Wednesday, 21 November 2007

CFBA Blog Tour of The Yada Yad Prayer Group Geets Decked Out by Neta Jackson


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

THE YADA YADA PRAYER GROUP GETS DECKED OUT
Thomas Nelson (October 2, 2007)

by

Neta Jackson


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Neta Jackson Neta Jackson's award-winning Yada books have sold more than 350,000 copies and are spawning prayer groups across the country. She and her husband, Dave, are also an award-winning husband/wife writing team, best known for the Trailblazer Books--a 40-volume series of historical fiction about great Christian heroes with 1.8 million in sales--and Hero Tales: A Family Treasury of True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes (vols 1-4).

Dave and Neta live in Evanston, Illinois, where for twenty-seven years they were part of Reba Place Church, a Christian church community. They are now members of the Chicago Tabernacle, a multi-racial congregation that is a daughter church of the well-known Brooklyn Tabernacle.


ABOUT THE BOOK:
Turkey dinners, tree trimming, and decking the halls--it's that time of year again! And I Jodi Baxter, can't wait to celebrate. My kids are coming home for Thanksgiving and Christmas, and then all of us Yadas are getting decked out for a big New Year's party.

But God's idea of "decked out" might just change the nature of our party plans. A perplexing encounter with a former student, a crime that literally knocks me off my feet, a hurry-up wedding, and a child who will forever change our family...it's times like these that I really need my prayer sisters.

This holiday season, we Yada Yadas are learning that no one can out celebrate God. So let's get this party started!

THE YADA YADA PRAYER GROUP GETS DECKED OUT is a festive novella featuring America's favorite prayer group, the Yada Yadas!

Sometimes dubbed "chick-lit" for their bright covers and catchy titles, this series provides far more depth than witty banter and wacky situations. Inspired by a prayer group of real women, each book will have you laughing, crying, and perhaps praying anew.

In this highly anticipated installment, the Yada Yada sisters-a group of multi-cultural friends-and their families prepare for the event of the season.

But yes, eager readers, this novella—which picks up a year and a half after the end of book #6 The Yada Yada Prayer Group Gets Rolling concludes the series with some twists and turns that will amaze and encourage you. Plus, it sets the stage for Neta’s new series with new characters and new situations but also occasional roles for the beloved Yada Yada sisters in familiar Chicago neighborhoods with all their cultural richness.

I have only just received this book and as I haven't read Neta's Yada Yada series, I have asked my good friend, Fiona (who loves the series) to pass on her thoughts of this final story, so look for that soon!

Sunday, 18 November 2007

Coming soon from Bethany House ~ Historicals ~ Part 2

Once again click on the title to pre-order from Amazon or the author's name for their website ~ enjoy!

Lady of Milkweed Manor by Julie Klassen **debut author

As Charlotte drew closer to the looming grey edifice that was to become her temporary home, she could not help but notice the secretive shuttered windows. Then she noticed the milkweeds…

Even a proper vicar's daughter can make a mistake…and now Charlotte Lamb must pay a high price for her fall. To avoid the prying eyes of all who know her, she hides herself away in London's forbidding "Milkweed Manor," a place of mystery and lore, of old secrets and new birth. But once there, she comes face to face with a suitor from her past--a man who now hides secrets of his own. Both are determined, with God's help, to protect those they love. But neither can imagine the depth of sacrifice that will be required. Sprinkled with fascinating details about the lives of women in Regency England, Lady of Milkweed Manor is a moving romantic drama about the redemption of past failings and the beauty of sacrificial love.



My Heart Remembers by Kim Vogel Sawyer

United by blood, divided by time, will three orphan train siblings ever find one another again? Orphaned in a tenement fire, three Irish-immigrant children are sent to Missouri to be adopted. Despite eight-year-old Maelle's desperate attempts to keep her siblings together, each child is taken by a different family. Yet Maelle vows that she will never stop searching for her brother and sister—and that they will be together one day in the future. Seventeen years later, Maelle is still searching. But the years have washed away her hope... and her memories. What are Mattie and Molly doing now? Where has life taken them? Will she ever see her brother and sister again?







Sister's Choice by Judith Pella

When it comes to quilting, Maggie Newcomb is all thumbs. And nobody rubs it in more than Emma Jean Stoddard. But Maggie swallows her ire for one simple reason—she has
a crush on Emma Jean's handsome son, Colby, and doesn't want to ruin her chances. So she works hard to become the best quilter in Maintown. Her plan seems to be working—that is, until Tamara Brennan comes to town. Tamara is wealthy and poised as well as beautiful, and immediately turns Colby's head. Evan Parker is smitten by Tamara, too, but unlike Colby, he isn't the dashing, athletic type. He's very smart, no doubt, but rather bookish and unexciting. Maggie forms a plan: She'll help Evan win Tamara's affection so that Colby will once again notice her. But befriending Evan has unforeseen consequences, and before long, Maggie is more confused than ever about what she truly desires in life.




A Touch of Grace by Lauraine Snelling

Eighteen-year-old Grace Knutson loves Blessing, North Dakota, and sees no reason to leave. She's more serious-minded than her twin sister, Sophie, and is very sensitive to the feelings of others. In spite of her family's disapproval, Grace has always had a soft spot in her heart for Toby Valders. She's seen the vulnerable side he's kept well hidden. The arrival of Jonathan Gould, the handsome scion of a wealthy New York family, creates a flurry of anticipation and speculation in Blessing. Jonathan's father wants him to learn the value of manual labor and to appreciate the accomplishments of those not born to wealth. Surprisingly, the "city boy" takes to farm life, working from dawn to dusk alongside the others. Soon he finds himself inexplicably drawn to gentle, courageous Grace. But Jonathan's affection presents an agonizing dilemma for Grace. Is he the one who represents the life she truly desires?

