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Saturday, March 31, 2007

My review of The Cure for the Curse by Patrick Vaughn...


Book Description:
Warrenna doesn't know anyone at her new high school, but that's the least of her problems. She just found out that her parents are vampires... and so is she.
Her family undergoes a grueling ritual to preserve their remaining humanity and keep their blood cravings at bay. They must live in total secrecy, even as they try to protect oblivious humans from the growing vampire threat. But there's hope on the horizon. His name is Thomas, and he wonders why he feels so sad around the strange new girl. And why do Warrenna's paintings seem to come straight from his dreams? Can Thomas somehow help Warrenna fight her awful condition? Could he really be The Cure For The Curse?

My review:
Remember that vampire book I mentioned in an earlier post? The one that I picked up at the book fair and couldn't put down? Well, I finally got a chance to finish reading it and let me tell you, that is one interesting tale. The author is from Sierra Vista, where I live, though he now resides in Phoenix.

The theme in The Cure for the Curse was redemptive in several ways. The urgency in this novel felt very suspense-like. I was continually wondering what would happen to both Thomas and Warrenna. The emotion pulled me along. However, for people who are squeamish, this may not work for you. The funny thing is, I've never read a vampire story in my life and I would never claim this story as having Christian themes. Redemptive themes, yes. But that's all. There is also some cursing, which is offensive. Though very little cursing is in the story, it's still there.

So if you like the dark side and want to read a story that is fast paced, filled with tension, and will pull you into another realm, then you might like this story. I enjoyed it, though I'm not a convert to this type of genre by any means. I still like a inspirational read better than anything else. But the author did a fine job weaving his strange, but intense tale into his debut novel, so I wanted to let you all know.

Friday, March 30, 2007

My review of the film Amazing Grace, which is currently still playing in the theaters...



Amazing Grace is a movie with passion. And lots of it. William Wilberforce struggled for many years to get his bill passed to abolish the slave trade. The story was compelling and the acting was FANTASTIC. That is unfortunately not often the case with inspirational films, but this one was top notch in many ways. The particulars of the slave trade weren't graphic (pictorially) when it came to the facts, but they described much of the horrific details of slavery while arguing in the House of Commons. They were quite compelling arguments.

The take away from this movie was powerful in that it showed how fighting for what you believe in is ALWAYS worth it even if it takes a long time to win. Friendships are bonded in difficult times and people may resist someone with strong convictions, but in the end they admire someone with the guts to stand up and fight for what is morally right. Never give up. Oh, and behind every great man is a supportive woman. (I loved that thread of the story.)

Children have really lost a sense of conviction these days, which comes from not being taught about the historical accounts of Christians making a moral difference in society. I encourage everyone to not only see the film, but take your children to see it as well. Unlike many films regarding slavery, there are no disturbing images. But there is a strong message of faith and the love of Christ, which is not diluted in any way. Highly recommended!

Whoo hoo! Amazing Grace (the movie) is in town and I'm seeing it tonight...

I'll try to write up a review or something tomorrow before I get involved in another project! I am so excited!!!

My review of Momma Said There'd Be Days Like This: Refreshing Rest Stops for Moms on the Run... by Jenn Doucette


Book Description:

Mothers often feel they are running as fast as they can to keep up or to stay just ahead of those who want a piece of their time, energy, and self. Author, speaker, and mother Jenn Doucette offers a humorous and insightful look at how every mom on the run can head for much–needed rest stops by:

experiencing girl time
choosing contentment
setting boundaries and achieve freedom
getting a grip on emotions
giving themselves a break

With comedic flair, Doucette confesses to her own failings as well as God’s successes in the face of them, reminding mothers that it is healthy to laugh, take a break, and practice grace.

My review:

I really enjoyed this book. About 75% of the time I could swear the author was talking about my kids. Also, rather than sounding like the "expert" all the time, the author speaks more "mom to mom," which makes the book feel more like peer support to help busy moms cope, than a book written to make you feel like you could do more stuff to be a good mom. Is that refreshing, or what?

I liked how the author often used herself as an example and wasn't afraid to admit her flaws. It made her very approachable as a paperback mentor, and it made me want to keep reading the book. It is truly funny, witty, and downright silly at times. I have to say I also learned quite a bit from this book in addition to being encouraged. Her anecdotes will make you smile and her examples of her own flubbing up will make you want to keep on keeping one (while taking better care of yourself, of course.) I highly recommend this book for all moms whether they are at home full time or out in the paid workforce.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Wishing on Dandelions is up on the FIRST Day Blog Tour!



It is April 1st, time for the FIRST Day Blog Tour! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and his/her latest book's FIRST chapter!



This month's feature is:


Mary E. DeMuth

and her book:

Wishing on Dandelions

(NavPress Publishing, 2006)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

This month's feature is very special. The author is one of the FIRST Day Blog Alliance Members!!! Click here for her Blogspot! MARY E. DeMUTH has spent the last fifteen years as a writer. Winner of the 2003 Mount Herman Christian Writers Conference's Pacesetter's Award, she now splits her time between writing and planting a new church with her husband, Patrick, and two other families. Wishing on Dandelions is the second book in the Maranatha Series. The first was the critically praised book, Watching the Tree Limbs. She has also written two parenting books. Building the Christian Family You Never Had and a new one called Authentic Parenting in a Postmodern Culture which will release this summer with Harvest House. Mary, Patrick, and their three children make their home in Texas.



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER: (I only posted a partial of the chapter to give you the gist of the story)



I n t r o d u c t i o n

I still can’t tell my story up close, like it was me in it,breathing the tangled wisteria on the fence posts of Burl, Texas. There are times I still can’t bear to say it was me. The book of mylife continues to open, painful word by painful word, page after page. I get real close to typing the whole story with the word I in it, but I hit delete every time, replacing me with she.

Zady tells me I’m ready to write my story honest, but I’m not so sure. She says she’s there to help me remember my healing,even as she puts an arm around my shoulder when a tear slips through. “It hurts,” she says. “Real bad. Lord, I wish it didn’t rip at you so.”

She tells me I survived that story — that I should be proud — yet her presence brings back its horrid validity written on the backdrop of her tender love. Reminds me in a kind, wild way that this is my story even if I can’t seem to admit it on the page.

