This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Breathe

(David C. Cook; New edition June 1, 2009)

by

Lisa T. Bergren



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Lisa T. Bergren is the best-selling, award winning author of over thirty books, with more than 1.5 million copies sold. A former publishing executive, she now splits her time between writing and freelance editing and parenting her three young children with her husband Tim. She lives in Colorado Springs.

ABOUT THE BOOK

To make a new life, she'll have to learn how to breathe again...

By the time Dominic and Moira St. Clair get their ailing sister, Odessa, to Colorado Springs in the winter of 1883, she is nearly dead. Odessa has been seriously aling for the past year from consumption, an illness that claimed the lives of four of her younger brothers, prompting her father, to send his only surviving children west to chase the cure.

Moira is beautiful and dangerously headstrong; and pugnacious Dominic is charged with establishing a new arm of the family business--a business he doesn't want.
Several days after her arrival, Odessa witnesses what she fears is the murder of miner Sam O’Toole, friend and neighbor to the charming Bryce McAllan.

What’s more, Sam leaves her a poem containing clues that seem to direct her to his mine, which is purported to carry a fantastic vein of silver. But if she is ever to rise from her bed again, she must first concentrate on conquering the giant that threatens her─consumption. Indeed, she must learn to breathe again─daring to embrace her life, her future, and hope in her God.

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

Review of Same Kind of Difference As Me


Review:

Denver grew up in a time when black people where free, but you find out fast that America might say they are free, though some did not treat them as free. Denver lived a very long time being homeless and he did not trust white people.

Deborah was a lady who after becoming Christian wanted to do something good and would go to the homeless shelter and volunteer. Denver could never understand why this rich white lady would want anything to do with him, but she just wanted to show him Christ love. After a little nudge from her, her husband Ron became friends with Denver.


Slavery can be seen in many different forms, it is not just a physical bondage but can be a spiritual one as well. When Ron and Deborah become Christians they open their hearts to the homeless. Deborah takes a special liking to Denver and sees him as a child of God. Ron is not as sure about Denver as his wife but because his wife wants him too he becomes friends with Denver, but it was very shaky at first.


Denver was born after slavery but in the south the plantations still treated their help as slaves while he was growing up. He was not so keen on trusting no white person to help him, but he could see something in the Hall's that drew him to them. Once he opened his heart to God, he formed a bond with the Hall's that would never be broken. He had finally found a place to call home.


It was a very moving and powerful story about how three lives were changed when God became the center piece. How three very different people with extremely different backgrounds where really not that different. It is a story that will make you laugh, make you cry and make you want to be a better person. I have never had a story touch my heart as much as Same Kind of Difference As Me did. Never been much for reading non-fiction but this is a story that you must read and I recommend it for everyone.

Terminator Salvation


Staring: Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Common, Moon Bloodgood, Michael Ironside


Its the year 2018, skynet has killed off most of humanity in a nuclear holocaust. The few that survived are part of the resistance lead by John Connor. When skynet captures Kyle Reese John Connor has to trust a terminator that doesn't know at first he is a machine. He is part of the new style, one with a human brain and heart.

John Connor goes against his orders and must get Kyle Reese out of Skynet before the resistance commanders blow up skynet and all the humans that have been captured.


My thoughts:


I found the movie to be a bit confusing, there was a lot of things that didn't make since to me. The main one was the fact that the first terminator movie was set in the time 2029 and this one was set in the time 2018, its just me but wouldn't have been set after 2029? There was a lot of other things that didn't make since like the fact that John's father Kyle was a teenager, I know his mother said something about him being a teenager on a tape, but it didn't make since to me. How could John be older than his father in this movie? If Skynet wanted to kill Kyle and John so much then why didn't they just kill them when they had a chance..why kidnap Kyle, why not just kill him? To many plot holes and confusion for me to rate this as a good movie, to me it was just a okay action flick (Best thing being I got to watch Christian Bale...lol) ( must also include this for parents, when the human looking terminator Marcus comes out of the underground he has no cloths on, though covered in mud you still see the whole man's front side before he finds some cloths to put on)


Fun Facts:


During filming in the summer of 2008, Christian Bale yelled and used profanity at cinematographer Shane Hurlbut, who was adjusting the light in the background while Bale was doing an intense scene and got distracted by the cinematographer. Bale's tirade was then leaked on the Internet. After it was leaked, Bale publicly apologized for his remarks and insisted that he and Hurlbut are on good terms. (They made such a big deal about this..are they going to tell me that others don't get mad on the set and yell and cuse..people do that in regular jobs!)


Josh Brolin was asked to play Marcus Wright, but he turned it down. (Glad he turned this down, Sam Worthington is so much cuter to look at...lol)


Christian Bale is one of seven actors to play John Connor. In Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), the adult John Connor was played by Michael Edwards, the teenage John Connor was played by Edward Furlong and the infant John Connor (who appeared during Sarah Connor's dream sequence of the nuclear attack) was played by Dalton Abbott. Nick Stahl played the fourth John Connor in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003). Thomas Dekker currently plays John Connor in the TV series, "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" (2008), with John DeVito playing a younger John in a flashback.


Arnold Schwarzenegger declined to cameo in the film, stating that a brief appearance would be cheating the audience. (I figured that machine at the end was just a machine and not the real thing)

TheChristianPulse.com

Cutting Edge Devotionals Now Available Online


TheChristianPulse.com Offers Creative Daily Content
(Rio Grande Valley, TX) In real life, Christians struggle with family issues, spiritual growth, worship, life topics, and keeping the humor in their everyday lives. In order to provide people of faith with a few words of spiritual nourishment to help them through their day, TheChristianPulse.com is now offering daily devotionals Monday through Friday on these very subjects. Kathy Carlton Willis Communications, their clients and staff are providing the muscle behind the scenes to bring these new, uplifting devotionals to life.

Managing Director and TCP Founder, Aaron Harris says, "When we started TCP Media Group and TheChristianPulse.com in 2005, we wanted to create something that could not be successful unless God was clearly involved. I am humbled by how much we have grown in just a few short years. We are adding new features all of the time, and we're grateful to our volunteer team of more than 85 people who make TCP possible. When Kathy mentioned that her communications firm would be interested in partnering with us to make our daily devotional goal a reality, it was an answer to prayer. We are excited to team up with Kathy and her group of excellent writers."


Kathy Carlton Willis Communications (KCWC) is compiling and editing the daily devotions each month. Her clients and staff write the inspirational messages free of charge, with the desire to touch many lives with the message of hope and the challenge of growth. Kathy shares, "We looked at the spiritual nourishment needs of online readers, and found a way to divide these needs into five daily themes. It's always been a blessing to get to fiddle with words, but when we get to compile words about THE Word--that's a bonus!"

The partnership of KCWC and TheChristianPulse.com combines the strengths of two business-ministries to accomplish great things for the Kingdom of God. The hearts of both TCP and KCWC beat with the intent to reach and disciple this generation using the tools and technology available today.

About TheChristianPulse.com:
TheChristianPulse.com is an e-magazine created for both Christians and those interested in growing their faith. The e-magazine strives to inspire their readers through cutting edge, counter-cultural daily content including articles, devotionals, original PulseCast audio shows, their Art Candy photo gallery, and online video shows. Visitors can also explore Directories for Christian Talent, Camps, Schools, Businesses, and Ministries. TCP Media Group, LLC is the parent company of TheChristianPulse.com.

About Kathy Carlton Willis Communications:

KCWC is staffed with professionals who take their clients' messages seriously. First and foremost, the team lives out their Christian faith daily. This communications firm provides coaching, publicity, editing, writing, and speaking to individual clients and complete organizations and companies. Visit their professional blog at: http://e2ma.net/go/2055427271/1879159/69885055/14449/goto:http://kcwcomm.blogspot.com.


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Tina Ann Forkner




ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Tina Ann Forkner writes contemporary fiction that challenges and inspires. She grew up in Oklahoma and graduated with honors from CSU Sacramento before settling in Wyoming. She lives with her husband, their three bright children and their dog and stays busy serving on the Laramie County Library Foundation Board of Directors. She is the author of Ruby Among Us, her debut novel, and Rose House, which recently released from Waterbrook Press/Random House.



ABOUT THE BOOK

A vivid story of a private grief, a secret painting, and one woman’s search for hope

Still mourning the loss of her family in a tragic accident, Lillian Diamon finds herself drawn back to the Rose House, a quiet cottage where four years earlier she had poured out her anguish among its fragrant blossoms.

She returns to the rolling hills and lush vineyards of the Sonoma Valley in search of something she can’t quite name. But then Lillian stumbles onto an unexpected discovery: displayed in the La Rosaleda Gallery is a painting that captures every detail of her most private moment of misery, from the sorrow etched across her face to the sandals on her feet.

