When her Advanced Placement English students
challenged her to quit talking about writing and "just do it," Jo
Robertson wrote her first completed manuscript, The Watcher, which won
the 2006 Golden Heart Award for romantic suspense. She's authored six indie
published romantic and historical thrillers and three novellas. Read more about
Jo at her website.
Jo is offering one e-copy each of her two Christmas
novellas, The Perfect Gift and The Hitman’s Holiday to two
readers who post comments to the blog. Be sure to include your email address or
check back on Sunday to see if you’ve won. -- AP
The Shepherds Returned to Their Flocks
Happy holidays, everyone,
and a big thanks to Lois for inviting me to visit today!
Although I'm not
particularly religious, I've always been fascinated by the Christmas holidays,
the varied ways we celebrate them, and the traditions that grow up around these
stories.
Luke records the version of
the birth of the Baby and recounts the tale of the shepherds.
You know the story – the
long trek to Bethlehem to be taxed, the no-room-in-the-inn scenario, the cave
and the manger, the angels and the shepherds. But because angels with wings and holy seraphim seem more
metaphorical than literal to me, I always found what those shepherds did after
visiting the manger more interesting than their actually getting
there.
Ah, those brave shepherds!
Since the concept of a
shepherd and his or her flock has universal application, I was intrigued by
what they did next.
They returned to their
flocks, Luke says. And although
they told the glorious news and sang praises for God’s gift, they did return
to their flocks.
Interesting.
They didn’t rush out to build
a holy tabernacle. They didn’t
write up the story and publish it in the Bethlehem
Daily Journal. Nor did they
try to sell their sheep and get a higher fee for them because they’d seen the
actual babe in the manger.
You see how crass and
commercial my mind runs?
No, instead the shepherds
returned to their flocks.
They went about the daily
business of sheepherding, or shepherding if you prefer. Sheep, you see, are rather stupid
animals. My father-in-law was a
sheepherder and used to regale us with tales of the sheep and their rather dumb
antics. In real life apparently,
sheep really need someone to shepherd
them about.
I like to think of myself as
a shepherd, and if we’re all shepherds like those ancient commoners, what
represents our “flocks”?
Teachers teach. Parents parent. Presidents preside. Grandparents – ah yes, they simply
spoil. Readers read. Writers write. And so it goes.
Although I’ve actually been
to the Grotto and the hillside in Israel, I’m not particularly concerned
whether the shepherds visited a real hillside cave and found a new-born child
two thousand years ago, or whether it’s a beautiful metaphor for a religious
belief.
But I do care about the message.
The shepherds returned to
their flocks.
Thinking about those
shepherds gives me new resolve to return to my “flock,” whether it’s my family,
my career, my church, my hobbies.
Or right now – to rededicate myself to my writing.
We’re about to herald a new
year. The thought of an entire year
stretching out before me unblemished by my blunders and mistakes is really
intriguing. I want to rush out and
write something on that pristine year ahead! I want to slough off the old and begin anew!
Like the shepherds, I want
to return to my flock.
What about you,
readers? What would you like to
renew your energies toward? What
would you like to rededicate yourself to?
If you are the shepherd in your life, what’s the “flock” you’re
returning to?
The Perfect Gift
When her husband dies unexpectedly Jane Stark is
left with four young boys and a mother-in-law who hates her. When she finds
herself pregnant with the longed-for baby girl her husband wanted and
ex-detective Rick moves in next door, Jane doesn't know whether to be happy or
overwhelmed with the changes life has handed her.
The
Hitman’s Holiday
Logan is a professional hit man. He finds the
Christmas Season the dreariest and most boring of the year, but this particular
year he gets caught up in a holiday jingle that lodges in his mind. When he
gets an unusual December contract, he follows a sassy twelve-year-old and her
odd companions through the Bronx ... and serious trouble.
This assignment brings Logan face to face with
the concept of how far he can go on this dark path before there's no turning
back. Is it already too late for redemption?
Readers,
if you’d like a chance to win copies of Jo’s Christmas novellas, post a
comment. Leave your email address or remember to check back on Sunday to see if
you’ve won. -- AP
14 comments:
Thanks for inviting me to join your Friday Author Blog, Lois! I always enjoy talking about reading, writing, and anticipation (none of that arithmatic stuff for me!) with other readers and writers.
I have flocks of students -- over the break, I look for new ways to teach.
I'm glad to meet such a witty, imaginative writer, Jo. You would also have made a great mathematician!
Thanks for the blog and "contest."
Interesting post Jo!
My flock is pretty small indeed (just my immediate family) but luckily I am part of several much larger flocks. ;-)
I've taken a couple of trips to Turkey and both times saw shepherds with their flocks. I was fascinated. I don't think they have changed much in the last 2000 years, which I found quite comforting somehow.
Best of luck with your holiday themed stories and all your other writing.
HUGS!
AC
Hi Jo and Lois. I really enjoyed this post. It also led me to think about all the flocks I've joined since my series was first published. Perhaps I need to de-flock a few and focus on writing! I love the concept of a clean slate:-)
Happy holidays to you and your family.
Thanks, Camille! I'm not sure about the mathematician-thing, but I sure do miss teaching teenagers. They're so full of natural chutpah and love of life!
Hi, Cindy! Thanks for swinging by! This is the perfect time of the year for a clean slate, but I've so enjoyed getting to know you through SVR. Such a wonderful "flock" of women writers!
Hi, my good friend, Cindy M.! I know what you mean about the timelessness of some of those countries. I remember looking out the train window traveling from Cairo to Luxor many years ago and watching farmers plow with wooden plows!
Thanks for stopping by and may we all have much success in 2013!
Hey, Lois! I was scrolling through your previous blog entries, and I swear I put on 5 pounds just reading those delicious-sounding recipes!
Since I'm an avid birder, the flock I'd like to return to is the flock of endangered whooping cranes now wintering on the Texas coast, which is where I was last week. It was warm and sunny, except when it was cool and sunny. Now I'm home in the PNW and it is cold, windy, and rainy.
Jo, very thoughtful post! I'm pretty much with my flock, but I hope to be more focused and orderly so I have time to read in the New Year.
I have The Perfect Gift and The Hitman's Holiday here to read and plan to do so as soon as I finish shopping--which I really, really, really hope will be tomorrow!
I never thought about the "return" before. Glad you did. Nice Post.
Hi, Kathleen! Thanks for stopping by. How interesting about the whooping cranes. I didn't know they were an endangered species. You must really enjoy your bird-watching. I'd think that would be fascinating.
Hi, Nancy, so glad you could stop by. Hope you enjoy the novellas and have much, much success with your debut release RENEGADE. It's fabulous!
Hi, Shelley. I've always wondered about what the shepherds did after such a miracle in their lives. It's fun to explore happenings beyond the story in the book.
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