Saturday, August 04, 2007

Return To Me Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing RETURN TO ME byRobin Lee Hatcher

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Robin is the author of over fifty novels, including Catching Katie, named one of the Best Books of 2004 by Library Journal.

Winner of the Christy Award for Excellence in Christian Fiction, two RITA Awards for Best Inspirational Romance, and the RWA Lifetime Achievement Award.

Robin, who is also one of our CFBA members, lives in Boise, Idaho.





ABOUT THE BOOK: Discouraged and destitute, her dreams shattered, Roxy Burke is going home. But what lies beyond the front door?

Rejection...or a bright future?

A lot has changed since Roxy Burke escaped small town life to become a Nashville star. Her former boyfriend Wyatt has found Christ and plans to become a minister. Her sister Elena, who comforted Wyatt when Roxy ran away, is now his fiancee. Her father Jonathan, a successful businessman, is heartbroken over the estrangement of Roxy from the family.

Now Roxy...her inheritance from her grandmother squandered, her hopes of stardom dashed...finds her way home...not by choice but because it's her only option. Her father's love and forgiveness surprise her, but her very presence throws the contented Burke family into turmoil, filling Roxy with guilt and shame.

Elena is shocked to discover doubt and resentment in her heart after her father's easy acceptance of Roxy into the family circle. Wyatt wrestles with doubts about marrying Elena. And Roxy struggles to accept forgiveness. Isn't she more deserving of rejection? As the story of the prodigal plays out, each member of the Burke family must search for and accept God's grace.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

FIRST Tour: Bad Idea



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



This month's feature author(s) are:






and their book:



BAD IDEA a
novel (with coyotes)

(NavPress TH1NK Books, August 22, 2006)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(s):


Todd and Jedd Hafer previously teamed up to write Snickers from the
Front Pew: Confessions of Two Preacher's Kids
, which has now sold more than fifty thousand units.

Todd is editorial director for the inspirational book division at
Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, Missouri.

Jedd is director at The Children's Ark in Colorado Springs, Colorado, a
home for troubled teens, and travels the country as a standup
comedian.

Visit them at their website.

AND
NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:



Chapter 1

“We should totally drive!” Rhonda said, wagging a limp french fry for
emphasis.

I clenched my teeth. I hate it when adults try to talk like teenagers.
Rhonda does it all the time. Her efforts are particularly grating to me
because she does, in fact, employ the teen vernacular, but always,
always at least one season too late.

Thus, my father’s 28-year-old fiancée didn’t say “Congratulations!”
when I was inducted into Quill & Scroll (the National Honor Society for
high school journalists) early in my senior year. She said, “Big ups to
you, G!” And when I was named Honorable Mention All-Area in track and
field (small-school division), she didn’t say “Way to go!” She said, “Big
respect, G-Man! You got the mad wheels, homey!”

If she says, “I’m feelin’ you, dawg,” during one more of our
Dad-initiated dinnertime theological discussions, I’m going to puke on her shoes.

Fortunately for Rhonda, and all of the people at the Big Bear Diner on
the night the road trip was conceived, I didn’t barf when she said, “We
should totally drive!” I raised my eyes to the ceiling and said, “I
don’t think we should totally drive. I don’t even think we
should partially drive.”

I looked across the booth to my dad to accept the disapproving glare I
knew he would be offering. I smiled at him. It was my infuriating, smug
smile. I practice it in the bathroom mirror. It’s so irritating that
when I see my reflection doing it, I want to punch myself in the face.

My dad didn’t hit me. That wasn’t his style. He just nibbled his bottom
lip for a while before saying calmly, “I think we should give the idea
due consideration rather than reject it out of hand.”

“Okay,” I said, sipping my bitter iced tea, “let’s hear why we should
cram ourselves into a car and drive for, what, three or four days to
Southern California, stomping on each other’s raw nerves all along the way
and probably breaking down somewhere near the Kansas-Colorado border.
Or maybe getting in a wreck.”

Rhonda looked at my dad, giving him her Wounded Face, all droopy eyes
and puckered chin and poofed-out lower lip. You know the look.

He looked at her, then at me. “Griffin, please . . .”

“Okay, okay, okay—you’re right, you guys. Yeah, you know, now that I
consider The Rhonda Eccles-Someday-To-Be-Smith Plan carefully, it’s
sounding better. I mean, why would I want to enjoy a quick, economical, and
stress-free flight when we could all cram into a tired old vehicle and
drive? Let’s go with the option that means more time, more
money, more risks, more headaches.”

Rhonda tried to smile, but she couldn’t get the corners of her tiny
heart-shaped mouth to curl upward. “Well,” she said quietly, “I just
thought it would be bomb to make a road trip of it. See the country. Stop at
mom-and-pop diners, like the Big Bear here. Maybe spend a day in
Denver—hit an amusement park or catch a Rockies game. Griff, please be more
open-minded. Think of the time it would give us to kick it.”

“We talk now,” I observed.

“Yessss,” she said, drawing the word out as though it had sprung a slow
leak. She wrapped her long, slender fingers around her coffee mug and
took a sip. “But in the car, you wouldn’t be able to run away from the
convo whenever it got too intense for you.”

I pushed my chair back from the table and popped up like a piece of
toast. I was ready to wad my napkin and spike it like a football on the
table before marching out of the Big Bear. Then, only a half second
before the Great Napkin Spike, I realized that would be proving her point.

Rhonda was studying me. I scrolled my mind for options on saving face,
because since she had unofficially joined our family, I had lost more
face than Michael Jackson. But I scrolled in vain. My brain was nothing
but blank screen.

Now other patrons were watching me too. I could feel their stares. An
idea began to emerge. It wasn’t a good idea, but it was all I had, so I
went with it. I said, with an air of dignified indignation, “Well, I’m
going back to the buffet for another muffin. Would anybody else care
for one?”

This is why I’ll never be a politician, a courtroom litigator, a public
speaker—or a success in anything that requires more than a modicum of
human interaction. I have my moments, but rarely can I think on my feet
when I’m around people. Half the time, I can’t think off of ’em
either. Maybe this is why track is the only sport I’m good at. All you must
do is keep alternating left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot, and
turn left every once in a while. I found football and basketball too
taxing mentally. They say Larry Bird was a hoops legend because he could
foresee plays unfolding before they actually happened. So he always
executed the perfect pass, put himself in position for nearly every
rebound, stole inbounds passes at will. The game didn’t take him by
surprise. Not the case with me. I played organized basketball in junior high
and the first two years of high school. And every time I got a jump shot
swatted back in my face or ran into a hard pick, it was like a new,
albeit unpleasant, experience. So I became a track man. I run the 1600 and
3200 meters—that’s the mile and two-mile for those of you still
holding strong in the anti-metric resistance.

I should note that I’m also adequate in cross-country. I often panic
before races, though, because many of the courses are complicated. Even
after reading the maps posted near the starting line, I don’t understand
where I’ll be going. And you know those diagrams at big malls, the
ones that assure that YOU ARE HERE? I study them, stare at them. Then I
look around the actual mall and become convinced that the diagram has no
concept of where I am. The diagram is mighty presumptuous, if not
outright cruel and dishonest. How can it purport to know where I am? Half
the time, I don’t know that myself.

