Carol Preston

October 30, 2009

Getting to know you Thursday with Susan Page Davis and giveaway

Welcome Susan Page Davis to getting to know you Thursday. Sorry its a little late I was having issues with my anti virus and a broken mouse.

1. Can you tell us a little about yourself?

I grew up in Maine, the extreme northeast of the USA. I have a degree in history and I’m a certified farrier (blacksmith). I’m the mother of six (four are grown college graduates and two are teenagers still at home). I also have five adorable grandchildren. I started writing fiction about 10 years ago. My husand is a recently retired news editor.

2. When you were a child did you have a favourite book or books?

I’ve loved books for as long as I can remember. A few of my favorites as a child were the Miss Pickerell books by Ellen MacGregor and the Trixie Belden series. My sisters and I pored over the poetry volumes of the Childcraft books.

3. Do you have a favourite Genre to both read and right write?

I love to read mystery and suspense, but I also read history (true and fictional), romance, and just about anything that comes my way. As to writing—whatever I’m working on now is my favorite. Today it’s historical romance.

4. Did you have favourite authors growing up who have influenced you?

I don’t think so. I read voraciously, often above my grade level. I’d get lost in the story. A lot of the stories I wrote as a child were mysteries, so probably those made the most enduring impression.

5. When did you know you wanted to be an author?

Very early. At least by age 9.

6. How did you go about becoming an author?

I assumed it was beyond reach for a long time. But as an adult, after working 21 years for a newspaper, I decided to try fiction seriously.

7. If you were not a writer what would you like to be?

A horse trainer.

8. Outside reading and writing what do you like to do?

I enjoy needlework, logic problem, and genealogy. I also like the outdoors.

9. Do you have a place you love to visit or would love to visit?

I went to England once while in college and would love to visit there again.

10. If you could have a meal with 3 living people who would you choose and why?

My three married children. They live from 1,200 to 4,000 miles from me, and I rarely get to sit down with them.


Finally can you tell us about your current books and/or any that will be coming out soon. Also where we can find you on the web.

Hearts in the Crosshairs releases next week. The heroine, Jillian Goff, has just taken the oath of office as Maine’s first female governor when someone shoots at her. Dave Hutchins and other members of the state’s Executive Protection Unit have to keep her safe and find out who is trying to kill her.

In December, look for The Sheriff’s Surrender, book 1 of my new series, The Ladies’ Shooting Club, set in 1885 Idaho.

My Web site is at: http://www.susanpagedavis.com/









Giveaway
Susan has generously offered one reader of my blog a chance to win a copy of Hearts in the crosshair. To have a chance of winning please leave a comment and a way to contact you (if I dont know how to contact you) by Monday November 9 midday Aussie time.

October 27, 2009

The Call of Zulina blog Tour with giveaway


ISBN: 1426700695

ISBN-13: 9781426700699

Format: Paperback

Abingdon Press

Pub. Date: August 2009

Retail: $13.99



About the Book:

(Eugene, Oregon) – An arranged marriage, a runaway bride, and an ugly family heritage
of brutal and inhumane slavery operations leave no room for a fairytale story. Grace Winslow, daughter of an English sea captain and African princess,
finds herself in a horrific position of betrothal. Doomed to marry an obnoxious white man, whom she does not love, Grace runs away to escape the
slavery she’s been surrounded by all her life. Instead, her journey from home brings her face-to-face with issues of extreme slavery, abuse and
human trafficking. In the end she discovers slavery is more than just chains and finds grace that exceeds a name given to her by her
parents.

Written by Kay Marshall Strom, The Call of Zulina links historical slavery issues with the modern-day crisis tainting many
countries. On the heels of important legislature regarding human trafficking, Strom tackles the subject boldly as she sheds light on the practices and
techniques used by angry slave traders. Seen as an advocate for those who have no voice, Strom finds words to communicate the message of history to
today’s readers. While this book shines the light on an uncomfortable subject, the message of hope, freedom, and justice prevail and eternal
truths discovered.




About the Author:
Author Kay Marshall Strom has two great loves: writing and helping others achieve their own writing potential. Kay has written thirty-six published books, numerous magazine articles, and two screenplays. While mostly a nonfiction writer, the first book of her historical novel trilogy Grace in Africa has met with acclaim. Kay speaks at seminars, retreats, writers’ conferences, and special events throughout the country and around the world. She is in wide demand as an instructor and keynote speaker at major writing conferences. She also enjoys speaking aboard cruise ships in exchange for exotic cruise destinations.



Blog Tour Interview:
1. How did you come up with the storyline of The Call of Zulina?
While in West Africa working on another project, I toured an old slave fortress and was struck dumb by a set of baby manacles bolted to the wall. The characters of Lingongo and Joseph Winslow, Grace's parents, are modeled after real people who ran a slave business in Africa in the 1700s. I "met" them when I was researching Once Blind: The Life of John Newton, a biography of the slaver turned preacher and abolitionists, author of Amazing Grace. The more I thought about them, the more I wondered, "If they'd had a daughter, who would she be? Where would her loyalties lie?"

2. What inspired you to write a book so entrenched with uncomfortable issues?
I used to think that non-fiction was the meat and potatoes of writing and fiction was the chocolate mousse dessert... fun, but not of much value. But I've come to understand that truths can be revealed through fiction just as powerfully as through non-fiction. Sometimes, more so! The fact is, for so long we have tried to look away and pretend that this horrible chapter in history never happened. But it did, and we still feel the effects today. Moreover, the roots of slavery--hunger for power and money, fear and diminishment of people unlike ourselves, and humanity's endless ability to rationalize evil actions--abound today. The time seemed right.

3. How haveyour travels around the world equipped you for writing such a historical novel?
People ask me where my passion for issues such as modern day slavery come from. To a large degree it is from the things I have seen and heard on my numerous trips to India, African countries, Cambodia, Nepal, Indonesia, and other places around the world.

4. Tell us a personal story regarding modern day slavery.
A most pervasive type of slavery is what is known as bonded servitude, where entire poor families are bound into virtual slavery--sometimes for generations--because of a small debt. This is especially common in India. I visited a village in central India where the women had been freed from bondage and set up with a micro loan that allowed them to raise a small herd of dairy cows. They worked so hard and saved every rupee. When they had enough saved, they persuaded a young teacher to come and start a school for their children. Then they used further profits to make low interest loans to others in the area so they could start their own businesses, too--a little bank. I sat in a circle with the five women who made up the "board of directors." Only one could read and write. I asked, "How will the next generation be different because of what you have done?" They said, "No more will be like us. When people look us, they see nothing. But when they look at our children, they see real human beings with value."
From invisible slaves to human beings... all in one generation!

5. Grace, the lead character in The Call of Zulina, forsakes all to escape the slavery of her parents and an arranged marriage.How common is this scenerio today in other countries?
Horrifyingly common. Slavery today takes many forms. According to UNICEF's more conservative count, there are about 12 million people living as slaves today--three times as many as in the days of the African slave trade. As for child arranged marriages, I have talked to girls "enslaved" to husbands in many countries. Examples include a girl in Nepal married at 9 to a middle-aged man, one in India married at 11, a 13-year-old in Egypt married to a man older than her father. I've seen it in Africa, Eastern Europe... so many places!

6. What about in America, are there slavery and trafficking issues here?
Unfortunately, there are. The U.S. State Department estimates between 14,500 and 17,500 people are trafficked into the Untied States each year, although it concedes that the real number is actually far higher. And it's not just states like New York and California that are affected, either. According to the U.S. Justice Department's head of the new human trafficking unit, there is now at least one case of trafficking in every state.

7. You've had 36 books published, and more written and contracted for future release. How has this one impacted your own life?
Some books report, some tell stories. This book has torn my heart.

