Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Book Launch: The Ephesus Scroll - By Ben Chenoweth (With A Giveaway!)

If you have been following this blog for a bit and have read through the comments, you will have seen Ben around giving great advice about writing. Ben has been living as a missionary in Russia for the last 9 years with his wife and two adorable daughters, after doing his Masters in New Testament studies. During this time he has been working on a novel concerned with the book of Revelations, set in ancient Asia Minor and modern day Russia. I know of no one who would be better qualified to write such an interesting book.

I am excited to announce that The Ephesus Scroll is now available on Smashwords and Amazon for download (e-book version only). 

http://cache.smashwire.com/bookCovers/a3581cf1d9df58a5b3c637534d4dc31364a82734 

In 93 AD, Loukas, the son of a wealthy Christian trader, is entrusted with a scroll to read in seven churches in Asia Minor. However, the scroll sparks rebellion wherever he goes and the Roman authorities attempt to track him down. But all Loukas wants to do is complete his mission and get back to Ephesus and his fiancée, Iounia.

In 2005 AD, Dima and Natasha, a young Russian couple from St. Petersburg, come across a stone box with a scroll inside, apparently found in Ephesus by Dima’s great-great-grandfather. The scroll is a complete – and early – copy of the book of Revelation. How did this scroll come to be found in Russia? And has it come to light at this very time for a reason?

The Ephesus Scroll is a novel that attempts to answer two questions. What did the book of Revelation mean to the people who first heard it? And what does it mean for us today?

In light of this exciting achievement, I asked him if he would like to answer a few questions about how this book was written and his writing process in general, to which he very kindly agreed. 
(To find out more, check out the book's blog which also has cool features such as an alternate beginning.)

1. What made you decide to dedicate hours and hours of your life to sitting behind a screen and touching little buttons?

As a computer programmer and computer support technician I was doing that already!  With writing, though, it's nice to tap into the creative part of my brain and generate something that non-computer programmers can enjoy.


I come to writing for two reasons.  The first is to entertain.  When I was at university my friend and I edited a youth magazine for our church.  We commissioned various people to write articles for the magazine but we probably wrote more than half of every issue.  We even wrote our own letters to the editor!  While some of what we wrote was to educate, most was to entertain.  My favourite thing we did for this magazine was a regular column entitled "The Diary of an Anonymous Christian Teenager", done very much in the style of Adrian Plass.  Incidentally, I wrote my first novel, Meeting of Minds as a birthday present for that other editor, although anyone who likes Douglas Adams' Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy series should enjoy it.


The second reason I write is to teach.  After the novel, I wrote a play, Saul: First King of Israel, based on the Biblical book of 1 Samuel, although seen from King Saul's perspective.  This was an attempt to put some brilliant scholarly materials I had read as part of a Bachelor of Theology into a more popular form.  But for some strange reason I chose a play!  It has never been performed, by the way, and one of my long-term dreams is to see it on stage one day...


2. Describe your writing history until this point in 25 words or less.

 I appear to have covered this already.  Right now I am excited about the recent release of my second novel, The Ephesus Scroll.


3. What is your writing style: plot it all out or discovery writing? one draft or many? Little bits everyday or mammoth writing sessions?

I like to plot things out fairly generally so that I know where I am going.  But I don't usually include much detail which means there is still the occasional surprise along the way.  I usually only have one draft but that draft is constantly being revised.  I find myself going back over what I have already written and tweaking it before adding more new material.  This means that progress can be slow!  And I have very rarely had the time to write everyday, so it tends to be one-off writing sessions possibly once every one or two weeks.  The Ephesus Scroll took me more than six years to write!

4. Best piece of writing advice you have ever received or given.

I have been enjoying reading your writing blog and have learned more about writing from that than anything else. [See why I love this guy? Such a flatterer!]  In particular, I was challenged to stop revising as I go and concentrate on just getting words down.  I will definitely give that a try in the future!

5. Inspiration behind this novel?

Three things inspired me to write The Ephesus Scroll.  The first was a trip I made back in 2004 to Ephesus, in Turkey.  Walking around the ruins of this ancient city was an amazing experience.  To think that the Apostle Paul may have walked on the very flagstones I was now walking on!  To think that I was sitting in the Great Amphitheatre that once resounded to the cry "Artemis of the Ephesians" as the crowd called for Paul to be executed.  It really brought home to me the fact that the books of the Bible were written by real people to real people.


The second source of inspiration was a student in a high-school Bible class I was teaching who couldn't understand how someone who did not follow the teachings of the Left Behind series could be allowed to teach in a Christian school.  To him, there was only one possible way to interpret the book of Revelation and if you didn't follow that interpretation then you couldn't be a Christian.  That experience made me want to do what Tim La Haye had done: write a disguised commentary of the book of Revelation, but from a very different interpretational standpoint.