Luckily, at a mall I can always find some low-rise-jeans-wearing Mall
Girls to lead me to the Food Court, and in cross-country I can follow
the other runners. If I’d ever lead a race, I’d be in trouble, but this
was never a problem in four years of high school, so there’s no chance
it will be a problem in college. Assuming I can even make the team.
Sure, I did receive one of Lewis College’s supposedly prestigious
Scholar/Athlete scholarships, but I suspect it was part of some Be Kind to
Kansas White Boys quota system. I’m not convinced I won’t fold like a beach
chair during my first college race—or first final exam.

Anyway, I give Rhonda credit (or in Rhonda-speak, “mad props”) for not
snort-laughing at my pathetic muffin excuse. She said she could
“totally go for another blueberry” and smiled at me as I left the table.

When I returned, she waited as I carefully peeled the pale yellow
corrugated paper away from my muffin, then hers, being careful not to break
off the stumps. I hate when that happens. Destroys the integrity of the
muffin.

“Before you dis the driving idea,” Rhonda said after buttering her
muffin, “there’s something you should know.”

I looked at her and arched my eyebrows.

“I talked to Cole yesterday. He’s totally down with the plan. We can
drop him off at Boulder on the way to So-Cal. Think of the time you guys
will have together. You’ll really be able to kick it, ya know.”

I nodded toward my little brother. “What about Colby?”

“Yeah,” he said, wiping chocolate milk from his upper lip with his
shirtsleeve. “What about me?”

“You’ll stay at Aunt Nicole’s crib in Topeka, my little dude,” Rhonda
said cheerfully.

Colby crinkled his nose. “Crib? I’m not a stinkin’ baby! I’m five. I
won’t sleep in a crib!”

“Her house,” I clarified for Colby. “‘Crib’ is what they call
houses back in da ’hood where Rhonda is from. Rural Wisconsin.”

“Oh,” Colby said.

I looked to Dad for a scowl again, but he was busy patting Rhonda’s
hand and whispering reassurance to her.

“I’m just kidding, Rhonda,” I said without looking at her. “Don’t get
all sentimental. Hey, it was a good idea to call Cole. And if he’s ‘down
widdit,’ so am I.”

Rhonda’s eyes were moist, but now they were shining-hopeful moist, not
somber-moist. “So it’s a road trip then?” she said.

I sighed. It sounded like one of my dad’s sighs. Too long and too loud.
Heaven help me. “Sure,” I said, “why not.”

I was quiet on the drive home. All I could think of was how I was going
to talk Cole out of the trip. First, of course, I’d need to find
something to calm myself down so I wouldn’t go Rant City on him. He tends to
shut down when I do that. I hoped I hadn’t exhausted my supply of
vodka, that I still had a bottle or two tucked away in my sock drawer.
Otherwise I’d have to resort to NyQuil and Peppermint Artificial Flavoring
again. And let me tell you, that’s a rough way to get yourself mellow.
(Of course, it does provide the side benefits of the clearest nasal
passages and freshest breath in town.)

***

“What kind of Midwest mojo did Rhonda use on you?” I asked Cole as soon
as I heard his flat “Hullo?” on the other end of the phone line. “A
road trip with my dad and his cliché? I mean, this is a joke, right?”

I watched the seconds morph by on my LCD watch. After eighteen of them
passed, Cole said, “You need to relax, dude. The trip will be cool.
It’s more time together before we have to go our separate ways. And it’s a
real road trip—not just some one-day, there-and-back thing. We’ve
always talked about doing something like this, remember? To be honest, I
thought you’d be all over this thing.”

“But this isn’t a normal thing, Sharp. This isn’t going to St.
Louis to see the Cardinals at Busch, before they tore it down, with a
bunch of guys from school. There is a bona fide adult in the
equation—one-point-five if you count Rhonda. So it’s no longer a road trip; it’s
a chaperoned ordeal. You understand that there will be no hard music on
the CD player? No Hatebreed. No Gwar. Dad listens to only classical
and old-school rock. And Rhonda likes those guys who are like twenty
years old but sing like sixty-year-old opera stars. That crap freaks me
out, man. And there will be no mooning busloads of girls’ volleyball teams
along the way.”

“It’s not volleyball season yet,” Cole said. This was no attempt at a
snappy retort on his part. The way he said it, he was just pointing out
a fact, such as, “Augusta is the capital of Maine.”

I sensed I was losing the argument. “You won’t be able belch in the
car, or swear. My dad ‘abhors profanity.’ You know that.” I wondered if I
sounded as shrill and desperate as I felt.

“His ride, his rules. Besides, you like old-school rock, and it’s kinda
starting to grow on me.”

“Okay, but consider this: Before we go, my dad will make us circle up
and hold hands while he blesses the stupid SUV before the trip. And
since we’ll probably have to rent one of those small trailers to haul all
our stuff, he’ll probably get on a roll and bless that, too: ‘Father
God, please bless this little U-Haul and all of its contents.’ Those words
probably have never been uttered in the history of the English
language. And he’ll make a plea for ‘traveling mercies.’ Traveling mercies!
That sounds like the name of a really bad folk-rock group. Are you
understanding how all of this is going to go down?”

“Praying for our trip—I’m cool with that.”

“Did you hear me say we’ll have to hold hands?”

“Dude, I would hold hands with Rhonda any day. She’s a fly honey.”

“What about me? Or my dad?”

“The team held hands in football huddles all the time. It’s only a
problem if you’re insecure in your masculinity.”

I did my involuntary Dad-sigh again. “Okay, man. I guess it’s on,
then.”

It’s on, then? I wagged my head in disbelief. That was
something Rhonda would say. I don’t talk like that.

Thus, my father’s 28-year-old fiancée didn’t say “Congratulations!”
when I was inducted into Quill & Scroll (the National Honor Society for
high school journalists) early in my senior year. She said, “Big ups to
you, G!” And when I was named Honorable Mention All-Area in track and
field (small-school division), she didn’t say “Way to go!” She said, “Big
respect, G-Man! You got the mad wheels, homey!”

If she says, “I’m feelin’ you, dawg,” during one more of our
Dad-initiated dinnertime theological discussions, I’m going to puke on her shoes.

Fortunately for Rhonda, and all of the people at the Big Bear Diner on
the night the road trip was conceived, I didn’t barf when she said, “We
should totally drive!” I raised my eyes to the ceiling and said, “I
don’t think we should totally drive. I don’t even think we should
partially drive.”

I looked across the booth to my dad to accept the disapproving glare I
knew he would be offering. I smiled at him. It was my infuriating, smug
smile. I practice it in the bathroom mirror. It’s so irritating that
when I see my reflection doing it, I want to punch myself in the face.

My dad didn’t hit me. That wasn’t his style. He just nibbled his bottom
lip for a while before saying calmly, “I think we should give the idea
due consideration rather than reject it out of hand.”

“Okay,” I said, sipping my bitter iced tea, “let’s hear why we should
cram ourselves into a car and drive for, what, three or four days to
Southern California, stomping on each other’s raw nerves all along the way
and probably breaking down somewhere near the Kansas-Colorado border.
Or maybe getting in a wreck.”

