Showing posts with label christian fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christian fiction. Show all posts

Monday, April 11, 2011

Denise Hunter's A Cowboy's Touch

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:


A Cowboy's Touch

Thomas Nelson (March 29, 2011)

***Special thanks to Audra Jennings, Senior Media Specialist, The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Denise lives in Indiana with her husband Kevin and their three sons. In 1996, Denise began her first book, a Christian romance novel, writing while her children napped. Two years later it was published, and she's been writing ever since. Her books often contain a strong romantic element, and her husband Kevin says he provides all her romantic material, but Denise insists a good imagination helps too!


Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Wade's ranch home needs a woman's touch. Abigail's life needs a cowboy's touch.

Four years ago, rodeo celebrity Wade Ryan gave up his identity to protect his daughter. Now, settled on a ranch in Big Sky Country, he lives in obscurity, his heart guarded by a high, thick fence.

Abigail Jones isn’t sure how she went from big-city columnist to small-town nanny, but her new charge is growing on her, to say nothing of her ruggedly handsome boss. Love blossoms between Abigail and Wade--despite her better judgment. Will the secrets she brought with her to Moose Creek, Montana separate her from the cowboy who finally captured her heart?



Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson (March 29, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1595548017
ISBN-13: 978-1595548016

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Abigail Jones knew the truth. She frowned at the blinking curser on her monitor and tapped her fingers on the keyboard-what next?


Beyond the screen's glow, darkness washed the cubicles. Her computer hummed, and outside the office windows a screech of tires broke the relative stillness ofthe Chicago night.


She shuffled her note cards. The story had been long in coming, but it was finished now, all except the telling. She knew where she wanted to take it next.


Her fingers stirred into motion, dancing across the keys. This was her favorite part, exposingtruth to the world. Well, okay, not the world exactly, not with Viewpoint's paltry circulation. But now, during the writing, it felt like the world.


Four paragraphs later, the office had shrunk away, and all that existed were the words on the monitor and her memory playing in full color on the screen of her mind.


Something dropped onto her desk with a sudden thud. Abigail’s hand flew to her heart, and her chair darted from her desk. She looked up at her boss’s frowning face, then shared a frown of her own. “You scared me.”


“And you’re scaring me. It’s after midnight, Abigail—what are you doing here?” Marilyn Jones’s hand settled on her hip.


The blast of adrenaline settled into Abigail’s bloodstream, though her heart was still in overdrive. “Being an ambitious staffer?”


“You mean an obsessive workaholic.”


“Something wrong with that?”


“What’s wrong is my twenty-eight-year-old daughter is working all hours on a Saturday night instead of dating an eligible bachelor like all the other single women her age.” Her mom tossed her head, but her short brown hair hardly budged. “You could’ve at least gone out with your sister and me. We had a good time.”


“I’m down to the wire.”


“You’ve been here every night for two weeks.” Her mother rolled up a chair and sank into it. “Your father always thought you’d be a schoolteacher, did I ever tell you that?”


“About a million times.” Abigail settled into the chair, rubbed the ache in her temple. Her heart was still recovering, but she wanted to return to her column. She was just getting to the good part.


“You had a doctor’s appointment yesterday,” Mom said. Abigail sighed hard.


“Whatever happened to doctor-patient confidentiality?”


“Goes out the window when the doctor is your sister. Come on, Abigail, this is your health. Reagan prescribed rest—R-E-S-T—and yet here you are.”


“A couple more days and the story will be put to bed.”


“And then there’ll be another story.”


“That’s what I do, Mother.”


“You’ve had a headache for weeks, and the fact that you made an appointment with your sister is proof you’re not feeling well.”


Abigail pulled her hand from her temple. “I’m fine.”


“That’s what your father said the week before he collapsed.”


Compassion and frustration warred inside Abigail. “He was sixty-two.” And his pork habit hadn’t helped matters. Thin didn’t necessarily mean healthy. She skimmed her own long legs, encased in her favorite jeans . . . exhibit A.


“I’ve been thinking you should go visit your great-aunt.” Abigail already had a story in the works, but maybe her mom had a lead on something else. “New York sounds interesting. What’s the assignment?”


“Rest and relaxation. And I’m not talking about your Aunt Eloise—as if you’d get any rest there—I’m talking about your Aunt Lucy.”


Abigail’s spirits dropped to the basement. “Aunt Lucy lives in Montana.” Where cattle outnumbered people. She felt for the familiar ring on her right hand and began twisting.


“She seems a bit . . . confused lately.”


Abigail recalled the birthday gifts her great-aunt had sent over the years, and her lips twitched. “Aunt Lucy has always been confused.”


“Someone needs to check on her. Her latest letter was full of comments about some girls who live with her, when I know perfectly well she lives alone. I think it may be time for assisted living or a retirement community.”


Abigail’s eyes flashed to the screen. A series of nonsensical letters showed where she’d stopped in alarm at her mother’s appearance. She hit the delete button. “Let’s invite her to Chicago for a few weeks.”


“She needs to be observed in her own surroundings. Besides, that woman hasn’t set foot on a plane since Uncle Murray passed, and I sure wouldn’t trust her to travel across the country alone. You know what happened when she came out for your father’s funeral.”


“Dad always said she had a bad sense of direction.”


“Nevertheless, I don’t have time to hunt her down in Canada again. Now, come on, Abigail, it makes perfect sense for you to go. You need a break, and Aunt Lucy was your father’s favorite relative. It’s our job to look after her now, and if she’s incapable of making coherent decisions, we need to help her.”


Abigail’s conscience tweaked her. She had a soft spot for Aunt Lucy, and her mom knew it. Still, that identity theft story called her name, and she had a reliable source who might or might not be willing to talk in a couple weeks.


“Reagan should do it. I’ll need the full month for my column, and we can’t afford to scrap it. Distribution is down enough as it is. Just last month you were concerned—”


Her mother stood abruptly, the chair reeling backward into the aisle. She walked as far as the next cubicle, then turned. “Hypertension is nothing to mess with, Abigail. You’re so . . . rest- less. You need a break—a chance to find some peace in your life.” She cleared her throat, then her face took on that I’ve-made-up- my-mind look. “Whether you go to your aunt’s or not, I’m insisting you take a leave of absence.”


There was no point arguing once her mother took that tone. She could always do research online—and she wouldn’t mind visiting a part of the country she’d never seen. “Fine. I’ll finish this story, then go out to Montana for a week or so.”


“Finish the story, yes. But your leave of absence will last three months.”


“Three months!”



“It may take that long to make a decision about Aunt Lucy.”


“What about my apartment?”


“Reagan will look after it. You’re hardly there anyway. You need a break, and Moose Creek is the perfect place.”


Moose Creek. “I’ll say. Sounds like nothing more than a traffic signal with a gas pump on the corner.”


