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Friday, March 30, 2012

River's Call by Melody Carlson

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About this Book:

It is the 1960s and Anna's daughter, Lauren, is confused, broken-hearted, and pregnant. The difficult situation seems to bring out the worst in the selfish girl. When Lauren chooses to stay with her manipulative Grandma Eunice, Anna worries her daughter will never become a mature adult and the relationship between Lauren, Anna and Eunice becomes even more strained. However, when she hits the lowest point in her life, Lauren returns to her mother, the river, and the Inn and Shining Waters. As time passes, Lauren, now a mother to her own defiant teenager, faces a new crisis, one that puts the entire family at risk.

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About the Author:

Melody Carlson published her first book in 1995 and she has been writing prolifically ever since. To date, Melody has published over 200 books, making her one of the top 20 most prolific authors of all time. With total sales of over 5 million her award-winning books include: Homeward, Love Finds You in Sisters, Oregon; Limelight; the Diary of a Teenage Girl series; the True Colors series; and the Carter House Girls series.

In her professional life, Melody has worn many hats: from pre-school teacher to political activist to senior editor. Currently, she writes full-time, and freelances from her home. She has two grown sons and lives in Sisters, Oregon with her husband, Chris, and Audrey, her yellow lab. They enjoy skiing, hiking, and biking in the beautiful Cascade Mountains

Simon and the Easter Miracle Book Review

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About this Book:

The gospels tell of Simon of Cyrene--"a man coming in from the country"--who was ordered to carry Jesus' cross. Over the centuries, his story has been woven into a Polish folktale. In the tradition of The Three Trees this folk tale gives a fresh perspective on the Easter story.
When Simon the farmer brings his wares to market, little does he expect how he will be involved in the events of that very special day, nor how his items--bread, eggs, and wine--will become important symbols of Jesus' passion and resurrection, remembered throughout the ages.

This picture book retelling of a traditional tale is both thought-provoking and engaging.

My Thoughts on this Book:

Beautiful illustrations on the tale of Jesus' death and resurrection from the eyes of the man who helped carry His cross.. Perfect story to tell year after year during the Easter season to your young loved ones..

Thursday, March 29, 2012

5K- First Race of 2012

Ran my first race for 2012 on St Patrick's Day. One year ago this was also the first race I'd ever done. They call it the St Patrick's Day Dash. Let's just say, last year I ran the 2 mile race. There was an option to run 2 or 4 miles. Since I only started running three months before this race I clocked in at 42:57.. That's 2 MILES.. I was thrilled I crossed the finish line back then..

This year was a little different. They had someone else putting it together so it was at a different location and it turned into a flat 5K for all.

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It was rather brisk that morning so as you can tell above I dressed in layers. I started out with my striped long sleeve shirt. The only thing I could grab that morning because my alarm didn't go off and we got there just 25 minutes before the race started.. phew!!!

My hubby laughed at me after I put on the green shirt we got for doing the race over it.. hee hee! Oh well, wasn't running for fashion...

My goal was to run a 12 minute mile and I did.. I ran it in 38:08 minutes.. Do you remember last year's race time?? Yes, it was 42:57 minutes. That was for a 2 MILE and this race was 3.2 MILES.. I raced 1.2 miles longer and did it in almost 5 minutes quicker.. I've come a long way in one year. From someone who didn't think I could run unless someone was chasing me to running 6 miles every other day. It really feels good!

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Hubby smoked me though. He raced with me but not like last year. Last year he cheered me on by running with me.. This year I was on my own.. He left me in the dust.. He finished the race in 28 minutes.. Someday I will be able to run that fast but my goal right now is to run distance not speed.. He was cute though. As I was coming around to the finish he found me and ran the last couple minutes AGAIN to the finish, cheering me on. There was an OLD man behind me..catching up..if you can picture that. There was NO WAY he was going to pass me so my hubby just kept coaching me to the finish helping me get there. It was awesome..

Next race is called the Icebreaker on April 22nd... This is the biggest race in our town. It weaves through our historic downtown.. It's going to be so much fun. Both hubby and I will be racing in this. You can choose 1 mile run/walk, 3 miles or 5 miles. Hubby will be doing the 5 mile. I'll be doing the 3 mile. I probably could do the 5 mile but not sure if they would be ok with me taking an hour to get through the course.. (smiles).... I run at about a 5.2 mph pace.. I have to get my forms in asap so I guess I will need to make a decision quickly.. Can't wait..

Kitchen Table Resurfaced

My hubby worked for two weeks to resurface our old kitchen table. We swapped tables with a friend about 2 yrs ago. She needed a smaller table and we wanted a bigger table. Well this table had stains from hot food and drinks. The leaves on the end wouldn't stay in the holders as the holes were bigger than the pegs it went into. And there was a huge annoying crease around the edging of the table where food would be swept into as you cleaned the table and it drove me insane....

We were trying to fix up some things for our get together with some church members. It was our turn to host dinner at our house. This motivated the hubby to get to working on the table.. oh yes!!!

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Here's the table in the before stages. You can see the edging has a piece that attaches to the base. That's where the food got trapped. Also note.. the square corners...Hubby has the leaves strapped as he screws them into the base of the table to make this one big permanent structure.

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Now the table is all one solid piece and the old finish has been sanded off

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Hubby filled in the seam where the food kept going when the table got cleaned off, stained it and coated it w/ polyurethane and now looks brand new. We also purchased a router and hubby gave the table a decorative edging.. It looks fantastic..
All I did was purchase the nice placemats that's on the table and added a new napkin holder and salt/pepper holder.. You know you need new ones when you get a 'new' table.. wink wink!

Stand By Me by Neta Jackson Book Review

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:

Stand By Me
Thomas Nelson (March 13, 2012)

***Special thanks to Rick Roberson The B&B Media Group, for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


As a child growing up on the campus of a Christian school where her parents taught, Neta Jackson began creating imaginary worlds at a young age. Loving horses but not having one, she wrote stories about them instead. By the time she reached high school, she had so honed both imagination and writing skills that when her English teacher submitted one of her stories to a Scholastic magazine writing contest, it won first place. With that first win, Jackson knew beyond the shadow of a doubt she wanted to be a writer. She’s been writing ever since.

After marrying the love of her life, Dave Jackson, the couple chose to settle in the Chicago area where Neta had attended college. Throughout their marriage, the Jacksons have worked together as a team, writing a multitude of books together on topics ranging from medical ethics to stories of gang kids, sometimes sharing the task with other experts who have served as co-writers. Together, they have also penned forty historical fiction accounts of Christian heroes, called the Trailblazer Books, along with another five-volume series called Hero Tales: A Family Treasury of True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes.

These days, both are busy penning their own works of adult fiction. Jackson began her individual effort in 2003 with the Yada Yada Prayer Group series, inspired by her real-life Bible study group, a multi-cultural gathering of dynamic women who have played an important role in her life for over fifteen years. Since publication of the first Yada Yada Prayer Group novel, the seven-book series has sold over a half-million copies and given rise to countless prayer groups across the country and the publication of a personal prayer journal for prayer group participants. In 2008, Where Do I Go?, her first book in the four-book House of Hope series, was published. The second book in the series, Who Do I Talk To?, won a Christy Award in 2010 for excellence in Christian fiction. Recently, the fourth book of the series, Who Is My Shelter?, was nominated for Best Inspirational Novel for 2011 by RT Book Reviews. Stand by Me is the first in Jackson’s new SouledOut Sisters series.

The Jacksons have been married 45 years and have raised two children plus a Cambodian foster daughter. They continue to live in urban Chicago where, together, they enjoy writing, gardening and spending time with their grandchildren.

Visit the author's website.


SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

How does God expect us to get along with those people who are always causing us pain? Are we supposed to keep helping those who repeatedly take advantage of us? Exactly what is the key to living in peace with difficult people? These are the questions award-winning author Neta Jackson addresses in her latest novel, Stand by Me (Thomas Nelson), the first book of her newest series, SouledOut Sisters.

Inspired by her own Bible study group, Jackson began several years ago to write about a multi-cultural gathering of dynamic women in a collection of books known as the Yada Yada Prayer Group series. Since publication of the first Yada Yada Prayer Group novel in 2003, the seven-book series has sold over a half-million copies and given rise to countless prayer groups across the country. Jackson followed the Yada Yada novels with the four-book House of Hope series. Though the series is not dependent upon its predecessors for understanding, Jackson has used the individual lives of familiar characters to introduce some of the more complex issues prevalent in our modern society. By allowing her characters to lead the way, Jackson has shed light on issues like drug addiction, the stigma associated with HIV/AIDS and even the racial conflicts that can so easily arise within any culturally diverse group.