What kind of artist would dare to intrude on such a personal scene, and how did he happen to witness Lillian’s pain? As the mystery surrounding the portrait becomes entangled with the accident that claimed the lives of her husband and children, Lillian is forced to rethink her assumptions about what really happened that day.

A captivating novel rich with detail, Rose House explores how the brushstrokes of pain can illuminate the true beauty of life.

If you would like to read an excerpt from HERE

I have heard a lot of good things about this book but I have not had a chance to read it yet.

Winner

Jo is the winner of Love Finds You in Last Chance California. Congratulations!

I Would Die For You gift basket giveaway!



I Would Die For You by Brent and Deanna Higgins


Take a look at the information about this book below and if you would like to be entered into a drawing that Kathy Cartlton Willis Communication is having then please leave a comment and your email address by June 7th.


About the Book:


(Tulsa, OK) - "It's an honor just to be nominated": familiar words for Emmy and Grammy nominees. Still, Brent and Deanna Higgins never believed the phrase would pertain to their family. Outreach magazine has recently honored the Higgins' book, I Would Die for You, with a nomination as Outreach Resource of the Year.


That nomination, however, came with a great cost. I Would Die for You chronicles the life and death of their young son, BJ Higgins; along with his faith; his passion for missions and his love for God. Compelling excerpts from personal notes, blog entries school assignments and journals reveal his clear calling and enthusiasm for sharing the gospel of Christ. BJ's challenging words and example combine to inspire readers of all ages.

After returning from his second short-term international mission trip at the age of 15, BJ became seriously ill. Six days before his sixteenth birthday, he died. His story lives on throughout the pages of his parents' book.

In spite of the inevitable grief , Brent and Deanna share their son's message of selfless sacrifice through both I Would Die for You and Awe Star Ministries, the nonprofit ministry that coordinated his mission trips. Their prayer? That countless others will embrace BJ's vision and give their all for the cause of Christ.


About the Authors:


As an ordained minister and youth pastor, Brent Higgins continues the faith journey his son, BJ, began a few years ago. He currently serves as Vice President of International Operations for Awe Star Ministries, a Christian nonprofit organization committed to equipping believers for life, speaking to more than 25,000 people each year.

As an accomplished musician and elementary school music teacher, Deanna Higgins opens the next chapter of BJ's missionary work by serving alongside her husband to lead mission trips for Awe Star Ministries. Brent and Deanna now reside in Tulsa, Oklahoma


What Teenagers are Saying:

BJ was just a year younger than me, and in his short life he had such a full life and could die with no regrets. He had a sense of urgency in telling the story of the gospel and its transforming power to others. He didn't worry about what they thought or if he would be rejected.
--T. Buse


Blog Tour Questions:

1. Describe how BJ became involved in short-term mission trips. How did these trips impact BJ’s faith?


BJ watched other members of our family participate in church mission trips. He couldn’t wait for his turn! When Brent led a team to Kentucky to serve in a school, BJ went along. At age fourteen, he learned of an opportunity to minister in Peru. He served there with Awe Star Ministries two consecutive summers and his heart broke over the world’s lostness. His mission service ignited a passion to see the Gospel reach the nations.


2. Even as a young boy BJ’s passion for God shone through in his life. How did you see that passion then and as he grew?


In his childhood, his passion sometimes came across as judgmental. When he learned to share out of love, his witness became much more effective. He was bold and unafraid to share the Gospel in any way possible. After his mission trips, his heightened passion led him to spend more time in the Word, in prayer, in fellowship, and worship. BJ could turn almost any conversation to the things of God because he genuinely loved others.


3. Share the story of BJ’s illness and the time when God called him home.


Three weeks after his 2005 Peru trip, BJ became critically ill. On the way to the hospital, he told Brent, “Dad, I know you’re scared. I believe the Lord will deliver me through this. But if he doesn’t, I’m going home to be with him, and that’s okay with me.” Friends began a blog we still maintain, http://e2ma.net/go/1995820663/1824399/68190384/goto:http://www.prayforbj.com/. It received thousands of hits as people across the world prayed for our son. After a six-week battle with a mysterious infection, BJ went to heaven days before his sixteenth birthday.


4. How did BJ’s faith journey become the inspiration for the song, “I Would Die For You” written by MercyMe’s lead singer, Bart Millard?


Within a week of BJ’s hospitalization Bart (a friend from the band’s early years) called Brent. Our oldest daughter had posted some of BJ’s journal entries on our blog and Bart was amazed at his spiritual depth. He emailed fans encouraging them to pray. MercyMe grieved deeply when BJ died. Our son’s life and writings inspired Bart to put words to a tune he already had, now the final song on the “Coming Up to Breathe” CD.


5. BJ’s life and death have touched many people. Which of his qualities and/or experiences seems to impact others the most?


People didn’t realize it was possible to live a life as sold out to Christ as BJ’s. They’re amazed at the boldness he showed when God told him to witness to four Peruvian policemen carrying uzis. As he wrote, he was “mucho scardios,” but all four accepted Christ. His passionate declaration, “I will not be satisfied. I will not let my passion be hid in a bottle” still touches people in deep ways.


6. As you both continue to partner with Awe Star Ministries, what are your hopes and dreams for this ministry? For this book?


We hope to impact students’ lives, discipling and partnering with them in missions. We long for them to realize that surrender to Christ can occur without crossing borders. God calls us to live a missionary lifestyle within our own culture. Our hope for the book is not that our son be glorified but that God multiply his message. We pray that God draws those who read it to embrace their Savior and live for Him as never before.


7. Where can readers learn more about BJ and I Would Die For You? Where can they learn more about Awe Star Ministries?


http://e2ma.net/go/1995820663/1824399/68190383/goto:http://www.prayforbj.com/ contains devotionals, complete archives, pictures, and BJ’s own words. Recently, we posted a video of his life at http://e2ma.net/go/1995820663/1824399/68190382/goto:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRNANk5rI2g. You’ll find I Would Die for You anywhere Christian books are sold.


http://e2ma.net/go/1995820663/1824399/68190381/goto:http://www.revellbooks.com/ contains a link for a free companion Bible study. Friend us on Facebook: Brent A. Higgins; Deanna Tucker Higgins.


Visit http://e2ma.net/go/1995820663/1824399/68190380/goto:http://www.awestar.org/ to learn more about international missions opportunities. May God use you to extend BJ’s passion to reach the nations and “raise a revolution” in Him.



I Would Die for You Gift Basket


I Would Die for You book - autographed

Rite of Passage Parenting book - autographed (Rite of Passage Parenting by Walker Moore, Thomas Nelson, 2007)

Global Passage Creed sticker

Not Home...Gone Global for Jesus sticker

Awe Star blue ink pen

Red Awe Star luggage tag

Green Global Passage bandana

2 Awe Star drink containers

Blue size L Awe Star 2009 trip T-shirt

Orange size L God's Global Roadie T-shirt


What is this? you ask. Read this post to learn all about Faith 'n' Fiction Saturday!

Today's Question:

A lot of us are reviewers which means we consume books at a rate that blows the minds of others. As a result, we might start seeing the same thing over. and over. and over.What are some cliched phrases or plot devices in Christian fiction that you'd like to see go? (by the way this was inspired by a conversation on Twitter with Deborah)


Answer:

Well, it seems like everyone has my answer...lol. I agree with what everyone else has been saying. I have notice myself skipping over the church scene parts too because it just seems out of place or something. I do like my books to have spiritual meaning, but I like it when it comes out of conversations or them contemplating things at home and reading their bible. Many times when we are searching for a answer, someone who talks to us supplies it even if they didn't know they were at the time. At church I always think to myself, good point, but its really not till I get home, or someone else comments on it that it hits my brain...lol.

I agree a lot with was said about the historicals, sometimes they do seem a lot of the same scenery just different people. Somebody please take me to Italy, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Japan, etc. I love to travel and I like traveling with characters as well. Even though they are contemporary I love the Sisterchicks books because she takes me places and I have fun while there...lol. (I am reading Sisterchicks in Wooden shoes..lol its great)

Though I must say I haven't found many books that I haven't liked, I believe I like most books I read, but I can tell which ones hold my attention better by how fast I read them.

Happy Reading!

Forensic Friday's


Forensics was something I always wanted to do, but never did. The college I went to did not offer it until after I graduated. I have thought about going back but the huge student loan bill I already have, sort of weighs on that decision. I do love reading about it, watching shows like The New Detectives, etc. So I thought I would try something on my blog and put something about forensics up every Friday.