“Don’t be silly. Moose Creek has no traffic signal. Abigail, you have become wholly obsessed with—”


“So I’m a hard worker . . .” She lifted her shoulders.


Her mom’s lips compressed into a hard line. “Wholly obsessed with your job. Look, you know I admire hard work, but it feels like you’re always chasing something and never quite catching it. I want you to find some contentment, for your health if nothing else. There’s more to life than investigative reporting.”


“I’m the Truthseeker, Mom. That’s who I am.” Her fist found home over her heart.


Her mother shouldered her purse, then zipped her light sweater, her movements irritatingly slow. She tugged down the ribbed hem and smoothed the material of her pants. “Three months, Abigail. Not a day less.”

Monday, April 20, 2009

Spotlight shines on Allison Pitman




Today we have Allison Pittman visiting us and she has offered to send out a book to a lucky reader so be sure to follow the instructions at the bottom of the post to get entered.
Please tell us a little about you.


I left a 17-year teaching career to follow my writing full time—and God has been so faithful in His blessings there! I’m married to the hands-down greatest guy in the world, and we have three great sons—twin teen-agers and a 10-year-old.

Allison, please tell us what your newest novel is about.


Stealing Home is the story of four people, each living in haunted isolation, each harboring a secret passion.
Duke Dennison is a superstar with the 1905 Chicago Cubs. He’s also an alcoholic, and that’s threatening his game. When he’s whisked away to the small town of Picksville to sober up in anonymity, he bides his time flirting with Ellie Jane Voyant, the town’s oddball spinster.
Ned Clovis, the town’s feed store clerk, has loved Ellie Jane since childhood, but he loves baseball and the Duke almost as much. So when Duke rounds up the town to form an impromptu league, featuring a great natural talent in a young African American boy named Morris, both Ned and Ellie Jane find their worlds coming together.


Who is the most important influence in your life besides God?

Definitely my mother. She is the most godly woman I know—so unwavering and strong in her faith. She takes true, absolute, utter joy in her salvation and her relationship with Jesus. She simply loves him. And she’s so saturated in His Word. I love to just get on the phone and talk with her about scripture, our Lord, the Old Covenant, Creation, End Times…anything! She’s a one-stop source for Biblical truth and recipes!
You are blessed to have her in her life. I hope you tell her that often.



Let’s pretend money is not a factor, if you could go anywhere is the world where would you go?

Disneyworld. Two weeks at the Grand Floridian.
What book are you reading now? What books are found lying around your home?

I’m reading Run by Ann Patchett.
I actually started it months ago, but then I had some other “required” reading come along, so I’ve just been able to get back to it. And you’ll find absolutely anything and everything around my home from Wuthering Heights to Harry Potter.









What is your favorite children’s book?



Hands down, it’s the Little House on the Prairie series. The year I got the whole series for Christmas, well, that was my favorite Christmas gift ever. I still read them over the summer. The writing is so simple, but so precise and descriptive. The stories are timeless, and I think they prove the point that rather ordinary lives are the stuff legacies are made of.

What do you find most challenging about writing?

Simply getting it done. Like, pulling up the Word doc and putting words on the screen. I’m too easily distracted by, well, anything.
Oh I can relate to this Allison. I find the blank word doc very intimidating and distractions get me too.

What do you find most rewarding?

Hearing from readers. It never fails when I’m just about to throw my laptop out the window, I’ll get an email from a reader who loved my book. That’s enough to spur you on to another 500 words before calling it a day! I think of my readers’ letters as being the voice of God’s approval for the work I’m doing.
Hopefully you will here from some new readers with this new books.

What would you like your readers to say about your writing?

I’d like them to feel like I’ve taken them to a place and introduced them to people they’ve never even really thought about before. With Stealing Home and even the next two books to come, I’m taking characters from the world of turn-of-the century professional baseball. It just seemed fun to write historical without ranchers and cowboys and the typical stock characters. Not that I don’t love those guys, but there was a whole world functioning in those days, and I think it gets underrepresented in Historical fiction.

Where can readers find you on the Web?
My website is allisonpittiman.com
Blog: apittman-crossroads@blogspot.com
And, of course…Facebook!

Here is what others are saying about Stealing Home.

"There is no doubt about it. Stealing Home has earned a place on my keeper shelf. Allison Pittman's wonderfully drawn characters captured my heart and never let go. I hurt with them, laughed with them, loved with them, and cried with them, and I will surely never forget them. Don't miss this book!"-Robin Lee Hatcher, best-selling author of Wagered Heart and A Vote of Confidence

"The fabulous ensemble cast of Stealing Home broadens the scope of Allison Pittman's well-crafted novel, setting it apart from typical period romances and grounding the story with historical relevance. Yes, readers will want Ellie Jane to find love, but they'll want much more than that, too-justice for Morris; hope for Ned; peace and victory for Duke. And they won't be disappointed. Stealing Home drew me in from the first pitch and held me until the final strikeout."-Christa Parrish, author of Home Another Way

"Allison Pittman hit one out of the park with Stealing Home. The superb cast of characters in this tender story of hope, love, and healing settled in my soul and made me long to stroll down to the town square and linger a while. An unexpected delight in this lovely tale was the narration by Morris, an innocent yet perceptive young man who knows the citizens of Picksville better than they know themselves. More than the story of a few characters, Stealing Home is a study of small town life at its very worst and its shining best."-Megan DiMaria, author of Out of Her Hands and Searching for Spice

"Written with an elegant flair, Stealing Home is a tremendous story of love, patience, and hope against hope."-Alice J. Wisler, author of Rain Song and How Sweet It Is


If you would like to win a copy of Stealing Home leave a comment with a way to contact you. Please put your email in this format: runninmama[at]sbcglobal[dot]net. The contest runs until May 4th. Email subscribers and followers earn an extra entry.

You also must answer the Question of the Day:
Tell me your best memory of a baseball game.
Mine is when my husband and I played on a co-ed softball team. It was so much fun right up until I broke my nose. Then I never played again.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Daisy Chain by Mary Demuth....free book


Daisy Chain by Mary DeMuth


The abrupt disappearance of young Daisy Chance from a small Texas town in 1977 spins three lives out of control-Jed, whose guilt over not protecting his friend Daisy strangles him; Emory Chance, who blames her own choices for her daughter’s demise; and Ouisie Pepper, who is plagued by headaches while pierced by the shattered pieces of a family in crisis.In this first book in the Defiance, Texas Trilogy, fourteen-year-old Jed Pepper has a sickening secret: He’s convinced it’s his fault his best friend Daisy went missing. Jed’s pain sends him on a quest for answers to mysteries woven through the fabric of his own life and the lives of the families of Defiance, Texas. When he finally confronts the terrible truths he’s been denying all his life, Jed must choose between rebellion and love, anger and freedom.
Daisy Chain is an achingly beautiful southern coming-of-age story crafted by a bright new literary talent. It offers a haunting yet hopeful backdrop for human depravity and beauty, for terrible secrets and God’s surprising redemption.