***

Summer 1983
Burl, Texas

Uncle Zane appeared disheveled when Maranatha pestered
him. His silvery hair, normally combed and parted in the exact
same place, was instead bunched and unkempt, his part like a
winding Burl road.

“Camilla and me, well, we want to go to the fair. Can you drive us? Please?” Maranatha practically danced, shifting her weight from one foot to the other.

“No,” he shouted, an odd outburst for such a quiet man.

Gangly and with a sinewy will of her own, she pled, “C’mon,Uncle Zane. Everyone will be there. Besides, Camilla promised we’d shoot the fair — ride every single ride from the merry-goround to the Zipper. This year I promised her I’d do it without getting sick.”

“I said no.”

Three plain words. Maranatha almost turned away in a thirteen-year-old huff, but she lingered long enough to see him sit down in a parlor chair, then bend forward, pressing palms to temple.

“We’ll ride our bikes,” she told him. The room echoed her words. “I’ll be back later.” Her words stung even as she said
them, particularly because Uncle Zane, usually a man without
reaction, looked up at her with a strange sort of look in his blue
eyes. A look that pleaded, Please stay.

She left him there. And didn’t look back.

***

Camilla and Maranatha raced down the road toward the embrace of the fair, miles away. “You’re going to barf on me, I know it,” Camilla teased.

“I will not. My stomach’s better.”

“Oh, right. Now that you’re a teenager, you’re not nauseous? If I were you, I’d be cautious. I don’t trust your stomach. Neither should you.”

They raced, tire to tire, until Camilla saw a wrought-iron gate and, behind it, a burnt skeleton of a house. “I smell mystery,” she said. She stopped her bike. Maranatha nearly crashed into her.

In lieu of a ride on the Tilt-a-Whirl, and despite Uncle Zane’s pained blue eyes, Maranatha and Camilla climbed over the gate. They searched the scorched scene, pretending to be arson investigators.

They concluded a cat had set fire to the house, taking feline revenge on an evil master. “All scary houses have names. This one’s Black, sure as night,” Camilla said.

As the day’s shadows lengthened, after they’d explored the woods behind the house whose once-grand pillars stood charred against the Texas sky, Camilla said, “I want to come back here another day.” She put her hands on her hips and tilted her head back. “Let’s go back to Black.” She wailed and screamed the words like AC/DC. Maranatha laughed so hard, she nearly wet her pants.

***

My thoughts on Wishing on Dandelions!

First, let me say I thought it was a fabulous book! I actually endorsed it. If you look inside the cover the very first endorsement at the top has my name right there in black and white! I read the galley and endorsed it as a social worker. The author has the characterization nailed perfectly. I also did a review of this book on Amazon and a ton of other places. I will post it again here to make it easy for you all to find because she had 24 reviews of her book on Amazon and most were fives, a few were four stars, and nothing ranked lower than that. I told you it is a fabulous novel. The throngs agreed with me.

My review:

Wishing on Dandelions is another amazing work of art by the author, Mary DeMuth. The prose is beautiful, the story is riveting, and I loved the entire novel. The characters are so real. Some parts were so funny they had me rolling and other parts had me on the edge of my seat. I loved Watching the Tree Limbs, but I think I love Wishing on Dandelions even more. I love how the author shows true Christianity in her stories through the love that is shown to Maranatha by the people who care about her.

I also loved the honest portrayal of merely religious people and their stifling ways. They are often the people who stunt the growth of new and struggling believers. Oh, and the tension between Maranatha and the two Charlies was fantastic, and the racism issue very realistic. Plus, the reluctance Maranatha exhibited in regards to helping put the "bad guy" in jail is very typical of abuse victims. They are SO afraid. Totally believable.

Georgeanne and the uncle are so classic--as is their relationship. I loved watching them grow emotionally by occasionally popping from behind their protective walls to show affection to Maranatha the only way they knew how. And I loved Camilla's quirky poem ministry to Maranatha. Great stuff! You have to read the story to get my meaning there. The long and short of this review is...I don't want the series to end. I want to see Maranatha get married and deal once again with the issues that will arise when she makes those sacred vows and bears children. I hope the publisher agrees! Highly recommended!

How can I keep from singing....?

More like, "How can I keep from shouting Hooray!" when I get more books and some of them I either have already read or are duplicates. Could you hear me singing the Hallelujah Chorus? I am so buried! But I haven't lost my sanity yet. :)

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Reclaiming Nick by Susan May Warren is up on the CFBA blog tour this week.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Award winning author SUSAN MAY WARREN recently returned home to her native Minnesota after serving for eight years with her husband and four children as missionaries with SEND International in Far East Russia. She now writes full time from Minnesota's north woods. Visit her Web site at www.susanmaywarren.com.



ABOUT THE BOOK:

RECLAIMING NICK is the first of The Noble Legacy series. Book Two, Taming Rafe, will be available January 2008.


A Modern Day Prodigal Comes Home...


NICK NOBLE HADN'T PLANNED ON BEING THE PRODIGAL SON.

But when his father dies and leaves half of Silver Buckle--the Noble family ranch--to Nick’s former best friend, he must return home to face his mistakes, and guarantee that the Silver Buckle stays in the Noble family.
Award-winning journalist Piper Sullivan believes Nick framed her brother for murder, and she’s determined to find justice. But following Nick to the Silver Buckle and posing as a ranch cook proves more challenging than she thinks. So does resisting his charming smile.
As Nick seeks to overturn his father’s will--and Piper digs for answers--family secrets surface that send Nick’s life into a tailspin. But there’s someone who’s out to take the Silver Buckle from the Noble family, and he’ll stop at nothing--even murder--to make it happen.


My thoughts:
The first chapter didn't pull me in all that much, but I could see the author was trying to get the setting established. Chapter two became a little bit more compelling. I'm still not sure I will be sucked into the story yet because I just started on chapter 3, but there were a few things that came up that piqued my curiosity. Stay tuned and I'll let you know as read this story.

Thoughts on what I'm reading right now.