8. Briefly tell us about the next two books in this Grace in Africa trilogy.
In Book 2, Grace watches her reconstructed life smashed by slavers and revenge, and she is forcibly taken to London. There she faces a new kind of tyranny and another fight for freedom... and for her husband, who is enslaved in America.

Book 3 is set in the new United States of America, in the heart of the slavery. It is a story of slavery at it's worst and redemption at its best.

What Can Concerned Citizens Do to Raise Awareness?
Find out all you can about Modern Day Slavery: then watch for chances to pass on what you have learned.
Write to your elected officials: Petition them to place a high priority on enforcing anti-slavery laws and to put pressure on countries that tolerate forced labor or human trafficking.
Buy Fair Trade products: Fair trade provides a sustainable model of international trade based on economic justice. To find out more, see http://e2ma.net/go/2459016468/2238546/84701534/goto:http://www.fairtrade.net/ .
Support organizations that are in a position to make a difference. When you find an one that is doing a good job on the front lines, contribute to their cause so they can continue on.
Be willing to step into the gap. If you suspect someone is being held against his or her will, call the Department of Justice hotline: 1-888-428-7581. Or you can call 911.

Grand Prize Giveaway!!!
Kay Marshall Strom is giving the following books to one fortunate commenter from The Call of Zulina blog tour. The prize package includes several of Kay's books:

Seeking Christ: A Christian Woman's Guide to Personal Wholeness & Spiritual Maturity
John Newton:The Angry Sailor
Making Friends with Your Mother
Making Friends with Your Father
To enter this giveaway leave a comment by Nov 2 aussie time and one person from the comments will go into the drawing for this prize. Leave a way to contact you in case you win.

CFBA Tour A Little Help from My Friends by Anne Dayton & May Vanderbilt


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

A Little Help from My Friends

FaithWords (October 15, 2009)

by

Anne Dayton & May Vanderbilt



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


ANNE DAYTON graduated from Princeton University and is earning her master's degree in English literature at New York University. She works for a New York publishing company and lives in Brooklyn.

MAY VANDERBILT graduated from Baylor University and went on to earn a master's degree in fiction from Johns Hopkins University. She lives in San Francisco, where she writes about food, fashion, and nightlife in the Bay Area.

Together, the two women are the authors of Miracle Girls series




ABOUT THE BOOK

Zoe is used to being overlooked. As the youngest and shyest Miracle Girl, she was happy to fade into the background last year. But when she sheds her baby fat and shoots up four inches the summer before her junior year, everything changes. Now she's turning heads at school, and this new attention is beginning to strain her relationship with her sweet, serious boyfriend, Marcus.

Pressure builds when Zoe's assigned partner for history class is Dean Marchese--a handsome New York transplant who isn't afraid to show her how he feels.
Just when she needs her three best friends the most, the Miracle Girls are suffering from boy troubles of their own.

Even Zoe's rock-solid home life begins to shake underneath her when her parents' relationship frays in the face of serious financial burdens. As this uncertain year of growing pains comes to a frenetic head, the quietest Miracle Girl must find her voice at long last and take control of her own destiny . . . with more than a little help from her friends.

If you would like to read the first chapter of A Little Help from My Friends, go HERE

October 24, 2009

CFBA tour The Fence My Father Built by Linda S. Clare


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

The Fence My Father Built

Abingdon Press (October 2009)

by

Linda S. Clare




ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Linda S. Clare is an award-winning coauthor of three books, including Lost Boys and the Moms Who Love Them (with Melody Carlson and Heather Kopp), Revealed: Spiritual Reality in a Makeover World, and Making Peace with a Dangerous God (with Kristen Johnson Ingram). She has also published many essays, stories, and poems in publications including The Christian Reader, The Denver Post, and The Philadelphia Inquirer. Linda grew up in a part of Arizona, where the dirt is as red as it is in Central Oregon. She graduated summa cum laude in Art Education from Arizona State University and taught in public and private schools. She has taught college-level creative writing classes for seven years, and edits and mentors writers. She also is a frequent writing conference presenter and church retreat leader. She and her husband of thirty-one years have four grown children, including a set of twins. They live in Eugene, Oregon, with their five wayward cats: Oliver, Xena the Warrior Kitty, Paladine, Melchior, and Mamma Mia!

ABOUT THE BOOK

When legally separated Muri Pond, a librarian, hauls her kids, teenager Nova and eleven year-old Truman, out to the tiny town of Murkee, Oregon, where her father, Joe Pond lived and died, she's confronted by a neighbor's harassment over water rights and Joe's legacy: a fence made from old oven doors.

The fence and accompanying house trailer horrify rebellious Nova, who runs away to the drug-infested streets of Seattle. Muri searches for her daughter and for something to believe in, all the while trying to save her inheritance from the conniving neighbor who calls her dad Chief Joseph.

Along with Joe's sister, Aunt Lutie, and the Red Rock Tabernacle Ladies, Muri must rediscover the faith her alcoholic dad never abandoned in order to reclaim her own spiritual path.

Watch the trailer:




If you would like to read the first chapter of The Fence My Father Built , go HERE

I haven't read this book yet but hoping to start today. Will post asap.

October 22, 2009

Getting to know you Thursday with Trish Perry

Please welcome Trish Perry to Getting to know you Thursdays.


1. Can you tell us a little about yourself?

I’ve been writing seriously for about 15 years and publishing books for the past four. Before I started writing, I worked for attorneys in Washington, D.C. and then for the Securities and Exchange Commission. I was also a stockbroker for four agonizing years; I really hated that job. I’m much happier operating through the right side of my brain! I live in Northern Virginia with my teenaged son, who constantly makes me laugh. I have a lovely adult daughter who will be remarrying in a few months to a terrific guy with whom she’s been friends for years. And I have a fantastic six-year-old grandson.

2. When you were a child did you have a favourite book or books?

My British grandparents gave me a book called Beryl the Peril, about a real troublemaker of a girl. I loved that book. She was so bad! And then My Father’s Dragon was a huge favorite of mine. I so wanted my kids to embrace it as I did, but it never rang their chimes the same way. Ah, well, different books for different generations, right?

3. Do you have a favourite Genre to both read and right write?

Certainly as far as writing is concerned, I’m most drawn to contemporary romance with a humorous twist. I’ve dabbled in writing historical, but I find myself stilted with it. My heroine can’t take a step without my feeling I need to research that step to death, to make sure every facet of it fits with the time period. Yeesh. It’s like trying to play basketball while wearing a corset—very confining. And I’ve written a supernatural thriller that I actually like very much, but I don’t think the market is very strong in that regard right now. Maybe someday.
As far as reading is concerned, I’m wide open. I vary genre from one book to the next, so if I read an inspirational romance I’ll follow with maybe a mainstream historical, followed by something speculative or otherwise off the wall.

4. Did you have favourite authors growing up who have influenced you?

I think “influenced” would be too strong a word. Maybe a touch here and there, so I suppose I’m a bit of a mutt in that regard. Before I became a Christian, I read plenty of yearning-heaving-type romances until they became too predictable. They didn’t seem particularly romantic to me, just sexual. Then I read a lot of thrillers, a la Ken Follet, James Grady, and Robert Ludlam, until they started to blend into one big ball of espionage, and I wanted a change. Finally, I started reading more classical fare: Hemingway, Austen, Fitzgerald, Hurston, Faulkner, George Eliot. And after becoming a Christian, I added inspirational fiction to my reading list. You see? Mutt.

But anyone who has read my stuff is probably scratching her head at the above author list. Despite what I read, I found when I wrote that my voice was more a romantic, humorous one. I began reading authors like Helen Fielding, Marian Keyes, and Jennifer Weiner. Surely, I thought, there was a market out there for a similar style, but with cleaner plotlines. After writing my first two published books, I learned there were a few other authors out there who wrote humorous contemporary romance for the inspirational reader. And our numbers are growing!