About the Author:Mary DeMuth


Mary DeMuth is an expert in the field of Pioneer Parenting. She helps Christian parents plow fresh spiritual ground, especially those seeking to break destructive family patterns. Her message guides parents who don’t want to duplicate the home where they were raised or didn’t have positive parenting role models growing up.


An accomplished writer, Mary’s parenting books include Authentic Parenting in a Postmodern Culture, Building the Christian Family You Never Had, and Ordinary Mom, Extraordinary God. Her real-to-life novels inspire people to turn trials into triumphs: Watching the Tree Limbs (2007 Christy Award finalist, ACFW Book of the Year 2nd Place) and Wishing on Dandelions (2007 Retailer’s Choice Award finalist).


Mary is a frequent speaker at women’s retreats and parenting seminars, addressing audiences in both Europe and the United States. National media regularly seek Mary’s candid ability to connect with their listeners. Her radio appearances include FamilyLife Today, Moody Midday Connection, and U.S.A. Radio network. She also has articles published in Marriage Partnership, In Touch, and HomeLife.


As pioneer parents, Mary and her husband Patrick live in Texas with their three children. They recently returned from breaking new spiritual ground in Southern France where they planted a church.
Learn more about Mary at http://blog.myfamilysecrets.org/.
IMHO:
This novel is worth reading!!! The novel goes very deep into the ways in which secrets can destroy a family or even a town. Daisy Chains is not what I would call a light read. I forgot about sleep, dishes and all other distractions as I fell into the town and characters of Daisy Chains. From the very beginning I was riveted by the intensity of the characters. Be ready to be challenged and become so involved with the characters you will forget they aren't real. Mary does an amazing job with writing from the heart.
I have an extra copy of this book that I would love to share and Mary is also having a contest for some great prizes with the Truth and lies Meme. In following with Mary, I am going to give away one of my extra copies to a lucky reader who leaves a comment telling me which of these three statements are the truth.
  • I met my husband at Skunk Camp.
  • I collect salt and pepper shakers.
  • I have traveled to all 50 states.
Remember you can earn extra entries for my book give away by subscribing to my blog by email or by following me, or send a friend who leaves your name in the comments. Contest will close March 25th.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Spotlight shines on S. Dionne Moore



If you have not read S. Dionne Moore's novel you are missing out on some wonderfully written humor. I read her first debut novel Murder on the Ol' Bunions and laughed through the book. It is refreshing and fun. I would love to share a little of her with the readers on this blog. I think you will really enjoy meeting her. She has also offered to give away a copy of her newest novel. All you have to do is leave a comment at the end of this post and be sure to leave a way for her to contact you.

Tell us a little about yourself :


I’m the youngest of three girls, and I don’t ever let my sisters forget it! I grew up in Northern Virginia, moving away for the first time in my life after being married for three years. I’ve come to love the hills of PA countryside where we just finished building our new home that includes a wood burning fireplace--a wonderful treat!



What is your novel about:


Polly Dent Loses Grip on the treadmill and takes a fatal spill that’s ruled an accident. Helping her mother-in-law move into Bridgeton Towers Assisted Living, but the scars from LaTisha Barnhart’s surgically removed bunions tell her something’s afoot. The residents’ gossip is revealing all kinds of motives for murder. Gertrude Herrman is out looking for love in the form of Thomas Philcher’s fat wallet, and Polly’s fall eliminates her competition once and for all. Otis Payne, the venerable director of Bridgeton Towers, is over a barrel when his wife demands cash, or she’ll carry on without him. Mitzi Mullins’s penchant for rhyme puts her in direct line as perpetrator of the crime, and Sue Mie’s mistake seals Polly’s fate.



What is the craziest thing you have ever done? Write a book about an African-American woman who has had seven children and is married to a most wonderful, and very patient, man.

Let’s pretend money is not a factor, if you could go anywhere is the world where would you go? The Mediterranean. For days. Weeks even. I might not even come home again.


What book are you reading now? What books are found lying around your home? I just finished Melody Carlson’s Just Another Girl to review for Novel Reviews. Which reminds me that I need to send in my review! Before that I read The Red Siren by Marylu Tyndall for review. Usually I have an eclectic mix of books in my to-read pile.



I always am trying to learn new ways to be organized in the office, what is your favorite organizational tool?
Stickies!!! My Macbook Pro has a little program called Stickies. I depend on those little yellow notes (virtual post-its) SO much while I’m working through the day. I don’t have to have a pad and paper ready, just my laptop and that wonderful program. Sorry, if you use Windows, you’re truly suffering.


What would you like your readers to say about your writing?
I’d love to hear how much fun LaTisha and Hardy are and how well they blend. I would love to hear that the mystery kept them baffled to the end, but that the entire story was enormously satisfying and funny.


What advice do you have for aspiring authors?
This is a tough question. There are so many things to say, but seldom is advice followed. I’ve found that most have to discover for themselves why the advice was right before they’ll actively put it to use. But, for the sake of this interview, I’ll give my list.
a. Learn to accept criticism and apply it.
b. Writers write.
c. Writing is rewriting. Get used to it.


What do you want your readers to take away from your novel?
The important theme for the entire LaTisha Barnhart Mystery series is showing two people who have been married for a long time because they chose to blend their very different personalities rather than cite irreconcilable differences. Marriage is too important to leave to chance. Be ready to be selfless before you say I Do.


If you would like to win a copy of Polly Dent Loses Grip leave a comment with you name and an email addy to contact you.
Of course you can always earn an extra entry by:
  • sending a friend and having them leave their name and yours in a separate comment
  • visiting S.Dionne Moore's website at www.sdionnemoore.com and come back and tell me what you found.
  • Sign up to be a follower or subscribe by email to Write by faith.

Leave a separate comment for each entry. Contest ends March 9th. Open to U.S. only.



