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The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World…Word by Word

The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Are You Leaving a Legacy Now?

By Karen Ballon July 1, 2015
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Two weeks ago I wrote about a video made to honor Paul Lee, a student at Seattle Pacific University whose life was ended too soon in the shooting a year ago. The video mourned his loss, but it also celebrated his life and showed the impact he’d had on those he met in his few years of life. When I first watched the video, it inspired and challenged me. Paul’s legacy is one of joy and dance and celebration. That made me wonder what people will say about me when I’m gone? How have I affected those I’ve met? What legacy am I building? And so I shared the video, and the challenge with all of you. What legacy are we leaving?

One of the responses, from Andrew Budek-Schmeisser, got me thinking when he wrote:

“I’ve thought a lot about legacy in recent weeks, under the press of circumstance, and the truth is, I don’t know much more than when I first considered the question.

There’s no legacy I can deliberately leave, now, without it being forced or mannered, and the only things that are really out there are one novel and my blog…I can’t really read a lot of faith or meaning into life at the edge of the Mystery.”

He’s right, we can’t force a legacy. That would be like doing a good deed for someone, then pointing it out to them, saying, “Please take note of this wonderful thing I’ve done for you. It is my way of leaving a legacy.”

Um…no.

Nor can we, where we are now in life, know what our legacy will be after we’re gone. We can’t, as Andrew wrote, “read a lot of faith or meaning into life at the edge of the Mystery.” Or…

Can we? Can we have a sense, here and now, of the legacy we’re leaving? But why would we want to? Why even think about legacy? Isn’t that kind of egotistical?

No, not if you’re pondering it not to know you’ll be remembered, or to be assured someone will make a video about you or erect a monument to your life. I’ve been spurred to think about my own legacy not for me, but for the witness I leave for the only One who matters. For the Master Wordsmith, the Creator of all. I want my life, my words, my actions—my legacy–to draw people to him.

So how do we leave a legacy? I have my own thoughts on this, but before I share them, I wanted to see what you thought.

So tell me, friends, how do we, in the here and now, leave a legacy?

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Category: Career, CraftTag: Career, Legacy

Bestsellers Twenty Years Ago

By Dan Balowon June 30, 2015
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Twice each year, I take this space on the agency blog and make a trip down memory lane to see what books were selling many years ago. If you understand from where books have come, you can understand where books are going. Below is the New York Times bestseller list from July 2, 1995 and the Christian Booksellers Association list from July, 1995. A lot has happened in twenty years. NOTE: Check out …

Read moreBestsellers Twenty Years Ago
Category: Book Business, TrendsTag: Bestsellers, Trends

Does Genre Matter?

By Steve Laubeon June 29, 2015
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Earlier this month two literary heavyweights discussed the issue of “Genre” and whether or not it should exist in its current form. Read Neil Gaiman and Kazuo Ishiguro’s discussion in the New Statesman. It all started because Ishiguro’s new novel Buried Giant is not presented as a Fantasy novel despite having a number of elements in it that would brand it as a Fantasy (like ogres). The argument is …

Read moreDoes Genre Matter?
Category: Book Business, Book Proposals, Branding, Genre, PlatformTag: Branding, Genre

Fun Fridays – June 26, 2015

By Steve Laubeon June 26, 2015
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Every once in a while someone’s creativity will blow you away. Pun intended! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmSX8eX34Hs HT: Deborah Raney

Read moreFun Fridays – June 26, 2015
Category: Fun Fridays

Setting Yourself Apart

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon June 25, 2015
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Unfortunately, even though I’d love to represent each writer I’m fond of and enjoy hanging out with, I can’t represent everyone for a variety of reasons. That’s okay. CBA has many agents and authors, and God has a plan for all of us. But let”s say you hope your proposal rises to the top of my stack. Here are a few tips when submitting: 1.) Please follow our …

Read moreSetting Yourself Apart
Category: Book Proposals, Conferences, Get Published, MarketingTag: book proposals, Get Published

Nuance: A Key to Real-Life Characters

By Karen Ballon June 24, 2015
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I love watching movies and TV. Love being transported by the stories and entertained by the characters. Lately, I’ve been keying in on something, though, that is helping me with building characters in my fiction. Nuance. It’s defined by good ol’ Webster’s as “a subtle or small distinction,” but I’m finding that it could be defined as “the difference between real-life and stereotypical characters.” …

Read moreNuance: A Key to Real-Life Characters
Category: Craft, Writing CraftTag: Characters, Craft, Writing Craft

The Accidental Theologian

By Dan Balowon June 23, 2015
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I’m stepping far outside my theological pay grade today so you will need to test and weigh the words of this post. After forty years of knowing Jesus, I find myself challenging my assumptions about many things on a regular basis, attempting to see myself as God sees me. What attitudes do I have that should change? What comfortable positions do I have that are more self-deception than God’s truth? …

Read moreThe Accidental Theologian
Category: Creativity, Theology, Writing Craft

The Sale of Family Christian Stores Halted

By Steve Laubeon June 22, 2015
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In case you missed the news, late last week the judge presiding over the bankruptcy case of the Family Christian Stores (FCS), voided the auction results on which I reported three weeks ago (see that story here). There were a number of reasons for the judge’s decision. On page eleven of his 48 page ruling the judge called the auction process “nothing short of chaotic” and said that some mistakes …

Read moreThe Sale of Family Christian Stores Halted
Category: Book Business, Legal IssuesTag: family christian stores

Fun Fridays – June 18, 2015

By Steve Laubeon June 19, 2015
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Care to try a little Verdi, Puccini, and Rossini with your spaghetti?

Read moreFun Fridays – June 18, 2015
Category: Fun Fridays

Why We Must Be Forthright

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon June 18, 2015
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 I’ve heard more than one writer say, “I’m sneaking Christianity into a book for the general market!” Wanting to reach the unsaved is a wonderful mission, but in my opinion, sneaking (and I’m not kidding when I say authors actually use this verb) Christianity into books isn’t the way to do it. Why not? Well, for one, that’s not the example Christ set. …

Read moreWhy We Must Be Forthright
Category: Branding, Craft, Creativity, Marketing, Trends, Writing CraftTag: Christian, Craft, Writing Craft
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