In her newest work, Stand by Me, Jackson introduces her readers to Kathryn Davis, a young college student who has left her prestigious Phoenix family behind to move to Chicago after dropping out of medical school against her father’s protests. Her newfound faith in Christ helps temper the realization that she has stepped out of her family’s good graces, but does little to alleviate the pain of their rejection.

When Kat discovers the dynamic multi-cultural membership at Souled Out Community Church, she longs to be part of it. But her unconventional behavior and brash eagerness have not helped her win favor with the church members. And, much to her dismay, Avis Douglass, the one woman in the church whom she most admires and would love to know better, is the one who is the most aloof.

Kat has no idea that, after being confronted by a number of serious problems all at once, Avis and her husband, Peter, are beginning to question God’s will for their lives. Having been recently estranged from her HIV positive daughter and being worried about her welfare, Avis would like nothing more than to quietly retreat into the recesses of her faith and find the answers she seeks. Her attempts to do so, however, are thwarted at every turn by the flamboyant Kat, who has apparently decided to foist herself on their lives whether they want her to or not.




Product Details:

List Price: $15.99

Paperback: 400 pages

Publisher: Thomas Nelson (March 13, 2012)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1595548645

ISBN-13: 978-1595548641


AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:





PROLOGUE





Midwest Music Festival, Central Illinois




Kat Davies ducked into the billowing exhibition tent staked down in a large pasture in central Illinois like a grounded Goodyear blimp. She’d been at the Midwest Music Fest three days already—didn’t know it was a Christian festival until she got here—and needed a little respite from the music pulsing morning-till-night on the Jazz Stage, Gospel Stage, Alternative Stage, Rock Stage, Folk Stage, and a few more she’d forgotten.





Besides, she’d be heading back to Phoenix in two days, and sooner or later she needed to figure out how to tell her parents she’d “given her heart to Jesus” after the Resurrection Band concert last night. Maybe this tent had a quiet corner where she could think. Or pray. Not that she had a clue how to do that.





Kat had a good idea how they’d react. Her mother would f lutter and say something like, “Don’t take it too seriously, Kathryn dear. Getting religion is just something everyone does for a year or two.” And her father? If he didn’t blow his stack at what he’d call “another one of your little distractions,” he’d give her a lecture about keeping her priorities straight: Finish pre-med at the University of Arizona. Go to medical school. Do her internship at a prestigious hospital. Follow in the Davies’ tradition. Make her family tree of prominent physicians proud.





Except . . . she’d walked out of her biochemistry class at UA one day and realized she didn’t want to become a doctor. She’d tutored ESL kids the summer after high school and realized she liked working with kids. (“Well, you can be a pediatrician like your Uncle Bernard, darling,” her mother had said.) And the student action group on the UA campus sponsoring workshops on “Living Green” and “Sustainable Foods” had really gotten her blood pumping. (Another one of her “distractions,” accord- ing to her father.)





Was it too late to pursue something else? Her parents were already bragging to friends and co-workers that their Kathryn had received her letter of acceptance into medical school a few months ago. Feeling squeezed till she couldn’t breathe, she’d jumped at the chance to attend a music fest in Illinois with a carload of other students—friends of friends—just to get away from the pressure for a while.





What she hadn’t expected was to find so many teenagers and twenty-somethings excited about Jesus. Jesus! Not the go- to-church-at-Christmas-and-Easter Jesus, the only Jesus she’d known growing up the daughter of a wealthy Phoenix physician and socialite mother. That Jesus, frankly, had a hard time com- peting with Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.





But these people talked about a Jesus who cared about poor people. A Jesus who created the world and told humans to take care of it. A Jesus who might not be blond and blue-eyed after all. A Jesus who said, “Love your neighbor”—and that neighbor might be black or brown or speak Spanish or Chinese. A Jesus who said, “All have sinned” and “You must be born again.” The Son of God, who’d died to take away the sins of the world.





That Jesus.





That’s the Jesus she’d asked to be Lord of her life, even though she wasn’t exactly sure what that meant. But she desper- ately longed for something—Someone—to help her figure out who she was and what she should do with her life. The guitar player in the band who’d challenged the arm-waving music fans last night to be Christ-followers had said, “Jesus came to give you life—life more abundantly! But first you must give your life to Him.”





That’s what she wanted. Abundant life! A life sold out to something she could believe in. To give herself to one hundred percent. So she’d prayed the sinner’s prayer with a woman in a denim skirt whose name she never learned, and a “peace like a river” f looded her spirit.





Last night, anyway.





But by the light of day, she was still heading in a direction—medical school—that she didn’t want to go.





Big fans circulated the air in the large tent, though mostly it just moved the stif ling July heat around. Thick, curly strands of her long, dark hair had slipped out of the clip on the back of her head and stuck in wet tendrils on her skin. Redoing the clip to get the damp hair off her neck and face, she wan- dered the aisles, idly picking up brochures about Compassion International, Habitat for Humanity, and YWAM. Huh. What if she just dropped out of pre-med and did something like this Youth With A Mission thing. Far from Phoenix and the Davies Family Tradition. Go to Haiti or India or—





“Nice boots,” giggled a female voice nearby.





Kat glanced up from the brochure. A cute brunette with a shaggy pixie cut grinned at her from behind a booth that said Find Your Calling at CCU! Kat self-consciously looked down at the Arizona-chic cowboy boots peeking out beneath her designer jeans and f lushed. Ever since she’d arrived at the fes- tival, she felt as if she’d walked into a time-warp—girls in tank tops, peasant skirts, and pierced nostrils, guys wearing pony- tails, tattoos, shredded jeans, and T-shirts proclaiming Jesus Freak. Kat had felt as conspicuous as a mink coat in a second- hand store.





“Thanks. I think.”





The young woman, dressed in khaki Capris and a feminine lemon-yellow tee, laughed. “This your first time to the Fest? Where’re you from?”





Kat felt strangely relieved to be talking to someone else who didn’t look like a throwback to the seventies. “Phoenix. First time.”





“Wow. You came a long way.”





“You?”





“Detroit. But during the year I’m a student at CCU in Chicago. I get a huge discount off my festival fee if I sit at this booth a couple hours a day during the Fest.” The girl grinned again and extended her hand across the stacks of informational literature. “I’m Brygitta Walczak.”





Kat shook her hand. “Kathryn Davies. But my friends call me Kat. With a K.”





“Like ‘kitty kat’ ? That’s cute. And . . . blue eyes with all that dark, curly hair? Bet the guys love that.”





Ignoring the remark, Kat glanced up at the banner above the booth. “What does CCU stand for?”





“Chicago Crista University. Usually we just call it Crista U. Located on the west side of Chicago. I’ll be a senior next year. Christian ed major.”





“Christian ed? What’s that?”





“You’re kidding.” Brygitta eyed her curiously. “Mm. You’re not kidding. Uh, are you a Christian?”





Kat allowed a wry smile. “For about twelve hours.”





The pixie-haired girl’s mouth dropped open, and then her amber eyes lit up. “That is so cool! Hey . . . want a Coke or something? I’ve got a cooler back here with some soft drinks. Wanna sit? I’d love some company.”





Brygitta dragged a folding chair from an unmanned booth nearby, and Kat found herself swapping life stories with her new friend. Unlike Kat, who had no siblings, Brygitta came from a large Polish family, had been raised in the Catholic church, “went Protestant” at a Youth for Christ rally in high school, planned to get a master’s degree at Crista U, and wanted to be a missionary overseas or a director of Christian education somewhere.





“Sorry I’m late, Bree,” said a male voice. “Uh-oh. Two gor- geous females. You’ve cloned yourself. I’m really in trouble now.”





Kat looked up. A young man about their same age grinned at them across the booth. He was maybe six feet, with short, sandy-brown hair combed forward over a nicely tanned face, wire-rim sunglasses shading his eyes. No obvious tattoos or body piercings. Just cargo shorts and a T-shirt that said CCU Soccer.


Brygitta jumped up. “Oh, hi, Nick. This is Kat Davies. She’s from the University of Arizona, first time at the Fest. Nick Taylor is my relief. He’s a seminary student at Crista—well, headed that way, anyway.”


Nick slid off his shades and flashed a smile, hazel eyes teasing. “So, Miss Blue Eyes. Has Brygitta talked you into coming to CCU yet?”