Thursday, February 19, 2009

Reveiw of Age Before Beauty by Virginia Smith

From Ginny's website:
Desperate to stay home with her baby, Allie Harrod launches a new career. Sure, she dropped out of Girl Scouts because she was lousy at cookie sales, but makeup is different, right? She'll do anything to make enough money to cover her share of the household bills, but how can she focus on her business when her list of problems is growing? None of her pre-baby clothes fit, her checking account is dwindling, and her mother-in-law has decided to move in! To top it off, her husband's attractive coworker suddenly needs his help every weekend. Middle sister Joan insists that God has the answers to all her problems, but Allie isn't so sure. Can she really trust him?
My review:
This book brought back a lot of memories for me. The novel looks into the life of Allie after having her first child and with great clarity the difficulties mom's face of wanting to stay home with their children but still face the financial demands of life and of course the fact that our bodies change after birth. The novel does a wonderful job of demonstrating the different ways that men and women think. Eric Harrod, Allie's husband has a wonderful heart but so often he is misunderstood by Allie. There were times I wanted to knock him in the head and ask "What are you thinking?" This just went to illustrate the dynamics of marriage. Age before Beauty takes a look into the lives of one woman trying to have it all. What makes it such a great story is the characters seem so real...just like your own sister or friend.
To read the first chapter go here



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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Review of Daniel's Den by Brandt Dobson


Description from Brandt Dodson's website:


In this fast–paced thriller by popular author Brandt Dodson, a young government accountant learns to trust God when his life begins to fall apart and unseen enemies pursue him with relentless zeal.Daniel Borden is a thirty–year–old stock broker who lives a quiet life and plays by the rules. But when events transpire that shatter his orderly world and a team of assassins mark him for death, Daniel must flee for his life.While on the run, Daniel encounters Laura Traynor. Carefree and easygoing, Laura is everything that Daniel isn’t. But when the killers assigned to eliminate Daniel find him at Laura’s bed–and–breakfast, gunfire erupts and the two set out on the run once again.As they try to unravel the mystery that confronts them, they discover how tenuous life can be and how their very existence depends on the God who will never abandon them.


My review:

I just finished reading this fast paced suspense and you can always tell how good a book is by how long it takes you to finish it. I started reading Daniels Den last night and finished this morning. What is a little lost sleep when it is sacrificed to a good book. Daniel Borden is a great character who follows what is right even if doing the right thing is counter productive to his own life. What makes him an even more dynamic character is that he is not a Christian. I love that Brandt Dobson created a character that with good motives but not a Christ follower until the end of the novel. Laura Traynor is a strong female character who does everything she can to protect her son. I recommend this novel to anyone who like suspense and drama. It is a really good read.
I found a giveaway for this book at Treeswing so if you want to win a copy of this book go stop at this site and leave a comment.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Mary Connealy's Gingham Mountain

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:


Gingham Mountain (Lassoed in Texas, Book 3)

Barbour Books (February 1, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


MARY CONNEALY is married to Ivan a farmer, and she is the mother of four beautiful daughters, Joslyn, Wendy, Shelly and Katy. Mary is a GED Instructor by day and an author by night. And there is always a cape involved in her transformation.


Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $10.97
Paperback: 288 pages
Publisher: Barbour Books (February 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1602601410
ISBN-13: 978-1602601413

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Sour Springs, Texas, 1870


Martha had an iron rod where most people had a backbone.

Grant smiled as he pulled his team to a stop in front of the train station in Sour Springs, Texas.

She also had a heart of gold—even if the old bat wouldn’t admit it. She was going to be thrilled to see him and scold him the whole time.

“It’s time to get back on the train.” Martha Norris, ever the disciplinarian, had a voice that could back down a starving Texas wildcat, let alone a bunch of orphaned kids. It carried all the way across the street as Grant jumped from his wagon and trotted toward the depot. He’d almost missed them. He could see the worry on Martha’s face.

Wound up tight from rushing to town, Grant knew he was late. But now that he was here, he relaxed. It took all of his willpower not to laugh at Martha, the old softy.

He hurried toward them. If it had only been Martha he would have laughed, but there was nothing funny about the two children with her. They were leftovers.

A little girl, shivering in the biting cold, her thin shoulders hunched against the wind, turned back toward the train. Martha, her shoulders slumped with sadness at what lay ahead for these children, rested one of her competent hands on the child’s back.

Grant noticed the girl limping. That explained why she hadn’t been adopted. No one wanted a handicapped child. As if limping put a child so far outside of normal she didn’t need love and a home. Controlling the slow burn in his gut, Grant saw the engineer top off the train’s water tank. They’d be pulling out of the station in a matter of minutes.

Isn’t this the last stop, Mrs. Norris?” A blond-headed boy stood, stony-faced, angry, scared.

“Yes, Charlie, it is.”

His new son’s name was Charlie. Grant picked up his pace.

Martha sighed. “We don’t have any more meetings planned.”

“So, we have to go back to New York?” Charlie, shivering and thin but hardy compared to the girl, scowled as he stood on the snow-covered platform, six feet of wood separating the train from the station house.

Grant had never heard such a defeated question.

The little girl’s chin dropped and her shoulders trembled.

What was he thinking? He heard defeat from unwanted children all the time.

Charlie slipped his threadbare coat off his shoulders even though the wind cut like a knife through Grant’s worn-out buckskin jacket.

Grant’s throat threatened to swell shut with tears as he watched that boy sacrifice the bit of warmth he got from that old coat.

Stepping behind Martha, Charlie wrapped his coat around the girl. She shuddered and practically burrowed into the coat as if it held the heat of a fireplace, even as she shook her head and frowned at Charlie.

“Just take the stupid thing.” Charlie glared at the girl.

After studying him a long moment, the little girl, her eyes wide and sad, kept the coat.

Mrs. Norris stayed his hands. “That’s very generous, Charlie, but you can’t go without a coat.”

“I don’t want it. I’m gonna throw it under the train if she don’t take it.” The boy’s voice was sharp and combative. A bad attitude. That could keep a boy from finding a home.

Grant hurried faster across the frozen ruts of Sour Springs Main Street toward the train platform and almost made it. A tight grip on his arm stopped him. Surprised, he turned and saw that irksome woman who’d been hounding him ever since she’d moved to town. What was her name? Grant’d made of point of not paying attention to her. She usually yammered about having his shirts sewn in her shop.

“Grant, it’s so nice to see you.”

It took all his considerable patience to not jerk free. Shirt Lady was unusually tall, slender, and no one could deny she was pretty, but she had a grip like a mule skinner, and Grant was afraid he’d have a fight on his hands to get his arm back.

Grant touched the brim of his battered Stetson with his free hand. “Howdy, Miss. I’m afraid I’m in a hurry today.”

A movement caught his eye, and he turned to look at his wagon across the street. Through the whipping wind he could see little, but Grant was sure someone had come alongside his wagon. He wished it were true so he could palm this persistent pest off on an unsuspecting neighbor.

Shirt Lady’s grip tightened until it almost hurt through his coat. She leaned close, far closer than was proper to Grant’s way of thinking.

“Why don’t you come over to my place and warm yourself before you head back to the ranch. I’ve made pie, and it’s a lonely kind of day.” She fluttered her lashes until Grant worried she’d gotten dirt in her eye. He considered sending her to Doc Morgan for medical care.

The train chugged and reminded Grant he was almost out of time. “Can’t stop now, Miss.” What was her name? How many times had she spoken to him? A dozen if it was three. “There are some orphans left on the platform, and they need a home. I’ve got to see to ’em.”

Something flashed in her eyes for a second before she controlled it. He knew that look. She didn’t like orphans. Well, then what was she doing talking to him? He came with a passel of ’em. Grant shook himself free.