Rhonda looked at my dad, giving him her Wounded Face, all droopy eyes
and puckered chin and poofed-out lower lip. You know the look.

He looked at her, then at me. “Griffin, please . . .”

“Okay, okay, okay—you’re right, you guys. Yeah, you know, now that I
consider The Rhonda Eccles-Someday-To-Be-Smith Plan carefully, it’s
sounding better. I mean, why would I want to enjoy a quick, economical, and
stress-free flight when we could all cram into a tired old vehicle and
drive? Let’s go with the option that means more time, more money, more
risks, more headaches.”

Rhonda tried to smile, but she couldn’t get the corners of her tiny
heart-shaped mouth to curl upward. “Well,” she said quietly, “I just
thought it would be bomb to make a road trip of it. See the country. Stop at
mom-and-pop diners, like the Big Bear here. Maybe spend a day in
Denver—hit an amusement park or catch a Rockies game. Griff, please be more
open-minded. Think of the time it would give us to kick it.”

“We talk now,” I observed.

“Yessss,” she said, drawing the word out as though it had sprung a slow
leak. She wrapped her long, slender fingers around her coffee mug and
took a sip. “But in the car, you wouldn’t be able to run away from the
convo whenever it got too intense for you.”

I pushed my chair back from the table and popped up like a piece of
toast. I was ready to wad my napkin and spike it like a football on the
table before marching out of the Big Bear. Then, only a half second
before the Great Napkin Spike, I realized that would be proving her point.

Rhonda was studying me. I scrolled my mind for options on saving face,
because since she had unofficially joined our family, I had lost more
face than Michael Jackson. But I scrolled in vain. My brain was nothing
but blank screen.

Now other patrons were watching me too. I could feel their stares. An
idea began to emerge. It wasn’t a good idea, but it was all I had, so I
went with it. I said, with an air of dignified indignation, “Well, I’m
going back to the buffet for another muffin. Would anybody else care
for one?”

This is why I’ll never be a politician, a courtroom litigator, a public
speaker—or a success in anything that requires more than a modicum of
human interaction. I have my moments, but rarely can I think on my feet
when I’m around people. Half the time, I can’t think off of ’em
either. Maybe this is why track is the only sport I’m good at. All you must
do is keep alternating left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot, and
turn left every once in a while. I found football and basketball too
taxing mentally. They say Larry Bird was a hoops legend because he could
foresee plays unfolding before they actually happened. So he always
executed the perfect pass, put himself in position for nearly every
rebound, stole inbounds passes at will. The game didn’t take him by
surprise. Not the case with me. I played organized basketball in junior high
and the first two years of high school. And every time I got a jump shot
swatted back in my face or ran into a hard pick, it was like a new,
albeit unpleasant, experience. So I became a track man. I run the 1600 and
3200 meters—that’s the mile and two-mile for those of you still
holding strong in the anti-metric resistance.

I should note that I’m also adequate in cross-country. I often panic
before races, though, because many of the courses are complicated. Even
after reading the maps posted near the starting line, I don’t understand
where I’ll be going. And you know those diagrams at big malls, the
ones that assure that YOU ARE HERE? I study them, stare at them. Then I
look around the actual mall and become convinced that the diagram has no
concept of where I am. The diagram is mighty presumptuous, if not
outright cruel and dishonest. How can it purport to know where I am? Half
the time, I don’t know that myself.

Luckily, at a mall I can always find some low-rise-jeans-wearing Mall
Girls to lead me to the Food Court, and in cross-country I can follow
the other runners. If I’d ever lead a race, I’d be in trouble, but this
was never a problem in four years of high school, so there’s no chance
it will be a problem in college. Assuming I can even make the team.
Sure, I did receive one of Lewis College’s supposedly prestigious
Scholar/Athlete scholarships, but I suspect it was part of some Be Kind to
Kansas White Boys quota system. I’m not convinced I won’t fold like a beach
chair during my first college race—or first final exam.

Anyway, I give Rhonda credit (or in Rhonda-speak, “mad props”) for not
snort-laughing at my pathetic muffin excuse. She said she could
“totally go for another blueberry” and smiled at me as I left the table.

When I returned, she waited as I carefully peeled the pale yellow
corrugated paper away from my muffin, then hers, being careful not to break
off the stumps. I hate when that happens. Destroys the integrity of the
muffin.

“Before you dis the driving idea,” Rhonda said after buttering her
muffin, “there’s something you should know.”

I looked at her and arched my eyebrows.

“I talked to Cole yesterday. He’s totally down with the plan. We can
drop him off at Boulder on the way to So-Cal. Think of the time you guys
will have together. You’ll really be able to kick it, ya know.”

I nodded toward my little brother. “What about Colby?”

“Yeah,” he said, wiping chocolate milk from his upper lip with his
shirtsleeve. “What about me?”

“You’ll stay at Aunt Nicole’s crib in Topeka, my little dude,” Rhonda
said cheerfully.

Colby crinkled his nose. “Crib? I’m not a stinkin’ baby! I’m five. I
won’t sleep in a crib!”

“Her house,” I clarified for Colby. “‘Crib’ is what they call houses
back in da ’hood where Rhonda is from. Rural Wisconsin.”

“Oh,” Colby said.

I looked to Dad for a scowl again, but he was busy patting Rhonda’s
hand and whispering reassurance to her.

“I’m just kidding, Rhonda,” I said without looking at her. “Don’t get
all sentimental. Hey, it was a good idea to call Cole. And if he’s ‘down
widdit,’ so am I.”

Rhonda’s eyes were moist, but now they were shining-hopeful moist, not
somber-moist. “So it’s a road trip then?” she said.

I sighed. It sounded like one of my dad’s sighs. Too long and too loud.
Heaven help me. “Sure,” I said, “why not.”

I was quiet on the drive home. All I could think of was how I was going
to talk Cole out of the trip. First, of course, I’d need to find
something to calm myself down so I wouldn’t go Rant City on him. He tends to
shut down when I do that. I hoped I hadn’t exhausted my supply of
vodka, that I still had a bottle or two tucked away in my sock drawer.
Otherwise I’d have to resort to NyQuil and Peppermint Artificial Flavoring
again. And let me tell you, that’s a rough way to get yourself mellow.
(Of course, it does provide the side benefits of the clearest nasal
passages and freshest breath in town.)

***

“What kind of Midwest mojo did Rhonda use on you?” I asked Cole as soon
as I heard his flat “Hullo?” on the other end of the phone line. “A
road trip with my dad and his cliché? I mean, this is a joke, right?”

I watched the seconds morph by on my LCD watch. After eighteen of them
passed, Cole said, “You need to relax, dude. The trip will be cool.
It’s more time together before we have to go our separate ways. And it’s a
real road trip—not just some one-day, there-and-back thing. We’ve
always talked about doing something like this, remember? To be honest, I
thought you’d be all over this thing.”

