Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Celebrating Beyond Prejudice Book Release and Looking Ahead

As of Tuesday, July 5, 2011, Beyond Prejudice was officially released by Liberty University Press.  Heartfelt thanks to everyone who made this dream a reality.  Order your copy through http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ or http://www.amazon.com/ or special order through your favorite bookstore.  Also, thanks to Diane Estrella, Sharlene MacLaren, Margaret Daley, and Northeast Iowa Community College for their recent features.  You’ve all been wonderful to work with!

If you enjoyed Beyond Prejudice, would you consider writing a review on http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ or http://www.amazon.com/ for potential readers?  Positive reviews are invaluable in book sales.  Thanks to those individuals who have already done so.

Though Beyond Prejudice was released just last week, I’m looking ahead to a new baby and a new book project.  Please keep my husband and me in your prayers as we prepare to welcome our first son into the world within the next few weeks.  We are astounded at God’s goodness in the smoothness of the pregnancy and anticipate a full-term delivery.  Also pray for the two big sisters who will undoubtedly be wonderful little mommies throughout the transition.

I’m considering writing a sequel to Beyond Prejudice, but before I start, I’d like your feedback as readers.  In the meantime, I’m working on a contemporary novel set around my experiences as a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) mom with our first child, Elizabeth.  Get a sneak peak on the next blog post!  Read the “story behind the story” of Beyond Prejudice below in this Q & A session and get a glimpse of those experiences.


Beyond Prejudice Q & A

  1. Q: Why did you write Beyond Prejudice?

A:  I’ve always had an interest in multicultural missions, even as a teenager.  In one of my homeschool history textbooks, I read a one-page entry of the Japanese-American interment.  I was intrigued by this little known fact of American history and found books at the public library to satisfy my curiosity.  It was then that I knew there was a story to be told while educating and entertaining readers.  I started the manuscript as part of an Institute of Children’s Literature course at age 18.

  1. Q:  Why the title Beyond Prejudice?

A:  Not only is Beyond Prejudice an appropriate title for what was going on racially in the world in the 1940’s, it also portrays Christ looking beyond our sins to see our need for His saving grace.  To believers as well, He is extending daily grace to trust His plan.

  1. Q:  Trusting God through hardship seems to be an underlying theme of your novel.  Is there any personal significance to this?

A:  Most definitely.  The main character Elizabeth struggles to trust God when her fiancĂ©, David, is interned as a result of Executive Order 9066.  She questions her love for David and seeks immediate comfort rather than trusting that God’s plans and purposes for this season in her life are more wonderful than she can imagine.  I have been like Elizabeth and have learned trusting God as a result of my circumstances and experiencing His faithfulness in spite of my own shortcomings.

  1. Q:  What was a key turning point of trusting God for you?

A:  I was learning to trust God as a young adult when He brought me my husband, Daniel.  There was no striving involved.  God just made it happen.  However, the single-most circumstance of my life that compelled me to trust God was the pre-term birth of our first-born, Elizabeth Anne, at 23 ½ weeks gestation.  She was 1 pound 4 ½ ounces and 11 inches long.  Before birth, she was given a 35% chance of survival.  While traveling 200 miles round-trip to the NICU every other day for five months, I learned the validity of God performing miracles today.  It was a daily struggle of trust, though, as some days she was progressing, gaining weight, and breathing some on her own, and other days she was digressing, retaining water, and struggling on 80% oxygen.

  1. Q:  How do you know trusting God works?

A:  I have the proof in a healthy, energetic, mentally-alert 3-year old who requires no oxygen or feeding tube.  The stereotypes placed on her at birth have been broken by the healing power of Jesus Christ.

  1. Q:  Trusting God doesn’t guarantee us the results we want.  How have you experienced that as well?

A:  God has also taught me the concept of His will being far superior to mine.  One way is through the peaks and valleys over the seven years it took for Beyond Prejudice to progress from idea to publication.  Had I been able to do it my own way, I’d have had it published the minute I finished the last chapter.  But God in His omniscience commanded I wait, give birth to a micro-preemie, give birth to a full-term daughter, and expect a son first, learning to trust the whole way!

Another way God has taught me this parallels the pre-term birth of my first-born.  A month after her birth, my father-in-law was killed in a single truck/trailer accident.  We had moved two weeks prior and the weight of the strain was enough to break human capacity.  Our daughter, then just over two pounds, was sent from Gundersen Lutheran in La Crosse, WI to Mayo in Rochester, MN to have a surgical ligation to clamp a valve near her heart to aid oxygenation a couple days before the funeral.  Crying out to God for strength and trusting He’s in control was the only thing that saw us through those heart-wrenching days.