“We’ll talk another time then.”

Sorely afraid they would, Grant tugged on his hat brim again and ran. His boots echoed on the depot stairs. He reached the top step just as Martha turned to the sound of his clomping. She was listening for him even when she shouldn’t be.

Grant couldn’t stand the sight of the boy’s thin shoulders covered only by the coarse fabric of his dirty, brown shirt. He pulled his gloves off, noticing as he did that the tips of his fingers showed through holes in all ten fingers.

“I’ll take ’em, Martha.” How was he supposed to live with himself if he didn’t? Grant’s spurs clinked as he came forward. He realized in his dash to get to town he’d worn his spurs even though he brought the buckboard. Filthy from working the cattle all morning, most of his hair had fallen loose from the thong he used to tie it back. More than likely he smelled like his horse. A razor hadn’t touched his face since last Sunday morning.

Never one to spend money on himself when his young’uns had needs—or might at any time—his coat hung in tatters, and his woolen union suit showed through a rip in his knee.

Martha ran her eyes up and down him and shook her head, suppressing a smile. “Grant, you look a fright.”

A slender young woman rose to her feet from where she sat at the depot. Her movements drew Grant’s eyes away from the forlorn children. From the look of the snow piling up on the young woman’s head, she’d been sitting here in the cold ever since the train had pulled in, which would have been the better part of an hour ago. She must have expected someone to meet her, but no one had.

When she stepped toward him, Grant spared her a longer glance because she was a pretty little thing, even though her dark brown hair hung in bedraggled strings from beneath her black bonnet and twisted into tangled curls around her chin. Her face was so dirty the blue of her eyes shined almost like the heart of a flame in a sooty lantern.

Grant stared at her for a moment. He recognized something in her eyes. If she’d been a child and looked at him with those eyes, he’d have taken her home and raised her.

Then the children drew his attention away from the tired, young lady.

Martha Norris shook her head. “You can’t handle any more, Grant. We’ll find someone, I promise. I won’t quit until I do.”

“I know that’s the honest truth.” Grant knew Martha had to protest; good sense dictated it. But she’d hand the young’uns over. “And God bless you for it. But this is the end of the line for the orphan train. You can’t do anything until you get back to New York. I’m not going to let these children take that ride.”

“Actually, Libby joined us after we’d left New York. It was a little irregular, but it’s obvious the child needs a home.” Martha kept looking at him shaking her head.

“Irregular how?” He tucked his tattered gloves behind his belt buckle.

“She stowed away.” Martha glanced at Libby. “It was the strangest thing. I never go back to the baggage car, but one of the children tore a hole in his pants. My sewing kit is always in the satchel I carry with me. I was sure I had it, but it was nowhere to be found. So I knew I’d most likely left it with my baggage. I went back to fetch it so I could mend the seam and found her hiding in amongst the trunks.”

Grant was reaching for the buttons on his coat, but he froze. “Are you sure she isn’t running away from home?” His stomach twisted when he thought of a couple of his children who had run off over the years. He’d been in a panic until he’d found them. “She might have parents somewhere, worried to death about her.”

“She had a note in her pocket explaining everything. I feel certain she’s an orphan. And I don’t know how long she was back there. She could have been riding with us across several states. I sent telegraphs to every station immediately, and I’m planning on leaving a note at each stop on my way back, but I hold out no hope that a family is searching for her.” Martha sighed as if she wanted to fall asleep on her feet.

Grant realized it wasn’t just the children who had a long ride ahead of them. One corner of Grant’s lips turned up. “Quit looking at me like that, Martha, or I’ll be thinking I have to adopt you so you don’t have to face the trip.”

Martha, fifty if she was a day, laughed. “I ought to take you up on that. You need someone to come out there and take your ranch in hand. Without a wife, who’s going to cook for all these children?”

“You’ve been out. You know how we run things. Everybody chips in.” The snow was getting heavier, and the wind blew a large helping of it down Grant’s neck. Grant ignored the cold in the manner of men who fought the elements for their living and won. He went back to unbuttoning his coat, then shrugged it off and dropped it on the boy’s shoulders. It hung most of the way to the ground.

Charlie tried to give the coat back. “I don’t want your coat, mister.”

Taking a long look at Charlie’s defiant expression, Grant fairly growled. “Keep it.”

Charlie held his gaze for a moment before he looked away. “Thank you.”

Grant gave his Stetson a quick tug to salute the boy’s manners. Snow sprang into the air as the brim of his hat snapped down and up. He watched it be swept up and around by the whipping wind then filter down around his face, becoming part of the blizzard that was getting stronger and meaner every moment.

Martha nodded. “If they limited the number of children one man could take, you’d be over it for sure.”

Grant controlled a shudder of cold as he pulled on his gloves. “Well, thank heavens there’s no limit. The oldest boy and the two older girls are just a year or so away from being out on their own. One of them’s even got a beau. I really need three more to take their places, but I’ll settle for two.”

Martha looked from one exhausted, filthy child to the other then looked back at Grant. “The ride back would be terribly hard on them.”

Grant crouched down in front of the children, sorry for the clink of his spurs which had a harsh sound and might frighten the little girl. Hoping his smile softened his grizzled appearance enough to keep the little girl from running scared, he said, “Well, what kind of man would I be if I stood by watching while something was terribly hard on you two? How’d you like to come out and live on my ranch? I’ve got other kids there, and you’ll fit right in to our family.”

“They’re not going to fit, Grant,” Martha pointed out through chattering teeth. “Your house is overflowing now.”

Grant had to admit she was right. “What difference does it make if we’re a little crowded, Martha? We’ll find room.”

The engineer swung out on the top step of the nearest car, hanging onto a handle in the open door of the huffing locomotive. “All aboard!”

The little girl looked fearfully between the train and Grant.

Looking at the way the little girl clung to Martha’s hand, Grant knew she didn’t want to go off with a strange man almost as much as she didn’t want to get back on that train.

“I’ll go with you.” The little boy narrowed his eyes as he moved to stand like a cranky guardian angel beside the girl.

Grant saw no hesitation in the scowling little boy, only concern for the girl. No fear. No second thoughts. He didn’t even look tired compared to the girl and Martha. He had intelligent blue eyes with the slyness a lot of orphans had. Not every child he’d adopted had made the adjustment without trouble. A lot of them took all of Grant’s prayers and patience. Grant smiled to himself. He had an unlimited supply of prayers, and the prayers helped him hang onto the patience.

Grant shivered under the lash of the blowing snow.

The boy shrugged out of the coat. “Take your coat back. The cold don’t bother me none.”

Grant stood upright and gently tugged the huge garment back around the boy’s neck and began buttoning it. “The cold don’t bother me none, neither. You’ll make a good cowboy, son. We learn to keep going no matter what the weather.” He wished he had another coat because the girl still looked miserable. Truth be told, he wouldn’t have minded one for himself.