5. When did you know you wanted to be an author?

I was working on my Psychology degree (as an adult college student). I was sure the Lord wanted me to become a counselor. But in the process of completing the degree, I realized how much I enjoyed the writing assignments given me, especially in English classes that required creativity. I got wonderful encouragement from my professors, so I took as many creative writing courses as I could and absolutely loved them. By the time I finished my degree, I had decided to write for a couple of years before deciding whether or not to go to grad school for Psychological Counseling. I never went back!

6. How did you go about becoming an author?

Besides those classes, I joined a local writers’ group, and I read everything I could about writing fiction. I joined Writers Digest Book Club and went nuts. I still haven’t finished reading all of the books I ordered. I started submitting small pieces before I finished college, and my first acceptance letter—for a poem in the Salvation Army’s War Cry magazine—arrived in the mail a few days after I graduated. I wrote several short stories and published a few of those, as well as some personal essays and such. I entered several writing contests and won a few accolades. Finally I decided to try a novel. The first one took me years. That’s the supernatural novel, and it may very well have simply been a learning experience, never to be published. I met my fabulous agent when she spoke to my local writers’ group, and she eventually brought my next two books to publication. They sold together (The Guy I’m Not Dating and Too Good to Be True).

7. If you were not a writer what would you like to be?

Everything I would like to be, if not a writer, is artistic and low paying—isn’t that just the way? I’d like to sing professionally or be a professional photographer. However, I’m actually training right now to become a courtroom reporter—which will be interesting enough—just to make sure the bills get paid. But what I find most attractive about that career is the flexible hours, which will enable me to continue to write and to keep the all-important electricity flowing to my computer!

8. Outside reading and writing what do you like to do?

I love to sing, and before my writing schedule got so busy I served on the worship team at my church for years. I enjoy getting together with girlfriends just to hang out, eat, laugh, and go to shows and to the movies and such. I treasure my time with my kids, and I pray they’ll always be near enough for us to get together once in awhile—that’s difficult enough with my daughter living only an hour away! I would definitely enjoy traveling more often than I do, but only if I could teleport. Airports and flying are such pains! But when I’m wealthy enough for my own jet, I’ll be all over the world, honey!

9. Do you have a place you love to visit or would love to visit?

I’m a homebody at heart and moved into my townhome a couple of years ago—I love my cozy home. I’ve only been overseas once, to Italy. I’d like to return. And I’d love to tour all of Europe. A few of my girlfriends and I talk about that on occasion, our eyes getting all dreamy. Once all of our kids are off at college, we just might go. Again, that’s going to be so much easier once that jet of mine arrives.

10. If you could have a meal with 3 living people who would you choose and why?
Wow, I could come up with so many different combinations, depending upon my mood of the time. If I have to give you just one combination, I’ll give you a group I’d choose for a laugh-out-loud dinner: Steve Carell, Ricky Gervais, and Ellen DeGeneres.

11. Finally can you tell us about your current books and/or any that will be coming out soon. Also where we can find you on the web.

My most recent release is Sunset Beach. It’s about a curious young woman about to enter grad school who decides to orchestrate a meeting between her enigmatic mother and long-lost aunt at a funky little beach house in San Diego, California. Many family secrets unfold, and a juicy romance happens along, as well. The book is all about identity.

And by the time you post this, the ink should be dry on a brand new contract I’ve just received, so I’m probably safe to mention it. I’m very excited about a new series I’m doing for Harvest House Publishers, called The Tea Shop Series. The books are set in beautiful Middleburg, Virginia, a small-but-diverse town in Northern Virginia, about an hour outside Washington, D.C. The connecting point of the stories is a tea shop run by a British woman who has lived in America for years. None of the stories are hers—she is simply the person in common with the various groups featured in each installment.

The first book, The Perfect Blend, is about a young woman who burns all of her bridges, leaves her family, job, and hometown, to elope with her dashing attorney boyfriend. The problem? She arrives in Middleburg, ready to wed, and dashing boyfriend is nowhere to be found. What happens after that is great fun. And very romantic! The book won’t release until sometime in early 2011, but I suspect the next installment, Water Hot Enough, may follow within the same year. That book will involve an entirely new cast of characters, other than our tea shop owner.
You can find me at my web site: http://www.trishperry.com/

And read my monthly column: http://www.christianfictiononlinemagazine.com/berzerk_stranger.html

My Facebook page is: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/profile.php?id=145

My Twitter page is: twitter.com/TrishPerryBooks

And my Shoutlife page is: http://www.shoutlife.com/profile_view.cfm?uid=12222

CFBA Tour Watch Over Me by Christa Parrish


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Watch Over Me

(Bethany House October 1, 2009)

by

Christa Parrish



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Christa Parrish graduated high school at 16, with every intention of becoming a surgeon. After college, however, her love of all things creative led her in another direction, and she worked in both theatre and journalism.

A winner of Associated Press awards for her reporting, Christa gave up her career after the birth of her son, Jacob. She continued to write from home, doing pro bono work for the New York Family Policy Council, where her articles appeared in Focus on the Family’s Citizen magazine. She was also a finalist in World magazine’s WORLDview short story contest, sponsored by WestBow press. She now teaches literature and writing to high school students, is a homeschool mom, and lives with her husband, author Chris Coppernoll, and son in upstate New York, where she is at work on her third novel.



ABOUT THE BOOK

Her Rescue Might Be the Miracle They Needed Things like this don't happen in Beck County. Deputy Benjamin Patil is the one to find the infant girl, hours old, abandoned in a field. As police work to identify the mother, Ben and his wife, Abbi, seem like the obvious couple to serve as foster parents. But the newborn's arrival opens old wounds for Abbi and shines a harsh light on how much Ben has changed since a devastating military tour. Their marriage teeters on the brink and now they must choose to reclaim what they once had or lose each other forever.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Watch Over Me, go HERE

Wildcard tour Emmy's Equal by Marcia Gruver

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Emmy’s Equal

Barbour Books (October 9, 2009)

***Special thanks to Angie Brillhart of Barbour Publishing for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Marcia Gruver lives with her husband in Huffman, Texas, and has published various articles, poems, and devotionals. Her novel, Love Never Fails (renamed Chasing Charity), won third place in the 2007 American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) Genesis Contest. Marcia is a member of ACFW, Fellowship of Christian Writers (FCW), and The Writers View.

Visit the author's website.


Product Details:

List Price: $10.97
Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: Barbour Books (October 9, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1602602077
ISBN-13: 978-1602602076

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Humble, Texas, August, 1906


The stagnant well appeared bottomless, as dank and murky as a grave. Emmy rested her arms on the cold, jagged stones and leaned to peer into the abyss. Mama’s embroidered lace hankie, shimmering in the meager light, hung from an outcropping of rock about four feet down. Narrowing her eyes, she peered at the spot of white that stood out from the surrounding darkness and heaved a sigh, stirring the fetid air below and raising a noxious odor that took her breath.

She pushed up her sleeves and blasted a droopy blonde ringlet from her eyes with a frustrated puff of air. There was no help for it—at the risk of certain death, she had to retrieve that handkerchief.

A figure loomed, drawing alongside her with a grunt.

She jumped, and her heart shot past her throat. Chest pounding, she wasted a glare on the dark profile, noticing for the first time a scatter of lines around his eyes and tiny gray curlicues in his sideburns.

“Nash! I nearly leapt over the side.” She swatted his arm. “I’ve asked you to stop sneaking up on me. I’ve a good mind to fit you with a cowbell.”

A chuckle rumbled from his chest, as deep as the chasm. “I didn’t go to scare you, Miss Emmy.” He bent his lanky body so far she feared he’d tumble headfirst into the never-ending shaft. “Say, what we looking for inside this hole?”

