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Q:
It's a great pleasure to share the following interview with Jeanette
Windle, author of
Firestorm. Jeanette, I've been a fan of your previous
writing, including Crossfire, The DMZ and the Parker Twins Series
and know that your writing has been greatly influenced by your previous
life as a missionary. Could you please start by telling our readers about
your upbringing and background?
A: As a child of missionary parents, I grew up in
the rural towns of Colombia, now guerrilla hot zones and the background
for my second political/suspense novel The DMZ. My husband, Marty,
and I served as missionaries in Bolivia, the setting of my first adult
political/suspense novel CrossFire, for fifteen years. In June,
2000, our family moved to Miami, Florida, where Marty serves as Vice
President of General Services for Latin America Mission. I continue to
write as well as teaching writing conferences and mentoring Christian
writers in a dozen nations around the world. We have four children from 13
to 21. If you'd like to meet them, check out our family website at
windle.lam.org (no www).
Q: For our readers who have not yet had the
opportunity to read
Firestorm, please summarize the plot of the story.
A:
Firestorm is a sequel to CrossFire, my first adult
political/suspense novel set in the drug war in Bolivia. In
Firestorm, protagonist Sara Conner escapes the ruins of the
Cortez drug empire to find sanctuary in Miami. But is she really safe? And
what of special agent Doug Bradford? Can a relationship formed under fire
survive the stress of Doug's dangerous profession? When old enemies
resurface, the trail of suspicion leads to the lawless Tri-Frontier region
of South America where drug-dealing, smuggling, and terrorism hide behind
the tourist trade of Iguazu Falls, the world's greatest cascades. A
routine drug raid catapults Sara and Doug into a raging firestorm that
sweeps across international borders . . . and this time the flames of
terror burn in their homeland.
Q: How did you come to the decision to write
Christian fiction? Has it been difficult to combine writing such
intriguing books while staying true to your spiritual roots?
A: Why do I choose fiction to write? One, I am a
story-teller by nature, and for me, telling stories is as much a creative
gift God has woven into my being as He has woven art and music into
others. My medium simply happens to be the printed page. Jesus Christ knew
the power of story-telling. Matthew 13:34 tells us Christ used parables (a
fictional tale with a spiritual meaning) any time he spoke to a crowd. As
best-selling author Madelaine L'Engle once said, 'Jesus wasn't a
theologian. He was God telling stories.'
Why do stories have such power? Because the simple
declaration of truth -even great spiritual truths - largely touches our
minds. A well-told story touches not only minds, but hearts and emotions
and soul, carrying readers into a world where they can experience those
truths for themselves, feel along with the protagonists pain and betrayal,
friendship and injustice, the despair of evil and the hope of God's
righteousness and power. And when we as writers manage to do it right, an
academic statement of spiritual truth can become an interactive experience
that permanently impacts the way a reader thinks and feels and acts. Which
is why a fictional novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, had a greater impact
on the anti-slavery movement than all the preaching from pulpits.
Does a good story have to be fiction? No. There have
been many well-told true-life stories that have touched my own life as
well - Elizabeth Elliot's Through Gates of Splendor, Isobel Kuhn's
books and many missionary biographies. But our own lives have limited
stories while fiction gives an infinite canvas on which to paint the
stories of people and places, historical and political and social
realities - and of course, the spiritual journeys and truths woven through
them. In fact, the first Christian fiction - and the spiritual impact it
had - is given to us in the Bible. Check out 2 Samuel 12 where the prophet
Nathan's tale of a rich land owner stealing a poor shepherd's only lamb
stirs David to repentance over Bathsheba.
Q: Your writing is so convincing and well
researched. How do you manage to include such a tremendous level of
detail in your writing?
A: That's easy. Like my protagonists,
I've spent my
life on the ground in these places. As a daughter of American
missionaries, I grew up in the rural parts of Colombia which are now
guerrilla zones. When we were't at the missionary kids boarding school
across the border in Venezuela, we lived the lifestyle of a Colombian
villager - reading by candle-light and Coleman lamp, traveling the rivers in
long, dug-out canoes to the riverside villages up on their stilts where my
dad would preach, hiking up Andes mountain and through the jungle. Today
every place I lived as a child is a guerrilla hot zone. The small
homesteading town in which I spent my teen years, Saravena in the eastern
plains of Colombia, has been a guerrilla base for years and is, in fact,
the basis for the fictional town of The DMZ.
After Bible college in yet another country not my
own, Canada, my husband and I spent 15 years as missionaries in Bolivia,
one of the world's top-five most corrupt countries, where I had the
dubious pleasure of watching firsthand the development of a narco-democracy
and getting to know - and interview - many of the players on both sides of the
equation, which became the background material for CrossFire.
If not a typical American upbringing - and certainly
not always comfortable - it was a lifestyle that proved the greatest
possible training to be an investigative writer. I learned to be wary,
observant, always looking over my shoulder and asking who, what, why,
when, where and how. I also research thoroughly, and I can
tell you our intelligence services has full reason to be concerned at how
much information is out there if you know how to put the pieces together.
Q: Unfortunately, in today's world we face so many
threats from drugs to terrorism. Does writing thrillers impact upon the
way you look at the world? What role does your faith play in your
writing?
A: I would say rather that the way I look at the
world has impacted my writing. A life spent in some of the sleazier
corners of our world has taught me more than I would choose to know of the
absolute depths of mankind's capacity for sin. But those same experiences
have brought me face-to-face with a loving heavenly Father who yearns for
His lost creation and holds me securely in the palm of His outstretched
hand. My ultimate goal in every book I write, however much a "thriller',
is to share with the reader my own heartfelt conviction that, for all the
turmoil and conflict and pain in our world, this universe DOES make sense
and has both a purpose and a loving Creator.
Q: Do you have any future projects in the works?
Will we run into Sara and Doug again?
A: Yes, I am always working on the next book. This
one is not a Latin-American political/suspense thriller, but that is all
I'll say about it for now. And no, I don't plan to write another book
involving Sara and Doug (though I said that after CrossFire too!).
I have had a number of requests to give Ramon, Doug's DEA partner in
CrossFire and
Firestorm his own book, so that just might materialize when I
finish the novel I'm working on now.
Q: Thank you so much, Jeanette Windle, for sharing
the gift you have for storytelling and for hours of inspiration and
entertainment! Are there any closing thoughts you'd like to share with
our readers?
A: Yes, the two themes that thread together through
the pages of FireStorm:
1) We are not called to safety, but to stand strong in the
storm.
2) Our safety is not in the absence of the storm, but in the
presence of God.
We live in a culture here in this
country, even within the church, that emphasizes watching our own backs,
demanding as our right to be free from the danger and risk and storms so
much of the rest of our world is facing. But the Creator God we see in
Scripture is not about safety and tranquility. Look at the images in the
Psalms especially. We serve a God who rides on the wings of the wind, who
makes storm clouds His footstool, whose laughter crashes through the
thunder and lightning, who shakes the earth with His passing. Our God is
mighty, awesome, powerful, even wild. But He is not about safety and
tranquility.
And
whatever we might wish, God never promised a safe and quiet life to His
children. On the contrary, the God we serve is calling His followers to
be out there standing strong in the storm, because in the world of chaos
and uncertainty in which we live, someone has to be out there nailing down
the loose roof shingles and pulling people from the floodwaters.
If that sounds frightening, it
shouldn't be because
our safety is not, and never will be, in the absence of the storm, but in
the presence of a God who loves His children passionately. Which is why,
in the rising storm assailing our world, the underlying message of
Firestorm is not one of fear or doomsaying but of hope and
challenge.
For more
information or to order
Firestorm
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