“But this isn’t a normal thing, Sharp. This isn’t going to St. Louis to
see the Cardinals at Busch, before they tore it down, with a bunch of
guys from school. There is a bona fide adult in the
equation—one-point-five if you count Rhonda. So it’s no longer a road trip; it’s a
chaperoned ordeal. You understand that there will be no hard music on the CD
player? No Hatebreed. No Gwar. Dad listens to only classical and
old-school rock. And Rhonda likes those guys who are like twenty years old but
sing like sixty-year-old opera stars. That crap freaks me out, man.
And there will be no mooning busloads of girls’ volleyball teams along
the way.”

“It’s not volleyball season yet,” Cole said. This was no attempt at a
snappy retort on his part. The way he said it, he was just pointing out
a fact, such as, “Augusta is the capital of Maine.”

I sensed I was losing the argument. “You won’t be able belch in the
car, or swear. My dad ‘abhors profanity.’ You know that.” I wondered if I
sounded as shrill and desperate as I felt.

“His ride, his rules. Besides, you like old-school rock, and it’s kinda
starting to grow on me.”

“Okay, but consider this: Before we go, my dad will make us circle up
and hold hands while he blesses the stupid SUV before the trip. And
since we’ll probably have to rent one of those small trailers to haul all
our stuff, he’ll probably get on a roll and bless that, too: ‘Father
God, please bless this little U-Haul and all of its contents.’ Those words
probably have never been uttered in the history of the English
language. And he’ll make a plea for ‘traveling mercies.’ Traveling mercies!
That sounds like the name of a really bad folk-rock group. Are you
understanding how all of this is going to go down?”

“Praying for our trip—I’m cool with that.”

“Did you hear me say we’ll have to hold hands?”

“Dude, I would hold hands with Rhonda any day. She’s a fly honey.”

“What about me? Or my dad?”

“The team held hands in football huddles all the time. It’s only a
problem if you’re insecure in your masculinity.”

I did my involuntary Dad-sigh again. “Okay, man. I guess it’s on,
then.”

It’s on, then? I wagged my head in disbelief. That was something Rhonda
would say. I don’t talk like that.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

To Dance in the Desert Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing TO DANCE IN THE DESERT
(RiverOak, May 1, 2007) by Kathleen Popa.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Raised in the American Southwest, Kathleen began her love affair with the desert as a child. Before becoming a writer she, among other jobs, worked in both the juvenile facility fro incarcerated girls and a home for emotionally disturved children. Mother of two, sh lives in Northern California with her husband and youngest son. Visit her blog, Reading, Writing, and What Else is There? She is a member of the CFBA, too! Give her a holler!










ABOUT THE BOOK: “Not a safe world.” How many times had she heard it over and over again? Well, it is not a safe world and Dara Murphy Brogan knew it better than most, which is exactly why she had tucked herself away on a desert mountaintop. Now it was just her, the voice inside her head and the boxes of hastily packed odds and ends—all that was left of her pathetic excuse of a life. Hadn’t she chosen the desert because it was barren and brown and dead looking and far, far away from anyone who may have seen the news?

So what was this, this trespasser, this interloper, this wacked out earth mother doing dancing outside her window? Celebrating life and the Spirit in a way Dara never could have dreamed. Until she opened her door and met Jane Cameron.

A book that makes me laugh is a joy, a book that makes me cry is a rarity. But a book that moves me to dance is sublime. To Dance in the Desert is a spectacular experience. Beautifully written, deeply moving, and warmly engaging—that this is Kathleen Popa’s first novel astounds me. That she will quickly be counted among the top caliber of Christian novelists delights me. I simply loved this book.
~Kathryn Mackel, Author of The Hidden

Kathleen Popa creates a compelling vision of a small community’s power to coax waning spirits back toward life. This gem of a novel worked on me like a dream. Popa’s evocative prose captured the nuance and complexity of transformation with equal parts mystery and truth. She conjures the deserts of Dara Brogan’s life with intimate clarity, reminding us along the way of the profound strength of what we take far too much for granted—the deep friendship of kindred spirits. This is a journey worth taking.
~Jeff Berryman, Author of Leaving Ruin

Saturday, July 21, 2007

One Step Over the Border Blog Tour


This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing ONE STEP OVER THE BORDER (Center Street June 12, 2007) by Stephen Bly

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: <Stephen Bly is a pastor, a mayor, an antique Winchester gun collector and a writer.

He's mayor of a town of 308 in the mountains of Idaho, on the Nez Perce Indian Reservation. In his spare time, he pursues the three R's of ridin', ropin' and rodeo...and construction of Broken Arrow Crossing, a false-front western village near his home.

That keeps him very western. And he collect old Winchester rifles, which reflects his love of historical accuracy. He's also a fan of Jimmy Buffet music.

Stephen says about his writing, "I write about the West (historic or modern) from the inside. Born and raised on western ranches, I have both the heart and mind to describe things as they really were...and are. There are those who think the frontier has long passed and with it the ‘code of the west.’ The truth is, both are still around...and it’s fun to show that in a contemporary story. The West is so big, so diverse, so enchanting it’s a thrill to write about it in any era."

Stephen is the author of ninety-five books and hundreds of articles.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
It’s a romp...

A road adventure...

It’s a buddy story with romantic comedy!!

Some call it CowboyLit. Rodeo cowboy Hap Bowman’s on a search for Juanita, the gal of his dreams, whom he hasn’t seen in 18 years. He seems stuck on 12-years-old and the enchanting girl he met then."

An idiot obsession," his roping partner, Laramie Majors, chides.

But Laramie agrees to a final summer’s trek along the Rio Grande. If they don’t find Juanita during those months, Hap promises to drop the idea of the hunt for the mystery senorita. But if they find her, will she feel the same as Hap does about their years ago interlude?

In One Step Over The Border the time tested values of cowboys rub up against contemporary mores. It’s a crazy story that becomes more logical as the reader delves deeper into it. It will make you laugh and shed a tear or two.

Getting back to Hap’s pursuit . . . don’t we all have someone in the past, that we knew for only a short while, that we wish we could have known better, longer? Stephen Bly has!. So when Hap and Laramie ventured out on a quest for Hap’s Juanita, Stephen decided to invite others to go along too. Folks have been e-mailing Hap hapandlaramie@yahoo.com and asking for their own “Juanita Search Kits.”

They get a bumper sticker, magnet, bookmark, stickers, flyers, etc. It’s a whole packet of material that will equip anyone to join the fun of finding the Juanita with “the mark of God.” If they send Hap a picture of the places where they stuck their Juanita signs, they’ll receive a free copy of the book. It’s all there on the website at http://www.onestepovertheborder.com/

And there’s a very special feature on http://www.amazon.com/...some more adventures about Hap and Laramie that did NOT appear in the book, can be found on AmazonShorts in the story entitled, Aim Low, Shoot High.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Fearless Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing FEARLESS (Bethany House, July 1, 2007) by Robin Parrish.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Robin Parrish had two great ambitions in his life: to have a family, and to be a published novelist.

In March of 2005, he proposed to his future wife the same week he signed his first book contract.Born Michael Robin Parrish on October 13, 1975, Robin's earliest writing efforts took place on a plastic, toy typewriter, and resulted in several "books" (most between 10 and 30 pages long) and even a few magazines.

