About Chris

Christina Weigand’s a writer, wife, and mother of three grown children and a grade school daughter. She is also Nana to two grandchildren. She lives with her husband and youngest daughter in Washington State after a lifetime in Pennsylvania. Currently, she’s working on fantasy novels and inspirational writing. Through her writing she strives to share the Word of God and help people young and old to realize the love and mercy He has for everyone. When she’s not writing she’s active in her local Church as a lector, volunteering at her daughter’s school in the library as well as helping the children develop a love for reading and writing, Bible Study or with the church theater group. Jesus fills her home with love as she shares Him through her writing.

Dragon Disciples: Resurrection ; On Writing

This week I decided to share a little bit about my writing process for Dragon Disciples: Resurrection. I’m often asked what the inspiration for my books is, and most of the time it is hard to pin down. But with Dragon Disciples: Resurrection there was a distinct point when I felt the inspiration hit. In this and part two I will discuss that inspiration and how it went from inspiration to a written story.

So what was my inspiration? One Sunday morning I was sitting at mass listening to the Gospel proclaimed by our priest. This particular Gospel story: Jesus feeding the 5000 with bread and fish supplied by a boy in the crowd. My wheels started turning. What if that boy was a Samaritan? Now I have a character and the beginnings of a conflict for him.

With that information I now take a deep dive into my process. I’m not a plotter. I let the characters dictate the story for me. But that doesn’t mean I don’t have some work to do, in the form of research. With this book there were a lot of little and big details needed to set the scene, to give the characters life, to provide the ambiance necessary to flesh out the story. My process: do enough research to get the story rolling, continue through writing the first draft and then a few jewels for the final draft to make the story shine.

What kind of things do I research? I tend to start big. In the case of Resurrection two details were important to nail down; A timeline of Jesus’s ministry and the relationship between Jews and Samaritans. I had to ensure that the story timeline lined up with Jesus’s ministry. In spite of the fact this is fantasy I still wanted to keep things as close to real as possible. To accomplish that I started big and worked to the small. City layouts in first century Israel, what buildings looked like, how they were constructed. And while I am still on the big stuff what were the relationships with and between the groups of people that have a part in the story.

This sets up the framework or the skeleton of the story. In Part 2 I will dive deeper into fleshing out the skeleton by adding muscles and skin.