“We’re not looking for anything. I’ve already found it.” Emmy clutched his shirtsleeve and pulled him away. “Go fetch me a lantern, and be quick about it.” She tucked her chin in the direction of the palomino pony languishing under a nearby oak, nibbling at the circle of high grass around the trunk. “Take Trouble. He’ll be quicker than walking.”

Nash frowned and rubbed the knuckles of one hand along his temple, as if an ache had sprung up there. “What you need a lantern for, with the sun up and shining the past five hours? There’s plenty of light to see.”

She braced herself and pointed. “Not down there.”

Nash’s sleepy eyes flew open. His startled gaze bounced along her finger to the circular wall of weathered stones. “Down there?” He took a cautious step back. “What’s in this sour old pit that might concern you?”

Emmy swallowed hard. She could trust Nash with anything but dreaded his reaction all the same. “It’s. . .one of mama’s hankies.” She squeezed her eyes shut and ducked her head.

His shoulders eased, and he ambled over to gaze inside. “Is that all?”

If only it were. Emmy risked a peek at him. “You don’t understand.”

He winced as if she’d spoken a bad omen. “Uh, uh. Not from her good batch? Them she’s always cackling about?”

Emmy cringed and nodded.

The delicate, lacy linens held an uncommon depth of meaning for Emmy’s mama. Hand embroidered in Germany by her grandmother then brought to the Americas and placed in Mama’s hope chest, they represented heart, hearth, and homeland to Magdalena Dane. In equal measure, they represented distress, discontent, and discord to her only daughter, because the bothersome bits of cloth seemed determined to cause Emmy grief.

Nash’s stunned expression hardened into an accusing glare. “Why, Miss Emmy? Why you done brought about such misery? You ain’t s’posed to touch ’em, and you know it.” His graying brows fluttered up and down, like two moths bent on escape. “There’s scarce few left, and your mama blames you for them what’s missing.”

She moaned and flapped her hands. “I didn’t mean to take the silly thing. It was warm when I rode out this morning. I knew I’d likely sweat, so I snagged a hankie from the clothesline. I never looked at it until a few minutes ago. That’s how this terrible mishap came about. I held it up as I rode, staring in disbelief. Trouble was galloping across the yard when the wind caught it and. . .” She motioned behind her. “The willful rag drifted down the well before I could stop the horse and chase after it.”

Emmy lowered her eyes then peered up at him through her lashes. “None of this is my fault, Nash. Papa should’ve covered this smelly cistern months ago, and those wretched handkerchiefs have a mind of their own.”

The hint of a smile played around Nash’s lips. “If so, they harbor a mighty poor opinion of you.”

She wrinkled her nose at him.

Wagging his head, he rested the back of his hand on his side. “In all my years of working for your family, of all the fits I’ve seen your mama pitch, the worst have been over the loss of them fancy scraps of cloth.” He shuddered. “Miss Emmy, I’d be mighty grateful if you’d wait and break the news to her after I leave for the day. She gon’ be powerful upset.”

Emmy held up and wiggled a finger. “On the contrary. I won’t be upsetting Mama.”

“How you figure that?”

“Because there’s no need to tell her.”

Nash propped his elbow in one hand and rubbed his chin with the other. “Missy, I thought you was done telling lies and scheming. Don’t forget you’re a saint of God now.”

A saint of God. Yes, she was, through no fault of her own. Like Elijah’s fiery chariot, God had swirled into Emmy’s life in a weak moment and delivered her from herself. Not that she minded His day-to-day presence. In fact, she rather enjoyed the peace He brought. It was during times of temptation when she found the constant stirring in her heart to do the right thing a bit of a bother. Yet no wonder, really. In the past, she’d had precious little practice in doing the right thing.

She blinked up at Nash. “I have no plans to lie, and I won’t need to scheme. We’re simply going to return great-grandmother’s hankie to Mama’s clothesline, washed, rinsed, and fresh as a newborn calf.”

Nash stared then shook his head. “No ma’am. You jus’ forget about what we gon’ do. Question is how are you gon’ pull it off?”

“I’ll show you.” She shooed him with her hands. “Run fetch that lantern like I asked and leave the rest to me.”

Still shaking his head, Nash mounted Trouble and laid in his heels. The horse bolted the short distance across the yard to the well-kept shed tucked behind Emmy’s two-story house. With a furtive glance toward the porch, Nash eased the door open and slipped inside.

While she waited, Emmy watched a rowdy band of crows swarm Nash’s cornfield. The black bandits bickered and pecked for position before settling in for a meal, oblivious to the mop-headed stick Nash had dressed in a ragged shirt and floppy hat and then shoved in the ground. She dared not call his attention to the culprits or he’d bluster after them, shouting and waving his arms like a demented windmill, leaving her to cope alone with her pressing dilemma.

She jerked her gaze from the birds when Nash rode up and slid off Trouble to the ground, a lighted lantern in his hand.

Handing over the light with a flourish, he lowered one brow and pinned her with a squinty look. “Here’s what you asked for. Jus’ be sure to leave me plumb out of the story when you go explaining yourself to your mama.”

He turned to go, but Emmy caught hold of his shirttail. “Not so fast. I’m not done with you.”

Nash covered his ears and reeled away. “Don’t tell me no mo’. I ain’t seen nothing, and I ain’t heard nothing. If anybody needs me, I’ll be feeding the chickens.”

Emmy aimed a haughty laugh at his back. “It’s too late for that. You’re in up to your hat, and it’s no less punishment than you deserve for sneaking about all the time.”

Nash dug in his heels and stood facing the grove of loblolly pine at the edge of the yard, his body stiff as a post.

Repentant, she softened her voice to a plea. “I’m sorry, Nash. I had no call to utter such a thing. It’s just. . .I can’t do this without you.”

Arms dangling at his sides, he tipped his head toward the sky and whispered something, a prayer no doubt, before turning to face her. “What you want me to do?”

She peppered him with grateful kisses then grabbed his hand. “Come over here.” Hauling him to the gaping cavity, she lowered the lamp. “See? There it is.”

They gazed at the only bright spot in the oppressive gloom, their ability to see inside the shaft made no better by the frail circle of yellow light.

Nash shrugged and drew back from the side. “Too far down. May as well wave it goodbye then go fess up to what you done.”

Emmy gripped his arm. “Nonsense. We can get it out of there.”

“How, short of fishing it out with a cane pole? And I got no hooks.” He scratched his head. “I reckon I could take my hammer and pound a bend in a nail.”

She shook her head. “Too risky. If the hankie slips off it’ll settle to the bottom, and that’ll be the end of it.” She drew a determined breath. “I have a better idea.”

Nash’s eyebrows rose on his forehead, reaching new heights, even for him. “What sort of idea? Harebrained or foolhardy? Them’s the only two kinds you have.”

She swallowed hard and fingered the wooden bucket sitting on the wall. “I’m going to straddle this, and you’ll lower me down to fetch it.”

The shaggy brows bested their last mark. “You cain’t mean it, Miss Emmy.”

“I do so.”

“Then your idea is both harebrained and foolhardy. You must be plain tetched up under them pretty white locks. S’pose that rope snaps in two?”

“Oh, pooh.” She patted the heavy hemp coiled around the crank. “This rope is thick and sound.” She pointed over her shoulder at the horse. “You could lower Trouble down that well.”

He nodded. “Yes’m. That’s exactly what I’d be doing.” He jerked off his weathered hat and dashed it against his leg. “Don’t ask me to put you in that kind of danger. No, missy. I won’t do it. Not for nothing in this wide world.”