Today its forensic anthropology (I love big words):


-Forensic anthropology is the application of the science of physical anthropology and human osteology (the study of the human skeleton) in a legal setting, most often in criminal cases where the victim's remains are more or less skeletonized. A forensic anthropologist can also assist in the identification of deceased individuals whose remains are decomposed, burned, mutilated or otherwise unrecognizable.


Anyone else like the series on fox TV called Bones? It is about Dr. Brennan (called 'bones' by Booth, the special agent she works with) who is a highly skilled forensic anthropologist who the police call when the body is so badly decomposed, burnt or destroyed that nobody else can solve the case. She works with FBI special agent booth as she uses her skills to track down the killers. She also writes book on the side (that info is for all my writing buddies)


Many cases are solved each year because of the study of the human skeleton and also of how the body reacts during decomposition. Patricia Cromwell wrote a book called The Body Farm. Some may wonder is there really a body farm? The answer is yes, The body farm was stared by anthropologist William Bass it is located behind the University of Tennessee medical center. Before he started the body farm there was not a accurate way to study decomposition on a body. Bass decided to start it up in 1981. The farm has donated bodies where they can study the different phases of decomposition on a body to help police have better information of what happened to a body when it has been left out in the elements.


Forensic anthropologist help law enforcement by putting together a profile on the unidentified remains. This profile can help with telling the sex, age, ethnicity, height, length of time since death, and sometimes the evaluation of trauma seen on bones. Today forensic anthropology helps put many criminals behind bars.

Interview and giveaway with Miralee Ferrell

Interview with Miralee Ferrell



I had the pleasure of reading Miralee's book Love Finds You in Last Chance, California. It is a fine romance and I happen to have a extra copy, so I thought I would give it away, so if you have been wanting this book now is your chance to try for it.




Book Blurb:


It's 1877 and Alexia Travers is alone in the world. Her father has died unexpectedly, leaving her burdened with a heavily mortgaged horse ranch. Marrying one of the town's all-too-willing bachelors would offer an easy solution, but Alex has no interest in marriage. Instead, she dons men's trousers and rides the range, determined to make the ranch a success on her own.

But despite Alex's best efforts, everything seems to go wrong: ranch hands quit, horses are stolen, and her father's gold goes missing. Alex is at her wit's end when wrangler Justin Phillips arrives in Last Chance with his young son, looking for a job. But there seems to be more to Justin's story than he's willing to share. Will Alex ever be able to trust him? More importantly, will the independent woman finally learn to depend on God?




AUTHOR BIO


Miralee Ferrell began writing a little over three years ago, and her first book was published 18 months later. She lives with Allen, her husband of 36 yrs., in a rural area of Washington state where she enjoys riding horses with her grown daughter and tending her garden and flower beds in the summer. Miralee and Allen hope to spend a few months each summer on their sailboat. She serves on staff at her church as a licensed minister, counseling and ministering to the needs of women.




Interview:


When you’re writing, whom are you writing for? What type of reader do you envision picking up your books?




That depends on the genre I’m writing. On my first book, The Other Daughter, I hoped to minister to women who’d been hurt in their marriage, felt betrayed in some way, or were struggling with their own spirituality. It dealt with a married couple who discover a young girl standing on their doorstep claiming to be the husband’s daughter.


My newest release, Love Finds You In Last Chance, CA, is a bit different. I can see both men and women picking this up, as it has more of an “old west” flavor and theme. The spiritual thread is woven through out the story, but isn’t ‘in your face’. People who love peeking into the 1800’s and want an entertaining read without getting bogged down in heavy historical details will enjoy this story. I believe it will also minister to individuals who might be struggling with who they are and where they fit in life, especially if they’ve had issues with acceptance.




What do you want your readers to take away from this book?




First, I hope it will be entertaining and take them back to a simpler time and place. I also hope the spiritual message (that God accepts and loves us as we are) will come through and possibly minister to some readers. Alexia, the heroine of the story, struggled with coming to terms with the acceptance issue in her own life, but was able to easily accept others. She constantly was trying to prove she was capable as a woman and a daughter, and needed to learn how God viewed her.


And last, I hope they’ll enjoy my writing style enough that they’ll be willing to pick up my next book, and maybe even find my first book, The Other Daughter, if they’ve not read it yet.


Did you see God open any doors you never expected in the promotion of your books?


Yes, I’ve been asked to speak at several women’s church functions, and I recently had a local book store ask if they can do a book release party for my next historical, as it’s set in Oregon (I’m in WA, but right on the border). I didn’t expect that at all, and am so blessed, as they want to do some serious advertising. I’m did a book signing with them for my first book, and will again soon for the second one, but it’s the ongoing relationship with them that triggered the offer for the book release party. I’m going to make a point of returning to some of the same book stores with each book, as I believe it builds a relationship with the local community as well as the store.


How did you get into writing? How many books do you have published?


I started writing in March of 2005 after a visiting pastor prayed with me about a small prayer request. After praying he lifted his eyes and said “I believe the Lord just told me you’re supposed to be writing…I don’t know what type, but it needs to be published”. I took that home and prayed about it for two weeks, than wrote what I knew…. a 100K word memoir of the spiritual journey my husband and I have taken since our marriage, hoping it might transition into a marriage helps book. I had no idea how to refine it and make it more than a simple auto-biography, so at the suggestion of a friend, set it aside and began writing short story/articles. I joined a free online writer’s group, Christian Writers, where I learned that submitting articles to magazines was a good way to build writing credits. I followed through and had three published. A friend suggested I try Christian fiction, and after brainstorming a bit came up with the idea for my debut novel, a women’s contemporary called The Other Daughter. Six months later I signed with my agent, and later that winter it was picked up by Kregel, and released the following year.
My second book released Feb. 1st of this year with Summerside Press, and is titled Love Finds You in Last Chance, CA.


I see this is your first historical. Was it hard for you to switch from a contemporary to a setting of over 100 yrs ago?




I thought it might be and wondered when I pitched the book to Summerside if I’d be able to pull it off. I saw myself as a contemporary writer and six months earlier would have said I’d never write an historical. In fact, I pitched the story line as a contemporary, but after brainstorming with my editor, we agreed it would be better served as an historical. I loved writing about this time period and had so much fun fleshing out the variety of characters in the book to fit the old west theme. It’s not your typical ‘prairie romance’, as it does have a bit of gun play, one fight scene (but none of these are graphic), and a suspense thread. I grew up reading Zane Grey books, which may have colored my writing style somewhat.




What kind of special research did you do for this time period and setting?




My husband and I flew into Sacramento last summer, then drove 1 ½ hrs to our B&B on the edge of the Sierra Nevada Mtns where we stayed for 3 nights. A wonderful archeologist who works for the National Forest offered to take us another 1 ½ hrs into the mountains to visit the ghost town site of the once booming mining town of Last Chance. We’d never have found it on our own, as it’s simply a wide spot on the forest road now, with one small building. We spent a couple of hours scouting the area, taking pictures, and another few hours chatting with our guide. We poured over maps of the area, and I found books depicting the time period with scant bits of history on the town and surrounding area. A local museum in a nearby town helped with a little more information, as did the local library and our hostess at the B&B.


What did you enjoy most about writing this book and were there any surprises along the way?


I loved bringing the old west to life and getting acquainted with some of the specific history of that time. And yes, a rather big surprise. We assumed that since Last Chance was in Central Ca., that it might lend itself to a horse ranch theme. It wasn’t until I started seriously researching the area that I discovered it was set high in the mountains and a horse ranch might present a problem. I wanted to keep the story as true to the history and geography as I could and wondered if I’d have to turn the plot into a mining story, but had my heart set on the ranch theme. I dug deeper into history and discovered an old diary entry from the 1860’s, just 10 yrs before the time period I’d chosen. It stated that there was a wide plateau just a couple of miles out of town, stretching for 3 miles, and treeless. Perfect spot to put a ranch. When we visited the area we found the plateau, now completely covered with large trees. Had I not found that diary entry I’d probably have had to change the story. God is indeed good to us writer’s, isn’t He!


If your book was turned into a movie who would you want to star as your main characters?






Great question!! I’d have to say I’d want to turn back time and get a young George Strait to play Justin. George has the same sweet smile, charming personality and is downright gorgeous, to boot!






For Alexia, I think it would be Jennifer Gardner. From what I can tell, she’s a pretty down to earth person, has natural beauty, and isn’t pretentious or stuck on herself.






Do you plan on returning to contemporary, or will this be a permanent genre change?


