Talkshow Thursday: Welcome back, Barbara Britton!
Linda: Welcome back to my blog. I’m a huge fan of
your work. Congratulations on Heavenly
Lights: Noah’s Journey that released just last week. How did you decide to write about this particular biblical
character?
Barbara: Thank you
for having me back on the blog, Linda.
In Heavenly Lights,
I follow the daughters of Zelophehad into the first chapters of the book of
Joshua. I was going to leave the brave girls after they crossed the Jordan
River and settled in Canaan, but they didn’t have their inheritance of land. I
couldn’t leave them yet. Noah is front and center in this novel, but her four
sisters are still around to support and encourage her.
LM: What is something
you learned about Noah during your research that really stuck with you?
Barbara: As the
daughters of Zelophehad travel into God’s promised land, they are confronted
with the sin of Achan and its ramifications on the whole Israelite camp.
Thirty-six men perished in the battle for Ai because Achan stole from God.
Achan must not have thought much of God to believe God wouldn’t know that he
had hidden gold, silver, and an ornate robe in his tent. I always thought the
stoning of Achan and his family was a harsh punishment until I studied the
Scripture. Achan caused the death of others and put the entire camp in peril.
He thumbed his nose at God’s sovereignty after seeing God’s miracles. One
interesting fact is that the Scripture mentions Achan’s children, but not a
wife (Joshua 7:24-25). Perhaps his wife had died in the desert. If she had
lived, maybe she would have told him to stop digging in her tent and seek
forgiveness from God.
LM: If Heavenly Lights was going to be made
into a movie, who would you like to play the main characters?
Barbara: Oh,
Jeremiah is easy. I would cast Nyle DiMarco as my silent shepherd. Nyle amazed
me on Dancing With The Stars when he won the competition. Nyle is deaf
like my character Jeremiah. I don’t know how Nyle kept time with the music. I
enjoyed Madeline Carroll in the movie I Can Only Imagine and think she would
handle the role of Noah well.
LM: How do you
get your ideas about which characters from the Bible you’d like to write about?
Barbara: I heard
about Jesus in the third grade, but I didn’t hear about the daughters of Zelophehad
until a few years ago when a friend mentioned them in Bible Study. How had I
missed them? Their account is mainly in the book of Numbers and they are
mentioned briefly in the book of Joshua. I read the Scripture and decided to
write their groundbreaking story. I
enjoy writing about Bible characters that readers haven’t heard much about. I love
learning about these inspiring characters as I write my story.
LM: What is one
thing you wish you knew how to do?
Barbara: I
would like to be a seamstress that could create dresses and pants. I am fairly
tall, and I always have trouble finding pants and skirts that are long enough.
I prefer my dresses on the longer side too.
LM: Here are some
quickies:
Barbara:
Ideal vacation spot: Hawaii
Favorite childhood book: The Borrowers
Favorite food: Dark or mint chocolate
LM: What is your
next project?
Barbara: I am
currently working on another Biblical story, but I have a Historical releasing
in June called “Until June.” My tag line for the story is: When a young
seamstress agrees to take care of a WWI amputee in a remote Alaskan lodge,
there’s enough friction to melt a glacier. If you liked “Me Before You” but
disliked the ending, then “Until June” is for you.
LM: Where can
folks find you on the web?
Barbara: I
have a website (http://www.barbarambritton.com)
and I am active on Twitter, Facebook,
and Goodreads.
You can find the daughters of Zelophehad in Numbers
26:33, 27:1-11, chapter 36, and in Joshua 17:3-6.
Book blurb:
Noah bat Zelophehad might have broken tradition by being
able to inherit her father’s land, but her heart’s desire is to have the finest
herds in all of Israel, something an orphaned and unmarried woman has never
achieved.
Jeremiah ben Abishua cannot speak, nor hear. God has made
his thoughts captive to his mind. But he can communicate with one shepherdess,
a woman who sees his skill with animals and treats him like a man worthy of
respect.
When their people disobey God and incur his wrath, Noah and
Jeremiah must overcome tragedy in order to change perceptions in the tribes of
Israel. Will their kinship desire to care for one another and the four-legged
creatures God has placed in their care, be able to flourish in a land filled
with enemies of the One True God?
God gave Noah bat
Zelophehad four sisters, a way with four-legged creatures, and a strong spirit.
She will need all three gifts to thrive in the Promised Land of God and find
love with a special shepherd.
Purchase Link: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B07XLQT1GH