Touched, Emmy smiled at the man who’d been like a father to her over the years, far more of a parent than her own papa, who didn’t stay home often enough to have much practice at the role. She took Nash’s hand and squeezed it. “I won’t be in any danger. As long as you’re holding the handle, I know I’ll be safe.” She peered up into his sulky brown eyes. “You know if you don’t help me I’ll just find a way to do it myself. I have to get that hankie.”

He gaped at her. “The silly thing ain’t worth dying for, is it? Your mama has fussed at you before, and you lived to tell the tale. Why is this time so all-fired special?”

She squared around to face him. “I can’t have her angry about anything just now. I’m planning to ask permission to go to St. Louis when Mama travels with Aunt Bertha to South Texas. It’ll be hard enough to convince her as it is. If she gets in a snit, my plan is doomed.”

“Why they going off so far?”

“It’s Aunt Bertha’s idea. Now that she has money, she’s determined to go into the cattle business. She’s bent on learning all she can. Papa knows a very successful rancher down south who’s willing to teach her everything he knows.”

“Cain’t you jus’ stay home?”

“They’ll be gone for a month or better. Mama refuses to leave me here alone for that long, and I’d much prefer going to see Charity.”

Nash smiled and nodded. “ ’Specially with her jus’ done birthing the little one.”

Emmy beamed. “Exactly. I can help Charity bring him home.”

A thrill coursed through her at the thought of seeing Charity and Buddy’s new baby boy. Emmy and Charity were as close as twin sisters, best friends like their mamas had always been. Emmy’s mama and Aunt Bertha had grown up together in Jefferson before moving to Humble.

Last year, a handsome young oilman came to town and found oil on Aunt Bertha’s land. Charity wound up married to him and soon left for St. Louis to meet his parents. When Buddy found out she was expecting, he kept her in the city so she’d be close to good medical care.

Not a day had passed that Emmy didn’t think of Charity and long to see her. She was coming home next month, bringing little Thad to meet the family.

Nash narrowed his eyes. “You ain’t jus’ trying to sneak off to St. Louis to see that oilman friend of Mistah Buddy’s, are you? Don’t think I didn’t see you making eyes at him the whole time that preacher was trying to marry off Miss Charity.”

Emmy whirled. “Who? Mr. Ritter?” She dismissed the thought with a wave of her hand. “Jerry Ritter was just a passing fancy.”

Nash raised a cynical brow.

“Oh, pooh, Nash! You stop that!” She fiddled the row of tiny buttons on her sleeve. “Besides. . .Aunt Bertha claims Mr. Ritter was recently betrothed to a childhood sweetheart.” She flicked off an insect from the cuff of her blouse and dashed away her humiliation with the same resolve. “Therefore, my desire to be in St. Louis has nothing to do with him. I just need to see Charity. If I get into any more trouble, Mama’s bound to haul me with them to that dreadful desert town instead. If she does, I’ll just dry up along with it and perish. I mean it!”

Grinding the toe of his oversized boot in the dirt, Nash sighed and shifted his weight. “I don’t know, Miss Emmy. . .”

Emmy stifled a grin. She had him. “I’ll be just fine. I promise. Now help me climb up.”

Still mumbling his objections, he offered an elbow to Emmy so she could pull up and sit on the uneven stones. Unfastening the buttoned flap on her split skirt, she swung her legs over and settled on the side, trying hard not to look past her boots. “Turn your head while I sit astride the pail. It won’t look so dainty in this outfit.”

Nash gazed toward the field, obviously too distracted to notice the raiding crows.

Still clinging to his arm, Emmy held her breath and pulled the dangling rope closer, guiding it between her legs. “All right, I’m ready. Lean your weight into the handle. I’m about to push off.”

Nash shifted his gaze to the sky. “Oh, sweet Jesus. Please protect this chil’.”

Holding her breath, she scooted from the edge, squealing when her body spun and dipped about a foot. “Nash! Have you got it?”

“I’ve got it. Stop squirming now. You heavier than you look.”

Emmy forced herself to still, more afraid than she’d expected to be. She felt more than saw the yawning gulf, a great gaping mouth poised to swallow her whole. “Hand me the lantern and then you can lower me. But go slowly, for heaven’s sake.”

She breathed a prayer as she spiraled past the opening and descended. Glancing up, she bit her lip and watched the rope unwind from the wobbly reel, outlined by a circle of light. Misguided but determined white roots that had pushed through cracks in the mortar groped at her, snagging her hem and sleeves. Crisscrossed nets of taught, silky threads offered whispers of resistance before giving way and sticking to the exposed parts of her legs. Emmy held the soft glow of the lamp closer to the side, shuddering when eight-legged bodies skittered in every direction. She gritted her teeth, suppressing a shriek and the urge to order Nash to haul her out of the wide-awake nightmare.

You can do this. Just a little more and you’ll be there. Three more turns and you’ll have Mama’s hankie in your hands. This will all be worth it then.

Exhaling her relief, she drew even with the jutting rock that had caught the precious heirloom. Holding the lantern out of the way, she swayed her body until the motion brought her closer to the wall.

She snatched at the white spot. Instead of soft linen, she felt thick, sticky padding. In place of the crush of a napkin gathered in her palm, there was the unmistakable writhing of something alive.

I am still reading this book but loving it will review asap.

October 20, 2009

First Wildcard tour Love is a Battlefield by Annalisa Daughety

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Love is a Battlefield

Barbour Books (October 1, 2009)

***Special thanks to Angie Brillhart of Barbour Publishing for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:




Annalisa Daughety lives in Memphis, Tennessee, where she works as an event planner. After attending Freed-Hardeman University, where she majored in American Studies, Annalisa worked at Shiloh National Military Park as a park ranger. She’s a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and loves gardening, shopping, and watching sports. For more information, visit her Web site at .

Visit the author's website.





Product Details:

List Price: $10.97
Paperback: 288 pages
Publisher: Barbour Books (October 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1602604770
ISBN-13: 978-1602604773

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


If someone had told Kristy O’Neal that the battlefield at Shiloh would see another casualty nearly one hundred and fifty years after the battle ended, she’d have thought they were crazy.

Yet, two weeks ago, one last soldier had been injured on the majestic field. And Kristy had the battle scars to prove it. Admittedly, her wound was emotional, not physical, but she still wondered if the splintered pieces of her heart might be tougher to knit back together than a bullet-shattered bone.

Ready or not, her recovery time was over, so she squared her shoulders and headed back onto the hallowed ground. Never let it be said that Kristy couldn’t soldier up with the best of them. Ranger hat firmly in place and gold badge glinting in the May sunlight, she marched briskly to the visitor center.

“Morning, Kristy.” Ranger Owen Branam stopped putting money in the cash register slots long enough to nod in her direction. “You have a nice trip?” He closed the drawer, finished with his preparations for the day’s visitors.

Nice trip? A cruise spent faking allergies to explain away tears. Who wouldn’t enjoy that?

“Lovely.” she managed what she hoped was a convincing smile. “The weather was great.” Scooting past him, she attempted to make it to her office without further questioning.

“Umm. Kristy?”

The apprehension in the older man’s voice made her stop in her tracks. She slowly turned to look back at Owen.

He ran his finger around the neck of his shirt as if he had a little too much starch in the collar. “The chief asked me to have you go straight up to his office when you got in.” He motioned toward the counter. “You can leave your things here. I’ll keep an eye on them while you’re upstairs.”

Only five minutes into her morning and her plan to fly as far under the radar as possible had already gone out the window. So much for the low-key first day back she’d hoped for.

“Thanks, Owen.” Kristy put her hat on the counter and tucked her purse underneath the desk.

As she got to the top of the stairs, an unfamiliar voice called out a greeting to Owen. Twisting around, she peeked over the railing. Wow. A Johnny Depp lookalike was helping Owen straighten the brochures. The second thing she noticed about him, after his movie star resemblance, was the park service uniform he wore. Surely, he wasn’t a new employee. She’d only been gone a few weeks. Things didn’t usually happen that quickly at Shiloh National Military Park.