  1. Q:  Who would most be interested in reading Beyond Prejudice?

A:  Women will especially enjoy Beyond Prejudice, as the challenges Elizabeth faces are those women often deal with as they pursue God’s will for their lives.  Women often handle the situations of life through their emotions, sometimes overlooking that trusting God is essential to living a victorious Christian walk.  Beyond Prejudice gives breath to those emotional struggles, as Elizabeth learns that trusting God is her ultimate source of security.

In addition to identifying with women on the issue of trusting God amidst adversity, Beyond Prejudice may appeal to those younger women who are reaching marriageable age in a culture where faith and moral values have little to do with the selection of a life partner.  The novel will encourage young women in trusting God to provide the best choice in a husband at the right time.  Also, individuals and/or couples who are or have been in interracial relationships will identify with David and Elizabeth.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Beyond Prejudice Now Available for Pre-order!

Beyond Prejudice is now available for pre-order from http://www.Amazon.com and http://www.BarnesandNoble.com!  The official release date is July 5.  To find the book, simply visit the site of one of these booksellers and type in Beyond Prejudice, Raschelle Wurzer, or the ISBN # 978-1-935986-11-9 into the search box.  You can also order directly from your favorite bookseller.

This week and next week, Sharlene MacLaren is featuring Beyond Prejudice on her blog at http://sharlenemaclaren.blogspot.com .  She endorsed the novel, and also has a new release coming out July 5.  You can find out more at www.sharlenemaclaren.com .

Don’t forget to visit Diane Estrella’s blog at http://www.dianeestrella.com on Friday, June 24 to read her official review of the book.  Enter for a chance to win a copy of Beyond Prejudice July 11 when she features an author interview.  Take a look at her rating of the novel on http://www.goodreads.com.
Award-winning author, Margaret Daley, will feature Beyond Prejudice on her blog at http://margaretdaley.blogspot.com the week of July 4.

After you’ve read Beyond Prejudice, let me know if you’d like to see a sequel or if you’d be more interested in reading another stand-alone title.  You can contact me at raschellewurzer@juno.com.  My goal as an author is to #1 please God with my writing and #2 please you as my readers.

For now, though, happy reading!

Character Diaries
David Mitsuko, Male Protagonist
Entry #3

     I never dreamed I’d feel like the animals I saw caged in at the zoo when I was a young boy.  At least not here in America.  Maybe one could expect adverse reactions such as these to a missionary on the field, as I may, should God permit it, but not here where things are supposed to be safe and “civilized” for ordinary citizens, even if they do look like the enemy. 
     Barbed wire fences and guard towers should be reserved for crazed prisoners of war, if they should be used to incarcerate human beings at all.  But for women, children, the sick, and the elderly?  May God forbid it to ever happen again.
     Being a Christian and a strong young man, I thought I was exempt from despair.  How wrong I was!  A few months of interment confinement and my spirits waned with the hope I once had of marrying Elizabeth.  She seemed so far away, even if we were both in California.  It would have been just as well, had I been in Japan, for we couldn’t hope to be together at a time like this.  I told her she couldn’t come with us to the internment camp, and when I got here I realized why.  However, my love for her still made me long for her to be here, though it was a selfish wish.  She was much better off not being classified as “one of us”.
     The claim of being a strong Christian young man not only deteriorated with despair, but also with the common weakness of every man, should he be wise enough to admit it.  Joy’s beauty wasn’t just physical.  She looked at the world and life through the beauty she found in everything, and that made me hope again.  A hope for the future—with her.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Projected Timeline to Beyond Prejudice Release!

Thanks to the hard work of staff at Liberty University (LU) Press, Beyond Prejudice is projected to be released in approximately four weeks!  I would like to acknowledge my editor, designer, and business manager at LU Press for their persistence and dedication to this project.  They have taken my vision for my debut novel and brought reality to that vision through the business side of writing.  I am blessed to work with individuals who not only are professional in their work, but also have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, the ultimate Reason for writing and publishing.

Post yourself a reminder to visit Diane Estrella’s blog on June 24 at http://www.dianeestrella.com/ to read her review of Beyond Prejudice before you can buy it.  A copy of the novel will be given away that day or shortly thereafter on her blog.  I’ll be giving you more information here, too, closer to the release date, so keep following!

Northeast Iowa Community College (NICC) will be featuring Beyond Prejudice in the July issue of their alumni e-newsletter, Connection Point.  More information on that later this month.