I deleted The Watchers by Mark Andrew Olsen from my list because my son took it and he's reading it right now. So until he's done, I'm setting it aside. Ironically, my husband loved it and so he keeps raving about it and telling me he is biting his tongue to not tell me about the story. My teenage son hears this, and of course is not as interested in the book now (probably just "because") yet he won't let me have it back just yet, either. Told you it was ironic.

I was about to give up on Reclaiming Nick by Susan May Warren by the end of chapter 2, but as promised I went on to chapter 3 and now I'm starting to like it so I'm going to continue with this one.

I'm enjoying the non-fiction title called What Jane Austen Taught Me About Love and Romance by Debra White Smith. This book makes me think of Kristen Billerbeck and all of those other Pride and Prejudice fans out there. According to Debra, only the mature reader would truly understand the story in its entirety and the depth of emotion the novel entails. Go, Kristin!

Anyway, I'm still reading the vampire book (gasp) but forgot the title and author's name (and I'm at lunch now and not at home) so I'll add it later. I've been very tired the past few nights so my reading has been much less than normal. Also, I picked up Letter Perfect by Cathy Marie Hake again last night. It is a pretty cute story. There were similar themes in a few books I just read so I hope I don't get too confused. Eek!

I started Pursuit of Justice by Pamela Tracey on Saturday. It starts with a bang and hasn't slowed down yet. I'm enjoying this one. Her LI Suspense was just released two weeks ago so if you want it you need to go to a Kmart, Wal-mart, Target, etc. to get this baby before it is no longer on the shelf.

One more thing. I'm almost finished with the non-fiction title Mama Said There'd Be Days Like This by Jenn Doucette. I love this book. It's hilarious. I have a friend who needs encouragement so after I finish the last two chapters and write a review I'm going to have my friend read this one. Parenting can be so hard sometimes that you need a good laugh to keep pressing on.

Oh, and I almost forgot! These Shoes Weren't Made for Walking by Melody Carlson is so fabulous I can hardly stand it! This one is going to be near the top of my chick lit list of favorites. To be continued later...

Monday, March 26, 2007

My first review of a movie....Hidden Secrets...coming to theaters April 30, and to DVD in August 2007.

Here is a link to CBD if you want to see the cover. For some reason I can't get it to upload and there is no cover located anywhere else. DVD Hidden Secrets

Hidden Secrets was an interesting movie. Some of the actors did a better job than others. You could tell who the pros were by the quality of their acting. The music was great and there were some truly touching scenes in this movie. I loved how the opening scene left you wondering what happened. The answer to that question came much later, and I liked that. There were some scenes between characters that almost had a soap opera feel to them. By that I mean that some of the dialog was almost corny and overly-dramatic, but the message was still worth paying attention to.

The bottom line is the movie was good. The message was about forgiveness and how living a Christian life of love will influence many people around you, like the impact the heroine's brother made on so many lives before he died. There was also a pretty intense underlying message about assumptions and judging others without knowing their hearts. The theme of this movie was that love wins people to Christ, and self-righteousness only gets in the way. The one female character who portrayed this was almost too extreme in her judgmental attitude, but it did provide for a few laughs along the way. I would recommend Hidden Secrets to both Christians and non-Christians alike.

Posted with permission....

This is a very cool, creative, and true story, which was written by two author friends of mine. I just wanted to share it because it's so unique and very fun! Just click on the link. Post your thoughts and I'll pass them on to the authors if you want me to.

My friend's mini-story

Saturday, March 24, 2007

More pics...but these are from the Sisters in Crime bookfair in Sierra Vista today.

I'm sharing the spotlight with Pamela Tracey...um, not really. But I tried!




Pamela Tracey is proud of her Love Inspired Romantic Suspense title released two weeks ago. It's called Pursuit of Justice (and it's really good!!!)




Pamela Tracey autographing a book for a customer.

My pics from my trip to Chicago for the ACFW board meeting are here!

Me yacking the first night at dinner.


It's a little dark in the meeting room, but you get the idea. We (the ACFW Board) worked hard for three days!!!



Robin Miller (ACFW Pres) and I are exhausted! We're on our way to the airport and we're going in style.

I've had enough I'm telling you!!!

What am I deciding? I'll tell you. I have received 10 books in the mail in the last three days and I've made an important decision. I am no longer going to torture myself by trying to finish a book that I'm not all that thrilled with just so I can say I reviewed that book. Why? Because half the time when I force myself to finish a story I end up not wanting to post a review anyway. A negative review can hurt the author and I do try to promote Christian fiction because I believe in it. If I still liked the book a lot but just noted some flaws, then I will continue to mention them, but I am NOT finishing dull books anymore just to end up tossing them to the side anyway.

Part of my reasoning here is I spent the day at a book fair and while sitting around I picked up a paranormal thriller - gasp, I know - and I set it down only to keep on picking it up again. Then I did what I NEVER do. I actually bought the book. I couldn't stand it anymore. I had to find out what happened. Just like with Deborah M. Piccurelli's book In the Midst of Deceit, I picked it up to peek at chapter one and then I couldn't put it down without thinking about--obsessing over--the story. From now on that is going to have to be a prerequisite for me. The book has to draw me...a lot.

SO there you have it. I ought to be able to plow through my to-be-read pile much faster now. :) And the fun thing is that unless you read my blog daily you may not notice which books drop off my "what I'm reading" list. So if you pay close attention you may figure it out. If not... Oh, well. I simply don't have the luxury of pressing on with a so-so book anymore. If it doesn't grab my interest sufficiently by chapters 3-5 or has a sagging (yawn) middle, it's getting set off to the side from this day forward. I'm putting my foot down! Comments anyone?

Thursday, March 22, 2007

My review of In the Midst of Deceit by Deborah M. Piccurelli


I grabbed this book with the intention of just reading a few pages. (Which is why it never showed up on my "what I'm reading" list. But I was hooked immediately. I read the story almost straight through. While the prose wasn't perfect at first, the story was so good I honestly didn't notice once I got into it. The tension between the hero and heroine was fabulous and honestly one of the best portrayals of romantic tension I've read in awhile. The kisses were delicious and probably my favorite scenes. But there was so much more depth to the story than that. Truly! Plus, the suspense was awesome and very well done. The people felt like my friends long before the book ended. I truly cared about them and I think I fell in love with Slade, too. His characterization and growth was perfectly done! I loved this book and would highly recommend it to anyone who loves romantic suspense.