Kat laughed and started to shake her head . . . and then stopped as her eyes caught the logo on the banner across the booth. Find Your Calling at CCU.





Transfer to Crista University? Why not?



Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Just Too Busy by Joanne Kraft Book Review

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:

Just Too Busy: Taking your Family on a Radical Sabbatical
Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City (June 1, 2011)

***Special thanks to
Susan Otis/Creative Resources for sending me a review copy.***


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Joanne Kraft is a sought-after speaker who loves to encourage women. She has been published in Today’s Christian Woman, In Touch, ParentLife, Kyria and P31 Woman magazine. A leader of Inspire Christian Writers, she serves as a marriage study group leader, and works as a 911 dispatcher in Sacramento County, California. Kraft is married and has four children.



Visit the author's website.


My Thoughts on this Book:
I'm a homeschool mother and find myself and other homeschool mothers falling prey of being too busy. We feel like we need to fit anything and everything into our day so the children have the best education possible. Having our children home with us we now have even more time to devote to adding more activity and chaos to our agenda.. Reading this book has helped me put into perspective what's truly important and there is not an activity out there that will fill that void! You'll have to read the book to find out more.. Awesome and a MUST READ for all mothers of any aged child/ren....

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:




Just Too Busy is one mother’s story of getting off the merry-go-round of her family’s over-commitment. When everything their life seemed like a marathon race, Joanne Kraft and her husband decided to take a “radical sabbatical”—a year-long absence from any of their four children’s organized after-school activities. Memories made, new traditions started, lessons learned, and how their family’s legacy was enriched are shared, spiced with a liberal helping of light-hearted humor.









Product Details:

List Price: $14.99

Paperback: 192 pages

Publisher: Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City (June 1, 2011)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0834126095

ISBN-13: 978-0834126091



AND NOW...Click the LOOK INSIDE! Button to view the FIRST Chapter:





Tuesday, March 27, 2012

The Chase by DiAnn Mills Book Review

This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
The Chase
Zondervan (March 27, 2012)
by
DiAnn Mills


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
DiAnn Mills believes her readers should “Expect an Adventure.” She is a fiction writer who combines an adventuresome spirit with unforgettable characters to create action-packed novels. Her books have won many awards through American Christian Fiction Writers, and she is the recipient of the Inspirational Reader’s Choice award for 2005, 2007, and 2010. She was a Christy Award finalist in 2008 and a Christy winner in 2010.

DiAnn is a founding board member for American Christian Fiction Writers, a member of Inspirational Writers Alive, Advanced Writers and Speakers Association, and is the Craftsman Mentor for the Christian Writer’s Guild. She speaks to various groups and teaches writing workshops.

DiAnn and her husband live in Houston, Texas. Visit her website or find her on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/diannmills


ABOUT THE BOOK
To the FBI it's a cold case. To Kariss Walker it's a hot idea that could either reshape or ruin her writing career. And it's a burning mission to revisit an event she can never forget. Five years ago, an unidentified little girl was found starved to death in the woods behind a Houston apartment complex. A TV news anchor at the time, Kariss reported on the terrifying case. Today, as a New York Times bestselling author, Kariss intends to turn the unsolved mystery into a suspense novel. Enlisting the help of FBI Special Agent Tigo Harris, Kariss succeeds in getting the case reopened. But the search for the dead girl's missing mother yields a discovery that plunges the partners into a witch's brew of danger. The old crime lives on in more ways than either of them could ever imagine. Will Kariss's pursuit of her dream as a writer carry a deadly price tag? Drawing from a real-life cold case, bestselling novelist DiAnn Mills presents a taut collage of suspense, faith, and romance in The Chase.

Watch the book video!



If you would like to read the first chapter of The Chase, go HERE.

Monday, March 26, 2012

3 in 30 March Update- Plugging Along

3in30 Challenge

If you'd like to join in on the 3 in 30 Challenge, just click on the banner above to get more info and to link up your goals for the month.

My 3 goals I've been working on are below for March:

1. Organization-
I have been really working on finishing this goal. I am not only giving everything a deep clean, but going through EVERYTHING to see if it stays or goes. Some rooms needed new organizational materials like shelving and totes (office) but the others just needed to be re-organized and things just had to go. My house is looking so nice. I love the simpleness of it and now my house is clean and totally manageable.

Rooms Completed:

*homeschool room
*master bathroom
*master bedroom
*living room
*dining room
*kitchen
*boys' rooms

I am now finishing up my office/craft room and then need to tackle my spare room closet. Then I have successfully re-organized my entire house.. YES!

2. Health-
This was really tough this past week. Went for a run one day and that was the extent of my exercising other than house cleaning. I did go out once and shovel some snow which is the third time I've had to do that this year (sad) since I'm usually out a good dozen or more times by now. I have just been too tired this week to get to the gym or go out to run. It's been very cold outside for one so outdoor running was out and I've been working really hard with all my spare time getting the house in order because we had a dinner party here last night with our church members. So needed all the open spaces tidy and clean. That was a huge task because I was in the middle of my 'remodel' of my things and had to work overtime with my mess..

3. Marriage-
I've been doing well with showing my husband his love language. He's responding really well to the attention.. I really feel our marriage is getting better through this experience and I am also getting more used to showing his language without even thinking about it now. Doing this has spirred on a big deep discussion with the boys about love languages and we spent an entire evening last week writing down our love languages in the order of importance and we were to write down theirs to see if we knew them. It was such a wonderful night..

I'm still working on my once a month date container. After the house is done, that's my first to do project.. and oh how many of those I have.. thanks to Pinterest!! wink wink!

Fear, Faith & Patience by Felicia S. Killings Book Review

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:

Fear, Faith, and Patience:
My Fight For Justice In a Unjust System

PowerFaithLove Publishing, CA (February 17, 2012)

***Special thanks to Paulette Harper Johnson for sending me a review copy.***


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Felecia S. Killings is a quintessential educator and promoter of change, transformation, and innovation within the educational field. Her years of dedicated service to education, and ascribing to the motto that “Learning is a Lifestyle,” has resulted in extensive years of training and preparation in the educational spectrum. She received her Bachelor’s Degree from the University of California, Davis in 2005 with double majors in English and African and African American Studies. She also obtained her Master’s Degree from UC Davis’s School of Education in 2007. She has received preliminary Doctoral of Education course work at Argosy University from 2008-2010; and will complete her Doctorate of Philosophy in Education with emphasis in Organizational Leadership at Northcentral University in Arizona. Felecia has provided her community with five years of service as a public-school English instructor. She has also created educational programs that help minority youth reach their full potential through excellence in education, job training, and college and career preparations. Felecia is also an author and publisher, and founder and CEO of Power, Faith, and Love Ministries, which oversees seven organizations.

Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:








We often wonder what it is like to be a teacher in today’s time. With so much happening in the public schools, it seems any wonder how it is able to function given all the atrocities that go on in the system. But this is the story about a young, beautiful teacher named Felecia Killings. As a child, she dreamt of the opportunity to be what many call one of the most admirable professions in society: an educator. And when her father witnessed this aspiration in her, he did everything in his power to protect it and to ensure that she fulfilled her mission. Yet, like so many countless individuals who enter the public school system, Ms. Killings was met with tragedies and struggles. But through it all, she allowed her faith to keep her strong, even in the midst of hell.

This book is one to be commended, for it takes what we think we know about the public school system and brings to light another side that is never talked about. Through this text, you will learn about the power of unconditional love and personal sacrifice. For every teacher who chooses to stand up for what’s right, even when everyone is against you, this book will minister to you in ways that even you could not imagine. You WILL be inspired.

Product Details:

List Price: $12.95

Paperback: 248 pages

Publisher: PowerFaithLove Publishing, CA (February 17, 2012)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 098483530X

ISBN-13: 978-0984835300



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:







“You will be a Queen Esther”




The Queen Esther Prophecy




A prophetic word is spoken to an individual to give one a window or glimpse into that person’s future. It serves as a roadmap that outlines God’s perfect course and path for one’s life. When we receive a prophetic word, God always intends for it to be fulfilled in its due time—at the right moment, at the right season. His word never returns to Him empty or unaccomplished. Rather, it comes back to Him, having completed what He desired.


_____________________________________________________________________________


The Bible speaks of a young woman named Esther who became queen of an entire nation. Her beginnings were meek and mild; yet God raised her to become one of the Bible’s most heroic female figures. She was an extremely beautiful young woman, and when the king of the land was looking to appoint a new queen, Esther became that one.


