From the monthly archives:

November 2007

December’s Feature Author - Jodi Cowles

by 123pizza on November 30, 2007

It is December 1st, time for the FIRST Day Blog Tour! The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and his/her latest book’s FIRST chapter!

This month’s feature author is:

JODI COWLES

and her book:

The Minor Protection Act
Musterion (December 1, 2005)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Jodi Cowles caught the travel bug when her parents took her on her first international flight at six months of age. Since then she’s been in over 30 countries. Along the way she’s gotten locked out of her cabin on an all night train to Kiev, helped deliver a baby in Indonesia, taught English in South Korea, gone spelunking in Guam, hiked the Golan Heights and laid bricks in Zimbabwe. Her interest in politics stems from hunting Easter eggs on the south lawn of the White House as a child. For her 30th birthday she ran the LA Marathon and promised to get serious about publishing. Jodi resides in Boise, Idaho and this is her first novel.

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

If the politically correct set was searching for a poster couple, they would need to look no further than Erik and Roselyn Jessup. In college they lit up doobies while attending passionate speeches about legalizing marijuana and freeing Tibet. Erik was even arrested once for helping break into an animal research center. Roselyn bailed him out. After five years of dating they decided to tie the knot. Seven years later, after Roselyn had enough time to get established in her career, she gave birth to their pride and joy, Jayla Lynn Jessup.

Both had satisfying full-time jobs that left them only enough time to pour themselves into Jayla. They attended every event at school, even if it meant working overtime and paying the after school program for a few extra hours. When Jayla made the principal’s list or won a spelling bee, they were cheering, and filming, from the front row.

Jayla began junior high at a brand new school with a brand new curriculum. It was being called “progressive” in the papers; the first program of its kind implemented in California with plans for a nationwide rollout over the next 10 years. Praise poured in from around the country, applauding the straight talk about sexuality and focus on tolerance.

Erik and Roselyn were thrilled to have their daughter in this groundbreaking program. Granted, it took several phone calls to district authorities to accomplish the transfer and Roselyn had to drive an extra 30 minutes each morning to drop off Jayla, but it was quite a coup to brag about in their circle of friends.

Jayla turned 13 two years into junior high. For her birthday she told her parents she wanted to order pizza and hang around the house – there was something she needed to tell them. Over pepperoni and Coke, Jayla calmly informed them that she’d been discussing it with her friends and teachers and had decided she was gay.

Though she had never had a girlfriend, or a boyfriend for that matter, Erik and Roselyn were quick to affirm her decision and let her know she had their full support. Roselyn applauded her daughter’s honest, courageous move and told Jayla how proud she was. Erik was also supportive and went so far as to tease Jayla about her best friend Sara.

There weren’t too many lesbians in her junior high and Jayla had a pretty average experience, but she attracted attention when she entered high school wearing the rainbow buttons specially purchased by her mother. Soon she was 15 and seriously involved with Carla, the 17-year-old senior who was President of the Gay Pride Club. When Erik and Roselyn saw the relationship deepening they sat Jayla down and had a heart to heart “sex talk,” encouraging her to be responsible and safe, and only to have sex if she was truly in love.

She was. However, when the year ended Carla left for college on the east coast and broke off the relationship in a letter.

Jayla was heartbroken. Erik and Roselyn were quick to comfort, as any loving parents of a shattered teenager, but their answers seemed hollow to Jayla, their comfort cold. At 16 she began dabbling in drugs - a first for her.

By the time her senior year began the family bond that was once so strong had disintegrated to the degree that she seldom spoke to her parents unless it was to strike out in anger. She had not entered into another dating relationship, as much as they encouraged her in that direction. Rather, she seemed withdrawn from the world and spent endless hours either locked in her room or suspiciously absent. Finally, Roselyn had enough and took her to a doctor who prescribed an anti-depressant for teenagers that had just been released on the market.

By Christmas the medication seemed to be working. Jayla was coming around, spending more time at home. She seemed calmer and more at peace. They were even beginning to talk about college. But New Year’s morning they found her dead, her anti-depressant bottle and a quart of vodka laying empty in the trash and a mass of journals and letters scattered around her in the bed.