By the age of thirteen, he had begun winning local writing awards and became a regular in his high school's literary magazine. In college, he garnered acclaim from his English professors and fellow students while maturing and honing his skills.

After college, he entered the writing profession through a "side door" -- the Internet. More than ten years he spent writing for various websites, including About.com, CMCentral.com, and his current project Infuze Magazine, which is a unique intersection between art and faith which he also conceived of and created.

One of his more "high concept" ideas for Infuze was to return to his love for storytelling and create a serialized tale that would play out every two weeks, telling a complete, compelling story over the course of nine months. That serialized story eventually came to the attention of several publishers, who saw it as a potential debut novel for Robin Parrish.

In 2005, Bethany House Publishers brought Robin full circle by contracting him for the rights to not only that first book, Relentless -- but two sequels. A trilogy, to unfold in the consecutive summers of 2006, 2007, and 2008. One massive tale -- of which that first, original story would form only the foundational first volume of the three -- spread across three books.

Robin is the Editor in Chief and creator of Infuze Magazine. He and his wife Karen reside in High Point, North Carolina. Karen works for High Point's First Wesleyan Church, where Robin and Karen are members and Small Group leaders.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Book Two of the Dominion Trilogy:The world changed after that terrible day when the sky burned, and now every heart is gripped by fear...

Earthquakes, fire, disease, and floods pummel the earth, and its citizens watch in horror.

But in the darkness there is hope -- an anonymous but powerful hero whom the public dubs "Guardian." He is Grant Borrows, one of a chosen few who walk the earth with extraordinary powers. But while Grant enjoys this new life, signs of a dangerous ancient prophecy begin coming true, and those closest to Grant worry he may be hiding a terrible secret.

A search for answers brings Grant and his friends to London, where an extraordinary discovery awaits that will challenge everything they thought they knew. With a deadly new enemy dogging his steps, Grant realizes that the world's only hope may come from unraveling the truth about himself once and for all. But what he comes face-to-face with leaves even this most powerful of men shaken with fear.

Secrets will be revealed.

Friends will make the ultimate sacrifice.

And destiny will not be denied.

The story continues...

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Wedding Bell Blues Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Wedding Bell Blues (Avon Inspire 2007) byLinda Windsor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Linda, a native of Maryland's Eastern Shore, is the author of eighteen historical novels and nine contemporary romances for both the secular and Christian market. A Christy Award finalist, Linda has received numerous awards in both the ABA and CBA, including the Romantic Writers of America's Beacon Award. She lives in Salisbury, Maryland. Learn more!





ABOUT THE BOOK:
Wedding Bell Blues is the first in a new series, The Piper Cove Chronicles, that follows four women who grew up as best friends in a small community on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. They have returned home from their successes and failures at college and life, determined to pursue their dreams in the town they'd once vowed to leave in the dust. True love has eluded the four friends until one by one they encounter their soul mate. Next in the series is FOR PETE'S SAKE, on sale from Avon Inspire in April 2008.

Alex Butler is a successful home decorator who hopes she has finally gotten her life together. But when Josh Turner, the man who ran away and broke her heart sixteen years ago, returns to Piper Cove to be the best man in her sister's wedding, Alex can't escape the butterflies in her stomach. But Alex has no time for distractions. Her family has enlisted her to make this the wedding of the century. To pull the event off, she pools the talents of her three best friends - Jan, who creates desserts to-die-for will help with the cake and catering, tomboy Ellen, who works at a landscaping business will handle the flowers and decorations, and Sue Ann, who can…well, Suzie Q can give Alex a much-needed reality check in the course of the wedding planning chaos.

But fate won't be stopped in this small town as Alex and Josh keep running into each other at every turn. When sparks fly, Alex soon finds herself caught in a paralyzing battle of the heart between her old-fashioned Southern father, who fiercely resents Josh for breaking his little girl's heart, and her feelings for the one man she ever truly loved.

As the wedding approaches, the Butler family faces a threat to their reputation that will shake this Chesapeake clan to their very core. In the midst of it all, can Alex and Josh resist the many forces that seem to be drawing them together?

Read an excerpt

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Island Inferno Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing ISLAND INFERNO by Chuck Holton

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Chuck served four years in the Elite 75th Ranger Regiment–the same unit profiled in the movie “Black Hawk Down.” Chuck saw combat in Panama in 1989. After leaving active duty, Chuck flew helicopters in the Wisconsin National Guard while attending the University of Wisconsin.

In 2004, after ten years as a stockbroker, Chuck left that profession to pursue full-time writing. At the same time, he began working as the "Adventure Correspondent" for CBN.

He is the author of five books, including A More Elite Soldier, Bulletproof, andAllah's Fire, the first of three books in the Task Force Valor series.Today, Chuck, Connie, and their five children live on a farm in Appalachia, where Chuck now pursues his varied interests of farming, writing, adventure travel and public speaking, among other things.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
TASK FORCE VALOR
EXPLOSIVE ORDINANCE DISPOSAL--THE BOMB SQUAD
As the global war on terror heats up, the U.S. deploys a team of highly trained special operators overseas to locate and neutralize threats, bringing EOD expertise to dangerous missions that have no room for error.
A DEADLY EXPLOSION
A new specialty explosive is on the black market: ITEB looks like water, but when it's exposed to air, the effects are lethal! The United States government is frantic to keep it from our shores. Staff Sergeant Euripides "Rip" Rubio knows how destructive ITEB can be. He has already risked his life to thwart a horrific terrorist plot involving the chemical. Now Task Force Valor heads to Panama, on the trail of an arms dealer who plans to use ITEB to make a killing...literally.
AN ADVENTURE ABROAD
Fernanda Lerida is a University of Florida grad student who jumps at the chance to join a biological expedition to a mysterious former prison island. But the snakes, bugs, and crocodiles are soon the least of her worries as the group stumbles upon something they were not meant to see. To Make matters worse, Fernanda soon finds herself alone and being pursued by an unseen foe.
A RISKY RESCUE
When Rip's path collides with Fernanda's, they find themselves caught in the midst of a brutal turf war. Can they use the chaos to their advantage, or will one false step set the entire island ablaze?

"Island Inferno is a boy-meets-girl story. But in Chuck Holton's world, boy meets girl in the middle of a jungle at 25mph. hanging under a parachute with an assault rifle strapped across his chest. You'd better plan on reading this in one sitting. And once you're done, you'd better give yourself time for your pulse to calm down."----TOM MORRISEY, Author of Deep Blue, and Dark Fathom

Sunday, July 01, 2007

FIRST: Coral Moon by Brandilyn Collins



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




This month's feature is:




and her book:


Coral
Moon


(Zondervan, 2007)

ABOUT THE
AUTHOR:


Brandilyn
Collins
is the bestselling author of Violet Dawn, Web Of Lies,
Dead of Night, Stain of Guilt, Brink of Death, and Eyes of Elisha

just to name a few.

Brandilyn and her family divide their time between the California Bay
Area and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.

She maintains an informative blog called Forensics and Faith
where she daily dispenses wisdom on writing, life, and the Christian book
industry.