“Glad to have you back.”

The gruff voice of Chief Ranger Hank Strong made her jump and turn around.

She felt her face grow hot. Had he been watching her ogle Ranger Depp? She cleared her throat.

“Glad to be back.” She followed him into his office and perched on one of the uncomfortable plastic chairs in front of his desk. Her gaze skimmed over a hodgepodge of furniture, maps, and historical books. None of the furnishings matched, except for Hank’s oversized desk and equally oversized chair that had always reminded her of a king’s throne.

“Good, good.” Hank settled himself behind the desk and peered at her over his round bifocals. “Look, Kristy. There’s no easy way to tell you this.” For a moment, an expression that looked like uncertainty flitted over his weathered face.

Uh-oh. As befitted his name, Hank Strong was always sure of himself. Whatever he was about to say, she wasn’t going to like it.

“I told you before you left on your trip there’d be a job waiting for you when you got back,” Hank paused.

Kristy could tell he was choosing his words carefully.

She nodded. “Yes. And believe me, I’m so grateful.” When she’d turned in her two-week notice, it had felt like she was letting him down, letting the park down. After all, she’d begun working at Shiloh while she was still in college. It was the only place she’d ever worked—or ever wanted to work, for that matter. After her plans had abruptly changed, she’d been relieved when Hank stepped in and told her there was still a place for her at Shiloh.

“Well, there was one thing I didn’t mention.”

“Oh?” Why do his words sound so ominous?

“By the time I found out you weren’t moving and were still available to work, your position had been filled.” He shook his head. “I’m sorry, Kristy. The paperwork had already gone through. There was nothing that could be done.”

She tried to catch her breath. Knowing she was at least able to come back to work at the park was the only thing that had gotten her through the past two weeks. “But you said. . .” Her voice trailed off as she willed herself not to panic.

“I know. I said I had a position for you. And I do.” He leaned back a little in his chair, visibly relieved to have the bad news off his chest. “You’re welcome to stay on as a seasonal ranger.”

Seasonal? That was where she’d started, nine years earlier, the summer after her freshman year of college. She glanced around, hoping for a paper bag she could breathe into. Of course, what she needed most was a rewind button that would allow her to go back in time and decide not to quit her job. But if she could travel back to the past, knowing what she did now, there wouldn’t have been a reason to leave Shiloh in the first place.

“You want me to be a seasonal?” Kristy’s voice squeaked. “What about my salary?”

A frown drew his bushy brows together. “There’ll be a pay cut. And you’ll move to the office shared by the seasonal staff. In fact, Owen has already put your box of office doodads in there.”

If she hadn’t been so shell-shocked, she probably would’ve laughed at his word for the contents of the box she’d left in her former office weeks earlier. Instead, all she could think was how she’d planned to stop by and pick her things up once the movers arrived. But the moving van had been permanently rerouted.

“You can still live in park housing. I know you’ve already packed most of your things, but Owen said he didn’t think you’d actually moved anything out yet.” He handed her a manila folder. “Your decision, kiddo. We’d love to keep you around. You’re a great park ranger. But I understand if you want to go in a different direction now.”

She took the file from him and glanced at the paperwork inside. The contents of the folder would effectively help to move her back down the career ladder she’d been climbing.

“What happens in September?” The seasonal positions at Shiloh ran from Memorial Day through Labor Day. And since they were only a few days shy of Memorial Day, she figured she should feel lucky there was even a seasonal position still available. They usually filled pretty quickly.

“Well.” He leaned back even farther and pressed his fingertips together. “At that juncture you’ll have a few options. Perhaps a permanent position will open here. Or we can look around at other parks and try to get you a transfer.”

Or I can leave the park service.

He rose to his feet. “If you want to think about it for a day or two, that’s fine.”

She knew Hank well enough to know that giving her time to consider the offer was his way of being sympathetic. Despite her trembling legs, she managed to stand. “Thank you,” she mumbled and scurried for the stairs, her mind spinning like a recently fired cannonball.

A permanent position opening at Shiloh was pretty much out of the question. Most of the rangers planned to stay until retirement age, some of them even longer. And she wasn’t interested in a transfer. This was the park she loved. Kristy had grown up in nearby Savannah, Tennessee, and some of her earliest memories were of the cannons and monuments at Shiloh.

Owen avoided eye contact with her as she descended the stairs.

Thanks a lot, buddy.

He’d obviously known what the meeting was going to be about, but hadn’t had the nerve to give her a warning before she went upstairs. Kristy couldn’t blame him though. No one liked to be the bearer of bad news.

And with her newfound knowledge, the mystery of the unfamiliar ranger was solved. The Johnny Depp lookalike was the ranger who now had her position. Not to mention her office.

She silently gathered her hat and purse from the front desk and took them to the room reserved for seasonal staff. As she passed the office she used to occupy, a fleeting glance told her that Ranger Depp wasn’t inside. The seasonal office, if it could even be called an office, was full of old desks and equipment. Kristy turned on the light and took in the sparsely decorated white walls. It was a far cry from the cheerful yellow she’d painted her former office last year. Thankfully, the other members of the seasonal staff wouldn’t arrive until Monday. At least I should have peace until Memorial Day. She could even move the desks and junk, buy some paint for the walls, and live out the next few days in Pretend Everything’s Okay Land.

Except, eventually, she’d have to face reality.

She flipped on the computer and silently tapped her fingers on the desk as she waited forever for it to boot up.

Can I do this? Can I take a step down in pay and status? Seasonals were at the low end of the totem pole. She remembered those days all too well. Getting assigned the tasks no one else wanted to do and being expected to do them without grumbling. Would they do that to her again? Or would she continue to be treated as permanent staff, despite the demotion?

Demotion. Ouch.

Either way, it wouldn’t be pleasant.

She glanced down at the box of her things on the floor next to the computer, and tears flooded her eyes. Empty picture frames peeked out from the box flaps. The pictures that had once been in them were nowhere in sight. Someone had wanted to spare her feelings today. Either that, or they didn’t want to be stuck with an emotional female to console.

The frames might’ve been without pictures, but Kristy knew what they’d once held. Her heart pounded as she grabbed all three frames and tossed them in the trashcan, taking unexpected pleasure in the sight and sound of shattering glass. A yellow and white wad under a large shard caught her eye. She couldn’t resist carefully fishing it out of the can, even though she knew better.

Kristy unwrinkled the ball and smoothed it out on the old, beat-up desk, running her hand over the creases in the paper. Fancy paper, as Owen called it months ago when he’d first seen it. Her vision blurred with fresh tears, but she didn’t need to read the words to know what they said.

For a long moment, she stared down at the engraved invitation.

To her wedding.

My Review:
I enjoyed this book. It makes me want to go visit the park. I am interested in the Civil War era and one of my goals is to one day visit some of the war sites. Kristy is an interesting person and I do love the growth we see in her throughout this book. Ace is also an interesting charactor with secrets of his own. He also now has Kristy's job which also adds to the tension. Throw in a mother who thinks Kristy needs to be dating again and trying to set her up it all makes for an interesting story. I spent yesterday afternoon reading instead of gardening to read more of this book and wanted to just keep reading. I hope there will be more in this series and I do look forward to more books by Annalisa.

October 17, 2009

Getting to know you Thursday with Lynette Bonner

This week we have a second Getting to know you Thursday (on Saturday) as I wanted to finish this book first (Thanks Lynette for sending me a copy of your book I loved it)

Welcome Lynetter Bonner.

1. Can you tell us a little about yourself?

Well, I’m a missionary kid – born and raised in Malawi, Africa. I attended a boarding school in Kenya called Rift Valley Academy off and on from the time I was in 4th grade to when I graduated. (The “off” times were when we were in the States.)