Erik and Roselyn were devastated. Jayla had been their whole life. They dove into the letters and journals, trying to make sense of it all. What they found only served to inflame their anger. Some boy named Nick had been telling their daughter that she was a sinner, quoting Bible verses that said her sexual preference was an abomination before God. Jayla’s journal was full of self-loathing, page after page about her relationship with Carla, page after page of rambling, agonizing pain. Why was she made like this if homosexuality was a sin? Why would her parents have supported her if it were an abomination? Why had she listened to the seventh grade teacher who told her experimentation was the best way to determine her sexuality? What was wrong with her?

They could hardly stand to finish it but they read every word. In the end their grief found relief, as it so often does, in bitterness and hatred. The day after Jayla’s funeral, attended by hundreds of students from Jayla’s school, Erik and Roselyn met with the District Attorney. A year later, bitterness not yet assuaged, they went to see a lawyer. In the culture of America, where there is rarely tragedy unaccompanied by litigation, they found a willing law firm. Someone would pay.

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Auralia’s Colors by Jeffrey Overstreet

by 123pizza on November 28, 2007

This week, the

 

 

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

AURALIA’S COLORS
(WaterBrook Press September 4, 2007)

by

Jeffrey Overstreet
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:Jeffrey Overstreet lives in two worlds. By day, he writes about movies at LookingCloser.org and in notable publications like Christianity Today, Paste, and Image.

His adventures in cinema are chronicled in his book Through a Screen Darkly. By night, he composes new stories found in fictional worlds of his own. Living in Shoreline, Washington, with his wife, Anne, a poet, he is a senior staff writer for Response Magazine at Seattle Pacific University.

Auralia’s Colors is his first novel. He is now hard at work on many new stories, including three more strands of The Auralia Thread.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
As a baby, she was found in a footprint.

As a girl, she was raised by thieves in a wilderness where savages lurk.

As a young woman, she will risk her life to save the world with the only secret she knows.

When thieves find an abandoned child lying in a monster’s footprint, they have no idea that their wilderness discovery will change the course of history.

Cloaked in mystery, Auralia grows up among criminals outside the walls of House Abascar, where vicious beastmen lurk in shadow. There, she discovers an unsettling–and forbidden–talent for crafting colors that enchant all who behold them, including Abascar’s hard-hearted king, an exiled wizard, and a prince who keeps dangerous secrets.

Auralia’s gift opens doors from the palace to the dungeons, setting the stage for violent and miraculous change in the great houses of the Expanse.

Auralia’s Colors weaves literary fantasy together with poetic prose, a suspenseful plot, adrenaline-rush action, and unpredictable characters sure to enthrall ambitious imaginations.

Visit the Website especially created for the book, Auralia’s Colors. On the site, you can read the first chapter and listen to jeffrey’s introduction of the book, plus a lit more!

PRAISE

“Film critic and author Overstreet (Through a Screen Darkly) offers a powerful myth for his first foray into fiction. Overstreet’s writing is precise and beautiful, and the story is masterfully told. Readers will be hungry for the next installment.”
Publishers Weekly

“Through word, image, and color Jeffrey Overstreet has crafted a work of art. From first to final page this original fantasy is sure to draw readers in. Auralia’s Colors sparkles.”
-–Janet Lee Carey, award-winning author of The Beast of
Noor
and Dragon’s Keep

“Jeffrey Overstreet’s first fantasy, Auralia’s Colors, and its heroine’s cloak of wonders take their power from a vision of art that is auroral, looking to the return of beauty, and that intends to restore spirit and and mystery to the world. The book achieves its ends by the creation of a rich, complex universe and a series of dramatic, explosive events.”
-–Marly Youmans, author of Ingledove and The
Curse of the Raven Mocker

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Learning to Knit (The Real Way)

by 123pizza on November 27, 2007

I have finally learned to knit. I am so happy and excited and can’t wait until kiddos go to sleep so I can get my knitting out. I love working the yarn and the needles. Who knew this could be so much fun. I love how I see instant results and the feeling I get when I realize I made this.

So far I am working on a scarf (of course) and am getting ready to start a hat for hubby. I found the pattern online and it looks easy enough for me to do. I will be doing a purl stitch and need to practice them some more. I was trying earlier and somehow messed up so I had to start all over. No big deal since I was only on my third row.

I need to go review Donna Kooler’s Encyclopedia of Knitting (Donna Kooler’s Series) and this website to make sure I’m doing right.

I hope this isn’t a one time thing I’m interested in for a little bit especially since I’ve always wanted to learn how to knit. I would like to eventually make a Bible cover. I saw the one Camy Tang made and have wanted one ever since.