Before she was queen, Esther lived in humble dwellings with her cousin, Mordecai. When word spread around the kingdom that the king had a desire for a new queen (for he had divorced his first one), Mordecai, a worker in the palace, encouraged her to pursue that position. After much preparation, Esther was selected to be among the many handmaids, one of whom the king would later choose to be his next bride. While she lived in the palace, her cousin had instructed her not to reveal the nature of her ethnicity, for she was a Jew. For whatever reason, it was important to him that she did not convey this secret to anyone; and as such, she concealed it.


One day, the king promoted a prominent figure in his kingdom named Haman. As the Bible reads, the king “set [Haman’s] seat above all the princes who were with him” (Esther 3:1). All the servants in the king’s household were commanded to pay homage to Haman and to worship him because of his honor. But Mordecai, who loved the God of Israel, would not bow his knee to Haman. This outraged him, and from that point on, Haman not only hated Mordecai, but also made himself an enemy of the Jewish nation.


Out of his anger and frustration, Haman conspired to destroy the people who would not bow to him, and he convinced the king to sign a decree that would annihilate the Jewish people. As the Bible reads, “[Jewish] laws are different from all other people’s, and they do not keep the king’s laws. Therefore it is not fitting for the king to let them remain” (Esther 3:8). After the king heeded Haman’s request, he agreed to the decree, and Haman made haste to kill the Jews (men and women, boys and girls) all in one day. As the judgment was being sent throughout the land, Mordecai, who quickly learned of Haman’s plot, knew he needed to solicit the aid of their Jewish queen in hopes that she could save them from utter destruction.


When he finally delivered the message to Queen Esther, Mordecai demanded that she speak to the king immediately on behalf of her people. Esther, in her fear, told Mordecai that she could not do such a thing, for to come before the king without being summoned would warrant death. Mordecai then told her,


Do not think in your heart that you will escape in the king’s palace any more than all the other Jews. For if you remain completely silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. Yet who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this? (Esther 4:13-14)


As these words pierced Esther’s heart, she was persuaded to move on behalf of her people. She told Mordecai to have all the Jews who were in close proximity to fast and pray on her behalf for three days. He listened to her plea, and did as she asked.


When the time came for Esther to speak to her king before it was too late, fear gripped her heart and soul. Nevertheless, she presented herself before him; and because she had such grace and mercy from the king, he hardly considered killing her for breaking his law. Esther told him that she needed to speak to him, but that she wanted to do so with Haman present. The king agreed, and that same day, she prepared a banquet for the king and Haman. Initially, she anticipated sharing what was on her heart; but it would seem that in her fear, she could not explain the life-threatening matter at that moment. Instead, she told them that she wanted to hold another banquet the next day; and on that day, she would present her request. (Imagine sitting in front of the very man who has plotted to kill you and your people, and sitting in front of the king who had solidified the decree to murder the Jews. Wouldn’t you be afraid?)


Now Haman had no idea that the queen was a Jew. He thought that because she requested his presence at both banquets, that she was showing favor towards him. Haman returned to his home, boasting to his family of the events that had just taken place. But when he returned to the palace for the second banquet, Haman soon learned that favor was not on her mind.


At the second meeting, the king asked Esther to make her request before them. Esther, with all her trust in God, boldly said,


If I have found favor in your sight, O king, and if it pleases the king, let my life be given me at my petition, and my people at my request. For we have been sold, my people and I, to be destroyed, to be killed, and to be annihilated. Had we been sold as male and female slaves, I would have held my tongue…. (Esther 7:3-4)


When the king heard this, he was outraged. He demanded that Esther reveal who had plotted to kill his queen and her people. Esther boldly pointed towards Haman and exclaimed, “The adversary and enemy is this wicked Haman!” At that moment, the king was blown away. He immediately left the banquet room out of wrath, and while he was gone, Haman attempted to plea with the queen to save his life (the irony). When the king returned, he saw how Haman placed himself so closely to the queen, and was further outraged because he believed Haman was attacking her. Immediately, the king ordered that Haman be taken away and hanged on the gallows—the very same ones that he tried to use against Mordecai. Not only that, but the king gave orders to allow the Jews to fight back and destroy those who set out to assassinate them. The queen, against all odds and in the midst of intense fear, saved the lives of her people. Her actions came solely as a result of her refusal to remain silent, even with death looming in her way.


Of all the stories that I have read from the Scriptures, it is this one that the Lord drew me to the most, beginning at a very early age.


When I was about eleven or twelve years old, I attended a youth conference with other youth leaders from my church. While we were there, God was working and speaking through one preacher in particular. Like many preachers, he had an altar call, and encouraged any youth to come up for prayer. So, I and the group with me went forward.


I remember standing at the altar with other youth leaders, waiting patiently for him to come over and pray for me. When he finally arrived, I was not expecting him to utter the words that would soon come out of his mouth. As he prayed, God gave him several words concerning my future, which indicated what God intended to do in my life. Among other prophecies given to me, he told me that God was going to cause me to be a Queen Esther in the earth. This word was very strange to me because it was not like anything I had ever heard before. But as he repeated that phrase over and over to me, I knew that God was going to do something great in and through me.


When we returned home, we were able to share that message with my father, and I remember him being so proud of that word. Over the years, my father watched over that word to make sure that nothing I or anyone else did prevented it from being fulfilled in its entirety. And even though we rejoiced in the uniqueness of that prophecy, it was unfortunately something that I never fully understood.


For years, I asked the Lord what He meant by the “Queen Esther prophecy;” but I never received a clear answer. All I knew was that this particular word was of great importance, and I just couldn’t throw it by the wayside. In order to keep it at the forefront of my mind, I wanted that name to be on something that would serve as a daily reminder of that word spoken years ago. (My license plate reflects it: QN ESTR). I wanted God to know that while I did not fully understand what He meant by it, I was willing to let Him have His way in me. As far as I was concerned, I owed Him my life; and I was willing to do whatever He asked of me, no matter the cost. In essence, it was this prophecy that solidified my desires to become an educator. As I would later learn over the years, any time a prophet speaks over another person regarding being a “Queen Esther” in the land, it signifies God’s intent for change to happen in an organization where lives are at stake, and where dramatic change is necessary and crucial.




My Dreams




Now Joseph had a dream, and he told it to his brothers; and they hated him even more…And his brothers said to him, ‘Shall you indeed reign over us? Or shall you indeed have dominion over us? So they hated him even more for his dreams and for his words. (Genesis 37:5, 8 NKJV)


There are times when God will give us prophetic dreams to show us where He intends for us to be. Sometimes the desires that we have for our own lives are God-given interests that He embedded in our hearts. We must always be mindful and careful of these dreams, and guard them with all diligence. They give us purpose and illuminate our destiny.


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Dreams are far different than goals. Dreams are an overall picture of how we see ourselves in our adult life. Goals are the roads that we take in order to bring those dreams to pass. For me, my only dream was to become a teacher.


When I was little, I thought being a teacher was the best profession one could have. I loved how they could take a lesson and make it fun for students. I loved how they would give out rewards for good behavior; but I especially loved how they were the boss in the classroom, and were paid for it. I wanted to be a teacher because I really did enjoy education; but I especially wanted that profession so that I could be a boss.


When I was little, I used to play school at my house. I would gather all my stuff animals and Barbie dolls, and give them lessons to learn. I used the books that we had in the house as the curriculum, and I would pretend to have them working on assignments for me to grade later. Because I knew what I wanted to do at a young age, my parents, especially my dad, made sure that I always performed well in school so that I could attend a prestigious university upon high school graduation. You see, it was not enough that I had a dream to do something great. I had to make sure that everything I did up until that point would somehow cultivate that dream. Doing exceptionally well in school was not an option. It was a requirement.


Of all the years I spent in school, I never struggled in the area of academics. For the most part, I had straight A’s in most of my classes. During elementary, middle, and one year of high school, I attended two private Christian institutions (Shore Acres Christian School in Bay Point, California, and Christian Center in Pittsburg, California). And I always performed exceptionally well in every class. For some reason, the work and lessons came to me easily. A teacher only had to explain a concept to me once, and I mastered it immediately. I was a stellar student, and every year that we had honor ceremonies, I always came home with countless awards that centered on academic excellence.