Brandilyn also hosts the blog Kanner Lake: Scenes and Beans
where you can read entertaining and eclectic posts about life in Kanner
Lake from Bailey, Wilbur, S-Man, Jake, and other of your favorite
characters from the Java Joint. Coral Moon is
the second book in the Kanner Lake Series.


AND
NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:



Chapter 1


Kill tonight—or die.

The words burned, hot acid eating through his eyes, his brain. Right
down to his soul.

Only a crazy person would obey.

He slapped both hands to his ears, squeezed hard against his head.
Screwed his eyes shut. He hung there, cut off from the world, snagged on
the life sounds of his body. The whoosh of breath, the beat of his heart.

The words boiled.

His skull hurt. He pulled his hands away, let them fall. The kitchen
spun. He dropped into a chair, bent forward, and breathed deeply until
the dizziness passed.

He sat up, looked again to the table.

The note lay upon the unfolded Kanner Lake Times newspaper, each word
horrific against the backdrop of a coral crescent moon.

How did they get in here?

What a stupid question. As if they lacked stealth, as if mere walls and
locked entrances could keep them out. He’d been down the hall in the
bedroom watching TV, door wide open, yet had heard nothing. Hadn’t even
sensed their presence as he pushed off the bed and walked to the
kitchen for some water.

A chill blew over his feet.

His eyes bugged, then scanned the room. Over white refrigerator and oak
cabinets, wiped-down counters and empty sink. To the threshold of the
kitchen and into the hallway. There his gaze lingered as the chill
worked up to his ankles.

It had to be coming from the front of the house.

His skin oozed sweat, a web of sticky fear spinning down over him.
Trembling, he pulled himself out of the chair. He clung to the smooth table
edge, ensuring his balance. Then, heart beating in his throat, he
forced himself across the floor, around the corner, and toward the front
door.

It hung open a few inches.

They were taunting him.

He approached, hands up and fingers spread, as if pushing through
phantoms. Sounds of the night wafted on the frigid air—the rustle of breeze
through tree limbs, distant car tires singing against pavement. He
reached the door, peered around it, knowing he was a fool to seek sign of
them. The air smelled crisp, tanged with the purity of pine trees. The
last vestiges of snow dusted his porch, bearing the tracks of his
footprints alone.

He closed the door and locked it. As if that would do any good. He
sagged against the wall, defeated and sick. How stupid to think they would
leave him in peace. Hadn’t he seen this coming? All the events of the
last few months . . .

Shoulders drawn, he made his way back to the kitchen and his inevitable
fate. Each footstep drew him away from the life he’d built, reasoning
and confidence seeping from him like blood from a fatal wound. His
conscience pulsed at what he had to do.

The message sat on his table, an executioner beckoning victim to the
noose. He fell into the chair, wiped his forehead with the back of his
hand. He read the words, fresh nausea rising in his stomach. No
misunderstanding their commands. They had a chess score to settle. He was their
pawn.

He pushed back against the chair, arms crossed and hugging himself, the
way he used to do as a boy. Dully, he stared at the window, seeing
only his own pitiable reflection. For a long time he watched himself,
first transfixed in fright, then with the evolving expression of
self-preservation.

If he just did this one thing, his debt would be paid. They’d leave him
alone.

For another hour...two…he sat, forcing down the queasiness as he
thought through dozens of details. How he should do it. What could go wrong.

By the time he rose near midnight, he’d laid his plans.

Gathering the necessary items, shrugging on a coat, he slipped out into
the cold and soulless night.




Copyright 2007 by
Brandilyn Collins.

Used by permission of
Zondervan.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

The Divine Appointment Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing THE DIVINE APPOINTMENT
(Howard Books June 5, 2007) by Jerome Teel

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Jerome Teel is a graduate of Union University, where he received his JD, cum laude, from the Ole Miss School of Law. He is actively involved in his church, local charities, and youth sports.

He has always loved legal-suspense novels and is a political junkie. He is also the author of The Election, another political thriller that we reviewed November of '06.

Jerome and his wife, Jennifer, have three children...Brittney, Trey, and Matthew...and they reside in Tennessee where he practices law and is at work on a new novel.

You could visit Jerome at his Website, or at his blog Christian Political Blog.


ABOUT THE BOOK:

"They aren't hiding just one something, but a bunch of somethings..."Small town southern lawyer, Elijah Faulkner is a dying breed...an attorney that actually takes pleasure in fighting injustice by working hard for the little guy. But when he takes on a case to defend a philandering doctor with a pregnant wife in a seemingly open-and-shut murder trial, Eli is not so sure he is on the 'right' side.

Back in Washington D.C., supreme Court Justice Martha Robinson has died, presenting an unprecedented opportunity for conservative President Richard Wallace to impact the direction of the highest court in the land. He believes God put him in the presidency for just such a time as this...to make a Divine Appointment. Not everyone is thrilled with the president's nominee, however. And some will stop at nothing, including murder, to prevent his confirmation by the Senate.

A lobbyist with a vendetta, a small-time Mafioso, an investigative reporter with a Watergate complex, and a powerful Washington political machine combine to create a fast-paced suspense novel that explores the anatomy of a murder, and the ripple effect that it creates across the country.

"Jerome Teel has crafted an intriguing political thriller...nice twists and turns to keep you reading. he paints vivid mental pictures that bring characters and locales to life."--Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee's 7th District

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Reluctant Runaway Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing RELUCTANT RUNAWAY (Multnomah, March 2007) by Jill Nelson

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Jill Elizabeth Nelson is a member of the CFBA. Her blog, Artistic Blogger, addresses issues about art, art theft, antiquities preservation, and the art of fiction writing. She takes art seriously - when she's not having fun with it, that is. The To Catch a Thief Series combines her love of the written word with her love of other art forms.

The first in the series was Reluctant Burglar , second is Reluctant Runaway. In January 2008, she will reveal the third book, Reluctant Smuggler. Jill is thrilled if the adventures that spill from her imagination can raise awareness about art theft - deemed "a looming criminal enterprise" by the FBI. Jill and her husband, Doug, have four children and live in Minnesota.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Stolen Indian artifacts...A murdered museum guard…

A missing woman…A baby in danger…

Only Desiree can unearth the horrifying secret that links them all.

Museum security expert Desiree Jacobs doesn’t mean to get in danger’s path. Really she doesn’t. But when a friend is in trouble you don’t just walk away. No matter what your overprotective FBI agent boyfriend says! So when Desi and Tony’s date at a presidential ball is interrupted by a frantic Maxine Webb, Desi doesn’t hesitate to jump in.

Soon Desi is neck-deep in a confusing array of villains. Did Max’s niece run away or was she taken? Is she still alive or the victim of a perverse ritual? And who wants her infant son–and why?

Then Tony’s organized crime case collides with Desi’s investigation, throwing them both into the path of something dark and sinister. Something that craves blood...

From the streets of Desi’s beloved Boston to the mountain desert of New Mexico, Desi and Tony must rely on God to thwart unseen forces–and save a young woman and her baby from a villain more evil than any of them can imagine.

