
 
Mark Driscoll on CNN Print Email
Written by Staff   
Wednesday, 18 February 2009 11:19 AM America/New_York

Did anyone catch Mars Hill pastor and author Mark Driscoll (Vintage Jesus, Vintage Church) on CNN with comedian/commentator D.L. Hughley? If not, check it out below. What are your thoughts?

 
'Sisterchicks' Return May 19 Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 16 February 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
Robin Jones Gunn's popular "Sisterchicks"alt series returns on May 19 with the release of Sisterchicks in Wooden Shoes! (Multnomah). The story, which follows earlier titles Sisterchicks Go Brit! and Sisterchicks in Gondolas! centers on Summer Finley who, after receiving word of an abnormal medical report, travels to Holland and meets up with her longtime pen-pal, Noelle. The book will retail for $13.99.

Gunn, who has over 70 books to her credit and total sales  exceeding 3.5 million, is the author of several series, including "Glenbrook," "Katie Weldon," "Christy Miller," "Sierra Jenson" and the "Christy and Todd: the Teen Years" series.
 
'The Shack' author visits 'Good Morning America' Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Friday, 13 February 2009 04:50 PM America/New_York

William Paul Young, author of the paradigm-shifting best-seller The Shack (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group), got some prime time recently on ABC’s Good Morning America. Interviewer Robin Roberts seemed personally pleased with the success of Young’s novel and affirmed in their conversation that “God knows all.”

 

Having sold more than 6 million copies, The Shack prompted testimonies sent to ABC’s Web site, three which were aired, including a woman learning to grieve her son who committed suicide.

 

“I think it asks the questions that we’ve been wanting to talk about for a long time,” Young said of his novel. “It’s almost like it’s given a language to people to have conversations with.”

 

Young’s current project is his autobiography, which his wife—who prompted him to write The Shack—has encouraged him to do.

 

Truly, The Shack can be paradigm-shifting in terms of how readers view God, but I wonder how much of a best-seller it would be if God were not a large African-American woman, a carpenter and an ethereal Asian spirit rolled into one?

 

Watch the interview on the Good Morning America Web site.

 

 
Contest: Free GPS from Whitaker House Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 13 February 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
Who doesn't love a giveaway? I'm not a frequent winner but when I did get a new DVD player at a record company media breakfast around 10 years ago, I nearly wept (and stopped by the store to pick up some movies). The cool thing about the contests is that, sooner or later, somone is going to win -  at least that's what my mom told me when I was licking all those stamps to send back in for our annual Publisher's Clearing House entries.
To promote the new book Significant Living: A Road Map for the Second Half of Your Life by Jerry & Shirley Rose, Whitaker House has unveiled an online contest to win a Tomtom XL GPS personal navigator (a value of $299). At http://significantliving.whitakerhouse.com/, readers can find out more about the book, arriving in stores April 7, written by the hosts of the television program Significant Living, and register to win.The book will retail for $19.99.
 
Exclusive Online Q&A - Stephen Mansfield Print Email
Written by Staff   
Tuesday, 10 February 2009 11:27 AM America/New_York
On business, church hurts, The Faith of Barack Obama and faith in politics

You have two books that you're currently working for two publishers and one is a profile of the Guinness company?

Yes. I had been coming out of the political season and a lot of debates, thinking about the founding fathers vision of society and so I began to think a lot about what was in society, like corporate scandals, the election. I have always been intrigued by the Guinness family, which was a strongly Christian family, (they) funded the gospel around the world. I don't know if you know that in the old city of Jerusalem, there's only one Protestant church, it's called Christ Church and it's Episcopal. Guinness money built it. I could go on and on and on.

The other thing is Guinness as a company is unbelievable in taking care of its people. For example, just an aside here, I have a book from the 1920s where they describe the fact that they had doctors on call 24 hours a day for their employees and dentists and clinics. Massages, every other kind of thing. This is in the 1920s, now, in the time of the Great Depression.

What I thought I would do is to write a very unusual history, not even a history but a meditation, a look at Guinness and its heritage and going through three or four themes at once. One is the values of a Christian company. How really do you build a company on a faith basis? Second of all, the transmission of that down through the generations. We all know that you can have a strong family of faith in one generation and the next generation, some of them are living like devils. How does that happen? Then I wanted to talk about the beer, but not so much as 'hey, let's all go have a drink.' I don't even drink beer. But more from the standpoint of how it's powered civilization. There's a whole theory out there now that beer may have actually been behind a lot of the early innovations, once people developed the idea of beer. There are three or four things – faith, faith undergirding a company, faith transmitted down through a corporate line and of course, I also wanted it to be a book about business – how a company takes care of its employees and prospers as a result. That's why I'm writing that book. It's part of Thomas Nelson business line.