Because the work came to me so easily, I found myself outperforming my school mates of my same grade level. When I was in the 8th grade, I was reading at college level (according to the assessments issued to me from the administrator), and proficient in mathematics at the same level as their average 10thgrader. I had this issue, which remains with me today, that certain subject matters did not have the challenge that I needed to really produce the kind of intellectual results I was capable of. Unlike a lot of smart students who mess around because the work is too simple, I chose to take my education seriously because I knew that good grades and good behavior would be my tickets to immediate and life-long success. And even though I never fully experienced a challenge in school, I knew that success was my only option. I was addicted to it. And being the best at any and everything was my driving force. I don’t know when I first felt the high of success; but whenever I did, it stayed with me, even as I transitioned to my first (and only) public school.


By my tenth grade year, I had transferred to Pittsburg High School in Pittsburg, California. I guess you could say I was tired of going to the private schools so much, and I wanted something different. A part of me actually believed that with the countless number of classes this school offered, I would finally find that challenge that I lacked everywhere else. I believed that by going to this public school, I would be given a lot more opportunities to participate in different types of classes, such as advanced placement courses, which would really prepare me for university-level work. Upon my transfer, I was already ahead of most of my grade-level classmates by the number of credits I had received from my former school. You see, at Christian Center, we were not bound by the regular six-class schedule. No, I had nine courses throughout the year, and the multiple credits I received from there were transferred to the public school. I had already accomplished so much by the time I reached the High that I even considered early graduation; but I dismissed that idea because I was in no rush to move through the educational system.


While at Pittsburg High, it was a dramatic change for me. I had never seen so many people in one area at one time. I went from seeing about 350 students at the private school to seeing over 2,000 students in this public school. My dad really helped me transition to this arena because he had worked for the Pittsburg Unified School District (another corrupt school district, but I won’t get into that). I don’t know what it is about parents who get heavily involved with their child’s education; but whatever my father did during those years, he was truly influential in making sure that I always received the best. He made sure that I had the best counselor, the best teachers, and the best and most-challenging classes. During my junior year, he told my counselor, Adrian Brown (my other guardian angel), to place me in AP English, AP History, Honors Algebra II, Chemistry, and Physics; and to make my schedule a little easier, Physical Education just to relieve the academic stress. I remember thinking, “My father has gone crazy.” But it was the first time that I had a challenge as a student; and as can be expected, I did very well in those courses also.


My time spent at the High was okay to say the least. A couple of the youth from the church went there, and they made sure to keep an eye on me. I met a couple of close female friends; but for the most part, I stayed very quiet and reserved. Everyone could tell that I was not from that area because I didn’t speak like they did; I didn’t dress like they did; and I took my education very seriously. This was not the common or stereotypical image of a Black female student, and in a way I stood out amongst the crowd. I was well received by my teachers and administrators, but a lot of students—female students—had issues with me. To say I had haters would be an understatement. I even had one female tell me that I was stuck up and conceited because I had my own hair (no weave). I can’t count the number of the ridiculous comments I received in high school from so many females, and I never knew why. To this day, I still don’t know why so many females hated me (or still do hate me). But it was only a stupid distraction to try and draw my focus off of what was real. I had better plans for my life anyways, plans that would be used to help others fulfill their goals and dreams. I didn’t have time to deal with the petty drama of high school life.


Although I was heavily immersed in my education, I was also greatly involved with my church and youth organization. I would go to church every day except Tuesday. Since I was one of the Pastor’s daughters, I found myself involved in any and everything. On Sunday, we had two church services. I would leave home by 8:30am and return by 8:00pm. On Mondays, I had dance practice; on Wednesdays, I had youth Bible study; on Thursdays, I had choir and praise and worship practice; on Fridays, I had either a youth night or intercessory prayer; and then Saturdays were spent either cleaning the church or having a youth leadership meeting or evangelism. By the age of 16, I was a full-time student and full-time ministry worker.


Ministry continued to be a huge part of my life. I wasn’t the type of Pastor’s daughter that simply attended church and helped out a little. Some Pastor’s children do things because they feel forced or compelled. I, on the other hand, did it because I genuinely loved the Lord, and I had a real relationship with Him. I knew that God had anointed me to preach and teach His Word to His people. In fact, I preached my first message when I was 13 years old, and I spoke on Acts 1:8—the baptism of the Holy Ghost. That night, I prophesied the Word of the Lord to adults and youth, and it was certainly not the last time I did that. I knew that He had a calling on my life, which did not focus entirely on education. And I knew that the only way that the calling could come forth was if I put His gifts and talents to practice.


As addicted as I was to success and education, I was even more addicted to the Lord and His supernatural power. I wanted all of Him. I craved His presence and His anointing, so much so that I often feared that my love for education would take me away from my devotion to God. I didn’t realize it then, but a youth who gets addicted to the Lord is a dangerous weapon to the enemy, Satan. A youth who not only wants better in life, but is entirely dependent on the Lord is deadly to the enemy’s plan. And he made no small objections to it. I can’t count the number of things he placed in my way to try and draw me away from God’s plan and destiny. In high school, he tried to ruin my reputation and my good name (the same thing that is happening today). He placed people in my way that did not belong in my life. He raised hell in my family life. He did all kinds of things. But the Lord kept me, and I know it’s because of the relationship I had with Him while I was a teenager. He helped me escape a lot of the traps that youth often fall into, including teenage pregnancy, promiscuity, alcoholism, drugs, prostitution, and the like. So many people, especially those in the church, were shocked when they realized that I had not become pregnant before graduating from high school, and still maintained my virginity into my adult life. (I guess chastity is not something that the Church expects from its youth…what a shame.) It was like the more I pressed into the things of God, the more I was attacked.


While under the leadership of my father and step mother, who were and are my spiritual parents, I developed a strong relationship with the Lord. God continued to use His servants to speak His Word over me concerning my future. Not only had God called me to be a Queen Esther in the earth, but also a prophet to the nations—someone who would proclaim God’s Word to the world. Now, try to imagine hearing all these prophecies as a young girl and teenager. While most teens are enjoying life and doing what youth normally do, God was telling me that He had a plan for me that even I couldn’t have imagined. He was consecrating me and setting me a part for His purpose. In fact, even when I tried to be a “normal” teenager, the Lord would ruin those plans, and draw me back to Him. I couldn’t escape His presence, even if I tried. But as long as the Lord allowed me to continue pursuing my educational dreams, I had no problem serving Him and doing His will.


Albeit I was doing so much in the church and ministry, I was still focused on fulfilling my goals of becoming an educator. Being at the High helped me realize that working in the public school system was more necessary than working for a private school. I remember thinking how unfair it was that some families were able to send their children to the best schools, while other families had to settle for the weak public school education. I could tell the difference in the way the teachers worked with the students, and I always felt like our society was a promoter of inequitable education. I believed that the best way to help people become truly successful was not to work in a setting that was already thriving, but to go where my help was most needed. From there, I decided to become a public school English teacher, not because I liked English--which by the way I really hated in high school, especially those boring literature books--but because I wanted to help people in reading and writing. I always believed that those were the most important skills that everyone had to learn and master. It was also the one subject that I felt was universal enough to provide young people with lessons on life, morality, and more.


Making plans to fulfill my dream was so exciting. By my senior year, I had applied to five universities in California. Because I was in the top 5% of my class, the state guaranteed me a spot at one of their Universities; and with that, I was accepted into the University of California, Davis in the Fall of 2001. There was nothing more enthralling than seeing how my hard work and diligence paid off. My success was even recognized in our city’s newspaper.









I could not wait to leave high school. Although it was an interesting experience, it was not what I had expected it to be. Looking back on it now, I think the best option would have been for me to have remained in the private school setting; but I am grateful that the Lord still used that experience to work in my favor. After all, it was because I went to a public school that I developed a heart for students who were forced to attend them. I believed that if a public school, with all its failures and what not, could have a good teacher in its organization, then there was hope for those students who had no choice in being there. This passion for the youth grew only stronger as I entered my undergraduate study at UC Davis.


In September 2001, I made my way to the first of a few college campuses that I would attend. For me, college was everything that high school was not. It was new and challenging. I was surrounded with people who had worked hard to get there. Exceptional learning was the norm; and for the first time, I felt like I fit in with others. I was not surrounded with stupid females. I did not have to worry about high school boys and their drama. I was in a world where education, intelligence, and personal growth were as valuable as one’s life. It was my home, where I belonged. And the more I explored new concepts and ways of thinking, the more I was convinced that education was truly the key to one’s success.