The third inspiration was living in St. Petersburg, Russia.  This beautiful city, with its stunning churches, spectacular museums and intricate Metro system, is the backdrop for half of my novel.

6. Do you have a favourite part of this novel?

A couple of amusing incidents come to mind, one involving some bad dates and another involving throwing a book out of a moving train.  You'll have to read the novel for more details!  There was also what I thought was a funny scene involving a Turkish coin seller which was based on an actual experience I had in Ephesus.  But this scene was in the opening of the first draft which got significantly changed later on and so it ended up on the cutting room floor.  However, when I was putting together a blog to promote the novel I included the original opening as a comparison of the final version, but also to rescue this one scene.  Check it out here: http://ephesusscroll.blogspot.com.au/p/original-opening.html


There are also a couple of interesting theological discussions.  Actually, there are a lot of theological discussions, most of which - I hope - are interesting.  But there are two in particular that I really like, one critiquing the jigsaw approach to Biblical prophecy and the other discussing how fundamentals of Paul's theology might be applied in different contexts.

7. While you were writing this novel, you were working full time with a wife and two daughters and living in a foreign country: did you develop any good techniques for finding time, or is it always hard?

It is always hard.  Most of the novel was written on Sunday evenings when I would usually have a couple of hours to myself.

8. What are the top tips you have learned about self-publishing?

Self-publishing is the way of the future!  You will have seen the links to my books on Smashwords and I have been very impressed with this site.  Apparently, some of their authors are even making enough money to live off their writing!  (However, it helps to be in some very specific genres: paranormal, romance, erotica, paranormal romance, paranormal erotica, I think you get the picture...)  However, the reason I like Smashwords is that it solves the distribution problem.  True, they only distribute ebooks, but ebooks are only going to become more and more accessible as everyone and their dog ends up with a tablet or an e-reader.  I had been seeking a publisher for The Ephesus Scroll but after waiting more than a year for two publishers to make up their mind, I decided not to bother.  I want people to read the novel!  Now they can.

What Smashwords doesn't help with, however, is marketing.  My books are discoverable on the Nook, Sony readers and Apple devices.  But that doesn't mean people will automatically find them.  It certainly helps to make a book free.  My first novel is and always has been free and I have had nearly 800 downloads.  The play, on the other hand, costs money.  I think I have sold maybe 10 copies.  At one point, though, I made it free for some reason.  During that brief time is was downloaded more than 200 times.  The point is, people will try something for free.  If they like it, they will come back for more, even if it costs them money.  And this is how the authors who are making it on Smashwords operate.  Of course, it helps to have a series of books, something I don't currently have.


9. Any new projects on the horizons?

Funny you should ask!  I am planning on writing a three volume cyberpunk, thriller series.  I have plot overviews for the first two and a plot idea for the third.  I just need to find time to actually do the writing.  But having recently moved back to Australia, we are finding settling in more difficult than expected so it is taking longer than I had anticipated.  However, I would still like to have book one finished before I start my new job early in 2013.

10. Mystery questions: answer any question you feel I should have asked :D

Here's my mystery question: "Since marketing is the big problem with self-publishing, how can people help a struggling author out?"  In this day and age of social media just a little promotion may actually go a long way.  If you read one of my books, please take the time to rate it and maybe write a review.  I only have one review on Smashwords.  It's for my first novel and it says "A wonderful book. Very well written, entertaining and fun" and the reviewer gave it 5 stars.  I was really touched by that!  [It wasn't me if you were wondering...sorry.] And if more people left a rating and a comment then it might help other people to decide if they want to download the book and give it a try.  I would absolutely love it if The Ephesus Scroll went viral!  Not for the money (really!) but because then people would be reading it and hopefully learning something about the book of Revelation and what it means for us today.

Thanks Ben!

Giveaway:

Think it sounds interesting? Thinking of giving it ago?

Well, today's your lucky day!

I'm giving away copies to readers that promise to write a review of it either on Amazon or Smashwords or both!

Just comment below with your name and/or email me (b_greentr (at) yahoo.com) your email address (necessary so I can send you the gift copy from Smashwords) and I'll send it right out.

Enjoy!

Ben with his wonderful wife Kylie and two daughters Kate (red sweater) and Eleanor outside Catherine the Great's Palace in Russia.

Me with Elly and Katie.

 

5 comments:

  1. Here's the first, and hopefully not the only, comment on this post.

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  2. Hey Ross, good to hear from you. Send me an email at b_greentr(at)yahoo.com so I can send you a copy.

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  3. Yes, I would be happy to comment.

    elsamarjattas@gmail.com

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  4. Thanks Elsa!
    That should be emailed to you now. If you have any problems, let me know.
    Enjoy!

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  5. I'm in the middle of reading it and finding it really interesting. Biblical criticism combined with travelogue of places some of which I've been to, and humour. I give it lots of stars.

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