The winners of Splitting Harriet are...

My eldest picked out these names in the dark so there was no chance she could read any names ~ LOL!

Congratulations to AussieTigger, Tracy, Ausjenny and to Fiona, for winning the autographed copy. You will love this book!

And my vice.........you all know it is books but here's something else.......mango!

Friday, 16 November 2007

The winners are...

Breaking Free ~ ChristyJan

Surrender Bay ~ Jen

Congratulations! Thanks to everyone who posted and check back soon for more great giveaways!

BTW the closing date for the Australian Splitting Harriet giveaway is midnight Saturday 24th November. Click here to enter by leaving a post.

Fiction Title Survey from Bethany House


Here is another survey from Jim Hart at Bethany ~ this time requesting input on a title for a book by a new author, Christa Parrish.

Click here to participate ~ have fun and let me know your preference!

Thursday, 15 November 2007

What Lies Within by Karen Ball

Kyla Justice is a typical firstborn - driven and successful with an overdeveloped sense of responsibility for her younger siblings, Avidan and Annot, yet has an iron fisted control over her emotions, ever since she took on the role of parent as well as sister.

While her construction company is gathering accolades and the ever considerate and comfortable Mason Rawlins wants to marry her, she feels unfulfilled and lost.

Former Force Recon Marine and now coffee barrista, Rafe Murphy is drawn to Kyla Justice, like no other woman but his past and the secret he guards may find him losing the battle for her heart before it even begins.

Forced together to complete a hopeless task of building a youth centre from a run down church amidst violent opposition by an emergent street gang, Kyla and Rafe face a physical and spiritual war that requires both of them to look beyond their self reliance to each other and a God for whom nothing is impossible.

Karen Ball's stories aim straight for the heart and What Lies Within hit the bulls eye! With exceptional character development and masterful suspense, Karen takes you on a journey of heartache and despair to a joyful yet credible conclusion. Kyla's strength and vulnerability creates great pathos and Rafe's charismatic appeal, tempered by the nightmares of his armed combat give him an authenticity I loved. The attraction between Rafe and Kyla is electric and Rafe's longstanding love for Kyla despite their age difference and her failure to recognise him sets this story apart. Yet Karen's talents don't end with engaging characters and perfectly timed suspense. What Lies Within packs a spiritual punch worth pondering ~ there are no easy answers in this world but God's faithfulness never wavers and faith, hope and love can and will change lives.

I encourage you to read Avidan and Annot's stories in Shattered Justice and Kaleidoscope Eyes. I will be reading the Family Honor series, especially What Lies Within, many times over.

Available this month from Multnomah

Coming soon from Bethany House ~ Historicals ~ Part 1

Bethany House is releasing some great historical romance novels in early 2008 ~ thought you might like a sneak peek! Click on the book title to pre-order from Amazon or to find out more about the author, click on her name and browse her website.

I think the covers look fabulous ~ what do you think?



A Daughter's Inheritance by Tracie Peterson & Judith Miller

Lose Yourself in the History, Opulence, and Elegance of the Thousand Islands

Cousins Amanda, Sophie, and Fanny Broadmoor are as close as sisters, but when their grandfather dies, the terms of his will just might destroy their bond. Seventeen-year-old Fanny has never put much stock in the conventions of society. In fact, she has given her heart to Michael, the family boat-keeper. But when she receives a surprising inheritance, she discovers just how oppressive society can be... and that she may be trusting the wrong people.

Dare she follow her heart and risk going against her family? What if she loses everything she's ever known? It all comes down to one choice: What does Fanny Broadmoor want her legacy to be?


Forevermore
by Cathy Marie Hake



There's no one quite like Hope Ladley. A veritable dandelion in the wind, she blows from one farm to the next, roaming the Texas countryside as an itinerant cook. When she rides her mule, Hattie, onto the Stauffer farm, Hope knows this is the place the Lord wants her to be.

Jakob Stauffer, though grateful for a cook to assist his pregnant sister and young daughter through harvest, is baffled by Hope's unconventional methods as she gets things done around the farm. Yet he can't deny the way her sunny disposition and unstinting love make changes of a different kind…even within his own heart.

When harvest is over, will Hope return to her wandering ways or embrace the dream of forevermore?





A Lady of Hidden Intent by Tracie Peterson

When her father is falsely imprisoned for slave trading, Catherine Newbury finds her English world turned upside down. Whisked away with trusted servants to America, she is forced to disguise her past and create a completely new life. Taking on a servant's last name, Catherine becomes an accomplished seamstress whose dress designs are sought throughout Philadelphia.

Carter Danby, an architect who was touring England, met Catherine at a party in her English home the very night she was forced to flee. Five years later they meet again when his sister and mother come for a design consultation. Carter is sure he's met the dark-haired beauty before, but can't quite place her….

Drawn to Catherine, yet realizing she is hiding a painful past, Carter longs to create a future together with her. Catherine desires above all else to see her father set free—even at the cost of her own dreams. Will love be the sacrifice?

Wednesday, 14 November 2007

CFBA Blog Tour of Try Dying by James Scott Bell



This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

TRY DYING

(Center Street October 24, 2007)
by

James Scott Bell

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

James Scott Bell is a former trial lawyer who now writes full time. He is also the fiction columnist for Writers Digest magazine and adjunct professor of writing at Pepperdine University.

