Tell Me About Heaven, the last of my books that will come out this year, is just off the press. I first held it in my hands last week.
This time it’s our grandson Jake who gets his name in the book. He plays the part of a….drum roll…grandson.
Here’s the real Jake, who loves me to pull him behind my bike in a trailer (Ty and Matt love the trailer too, but they got pics in prior blogs, so it’s Jake’s turn. Although I will say that I was pulling Matt in the trailer last week and we were going up a very steep hill. He was eating a granola bar in the back and suddenly said, “Okay gramps, we can go faster now.”)
Here we are at the school yard where I got Jake really going before running around front to take the pictures.
Tell Me About Heaven is about a grandfather helping ten-year-old Jake come to terms with his grandmother’s death. Jake has all kinds of questions about Heaven, and what his grandma is doing and whether she remembers him. When he spends two weeks at his grandfather’s house out in the country, they do things together and talk about Heaven as they go. (It’s a low-key story. No shootings, pirates or Bruce Willis taking down a helicopter with a car.)
I do manage to mention our other grandchildren in there too, including Jack, our fourth grandson, now safely residing in our daughter Karina, and expected to be wearing a Dodgers hat at the end of August.
A grandfather, a grandson, and the two of them talking about Heaven are what Tell Me About Heaven has in common with my other children’s book, Wait Until Then. But the books are actually very different in setting, plot, illustrations, and length. I could have changed the relationship to father and daughter or uncle and nephew or mother and child, but I’m a grandpa of grandsons, and that seemed the natural way to tell both stories. When you read them, there’s no confusing the books.
Tell Me About Heaven is close to 16,000 words, short by book standards, but still seven times longer than Wait Until Then. (To give you a comparison, my little book The Grace and Truth Paradox is 18,000 words.) So while you can easily read Wait Until Then in a single sitting (that’s how it’s meant to be read), you’ll probably want to read Tell Me About Heaven one chapter at a time. If you read it to your children or grandchildren, you can discuss the subjects raised after finishing each of the nine chapters. I think most children will be very interested in these warm dialogues about Heaven.
Tell Me About Heaven is readable by many eight year olds, I’d say, but it’s designed to be enjoyed by the whole family. I hope families will read it together. It contains eleven fantastic paintings by my friend, artist Ron DiCianni, eight of them brand new, created specifically for this book.
Here’s Ron painting Safely Home, which was the cover (inside the jacket) of my hardcover novel of the same name, and then was put inside the cover when it went to paperback. (Steve Green sang a song “Safely Home,” about persecuted Christians going home to God, so the painting, song and novel are a sort of artistic trilogy.)
Ron had done previous Tell Me books with Max Lucado and Joni Eareckson Tada and Michael Card, and asked me to write this book on Heaven. I’m glad I did. It was really fun working with Ron and making suggestions for paintings to correspond to my story. (The pictures aren’t primarily depictions of the story, but of things related to Heaven and the New Earth that grandfather and grandson talk about.)
When this blog is posted, I should be in Atlanta at ICRS, the annual Christian booksellers’ convention, where I’ll be doing a book signing with Ron. That should be a blast. He’s a lot of fun, and we really enjoy giving each other a hard time, as good brothers do.
I’m telling you, this book is beautiful. Okay, I have to share one of Ron’s paintings to give you the flavor:
I also have to include this ad that Crossway, the publisher, designed. As a kid, after “lights out,” I often read books under the covers, with a flashlight, though I’m convinced my mom knew all about it. (I’m not recommending kids disobey parents, so let’s just assume his parents are all for him reading the book, okay? I just think it’s a great image.)
Our ministry just received a big shipment of books. So you can order Tell Me About Heaven from our website, www.epm.org, and other places online, and most bookstores. Though my books are carried in Borders and Barnes and Noble and other stores, I’m a big supporter of Christian bookstores.
As a clarification, our ministry sells books online (we try to match Amazon prices) because we know some people simply will NOT go to a physical bookstore to buy books. So if they’re going to order online anyway, then we’re glad to have them order from us, which helps support our ministry. But I still encourage you to visit Christian bookstores if you’re able to. One day I’m going to blog about the critical role a Christian bookstore played in my life as a young believer in the early seventies. There is no substitute for being in a store with carefully chosen Christ-honoring books, browsing and talking with the staff.
Prior to the booksellers’ convention, I will have attended a Christian novelists’ retreat with sixty other writers, including many of your favorite authors, if you read Christian fiction. We are good friends who enjoy a special camaraderie, and seek to honor Christ, encourage one another and raise the bar for each other in our craft and in our walks with God.
I’ve been attending the convention since 1985. This year there’s a full schedule with lots of interviews, book signings, dinners, a signing of the audio version of Deception, and Heaven for Kids, which is one of five finalists for the Evangelical Christian Publisher’s book of the year, in the children’s and youth category. I don’t expect it to win, but I’m honored to be included.
Maybe I’ll come back with a few pictures and stories.
Walk with Jesus. May He be pleased, as we abide in Him.