Welcome to the Christian Fiction Scavenger Hunt!

If you’ve just discovered the hunt, be sure to start at Stop #1, and collect the clues through all the stops, in order, so you can enter to win one of our top 5 grand prizes!

  • The hunt BEGINS on 3/19 at noon Mountain Time with Stop #1 at LisaBergren.com.
  • Hunt through our loop using Chrome or Firefox as your browser (not Explorer).
  • There is NO RUSH to complete the hunt. You have all weekend (until Sunday, 3/22 at midnight Mountain Time)! So take your time, reading the unique posts along the way; our hope is that you discover new authors/new books and learn new things about them.
  • Submit your entry for the grand prizes by collecting the CLUE on each author’s Scavenger Hunt post and submitting your answer in the entry form at the final stop, back on Lisa’s site. Many authors are offering additional prizes along the way!

 

Welcome to Stop #9! I’m Lori Benton. I write animal stories for children and historical fiction for grown-up readers (learn more about them here on this site, on Facebook, and on Instagram). My newest historical novel is called A Scattering of Light (releasing April 13 2026). Here’s what it’s about:

Colonial Virginia 1734

Mourning her wayward brother’s death, Verity Wilde has turned her back on Williamsburg society, striving to live by her notion of true religion: to keep oneself unspotted from the world. But when she boards a ship to claim an indentured Scottish clerk, she’s unprepared to find another Scotsman, starved and gravely ill, left on deck untended. With scarcely more knowledge of the man than his name and place of origin—William Crockett of Skye—pity compels Verity to purchase his indenture too, meaning to provide the compassionate death denied him by the ship’s crew. Only he doesn’t die.

Will Crockett’s survival upends Verity’s carefully circumscribed life, while he awakens to find his world shattered beyond recognition. As they seek to reconcile their broken pasts, bitterness and fear vie with hope to chart their futures. Can they find the courage to trust each other, and a God who scatters light in the darkness?

I’ve been creating landscapes in story and art for as long as I can remember. My earliest memories include drawing with crayons, inspired by an old anime show called Kimba the White Lion. As a painter, writer, and later a photographer, landscapes have informed my creative pursuits. No surprise then that one particular story landscape I encountered at the age of 19 changed the trajectory of my creative life…

The Power of Landscape in Story

“Every story would be another story… if it took up its characters and plot and happened somewhere else.” ~ Eudora Welty

The book that had such an impact on me was Taliesin by Stephen R. Lawhead, set during the latter years of Roman Britain. I read it in 1990 when I was making up my mind to become a published writer (if I could). It wasn’t just the setting of the book that inspired me, but also the cultural landscape of the British Celtic tribes, confronted with Christianity during the Roman occupation. Taliesin started my enduring fascination with the Iron Age Celts of the British Isles and explains why so many of the characters I include in my stories hail from that part of the world, even though my published novels are set during the 1700s and mainly in the American colonies. But none more so than my newest novel.

A Scattering of Light allowed me to weave in echoes of those vanished times into the life one of the main characters, William Wallace Crockett, a cattle drover from the Isle of Skye. The story begins high on the moors above a glen where, over the fleeting summer-dim nights, a young Will Crockett recounts the ancient Irish saga, the Táin Bó Cúailnge (The Cattle Raid of Cooley). A mysterious Celtic ring-brooch, like the one pictured below, figures into the story. Will invokes Celtic Christian blessings (old in the 1700s) as he goes about his daily life on Skye. Even a mention of aurochs, a type of wild cattle long extinct in Britain, echoes those far more ancient days.

I’d have happily (and passionately) filled the pages of A Scattering of Light with many more such references to times long before the 18th century, but that wasn’t the story I was telling. Most of A Scattering of Light unfolds on the other side of the Atlantic, in 1730s Williamsburg Virginia, where young Quaker Verity Crockett impulsively opens her home and (if she isn’t careful) her heart to Will Crockett, Skye drover, in his time of greatest need.

Is there a story landscape that’s deeply embedded in your heart? Do tell in the comments!

 

Here’s the Stop #9 Basics:

 

Before you go…

Check out an EXCLUSIVE FREE SNEAK PEEK of the opening scenes of A Scattering of Light!

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