I think I’ll be doing quite a bit of both. My next two books with Kregel will both be contemporary, but my next Summerside release is set in 1902, and I’m pitching another one that’s set in Wyoming in the 1860’s during the cattle rustling days. I also have another two projects in the works (but not contracted yet) that are both contemporary. I enjoy both and haven’t settled on just one.


Okay I am going to do things a bit differently this go around.


-If you leave a comment and your email that will get you one entry.


-If you twitter about this contest you can gain a extra entry (leave me away to see your twitter I am ladystorm33)


I will draw a name in two weeks.

This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

\Mark Andrew Olsen



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

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. Two of his last books were the supernatural thriller The Watchers, and The Warriors.

The son of missionaries to France, Mark is a Professional Writing graduate of Baylor University. He and his wife, Connie, live in Colorado Springs with their three children.


ABOUT THE BOOK

When an al-Qaeda email is intercepted, threatening an attack on America, it leads to the capture of the group's leader. Yet even under fierce interrogation, the terrorist clings to his jihadist beliefs and refuses to divulge any information. Desperate, the Army resorts to extreme measures--a controversial protocol designed to break a subject's resistance. But the attempt must be masked as an offer of clemency and rely on an outside party, someone who is unaware of the protocol's aims.

They find that someone in Greg Cahill, a disgraced soldier who now serves in a prison ministry. Lured by the chance to restore his reputation, Greg befriends a man the entire country despises. And the result proves combustible, the two men having to flee for their lives. With both in need of redemption, they set out to prevent a major catastrophe...

If you would like to read the first chapter of HERE

Angels & Demons Review


Staring: Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor, Ayelet Zurer, Stellan Starstard


Harvard symbologist Robert Langston isn't well like at the Vatican after his last escapades (The Davinci Code). When the pope dies and a secret society, the Illuminati, kidnap four cardinals he is the only one that can help them. He uses the clues left by the Illuminati from a long time ago that leads him all around the Vatican and the four alters of science, earth, air, fire, and water. Can he solve each clue in time to save the cardinals? Can he save the Vatican city from catastrophe?

The Davinci Code was very controversial and therefore a very popular movie, though I could never get into that book. I loved the book Angels and Demons, I like reading books where you solve puzzles using symbols, signs, paintings, etc that are left from the past. I was swept away into a fast paced journey into the secret society of the Illuminati.

The movie was just as good as the book, Tom Hanks does a amazing job as Robert Langston. I was very surprised at how good Ewan McGregor did as the Camerlengo (official for the papal court) The movie took you on a fast paced journey all around the Vatican city, into churches, the Vatican archives, underground. It was fun learning about the Illuminati and how they could keep themselves a secret but still be right out in the open. A clue from a statue, or on a brick in the street, a arrow pointing the way, etc. I very much enjoyed this movie and for those who have never read the book, it has a bit of a twist in the end.

Ron Howard made somewhere around 700 million dollars off of The Davinci Code, so it allowed him to give this movie a big budget so they could make it better than the first movie.

Fun Facts:
This movie became the first big-screen casualty of the Hollywood writer's strike in 2007, because Akiva Goldsman's script still needed work, and he was on strike with the Writers Guild of America. So, production of the movie had to be postponed.

The production had to build a scale replica of St. Peter's Square since Vatican officers banned the movie from being filmed in its grounds.

Although the novel upon which this film is based is set before the events of the novel The Da Vinci Code, the film has been written as a sequel to follow after events in The Da Vinci Code (2006).

Fancy going to the Cinema?

Summertime is my favorite time to go to the movies. It it chopped full of all the blockbuster movies that I have been waiting all year to watch. (Okay so I am a huge movie buff..lol) So I have decided to post each week the movies that are coming out for any other movie buffs that are out there and might want to know.

First up is the one I am going to go and watch this weekend:

Angels and Demons

Now I know that The Davinci Code might have turned off some of you from wanting to watch this movie, but I read this book long before The Davinci Code and it was a excellent book. Dan Brown has a great way of creating fast paced adventures. In all fairness, Angels and Demons should have came out first, but you know how Hollywood is, they go with the controversial book first..

When Langdon discovers evidence of the resurgence of an ancient secret brotherhood known as the Illuminati - the most powerful underground organization in history - he also faces a deadly threat to the existence of the secret organization's most despised enemy: the Catholic Church. When Langdon learns that the clock is ticking on an unstoppable Illuminati time bomb, he jets to Rome, where he joins forces with Vittoria Vetra, a beautiful and enigmatic Italian scientist. Embarking on a nonstop, action-packed hunt through sealed crypts, dangerous catacombs, deserted cathedrals, and even to the heart of the most secretive vault on earth, Langdon and Vetra will follow a 400-year-old trail of ancient symbols that mark the Vatican's only hope for survival. Rated PG-13.

Management (select theaters)

its a romantic comedy that chronicles a chance meeting between Mike Cranshaw (Steve Zahn) and Sue Claussen (Jennifer Aniston). When Sue checks into the roadside motel owned by Mike's parents in Arizona, what starts with a bottle of wine "compliments of management" soon evolves into a multi-layered, cross-country journey of two people looking for a sense of purpose. Mike, an aimless dreamer, bets it all on a trip to Sue's workplace in Maryland – only to find that she has no place for him in her carefully ordered life. Buttoned down and obsessed with making a difference in the world, Sue goes back to her yogurt mogul ex-boyfriend Jango (Woody Harrelson), who promises her a chance to head his charity operations. But having found something worth fighting for, Mike pits his hopes against Sue's practicality, and the two embark on a twisted, bumpy, freeing journey to discover that their place in the world just might be together. Rated R for language.

The Brothers Bloom (limited, wide on the 29th)

Welcome to the world of "The Brothers Bloom," where deception is an art and nothing is as it seems. The brothers have perfected the art of swindling fortunes through years of fraternal teamwork. Now they've decided to take on one last spectacular job—luring a beautiful and eccentric heiress into an elaborate plot that takes them around the world.For as long as they can remember, the Brothers Bloom have had only each other to depend on.

From their childhood in a long series of gloomy foster homes to their highflying lives as international con artists, Stephen (Mark Ruffalo) and Bloom (Adrien Brody) have shared everything. Stephen brilliantly concocts intricate stories that the brothers live out, but he's still searching for the perfect con, the one where "everyone gets what they want." Meanwhile, Bloom yearns for "an unwritten life"—a real adventure, one not dreamed up by his old brother.Eager to retire, Bloom agrees to take part in one last grand scam. He insinuates himself into the life of Penelope (Rachel Wiesz), a bored, single New Jersey heiress.

When a genuine romance begins to blossom between them, he is reluctant to exploit her naiveté, but Penelope has already taken the bait: She impulsively joins Bloom, Stephen and their "associate," a sexy Japanese explosives expert named Bang Bang (Rinko Kikuchi), on an ocean liner to Greece. Penelope is convinced she's happened upon the adventure of a lifetime and offers to bankroll a million dollar deal. As the quartet makes their way from Athens to Prague to Mexico to St. Petersburg, Penelope quickly becomes addicted to the illicit thrills. But as Stephen's elaborate web of deceit pulls tighter, Bloom begins to wonder if his brother has devised the most dangerous con of his life.

Well her is a small list of some movies coming out, so go enjoy yourself at the movies. (If you have not seen Wolverine or Star Trek I do recommend those as well)

This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Beloved Counterfeit

Barbour Publishing, Inc (May 2009)

by

Kathleen Y'Barbo




ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


KATHLEEN MILLER Y’BARBO is a tenth-generation Texan and a mother of three grown sons and a teenage daughter. She is a graduate of Texas A&M University and an award-winning novelist of Christian fiction whose first published work jumped onto the Christian Booksellers Association bestseller list in its first month of release. Kathleen is a former treasurer for the American Christian Fiction Writers, and is a member of the Author’s Guild, Inspirational Writers Alive, Words for the Journey Christian Writers Guild, and the Fellowship of Christian Authors. In addition, she is a sought-after speaker, and her kids think she’s a pretty cool mom, too…most of the time, anyway.


ABOUT THE BOOK

LOVE CAN COVER A MUTITUDE OF SINS

Washed ashore on Fairweather Key, Ruby O’Shea and her three nieces─the offspring of the pirate Thomas Hawkins and Ruby’s late sister─have a chance for a new beginning as Ruby takes a job in a boardinghouse and the girls are passed off as her daughters. But will Ruby be able to confess all when she falls for Micah Tate, a widower, wrecher, and soon-to-be preacher?

Micah is determined to marry the young woman who has captured his heart despite knowing she has something to hide. But will he be able to remain true to his vows when his lady love’s shady past comes to light?

