As many of you know, I’m an Appalachian girl. I grew up in the Southern Blue Ridge Region of Appalachia, which includes southwest VA and northwest NC (as well as some parts of TN and GA).
Now if you know anything about Appalachian culture, we are a
mesh of mostly Scottish, Irish, English, Welsh, French … with some German and
Native American sprinkled in too. The larger influence is from Scottish and
Irish – and with that influence came the wonderful gift of oral storytelling.
My grandmother was a master storyteller. She’d sit on her
front porch or at her kitchen table and recount family stories back six or
seven generations, and they weren’t boring ‘history’ lessons. They were the types of
stories that made you draw closer to listen. Some made you wonder if she was
telling the truth or spinning a tale with a little more flare than usual, but
her stories ….were true! That’s what
made them even more amazing!
Horse thieves, moonshiners, mountain preachers, midwives,
shotgun weddings, tragedies, and hilarious mountain antics spilled from the
rise and fall of her soft voice. It was mesmerizing and exciting. The call for
story pumped to life as I sat by Granny’s knee and listened. The stories stirred
my imagination and reminded me how God’s thread of redemption made it from
different parts of the world to my heart – and the stories inspired me to do
something about that amazing truth.
Now, my grandmother was a pretty amazing storyteller, but what
spoke to her hearers the most, was the grace, peace, love and purpose within
her stories and her life. Though many captivating moments weaved through her
tales, the Truth printed on the pages of her heart brought a deeper fascination
into the stories she told. Family members, neighbors, friends far and wide, came to talk with her, and usually, at some point or other, she ended up telling a story.
She never aspired to be a writer, but she’s the first person
who called me one, and nurtured that gift as only a lover of stories could do.
No, she never did anything the world would recognize as grandiose with her
stories, except share them with her family and friends, as reminders of God’s
grace throughout generations, but she kept telling them. Her whole life. Even
on her deathbed she shared with me about having to brush her teeth with ‘pinebrush’
because they’d never had toothbrushes. J
(Humor was a very important hallmark of a storyteller too, btw)
She was a storyteller because of her culture and upbringing,
but she was an amazing person because of her imitation of the Ultimate
Storyteller. You see, she lived the
Truth she explained in her stories. Her kindness and generosity bled into her
everyday choices and words because she recognized the Grand Story of life was
about our need for Jesus and His plan to save us. Hope, even in the midst of
incredible pain, always found a place in her stories. Why? Because she knew
what perfect Hope was and abided in the Giver of Perfect Peace. She'd be the first to tell you that there was nothing amazing in her, but God's grace empowered her to love, be kind, and choose forgiveness. And that's what people saw in her life and heard in her stories - God's grace.
I was convicted by this truth over Christmas as I worship
and thanked God for his miracle, because as writers we are
storytellers. Our tales may be great or small, but they reflect our hearts and our
purposes. The beautiful thing about storytelling is that it can be refined,
just as our souls are refined to become more and more like Christ.
Storytelling is the avenue Jesus chose to bring
understanding and change hearts. Why? Because our hearts beat for hope, and all
the best stories provide it – the very best give the answers for how to find it
:-)
What do I want my stories to show to readers? As a Christian
author, my ultimate desire is to bring Light into the Darkness and Hope into
Despair by sharing the love of The Storyteller. Whether in overt ways or subtle
brushstrokes, I hope the stories I pen will give readers a taste of something beautiful,
something life-changing. From comfort, to laughter, to joy, to knowing that
someone else understands – stories provide an avenue to the heart other methods
can’t create.
How do we, as Christian authors, bring beauty and hope to
our stories? How does the Light of hope shine into our words even when we’re
not trying?
By drawing closer and closer to The Ultimate Storyteller. As
we sit as his feet, learning of his love and grace, it shapes our lives … our
stories into something worth telling. He birthed the gift in us, now He bids us
to make it grow. As we learn more about
Jesus, rest more in His care, understand His love more deeply, His story writes
itself into our lives and becomes our story.
And THAT is always a story worth telling :-)
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And THAT is always a story worth telling :-)
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Pepper Basham writes
romance peppered with grace and humor. She’s a native of the Blue Ridge
Mountains, a mom of five, a speech-language pathologist, and a lover of
chocolate. She writes a variety of genres, but enjoys sprinkling her native
culture of Appalachia in them all. She is represented by Julie Gwinn and is
debuting her first novel in May. You can follower her on Facebook: www.facebook.com/pepper.basham , Twitter: @pepperbasham, or visit her website: www.pepperdbasham.com
This is great. Who wrote this? I don't see a name.
ReplyDeleteSorry, Tim- I forgot to put my bio. I'll try to fix that when I'm back to my computer :)
ReplyDeletePepper Basham
Love this, Pepper! <3 Love your heart and love the gift you've inherited!
ReplyDelete