What's the other book?

The one that's distinctly Christian book is one I'm doing for Tyndale House. That book is about believers getting over their hurt and offense with the church. I pastored for 20 years, had a great experience and for some reason, I've been called into help with all types of situations where there have been church splits and Ted Haggard-type situations. And I've had years and years of experience watching people or the church have to fire the pastor who had an affair, how to bring the new guy in, how do they be gracious, or whatever. The humorous title is Aint No Church Like a Church Hurt? But that's not going to be the actual title. I'm writing from the perspective of - we're losing a lot of great people with their offense with the church, their painful and hurtful wounding experiences in church – we need these people back more than ever, so let me talk bluntly to them about how they can be restored. And also some wisdom for the church as to how not to be an abuse factory. Gritty, down and dirty, hard-hitting, kind of a Blue Like Jazz approach. It's obviously something very needed. There's a lot of anti-church, 'we don't need religion' kind of thing, especially among the young. Maybe my perspective is skewed because I work in Washington and Nashville, but I see a lot of floating mass of wounded humanity out there that we need to get plugged back in and help us change this culture that's in crisis. So that's what I'm writing about.

And you're writing both at the same time?

I'm writing both at the same time. They're not due until the middle of the year. The Guinness I'll write a little later and the other I'm writing now.

Can you share some of your observations that came as a result of the release of The Faith of Barack Obama?

It was a very interesting thing. When the press first began to talk about the book before it was even released, I had some very violent and angry reactions from those on the right, the political right. I even had some death threats. Of course, nobody had read the book yet, they were all speculating, but since I'd written The Faith of George W. Bush, they figured I'd turned tail and gone the opposite direction. When the book came out, it was cited by both sides of the aisle as an objective treatment. If you read the book, you'll conclude Obama is not an evangelical, that he's got some liberal version of Christianity and you'll still be mad at him if you want to be.

The two most intriguing things that came to me was – number one, the surprise of the mainstream media that an evangelical could write an objective book about religion. They constantly expressed that perspective: 'Wow, I know you're not going to vote for him but thanks for just trying to telling the truth about him.' It's not just that they were complimenting me but I think they think Evangelicalism is a brain bypass and we can't just think rational thoughts in the real world without coming at it with what they perceive to be our bias.

The second thing to me was the anger in the church about politics and the government. Rush Limbaugh is a friend of mine. I like him, but he's entertainment. He's not really modeling for us the Christian perspective on politics, that we should be angry, attacking these people, that we should be speaking of liberals as though they are the Antichrist. One of the things that amazed me is how much anger and rage there is in the church about politics and, of course, Obama. While I'm not an Obama supporter, whatever your response is to be should be based on Scripture to any politician. You certainly are not supposed to hate them, rage against them and tell nasty jokes about them, that sort of thing. I ran into that time and time again. Those things surprised me and it was a real interesting 4-5 months to be at the forefront of that.

Another interesting thing is that I've done a lot of U.S. Media, but the amount of media I've done internationally is unbelievable because they're not used to talking about their politicians from a faith perspective. Obama has been so forthcoming about his faith that it forces the BBC, the Chilean paper or the French magazines to deal with his faith, because he's so upfront about it. I've done a lot of interviews where I had to get an interpreter on the line so we could do the interview. France, African countries, South American countries, Asian countries. I've probably done 7-8 BBC interviews now. That's astonishing. I did a lot with Bush but I think it was 3-4. I just think that Obama is forcing normally secular media in other countries to talk about this issue.

Did you have reaction from the Obama campaign?

Yes, they actually were in contact with me. They were grateful that I tried to do an objective job. Obviously they didn't like everything but then, the Bush family didn't like everything I said in The Faith of George W. Bush and that means I'm doing the right thing. In fact, the day I knew I had hit the mark with the Bush book is when Al Jazeera and the Bush family cited the book on the same day. That's when I knew I had nailed it and that's how it was with the Obama book. They thanked me for it, they actually put it on their website as the book to tell the truth about Obama's faith. When they put it on the site, they specifically said 'Mansfield is not an Obama supporter but he's told the truth.' That, to me, is a real compliment. That's what I want to accomplish.

How did the idea come about? Did you propose it?

We had been dancing around, looking for some vehicle. I had proposed a book on faith in that election because I could see the storm clouds gathering and it was going to be a very faith-based election. They said 'why don't we just do it on Obama?' I had actually thought of that but didn't think they would go for it quite frankly. I knew I could write an objective book about Obama's faith and we would still land in a solidly good Christian analysis of his faith but I didn't think they would want to do it. I was thrilled. So we did it. His story is really the best prism at which to look at faith and the culture and the election.