Captain Thomas Hawkins will go to any length to discover the whereabouts of his daughters. What will his determination cost the folks of Fairweather Key?

When Ruby finds herself bereft of her newfound love and protector, will she run away in an attempt to escape her present as she did her past? Will Micah’s love cover the multitude of Ruby’s sins, or will Ruby’s duplicity cost her everything?


If you would like to read the first chapter of Beloved Counterfeit, go HERE

Not had a chance to read this one yet, but I can't wait to read it I know it will be good.

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

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


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Blood Bayou

Howard Books (May 5, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:





Karen Young is the author of thirty-four novels with more than ten million copies in print. Romantic Times magazine and the Romance Writers of America have given her fiction numerous awards. She is a frequent public speaker and lecturer who lives in Houston. This is her first Christian novel.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 448 pages
Publisher: Howard Books (May 5, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1416587500
ISBN-13: 978-1416587507

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


PROLOGUE

Luanne Richard opened the door to her killer wearing a smile and little else. With a drink in one hand and invitation and mischief dancing in her eyes, she sensed no danger. After several martinis, her instinct for danger was hazy at best.

She’d been lounging on the patio in her bikini when the doorbell rang. It had occurred to her that a cover-up might be the proper thing, but she wasn’t much into doing the proper thing. Never had been. It got really boring trying to live life properly. Now, glancing through the peephole, she saw he was alone and thought it might be fun to tease him a little. No one

around, as far as she could tell. So she let him in, closed the door, and turned to face him.

That is when she saw the knife.

She sobered instantly. And when he raised it and lunged, aiming for her throat, she recoiled on instinct alone, tossed her drink at his face and somehow—miraculously—managed to

evade that first vicious slash. While he cursed and blinked gin from his eyes, she turned and ran on bare feet.

She raced through the huge house wondering frantically how to escape. She cursed her carelessness in leaving the gate open when she drove home from the club. It came to her that

she stood no chance while inside, so she flew through the living room and made for the den and beyond—the patio. She prayed the door was open, that she’d failed to close it when she got up

and came back in.

Please, oh, please . . .

Halfway there, she took a quick look over her shoulder and screamed. He was close and gaining. He would be on her if she didn’t do something. As she streaked past a very expensive Chinese vase, she gave it a push to tip it over, thinking to trip him. He stumbled but didn’t go down. He picked it up, tossed it aside, and laughed. Laughed!

This couldn’t be real. This kind of craziness happened in nightmares to other people, not to her. Hadn’t she had enough grief in her life? Hadn’t she tried her best to fight the demons that tormented her? Hadn’t she often resisted temptation? Was she to be damned for the times she didn’t?

I’m sorry, God. I’m sorry. I’m sorry . . .

No! She wasn’t going to let this happen. She had a lot of life to live yet. She would change. She had changed. Nobody understood how hard it was for her to keep to the straight and narrow. She kept to the path. Almost always.

Once out on the lawn, she realized she couldn’t make it to the front. It was too far away. He’d overtake her before she got halfway there. And there was no time to punch in the security

code to open the gate. She was trapped. Mad with fear, she ducked around lush landscaping, making for the walk that led to the pier and boathouse. She veered to avoid the cherub fountain and stumbled, twisting her ankle painfully. She flung out a hand for balance only to have it slashed on the lethal thorns of a pyracantha. Sobbing now, she dashed through a grove of wax myrtles, wincing at the slap and sting of limbs before finally reaching the pier jutting over the bayou. It was her only chance.

She looked again over her shoulder. He’d slowed, knowing she had no place else to run. The knife blade glinted brightly in the sun. She whimpered, trying to think. Blood dripped from

the gash on her hand and her ankle throbbed. Scalding tears ran down her cheeks. What to do?

“Gotcha now, Luanne,” he taunted. “The boathouse or the bayou, babe. What’s it gonna be?”

Not the bayou. Never the bayou.

She had a fear of Blood Bayou. It had almost claimed her once. None of the romantic legends spun about it held any charm for her. The water was too dark, too still, too deep, too alive with slimy things, predatory things. The bayou was death.

She was out of breath and in pain when she remembered the telephone in the boathouse only a few feet away. Checking behind her, she saw that he was still coming, but moving almost

leisurely, as if enjoying the chase, savoring her fear. Anticipating the kill?

The thought made her leap onto the pier. Hot from the August sun, the wooden planks burned the soles of her bare feet. Below the pier, black water slapped against the pilings, disorienting her. Don’t look down! Eyes straight ahead, she finally reached the boathouse door, grabbing at the latch, fingers clawing. Panic and blood from her wounded hand made her clumsy,

all thumbs, as she worked at the strange fastener. But at last she got it, wrenched it open.

Inside it was dark and dank and, like the bayou, smelled of rotting vegetation and decaying fish. But it was sanctuary and she scrambled inside, slammed the door shut, and set the bolt. It would not keep him out for long, but it offered a few precious seconds. Her eyes struggled with the dark. It was her only chance. But one thing nagged: Why was he giving her this chance? No time to worry about that. She flew to the wall-mounted phone, grabbed the receiver, and punched in 911.

He was at the boathouse now, rattling the door. Terror leaped in her chest. With her heart in her throat, she strained to hear the ring connecting her to 911. But nothing. In a panic, she jiggled the button up and down. Listened for a dial tone. Nothing. She frantically pressed the button up and down again. And again nothing. She gave an anguished cry and slammed the receiver against the wall. The phone line was dead!

She screamed at the thunderous crash. He kicked the door open. It slammed against the wall, shaking the boathouse to its foundation. As she watched, petrified, he took an unhurried step inside, filling the doorway. With the sun behind him, he loomed as large as a truck. He paused, no doubt to let his eyes adjust to the dark interior. He took his time. Then he began to move slowly toward her. “I’ve got you now, sugar,” he taunted, his smile grotesque.

Incoherent with terror, all she saw was the knife. She scrambled backward, desperate to get out of his reach. But he kept coming. With a bump, she backed against the sleek hull of a

boat. Trapped! Below was bottomless, black water. Sobbing, she looked at him piteously. She was going to die. The bayou was going to claim her after all.

Just started reading this one, but it sure hooked me from the very first page. Looks to be a good book.


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Taking Tuscany

David C. Cook (May 2009)

by

Renee Riva



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Renee Riva writes humorous stories with a message, for both children and adults. Having been raised in a large Italian family with a great sense of humor, she has much to draw from for developing quirky characters.

She loves sharing her secrets for story starters at Young Author events, helping to spark the imagination of young minds. Renee and her husband live in Richland, Washington, with their three daughters, a dog, a cat, and until recently, her beloved hamster—may she rest in peace.


ABOUT THE BOOK

A. J. Degulio loved the idea of a visit to the Old Country... until her family decided to stay. It's 1972 and she's turning fourteen in a crumbling castle on a hill in Tuscany, wishing she were back in Idaho with her beloved dog, Sailor. In Italy, her blonde hair makes her stick out like a vanilla wafer in a box of chocolate biscotti, and she's so lonely her best friend is a nun from the local convent.

The challenges of roots and relatives are nothing new to A. J., but she's going to need more than the famous Degulio sense of humor to survive. Can't anyone see that Italy isn't really home? It will take a catastrophe - and a few wise words from a friend - for A. J. to understand that sometimes the only thing you can change is your perspective.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Taking Tuscany, go HERE

My Take on Star Trek


Star Trek



Staring: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Eric Bana, Bruce Greenwood, Karl Urban, Zoe Saldana, Leonard Nimoy



Supposedly a prequel to the original Star Trek. It shows you how James T. Kirt and Spock meet and how they come to be on the Enterprise together.



First I don't think people should call this move a prequel to the other Star Trek's because I believe this movie with spawn off a whole new series of Star Trek movies, just like the New Batman's etc.

If you have no clue what so ever of what any of the other Star Treks are like, then I think you might actually like this movie more than those who grew up watching the TV series, or the original movies. For me I have seen the old movies and found that this movie had nothing really to do with the originals (which is why I think it shouldn't be called a prequel) I really enjoyed Zachary Quinto as Spock and Karl Urban as Doc McCoy I have become defiantly become a fan and well Chris Pine was just nice to look at...LOL)






I thought it had a lot of discrepancies to the old movies that left me a bit confused at times (I guess I remembered more than I thought I might of the older movies..lol) I also thought some of the stuff they did was a bit far fetched (Parachuting out of a Shuttle that is up in space and darting down to a funky looking drill at a very high speed, and then once landing on it fighting bad guys while way up in the sky with no air mask on...hmmmmmmm)


Over all it was a decent action movie, but you really have to just put the old movies aside and enjoy it for what it is, a new Star Trek. Live Long and Prosperous.