In the Midst of Deceit was published by Jireh Publishing and released in 2004.

My thoughts on the books I'm reading this week and Momma Said...

I snapped up a book called In the Midst of Deceit by Deborah M. Piccurelli that was published in 2004 by Jireh Publishing Company. She donated it for my giveaway basket that will be featured at our High Desert Crimes Book Fair this Saturday. I wanted to see if it was any good before I wrapped it up in the basket. It is not only good, but I think it's great! I'm glad I took a peek. I hope to finish it before Saturday since she did send it for the basket. :) I haven't been feeling all that great the last few days so I haven't read much. I did read more of These Shoes Weren't Made For Walking by Melody Carlson and I have to tell you that if this book keeps clipping along like it is right now then it will rank as one of my chick lit favs for sure. :) Oh, and I've been reading Momma Said There'd Be Days Like This by Jenn Doucette and it is totally hilarious! I normally don't like non-fiction all that much, but this one is addicting. I had no idea someone else raised my kids. Funny how her kids and mine never met yet they are amazingly similar. I think every mom ought to read this one. Very entertaining and insightful. I dare say I'm also feeling a bit encouraged by the book. :) I think I'll post a review of it on Writer...Interrupted. That's pretty much it for now.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

It Happens Every Spring is up on the CFBA blog tour...

IT HAPPENS EVERY SPRING

( Tyndale Fiction, 2007)

by

Gary Chapman

and

Catherine Palmer











ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

GARY CHAPMAN is the author of the New York Times best seller The Five Love Languages and numerous othe rbooks. He's the director of Marriage & Family Life Consultants, Inc., and host of A Growing Marriage, a syndicated radio program heard on over 100 stations across North America. He and his wife, Karolyn, live in North Carolina.

CATHERINE PALMER is the Christy Award-winning, CBA best-selling author of more than forty novels--including The Bachelor's Bargain--which have more than 2 million copies in print. She lives in Missouri with her husband, Tim, and two sons.


ABOUT THE BOOK:

IT HAPPENS EVERY SPRING is the first of The Four Seasons fiction series, based on the ever-changing cycles of relationships detailed in Gary Chapman's nonfiction book The Four Seasons of Marriage. The novels will focus on four couples, each moving in and out of a different season.


Word travels fast at the Just As I Am beauty shop.

So when a simple homeless man appears on Steve and Brenda Hansen's doorstep, the entire shop is set abuzz, especially when Brenda lets him sleep on their porch.

That's not all the neighbors are talking about. Spring may be blooming outdoors, but an icy chill has settled over the Hansens' marriage. Steve is keeping late hours with clients, and the usually upbeat Brenda is feeling the absence of her husband and her college-age kids.

Add to that the unsavory business moving in next to the beauty shop and the entire community gets turned upside down. Now Brenda's friends must unite to pull her out of her rut and keep the unwanted sotre out of town. But can Steve and Brenda learn to thaw their chilly marriage and enjoy the hope spring offers?

Buy the book... It Happens Every Spring

My review of Love Letters by Annette Irby...



From the publisher:

Randy Ambrose has penned scores of love letters to his wife, but she’s never seen them. He fears she won’t receive his affections, and her rejection would destroy their marriage. He also fears strong emotions, including passion. For ten years, he has kept his heart hidden. Jordan Ambrose is trying to pretend Randy’s emotional distance doesn’t hurt. She has erected walls to protect her heart. When she finds a box of ardent letters written from R to J, she hopes they’re to her. Randy has some explaining to do, and their tenth wedding anniversary is right around the corner. Can he rescue his marriage by taking an unprecedented risk and making a crucial confession?

My review:

I enjoyed Love Letters. I have always liked reading romances that involved already married people, but this one was special in that the conflict was so believable as was the way the couple handled things. They pulled away until they weren't sure they wanted to have much to do with each other anymore. Especially the wife. When the husband reaches out his wife challenges him, but with good reason. And the hero's response was very well done. The fire involved in that scene was smokin', btw. I loved it! I think most married people have felt like the hero and heroine at one time or another like they did in Love Letters and for that reason I highly recommend the story. Plus, I liked the way it was written. Couples struggling with relationship problems might acquire some insight and motivation to resolve their differences before they get worse. Plus, it's heavily romantic without being sappy. Unfortunately, it was a bit short, but that's the nature of novellas. I do think the author could lengthen this novel into a full length story, but either way I liked it. The storyline sizzled and the emotion was well done. I would read other books by this author.

Love Letters is published in e-book form by Wild Rose Press and was released several months ago. It can be downloaded into your computer. The story was very inexpensive. So for only $3.50, what do you have to lose? Did I mention it's labeled "sensual" yet it's inspirational fiction. Isn't that fabulous? How else can you truly express the tension between a husband and wife and be realistic without some sensual tension? So support this author. The read is worth it!

Here is a link to Wild Rose Press
for more information...

Link to Love Letters novella

Monday, March 19, 2007

Ack! More and more and more...

More taxes, more books, more taxes, more books... What in the world is she saying? (I know that's what you're thinking.) Well, we did the tax thing and will have to deplete the savings account to pay the $1,400 we owe the feds and Arizona. Ick. That's the tax part. The more books part is I got four more in the mail today! 4! I have to laugh, though, because two of them I already had. One of the titles I received is the fourth or fifth copy that has come to my mailbox OF THE SAME BOOK! I mean come on people, don't you all check your records? I guess since it didn't cost me anything, and it's not like I haven't told people that they've sent me duplicates before, I shouldn't worry. Right? I'll just give it to someone. That's how I keep friends at church (tee hee, though some run from me screaming now when they see me hold up a book and smile.) Sigh. Just another crazy Monday. Off to eat dinner. :)

Taking care of myself...