His book on writing, Plot and Structure is one of the most popular writing books available today. The national bestselling author of several novels of suspense, he grew up and still lives in Los Angeles, where he is at work on his next Buchanan thriller.


ABOUT THE BOOK:

On a wet Tuesday morning in December, Ernesto Bonilla, twenty-eight, shot his twenty-three-year-old wife, Alejandra, in the backyard of their West 45th Street home in South Los Angeles. As Alejandra lay bleeding to death, Ernesto drove their Ford Explorer to the westbound Century Freeway connector where it crossed over the Harbor Freeway and pulled to a stop on the shoulder.

Bonilla stepped around the back of the SUV, ignoring the rain and the afternoon drivers on their way to LAX and the west side, placed the barrel of his .38 caliber pistol into his mouth, and fired.

His body fell over the shoulder and plunged one hundred feet, hitting the roof of a Toyota Camry heading northbound on the harbor Freeway. The impact crushed the roof of the Camry. The driver, Jacqueline Dwyer, twenty-seven, an elementary schoolteacher from Reseda, died at the scene.

This would have been simply another dark and strange coincidence, the sort of thing that shows up for a two-minute report on the local news--with live remote from the scene--and maybe gets a follow-up the next day. Eventually the story would go away, fading from the city's collective memory.

But this story did not go away. Not for me. Because Jacqueline Dwyer was the woman I was going to marry.

In Try Dying, this fast-paced thriller, lawyer Ty Buchanan must enter a world of evil to uncover the cause of his fiancee's death--even if hie has to kill for the truth.
"Bell is one of the best writers out there...he creates characters readers care about...a story worth telling."
~Library Review~


Check back soon for a Try Dying giveaway when I post my review :)

Tuesday, 13 November 2007

A Fire Within by Kathleen Morgan

Synopsis:~

Caitlin Campbell has always enjoyed having things her own way as the sister of Niall Campbell, the head of her clan. Her strong will and fiery spirit add to her stubborn determination. However, she is about to discover that things can quickly get out of her control.

Darach MacNaghten's life has been far from easy. He seems doomed to cause pain to every life he touches. Despite being cast out of his own family, he is compelled to try to save them from extinction and restore their name.

Darach and Caitlin find themselves drawn together through circumstances beyond their control. Caitlin must decide between her attraction for this dangerous highlander and her family loyalties. Will Darach's plans lead to a deadly game that neither can afford to lose? Passion, romance, and the rugged Scottish countryside draw you into this tantalizing story.


My take:~

If you love a good Scottish historical romance you can't go past Kathleen Morgan! Each of the These Highland Hills series have descriptions that whisk you away to the Scottish moors and castles, characters that you can adore and despise and romance to knock your socks off! Kathleen's Highland men are men and her women, gutsy and determined. A Fire Within is no exception. Caitlin is fiercely proud and somewhat foolish in the opening scenes so her journey towards maturity and a deeper faith is completely engaging. Darach's brokenness explains his bitterness and self absorption but as he begins to acknowledge his place in God's plan he grows in integrity and compassion. While you know what the outcome will be it remains a lovely tale that ends the series in the same captivating and engaging way it started.

Don't miss Child of the Mist and Wings of Morning for the complete story of the Breadalbane Campbells ~ Niall, Iain and now finally, Caitlin.

Day 2 ~ Tamara Leigh Blog Tour ~ A Sneak Peek

When you finish reading a book like Splitting Harriet, what's a girl to do apart from mope around for days??? Check out the next Tamara Leigh book and reread Splitting Harriet, Stealing Adda and Perfecting Kate until Faking Grace releases next year :)


All she wants is a job.

All she needs is religion.

How hard can it be?


Maizy Grace Stewart dreams of a career as an investigative journalist. But her last job ended in disaster when her compassion cost her employer a juicy headline.
A part-time gig at a Nashville newspaper might be her big break. A second job at Steeple Side Christian Resources could help pay the bills, but Steeple Side only hires committed Christians. Maizy is sure that she can fake it with her 5-Step Program to Authentic Christian Faith--a plan of action that includes changing her first name to Grace, Jesus-themed accessories, and learning "Christian Speak." If only Jack Prentiss, Steeple Side's two-day-stubbled, blue-jean-wearing managing editor wasn't determined to prove her a fraud. When Maizy's boss at the newspaper decides that she should investigate--and expose--any skeletons in Steeple Side's closet, she needs to decide whether to deliver the dirt and secure her career, or lean on her newfound faith, change the direction of her life, and pray that her Steeple Side colleagues--and Jack--will show her grace.

And for more from the author herself, read my interview with Tamara, here!

Monday, 12 November 2007

Splitting Harriet by Tamara Leigh & fabulous Aussie Giveaway

Synopsis:~

Preacher’s kid and prodigal Harriet Bisset returned to her church and her family in Franklin, Tennessee, seven years ago. Once the proud owner of two tattoos and a nose ring, Harri is now addicted to Jelly Bellys in lieu of hangovers and Bible verses in lieu of foul
language.

The good news is that she has everything under control: a part-time position as director of women’s ministry, a church family that adores her, a rent-free home in a senior mobile home park, and the possibility of owning the café where she waitresses. Nothing could tempt Harri to return to her old ways. Nothing but a 1298 cc, liquid-cooled, sixteen-valve, in-line four-cylinder motorcycle—and the church consultant riding it.

Reformed rebel Maddox McCray’s arrival at First Grace spells C-H-A-N-G-E for the dying church. And it just might mean change for Harri when Maddox sets out to convince her that even Christians are allowed to have fun.