Martha leaned close to Grant’s ear on the side away from the children. “Grant, you need to know that Libby hasn’t spoken a word since we found her. There was a note in her pocket that said she’s mute. She’s got a limp, too. It looks to me like she had a badly broken ankle some years ago that didn’t heal right. I’ll understand if you—”

Grant pulled away from Martha’s whispers as his eyebrows slammed together. Martha fell silent and gave him a faintly alarmed look. He tried to calm down before he spoke, matching her whisper. “You’re not going to insult me by suggesting I’d leave a child behind because she has a few problems, are you?”

Martha studied him then her expression relaxed. Once more she whispered, “No Grant. But you did need to be told. The only reason I know her name is because it was on the note. Libby pulled it out of her coat pocket as if she’d done it a thousand times, so chances are this isn’t a new problem, which probably means it’s permanent.”

Grant nodded his head with one taut jerk. “Obliged for the information then. Sorry I got testy.” Grant did his best to make it sound sincere, but it hurt, cut him right to the quick, for Martha to say such a thing to him after all these years.

“No, I’m sorry I doubted you.” Martha rested one hand on his upper arm. “I shouldn’t have, not even for a second.”

Martha eased back and spoke normally again. “We think Libby’s around six.” She swung Libby’s little hand back and forth, giving the girl an encouraging smile.

All Grant’s temper melted away as he looked at the child. “Hello, Libby.” Crouching back down to the little girl’s eye level, he gave the shivering tyke all of his attention.

Too tiny for six and too thin for any age, she had long dark hair caught in a single bedraggled braid and blue eyes awash in fear and wishes. Her nose and cheeks were chapped and red. Her lips trembled. Grant hoped it was from the cold and not from looking at the nasty man who wanted to take her away.

“I think you’ll like living on my ranch. I’ve got the biggest backyard to play in you ever saw. Why, the Rocking C has a mountain rising right up out of the back door. You can collect eggs from the chickens. I’ve got some other kids and they’ll be your brothers and sisters, and we’ve got horses you can ride.”

Libby’s eyes widened with interest, but she never spoke. Well, he’d had ’em shy before.

“I can see you’ll like that. I’ll start giving you riding lessons as soon as the snow lets up.” Grant ran his hand over his grizzled face. “I should have shaved and made myself more presentable for you young’uns. I reckon I’m a scary sight. But the cattle were acting up this morning. There’s a storm coming, and it makes ’em skittish. By the time I could get away, I was afraid I’d miss the train.”

Grant took Libby’s little hand, careful not to move suddenly and frighten her, and rubbed her fingers on his whiskery face.

She snatched her hand away, but she grinned.

The smile transformed Libby’s face. She had eyes that had seen too much and square shoulders that had borne a lifetime of trouble. Grant vowed to himself that he’d devote himself to making her smile.

“I’ll shave it off before I give you your first good night kiss.”

The smile faded, and Libby looked at him with such longing Grant’s heart turned over with a father’s love for his new daughter. She’d gotten to him even faster than they usually did.

Martha reached past Libby to rest her hand on the boy’s shoulder. “And Charlie is eleven.”

Grant pivoted a bit on his toes and looked at Charlie again. A good-looking boy, but so skinny he looked like he’d blow over in a hard wind. Grant could fix that. The boy had flyaway blond hair that needed a wash and a trim. It was the hostility in his eyes that explained why he hadn’t found a home. Grant had seen that look before many times, including in a mirror.

As if he spoke to another man, Grant said, “Charlie, welcome to the family.”

Charlie shrugged as if being adopted meant nothing to him. “Are we supposed to call you pa?”

“That’d be just fine.” Grant looked back at the little girl. “Does that suit you, Libby?”

Libby didn’t take her lonesome eyes off Grant, but she pressed herself against Martha’s leg as if she wanted to disappear into Martha’s long wool coat.

The engineer shouted, “All aboard!” The train whistle sounded. A blast of steam shot across the platform a few feet ahead of them.

Libby jumped and let out a little squeak of surprise. Grant noted that the little girl’s voice worked, so most likely she didn’t talk for reasons of her own, not because of an injury. He wondered if she’d seen something so terrible she couldn’t bear to speak of it.

The boy reached his hand out for Libby. “We’ve been together for a long time, Libby. We can go together to the ranch. I’ll take care of you.”

Libby looked at Charlie as if he were a knight in shining armor. After some hesitation, she released her death grip on Martha and caught Charlie’s hand with both of hers.

“Did I hear you correctly?” A sharp voice asked from over Grant’s shoulder. “Are you allowing this man to adopt these children?”

Startled, Grant stood, turned, and bumped against a soft, cranky woman. He almost knocked her onto her backside—the lady who’d been waiting at the depot. He grabbed her or she’d have fallen on the slippery wood. Grant steadied her, warm and alive in his hands.


IMO:

I read Gingham Mountain last week when I was sick in bed so my take on the book may not be entirely fair. The novel is set in Sour Springs Texas in 1870. Grant is a rancher who rescues the "left-over orphans on the orphan train". The story opend with him rescuing two children even though he is a single young man. Hannah Cartwright gets of the train in Sour Springs also and is upset that Grant is adopting these children. She is convinced that he is up to no good. Grant and Hannah come to conflict over the children and their future. The novel deals with adoptions, charity and accepting the past. I enjoyed the loves story that developed between the two and loved that characters from past novels in the series made a cameo at the end of the novel. The only thing I didn't like is that the novel seemed to wrap up too quickly at the end. If you like historical romance this is a good pick.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Karen Kingsbury's This Side of Heaven is up on Wild Card

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:


This Side of Heaven

Center Street (January 6, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


New York Times bestselling author Karen Kingsbury is America's #1 inspirational novelist. She's written more than thirty novels, ten of which have hit #1 on bestseller lists, and her Center Street novel Just Beyond the Clouds hit #13 on the New York Times bestseller list. There are nearly seven million copies of her award-winning books in print, including more than two million copies sold last year alone. She lives in Washington state with her husband, Don, and their six children, three of whom are adopted from Haiti.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Center Street (January 6, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1599956780
ISBN-13: 978-1599956787

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Jill Elizabeth Nelson is in the spotlight! Win her new novel!

I just finished reading Evidence of Murder and have the chewed up nails to prove it. Jill's writing keeps you turning the pages and I have to say after the description of the first crime I was a little leery to go to sleep but then I am a little chicken. LOL. I don't read a lot of suspense novel but I have to say it is fun to switch up what you read now and then. I am glad I was able to read Evidence of Murder and if you like suspense I think this one is a great choice. Jill has agreed to send a free copy of her book to a reader so be sure to post a comment but be sure to read the instructions at the end of this post.


