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Read an Excerpt of Spero
"Spero is an imaginative fantasy that subtly instructs, entertains, and intellectually provokes the reader. It is fascinating reading. I'm definitely hooked on this series." Jean Heimann at Catholic Fire.
"...intelligent as well as inspiring..." Terry Barga at whattodoabout.com.
The first book in the Birth Pangs series, Fidelis, is Latin for faithfulness. The second book,
Spero, is Latin for hope.
Spero is an exploration, in fiction, of what hope is and why we need it. It is an exploration of what things are good to put our hope in and what things aren't. In the America of the future portrayed in the Birth Pangs series, all of the things that people have traditionally put their hope in have been brought low. There are no government agencies, no schools, and not even churches. In the face of daily perils, people have to figure out how where they are going to place their hope in dealing with them.
In the end, there is one daily peril that surpasses them all: death.
Spero is about people- even good people- putting their hope in lesser means to tackle lesser problems and being confronted with the consequences.
Spero is a 'discussion' about our chief problems and what solutions, if any, are available to resolve them.
This is a continuation of an interview done originally by audio. That audio is lost, so I am responding in text. This is question 9:
It is clear in your writing that you go to great lengths to develop masculine men and feminine women, yet you go to great pains to make your masculine men not macho, and your feminine women not submissive or needy in the least, while remaining very feminine. What draws you to explore these issues of masculinity and femininity?
I suppose there are two aspects of this question. What draws me to explore these issues and how did this get reflected in the presentation of men and women?
The ‘draw’ is easy enough. In my own life I felt that there were a missing components of ‘masculinity’ in my own life, like I was meant for something quite different- as a man- but for one reason or another I was not acting like a full man. If there is a ‘masculine ideal’ I wasn’t measuring up. There seemed to be others who felt the same way, even if their conclusions were different. The extraordinary success of Elridge’s “Wild at Heart” I think illustrates this. I don’t think that only men feel this disconnect, either.
At any rate, it seemed to me as I tried to find a way to resolve this issue that the very structure of our lives de-masculinizes and de-feminizes us. Read the rest of this entry »
This is the seventh question posed to me in a now lost audio interview which I am answering now in text. Many of these questions and answers apply to the whole series and this one in this entry does as well:
A large part of the last few years of your life have been devoted to exploring theological issues on your website sntjohnny.com. Have your experiences in that forum informed this novel?
There is no question that my Internet ministry has informed Fidelis and the entire Birth Pangs series. The Birth Pangs series has many purposes and one of them is to provide a tool for me to communicate in story form what I have attempted to communicate elsewhere in argument and discussion.
It wouldn’t be fair to say that the series is entirely designed to reflect back on my apologetics experiences, though. The series is equally informed by events in my life, events in history in general, and my overall way of looking at the world which is distinctly Christian. While I think it would be fair to say that many characters and events in the BP series can be tied in some way to a forum discussion, or a particular musing about reality in my own life, I’d urge some caution in trying to interpret the whole book and everything in it in that way.
The reason for this is that one of the things I was particularly sensitive to was to make sure that the story was enjoyable on its own terms. Readers have to be able to relate to the characters and events in the story. That’s the whole point, really. I want them to put themselves in the places of the people in the story going through what they’re going through and have them more or less compare what the characters do with what they would do.
The Christian overtones I think are hard to miss but it is my hope that they are not so overbearing as to turn off a secular or even atheistic reader. In fact, I think readers like that will enjoy some of the fun I have in addressing some of their challenges. 