Fun Facts:


The character that Bruce Greenwood plays, Captain Christopher Pike, was the commanding officer of the USS Enterprise in the unaired original series pilot episode, "Star Trek: The Cage (#1.0)" (1966). In that episode, Pike was portrayed by Jeffrey Hunter. Initially, the episode was rejected but when a second pilot was ordered, Hunter dropped out of the series so the part was rewritten and recast with William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk. The footage from the unaired pilot was later woven into the episode "Star Trek: The Menagerie: Part 1 (#1.11)" (1966). In the mythology of Star Trek, Captain Pike is considered to be Captain Kirk's predecessor, a plot line to be (potentially) played out in the film.


The idea of a young James T. Kirk and young Spock meeting at the Academy was considered as early as 1968, announced by Gene Roddenberry at the World Science Fiction Convention.


The role of James T. Kirk came down between Mike Vogel and Chris Pine. Vogel was reported as being the front runner for the part but J.J. Abrams decided to cast Pine in the end. Joshua Jackson also auditioned for the role.



Tyler Perry's first movie role outside one of his own projects.



To prepare for his role as Captain James Kirk, Chris Pine watched classic episodes and read encyclopedias about the Star Trek universe. However, his research was rudimentary, as he wanted his performance to be original and not an imitation of William Shatner. He based his performance on Tom Cruise's Maverick and Harrison Ford's Han Solo and Indiana Jones, heroes who Pine felt possessed the archetypal hero qualities Kirk has (humour, arrogance, decisiveness).

Welcome to Faith 'n Fiction Saturday. If this is your first time participating, please read this post. It will tell you everything you need to know!


Today's Topic


It doesn't take long hanging around people who read Christian fiction before the usual names come up. Janette Oke. Francine Rivers. Karen Kingsbury. Dee Henderson. Ted Dekker. Frank Peretti. These are the best-sellers...the authors everyone knows. But there are so many authors who get less coverage but have huge amounts of talent. Today, choose either an author you think deserves a wider readership or a book you wish more people had read and share about them on your blog! Because as you all know, we need to add to our TBR (to be read) lists!


Answer


Right off the top of my head Kaye Dacus comes to mind, I really loved her book The Stand-in Groom, it was a very fun romance. Another one is Sandra Byrd, she usually rights YA books but she recently has written, Let Them Eat Cake (French Twist Series, book one) and Bon Appetit (Book Two) and they are very fun and light-hearted and I sooooooo can't wait to read the third one when it comes out.

A Passioned Denied by Julie Lessman


A Review of A Passioned Denied by Julie Lessman



If you have already read both of her other books in the series then you are already familiar with the two main characters, Beth(Lizzie) and Brady, but Lizzie was just a young lady in the first two. Now Beth is almost eighteen and has become a modern woman, even changing her name to Lizzie for a more modern appeal. She thinks its time to go after what she wants, Brady. She has loved him since she was thirteen and now she wants to marry him.


Brady is not use to Beth being all grown up, when did his little buddy turn into a woman. When did his brotherly feel for her turn into more than brotherly affection. Brady has a sordid past that has left him very bitter and when Lizzie puts the moves on Brady, he runs. He runs taking Lizzie's heart with him, but when she finds out about his past will she run from him when he needs her the most?


I have never had a author who could draw me into a book as well as Julie Lessman does, from book one of her series The Daughters of Boston I have been hooked. Her writing still is so easy to read, but filled with a load of content.


She writes very passionate books with out going over the line of what we as Christian readers want to read. She is defiantly a edgy Christian writer and I love it. I like how she makes her characters seem so real, and passionate in their love for each other (and not in a bad way), not only in the main characters but in the who family that she is writing about. When the characters are hurting, you feel sad, when they are happy you want to laugh too, that to me makes a great book.


Book Three of the Daughters of Boston Series drove me absolutely crazy, I wanted to slap Brady upside the head threw most of the book, wanted to know what was so bad he couldn't love and that will drive you to finish the book as quickly as possible. This is the best Series I have read in a long time and I can not wait for the the stories of Katie, Sean and Steven that are to come.


I highly recommend this to everyone who loves a great love story. Two thumbs up. :)

Enduring Justice by Amy Wallace blurb


Book blurb:


In Enduring Justice, Hanna Kessler’s childhood secret has remained buried for over two decades. But when the dark shadows of her past threaten to destroy those she loves, Hanna must face the summer that changed her life and the man who still haunts her thoughts.

Crimes Against Children FBI Agent, Michael Parker knows what it means to get knocked down. And when the system fails and a white supremacist is set free, Michael’s drive for retribution eclipses all else.

A racist’s well-planned assault forces Hanna and Michael to decide between executing vengeance and pursuing justice. When the attack turns personal, is healing still possible?

This thought-provoking novel deals with healing from sexual abuse, the balance of justice and mercy, and maintaining mixed-race friendships in the midst of racial tension. Readers who enjoy investigative thrillers by Dee Henderson, Colleen Coble, and Catherine Coulter, and who watch crime dramas like Law & Order: SVU, Criminal Minds, and Without a Trace will love this book—and the entire series.

Author Bio:


Amy Wallace is the author of Ransomed Dreams and Healing Promises, a homeschool mom, and self-confessed chocoholic. She is a graduate of the Gwinnett County Citizens Police Academy and a contributing author of several books including God Answers Moms’ Prayers and Chicken Soup for the Soul Healthy Living Series: Diabetes. She lives with her husband and three children in Georgia .
Check out the Random House website if you would like to buy this book.
Welcome Cynthia Hickey to my blog today. She has a new book out called Candy Coated Secrets and if you would like to win a copy then leave a comment with a way to reach you.

Tell me about yourself.

I am a Detention Monitor at my local school and live in Arizona with my husband and two of our seven children. I have been making up stories since I was a child. I can't imagine not writing. It's as necessary as breathing.

How hard was your road to publication?


Depends on the definition of hard. I have a couple of pod books out. They aren't very good, but they showed me I could write more than one book and meet deadlines. My first "real" book was written on a dare. I entered it into a contest, won first place, obtained my agent, who sold the book within a month. This was Fudge-Laced Felonies.

How did you know that you were meant to be a writer?


I just can't imagine not doing it. I've been "writing" since I was a little girl. Even started a couple of books in high school. Hopefully, I'll be doing this until the day Jesus calls me home.

How do you choose a setting/storyline for your books?

I spent most of my childhood in the foothills of the Ozarks in Arkansas. My stories take places in fictional towns in the same area.

Which authors have influenced your writing?


LOL! I don't know. Since Fudge-Laced wasn't something I planned on writing, I have no one to compare it to. Maybe a clean version of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plumb series.

What are your currently reading?

A new Steeple Hill release. I just finished a book by Deborah Raney and one by Lisa Samson before that.

What advice do you have for new authors?

READ READ READ, PRAY PRAY PRAY, WRITE WRITE WRITE. And never give up. Not if this is something you really want. The road to publication can be an uphill climb, but it's worth pursuing.


If your book was made into a movie who would you pick to play your main characters?

A blond Patrick Dempsey, and Kristin Stewart




Tell me about your featured book.

Candy-Coated Secrets.

Who would have thought escorting an elehant down Highway 64 could lead to murder?

Whenn a carnival train crashes in front of Summer Meadows's house, she does what comes naturally--she acts without thinking and vounteers to lead an elephant to the fairground. The animal's trainer follows close behind but disappears when they reach their destination. When Summer goes looking for the trainer, she finds something altogether different--a woman hanging dead in the shower of one of the trailers.

A carnival slew of mishap and misadventure ensue when Summer and her fiance, Ethan, set out to solve the murder.

Do you have any works in progress?

I am currently working on a Romantic Suspense.






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

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


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


10 Dumb Things Smart Christians Believe

Multnomah Books (April 14, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Larry Osborne is senior pastor of the multi-campus, 7,000-member North Coast Church in Vista, California, recognized as one of the ten most influential churches in America. A pioneer in the sermon-based small group movement, Larry also founded the North Coast Training Network and is a highly sought-after consultant for business and ministry leaders worldwide. A frequent contributor to Leadership Journal, Larry’s books on genuine spirituality and leadership are designed to reach a wide audience. He lives in Vista with his wife and family.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Multnomah Books (April 14, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1601421508
ISBN-13: 978-1601421500

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


FA I T H

CAN FIX

ANYTHING


I’ll never forget the day my wife and I stopped by the local hospital for what we knew would be our last visit with her friend Susan.

For three years, Susan had put up a valiant fight against a disease that was now in its last stages. Her labored breathing, gaunt figure, and deep-set eyes made it painfully obvious that she would not be around much longer.

