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Top 10 Blog Posts of April 2026: #6. A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: The Long Tail Has a Pulse

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  How a Decades‑Old Book Keeps Whispering Back Every author knows the thrill of a new release: the launch, the buzz, the early reviews, the first royalty statement. What we talk about less is the quiet, stubborn afterlife of a book — the way it keeps moving through the world long after we’ve stopped expecting anything from it. Sometimes that afterlife arrives as a tiny, almost comical royalty deposit. A few dollars. A few cents. A reminder that somewhere, someone found your book. Maybe they searched for it. Maybe they stumbled across it. Maybe they were handed a used copy by a friend. But they read it — and that matters. The long tail of publishing isn’t glamorous, but it’s real. Books don’t disappear when the marketing stops. They drift. They linger. They get discovered in unexpected places. They find new readers in new decades. And every once in a while, they send up a little flare:  I’m still here. For authors, that pulse is worth noticing. It’s proof that our work has a li...

๐ŸŒ™ The Origins and Development of Sufism

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  Sufism, often called Islamic mysticism , is the heart of Islam’s spiritual tradition — a way of seeking direct experience of the Divine beyond ritual and doctrine. ๐ŸŒฟ Early Roots Emergence: Began in the 8th–9th centuries CE, as some Muslims sought deeper spiritual meaning amid growing materialism in the early caliphates. Name origin: The word Sufi likely comes from แนฃลซf (Arabic for “wool”), referring to the simple wool garments worn by early ascetics. Influence: Inspired by Qur’anic teachings on purity, love, and remembrance of God ( dhikr ). Early figures: Hasan al‑Basri, Rabia al‑Adawiyya, and Junayd of Baghdad emphasized humility, love, and inner purification. ๐Ÿ”ฅ The Inner Path Goal: Union with God through love, remembrance, and self‑transcendence. Core practices: Dhikr — rhythmic repetition of divine names. Sama — listening to music or poetry to awaken the heart. Fana — “annihilation” of the ego in divine presence. Ethos: Sufism teaches that the heart, not the intel...

๐ŸŒฟ Transformation Tuesday: Jennifer Fulwiler — Faith in the Midst of Real Life

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  Jennifer Fulwiler didn’t find God in a moment of emotion or crisis. She found Him through logic — through the steady, rational process of asking questions and following truth wherever it led. Raised in an atheist home, Jennifer approached faith as a skeptic and a thinker. Her conversion began not with a vision, but with a conclusion: that the world made more sense if God existed. She once wrote that this logical foundation gave her confidence — that reason would sustain her even through moments of doubt. And yet, her faith was never abstract. It was lived in the most tangible way possible — amid the joyful chaos of raising six children. Her blog, Conversion Diary , chronicled those early years with humor and honesty. One unforgettable photo showed what she found one morning: a doll, face‑down on a leather chair, lying in a puddle of pee. Real life, unfiltered — and somehow, sacred. Jennifer’s transformation reminds us that faith doesn’t always arrive through thunder or tears. Som...