After graduating from high school I came home to attend Northwest University in Kirkland, WA and fell madly in love with the man created for me from the beginning of time. J We’ve been married for over 17 years now, and have 4 children who range in age from 15 on down to 5. My hubby is a pastor and we live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. I work from home selling Legos on eBay. I was looking for a job that would allow me to stay at home with my kids and eBay seemed the way to go. I’ve been working on eBay for almost 7 years now.

2. When you were a child did you have a favourite book or books?

I loved the Peter Rabbit books by Thornton W. Burgess. There were a lot of them and I would sit and read them for hours. When I got a little older I would read Christian romance by the hour.

3. Do you have a favourite Genre to both read and write in?

I love romance of all kinds. My published book is a historical romance and I have a contract for a sequel in that series due out in 2010. But I also enjoy writing contemporary romance, and I’m even working on a romantic fantasy.

4. Did you have favourite authors growing up who have influenced you?

I love to read and have many favorite authors. Bodie and Brock Thoene brought the early 1900’s to life for me and really helped me understand more about the era around World War I and II with their Zion books. Francine Rivers is an amazing writer. I love the way Jeanette Windle weaves tension into her books. Linda Chaikin and Linda Windsor have a way of writing romance that amazes me. I would say all these writers have influenced me for the better.

5. When did you know you wanted to be an author?

To be honest, I don’t know the answer to that question. Reading was something I enjoyed so much, and one day I just had a story of my own to write. From there God took the reins and brought me to where I am today.

6. How did you go about becoming an author?

Through a lot of hard work. :) For beginning writers, the first thing you need to do is complete a work. Then you need to collect information on which publishing houses might be interested in your work. I recommend the Writer’s Market for general market publishers and The Christian Writer’s Market Guide by Sally Stuart for Christian publishers. After you figure out which publishers (or agents) might be interested in your work, you need to put together a proposal to send to them. Then the waiting – and the rejection - begins. But one day a publisher or agent will notice you, probably after many, many revisions. :) It took 8 years from the time I completed my novel to the time it was published.

7. If you were not a writer what would you like to be?

Hmmm, that is a hard question. I’ve always like artistic expression so perhaps a web-designer. Or an aide worker in a 3rd world country. Or a rancher. But really, being a writer is wonderful and I wouldn’t trade it – I get to be all the things I think I might like to be vicariously. :)

8. Outside reading and writing what do you like to do?

One of my favorite things to do is to watch my kids play sports. Some other things I enjoy are: playing computer games, watching some of our favorite shows together as a family, having tea with my daughter, and cruising the internet.

9. Do you have a place you love to visit or would love to visit?

If I could afford it I would go to Malawi every year. I’d love to take my husband and children to see the country where I was born and raised.

10. If you could have a meal with 3 living people who would you choose and why?

Wow, that is a hard question. A lot of people went through my mind. But in the end I’m going to have to say my mother and my two sisters. We don’t live close, so we don’t get to see each other too often and to get to spend a meal together just the 4 of us would be wonderful.

Finally can you tell us about your current books and/or any that will be coming out soon. Also where we can find you on the web.


My first book, Rocky Mountain Oasis, just released. There will be a sequel out (High Desert Haven) in early 2010 and I’m working on the third book in the series.

You can read more about me and my books at http://www.lynnettebonner.com Also on my website is an excerpt so you can read the first several chapters of Rocky Mountain Oasis.

But, for now, here is a short synopsis:

She's been living in a desert all her life. Suddenly she's come upon an oasis. But is it just a mirage?

Brooke Marie Baker, eighteen, has been sent west as a mail-order bride. As the stage nears Greer's Ferry, where she is to meet the man she's pledged to marry, she tries to swallow the lump of nervousness in her throat. "Can it be any worse than living with Uncle Jackson...or Hank?" she wonders. "All men are the same, aren't they?" But with her parents and sister dead, she has no choice.

Sky Jordan, a rancher, holds a single yellow daisy in his hand as he watches the ferry cross the river. Ever since he'd found out his surly cousin, Jason, had sent for a mail-order bride, his mind and heart had been ill at ease. "No woman deserves to be left with the likes of Jason." But now he questions his own plans to claim the bride for himself. "Why am I drawn to this woman I don't even know?"

A wounded heart. Desperate choices. Unfathomable love.

Set in the adventure and danger of the Wild Idaho Territory in 1885.

"An intriguing tale with the perfect blend of suspense, drama, and romance. Best keep your eyes on Lynnette Bonner. She's a gifted storyteller." -Sharlene MacLaren, Author, 'Through Every Storm', 'Long Journey Home', 'Little Hickman Creek Series', 'The Daughters of Jacob Kane Series'

You can order Rocky Mountain Oasis from your local bookstore or buy a copy on Amazon (http://www.amazon.com/Rocky-Mountain-Oasis-Lynnette-Bonner/dp/1602902143/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1252008111&sr=8-1) or CBD (http://www.christianbook.com/1-rocky-mountain-oasis/lynnette-bonner/9781602902145/pd/902145?item_code=WW&netp_id=648328&event=ETRS&view=covers)
My Review:
Once again thanks Lynette for giving me the opportunity to read your book to review.
As most of you know by now Historical fiction is my favourite genre. I enjoyed this book. I enjoyed the setting and the ruggedness of the area. I love the way Lynette weaves this story. It also made me glad i didn't live in that era. Brooke is a woman who has been abused by men and we see how this treatment conditions a woman. Sky is the kind man who wants to protect Brooke from his cousin who has alot of issues also. Add to this book the setting of an mining area where the gold has run out, Chinese nationals and an Indian population and you get an interesting mix when a major event happens. I loved how this book unfolded and I hope it will be an inspiration to women who have been or are being abused now. It shows how the abuse conditions a women to believe she deserves it when she doesn't. I want to thank Lynette for this insight. We often say why do women put up with this but if they haven't known any different or if its been happening for awhile the women really do think they are at fault. I hope that this book will help someone in this situation realize its not there fault. I am eagarly awaiting book 2.

October 16, 2009

Getting to Know you Thursday with Kathleen Y'Barbo

Welcome Kathleen Y'Barbo to Getting to Know you Thursday. Im a little late this week partly due to Blogger not co orporating with me.
Thanks Kathleen for taking the time to be on my blog. I have been Reading Kathleen's book for many years and do enjoy her stories.



1. Can you tell us a little about yourself?
I'm the author of historical and contemporary Christian novels as well as nonfiction books on divorce and empty nest. I've got a degree in Marketing from the Mayes School of Business at Texas A&M University and hold a certification as a paralegal. In addition, I am a publicist for Books & Such Literary Agency.

2. When you were a child did you have a favourite book or books?
Oh yes! I loved so many books, but my earliest memories are of reading The Borrowers, The Little Princess, the Pollyanna series, and all the Little House on the Prairie books. Later I discovered Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and was mesmerized by both the story and the way it was told. I read that book when Scout Finch and I were the same age, which was a memorable experience.

3. Do you have a favourite Genre to both read and right write?
I love writing historical romance. The challenge of setting and time is such fun! I'm thrilled when I can meld research with story. As to what I read, that's really hard to pin to any specific genre. Tell me a good story and I'm hooked.

4. Did you have favourite authors growing up who have influenced you?
Other than those already mentioned, there are so many more. In the interest of brevity, I will only mention two. Margaret Mitchell stunned me with her ability to keep a story interesting and characters ever evolving through a novel that was SO long. Some twenty years ago, I read a novel called And the Ladies of the Club by Helen Hooven Santmeyer that, when it ended, made me grieve for the loss of my friends. This, too, was a very long book but so well written that I felt as though each time I opened it I was spending time with people I knew and loved. I've always wanted to write characters that would transcend fiction.