I had a great Sunday. Just had to share. After singing lead vocals on the worship team at church (I did mess up a few lines but thankfully no one noticed) I went to the mall with my family. Did you know that teenagers love it when you take them to the mall for lunch? LOL! (I know, that's a no brainer. I was being silly.) Anyway, I got myself a pedicure and the chair was the best back massaging chair I think I've ever sat in. My knots were worked out. Honest! Every one of them. I then went to get my hair cut and styled. I did something a tad daring. I had the underneath part of my hair colored dark brown. It's only noticeable when I pull it forward or put my hair up, but I still think it looks cool under all that blonde hair. :) Hopefully this Monday morning won't feel like such a Monday, eh? Anyway, I'm telling you this because tonight we meet with the tax man to find out how much we owe Uncle Sam and I wanted to be mentally prepared. :)

Saturday, March 17, 2007

My review of Revealed by Tamera Alexander...


From the Publisher:
Newly widowed Annabelle Grayson hears a second chance calling her. But she can't answer it living in Colorado City; where everybody knows her sordid history. When she advertises for a guide to escort her to Idaho, Matthew Taylor---a bitter soul escaping his own past---applies. Will they find the fresh beginning they each seek?

My Review:
Move over Petticoat Ranch! I still love ya, but Revealed moves into the top spot now. In fact, I dare say I loved Revealed even more than Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers, which used to be my favorite book...period. The title Revealed is so perfect and sums up the story in so many ways.

What made this book so amazing? The characters were not just flawed, but they grew throughout the story. Especially the hero. To me, this is the most powerful redemption story I've ever read. The tension between the characters was truly believable. As they got to know each other more they discovered that many of their assumptions about each other were not true, which meant they had to change things about themselves because of that revelation. Is that cool, or what?

I don't want to spoil the story for you with too many details, but there was just so much healing and character growth in this novel that it sets it apart from most historical westerns. Sure, you still have the sleazy characters that you want to choke, and they were believable, too. But there is just more depth to this story than most. The spiritual threads were delicately woven throughout the book and not at all preachy, IMHO. And that first kiss was perfect. The finger trailing the lip. The look in his eyes. The romantic waiting. The fact that he said he'd wait. So many things understood between them without a word. Oh, and her scary feelings of love (as a woman should feel) and the wonder of it all was fabulously done. She experienced how special things could be with Matthew.

One of the things I loved best about this story was the theme of how you can't love others if you don't know what unconditional love is. Johnny rescued Annabelle from a horrible life and prepared the soil for her to experience true love for the first time in her life. I also loved how the author used Annabelle's concern for Sadie to reach Matthew as well. Their relationship was so well done, as was the guardedness on Sadie's end. Several times my eyes misted. Great emotional impact! I highly recommend this book.

Revealed was published by Bethany House and released in November 2006.

I couldn't resist posting this one....


Hopefully I will have another book or review for you all this weekend. Until then, snicker...

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Sometimes I can be sooooo stupid!


Creative Spiritz


Sheesh, if I had looked a little bit closer at the package I might have noticed that the delivery company was actually Federal Express this time. The code and all that looks the same and frankly, I don't recall getting a box from them at my house before. Usually you have to pick it up. So here I am getting all snarky about UPS and they weren't the bad boys this time. In case you were wondering... NO, I didn't discover my embarrassing error in the presence of the cute UPS guys (maybe that's the reason I keep taking chewed up packages there...Just kidding!) but I discovered the truth in the privacy of my own home. So there you have it. My neighbors didn't even hear my obnoxious groan when I discovered my error. On to the next project. Peace!

Great beginnings really influence me...and These Boots Weren't Made for Walking!

Let me explain. I don't have a lot of free time. When I pick up a book I want to feel an emotional investment in the story right away. Immediately engaging the reader is a unique skill that many authors struggle with. Some authors just have a knack for it.

Like Melody Carlson, for example. I was going to set her book These Boots Weren't Made for Walking aside for a few months since it doesn't come out until June.) But no-o-o-o-o, I had to keep looking at that darling cover and my resistence broke down. I started reading the story and it was GOOD! I'll have to make myself slow down on reading this one (by leaving it at my office at night) because it's truly interesting. The main character is obsessing on an expensive pair of boots and her thoughts are so realistic and hilarious that I was sucked right in.

I also started Love Letters by Annette Irby. Another good beginning. I am immediately wondering what the deal is with this couple. I'm invested. That's all it takes to keep me reading.

Chocolate Beach by Julie Carobini has me quite intrigued. I'm a bit worried about that husband of hers. Why do I get the feeling that all is not well in Paradise there? This is another very engaging novel.

I'm over halfway done with Revealed by Tamera Alexander and it's fabulous. This story reminds me of Redeeming Love except the hero in Tamera's story is the jerk from Francine Rivers's novel. Talk about conflict! Great stuff...

The Watchers by Mark Andrew Olsen is just plain psycho. He's a guy writer. Need I say more? (Just kidding.)

Letter Perfect by Cathy Marie Hake is also hilarious. I love this heroine. She is the ultimate klutz and a finishing school flunky. I love it already and I've only read three chapters. I hope to plow through this one once I finish Revealed.

The beginning for Lena Nelson Dooley's story A Daughter's Quest is also cute and engaging so far. I love the perpetual blushing and the heroine stumbling into who assume will be the hero. He sounds very buff and quite hot. Nice job!

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

What can BROWN do for me??? I'm taking a survey.

UPS (aka United Parcel Service) can put packages that are delivered to my house OUTSIDE the gate so they won't get eaten by one of my dogs (who is lucky to be alive, mind you). Once again I found a semi-chewed box, but thankfully Harvest House packages their items very well so nothing was damaged inside. I am taking a vote now. This is the 7th or 8th time this has happened. Should I or should I not bring the package to them for another visual reminder that they need to follow directions. Vote by commenting and I'll let you know what I end up doing...

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Do you like to win stuff? I do!

Check out this new contest offered by Broadman & Holman Publishing Group


Click here to enter!

The Reliance is up on CFBA this week!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

M. L. (MARYLU) TYNDALL grew up on the beaches of South Florida loving the sea and the warm tropics. But despite the beauty around her, she always felt an ache in her soul--a longing for something more.

After college, she married and moved to California where she had two children and settled into a job at a local computer company. Although she had done everything the world expected, she was still miserable. She hated her job and her marriage was falling apart.

Still searching for purpose, adventure and true love, she spent her late twenties and early thirties doing all the things the world told her would make her happy, and after years, her children suffered, her second marriage suffered, and she was still miserable.