WBF: Jill please, tell us a little about yourself.
JN: By day, I'm a full time housing manager/administrative assistant at my local health care complex, but by night, I morph into a wild and crazy writer, itching to share with my readers the exciting things my characters are telling me. My tagline conveys the essence of what I write: Endless Adventure~Timeless Truth. The stories that fill my head and spill out onto the page are full of adventure seasoned with humor, romance, and faith.


The To Catch a Thief series--Reluctant Burgler, Reluctant Runaway, and Reluctant Smuggler--are in print and currently available. These are about a daring museum security expert and a dashing (can I use that old-fashioned word?) FBI agent on the trail of murderous art thieves. Loads of fun!


My February release, Evidence of Murder, is a romantic suspense with the Steeple Hill Love Inspired line, which will be followed by Witness to Murder in June. In October, I will have an untitled book in the Mystery and the Minister's Wife series coming out with Guideposts books. Yes, they do novels now!


My first and only husband and I have been married for over 27 years now and still going strong. We've raised four children, two boys and two girls, in rural Minnesota, and we're expecting our first grandchild in February. Exciting times!More information about me, my books, my appearance schedule, and my speaking topics, as well as opportunities to win books, can be found on my web site. http://www.jillelizabethnelson.com/

WBF: It sounds as if you are pretty busy. Thanks for taking timeout to visit with us.




Here is a blurb about Evidence of Murder by Jill Elizabeth NelsonThe photographs Samantha Reid uncovers in her new store are shocking. Horrifying. And dangerous. This new evidence could reopen a decade-old multiple homicide case that someone wants desperately to keep closed. And when the evidence comes out, a reluctant Samantha is drawn straight into the spotlight. All the attention is wrecking her business--and drawing the killer's eye straight to her. Then she meets Ryan Davidson, the last surviving member of the murdered family. In spite of herself, she's drawn in by his need to find the truth. Together, they work to unravel the mystery, while the killer works to keep the secrets buried--forever. Evidence of Murder should be available in any bookstore, on or off-line, and will also be stocked in Walmart stores.

WBF: Who is the most important influence in your life besides God?

JN: Probably my husband. He's my best friend. We do lots of things together and enjoy many of the same activities. He even loves to go with me to my speaking engagements and writers conferences. If you want to read what he thinks about being around those kinds of things, he wrote a post about it for my blog. Here's the link: http://www.jillelizabethnelson.com/blogarchives/2006_10_01_archive.shtml. He's got a gift for mentoring people one-on-one. Everybody who works very closely with him for any length of time gets to to hear the Gospel and see it in action. I could list people who've come to the Lord because of his casual, everyday witness. People on the job seek him out with prayer requests. How cool is that!?





WBF: Let’s pretend money is not a factor, if you could go anywhere is the world where would you go?
JN: A country in the Far East to share the gospel and help in practical ways. My husband and I went to Thailand with a missions crew in 2006, and we're discussing a trip to Cambodia. Did you know that three out of every five people in the world live in the Far East, and only one penny out of every missions dollar spent in the US goes to reach these people? The number of Christians there are only 2 or 3% of the vast population. Many have never heard that Jesus has opened the way to God for them. Money and workers are badly needed to get the message out! I made a slide show about our Thailand trip. Here's the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWM4oveAnao.

WBF: What book are you reading now? What books are found lying around your home?
JN: I just finished reading an earlier book in the Mystery and the Minister's Wife series called Dog Days by Carol Cox. This was "homework" for writing the book for Guideposts. The series presents an interesting challenge in that different writers pen the consecutive books, but they are all about the same characters in the same community. Remember those writing exercises where each person would write a part of a story and then pass it on to the next person to add whatever comes next? Well, this is the practical application of that exercise, though in this case, each of us writes a complete story using the same criteria. Next, I plan to dive into Gallimore, the new romantic fantasy by Michelle Griep. I've been waiting for this one to come out, so grabbed one as soon as they became available. An unfortunate fact of my two full time jobs is that they leave me little time for pleasure reading, so it's a real treat when I can, and I'm very choosy about what it is.
WBF: I liked Gallimore. I read it as a pdf galley but it was wonderful.

WBF: If your book was being discussed at a book club what do you think the focus of the discussion would be on?
JN: I suspect there would be a lot of talk about the perennial question of why terrible things happen to apparently innocent people and where God is in the midst of tragedy. I don't pretend to present a pat answer to that question, merely the insistence that, despite anything that happens, God is good, and He loves us. A secondary topic would likely be fears that keep us from fulfilling our potential, and how we can overcome them through faith.


WBF: I always am trying to learn new ways to be organized in the office, what is your favorite organizational tool?
JN: Calendars! They're lifesavers so I don't forget what needs to be done when -- like answering interviews! LOL. I have a book-style calendar on which I keep track of all my engagements and times when this or that are due. I'm also a list-maker. It gives me a feeling of accomplishment when I can check something off. Eventually, any given list gets finished, and I throw it away and make a new one.

WBF: I love old black and white movies and the old musicals. What is your all time favorite movie?
JN: Like you, I love the old flicks. Ben Hur would have to be right up there. It's got everything--adventure, tragedy, heroism, love, the triumph of good over evil, and an incredibly powerful and unpreachy presentation of the Savior, Jesus Christ. I bought the DVD version right before Christmas, but I'm saving it to watch when the kids come to visit around Easter time. I'm not sure they've all seen it, and I want them to.


WBF: What do you enjoy doing when you are not slaving over the computer creating another wonderful novel?
JN: Any time one of my children comes home, and I can spend time with them, I'm a happy camper. And speaking of campers, that's what we all like to do together in the summer time. My husband and I have a venerable old motorhome in good condition (our idea of roughing it) that we take around to various state parks for relaxing outings. Otherwise, when it's just me and hubby, we like to watch movies together. Rarely, do we go to the theater, but that's usually because there are so few new releases we care to see. Probably the last one we went out to see was the most recent Narnia movie, Prince Caspian. That was excellent. We would have gone to see Fireproof, but the timing of when it came to our community didn't work for us.

WBF: What do you want your readers to take away from your novel?
JN: Hope. I could say that about any of my novels. I put my characters through horrendous trials that most of us, thankfully, never have to experience, but a consistent theme of my writing is that there is always hope in God. Where the world offers no hope or false hope, faith offers the ultimate hope. In many secular books, the theme is hopelessness or that life is pointless. I always want to say to the writer or reader, why write it or read it then? Hee-hee!
WBF: You do put them through some aweful experiences but your writing does leave the reader with hope at the end.

If you want to win copy of Evidence Of Murder please leave a way for me to contact you if you win. Disguise your email like this: writebyfaith[at]sbcglobal[dot]net. You have to answer the Daily question in order to be part of the drawing.

Daily Question: What book are you reading now?