As we sat by her bed, wondering what to say and how to pray, I was stumped. (I’m a pastor and I’m supposed to know what to say in these situations.) But before I could say anything profound—or even trite—our awkward silence was broken by the entrance of Susan’s husband, John, into the room.

We exchanged hugs and a quick greeting. Then John began to talk. He spoke of the plans he and Susan had for the future. Not in a regretful reflection of what could have been, but with a powerful conviction of what was yet to be.

It was weird.

Susan lay there barely cognizant, struggling for each breath, seemingly hours from death. Yet her husband stood inches away talking about future vacations, a kitchen remodel, and their retirement years as if the four of us were hanging out at a backyard barbeque.

While John and Susan had often spoken of their confidence in God’s ability to heal, this was different. He wasn’t talking about an assurance that she could be healed. He was describing his absolute certainty that she would be healed. He didn’t have an ounce of doubt. It was already a done deal.

Then he told us what had happened. That morning, while in prayer for Susan’s healing, he’d been overcome with a powerful sense of God’s presence and a deep conviction that God had answered his prayer. As he continued to pray, biblical passages proclaiming God’s protection and care flooded his mind. He felt as if God had physically reached down and touched him, whispering in his ear, “I’ve heard you. She’ll be okay.”

Brimming with confidence, he figured he’d arrived at the epitome of faith because he had absolute assurance of what he hoped for and complete certainty of what he had not yet seen.1He was as giddy as a prospector who’d just tapped into the mother lode.

I didn’t know what to say. Could it be that God was up to something big? Were we about to witness a miracle? Was John’s faith going to pull her back from the jaws of death?

I wasn’t so sure.

He was absolutely certain.

That night she breathed her last breath.

John was devastated. For years after Susan’s death, he limped along spiritually, disillusioned with God, prayer, and the impotence of faith.

But his spiritual meltdown had nothing to do with God letting him down. It had nothing to do with the promises of the Bible being hollow. It was the predictable result of having placed his trust in the fool’s gold of faith’s best known and most widely believed spiritual urban legend: the myth that if we have enough faith, we can do or fix anything.

Unfortunately, John’s concept of faith (what it was and how it worked) didn’t come from the Word of God; it came from the word on the street. He had banked on a set of assumptions and beliefs that simply weren’t true. And they had let him down.


The Word on the Street


The word on the street is that faith is a potent mixture of intellectual and emotional self-control that when properly harnessed can literally change outcomes through positive thinking and clear visualization.

It’s what successful people tout as the key to their achievements, survivors of great tragedies cite as the source of their endurance, televangelists credit with healing power, and motivational speakers make a sweet living espousing.

It’s why, when our team is five runs down with two outs in the ninth inning, we’re not supposed to think negatively. Instead, we’re supposed to hang tough, visualize a big inning. Because as long as we really believe we can win, there is a good chance we will.

This kind of hopeful thinking is more about

faith in faith than faith in God. Yet it’s what

many of us have been taught to believe God

wants from us when we’re confronted with

insurmountable odds.

Same with a medical crisis. Did the tests come back showing the cancer has metastasized? Don’t panic. It can be beat. Just think positively.

Or perhaps your son is a five-foot, two-inch freshman with dreams of playing in the NBA. Whatever you do, don’t discourage him. Who knows? It could happen. After all, nothing is impossible as long as he pursues his dreams with hard work and unwavering faith.

Unfortunately, this kind of hopeful thinking has nothing in common with what the Bible calls faith. It’s more about faith in faith than faith in God. Yet it’s what many of us have been taught to believe God wants from us when we’re confronted with insurmountable odds.

We’ve been told that for those who can muster it up, an all doubts-removed, count-it-as-done faith has the power to fix anything. It’s God’s great cure-all, a magic potion.

In fact, in some Christian circles, this kind of faith is said to have the power to actually manipulate the hand of God. I recently heard a TV preacher claim that God has to answer prayers of unwavering faith no matter what we ask for. As long as we have no doubt, he has no choice. It’s a law of the universe. Apparently it even trumps God’s sovereignty.

Though I’d hate to be the one to tell him so.


How the English Language Mucks Things Up


While faith is a concept deeply rooted in the Christian Scriptures, most of our modern ideas about it aren’t. Much of the blame can be placed on the way the original manuscripts of the New Testament have been translated into English.

It’s not that the translators are unskilled or deceptive. It’s simply that translating anything from one language to another is a difficult task, burdened by all the ancillary meanings and uses found in one language but not another.

A quick comparison of how we use the words faith, belief, and trust in modern-day English with how they were originally used in the Greek language of the New Testament can be eye opening. Let’s take a look to see what I mean.


Faith

For most of us, the word faith conjures up an image of confidence. It’s the opposite of fear and doubt. It’s often defined by our feelings as much as by anything else. That’s why most teaching on faith tends to focus on eradicating all fear, doubt, and negative thoughts. It’s also why “You gotta have faith” has come to mean “Think positively.”


Belief

On the other hand, the word belief usually conjures up an image of intellectual assent. We say we believe in something as long as we think that it’s probably true. And since our beliefs are thought to exist primarily between our ears, we’re not particularly puzzled when people claim to believe in something—say UFOs, Bigfoot, Darwinian evolution, creationism, even Jesus—but live as if they don’t. For most of us, beliefs are intellectual. Acting upon them is optional.

You can see this definition of belief in the way many of us approach evangelism. We tell the Jesus story to people and then ask them if they believe it. Those who say yes are immediately assured that they’re headed for heaven. After all, they’re “believers.” It doesn’t seem to matter that the Bible adds quite a few qualifiers beyond mere mental assent.2


Trust

In contrast to our use of faith and belief, when we use the word trust it almost always carries an assumption that there will be some sort of corresponding action. If we trust a person, it’s supposed to show up in our response. For instance, if the parent of a teenage girl says, “I trust you,” but won’t let her out of the house, we’d think that parent was speaking nonsense. There’s no question the daughter would.


Clearly, each of these three words carries a distinctly different meaning in the English language. But to the surprise of most Christians, almost every time we find one of these three words in our English New Testaments, each is a translation of the exact same Greek root word.3

That means that the Bible knows nothing of the sharp distinctions we make between faith, belief, and trust. Biblically, they not only overlap, but they are practically synonymous. To the writers of Scripture, our modern distinctions between faith, belief, and trust would seem quite strange and forced.


So, What Kind of Faith Does God Want?


The kind of faith the Bible advocates and God wants from us has far more to do with our actions than our feelings. In fact, biblical faith is so closely tied to actions of obedience that the Bible ridicules the very idea of someone claiming to have faith without acting upon it.4

God doesn’t care if we’ve mastered the art of positive thinking. He’s not impressed by the mental gymnastics of visualization. He doesn’t even insist that we eradicate all doubts and fears. In fact, more than once, he’s answered the prayers of people whose “faith” was so weak that when God said yes, they didn’t believe it.5

When the first response to an answered prayer is shock and amazement, the people who offered that prayer certainly don’t fit the standard definition of having faith. Yet God answered anyway because their prayers fit his definition of faith. Their simple act of praying was an act of faith—they trusted God enough to do what he commanded, even though they were certain it wouldn’t work.

To better understand what biblical faith is and how it works, let’s take a look at the most famous faith passage in the Bible: Hebrews 11. Often called God’s Hall of Fame, it offers a lengthy list of examples, each one showing what God-pleasing faith looks like and what it produced.

The writer of Hebrews starts with Adam’s son Abel, then moves on to Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses, laying out a series of vignettes that describe their steps of faith and the great victories that followed.

Then, almost as if he is running out of steam (or his audience is running out of attention), the writer adds twelve more examples. But this time he offers only a name or a cryptic reference to the great victories their faith accomplished.

It’s an inspiring list. At first glance it seems to support the popular notion that faith rightly applied can conquer anything. It tells of kingdoms won, lions muzzled, flames quenched, weaknesses turned to strength, enemies routed, the dead raised. All in all, a pretty impressive résumé.

But the writer doesn’t stop there. He goes on.

But I warn you. What he said might mess with your head. It certainly messed with mine. After reciting a litany of victories, he suddenly switches gears and changes direction. Now he speaks of people whose faith led them down a different path—folks who were tortured, jeered, flogged, imprisoned, stoned, sawed in two, and put to death by the sword. He ends with a reminder that still others were rewarded with financial destitution, persecution, and mistreatment.

Then he writes these words: “These were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what had been promised.”6 In other words, these weren’t the faith rejects, the losers, the ones who couldn’t get it right. These were men and women whose faith was applauded by God. Yet their faith didn’t fix anything.