The story of a prodigal daughter’s transformation, Splitting Harriet reminds readers of God’s delight in forgiving, loving, and enjoying the ride.

My take:~

A book only needs Tamara Leigh's name on it for me to be captivated but couple that with fabulous cover art and a great synopsis and I was hooked on Splitting Harriet before even cracking open a page! I knew I would be entertained but little did I know that Tamara's characters would remind me so poignantly of the freedom God desperately wants us to discover in Him.

Harriet Bisset is trapped by the guilt of her past, forever trying to make amends for the grief her rebellion caused her family and church community. Terrified of falling from grace once again, Harriet has immersed herself in doing good, socialising only with the elderly community in which she lives, addicted to Jelly Bellys rather than cigarettes and staying well clear of the opposite sex, at any cost.

Maddox McCray is a church consultant hired to bring Harri's declining church into the 21st century. A former bad boy himself, M
addox has experienced God's grace in his life and hopes to share that forgiveness and freedom with others. As Maddox gently makes changes to First Grace, Harri and her older friends are soon in uproar over the discarding of the creaking organ, allowing scrapbookers to come alongside quilters and the horrific suggestion of dual services!

Splitting Harriet is a wonderfully entertaining read with a message of deep spiritual importance. Tamara's characterisation is exquisite from Harriet to Maddox, the uncompromising Bea and the floundering pastor's kid, Anna. I was invested in each of their stories as the tension arising from the changing of traditions and incorporation of new ideas inspires some at First Grace and terrifies others. The attraction between Maddox and Harri is captivating as Harri's fears of returning to her past poor choices torment her and impact on her relationship with Maddox and her long suffering brother Tyler. The dialogue is so authentic, I ached for Harri, cheered for Maddox and felt deeply for Bea. While peppered with humour and wonderful characters, it is the lasting message of God's grace and forgiveness that has stayed with me. You don't want to miss all that Splitting Harriet has to offer! Available now from Multnomah

Author Bio:~

Tamara Leigh’s first novel, Warrior Bride, was published in 1994 and was followed by six more bestselling, award-winning historical romances for Bantam, HarperCollins, and Dorchester. Leigh’s inspirational chick lit debut, Stealing Adda, was published in 2006 to great critical acclaim. Leigh has also written for Romantic Times magazine and been a guest speaker for WaldenBooks’s corporate conference. Leigh lives outside of Nashville, Tennessee, with her husband and two sons and enjoys time with her family, volunteer work, faux painting, and reading.



Tamara has generously sent me an autographed copy of Splitting Harriet to give away and I also have three additional copies from Multnomah to give away to readers with an Australian mailing address only! To be eligible please post a comment telling me a "vice" you have that you can't give up! Harri's "vice" is Jelly Bellys - what's yours?

PS. RBC Book Club members ~ I think this is another one I will add next year ;-)

Coming soon from Hachette Book Group USA

You Had Me At Goodbye by Tracey Bateman

Everything is on the line for aspiring editorial diva Dancy Ames when she's fired by her publisher. Could this be the time to risk it all on her writing career--and maybe even love? Dancy Ames has an enemy: Jack Quinn. The man who swoops in, steals her dream job at Lane Publishing, and fires her, saying she just doesn't have what it takes to be an editor. Now that she's unemployed, Dancy must find a new career. Coffee barista, English teacher, literary agent. Hmm. Maybe she'll write a novel--a nasty invective, featuring a relentless job-stealing, coffee-drinking stalker who falls in love with a coffee barista. She's got time on her hands, so when her friends dare her to send Jack a proposal, under an assumed name, she takes them up on it. If he likes it, she'll have her ultimate revenge. But what will she do when it turns out that Jack is interested in her book--and maybe more?

Releasing February, 2008 from Faithwords






Miscarriage of Justice by Kip Gayden

Based on actual events, Anna Dotson is a passionate modern woman of the 1900s who finds herself stifled by the lingering outdated rules of Victorian society. When her every attempt to rekindle romance and affection with her husband--a prominent local doctor--fails, she finds herself turning to the friendship of Charlie Cobb, a new man in town. But as their relationship becomes more intimate, smalltown tongues start wagging, and their starcrossed affair leads to a shocking public murder.

Releasing February, 2008 from Center Street

Saturday, 10 November 2007

Aussie Giveaway ~ Surrender Bay by Denise Hunter

Well, you know I can't do a North American giveaway without having one for us Aussies!!!!

This is one you don't want to miss!
Thomas Nelson have given me a copy of Denise Hunter's fabulous Surrender Bay so leave a comment by midnight Thursday 15th November, 2007 to be included in the draw!

And no big question this time - can't think of one - LOL!!!

Read my review,
here!

Every Secret Thing by Ann Tatlock

A shattering loss, suffered when a young student at Seaton Preparatory School, continues to plague teacher Elizabeth Gunnar. Accepting a teaching position at that same school decades later, Elizabeth hopes to banish the memories that haunt her.

Elizabeth is drawn to Satchel Queen, an isolated student with a less than desirable family life, and a talent for words. Hoping to encourage Satchel to pursue her talent as a writer, Elizabeth soon discovers that Satchel may have a thing or two to teach her.

Ann Tatlock's unique prose once again weaves its way in to the heart and mind of the reader. The interlocking stories are melded beautifully with flashbacks to Elizabeth's past, the unfolding of the present and Satchel's writing assignments in a complex yet uncomplicated manner.