One day, she picked up her old Bible, dusted it off, and began to read. Somewhere in the middle, God opened her hardened heart to see that He was real, that He still loved her, and that He had a purpose for her life, if she's only give her heart to Him completely.



ABOUT THE BOOK:

A YOUNG BRIDE separated from her husband just as a child has been conceived...

A GRIEVING HUSBAND tempted to take his anger out through the vices of his past...

A MARRIAGE AND A SHIP threatenend to be split apart by villainous Caribbean pirates...

In THE RELIANCE, Edmund Merrick tormented by the apparent demise of his pregnant wife Charlisse, sails away to drown his sorrows. He turns his back on God and reverts to a life of villainy, joining forces with the demented French pirate Collier. When his mind clears from its rum-induced haze, will Edmund find the will to escape?

Seemingly abandoned by her new husband, Charlisse battles her own insecurities as she is thrown into the clutches of the vengeful pirate Kent, who holds her and Lady Isabel captive.

Will she be swept away by the undertow of treachery and despair? Can Edmund and Charlisse battle the tempests that threaten to tear them apart and steer their way to the faith-filled haven they so desperately seek? Or will they ultimately lose their love and lives to the whirlpool of treachery and deceit?

Buy The Reliance Now!

Here is a copy of my review of The Reliance...

This book stormed with action like a ship caught up in a Tsunami. Fabulous writing and very fast paced. There were some opportunities for the reader to catch their breath, but then the author plunges them right back into the action. Tyndall also does something I found particularly exciting. She shows the heart behind the behavior and the outward appearance of some of the characters. The Reliance brings those points home on an emotional level...with the reader in the center of the maelstrom.

The author flushes out some deep spiritual truths. Sometimes God allows His loved ones to be sucked into a mighty storm for their benefit, but more so for the benefit of others...in particular, the lost. There were some characters in this story who would not have had a change of heart if Merrick and Charlisse had not been separated for a time. Through their struggles the people around them saw God working in their midst. As their faith was strengthened, their lives became a testimony to those around them. Unfortunately, the opposite was also true. When they fell, others noticed, and the only reward they received from stumbling was grief and heartache. So true!

There were plenty of fights, stabbing, sweat, drinking, and the works in this novel to make it feel truly authentic. I found the setting compelling and realistic. I thought the way the heroine had the pirates cussing was particularly hilarious (since she couldn't use real words.) I think my favorite term was stiff-necked barnacle.

In short, The Reliance contains just enough testosterone and action to please a male audience, and enough romance and adventure to capture the female reader as well. Since Charlisse and Merrick were married, I dare say their relationship sizzled, and it was very satisfying and realistic to read about. I enjoyed The Reliance just as much as I enjoyed The Redemption, if not more so...

Drat, drat, drat...

I pulled several books off the shelf and took them with me to Chicago. Not necessarily the books that were on my "what I'm reading" list, mind you. I hoped to have at least one review to post for you all when I returned. Not so. Unfortunately I can't post a review on any of the books I finished without discouraging the authors...even if I word things nicely. It's important to me that I'm honest and never disparaging. That said, you will have to wait awhile longer for me to post something. Sorry, y'all. :(

Sunday, March 11, 2007

I'm baaaaaaaaaaack!

I had a great time in Chicago, but got way behind on my e-mails, and worked like a dog for our lovely president Robin! Just kidding. Seriously though, the new ACFW board is working together fabulously, like a well-oiled machine. Because we work so well together we got a lot accomplished, so I'm proud of us. :)

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

All you great Christian authors....

Why don't you join the Christian blogroll with me and get the word out!



Here is the link to join! Christian Blogosphere

CFBA is featuring The Watchers by Mark Andrew Olsen this week..

Buy The Watchers now

MARK ANDREW OLSEN whose novel The Assignment was a Christy Award finalist, also collaborated on bestsellers Hadassah (now the major motion picture: One Night With the King), The Hadassah Covenant, and Rescued. The son of missionaries to France, Mark is a graduate of Baylor University. He and his wife, Connie, live in Colorado Springs with their three children.


ABOUT THE BOOK
Just below the surface among the family of God lives another family tree--one traced in spirit, invisible and ageless, known as the Watchers. For two thousand years they've seen beyond the veil separating this world from the next, passing on their gift through a lineage mostly overlooked. Throughout history they've scouted the borders of the supernatural frontier, but now their survival hangs by a thread. And their fate lies in the hands of a young woman, her would-be killer, and a mystery they must solve....

My thoughts so far...
This story grips you by the throat as you witness a murder on the first page. And you are in the mind of the killer. Though considered suspense, there is a bit of fantasy involved here as well. I would not suggest reading this book before you go to bed since it will give you the willies. It is definitely a page turner. My husband kept wanting to tell me what happened when he devoured this book in a few days, but he refrained. I could tell it was hard for him, but knew he didn't want to spoil it for me. (What is it with my dh and doggies scarfing down books? LOL!)

I'll be going out of town for four days so I will update you again on what I think about this book if I can. Don't be surprised if you don't hear much from me, though.

Sad, but sometimes true for the writer....

Monday, March 05, 2007

My review of A Valley of Betrayal by Tricia Goyer...

From the Publisher:
For reasons beyond her control, Sophie finds herself alone in the war-torn Spanish countryside. What was once a thriving paradise has become a battleground for fascist soldiers and Spanish patriots. It doesn’t take long for Sophie to realize just how far from home she really is. Caught in the middle of what is quickly becoming a bloody battleground, she receives tragic news, but remaining in Spain is her only option. The route to safety is blocked and fighting surrounds her. On her darkest night, Sophie takes refuge with a brigade of international compatriots. It is among these volunteers, through the use of her fiancés camera and her art, that she pledges to make the plight of the Spanish people known around the world.

My review:

I'm so used to Tricia's Nazi era books that this one took me a while longer to get into at first. However, she had me hook, line, and sinker on this one to the end. Trica is so adept at describing scenes that you feel like you're there. The blood, the smoke, the cries of the dying. Her descriptions are an amazing treat for the senses. Tricia does a fabulous job describing the horror of war. Her writing style is always a cultural banquet and I felt like I got a real taste of war-torn Europe.