But faith in politics isn't going away anytime soon?

No, I think what this election has taught us that faith is forefront and politicians who are going to win national office and in some cases local office are going to have to be more articulate about these things. The likelihood is for example that McCain is the conservative evangelical but he so offended evangelicals in his approach to things that Obama won a larger percentage of evangelicals than anyone guessed. It's not just who you are but how you handle it.

The fact is McCain is probably closer to the average evangelical in America than Obama but his campaign and he so mishandled the “faith vote” that it didn't much matter, Obama won the day. For example, he went out and sought Rod Parsley and John Hagee's endorsement and within a matter of days rejected those endorsements. That's not good staff work. That doesn't make folks happy. That's embarrassing to these guys and puts a bad taste in their mouths. Of course, there's James Dobson, the last of the religious right lions and he did more attacking than he did endorsing. That may have been justified. I'm just saying the inability of the conservative candidate to capture the evangelical vote is one of the stories of this election.
 
Which Ending Do You Choose? Print Email
Written by Staff   
Wednesday, 04 February 2009 10:00 AM America/New_York
book coverIt's unusual for readers to be asked to shape the outcome of a novel. But in a new promotion for his upcoming thriller The Justice Game (Tyndale House), suspense writer Randy Singer (By Reason of Insantiy) has left the final verdict open-ended.In a YouTube video, the case is laid out for public view via a fake cable news show and a vote can be cast in favor of one party or the other.

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'Chicken Soup' Celebrates 15 Years, Offers Seconds Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 02 February 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
Chicken SoupHas it really been 15 years since the first Chicken Soup for the Soul book released? I fondly remember getting one from my cousin as a birthday gift and sharing all the stories with my co-workers, including one about a child buying shoes for his ailing mother that would later be encapsulated in the NewSong holiday hit, “The Christmas Shoes.” Tears were, of course, shed.

I imagine many more hearts were tugged, as the series, which is considered the bestselling publishing series in history, has amassed sales of over $1.3 billion and has over 112 million books in print.
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"The Shack" by Ted Dekker? Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 30 January 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
BoneMan's Daughters' The Shack
No, it's not The Shack but I'm sure the publisher doesn't mind a comparison, especially since the original design (below) went in a totally different direction. Besides the cover similarities, the latest release from bestselling author Ted Dekker does involve a serial killer. But this foray into the general market (it's being released by Hachette's general market imprint Center Street) revolves around the BoneMan who abducts women looking for the "ultimate daughter." Dekker, who continues to write with Christian publisher Thomas Nelson (most recently the novel Kiss), took an option in his contract for this standalone novel.
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'Uncommon' sight for Super Bowl Sunday Print Email
Written by Eric Tiansay   
Wednesday, 28 January 2009 03:16 PM America/New_York
A Christian book could be part of the plethora of sights for Super Bowl Sunday. Former Indianapolis Colts coach and best-selling author Tony Dungy will be part of NBC’s Super Bowl XLIII pre-game coverage Feb. 1 in Tampa, Fla., so look for him to plug Uncommon: Finding Your Path to Significance (Tyndale House Publishers).

Earlier this week, Dungy began his national media tour to launch Uncommon—released Jan. 27—with an appearance on ABC’s Good Morning America.
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Do Ghosts Clean Up After Themselves? Print Email
Written by Staff   
Tuesday, 27 January 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York

GhostwriterFaithWordsTravis Thrasher's next thriller, Ghostwriter, releasing in May through FaithWords, appears in the company's new Spring Summer 2009 catalog, its cover featuring a pen on a blood-stained, rough wood surface. According to the summary, the book centers on a suspense writer who finds himself in the center of real-life horror. Thrasher previously released Isolation with the company earlier this year.

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Deja Vu Designs Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 23 January 2009 12:00 AM America/New_York
Old-time felt-board flannelgraphs, used for Sunday school and children's church lessons in the 70s and 80s, make a modern comeback with two book covers scheduled for release in March. Fixing Abraham by Chris Tiegreen (Tyndale) and Relearning Jesus by Matthew Paul Turner (David C. Cook) seem to both follow the tradition of "rediscovery" books like Phillip Yancey's The Jesus I Never Knew and Lee Strobel's The Case for the Real Jesus (both Zondervan).
The book covers also have other similarities, like their two-word titles brought out by plain backgrounds and how-to subtitles ("How Taming Our Bible Heroes Blinds Us To the Wild Ways of God" and "How Reading the Beaititudes One More Time Changed My Life"). Tiegreen's book is new while Turner's is a redesigned re-release of his 2006 release from Revell, Beatitude: Relearning Jesus Through Truth, Contradiction and a Folded Dollar Bill.