Elizabeth is a multifaceted character whose layers are slowly revealed as her past and present merge in an unexpected fashion. The renewing of her friendship with her childhood sweetheart is superbly done with a surprisingly refreshing outcome steeped in reality. The supporting characters are also well developed highlighting Ann Tatlock's talent, not only for lyrical prose, but excellent characterization. She is able to reflect the lonely yet fulfilled life of a single adult woman and the heartache of a discarded and fractious teenage girl, both with consummate ease.

One of the mysteries plaguing Elizabeth is revealed halfway through the story which allows for a fleshing out of the resultant emotional turmoil, and a genuine look at the healing process required when hearts are scarred by secrets and misunderstandings. The slow pace of this story is perfectly in tune with the timely revelations of secrets and emotions as Elizabeth and Satchel journey together in search of faith, family and love. Every Secret Thing seeps its way into the readers' consciousness and remains long after the last page is finished.

As seen at TitleTrakk.com

Friday, 9 November 2007

Chloe~Anne's review of Hollywood Nobody by Lisa Samson


Scotty Dawn travels from movie set to movie set with her mum Charley. She gets to do what every other teenager would dream of doing, travel around, meet celebrities and the freedom to do what ever she wants when she wants. But Scotty’s life isn’t always positive she doesn’t get to attend a normal school and has no teenage friends, actually the only friends that she does have are all the other travellers and the people from her internet blog.

Scotty is really suspicious that something is wrong when Charley starts getting secret phone calls. Are they being followed? Does this have something to do with who Scotty’s father is?

Hollywood Nobody showed me a completely new world. I have never heard of Lisa Samson before but from what I’ve read she is quite a good author. Hollywood Nobody is a book that I think all teenage girls should read because whether or not you live in a caravan, all teenagers have similar troubles like parents, friends and secrets.

I have always thought that all teenagers went to high school and just hung out with their friends on the weekends. This book has shown me that many people live very differently, and yet as teenagers we are very much the same.


Guest reviewer:~ teen Chloe~Anne

Breaking Free by Lauraine Snelling & American/Canadian giveaway!

Faithwords is giving a copy of Breaking Free to one of my American or Canadian readers! Please post a comment by midnight Thursday 15th November to be included in the draw :)

Ten years in a women’s prison has developed Maggie Robert’s sense of self preservation in every way. Reluctant to be noticed by wardens or her fellow prisoners, Maggie is initially reluctant to become involved with a new program for linking a select group of prisoners with a traumatised or injured race horses in the hope of rehabilitating both women and horses.

Maggie thrives in the new environment despite being targeted by an embittered prisoner for emotional and physical bullying and she quickly connects with Breaking Free, a horse whose damage mirrors her own. Soon Maggie isn’t the only one spellbound by this magnificent yet broken horse and when she meets young wheelchair bound Eddie and his protective father she sees her dreams fading. Can Maggie save Breaking Free and face her future free from fear?

Breaking Free is an intriguing look into the life of a woman attempting to rebuild a future after bad choices and circumstances conspired to strip her of everytihing she held dear - self respect, her family and eventually, her freedom. Lauraine Snelling’s story creates a world few of us know where guilt, hatred and regret motivates inmates to flee or fight. Maggie chooses to flee until the love and acceptance of an animal slowly restores her hope in herself and her faith. On the flip side, Lauraine Snelling creates fellow inmate, DC whose aggression and vindictive behaviour highlights the downward spiral when love and understanding is spurned for power and intimidation.

While the pacing seemed slow in parts and the romance a little forced, the setting was unique and the inmates individual personalities were portrayed well. The themes of hope through forgiveness and the beauty of second chances never go astray and many readers will be moved by Maggie’s courage, Breaking Free’s indomitable spirit and the love and acceptance of a little boy who won't allow his limitations to hobble his future.

As seen at Titletrakk.com

Winners Galore!

I have a lot to catch up on due to my break and can now advise the winners of the following books:~

Illuminated ~ Davo

Boo Humbug ~ Julia, Fiona and Angela

I have also had to redraw two books due to the initial winnners not responding or not meeting the location conditions so:~

Days and Hours ~ Nolene

Mosaic ~ Naomi

Congratulations ~ your books will be on their way shortly!

Thursday, 8 November 2007

Coming in March, 2008 ~ Betrayed by Jeanette Windle

I love it when I find out one of my favourite authors is releasing a new book! I have been captivated by each one of Jeanette Windle's substantial thrillers, set in the jungles of South America, where Jeanette grew up as the daughter of missionaries then following in their footsteps herself.

While you are waiting be sure to read The DMZ, Crossfire and its sequel, Firestorm.

I can't wait to read Betrayed when it releases from Tyndale in March, 2008.

Check it out below:~

Summary

This action-packed international thriller brings readers to Guatemala, where anthropologist Vicki Andrews discovers that her sister has been murdered. Guatemalan authorities dismiss her death as another of the country’s frequent muggings or a kidnap-for-ransom, but Vicki refuses to accept their verdict. Vicki launches her own investigation and uncovers corruption buried so deep that crossing international lines may cost Vicki her life.

Back Cover Copy

Fires smolder endlessly below the dangerous surface of Guatemala City’s municipal dump. Deadlier fires seethe beneath the tenuous calm of a nation recovering from brutal civil war. Anthropologist Vicki Andrews is researching Guatemala’s “garbage people” when she stumbles across a human body. Curiosity turns to horror as she uncovers no stranger, but an American environmentalist—Vicki’s only sister, Holly. With authorities dismissing the death as another street crime, Vicki begins tracing Holly’s last steps, a pilgrimage leading from slum squalor to the breathtaking and endangered cloud forests of the Sierra de las Minas Biosphere. But every unraveled thread raises more questions. What betrayal connects Holly’s murder, the recent massacre of a Mayan village, and the long-ago deaths of Vicki’s own parents?