Being in college did more for me than any other experience (except when I gave my life to the Lord). It opened up windows of opportunities for me that would not have been there had I never went. I was more convinced that being an educator was the right profession for me, because I needed to show others what education could do for them also. I knew that if I came out of this system with empowering tools for success, I could then demonstrate to others how they, too, could become more powerful than the average man. I was so consumed with learning that I spent so much time making sure that I got everything I possibly could within a four-year time frame. So, upon graduation in 2005, I left the UC Davis undergraduate program with a Bachelor’s Degree in English and another in African American Studies. But I didn’t stop there. I returned to the school, and enrolled in their School of Education program where I received my Teaching Credential and Master’s Degree in Education—both within 15 months. By the age of 23, I was not only loaded down with academic degrees, but I had also received a full-time job as an English instructor. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Shepherding a Child's Heart Study

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I am really excited about going through "Shepherding a Child's Heart" book with other Moms as a book club online. I did this a month ago with these same ladies reading "How to Have a H.E.A.R.T for Your Kids". I really love this way of reading books, journaling my thoughts on my blog each week..

Here's the schedule of chapters to be read by if you would like to join in as well..

•April 2 – Intro and Ch. 1
•April 9 – Ch. 2-3
•April 16 – Ch. 4-5
•April 23 – Ch. 6-7
•April 30 – Ch. 8-9
•May 7 – Ch. 10-11
•May 14 – Ch. 12-13
•May 21 – Ch. 14-15
•May 28 – Ch. 16-17
•June 4 – Ch. 18-19

I will post each week on the chapters I've read according to the schedule above. I love this kind of study as it helps me absorb more of the reading as I journal it here. If you'd like to join in please check out the blog @ http://thepelsers.com/. I can't get my blog to interlink because it won't allow me to copy anything lately which is weird. Not sure how to fix that...

So today's post is to introduce myself to those following this book club and to those who happen to come across my blog.. HELLO!!

I am a mother of 3 and a wife to one devoted husband of over 14 yrs. I have a daughter who is 17 and two boys that are 13 and 10. We've been officially homeschooling since 2004, but have been training them in the way they should go since birth. We've moved a bit over our yrs of marriage but we've ultimately made Montana our home back in 2007.

Looking forward to anything that helps me become a better parent and to love my children as they grow up to be responsible adults.. Can't wait to dive in!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Missing by Shelley Shepard Gray Book Review

This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
Missing
Avon Inspire; Original edition (March 20, 2012)
by
Shelley Shepard Gray


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Since 2000, Shelley Sabga has sold over thirty novels to numerous publishers, including HarperCollins, Harlequin, Abingdon Press, and Avon Inspire. She has been interviewed by NPR, and her books have been highlighted in numerous publications, including USA Today and The Wall Street Journal.

Under the name Shelley Shepard Gray, Shelley writes Amish romances for HarperCollins’ inspirational line, Avon Inspire. Her recent novel, The Protector, the final book in her “Families of Honor” series, hit the New York Times List, and her previous novel in the same series, The Survivor, appeared on the USA Today bestseller list. Shelley has won the prestigious Holt Medallion for her books, Forgiven and Grace, and her novels have been chosen as Alternate Selections for the Doubleday/Literary Guild Book Club. Her first novel with Avon Inspire, Hidden, was an Inspirational Reader’s Choice finalist.

Before writing romances, Shelley lived in Texas and Colorado, where she taught school and earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education. She now lives in southern Ohio and writes full time. Shelley is married, the mother of two children in college, and is an active member of her church. She serves on committees, volunteers in the church office, and currently leads a Bible study group, and she looks forward to the opportunity to continue to write novels that showcase her Christian ideals.

When she’s not writing, Shelley often attends conferences and reader retreats in order to give workshops and publicize her work. She’s attended RWA’s national conference six times, the ACFW conference and Romantic Times Magazine’s annual conference as well as traveled to New Jersey, Birmingham, and Tennessee to attend local conferences.

Check out Shelley's Facebook Fan page


ABOUT THE BOOK
In the first book in her new Secrets of Crittenden County series, Shelley Shepard Gray delivers another page-turning romance set in Amish country

Perry Borntrager had been missing from the quiet Amish community of Crittenden, Kentucky, for months when his body was discovered at the bottom of an abandoned well. Everyone had assumed Perry left Crittenden on his own, seduced by the wider world he discovered during his rumspringa, but now the truth has thrown this once-peaceful town into chaos. The first death from mysterious circumstances in Crittenden in more than two decades has invited the scrutiny of the outside world: a police detective arrives to help their local sheriff with the investigation. His questioning begins with Lydia Plank, Perry’s former girlfriend, and Perry’s best friend, the Englisher Walker Anderson.

Lydia and Walker know they didn’t have anything to do with Perry’s death, but they both hold secrets about his final days. Do they dare to open up about the kind of man Perry had become? In the oppressive shadow of these dark times, they discover strength in a most unlikely companionship that offers solace, understanding, and the promise of something more.

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

My Thoughts on this Book:
I was really excited about reading this new series by Shelley Shepard Gray.. A mystery in the Amish community. I couldn't put it down and can't wait to get the next one in June. I love how she uses the characters and tells about Perry who was murdered with opening quotes on each chapter. Storyline was realistic and grabbed me from page one.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Son's 13th Birthday! Doctor Who Anyone?

I had a blast planning and preparing for my son's 13th birthday. I wanted it extra special since you only turn a teenager once.. He loves watching the BBC show 'Doctor Who'. Well this is a British TV show so finding things here in America are well, null and void, so you have to be creative to make a party out of this.

The festivities started with inviting all of his friends to Cyberbytes. It's a local gaming place where you can play their video games per hour. I like it because we can reward my boys by going there on occasion and don't have to purchase the video game systems.

I made a Doctor Who Tardis invitation to send to all his friends.. I posted this on my Creative Cardmaking blog, so that's why it's tagged like that in the photo..

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Then the fun begins. Making party favors for the guests. So what's going to go inside?? Yummy food of course. I don't like giving cheap toys to the guests so I thought food would be a great alternative.

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I made a dalek brownie out of a cookie cutter that my husband shaped into a Dalek. It was originally shaped like santa holding his hand out!.. If you don't know what a dalek is, they are bad guys or should I say robots in the show.. "Exterminate"...

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Then came the Jammie Dodgers.. Cookies that the 11th Doctor loved.. These are two sugar cookies with the top cookie cut out in the middle with a small heart cookie cutter. The middle is filled w/ raspberry jelly and then stuck together!.. YUM!

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Made some cute one eyed daleks to eat as well. I got this idea from online. I tweaked it though to fit what I had on hand for supplies. It's an oreo cookie base, then the ball is a chocolate chip muffin with the stump cut off. I then frosted the top of the oreo cookie to act as 'glue' to hold the muffin to the oreo. I then dipped the muffin (not the oreo cookie) into melted chocolate as well as a pretzel rod which will represent the arm and let it set. While it was setting I put the arm in and almonds on top and let it harden. The eye is a candy I found at Walmart in the cake decorating aisle.

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Designed the gift bags to look like the tardis..

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I made my son a Tardis bday card..

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The inside had his favorite doctor..

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I decided to make three cupcake daleks to go around the cake. I found a video online by the Tofu Guru that showed step by step how to make the cupcake daleks.. The cake is the tardis sitting on a planet..

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One of the daleks...

The cake.... This is of my own invention in my head.. I really wanted it to stand up and not lie down like I saw examples of online. I am so happy it turned out the way I wanted it to!

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This picture below did have my son's name written on it but I whited it out for this post.. This is with all 13 of his candles on it during the party!

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I went a little crazy and made the cake on the inside to match the British flag colors. The tardis was blue..

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And the planet was two layered. White and red..

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The entire cake was supposed to be made of marshmallow fondant. I was successful in placing the fondant on the planet but it was just too heavy to drape over the tardis so I ended up having to frost that part..

This Happy 13th Bday was on the table...

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I picked out star balloons since the Doctor travels in space.. They're 13 of them! Behind the balloons is the table with the cake and food since it was in the evening we had pizza, smokies, and chips..

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Here's the birthday boy with his cake!

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Blowing out the candles!

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My friends and I after the party was over..

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All the kiddos after the party was over..

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My son had a blast playing video games with his friends for two full hours, then opening presents, & eating cake.. I just can't get over that my baby boy is 13 now!! WOW!!!

