Good morning! Today, we have another exceptional woman of faith and fiction visiting with us. Although Angie and I have never met face to face, I feel as if I know her. She is a wonderful friend, a beautiful soul, and a terrific writer.
The Beekeeper’s Daughter has won recognition in the following:
- 2016 Unpublished Maggie Award for Excellence (Georgia RWA) in the Inspirational Romance category, 3rd place
- 2016 Orange County Chapter Romance Writers of America’s Orange Rose Contest, Inspirational Romance category, 3rd place
- 2016 Beacon Contest finalist, First Coast Romance Writers (Jacksonville, FL), Inspirational Romance category, 2nd place
- 2017 Fab Five Finalist, Wisconsin Romance Writers of America, Inspirational Category, Finalist.
And now, please welcome writer, Angela Arndt. Angie, please tell us a little about yourself.
I’m married, with two step-children and five grandchildren. Hubby is a beekeeper and we love living back in the woods with our three dogs. I have a Bachelor’s in Graphic Design and a Master’s in Education. Before leaving the corporate world, I was a trainer and curriculum writer.
When I retired because of my health problems, God placed the desire to write in my heart and now that is my job. I love it!
Sounds like a beautiful and blessed life! This month’s theme is Peace. Please share your thoughts with our readers.
Oh, wow. Peace is such a nebulous thing unless you’re squared away with God. The only way to have true peace is to be in the center of His wheel (to borrow your phrase). It’s true: if you’re not doing His will – what He created you to do – you’ll never be happy and at peace. It always amazes me how God gives us that “peace that passes all understanding” even when we should be wringing our hands in sorrow or worry. If we give all our worries to Him, even if it means do it over-and-over again on a minute-by-minute basis, He will keep our hearts at peace.
I agree, my friend. Now, life is a continual journey of learning, applying, and transforming. Have you ever experienced a season when you found it difficult to have peace? If so, how did you overcome?
Oh yes. Without going into a lot of detail, I’m estranged from a member of my family that I love very much. After it happened, I literally cried for two weeks. (Now I know what “being a basket case means.”) While going through all the stages of grief (denial, anger, etc.), I prayed for God to “fix it,” but He didn’t.
Fiction writers thrive on “what if,” but in this case it was getting me into trouble. I kept second-guessing the situation, asking what if I’d done things differently, who else was involved, should I do this or that. I finally realized the best scenario was to put the situation out of my hands and into God’s.
That’s where it is now. I still love her, but nothing’s changed. I have to believe that someday she’ll know the truth. While I don’t have peace about the situation, I do have total peace that God is in control.
Thank you for sharing that, Angie. I’m sure there is someone who needed to hear your testimony today. For my next question, please tell us in what genre do you write and how does your faith influence your writing?
In Christian fiction, we call it women’s fiction, but I really write Southern literary fiction. That genre explores the depths of complex, sometimes eccentric, characters set in the heat, humidity, and paradise that I call home.
The crux of literary fiction is showing how a character changes when placed in heart-rending situations. And I believe that in order for someone to change – a real heart-change –God has to do that work.
When I was an art major, I designed and cast a silver ring in jewelry-making class. First I designed it on paper, then make a mold from wax. Next was the casting process where I melted the silver down on an asbestos pad. It was beautiful and actually glowed! But all the impurities floated to the top, so I had to pull a graphite rod through its heart to gather up all those faults. Finally, I poured the liquid metal into a centrifuge with the mold and spun it so that the hot metal melted through the old wax, replacing it with a purified, gleaming silver ring.
That’s the work God does in our lives. He purifies our hearts, but in order to do it, He turns up the heat and uses the rod on us!
And that’s what I do to my characters, too. 🙂
Angie, thank you so much for visiting and sharing your heart with us!
To connect with Angie visit:
I really enjoyed this interview. 🙂 Blessings. 🙂
Thanks for stopping by, Mimi! 😊❤
Thank you so much, Mimi! Blessings back! 🙂
Thanks so much for having me here, Gail! I always look forward to reading your post. It’s such a thrill to have mine on your website!
It was my pleasure, Angie! I’m so glad you shared the silver story! I know that will stick with me for some time. I love smelting and pottery references. Both are hard but necessary for growth and maturity. Thanks for visiting. ❤
What an encouraging post, Angie! I love that the Beekeeper’s Daughter is doing so well!
Sandy, your encouragement means so much to me, too! Thanks so much! God has been so gracious to me. Hugs!