Nor is Vicki the only one demanding answers. Before her search reaches its startling end, the conflagration has spilled across international borders to threaten an American administration and the current war on terror. With no one turning out to be who they’d seemed, who can Vicki trust and who should she fear?

A politically relevant tale of international intrigue and God’s redemptive beauty and hope.

Holiday horrors and happiness!!!!!

If you have been wondering at the lack of new reviews here, it has been because my family and I have been enjoying a holiday to one of the northern states of Australia, Queensland.

It was an eventful trip for us in many ways and I am going to give you a glimpse of it at the urging of one Ms Tamara Leigh, who had a bit of a giggle over our exploits!!!

Here is a warning - it
was a bit like a Chevy Chase vacation for us!!!

C (4) was unwell before we left but recovered pretty quickly so we didn't think too much of it. I should back trac
k though! We haven't been ones to take many holidays and usually we just camp for a couple of weeks in January. As my hubby was retrenched last year we thought that once he was back in work and we still had some money left from his severance package we would take a "good" holiday so we booked this trip to the Gold Coast (the Florida of Australia, I guess!) to take the girls to the theme parks, etc. So anyway, plenty of expectation and anticipation comes along with that kind of history - can you tell it was a disaster waiting to happen!

We had a good flight until the descent when both E (9) and H (7) had bad trouble with their ears, despite precautions, and ended up in tears! We arrived fairly late (cheap flights, you know!) but the bus was there to transfer us to our apartment. The girls were ok by then but very tired and we just wanted to get to our apartment and sleep! We were literally 50 metres away when the bus driver realised he was in the wrong spot for another passenger but instead of dropping us off, he backtracked to another suburb before coming back to our place!!!

We arrived at our apt around 10.30pm and were pleased with it but one of our very tired treasures had had enough! The litany began ~ it was too hot, the bed was uncomfortable, she couldn't sleep, she wanted to go back home, etc , etc. Eventually she settled and all was well!

Morning came and I headed out to the supermarket for supplies, having left E feeling a little unwell! After arriving back home, my hubby told me she has vomited (great timing on my part!). Now, none of us cope with sick
ness well due to the rarity of us being unwell but we had planned a quiet day so we proceeded carefully! We did a little wander on the beach and E came good by bed time!

Wednesday morning H and I had an early walk along the beach, as she having woken at 5.03am!!! The sun rises very early in Queensland and the curtains are far from blockout! We hopped on the bus for a wonderful day at Warner Bros Sea World! Partway there H mentioned she was feeling a little off and sure enough, a few minutes later graces the bus with her tummy contents!!!!!! So here I am trying to comfort her while trying to soak up the excess rapidly running down the bus floor towards the driver's backpack!!!!! One ruined beach towel later and a hyperventilating H, we stumbled off the bus and headed into Sea World. Ended up racing H through the turnstiles (the attendant thought we were trying to avoid paying and H made another deposit just inside the entrance - LOL!!!!! She said she felt better so we carried on but of course, it was only temporary and she left a reminder around the park from time to time but was determined to stay (she is a real trooper!)

The drama di
dn't end there! Suffice it to say, I spent Thursday in bed similarly afflicted and hubby succumbed at 2am Friday morning!!! At his request the girls and I did Movie World on our own on Thursday (I am amazed how single parents manage!). Trying to meet the entertainment needs of a 9, 7 and 4 year old with only one adult at a theme park is somewhat difficult!!!

Saturday dawned and all tummies were settled finally so off to Wet 'n' Wild Water Park we went! A lovely day in the sun with fun rides, etc but yours truly had decided to wear a new pair of boardies (boardshorts) wanting to not look too middle aged! I had failed to wash them prior to wearing them and the combination of remaining wet all day and the continuous joining of one's not so skinny thighs led to a serious case of chafing!!! Getting caught in the photo shop we missed our bus! We were advised after a frantic call to the bus line, we could walk (remember those chafed thighs!) to Movie World and hopefully be in time for the last bus of the evening! So off we trotted to Movie World, a kilometre away! All was shut, as expected, when an urgent need from C arose and not of the liquid kind!!! So there I was pooper scooping for my 4 year old in the manicured garden beds of Movie World as the last bus pulls in!! We had the bus to ourselves with a lovely driver who chatted all the way so that was a nice end to my uncomfortable day :) Barely able to walk by the time we got to the apt, all chemists (drugstores) were closed, I ended up wearing my hubby's boxers to bed to prevent skin rubbing on skin. The following day I walked around looking like I had been riding a horse for three days straight!

After 5 less than stellar days of this great holiday, I let the emotion take over and became a bow-legged, blubbering mess! Time spent reading Malachi and some comfort from my dear hubby set me to rights and we enjoyed our subsequent days away - oh, there was that last day at Movie World when it bucketed rain the whole day but by then anything was funny :)

Seeing our girls and the other big kid in our family have a ball on the rides and sharing the experiences together has been fabulous. We have many memories to remember in the years to come although if I don't go on a carousel again, I won't mind!! It was C's favourite ride and i think she was aiming for the world record. As she was just under the height limit to go on her own I accompanied her most times!

But here is the biggest disaster ~ I read one, yes only one book, on my holiday!! (Tammy Leigh's Splitting Harriet which was brilliant, I might add!) That is unheard of for me so I will have to get cracking as I came home to a pile of packages with 19 books to read, review and give away (well, not all 19 but some of them, including a signed copy of Splitting Harriet!)