In some cases it made matters worse.

Whoa!

I guarantee you that no one taught my kids this side of faith in Sunday school. Imagine if they did. “Okay, children, today we’re going to learn how trusting and obeying God might get you torn in two, thrown into jail, hated by your friends, and force you to drive an old beater the rest of your life.”

That would thin the herd.

It would certainly rile a few parents.

But it’s essentially what the Bible says that faith (at least the kind of faith that God commends) might do. It may lead us to victory. It may lead us to prison. Which it will be is his call—not ours.


Why Bother?


That raises an important question. If faith is primarily about trusting God enough to do what he says, and yet it won’t fix everything and sometimes will make matters worse, why bother?

One reason stands out above all others. It’s what God wants from us. He says so himself: “Without faith it is impossible to please God.”7

Now, it seems to me that if God is really God, and not just some sort of mystical force, cosmic consultant, or favorite uncle in the sky, then knowing what he wants and doing it is a pretty important thing to pay attention to. Few of us would mess with our boss’s stated preferences. What kind of fool messes with God’s?

A thousand years from now, all the things we

try so hard to fix with our positive thinking,

visualization, and drive-out-all-doubt prayers

won’t matter. The only thing that will matter

is our awesome future and our face-to-face

relationship with God.

Another reason to live by faith (even if it can’t fix all the problems we face) is that it does promise to fix our biggest problem and our biggest dilemma. What do we say and do when we stand before a holy and perfect God who knows every one of our secrets and all of our sins?

Honest now—what’s to keep us from becoming toast?

Frankly, nothing.

But that’s where the real fix-it power of biblical faith kicks in. Jesus promised that all who believe in him (remember that includes trusting him enough to actually follow and do what he says) will receive forgiveness and the gift of eternal life.8 A thousand years from now, all the things we try so hard to fix with our positive thinking, visualization, and drive-out-all-doubt prayers won’t matter. They’ll be but a distant memory, if they can be remembered at all. The only thing that will matter is our awesome future and our face-to-face relationship with God.


God’s GPS System


There’s one more benefit to a proper understanding of biblical faith. Biblical faith gives us something that all the positive thinking and visualization in the world can’t provide. It gives us a life map, something we can depend on to always take us exactly where God wants us to go.

Admittedly, it’s not always an easy map to follow. It takes time, experience, and an occasional leap into the dark to master. It can be frustrating—and scary at times. But in the end, for those who are led by it, it’s a trusty guide, guaranteed to always take us where we need to be.

In many ways the adventure of learning to live by biblical faith is a lot like my love/hate relationship with the mapping software on my GPS unit. Let me explain.

I’m a geographical moron. My wife has no idea how I get home after traveling to speak somewhere. She’s always surprised to see me walk through the front door.

My problem is twofold. First, I’m often in two places at once, mentally. I call it multitasking. My family and friends call it something else. But the end result is that I can be completely oblivious to my surroundings. And when that happens, I literally don’t know where I am. I may think I do, but I don’t, mainly because I haven’t been paying attention.

My second problem is an absolute lack of an internal sense of direction. Without the Pacific Ocean and the mountains as bench-marks, I have no idea which direction is north, south, east, or west. That means that along with not knowing where I am, I often don’t know where I’m heading.

Put those two together and you have a recipe for search-and-rescue. But fortunately (or so you would think), I live in a day when GPS is within reach of the common man.

Yet, despite the promise that an affordable GPS unit has to offer, there is one frustrating problem. The pesky voice in my Garmin often tells me to turn the wrong way.

My first response is always a quick flash of annoyance at the company that makes the mapping software. I wonder why they can’t get it right. I know there are lots of streets they have to include, but come on. That’s what I paid for. And I’m not talking about thinking I should turn left when it says to turn right. I’m talking about those times when I know I should turn left.

To make matters worse, as I make the turn that I know I should make, the little lady in the box starts nagging me. In a mildly disgusted tone, she repeats over and over, “Recalculating. Recalculating.”

Faith is not a skill we master. It’s not an

impenetrable shield that protects us from

life’s hardships and trials. It’s not a magic

potion that removes every mess. It’s a map

we follow.

It’s enough to make me reach over to hit the Off button. But before I do, I’m usually struck with a haunting realization. I’ve been certain I was right before—but somehow ended up wrong. And despite the fact that my GPS sometimes seems unaware of a street or two and occasionally takes me on a circuitous route, it’s always found a way to get me where I want to go.

But doggone it, this time I know I’m right. I’m absolutely certain. I don’t care how many times she spouts off, “Recalculating.” She’s wrong.

So, what do I do?

This is, in essence, a crisis of faith. I have a choice to make. Will I place my trust in my own sense of direction, knowing that this time my not-so-trusty GPS has gotten it all wrong? Or will I place my faith in the little box and turn right, despite my certainty that it’s directing me far from where I want to go?

You probably know the answer. Based on my past experiences, I’ve learned to shrug my shoulders and do what the unit says. So I reluctantly make a turn that makes no sense tome. As I do, my pulse quickens and my stomach churns. My mind fills with images of speaking engagements lost and flights missed.

I turn anyway.

And that’s the reason that I always surprise my wife when I walk in the front door. Somehow east magically turns into west and the “wrong” route gets me there anyway.

Go figure.


Once I arrive at my destination, it really doesn’t matter what doubts or concerns I had along the way. As long as I follow the directions or quickly get back on track after a little “recalculating,” I always end up where I need to be.

That’s exactly how biblical faith works. When rightly understood and applied, it doesn’t matter how many doubts we have. It doesn’t even matter if we’re convinced that all is lost. Ultimately all that matters is whether we have enough faith (maybe just a mustard seed’s worth) to follow God’s instructions. Those who do, get where they’re supposed to go. Those who don’t, end up lost somewhere far from home.


Faith is not a skill we master. It’s not an impenetrable shield that protects us from life’s hardships and trials. It’s not a magic potion that removes every mess. It’s a map we follow.

It’s designed to guide us on a path called righteousness. Along the way, it doesn’t promise to fix every flat tire. It won’t reroute us around every traffic jam. It won’t even stop the road rage of the crazy guy we cut off at the merge.

But it will take us exactly where God wants us to go. And isn’t that where we want to be?


CAN FAITH FIX

ANYTHING?

They were stoned; they were sawed in two; they were put

to death by the sword. They went about in sheepskins

and goatskins, destitute, persecuted and mistreated—the

world was not worthy of them. They wandered in deserts

and mountains, and in caves and holes in the ground.

These were all commended for their faith, yet none

of them received what had been promised. God had

planned something better for us so that only together

with us would they be made perfect.

HEBREWS 11:37–40

A very interesting book about some of the things most Christians believe in.


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Shame

David C. Cook (May 2009)

by

Greg Garrett



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Greg Garrett has published newspaper and magazine features, short stories, personal and critical essays, reviews, encyclopedia articles, novels, a memoir, and books of nonfiction during his thirty-year writing career.

Author of the critically acclaimed novels Free Bird (chosen by Publishers Weekly and the Rocky Mountain News [Denver] as one of the best first novels of 2002) and Cycling, as well as the nonfiction books The Gospel Reloaded (with Chris Seay), Holy Superheroes!, the spiritual autobiography Crossing Myself, The Gospel According to Hollywood, and the forthcoming Stories from the Edge, Dr. Garrett is a past winner of the Pirate's Alley William Faulkner Prize for Fiction, and a regional CASE gold medalist for nonfiction.

He was elected to the Texas Institute of Letters in 2005 for his lifetime literary achievements. Professor of English at Baylor University, Dr. Garrett was named the Outstanding Baylor Faculty Member for 1994 by the Baylor Student Congress, and received the university administration's outstanding professor award in 1996. He received his Ph.D. in English from Oklahoma State University, and recently completed the M.Div. at the Episcopal Seminary of the Southwest in Austin, where he lives, writes, and serves as a lay preacher at St. David's Episcopal Church.


ABOUT THE BOOK

It's hard to appreciate the life you have when you're wondering about the one you might have had.

John Tilden's glory days are far behind him, and now it seems like all he has is the monotony of everyday living. He certainly thought there'd be more to it than his ramshackle Oklahoma farm and a mundane job coaching basketball at his old high school. He questions his fatherhood skills too: His oldest son won't speak to him, his younger son wants to quit the basketball team, and now his daughter wants to go out on dates. He loves his wife, but the marriage has settled into complacency.

With John's twentieth high school reunion approaching, he has agreed to play in an exhibition game with the old championship team. And his ex-girlfriend's back in town, newly single. What might have been now seems closer than ever.

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