I think for now I will stick with my scarf and figuring out the hat.

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Interesting Links Hubby Sends Me - 5th Edition

by 123pizza on November 24, 2007

Technically this is just one link but the story is so great I had to post it.

Illegal Immigrant Rescues Boy in Desert

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Questioning My Sanity

by 123pizza on November 23, 2007

I must be absolutely crazy because I have taken in two extra children for the day and then suggested they spend the night. What am I thinking? Not only did I do that…I put the two eight year old boys (best friends) in the same room…and let the two year old have her friend sleep in her bed.

Quick…guess which set went to sleep first? Did you guess the two year old? Correct! The two year old and her friend went to sleep first. Amazing considering she has never had anyone sleep with her before so she was excited.

The boys…well…they finally settled down after I threatened to call the other boy’s mom to come get him. He knows I’m serious considering his mom is Best Friend. Sad thing is it was my son who wouldn’t leave him alone. I told him to come tell me if my son kept bothering him. I’m not sure what I would have done since I couldn’t call the other kid’s mom because…well…it’s me. Thankfully my son left him alone.

For those of you that know I have three kiddos the extra kiddo went to sleep in my bed. It’s a rare privilege to sleep in our bed so since he didn’t have a friend to sleep with he gets to sleep with me.

Yes, I am definitely loosing my mind. Thank goodness I have plenty of Coke Zero to drink (thanks to Best Friend) to make up for my temporary loss of sanity.

I do have to say that all five kiddos behaved excellently and we had lots of fun.

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Christmas Music

by 123pizza on November 23, 2007

I am on a quest to get some decent Christmas music. You see I love Christmas music. It’s a tradition in my home to play Christmas music while we are putting up the Christmas tree and decorating it. So far I own Kenny Chesney’s All I Want for Christmas is a Real Good Tan. It’s a great CD however I am tired of it.

Every year I decide I am going to buy Christmas music and every year I am faced with so many options (this year being the year I’m faced with so few) that I go home without purchasing anything. I’m afraid I’ll buy a CD, get home, play it and absolutely hate it.

This year I was I was determined I wasn’t leaving the store until I had a CD. It was definitely hard to decide and I finally chose Disney Channel’s Holiday CD. I knew hubby wouldn’t like it but I wasn’t buying it for hubby, I was buying it for me and the kiddos.

I love this CD. It is so much fun and so bubble-gum pop! The kiddos and I sing and dance around the house being silly and having fun.

This post was written as a part of a blog giveaway at OhAmanda on what puts me in the Christmas spirit.

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Thankfullness

by 123pizza on November 22, 2007

I started this post in my head earlier this morning thinking I wouldn’t be able to post today but look here I am. With this being Thanksgiving Day and all I have been reflecting on things I am thankful for.

  • I immediately thought of Best Friend who knows just about everything about me and what she doesn’t know the Holy Spirit chooses the right time to reveal it.
  • I thought of my neighbor who is quickly becoming a best friend of mine which is saying a lot because I have a hard time letting people in. This relationship is totally a God thing just as my friendship with Best Friend is. Thank you Neighbor Friend.
  • I am thankful for friends who are creative and don’t mind sharing their knowledge even when their life has turned a different direction they still have time to show me how to knit. (Oh yes! I have learned how to knit…the real way…you know with two needles.)
  • I am thankful for friends who host Craft Night at their homes so I will be able to get out every once in awhile and enjoy women conversations and work on my projects.
  • I am thankful for friends who will tell me the truth and stop by my home just because they can.
  • I am thankful for excellent babysitters who truly love my kiddos.
  • I am thankful for Grandparents who take their grandchildren for the evening and for eldest child who turns them down because he doesn’t want his mom to be lonely.
  • I am thankful for my family…I figured that was a given so I wasn’t even going to mention it.

God has placed some very special women in my life and I wanted to let you know that I am thankful for each and every one of you. I am overwhelmed by the honest, loving relationships that I have with these women. I would not be who I am today without each of these women’s influence and prayers and personalities. They have been hand-picked by God to help me become the woman God has intended me to be. (Yes. It’s all about me. Your sole purpose in life is helping me.)

I love all of you. Thank you.