Well, if you have persevered this far with my story, I'm impressed!! Thanks for reading and letting me debrief with you! Now it is off my chest, I can return to reviewing some great books!


Thursday, 1 November 2007

FIRST Day Blog Tour of Hollywood Nobody by Lisa Samson

It is November 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:

LISA SAMSON

and her book:

Hollywood Nobody

Th1nk Books (August 30, 2007)



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Lisa Samson is the author of twenty books, including the Christy Award-winning Songbird. Apples of Gold was her first novel for teens. Visit Lisa at http://www.hollywoodnobody.com/ These days, she's working on Quaker Summer, volunteering at Kentucky Refugee Ministries, raising children and trying to be supportive of a husband in seminary. (Trying . . . some days she's downright awful. It's a good thing he's such a fabulous cook!) She can tell you one thing, it's never dull around there. Other Novels by Lisa: Straight Up, , Club Sandwich, Songbird, Tiger Lillie, The Church Ladies, Women's Intuition: A Novel, Songbird, The Living End



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Hollywood Nobody: April 1 Happy April Fool’s Day! What better day to start a blog about Hollywood than today? Okay, I’ve been around film sets my whole life. Indie films, yeah, and that’s all I’m saying about it here for anonymity’s sake. But trust me, I’ve had my share of embarrassing moments. Like outgrowing Tom Cruise by the age of twelve — in more ways than one, with the way he’s gotten crazier than thong underwear and low-rise jeans. Thankfully that fashion disaster has run for cover. Underwear showing? Not a good idea. Fact: I don’t know of a single girl who doesn’t wish the show-itall boxer-shorts phenomenon would go away as well. Guys, we just don’t want to see your underwear. Truthfully, we believe that there is a direct correlation between how much underwear you show and how much you’ve got upstairs, if you know what I mean. I’ve seen the stars at their best and at their worst. And believe me, the worst is really, really bad. Big clue: you’d look just as pretty as they do if you went to such lengths. As you might guess, some of them are really nice and some of them are total jerks, and there’s a lot of blah in-betweeners. Like real life, pretty much, only the extremes are more extreme sometimes. I mean honestly, how many people under twenty do you know who have had more than one plastic surgery? So you’ll have to forgive me if I’m a little hard on these folks. But if it was all sunshine and cheerleading, I doubt you’d read this blog for long, right? Today’s Rant: Straightening irons. We’ve had enough of them, Little Stars, okay? It was bad on Helen Hunt at the Oscars, worse on Demi, yet worse on Madonna, and it’s still ridiculous. Especially on those women who are trying to hold onto their youth like Gollum holds onto that ring. Ladies, there’s a reason for keeping your hair at or above your shoulders once you hit forty, and ever after. Think Annette Bening. Now she’s got it going on. And can’t you just see why Warren Beatty settled down for her? Love her! According to The Early Show this morning, curls are back, and Little Me ain’t going to tell why I’m so glad about that! Today’s Kudo: Aretha Franklin. Big, bold, beautiful, and the best. Her image is her excellence. Man, that woman can sing! She has a prayer chain too. I’m not very religious myself, but you got to respect people who back up what they say they believe. Unless it’s male Scientologists and "silent birth." Yeah, right. Easy for them to say. Today’s News: I saw a young actor last summer at a Shakespeare festival in New England. Seth Haas. Seth Hot is more like it. I heard a rumor he’s reading scripts for consideration. Yes, he’s that hot. Check him out here. Tell all your friends about him. And look here on Hollywood Nobody for the first, the hottest news on this hottie. Girls, he’s only nineteen! Fair game for at least a decade-and-a-half span of ages. I don’t know about you, but following the antics of new teen rock star Violette Dillinger is something I’m looking forward to. Her first album, released to much hype, hit Billboard’s no. 12 spot its third week out. And don’t you love her hit single "Love Comes Knocking on My Door"? This is going to be fun. A new celeb. Uncharted territory. Will Violette, who seems grounded and talented, be like her predecessors and fall into the "great defiling show-business machine" only to be spit out as a half-naked bimbo? We’ll see, won’t we? Keep your fingers crossed that the real artist survives. Today’s Quote: "Being thought of as ‘a beautiful woman’ has spared me nothing in life. No heartache, no trouble. Beauty is essentially meaningless." Halle Berry Later! Friday, April 2 I knew it was coming soon. We’d been camped out in the middle of a cornfield, mind you, for two weeks. That poke on my shoulder in the middle of the night means only one thing. Time to move on. "What, Charley?" "Let’s head ’em on out, Scotty. We’ve got to be at a shoot in North Carolina tomorrow afternoon. I’ve got food to prepare, so you have to drive." "I’m still only fifteen." "It’s okay. You’re a good driver, baby." My mom, Charley Dawn, doesn’t understand that laws exist for a reason, say, keeping large vehicles out of the hands of children. But as a food stylist, she fakes things all the time. Her boundaries are blurred. What can I say? Charley looks like she succumbed to the peer pressure of plastic surgery, but she hasn’t. I know this because I’m with her almost all the time. I think it’s the bleached-blond fountain of long hair she’s worn ever since I can remember. Or maybe the hand-dyed sarongs and shirts from Africa, India, or Bangladesh add to the overall appearance of youth. I have no idea. But it really makes me mad when anybody mistakes us as sisters. I mean, come on! She had me when she was forty! My theory: a lot of people are running around with bad eyesight and just don’t know it. I throw the covers to my left. If I sling them to my right, they’d land on the dinette in our "home," to use the term in a fashion less