She also had me going there for awhile about Michael. I'm still not sure I like the guy. Plus, there is still some major mystery lingering by the books end. And the romance! Oye ve! She BETTER address some of that in the sequel or I'll have to hunt her down. I can almost feel the rope burns on my neck from where she left me hanging! I wish I had the sequel on hand because I'd whip it out and continue the saga right now! Great new series. Makes me want to kick back, put my feet up, roll my Rs, and eat a torta! :)

A Valley of Betrayal was published by Moody Publishers and released On February 1, 2007.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Some thoughts on what I'm reading this first week of March 2007...

All of the authors who write historical fiction and have books in my to-be-read pile will now benefit from the fact that I must review one historical novel a week for the PASTimes blog. :) So that means if you write historicals I'm four times more likely to read your book next. In regards to Valley of Betrayal by Tricia Goyer...I'm liking it much better now that I'm getting into the story. Why do I get the feeling that Michael is going to be a creep? Oh, and the bullfighting is quite something to read about. I plan to start Letter Perfect by Cathy Marie Hake very soon. I need to finish Family Guardian first. I haven't read it in a week due to other pressing matters, but so far Family Guardian is pretty entertaining. I'm curious as to how it will turn out. The sensory imaging in this book is quite well done, but some of the action seems a bit too crisp. It's hard to explain. You have to read it to see what I mean. When I finish I'll give you an overall impression of that one. Blessed are the Uncool is slowly creeping to a finish. It's very profound reading so I chew it in morsels. All great points and very spiritually deep stuff. I highly recommend this one for teens and adults.

Friday, March 02, 2007

My review of Frasier Island by Susan Page Davis...

Product Description: After specialized underwater training, Ensign Rachel Whitney is posted to a remote island in the North Pacific, a tiny scrap of rock guarding a highly classified secret. She could love her new assignment if her commanding officer, Lt. George Hudson, were not so obstinate and a bit distrustful. Despite George's first reaction to her presence on the island, Rachel sets out to prove she is perfect for the job. She doesn't dream of being a heroine or falling in love, but months later, when word leaks out about the prize they are guarding, Rachel and George have few resources besides each other and their faith in God to foil an enemy attack that could endanger all of America.

My review:
Wow! This story packed some emotional punch. I enjoyed the romance and the suspense equally. That's very unusual for me because I usually prefer the romance, but the intrigue was fabulous! The romantic element and suspense were so intricately woven together that separating the two elements would've unraveled the entire story.

I loved George about as much as Rachel did! He was such a great hero in every sense. The longing they felt for each other was perfectly done. It made my heart ache despite the fact that they were fictional characters. At times I lost sight of that fact and just wanted to see them together. And that first kiss....ahhhhh. Very satisfying. Rachel was tough, but lovable and cute. I enjoyed experiencing her character growth along with her. Trust was hard for her to learn, but rewarding when she experienced the benefits of putting her life in God's capable hands.

In some ways this story had an exotic feel like the Hawaiian setting of Heitzmann's novel Freefall (which was awesome!) Frasier Island was different in that it had a touch of Gilligan's Island sentiment. Portions of the book had a real "castaway" feel. Rachel made me think of Maryann because she was fun and dainty, yet also tough when needed. George and Rachel were so isolated on that island that at times it made me get the shivers. And not knowing who the bad guy was for the last third of the book was quite exciting. Sure, there were little hints dropped as who it might be, but I felt the tension as they hid from the unknown. I loved how they had to protect themselves and stay on the offensive at the same time. Brilliantly done!

The secondary characters were also terrific. Pierre was a dream and Brian was creepy at first. I can't wait for the next book in the series. Oh, and the last chapter of Frasier Island was probably the best part of the story. Talk about great endings! This was no wall-banger. It made me want to sigh and grin like a fool. I loved this book!

Frasier Island was published by Harvest House and is being released this month!

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Scimitar's Edge is up on the F.I.R.S.T blog tour for March...


It is March 1st, time for the FIRST Day Blog Tour! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and his/her latest book's FIRST chapter!

This month's feature author is:

Marvin Olasky

and his book:

Scimitar's Edge


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Dr. Olasky is editor-in-chief of World Magazine, a senior fellow of the Acton Institute, and a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He and his wife Susan have been married for 30 years and have four sons. He has written 17 non-fiction books and has also started (with several others) a Christian school; he has been a crisis pregnancy center chairman, a foster parent, a Little League assistant coach, a PTA president, and an informal advisor to George W. Bush. He is a graduate of Yale University and the University of Michigan.

Stepping away from his roles as professor, historian, and creator of "compassionate conservatism," Marvin Olasky, editor-in-chief of WORLD Magazine has penned an edge-of-your-seat novel that educates as well as it informs.

SCIMITAR'S EDGE is the story of four unique Americans on a journey that takes them to a world of great beauty and great danger. Olasky uses his vast knowledge of the culture to pen a tale about the War on Terror that is so realistic it might have been taken from today's headlines.

A FEW QUESTIONS WITH THE AUTHOR

1. What's the book about?

At its basic level it's about Americans who go to Turkey for a vacation -- I spent a month there two years ago -- and are kidnapped by Turkish Hezbollah; the question then is how to get away and whether to forget about the whole thing or attempt to fight back. In another sense Scimitar's Edge is about America and the war against terrorism: Now that it's almost five years since 9/11 many of us almost seem to be on vacation again, but the terrorists are not.

2. You're a journalist and professor by trade, with about 18 non-fiction books in your past. What led you to turn to fiction?

Largely fun. In one sense I was playing SIM Turkey: Drop four people into a harsh foreign environment, give them action and adventure, build a romance … I grew to like the characters and wanted to see what they would do. I also enjoyed the challenge: I've written lots of nonfiction books and know how to do that, but this was all new.

3. Is your research for fiction different from your nonfiction research?


The trunk is common - as I traveled through Turkey I took notes on geography, food, customs, and so forth - but the branches differ. My nonfiction research emphasizes accuracy concerning what has happened; for example, every quotation has to be exactly what a person said. In fiction, though, I'm inventing dialogue, yet everything that happens has to be true to the characters and the situation.

