This is an excerpt of Part 2 of an interview done by Janet Sketchley with the co-editors of A Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider. Read both parts of the interview at Janet's blog, God With Us: Finding Joy.

Janet: I’m not sure where you found time to write, but you each contributed a piece for the anthology as well. Was it difficult editing one another’s work without that second, impartial editor?

N.J. LindquistNJL: We tried to get at least a first draft done before the submissions deadline because we knew how swamped we’d be after that. I actually tried writing about four other short stories before I hit on the one that we used in the book.

I have two terrific concept/substantive editors who live close-by, so they always read my work first anyway. (My #2 son and my husband, in case you’re wondering.) They give me very honest and often annoying feedback. So I don’t think editing our own pieces was a huge problem. I think I was as tough on Wendy as I’d been on everyone else.

The real problem was that we kept leaving our own pieces to the last to edit, which wasn’t good.

Wendy Elaine NellesWEN: Yes, we were tough on each other’s pieces too, and we went through a number of revisions just like everyone else. But it was hard slogging because we were completely exhausted by the time we focused on finishing our own pieces at the end.

I deliberately chose to write someone else’s story, because I think too often writers who are Christian focus only on their own experiences when many other people have wonderful stories others would benefit by reading. But writing a 3,500 word human interest profile is a huge amount of work, because you have to get to know the people, do lengthy interviews, ask the right questions, transcribe everything that was said, organize the material, condense it all, focus on the story aspects, get the answers to any missing details, retain the other persons’ voices… and make sure that you have represented them fairly, accurately and compellingly.

Read the rest of this interview

Read Part 1 of the interview 

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Janet Sketchley, whose true story, "The Road Trip that Wasn't," was chosen for inclusion in A Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider, just posted Part 1 of an in-depth interview with the editors of the book, N. J. Lindquist and Wendy Elaine Nelles.

To read the answers to questions such as "What made you believe so strongly in the project?" and "What submission criteria helped you choose the best of the best?" click on the link below.

Read Part 1 of the Interview 

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Bonnie Beldan-Thomson, contributor to A Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider, had an inspiring interview with Peter Kazmaier recently about the popular anthology and her part in it.

Here's a little peek inside:

KAZMAIER: Bonnie, by all accounts Hot Apple Cider has been a success in a relatively small book market like Canada. How many books have been sold? What prompted the issue of the second volume?

BELDAN-THOMSON: Hot Apple Cider has 45,000 copies in circulation. The warm reception it received is one of the reasons for creating A Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider. Readers wanted more.

But writers, as well as readers, benefit. Being a contributor to one of these books provides a unique opportunity for developing one’s craft through an intensive editing process under the tutelage of editors, NJ Lindquist and Wendy Nelles.  Contributors to these two anthologies gained first-hand understanding of the many steps required to take a book from manuscript to printing to sales.

Another benefit to the contributors is that they become part of an on-line community where they connect and learn from each other.

KAZMAIER: In A Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider, your story Love in the Ice and Snow is an intensely personal account of a daughter visiting her aged father. I presume this was based on your own experience. How did this story come to you?

BELDAN-THOMSON: The characters, setting and plot of this story are fictional. However, my understanding of how it might happen came about because of the last years of my father’s life.

The experience of losing someone you love to dementia, bit by bit, day by day, is difficult and painful.  My comfort came from looking not at the parts of my father that had gone missing, but at the bits of him that remained intact.  I saw this the day my siblings and I took musical instruments to his nursing home.  He no longer communicated verbally and gave no sign of recognizing us, but when we played familiar old songs, he began to sing, not just the tune, but words.  And he sang not just the melody, but harmony.  In spite of evidence to the contrary, my dad was there.

Read the entire interview on Peter's blog.

Congratulations, Bonnie. Your contributions are sure to continue blessing many.

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