"A fresh voice, strong heroine, and unique plot make Reluctant Runaway a can't-put-down read. Jill Elizabeth Nelson is an author to watch in the realm of romantic suspense!"
----SUSAN MAY WARREN award-winning author of In Sheep's Clothing

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

As I Have Loved You Blog Tour

This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
As I Have Loved You
(Revell June 1, 2007)
by
Nikki Arana
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Nikki Arana is an award-winning author of highly-acclaimed inspirational women's fiction who weaves today's social, political, and spiritual issues into her novels. She has received numerous awards, including the Excellence in Media 2007 Silver Angel Award for The Winds of Sonoma.

The book was based on the true love story of how Nikki met her future husband Antonio as he was cleaning the stalls of her parents' Arabian horses. Nikki and Antonio have been married for over thirty years, have two grown sons, and live in Idaho.









ABOUT THE BOOK:
Contemporary Struggles...
...A Single Mom and College-Ages Son.

Leigh Scott is a widowed, single mother who wants the best for her son Jeff. She would like him to graduate from college, land a secure job, and start a family. However, Jeff, who was diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) at a young age, has a God-given compassion for people. And his non-judgemental acceptance of all has unintended consequences.

Jeff starts dating Jessica, a girl with a questionable past and seemingly non-existent future. Soon, Jeff's grades drop as quickly as his sober determination to achieve the goals he's worked toward all his life, and Leigh finds herself caught ina relational tornado

To complicate matters further, Leigh is an author with a looming book deadline, a father battling cancer, and her former boyfriend and first love, a strong Christian Native American, coming back in her life.

Arana weaves a multi-layered, emotional family saga that brings the peril of judgement, the need for forgiveness and the gift of love to light

"Nikki Arana wrings the heart and exalts the soul."
---Romantic Times

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Diva NashVegas Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing DIVA NASHVEGAS (Thomas Nelson May 8, 2007) by Rachel Hauck

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Rachel is the author of many books. Her current release, Diva NashVegas is the second in a series which began with Lost in NashVegas. She is also a Blogger and a CFBA member! She lives in Florida with her husband. Visit her great profile and learn more.






ABOUT THE BOOK:
Even if you are not a lover of country music, you can enjoy this fun look at the Nashville entertainment industry.

What do you do when the past you’ve been skirting shows up at your door with cameras rolling?

Aubrey James ruled the charts as the queen of country for over a decade. She’d rocketed to fame in the shadow of her parents’ death-both of them pioneers in Gospel music. But while her public life, high profile romances, and fights with Music Row execs made for juicy tabloid headlines, the real and private Aubrey has remained a media mystery.

When a former band member betrays Aubrey’s trust and sells an "exclusive" to a tabloid, the star knows she must go public with her story. But Aubrey’s private world is rocked when the Inside NashVegas interviewer is someone from her past-someone she’d hoped to forget.

All the moxie in the world won’t let this Diva run any longer.

"Hauck once again takes us into the country music world, this time through the experiences of mega-star Aubrey James. Aubrey's life journey is filled with flaws, as well as a great deal of joy, and real life locales makes this highly original story authentic. The extra tidbits - from Aubrey's liner notes to quotes from the "media" at the beginning of the chapters - add extra sparkle to the plot."

- 4 Stars, Melissa Parcel, Romantic Times Book Club

Saturday, June 09, 2007

These Boots Weren't Made For Walking Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing These Boots Weren't Made for Walking (WATERBROOK Press June 19, 2007) by Melody Carlson

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Melody Carlson has published over 100 books for adults, children, and teens, including On This Day, Finding Alice, the Notes from a Spinning Planet series, and Homeward, which won the Rita Award from Romance Writers of America. She and her husband, the parents of two grown sons, make their home near the Cascade Mountains in Central Oregon. Melody is a full-time writer as well as an avid gardener, biker, skier, and hiker.






ABOUT THE BOOK:
Willing to make the necessary sacrifices–even skipping the occasional latte–to ensure career success, 31-year-old Cassidy Cantrell "invests" in a chic pair of boots, certain they’ll make a spectacular impression and help seal the deal on a long-anticipated promotion from her Seattle employer.

But reality tromps all over her expectations. Cassie’s job is abruptly eliminated–and her love life obliterated, when her longtime boyfriend dumps her for a "friend." Her self-esteem in tatters, Cassie limps home to the resort town she once so eagerly fled–only to find her recently divorced mother transformed into a gorgeous fifty-something babe with a thriving social life. Cassie wrestles with envy and apathy as she considers the dismal shape of her own physique and romantic prospects. What will it take for her to jump back into life and regain her stride?

This sassy and hilarious novel leads readers on a romp through the wilds of relationships, romance, career, and spirituality, revealing that, while God’s plans may look drastically different than our own, it’ll always be a perfect fit.

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Spirit of Sweetgrass Blog Tour

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing SPIRIT OF SWEETGRASS Integrity/Thomas Nelson (March 6, 2007) by Nicole Seitz

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

NICOLE SEITZ is a South Carolina Lowcountry native and freelance writer/illustrator published in South Carolina Magazine, Charleston Magazine, House Calls, The Island Packet and The Bluffton Packet.

A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Journalism, she also has a bachelor's degree in illustration from Savannah College of Art & Design. Nicole is an exhibiting artist in the Charleston, South Carolina area where she owns a web design firm and lives with her husband and two small children.

ABOUT THE BOOK:

Essie Mae Laveau Jenkins is a 78-year-old sweetgrass basket weaver who sits on the side of Hwy. 17 in the company of her dead husband, Daddy Jim.

Inspired by her Auntie Leona, Essie Mae finally discovers her calling in life and weaves powerful "love baskets," praying fervently over them to affect the lives of those who visit her roadside stand.

Relations are strained with her daughter Henrietta, who thinks Essie belongs in a retirement center. If Essie can't pay $10,000 in back taxes to save her home, she may have no choice. More tensions: her grandson EJ wants to marry a white girl, Essie discovers that a handsome man she's trying to find a girl for is gay, and her daughter carries a hidden secret.

When she's faced with losing her home and her stand and being put in a nursing home, Daddy Jim talks her into coming on up to Heaven to meet sweet Jesus-something she's always wanted to do.

The SPIRIT OF SWEETGRASS shifts less successfully to the afterlife, where her Gullah-Creole ancestors surround her; but soon, her heavenly peace is disrupted, for she still has work to do. Now Essie Mae, who once felt powerless and invisible, must find the strength within her to keep her South Carolina family from falling apart. Together, with Daddy Jim, they team up to return to Earth and battle two spirits conjured up by Henrietta's voodoo that threatens to ruin an attempt to save the sweetgrass basket weaving culture.