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This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing

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

by

Neta Jackson

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Neta Jackson Neta Jackson’s award-winning Yada books have sold more than 350,000 copies and are spawning prayer groups across the country. She and her husband, Dave, are also an award-winning husband/wife writing team, best known for the Trailblazer Books–a 40-volume series of historical fiction about great Christian heroes with 1.8 million in sales–and Hero Tales: A Family Treasury of True Stories from the Lives of Christian Heroes (vols 1-4).Dave and Neta live in Evanston, Illinois, where for twenty-seven years they were part of Reba Place Church, a Christian church community. They are now members of the Chicago Tabernacle, a multi-racial congregation that is a daughter church of the well-known Brooklyn Tabernacle.ABOUT THE BOOK:
Turkey dinners, tree trimming, and decking the halls–it’s that time of year again! And I Jodi Baxter, can’t wait to celebrate. My kids are coming home for Thanksgiving and Christmas, and then all of us Yadas are getting decked out for a big New Year’s party.But God’s idea of “decked out” might just change the nature of our party plans. A perplexing encounter with a former student, a crime that literally knocks me off my feet, a hurry-up wedding, and a child who will forever change our family…it’s times like these that I really need my prayer sisters.

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

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

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

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

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

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Family Tree by Barbara Delinsky

by 123pizza on November 20, 2007

Having stayed up till midnight finishing Family Tree by Barbara Delinsky left me with mixed feelings. I had wanted to read this book ever since it first came out. When I saw that the library had it I made a special point of putting aside my other reading so that I could read this book.

The basic premise is that a Caucasian couple have an African-American baby. How can this be possible? Dana, the wife, doesn’t know the history of her father and is pressured by Hugh, her husband, to find him. Hugh knows that their daughter’s coloring couldn’t have come from his side of the family since he could trace his genealogy all the way back to the Mayflower.

Although I am glad I read the book and it talks about some good issues, the conversation was dry at times. I kept wondering what the big deal was in trying to find Dana’s father and who cares about where the “black gene” came from. I had to keep reminding myself that color really does matter to some people and Hugh’s family were “pure blood” and didn’t want to have to deal with the fact that the new baby looked different from them.

One of the reasons I was disappointed was because I expected the book to be a lot deeper than it was. Yes, it discussed some great issues but it didn’t make me “think” like I wanted it to. It was a good story and that’s it, nothing more and nothing less.

I am glad I read the book however I expected more than what was delivered. Is that the author’s fault? No, it just means at the time I wanted more. I could read the book again and get something completely different from it and think it’s the best thing ever written. Just right now I had mixed feelings.

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Trying to Find Me

by 123pizza on November 19, 2007

  1. What is my passion?
  2. What drives me?
  3. What do I want to accomplish?
  4. Which goals are ones to strive for and which ones are frivolous?
  5. Why at the age of thirty-something do I keep switching back and forth from what interests me?
  6. How can I be so absorbed in one thing and then a week later (or less) be completely not interested?
  7. How does one go about finding oneself?
  8. I know who I am in Christ but who am I outside of Him?
  9. Surely there is something more than just rearing my kiddos but what is it?
  10. What is my purpose? (Do not tell me to read The Purpose Driven Life or I will puke.)
  11. Who am I?

Let’s see if I can answer any of these questions…

  1. I like to read but what can I do with that?
  2. Not sure.
  3. Not sure at the moment…ask me tomorrow because I might have changed my mind.
  4. Not sure.
  5. Because I am indecisive.
  6. Because I get bored easily.
  7. Still trying to figure that one out.
  8. Still don’t know the answer to that one.
  9. Not sure.
  10. Don’t know.
  11. I don’t know who I am.

I wasn’t able to answer very many of the questions but I didn’t really expect to have any answers. These are questions I have had for quite some time and don’t ever want to voice them because then it seems like I am depressed or don’t like where I am in life. That’s hardly the case at all however I know there is more to me than what I am seeing right now. I want to do things but don’t know what I want to do. I’ve been praying for quite some time and still don’t have the answers but I have had God tell me some things are ‘no’ and some things are ‘not right now’.

Am I going through a mid-life crisis? What exactly is a mid-life crisis and if it were mid-life shouldn’t it be happening much later in life? How does one get out of a mid-life crisis if one were in one? Can’t I just get a sports car and my answers and be done with this?

I want a Mustang preferably one of the newer ones…like 2005 and up. I also want it in orange. If I going to get the car for the crisis I might as well get it in my happy color.

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