One Thousand Gifts 430-450



Multiple Blessings, One Blessing @ a Time


430. My oldest son taking Hunter's Safety Course to learn to hunt with us come fall.
431. Planning my son's 13th birthday celebration
432. seeing myself slip into a size 8 pants from a size 14
433. seeing myself slip into a size 4/6 top when it was 12/14.
434. running my first 5K race for 2012 in 38:08 min
435. celebrating 1 yr of running
436. running my first 10K around the house
437. Hitting my 30 lb weight loss goal
438. re-organizing my house
439. having the $ needed to purchase new containers to organize my office
440. Snow on the first day of Spring
441. enjoying our curriculum after using it for 7 months!
442. being able to sell my older curriculum to purchase my new curriculum
443. seeing my boys cuddled together in the morning laughing
444. celebrating my son turning 13 (a teenager)
445. making his Tardis cake
446. decorating for his party!
447. watching him have fun with his friends
448. listening to the birds come to life and singing outside my window
449. celebrating Valentine's Day with my hubby with a romantic weekend!
450. MyFitnessPal- being able to track my calories/weight loss progress online

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

The Heart's Frontier by Lori Copeland & Virginia Smith

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 authors are:

and the book:

The Heart's Frontier
Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2012)

***Special thanks to Karri Marketing Assistant Harvest House Publishers for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Lori Copeland is the author of more than 90 titles, both historical and contemporary fiction. With more than 3 million copies of her books in print, she has developed a loyal following among her rapidly growing fans in the inspirational market. She has been honored with the Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award, The Holt Medallion, and Walden Books' Best Seller award. In 2000, Lori was inducted into the Missouri Writers Hall of Fame. She lives in the beautiful Ozarks with her husband, Lance, and their three children and five grandchildren.

Visit the author's website.


Virginia Smith is the author of more than a dozen inspirational novels and more than fifty articles and short stories. An avid reader with eclectic tastes in fiction, Ginny writes in a variety of styles, from lighthearted relationship stories to breath-snatching suspense.

Visit the author's website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:





An exciting new Amish-meets-Wild West adventure from bestselling authors Lori Copeland and Virginia Smith weaves an entertaining and romantic tale for devoted fans and new readers.



Kansas,1881—On a trip to visit relatives, Emma Switzer’s Amish family is robbed of all their possessions, leaving them destitute and stranded on the prairie. Walking into the nearest trading settlement, they pray to the Lord for someone to help. When a man lands in the dust at her feet, Emma looks down at him and thinks, The Lord might have cleaned him up first.



Luke Carson, heading up his first cattle drive, is not planning on being the answer to anyone’s prayers, but it looks as though God has something else in mind for this kind and gentle man. Plain and rugged—do the two mix? And what happens when a dedicated Amish woman and a stubborn trail boss prove to be each other’s match?









Product Details:

List Price: $13.99

Paperback: 320 pages

Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2012)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0736947523

ISBN-13: 978-0736947527


AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:






Apple Grove, Kansas


July 1881





Nearly the entire Amish district of Apple Grove had turned out to help this morning, all twenty families. Or perhaps they were here merely to wish Emma Switzer well as she set off for her new home in Troyer, fifty miles away.


From her vantage point on the porch of the house, Emma’s grandmother kept watch over the loading of the gigantic buffet hutch onto the specially reinforced wagon. Her sharp voice sliced through the peaceful morning air.


“Forty years I’ve had that hutch from my dearly departed husband and not a scratch on it. Jonas, see that you use care!”


If Maummi’s expression weren’t so fierce, Emma would have laughed at the long-suffering look Papa turned toward his mother. But the force with which Maummi’s fingers dug into the flesh on Emma’s arm warned that a chuckle would be most ill-suited at the moment. Besides, the men straining to heft the heavy hutch from the front porch of their home into the wagon didn’t need further distractions. Their faces strained bright red above their beards, and more than one drop of sweat trickled from beneath the broad brim of their identical straw hats.


Emma glanced at the watchers lined up like sparrows on a fence post. She caught sight of her best friend, Katie Beachy, amid the sea of dark dresses and white kapps. Katie smiled and smoothed her skirt with a shy gesture. The black fabric looked a little darker and crisper than that of those standing around her, which meant she’d worn her new dress to bid Emma farewell, an honor usually reserved for singings or services or weddings. The garment looked well on her. Emma had helped sew the seams at their last frolic. Of course, Katie’s early morning appearance in a new dress probably had less to do with honoring Emma than with the presence of Samuel Miller, the handsome son of the district bishop. With a glance toward Samuel, whose arms bulged against the weight of holding up one end of the hutch, she returned Katie’s smile with a conspiratorial wink.


Emma’s gaze slid over other faces in the crowd and snagged on a pair of eyes fixed on her. Amos Beiler didn’t bother to turn away but kept his gaze boldly on her face. Nor did he bother to hide his expression, one of longing and lingering hurt. He held infant Joseph in his arms, and a young daughter clutched each of his trouser-clad legs. A wave of guilt washed through Emma, and she hastily turned back toward the wagon.


From his vantage point up in the wagon bed, Papa held one end of a thick rope looped around the top of the hutch, the other end held by John Yoder. The front edge of the heavy heirloom had been lifted into the wagon with much grunting and groaning, while the rear still rested on the smooth wooden planks of the porch. Two men steadied the oxen heads, and the rest, like Samuel, had gathered around the back end of the hutch. A protective layer of thick quilts lined the wagon bed.


Papa gave the word. “Lift!”


The men moved in silent unity. Bending their knees, their hands grasped for purchase around the bottom edges. As one they drew in a breath, and at Papa’s nod raised in unison. Emma’s own breath caught in her chest, her muscles straining in silent sympathy with the men. The hutch rose until its rear end was level with its front, and the men stepped forward. The thick quilts dangling beneath scooted onto the wagon as planned, a protective barrier from damage caused by wood against wood.


The hutch suddenly dipped and slid swiftly to the front. Emma gasped. Apparently the speed caught Papa and John Yoder by surprise too, for the rope around the top went slack. Papa lunged to reach for the nearest corner, and his foot slipped. The wagon creaked and sank lower on its wheels as the hutch settled into place. At the same moment Papa went down on one knee with a loud, “Ummph.”


“Papa!”


Ach! Maummi pulled away from Emma and rushed forward. Her heart pounding against her rib cage, Emma followed. Men were already checking on Papa, but Maummi leaped into the wagon bed with a jump that belied her sixty years, the strings of her kapp flying behind her. She applied bony elbows to push her way around the hutch to her son’s side.


She came to a halt above him, hands on her hips, and looked down. “Are you hurt?”


Emma reached the side of the wagon in time to see Papa wince and shake his head. “No. A bruise is all.”


“Good.” She left him lying there and turned worried eyes toward her beloved hutch. With a gentle touch, she ran loving fingers over the smooth surface and knelt to investigate the corners.


A mock-stern voice behind Emma held the hint of a chuckle. “Trappings only, Marta Switzer. Care you more for a scratch on wood than an injury to your son?”


Emma turned to see Bishop Miller approach. He spared a smile for her as he drew near enough to lean his arms across the wooden side of the wagon and watch the activity inside. Samuel helped Papa to his feet and handed him the broad-brimmed hat that had fallen off. Emma breathed a sigh of relief when he took a ginger step to try out his leg and smiled at the absence of pain.


“My son is fine.” Maummi waved a hand in his direction, as though in proof. “And so is my hutch. Though my heart may not say the same, such a fright I’ve had.” She placed the hand lightly on her chest, drew a shuddering breath, and wavered on her feet.


Concern for her grandmother propelled Emma toward the back of the wagon. As she climbed up, she called into the house, “Rebecca, bring a cool cloth for Maummi’s head.”


The men backed away while Katie and several other women converged on the wagon to help Emma lift Maummi down and over to the rocking chair that rested in the shade of the porch, ready to be loaded when the time came. Maummi allowed herself to be lowered onto the chair, and then she wilted against the back, her head lolling sideways and arms dangling. A disapproving buzz rumbled among the watching women, but Emma ignored them. Though she knew full well that most of the weakness was feigned for the sake of the bishop and other onlookers, she also knew Maummi’s heart tended to beat unevenly in her chest whenever she exerted herself. It was yet another reason why she ought to stay behind in Apple Grove, but Maummi insisted her place was with Emma, her oldest granddaughter. What she really meant was that she intended to inspect every eligible young Amish man in Troyer and handpick her future grandson-in-law.


Aunt Gerda had written to say she anticipated that her only daughter would marry soon, and she would appreciate having Emma come to help her around the house. She’d also mentioned the abundance of marriageable young men in Troyer, with a suggestion that twenty-year-old Emma was of an age that the news might be welcome. Rebecca had immediately volunteered to go in Emma’s place. Though Papa appeared to consider the idea, he decided to send Emma because she was the oldest and therefore would be in need of a husband soonest. Maummi insisted on going along in order to “Keep an eye on this hoard of men Gerda will parade before our Emma.”