Again, a listing of upcoming blog features for Beyond Prejudice:




Character Diaries
Caleb Phelps, Antagonist, Beyond Prejudice
Entry #2

     Well, if you were a guy with age, looks, and education in your favor, wouldn’t you try to get the girl you wanted?  Not that I didn't have lots of other choices, but let’s be honest, not every girl is like Elizabeth Tyler.  Some are better looking, better educated, and better acquainted with the world’s pleasures (not unlike myself), but somehow, Elizabeth caught my attention in ways that no other girl has ever done.  Even now, I can’t quite identify what it was. 
     David Mitsuko is one lucky guy.  I mean, who else but Elizabeth would cherish love for someone for two and a half years while he’s interned for being the same race as the enemy in war?  She kept saying it was because God had put them together.  How does God put two people together, anyway?  Don’t humans put themselves together?  Who said, if God even exists as omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient (yes, I know those terms!), that He would care enough about one person to intervene to the point of restructuring the possible outcomes of an executive order to reunite the two?

As I told Elizabeth, I’m a conformist, so I buy into the more popular view of dictating my own destiny.

All I know is, David found someone else at Manzanar.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Follow Beyond Prejudice in Print Publications and Online

Hello, all.  Spring is finally here!

Thanks to everyone who participated in the promotional drawing for Beyond Prejudice.  The complimentary copy of the novel goes to Derek.  Congratulations!

Thanks also to those who answered the survey question.  Many of you will be pleased to know that Beyond Prejudice is written in the single viewpoint of the main character, Elizabeth Tyler.  The greatest advantage of this viewpoint is that you, as the reader, can understand the main character with greater insight than in any other viewpoint.  It can be limiting, however, as the author is confined by what that specific character feels, thinks, acts out.  This character has to be in every scene, and in some cases, this limitation can shorten the length of the story to avoid padded prose.  What’s your answer for the new survey question?

If you haven’t read the feature article by the Fayette County Newspapers, check it out at  http://www.newspapersoffayettecounty.com/ .  It was printed in the Elgin Echo the week of April 25 and in the Fayette County Union and Ossian Bee the week of May 2. 

Look for blog features of Beyond Prejudice on these dates at the following blogs:


Get involved in a chance to win a complimentary copy of Beyond Prejudice when you participate on Margaret Daley’s and Dianne Estrella’s features.

Character Diaries
Elizabeth Tyler, Main Character, Beyond Prejudice
Entry #1

     Going to Poston changed my life.  It wasn’t just because I had stepped out on my own, out from the shelter of my parents’ home, though.  God used my experiences there to challenge everything I had claimed I believed about Him, from trust to the essence of salvation and obedience to His word.  I realized, too, how weak I am apart from God’s will and walking in the blessings of His council.
     I didn’t intend to lead Caleb on the way I did.  It wasn’t fair to him or David or God or even me.  Maybe I hurt myself the worst.  Caleb was enticing.  Flattery and infatuation can blind in an instant, or in this case, slowly, whittling away at scarred emotions and reluctant surrender to a will higher than my own.
     Seeing the prejudice tendencies of my nation solidified my love for others in many ways.  It caused me to look past what spectators thought and care for what God thinks of me instead.  I still grieve over what conditions David and his parents, Midori, Hannah, and Toyo lived in for over two years.  But even through the memories and pain I know they must still harbor somewhere deep inside, I am assured of the healing power of His grace that has taken an evil situation and used it to produce faith and the promise of eternal life for those involved.
     I can only trust that He uses my weaknesses to magnify His strength, just as He promised.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Beyond Prejudice

Welcome to my blog!  Thanks for stopping by.  I’m excited to inform you about my first book publication, coming soon from Liberty University Press.

Beyond Prejudice

In Beyond Prejudice, Elizabeth Tyler’s Japanese American fiancĂ© is interned with the rest of the West Coast Japanese in response to Executive Order 9066 after Pearl Harbor.  Elizabeth questions her country, her love, and her God as her faith is tried and refined. 

Beyond Prejudice is unique in its interracial twist on relationships among characters.  Readers get to experience the effects of Pearl Harbor two-fold as Elizabeth faces the challenges associated with “loving the enemy” and David overcomes the obstacle of remaining loyal to his country and his God while being denied the basic freedoms of being an American.  Women will especially enjoy Beyond Prejudice, as the challenges Elizabeth faces are those women often deal with as they pursue God’s will for their lives. 

My purpose in writing this novel is to encourage other believers to trust the Creator with their lives, hearts, minds, and ambitions, and to evoke a longing in those who have yet to believe.

Ordering information coming soon!

New blog entries will appear frequently after the release of the tile.  You’ll get to read my personal thoughts along with character and themed diaries, subject-related facts, quiz questions, surveys, promotions, and blog features.  Don’t miss it!

Know someone who loves Christian fiction?  Send them the link to my blog, http://raschellewurzer.blogspot.com/.  I’d love to hear from you.  E-mail me at raschellewurzer@juno.com.