For extra entries:
1 extra entry be an email subscriber
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2 extra entries Blog about this post on your own blog and then come back and give me the link.
3 extra entries: send a friend over and have them mention your name in their comment. You will both get 3 extra entries.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Spotlight on Craig Harms


In the spotlight is Craig Harms and he has offered to give away a copy of his novel Day Omega. Craig has an amazing testimony that he has shared today. So let's learn more about Craig Harm.

Tell us a little about yourself:
I live along the banks of the muddy Mississippi with my remarkable wife Sue, three dogs, two cats, and a flock of very lively parrots. I received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University Of Nebraska School Of Journalism and a Master’s of Science degree from Western Illinois University. My career choices have included advertising, research, writing, PR for a New York City art gallery, and stints in the broadcasting and entertainment industries.

Tell us about your book:



Day Omega counts down the last seven years before Christ’s Final Judgment. The end-times novel begins when millions of people round the world suddenly vanish during a violent storm that sweeps the planet. After “Disappearance Day”, as the media dubs it, anarchy and chaos reign supreme and the United Nations is impotent in stopping the madness. So a new one-world government is formed; once sovereign nations are now annexed into ten sectors, each with their own leader. But one of them has plans to control the world and all its citizens who, incidentally, must have a microchip implanted in their hands—for prosperity and security sake, of course. The story examines what could happen if people turn away from God and put their faith and trust in His enemy.It is also the personal story of an ordinary middle-aged man from Chicago who despises nearly everything in his life—his family, his job, his past, his present—until he is chosen to bring people back to God and to sanctuary, when everything is falling apart around him. It is his journey of failure and triumph, tragedy and joy, his spiritual growth from atheist to Christian, and how he keeps the faith, even through seemingly insurmountable odds.

What is the craziest thing you have ever done? When I was young, single, footloose and fancy-free, I did a lot of things that, in retrospect, seem crazy. It’s a wonder looking back as an older (wiser?) person how fearless we might have been in our youth and how we survived!
That being said, after college graduation I packed up my few possessions in a half dozen cardboard boxes and lit out for Los Angeles from Nebraska, having never been there, no connections, no job offers—only my adventurous spirit and a will to succeed. Within a week, I got a job at a fashionable restaurant; within a year I was a page/tour guide at NBC-TV studios in Burbank which led to a position in the Program Research department. Along the way, I performed stand-up comedy, acted in plays, did cable comedy shows, and generally enjoyed life in sunny, Southern California. But God had other plans for me.

Beside salvation, what is the best gift you have ever received? This is where God came into the picture. While in LA, I developed a close friendship with a guy from Seattle, whose wife was from Quincy, Illinois. He decided to start a radio station there and asked if I wanted to help him get it launched. I put my stuff in storage and told him I’d commit two years, with all intentions of returning to the West coast after that.



Well, a year and ten months passed and I was preparing to leave when Sue appeared out of the blue. It was love at first sight! We married nine months later and have been together for sixteen years now.But all was not “happily ever after”. She had a seven-year old son named Jamey, who worked on me to give my heart to Jesus, as I was an agnostic at the time. I finally relented, but our joy was too short-lived—the little boy with a fervent love of Christ died two years later in an accident.


Our lives were irrevocably shattered, but we carry on the best we can. To relieve some of the pain and escape reality, I began writing Day Omega—the novel is dedicated to him with all profits being donated to local charities in his name.


Besides that body blow, we’ve both lost several good jobs, suffered a miscarriage, survived two floods, a tornado, and a Midwestern earthquake! among the ordinary stresses of everyday life. But through it all, I wouldn’t trade a minute without Sue. I hope I’ve helped her through her tragedy—I know she has made me a much better person and so thankful God pulled the strings to put us together. What a wonderful, beautiful gift—her and a sense of humor bestowed on us—without that, we’d both be certified crazy by now!


Sue is very blessed to have you in her life. I can tell you have an amazing marriage. Who is the most important influence in your life besides God?


Definitely Jamey—I owe the lad for my eternal life. I’ll give him a huge hug when we meet at the Ruby Wall.



Let’s pretend money is not a factor, if you could go anywhere in the world where would you go?If indeed money—or time—was not a factor, I would travel everywhere (with the possible exception of frigid, barren Antarctica!) Sue and I have dreams of someday just meandering about the United States in our Corvette, but I would also love to visit the pyramids at Giza, Europe (especially the Louvre and Scotland), participate in an African safari, and tramp through an equatorial rain forest. We raise parrots (they’re our FIDs: an acronym for “feathered kids”) and it would be very cool to see them in their natural habitats.



What books are found lying around your home? My library is stocked with an eclectic mix of biographies, historical, religious, fiction, and reference books. I especially love going through almanacs, dictionaries, and encyclopedias—not on DVD’s, but old-fashioned tomes of paper and ink. There is so much information packed between the pages that I like to incorporate into my writing. I think it really adds a sense of authenticity among the realm of fiction.



What would you like your readers to say about your writing?That I tell a good story—one that makes them want to keep turning the pages and that my work had an emotional impact on them. Most importantly, that it made them think.



What is your favorite verse from the Bible? I have a little sign on my desk quoting Proverbs 3, verses 5 – 6: Trust in the LORD with all your heart, And lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths.


When events of our lives were out of control, when I felt totally hopeless and helpless, and when I could see no positive outcome for the future, this little placard always sustained me and did indeed see us through the hard times—even when we seemed to be dangling by that last, frayed thread. And His promise has proven true, as Sue and I have been given opportunities we wouldn’t have imagined in a million years!

What do you want your readers to take away from your novel? I sincerely hope I inspire readers to “get right with God”, regardless if the end-times are at our doorstep or not. It’s also important that people research and question what their government and media spoon-feed them—oftimes, it seems, the truth is shaded gray and there might be ulterior motives to their altruistic promises.Most importantly, I hope readers will appreciate all that they have—to love their family always, to enjoy their possessions, rather than trying to accumulate more. To keep the faith when everything seem to be crumbling about them. Believe me, I’ve been there—things taken for granted can be lost in a flash.

What are your dreams of 2009? What do you hope to accomplish this year?I’m unemployed . . . again, having been laid off last summer from a marketing job, so it’s going to be interesting to see where the Lord takes us next (hopefully to a warmer climate!) And I plan to make some major headway with my second work-in-progress called “Saving Jesus”. Briefly, it’s about a time-travelling quantum physicist who is “chosen” to thwart John 3:16. I’m anticipating an exciting, healthy, and amazing year, and wish you all the same. May God bless us and keep us through this New Year!





Thank you Craig for visiting with us. I know that this interview will stay with me for a long time.





Craig has offered to give away a copy Day Omega. I have not read this book but I plan to get a copy in the future and read it soon. If you would like to win a copy please leave a comment and in respect to little Jamey, please tell me who is the most influential person in your life and why.




If you want to learn more about Day Omega or email Craig you can reach him at his website: http://www.dayomega.com/


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