As far as Emma was concerned, they should just send Maummi on alone and leave her in Apple Grove to wait for her future husband to be delivered to her doorstep.


Rebecca appeared from inside the house with a dripping cloth in hand. A strand of wavy dark hair had escaped its pins and fluttered freely beside the strings of her kapp. At barely thirteen, her rosy cheeks and smooth, high forehead reminded Emma so sharply of their mother that at times her heart ached.


Rebecca looked at Maummi’s dramatic posture and rolled her eyes. She had little patience with Maummi’s feigned heart episodes, and she was young enough that she had yet to learn proper restraint in concealing her emotions. Emma awarded her sister with a stern look and held out a hand for the cloth.


With a contrite bob of her head, Rebecca handed it over and dropped to her knees beside the rocking chair. “Are you all right, Maummi?”


Ach, I’m fine. I don’t think it’s my time. Yet.”


Emma wrung the excess water from the cloth before draping it across the back of Maummi’s neck.


Danki.” The elderly woman realized that the men had stopped working in order to watch her, and she waved her hand in a shooing motion. “Place those quilts over my hutch before you load anything else! Mind, Jonas, no scratches.”


Papa shook his head, though a smile tugged at his lips. “Ja, I remember.”


The gray head turned toward Emma. “Granddaughter, see they take proper care.”


“I will, Maummi.”


Katie joined Emma to oversee the wrapping of the hutch. When Samuel Miller offered a strong arm to help Katie up into the wagon, Emma hid a smile. No doubt she would receive a letter at her new home soon, informing her that a wedding date had been published. Because Samuel was the bishop’s son, there was no fear he would not receive the Zeungis, the letter of good standing. Rebecca would be thrilled at the news of a proper wedding in tiny Apple Grove.


But Emma would be far away in Troyer, and she would miss her friend’s big day.


Why must I live there when everything I love is here?


She draped a thick quilt over her end of the hutch and sidled away while Papa secured a rope around it. The faces of her friends and family looked on. They filled the area between the house and the barn. She loved every one in her own way. Yes, even Amos Beiler. She sought him out among the crowd and smiled at the two little girls who hovered near his side. Poor, lonely Amos. He was a good father to his motherless family. No doubt he’d make a fine husband, and if she married him she wouldn’t have to move to Troyer. The thought tempted her once again, as it often had over the past several weeks since Papa announced his decision that she would live with Aunt Gerda for a while.


But she knew that if she agreed to become Amos’s wife that she would be settling. True, she would gain a prosperous farm and a nice house and a trio of well-behaved children, with the promise of more to come. But the fact remained that though there was much to respect about Amos, she didn’t love him. The thought of seeing that moon-shaped face and slightly cross-eyed stare over the table for breakfast, dinner, and supper sent a shiver rippling across her shoulders. Not to mention sharing a marriage bed with him. It was enough to make her throw her apron over her face and run screaming across Papa’s cornfield.


He deserves a wife who loves him, she told herself for the hundredth time. Her conscience thus soothed, Emma turned away from his mournful stare.


“That trunk goes in the front,” Maummi shouted from her chair on the porch. “Emma, show them where.”


Emma shrank against the gigantic hutch to give the men room to settle the trunk containing all of her belongings. An oiled canvas tarp had been secured over the top to repel any rain they might meet over the next week. Inside, resting on her dresses, aprons, bonnets, and kapps, was a bundle more precious to her than anything else in the wagon: a quilt, expertly and lovingly stitched, nestled within a heavy canvas pouch. Mama had made it with her own hands for Emma’s hope chest. The last stitch was bitten off just hours before she closed her eyes and stepped into the arms of her Lord.


Oh, Mama, if you were here you could convince Papa to let me stay home. I know you could. And now, without you, what will happen to me?


Yet, even in the midst of the dreary thought, a spark of hope flickered in the darkness in Emma’s heart. The future yawned before her like the endless Kansas prairie. Wasn’t there beauty to be found in the tall, blowing grasses of the open plain? Weren’t there cool streams and shady trees to offer respite from the heat of the day? Maybe Troyer would turn out to be an oasis.


“Emma!”


Maummi’s sharp tone cut through her musing. She jerked upright. Her grandmother appeared to have recovered from her heart episode. From the vantage point of her chair, she oversaw every movement with a critical eye.


“Yes, ma’am?”


“Mind what I said about that loading, girl. The food carton goes on last. We won’t want to search for provisions when we stop at night on the trail.”


An approving murmur rose from the women at the wisdom of an organized wagon.


“Yes, ma’am.” Emma exchanged a quick grin with Katie and then directed the man carrying a carton of canned goods and trail provisions to set his burden aside for now.


A little while later, after everything had been loaded and secured under an oiled canvas, the men stood around to admire their handiwork. Samuel even crawled beneath the wagon to check the support struts, and he pronounced everything to be “in apple-pie order.”


Emma felt a pluck on her arm. She turned to find Katie at her elbow.


“This is a gift for you.” Her friend pushed a small package into her hands. “It’s only a soft cloth and some fancy-colored threads. I was fixing to stitch you a design, but you’re so much better at fine sewing than I am that I figured you could make something prettier by yourself.” She ducked her head. “Think kindly of me when you do.”


Warmed by her friend’s gesture, Emma pulled her into an embrace. “I will. And I expect a letter from you soon.” She let Katie see her glance slide over to Samuel and back with a grin. “Especially when you have something exciting to report.”


A becoming blush colored the girl’s cheeks. “I will.”


Emma was still going down the line, awarding each woman a farewell hug, when Bishop Miller stepped up to the front of the wagon and motioned for attention.


“It’s time now to bid Jonas Switzer Godspeed and fair weather for his travels.” A kind smile curved his lips when he looked to Maummi and then to Emma. “And our prayers go with our sisters Marta and Emma as they make a new home in Troyer.”


He bowed his head and closed his eyes, a sign for everyone in the Apple Grove district to follow suit. Emma obeyed, fixing her thoughts on the blue skies overhead and the Almighty’s throne beyond. Silence descended, interrupted only by the snorts of oxen and a happy bird in the tall, leafy tree that gave shade to the porch.


What will I find in Troyer? A new home, as the bishop says? A fine Amish husband, as Papa wishes? I pray it be so. And I pray he will be the second son of his father so that he will come home with me to Apple Grove and take over Papa’s farm when the time comes.


A female sniffled behind her. Not Katie, but Rebecca. A twist inside Emma’s rib cage nearly sent tears to her eyes. Oh, how she would miss her sister when Rebecca left Troyer to return home with Papa. She vowed to make the most of their time together on the trail between here and there.


Bishop Miller ended the prayer with a blessing in High German, his hand on the head of the closest oxen. When the last word fell on the quiet crowd, Maummi’s voice sliced through the cool morning air. “Now that we’re seen off proper, someone help me up. We’ll be gone before the sun moves another inch across the sky.”


Though she’d proved earlier that she could make the leap herself at need, Maummi allowed Papa and the bishop to lift her into the wagon. She took her seat in her rocking chair, which was wedged between the covered hutch and one high side of the wagon bed. With a protective pat on the hutch, she settled her sewing basket at her feet and pulled a piece of mending onto her lap. No idle hands for Maummi. By the time they made Troyer, she’d have all the mending done, and the darning too, and a good start on a new quilt.


Emma spared one more embrace for Katie, steadfastly ignored Amos’s mournful stare, and allowed the bishop to help her up onto the bench seat. She scooted over to the far end to make room for Papa, and then Rebecca was lifted up to sit on the other side of him. A snug fit, but they would be okay for the six-day journey to Troyer. Emma settled her black dress and smoothed her apron.


“Now, Jonas, mind you what I said.” Maummi’s voice from behind their heads sounded a bit shrill in the quiet morning. “You cut a wide path around Hays. I’ll not have my granddaughters witness the ufrooish of those wild Englischers.”


On the other side of Papa, Rebecca heaved a loud sigh. Emma hid her grin. No doubt Rebecca would love to witness the rowdy riots of wild cowboy Englischers in the infamous railroad town of Hays.


Papa mumbled something under his breath that sounded like “This will be the longest journey of my life,” but aloud he said, “Ja, Mader.


With a flick of the rope, he urged the oxen forward. The wagon creaked and pitched as it rolled on its gigantic wheels. Emma grabbed the side of the bench with one hand and lifted her other hand in a final farewell as her home fell away behind her.