The Steve Laube Agency is committed to providing top quality guidance to authors and speakers. Our years of experience and success brings a unique service to our clients. We focus primarily in the Christian marketplace and have put together an outstanding gallery of authors and speakers whose books continue to make an impact throughout the world.
Our Service Philosophy

Content
To help the author develop and create the best book possible. Material that has both commercial appeal and long-term value.

Career
To help the author determine the next best step in their writing career. Giving counsel regarding the subtleties of the marketplace as well as the realities of the publishing community.

Contract
To help the author secure the best possible contract. One that partners with the best strategic publisher and one that is mutually beneficial for all parties involved.
Recent Posts
You Probably Won’t Get a Book Deal. We Still Need You to Write: Guest Post by Darryl Dash
DARRYL DASH is the pastor of Grace Fellowship Church East Toronto and cofounder of Gospel for Life. He has a Doctor of Ministry degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and has over 30 years of ministry experience. He is the author of two books published by Moody Publishers. Darryl is married to Charlene and has two adult children, Christy and Josiah. You can find Darryl online at www.DashHouse.com.
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The publishing industry is challenging. Not only do you have to be a great writer, but you need a big platform. In the end, you need a book that will sell.
It’s understandable. Publishers aren’t charities, and they need to make money from their books. Publishing a book is a massive investment that costs a lot of money and involves significant risk.
For this reason, it’s difficult to be published. Unless you have a large following, or catch a break, you may face an uphill battle in getting your book published.
And yet, I would argue, it’s still important for you to write for at least a couple of reasons.
First, somebody needs your writing. Just because you won’t sell 5,000 or 10,000 books doesn’t mean that you don’t have a message that can benefit many. You don’t need a large audience; a small one will do. Someone will likely benefit from what you’ve learned. Your writing will be a blessing to someone who needs it.
There’s also a huge benefit in writing for your own sake. Writing helps us think on paper. It helps us practice and develop our skill. The only way to become a better writer is to write. If writing changes nobody else, it will change you. But as it changes you, I’ll bet that it will also help others at the same time.
Beyond that, it’s never been easier to publish. Anyone can start a blog or open their own Substack. If you want to write a book, you can publish and market it yourself. Sure, it’s hard work, but so is publishing the traditional way. Nobody’s standing in your way.
Years ago, someone told me that a well-written article will get more readers than most books. That was before the age of blocking any internet content, but the point still stands.
You can write on the internet; and if you write well, your writing can have just as big an influence as many of the books you see in the bookstore. If your writing is good, or even if it’s becoming good, you will find readers.
I agree with what Barbara Ueland wrote a long time ago: “Everybody is talented, original and has something important to say.” You probably don’t have something new to write—pretty much everything’s been said already—but nobody’s said it quite the same way that you will, from your perspective.
Please write. We need your voice. It’s nice to publish a book; and if you want to, you should pursue that goal. If you can’t find a publisher, you can do it yourself.
But you don’t need to publish a book for your writing to be worthwhile. In an age where the publishing industry is not going to publish as many of our books as we’d like, we can still write to bless others and develop our craft.
For this reason, please keep writing. And share your writing so we can benefit from it too.
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Fun Fridays – April 25, 2025
Today’s video is a stunning rendition of the song “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Performed for the National American Choral Directors Association Conference two weeks ago, it features a group of high school singers and an amazing director. The audience is filled with choral directors who cheer when something extraordinary is heard. The arrangement is sheer genius, and the performance is beyond words, as the two-minute standing ovation attests. Turn up the volume and let the sound wash over you. HT: Trissina Kear ShareTweet
A Month at the Center of History
April 1945 might have been the pivotal month in all world history, considering all of the historical events and people who eventually ended up in books, articles, photos, and movies—likely thousands, both from a Judeo-Christian and a secular perspective. Looking day by day, this was April 1945, eighty years ago. April 1 – Easter Sunday. The Battle of Okinawa, Japan began. It was the largest and deadliest battle in the Pacific theater during World War II. (About a quarter million people died.) April 4 – Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany was liberated by US troops. It was part of the …
What Is the Best Way to Submit My Self-Published Book?
We are asked this question so frequently that I have to re-run this post on a regular basis! Since it has become so easy to self-publish, many authors are creating their own books, both in ebook and print form. Later, those authors are not quite sure what to do if/when they want to approach an agent. Or pitch to an editor at a conference. Should they just send a copy of the book with a letter? Or should they create a proposal? Or do both? Is there truly a right way and a wrong way? And if you are at …
Gray Saturday
I wrote this many years ago and post it every Easter weekend as a reminder. May it speak to you in some small way. Gray Saturday by Steve Laube Holy weekend is such a study in contrasts. Friday is dark. Somber. Frightening in its hopelessness and pain. I do not like Dark Fridays. The nails bury themselves deep into my soul. They become a singular stake through the heart of this sinner. Piercing. Rending. Bloody. Vanquishing this creature of the night who dares to follow his own way. Christ’s death becomes mine. The death I deserve. Alone. Anguishing. Agonizing. There …