FIRST Post: Prints Charming by Rebeca Seitz


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




This month's feature is:


Rebeca
Seitz


and her book:


PRINTS
CHARMING


(Thomas Nelson Publishers, March 15, 2007)



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Rebeca Seitz is Founder
and President of Glass Road Public Relations. An author for several
years, Rebeca cut her publicity teeth as the first dedicated publicist for
the fiction division of
Thomas Nelson Publishers. In 2005, Rebeca resigned from WestBow and opened the doors of GRPR, the only publicity
firm of its kind in the country dedicated solely to representing
novelists writing from a Christian worldview. Rebeca has worked with such
esteemed authors as
Robin Jones Gunn, Ted Dekker, Frank Peretti, Walter Wangerin, Jr., DiAnn Mills, Brandilyn Collins, Colleen
Coble
, Melody Carlson, and numerous others. She
has secured coverage for novelists in a variety of media outlets,
including
The Today Show, USA Today, Chicago Sun-Times, Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
, Publishers Weekly,
Christian Retailing, Aspiring Retail, Southern
Living
, Daystar Television, HarvestTV, WAY-FM, K-LOVE, and others. Rebeca makes
her home in Kentucky with her husband, Charles, and their son, Anderson.




AND
NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:



Chapter One

"Girl, where are you?" Lydia tightened her grip on the cell phone as
she wondered anew how any woman could be late to every single thing in
her life. She had thought Jane might’ve changed in the two years they’d
been apart, but Jane was evidently still living up to her old high
school nickname of Late Jane. The woman would get to her own funeral about
an hour after they started the music.

"I’m coming, I’m coming." Jane kept one hand on the steering wheel
while frantically sifting through the things in the passenger seat of her
Blazer. There was a brush somewhere, she just knew it, but finding
anything at seven in the morning was difficult at best. Why in the world
she’d allowed herself to be talked into attending a sale that started at
seven a.m. was beyond her ability to fathom. Finding her shoes had been
a reason for cheering. A brush might just be asking too much.

"Do I need to grab anything for you? This stuff is going fast." Lydia
watched a woman stretch for the last package of Times-style foam
alphabet letters and readjusted her own heavy shopping basket. In the five
minutes she’d been in the store, it had already begun biting into the skin
on her arm.

"Nope, I don’t think so. I’ll be there in about two minutes," Jane
said, still searching for the brush while trying not to drop the cell phone
from her shoulder.

"Okay, but hurry. I’ll be over in the baby girl section. I need to find
something for Olivia’s first bath pages and get ribbon for Mac."

"Got it. Baby girl. Be there in a flash."

***

Jane snapped the phone together and slammed to a stop at the red light.
Turning her attention to her still searching hand, she finally grasped
the elusive hairbrush and quickly raked it through her long black hair.
She had been looking forward to this sale all week but, of course, Mr.
Wonderful had chosen to make his appearance a mere thirty minutes
before she walked out the door. They had fought over Wilson. Again. When
would the man get it through his head that Wilson was in her life forever?

She pushed thoughts of her soon-to-be ex-husband out of her mind as the
green arrow finally appeared. Squealing her tires, she tore into the
parking lot of The Savvy Scrapper. Tossing the hairbrush back into the
passenger seat, she threw the car into Park, grabbed her purse, and flung
open the door.

"Ouch!"

Jane looked up just as her door collided with the midsection of one
very tall man.

"Ohmigosh. I am so, so sorry. I’m just in a rush. The sale is happening
and I’m late and—"

"It’s okay."
Mr. Tall held his hands up as if to ward off any other car doors she
might be hiding somewhere and she noticed the coffee cup in one hand and
bagel bag in the other. Bagels would be so heavenly right now.

"I’m fine, really." He set the bag down on the ground and brushed the
dust off of his olive-green sweater, then looked at her. "I know how
women can be when there’s a sale involved." He grinned as he knelt to pick
the bag back up.

She tried hard to ignore his sexist statement and not remind him of how
many guys camp out at golf stores before a sale or sleep in the parking
lot to get tickets to a concert.

"Are you sure you’re okay? I mean, I have insurance and we can call
somebody." Jane forcefully tucked her hair behind her ears, willing
herself to focus on the problem at hand rather than the sale happening about
ten yards away or the way her stomach was now grumbling for coffee and
a bagel.

"Really, go ahead. I’m fine."

"Okay, thanks." She turned and made her way around the back of the car.
"Really, I appreciate this. It’s just that this only happens once a
year and my friend is waiting . . ." She stopped on the far side of the
car and looked at him. He could sue if he was really hurt and her luck
with men right now meant he would definitely sue and she would surely
lose. "You’re absolutely fine?"

"Go." He made a shooing motion with the bag. "Happy shopping."

Her mother always said to never look a gift horse in the mouth and this
was one time Jane would be obeying Elizabeth rather than giving in to
her own desire to argue. She practically sprinted to the front door of
The Savvy Scrapper, yanked it open, and burst inside.

***

"Jane!" Lydia was in the front corner of the store, surrounded by pink,
yellow, blue, lilac, and pale green. She waved a die-cut of a bathtub
and bubbles above her head. "I found the perfect stuff for Olivia and
Oliver’s First Bath page."

"Great." Jane joined her, looking a bit frazzled but otherwise okay.

"Okay, here’s the deal." Lydia turned toward the back of the store and
pointed. "All the Times letters are gone, the vellum is quickly going,
and the dog section is getting riffled through as we speak. Where do
you want to start?"

"Dog section, definitely." Jane stuffed her keys into her purse. "I
took great pictures of the ex this morning picking up Wilson’s poop while
stepping in another pile."

"You are so gross. What was he doing there?"

"Trying to get me to give him Wilson again." Jane scanned the rest of
the store, making a quick plan to get the most stuff. "He’ll get the
picture one day, just not today. He’s insane if he thinks I’m letting my
puppy come live with him while he’s spending all hours online with his
e-mistress."

"Okay, that still sounds so weird." Lydia’s eyebrows rose as she gave
Jane a disbelieving look. "E-mistress? Really? That’s what we’re calling
her?"

"E-mistress is the only thing I could think of that’s fit for public
consumption." Jane grimaced. "Anyway, forget her and him. I’m here to
shop, honey."

"Right. Go on over to the dog section. I’ll come over there when I’m
finished here. Can you grab me that new paper with the red stripes and
dark-brown bones? I’ve got some pictures of Otis with Olivia and Oliver
from last week."

"Dale let that pug get near his precious twins? I thought you said the
only thing he cared more about than SportsCenter was those babies."

"Dale hasn’t seen the pictures yet. He never comes in my scrapbook
studio. Says it’s my workspace and that I spend too much money on all this
junk as it is." Lydia waved her hand to encompass the store. "He’s
probably right."

"Oh, please. Men are never right," Jane said and turned toward the dog
section. "Dogs, on the other hand, are absolutely wonderful companions
who never cheat and can’t even turn a computer on."

Lydia laughed and turned back to the wall of baby-themed paper in front
of her, leaving Jane to take care of the dog paper. Stripes or flowers?
She didn’t want to make the scrapbook too babyish, but she also didn’t
want it to look too grownup. The papers were all on sale, so maybe she
would just get both. Dale would never know since he didn’t come into
her studio anyway, and she could give some of it to Mac for Kesa’s baby
book. She took two sheets of the pink-and-lime-green-striped paper, then
two of the blue rosebud ones.

"Men are never right," she muttered under her breath. Maybe Jane had a
good point.



Prints CharmingRebeca SeitzCopyright © 2006 by Rebeca Seitz.