TWICE A SLAVE - Sammy Tippit - One Free Book

What is the quirkiest thing you have ever done?I walked with six others across America, pushing a wheelbarrow filled with Bibles. We passed out the Bibles and held rallies on university campuses in 1970.
When did you first discover that you were a writer?I returned from traveling in Romania in the mid 1980s and knew that what I had witnessed in the nation needed to be shared. I approached Moody Press with an idea about a book on what I had learned. They were open to the idea, and I wrote my first book, Fire in Your Heart. It did well, and I knew writing would be a part of my life and ministry.
Tell us the range of the kinds of books you enjoy reading.With nonfiction, I read a lot of the classic books on Christian living. I enjoy the depth of writers during the 1800s and early 1900s. I, also, enjoy Jerry B. Jenkins and Brandilyn Collins writings in Christian fiction and have read their latest books. I am, also, a big John Grisham fan.
How do you keep your sanity in our run, run, run world?I attempt to maintain a consistent time alone with God, reading His word and spending time in prayer each morning. I find that I am able to accomplish much more with less time if I’ve spent time with God.
How do you choose your characters’ names?With my present novel, Twice a Slave , ninety percent of my characters were historical personalities. I had a pretty good handle on the times and the persons involved in the story. That made it fairly easy. I had a much more difficult time choosing names for the novel I’m presently writing. For it, I chose names that were uncommon but not completely unknown. I tried to find a name that fit the character’s personality.
What is the accomplishment that you are most proud of?Speaking at the first outdoor stadium evangelistic event in Romaniaafter the Romanian Revolution.
If you were an animal, which one would you be, and why?A lamb. I like the gentle character of the lamb.
What is your favorite food?Crawfish étouffée.
What is the problem with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you overcome it?In Twice a Slave , there were several historical circumstances and events that didn’t make sense. However, I checked with experts in those areas and found that even though those events were unusual, they were explainable. It took a lot of digging to find the right experts who knew the answers to those difficult questions.
Tell us about the featured book.

Please give us the first page of the book.October 1, 1852 Outside Blanche, LouisianaPaw told me not to worry when he and Maw climbed into the family wagon before dawn to head for Blanche to buy supplies. They were leaving me to help Grandpa get ready to speak at the big meetin’. “He’ll be all right, Polk,” Paw said. “We’ll be home in a couple of hours.”
But he didn’t know. Didn’t know I’d get the fright of my life. Didn’t know what I’d be told.
Grandpa was real old, seriously old. Nobody knew exactly how old, because people like him didn’t know, but Paw said he was past ninety. It seemed like everybody expected Grandpa — church folks called him Father Willis — to die any minute. But Paw said they’d been saying that for twenty years. I just hoped it wouldn’t happen when it was only me at home.
A few minutes before Maw and Paw were s’posed to be back home, Rube, an old freed slave, rode up asking if Grandpa was ready to go to the meetin’.
I shook my head. “Paw told me he’d be awake before the rooster crowed, but he ain’t moved a muscle.”
Rube’s eyes grew wide. “Your Paw told me to git the other wagon ready so’s I could tote you and Father Willis to Evergreen behind them in the buckboard. You don’t think somethin’s a-happened to him?”
I shrugged.“We gotta wake him! Right now. Your maw is gonna be mighty upset if he’s not ready to go when they get back.”
Rube and I hurried off to Grandpa’s bedroom and found him on his back, eyes closed, not moving, his face as gray and cold as the blade on Paw’s old knife. We tiptoed to Grandpa’s bed and bent over him, and Rube whispered, “Lord Jesus, have mercy.”
“You think he’s dead?”
“Yessuh, for shor.”
It took all the courage I could muster, but I leaned close to Grandpa’s face and lifted one of his eyelids with my trembling fingers. Fighting back tears, I said, “Yep, he’s dead.”
“What you doing, boy?” Grandpa bellowed, flinching at my touch.
I jumped so high I thought I would hit the ceiling. Rube screamed and fell on his back, and I landed on top of him, our arms and legs tangling as we just kept turnin’ over each other, slapping and kicking and hollering until Grandpa sat up and yelled, “Stop it!”
Old Rube finally gathered himself from the floor and bowed his head. “I’m sorry, Father Willis. We thought you was dead.”How can readers find you on the Internet?www.sammytippit.orgwww.sammytippitbooks.comhttps://www.facebook.com/sammy.tippitwww.twiceaslave.comhttps://www.facebook.com/twiceaslavenovel
Thank you, Sammy, for sharing this new book with us. I know my readers well be as interested as I am in this story.
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Published on June 19, 2014 06:25
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