Christian Carnival Plug

| | Comments (1)

This coming Wednesday is Christian Carnival XXXV and will be hosted at Rebecca Writes. If you have a blog, this will be a great way to get read and possibly pick up readers in the process or highlight your favorite post from the past week.

To enter is simple. First, your post should be of a Christian nature, but this does not exclude posts that are political (or otherwise) in nature from a Christian point of view. Second, please send only one post dated since the last Christian Carnival. Then, do the following:

email Rebecca at rstark@northwestel.net

Provide the following:

Title of your Blog
URL of your Blog
Title of your post
URL linking to that post
Description of the post

Please send in your post by Tuesday night before midnight EST.

Don't forget to encourage a friend to contribute, and have them stop
by and join the Christian Carnival mailing list here.

1 Comments

Hi Jeremy,

While we're on the topic of carnivals, I thought you might like to know about a new Carnival I'm hosting. The Storyblogging Carnival is currently up at Back of the Envelope.

What is Storyblogging? To quote myself:
--
If you're unfamiliar with the concept of storyblogging, it consists of storytelling in blog format. It may be as simple as posting short stories on your blog, or as intricate as blogging as a fictional persona. (I am excluding deliberate deception from this definition--you can argue that deception is a legitimate storytelling technique, but examples won't be included in this Carnival.) While storytelling is not necessarily fictional, the fiction/non-fiction categorization makes a useful criteria to separate out the storyblogging from the usual blog commentary. However, as you'll see, I haven't kept strictly to that criteria.
--
As you might guess, I'm busily promoting it with anyone who will listen. I hope you don't mind the pseudo-spam.

Thanks,

Donald

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jeremy Pierce published on September 12, 2004 7:49 PM.

Tokenism in Illinois was the previous entry in this blog.

Review: D.A. Carson, How Long, O Lord? is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Contact

    The Parablemen are: , , and .

Archives

Archives

Fiction I've Finished Recently

Non-Fiction I've Finished Recently

Games I've Been Playing