Right now I’m reading a book called the Moral Premise. The author Stanley D. Williams will teach the Early Bird at ACFW in September, and like any good hyper student, I wanted to get a head start on preparing. The Moral Premise reveals the foundational concept at the heart of all storytelling and successful box office movies. In concrete terms it explains how you can create your own success and, in the process, entertain, delight, challenge, and uplift this generation and the ones to come.
Hmmm, that’s a lot to offer in one little book!
But as I think more about it, I think the author is on to something. Don’t we all want to read books that challenge us to live better lives? That illustrate good v. evil? That show hope and redemption at the end?
One reason I write Christian fiction is my firm belief that if God is with us, which He promises He is, then no matter how bad things seem, there is always hope. And as the movie says, Hope Floats to the surface. Sometimes it just takes longer than other times.
In a nutshell, the premise of the Moral Premise seems to be that a movie or book that will resonate with its audience is one that illustrates the dichotimies of life. Illustrates the differences between choosing well and choosing evil.
The one John Grisham novel I wanted to throw against the wall had Goliath winning rather than David. I don’t know about you, but in the books I read and write, I want hope to prevail…after the long, dark night.
Who else is taking the Early Bird at conference? Or have you read the Moral Premise? What did you pull from it?
Comments 3
I’m coming to ACFW, but not the early bird. I’m sad to say I have not read the Moral Premise and wasn’t sure it was something I could spend the extra money on. Now I’m thinking hmm, should reconsider and at least by the book.
Diana
http://www.dianabrandmeyer.com
I’m coming to the early bird! I haven’t read the book yet, so you are way ahead of me!
I haven’t read all of it yet, Anne, but what I have is very good.