About Stephen M. Miller
STEPHEN M. MILLER is an award-winning, bestselling Christian author of easy-reading books about the Bible and Christianity and author of the Casual English Bible® paraphrase.
His books have sold over two million copies and include The Complete Guide to the Bible (930,000) and Who’s Who and Where’s Where in the Bible.
A former newspaper reporter, Miller has a bachelor’s degree in news journalism from Kent State University and a master’s degree in biblical studies from Nazarene Theological Seminary. He describes himself a journalist who covers the Bible as his beat.
He launched his full-time freelance writing career in 1994, after working as a news reporter and later as an editor of Christian books, magazines, and Bible curriculum for a group of Christian denominations in the Wesleyan theological tradition.
Miller lives in the suburbs of Kansas City with his wife, Linda, a registered nurse. They have two married children who live nearby: Rebecca with her husband Jonathan, and Brad with his wife Jill. And they have five grandchildren.
In the Beginning: Stephen M. Miller
Stephen Miller was born in Oakland, Maryland. He was the first of six children—four boys, two girls—born to Clyde and Virginia Miller.
Steve’s parents grew up a mile apart in coal country near Tunnelton, West Virginia, a deer hunter’s long walk south of Morgantown.
After Steve came along, Clyde went looking for a job that didn’t involve dragging a pick into a dark hole.
He moved the family to Akron, Ohio where he became a tool and die maker, crafting steel parts for machinery.
Virginia didn’t work outside the home until all the kids were in school. Then she took a part-time job as a sales clerk at JC Penney—as much for the clothing discount as for the slight salary.
Steve, at age 15, started working part-time after school at a Sohio service station, pumping gas, changing oil, and fixing flat tires. (Sohio stood for Standard Oil of Ohio.) It was a job he kept into his college years, until the owner died. The salary, which started at 75 cents an hour, paid for his first car. An extreme vehicle. Extremely used. Ford Galaxy, dingy green. The first time he drove it, he didn’t know how to work the manual choke. A kid on a bicycle passed him.
News Journalism at Kent State University
In college, Steve Miller knocked out his general courses at the nearby University of Akron. Then he transferred to Kent State University, where he got a bachelor’s degree in news journalism.
For those wondering where he was in 1970 when the Ohio National Guard came to Kent State to quell the Vietnam War protests and ended up killing four students in the parking lot outside the School of Journalism, Steve was a senior in high school.
His mother enrolled at Kent State the same year he did. She got a degree in elementary education, launching her career as a public school teacher. Don’t ask Steve who finished college with a higher grade-point average.
Steve commuted to college; he couldn’t afford to live on campus. He drove the 45 minutes each day to Kent, Ohio. After the owner of the Sohio service station died, Steve found a full-time summer job working in a factory. He ran heated molds that pressed uncured rubber into auto parts. Then he dug out the parts with a brass pick. He sweat through his clothes in the first 10 minutes, and through his boots by 30. At shift’s end, his crust of body salt sculpted him into Lot’s wife’s brother.
Steve Miller: News Reporter
When Steve Miller landed a summer internship his senior year, working as a news reporter for the Coshocton Tribune in central Ohio, life was looking up. He lived in a rented trailer and listened to his mouse traps snapping at night. Which wasn’t as tough as listening to the girl next door match her oscillating voice to a record player with an rpm that couldn’t decide which r to pm. But Steve was out of the rubber factory. And into an air-conditioned office.
After graduation, he took a job as a news reporter with the Alliance Review. He worked there a year and a half, covering general news and editing the religion section and the business section. Small paper. Pleasant town.
It was during those months that he decided the Christian publishing world needed a little help from writers and editors who had taken journalism 101. He admits his arrogance.
He moved to Kansas City in 1976 to attend Nazarene Theological Seminary. The seminary offered no programs for Christian journalists. The options were: preacher, Christian education minister, or missionary. Steve wanted none of the above. All he wanted was an education in the Bible and theology. He took the two-year Christian education program, and concentrated his electives in biblical literature and theology.
He worked at Nazarene Church Headquarters as a magazine, book, and curriculum editor for about a dozen years, receiving the top editing award from the Evangelical Press Association. It was the award of excellence for the magazine he edited, Illustrated Bible Life.
Full-Time Freelancing
That same year, in 1994, Steve Miller resigned from Nazarene Headquarters to begin a full-time career in freelance writing.
By then, he was already writing part-time for Reader’s Digest Books, helping them with Who’s Who in the Bible—the first in a series of four Bible-related books he helped them write.
As a full-time freelance writer, Steve covered a wide range of topics for secular and religious publishing companies. From international travel to family matters to health topics for the Mayo Clinic, helping Mayo write 10 books. All the while, he wrote articles and books about the Bible. This was the writing he most enjoyed, and knew best. It became his niche.
His first bestselling book was How to Get Into the Bible, published without the help of an agent. The lousy deal he let himself get talked into convinced him that good agents are worth the 15 percent they charge.
Steve Miller teamed up with Robert V. Huber, a former Reader’s Digest editor, to write The Bible: A History, for Lion Publishing of England. The book won the non-fiction book of the year award in 2004 from England’s Christian broadcasting media. It has been translated into more than a dozen languages, including Arabic, Chinese, and Russian.
Steve’s next award-winner, which turned out to be a bestseller as well, was Who’s Who and Where’s Where in the Bible. It won the 2006 non-fiction book of the year award from Christian retailers. It also spent most of the year on the Christian bestseller list.
This book, illustrated with color pictures and written in a magazine style laced in humor, convinced the publisher there was a market for easy-reading Bible reference books.
Awards
- Best Christian nonfiction book in United States: Who’s Who and Where’s Where in the Bible (Awarding organization: Christian Retailing; the Retailer’s Choice Award)
- Best Christian nonfiction book in England: The Bible—A History (Awarding organization: Christian Broadcasting Council)
- Award of Excellence: Illustrated Bible Life magazine (Awarding organization: Evangelical Press Association; top award in magazine editing)
- Gold Medallion Finalist: How to Get into the Bible (Awarding organization: Evangelical Christian Publisher’s Association; one of top 5 Bible study books of the year)
- Gold Book Award: Complete Guide to the Bible (Awarding organization: Evangelical Christian Publisher’s Association; sales over half a million)