4. What's been the feedback from your fans since your switchto fiction? Oh, are there fans?


Actually, I've gotten excellent reactions from many of the folks who like my nonfiction. A few worry about sexual allusions - one of the characters is a serial adulterer and two of the others, as they fall in love, encounter sexual tension. Scimitar's Edge is also an action/adventure novel so there's some shooting, and one of the main characters is a terrorist who relishes lopping off heads. So anyone who wants a sugary book should look elsewhere.

5. You also include some descriptions of what's been called "the forgotten holocaust" a century ago, and explain some Turkish history.


Turkey was the proving ground for the first sustained governmental attempt at genocide, as Turks killed over one million Armenians and sent many to concentration camps; Hitler admired that effort. But Turkey has often been a central player in world affairs, not a backwater. Nearly two millennia ago Turkey became a Christian stronghold: The seven churches John addresses in the book of Revelation, for example, were in what is now Western Turkey. Going back one millennium, what is now Turkey was the front line for a clash of Christian and Muslim cultures.

6. I know you wrote your doctoral dissertation about film and politics from the 1930s through the 1960s, a time when Westerns were one of the dominant genres, and I see certain Western-like elements in this book.

Westerns came in about seven different varieties, and one of them was called the "revenge Western," where a bad man has killed a beloved person and the hero heads out to bring him to justice. In nuanced Westerns the hero at various points asks himself whether his end justifies his means and whether it's worth giving up a lot to carry out what he planned. An internal struggle of that sort occurs in this book as well.

7. Scimitar's Edge is an unusual novel that combines action against terrorists with quotations from Walker Percy. In fact, the book ends with an allusion to one of Percy's most enduring characters, Will Barrett. Were you consciously trying to walk a knife-edge between high-brow and low-brow culture?

Not consciously; that's just where I am myself. Since evangelicals are sometimes disparaged as dumb, some press to show we're not by tossing around Latin phrases or going to opera rather than popular movies -- not that there's anything wrong with opera, as long as there's a car chase within the first five minutes. To me it comes down to enjoying the pleasures God gives us, including those from both popular culture and literary culture.

8. Are you planning a sequel?

When I talk with students about careers we discuss the importance of both internal calling and external calling - do you feel God's pleasure as you do something, and do other people think you're good at it? I feel the internal call to write more novels; I'm trying to discern the external call from readers.

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Note: All present-day characters are fictional except for the media and political personalities in chapter sixteen and one character in chapter twenty-one: There really is a Metropolitan Ozmen at the Deur-ul Zaferan Monastery near the Turkish- Syrian border.

Descriptions of historical characters are factual. Suleyman Mahmudi did build Castle Hosap in southeastern Turkey in 1643.

The chess game in chapter fourteen derives from one played by Gustav Richard Neumann and Adolf Anderssen in Berlin in 1864, but then it was not a matter of life or death.

PROLOGUE

Zeliha Kuris sat in her living room in Konya, scarcely believing what she was watching on TRT1, the major government-run channel in Turkey. The second of the twin towers of New York was crumpling. She cried, thinking of the horrible way so many were dying. Then came a knock on her door.

She peered out cautiously. Ever since her last book, threats from Hezbollah terrorists had come as fast as the sewage ran after heavy rains. One fatwa against her read, "She has confused and poisoned Muslims with her Western ideas. She deserves death."

But it was only a man, Trafik Kurban, whose ailing mother she had helped. They had met in the room at the hospital where the old woman was dying of lung cancer. Trafik's hollow cheeks and chain-smoking habits made generational continuity likely, but he had seemed friendly enough as he joked about his favorite American film, The Wizard of Oz. Zeliha opened the door to him.

"I have a present for you in my car," he said, taking her hand in his own—it was sticky soft—and pointing to a white Mitsubishi that sat at the curb. "You showed yourself a true daughter of Turkey during my mother's duress, and I want to thank you."

Zeliha looked up and down the street but saw no danger signs. She smiled and followed him to the vehicle. Trafik reached in, pulled out a three-foot-tall scarecrow stuffed with straw, and handed it to her. She gave it a puzzled look before smiling and saying, "It's lovely."

Then Trafik stuck a needle into her arm and shoved her into the car.

She came to in a dank basement. At first all she could sense was the overpowering smell of onions. The odor hung in the air and left her struggling for breath. Her hands were bound behind her back, her legs tethered to a pillar. All was quiet, but then she heard movement and conversation on the floor above.

She strained to catch what was being said. A man with a booming voice. He sounded joyous. "Passed the initiation . . . Trafik, one of us . . . member of Hezbollah."

Hezbollah! So Trafik was not just a petty criminal. Hezbollah! Instantly she knew what would happen though her tormentors made her wait. She lost track of the time and must have dozed because when she awoke her throat was parched and a glass of water sat just beyond her reach.

She often heard the man with the loud, harsh voice talking and then laughing outside the door. When the door opened, the smell of fresh bread wafted into the room. Only when her mouth was as dry as Saudi sand and her stomach cramped from hunger did the loud man enter. Even then he was patient, standing for a time just staring at her.

Finally he leaned close, smelling of garlic, his thick black mustache tickling her check. Spit from his mouth sprayed her face. "You wanted to be Turkey's Salman Rushdie or Taslima Nasrin, eh? They deserve to die, and you will."

On the first day he beat her. On the second day he dripped burning nylon on her, all the time complaining that he had to use primitive torture devices because her Western allies kept him from getting modern electroshock devices. He demanded information about the members of her conspiracy. She explained that there was no conspiracy, that she had only written what was true. He became furious.

Upstairs she could hear The Wizard of Oz playing nonstop, with the Munchkins' song turned up loud to cover up her screams. She imagined Trafik was watching, and her one hope was that he would come to see her so she could ask him how he felt betraying the woman who had been his dying mother's only friend. Trafik did not descend, but she heard him chortle as the Wicked Witch screamed, "I'm melting, melting."

Finally he did stand in front of her, but instead of displaying remorse he held a camera. As the loud man did his work, Trafik silently recorded the ravages of torture. Summoning her remaining strength, Zeliha spat at him. "How could you do this?" But before he answered, if he answered, she lost consciousness and never returned to life.
***
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