5. When did you know you wanted to be an author?
When I was 5. I was in love with a classmate whose name shall not be mentioned. I remember asking my parents to help me spell the following: My heart beats for you. Yes, 5. In any case, I blame this lad for my love of writing and romance. And no, the relationship did not last. :)


6. How did you go about becoming an author?
I read - LOTS! Then I wrote - LOTS! Then I sought out a writers group and admitted to others that I was a writer. It was that last step that took the longest. I still do all three of those, by the way, and I highly recommend anyone who wants to write do the same.

7. If you were not a writer what would you like to be?
I'm already doing it! I love telling the world about great books, so my other job as a publicist for Books & Such Literary Agency (http://www.booksandsuch.biz/) fits me well.


8. Outside reading and writing what do you like to do?
I have a Miniature Schnauzer named Baxter who loves going on long walks with me. For longer trips I leave Baxter at home and take a spin in my red MINI Cooper convertible, which my kids have affectionately named Rupert. Spending time with friends and family is also high on the list.

9. Do you have a place you love to visit or would love to visit?
I love the Texas Hill Country, especially in the spring when the bluebonnets are in bloom. Many years ago, my family visited Australia and had a fabulous time at the Taronga Zoo. I would love to once again take the ferry over and repeat that trip. With my children now grown, it would be such fun to see them in that environment again.

10. If you could have a meal with 3 living people who would you choose and why?
Easy! That would be my two sisters and my brother, all of whom live in different cities several hours away. Because of our schedules, we haven't been at the same table together in far too long!


Finally can you tell us about your current books and/or any that will be coming out soon. Also where we can find you on the web.
My website is http://www.kathleenybarbo.com/, and you MUST check it out as it is all new!



My latest releases are:
THE CONFIDENTIAL LIFE OF EUGENIA COOPER (Waterbook Press)
BELOVED COUNTERFEIT (Barbour)
CAJUN HEARTS (Barbour)
BELOVED CAPTIVE (Barbour)
BELOVED CASTAWAY (Barbour)
WILD WEST CHRISTMAS (Barbour)
THE NEST IS EMPTY, NOW WHAT? (Barbour)




The Confidential Life of Eugenia Cooper- #1 All That Glitters Series
Buy the Book
Order at your local Christian bookstore

Gilded Age romance collides with Wild West adventure! New York socialite Eugenia Cooper longs to enjoy one last escapade before she marries banker Chandler Dodd.
Opportunity knocks, and she heads for rough-and-tumble Colorado. When she takes the job as governess for silver baron Daniel Beck’s daughter, she wonders where her future lies. With Chandler—or with Daniel?




Beloved Counterfeit – #3 Fairweather Keys Series
Buy the Book
Order at your local Christian bookstore
Read an Excerpt

When the less-than-reputable Ruby O’Shea washes up on the shores of Fairweather Key, she’s determined to bury her past and make a new life for herself and her three nieces. But doing so will entail secrecy and deception. Is that any way to start anew? When Micah Take, a wrecker, widower and soon-to-be preacher, falls for Ruby, it seems a wedding is certain and her past unimportant. But as Ruby’s secrets are uncovered, Micah finds himself falling short of the grace of forgiveness. Will Micah abandon the heart that God has won? Or will he stand by his woman against all odds?




Wild West Christmas -by Kathleen Y’Barbo, Lena Nelson Dooley, Darlene Franklin, and Vickie McDonough – Arriving September 2009
Preorder Now!
Pre-Order at your local Christian bookstore

Romance takes root in the lives of a Texas rancher’s four daughters.
Charlsey Ames loves being a cowhand until a dandy tenderfoot from the city begins opening her eyes to unexplored territory.
Sharpshooter Lucy Ames takes a shot at love while traveling with a Wild West show. Horse-trainer Sarah Ames finds herself falling for a suspicious drifter with a gentle hand.
Tracker Bessie Mae Ames is being trailed by a handsome yet guarded Texas Ranger. Will love corral these Lone Star ladies hearts this Christmas?

CFBA Tour Leaving yesterday by Kathryn Cushman


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Leaving Yesterday

Bethany House (October 1, 2009)

by

Kathryn Cushman



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

I graduated from Samford University with a degree in pharmacy, but I’ve known all my life that I wanted to write a novel “some day”. For me, “some day” came about five years ago, when I started writing and never looked back.

My third attempt became my first published novel.

A Promise to Remember was a finalist for the American Christian Fiction Writers Book-of-the-Year in the Women’s Fiction category, and Waiting for Daybreak was a finalist in Women’s Fiction for the Inspirational Reader’s Choice Award. Leaving Yesterday just arrived on scene and I’m very excited about it!

On the homefront, I’ve been married to the wonderful and handsome Lee for over twenty years now, and our two daughters are currently braving the worlds of elementary and high school. We’ve lived in Santa Barbara for the last seventeen years. When I’m not writing or reading or braving seventy degree holidays, you’ll find me watching the younger daughter play softball, or the older daughter building amazing high school theater sets



ABOUT THE BOOK

Alisa Stewart feels like she's lost two sons: her youngest to a terrible tragedy and her eldest, Kurt, to a life ruined by addiction. But now Kurt has checked himself into rehab and found a healing faith that seems real. It's like he's been raised from the dead.

But then a detective arrives at Alisa's door asking questions about a murder--the death of a drug dealer before Kurt entered rehab. Alisa fears losing her son again, and when she finds evidence linking him to the killing, she destroys it. Her boy is different now. He's changed and deserves a second chance.

But when another man is charged with the crime, Alisa finds herself facing an impossible choice: be silent and keep her son or give up everything for the truth.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Leaving Yesterday, go HERE

CFBA Tour Things Worth Remembering by Jackina Stark


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Things Worth Remembering

Bethany House (October 1, 2009)

by

Jackina Stark



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Jackina (pronounced with a long “i” to rhyme with China) Stark recently retired from teaching English at Ozark Christian College to spend more time writing and traveling.

Jackina says: "Although I loved my subjects and my students, I retired to do more writing and speaking, to spend more time with my family, and to travel with family and friends (including trips to encourage two missions in Cambodia). I have also spoken nationally and internationally at many retreats and seminars and enjoy running into many readers and former students. I have written frequently for both Christian Standard and Lookout, periodicals of Standard Publishing. Years ago I wrote two non-fiction books, published by College Press, but currently out of print. These days, I’m exploring fiction. My first novel, Tender Grace, was released by Bethany House January 30, 2009, and Things Worth Remembering, is the second. I’m working on new projects, including a third novel, as time permits. Whether speaking or writing, I love the opportunity to tell about Him whom Jesus called “Holy Father” and “the only true God.”

She has been married to her husband, Tony, for forty-two years. They live in Carl Junction, Missouri, and have two daughters and six grandchildren.

ABOUT THE BOOK

Kendy Laswell and her daughter, Maisey, used to do everything together--until one fateful summer when Maisey witnessed something she shouldn't have, and their relationship fractured. Now, Maisey is back home to get married and Kendy realizes this is her last chance to reconnect with her daughter. Will Kendy and Maisey be able to reclaim the bond they once shared?

Maisey asked for a bride doll the Christmas she was five, mesmerized by her aunt's wedding the fall before. Since then I've been dreaming of the day, or days, we would shop for her wedding dress. A mother helping her daughter find just the right creation for that momentous walk down the aisle strikes me as one of life's happiest endeavors. The night she called to tell us she'd bought her "dream of a gown," I sat beside Luke on the couch, a striking contrast to Maisey's exuberance.
My dejection seemed a tad inappropriate. "Being hurt because I wasn't included is silly, isn't it?" I asked.

"Not so silly," he said.

Will I ever quit longing for the Maisey who was once mine?


If you would like to read the first chapter of Things Worth Remembering , go HERE
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