meaningful than a Hollywood "I do." I grew up in this old Travco RV I call the Y. As in Y do I have to live in this mobile home? Y do I have to have such an oddball food stylist for a mother? Y must we travel all year long? Y will we never live anyplace long enough for me to go to the real Y and take aerobics, yoga, Pilates or — shoot — run around the track for a while, maybe swim laps in the pool? And Y oh Y must Charley be a vegan? More on that later. And Y do I know more about Hollywood than I should, or even want to? Everybody’s an actor in Hollywood, and I mean that literally. Sometimes I wonder if any of them even know who they are deep down in that corner room nobody else is allowed into. But I wonder the same thing about myself. "You’re not asking me to drive while you’re in the kitchen trailer, are you, Charley?" "No. I can cook in here. And it’s a pretty flat drive. I’ll be fine." I’m not actually worried about her. I’m thinking about how many charges the cops can slap on me. Driving without a license. Driving without a seat belt on the passenger. Speeding, because knowing Charley, we’re late already. Driving without registration. Charley figured out years ago how to lift current stickers off of license plates. She loves "sticking it to the man." Or so she says. I kid you not. Oh, the travails of a teenager with an old hippie for a mother. Charley is oblivious as usual as I continue my recollection of past infractions thankfully undetected by the state troopers: Driving while someone’s in the trailer. It’s a great trailer, don’t get me wrong, a mini industrial kitchen we rigged up a couple of years ago to make her job easier. Six-range burner, A/C, and an exhaust fan that sucks up more air than Joan Rivers schmoozing on the red carpet. But it’s illegal for her to go cooking while we’re in motion. "All right. Can I at least get dressed?" "Why? You’re always in your pj’s anyway." "Great, Mom." "It’s Charley, baby. You know how I feel about social hierarchy." "But didn’t you just give me an order to drive without a license? What if I say no?" She reaches into the kitchen cupboard without comment and tips down a bottle of cooking oil. Charley’s as tall as a twelve-year-old. "I mean, let’s be real, Charley. You do, in the ultimate end of things, call the shots." I reach back for my glasses on the small shelf I installed in the side of the loft. It holds whatever book I’m reading and my journal. I love my glasses, horn-rimmed "cat glasses" as Charley calls them. Vintage 1961. Makes me want to do the twist and wear penny loafers. "Can I at least pull my hair back?" She huffs. "Oh, all right, Scotty! Why do you have to be so difficult?" Charley has no clue as to how difficult teenagers can actually be. Here I am, schooling myself on the road, no wild friends. No friends at all, actually, because I hate Internet friendships. I mean, how lame, right? No boyfriend, no drugs. No alcohol either, unless you count cold syrup, because the Y gets so cold during the winter and Charley’s a huge conservationist. (Big surprise there.) I should be thankful, though. At least she stopped wearing leather fringe a couple of years ago. I slide down from the loft, gather my circus hair into a ponytail, and slip into the driver’s seat. Charley reupholstered it last year with rainbow fabric. I asked her where the unicorns were and she just rolled her eyes. "Okay, let’s go. How long is it going to take?" "Oh." She looks down, picks up a red pepper and hides behind it. I turn on her. "You didn’t Google Map it?" "You’re the computer person, not me." She peers above the stem. "I’m sorry?" She shrugs. Man, I hate it when she’s so cute. "Really sorry?" "Charley, we’re in Wilmore, Kentucky. As in Ken-Tuck-EEE . As in the middle of nowhere." I climb out of my seat. "What part of North Carolina are we going to? It’s a wide state." "Toledo Island. Something like that. Near Ocracoke Island. Does that sound familiar?" "The Outer Banks?" "Are they in North Carolina?" Are you kidding me? "Let me log on. This is crazy, Charley. I don’t know why you do this to me all the time." "Sorry." She says it so Valley Girl-like. I really thought I’d be above TME: Teenage Mom Embarrassment. But no. Now, most kids don’t have mothers who dress like Stevie Nicks and took a little too much LSD back in the DAY. It doesn’t take ESP to realize who the adult in this setup is. And she had me, PDQ, out of the bonds of holy matrimony I might add, when she was forty (yes, I already told you that, but it’s still just as true), and that’s OLD to be caught in such an inconvenient situation, don’t you think? The woman had no excuse for such behavior, FYI. My theory: Charley’s a widow and it’s too painful to talk about my father. I mean, it’s plausible, right? The problem is, I can remember back to when I was at least four, and I definitely do not remember a man in the picture. Except for Jeremy. More on him later too. I flip up my laptop. I have a great satellite Internet setup in the Y. I rigged it myself because I’m a lonely geek with nothing better to do with her time than figure out this kind of stuff. I type in the info and wait for the directions. Satellite is slower than DSL, but it’s better than nothing. "Charley! It’s seventeen hours away!" I scan the list of twists and turns between here and there. "We have to take a ferry to Ocracoke, and then Toledo Island’s off of there." "Groovy!" "Groovy died with platform shoes and midis." "Whatever, Scotty." Only she says it all sunny. She’s a morning person. "That phrase should be dead." Honestly, I’m not big on lingo. I’ve never been good at it, which is fine by me. Who am I going to impress with cool-speak anyway? Uma Thurman? Yeah, right. "Okay, let’s go." "We can go as long as possible and break camp on the way, you know?" Charley. I climb back into the rainbow chair, throw the Y into drive, pull the brake, and we’re moving on down the road. Again.


Sample from Hollywood Nobody / ISBN: 1-60006-091-9 Copyright © 2006 NavPress Publishing. All rights reserved. To order copies of this resource, come back to www.navpress.com.

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