Where I share my love of books with reviews, features, giveaways and memes. Family and needlepoint are thrown in from time to time.

Monday, August 2, 2010

It's Monday! What are you reading? (Aug 2, 2010)



What are you reading on Mondays is hosted by Sheila at One Person's Journey - You can hook up with the Mr. Linky there with your own post - but be sure and let me know what you are reading too!

Wow - Can you believe it is August?  School starts here in 2 weeks for my highschooler and 3 weeks for my Kindergartener!  Can't believe it - but looking forward to some extra reading time!  I am hoping to be able to start visiting other bloggers more often too!

Currently Reading:
Lowcountry Summer by Dorothea Benton Frank - I started this one awhile ago and just haven't been able to get back to it.

he Little Giant of Aberdeen County by Tiffany Baker - Ditto for this one.
Farm Fatale by Wendy Holden - I think I will be giving up on this one - just isn't my cup of tea.
Final Touch by Brandilyn Collins and Amberly Collins
The Hanging Tree by Bryan Gruley  - This is the second book in the Starvation Lake series with this book coming out tomorrow!  It is not going to be my bathroom book this time though!
Roseflower Creek by Jackie Lee Miles - promising start!

Bathroom Book:
Masked edited by Lou Anders

Audio Book:
The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly - We were supposed to finish this one on a road trip to Wisconsin this weekend - but I had to stay behind because my sister got really sick...



New this week:
I Love This Bar by Carolyn Brown (Book Had Been Found! - My mom had picked it up when she was here - it was still in her suitcase!)
Wild Irish Sea by Loucinda McGary - another really late one. . .
The Bishop by Steven James - Check out the Facebook Party at the top of my blog!


Books Reviewed Last Week:
The Summer of Skinny Dipping by Amanda Howells
Starvation Lake: A Mystery by Bryan Gruley
So Over It by Stephanie Morrill
Online with God by Laurie Lazzaro Knowlton
And One Last Thing. . . by Molly Harper
Sand in My Eyes by Christine Lemmon - I will be having a giveaway for 3 copies of this one possibly starting today!


Waiting to Be Reviewed:
101 Things I Learned in Fashion School by Matthew Frederick and Alfredo Cabrero

Heart of My Heart by Kristin Armstrong
Meet Me in Dreamland: A Lu-Chu and Lena Book by Steven McKinney, Valerie McKinney
Forget You by Jennifer Echols




 
Ready - Set - Read!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Winner Announcements!



Heart of Lies by M.L. Malcolm
#29 - DarcyO
 #31 - hippmom

Barely a Lady
#1 - elaing8
#29 - luvdaylilies
#16 - ChristyJan

A Tidbit Romance
Original winner did not get back to me within the 48 hours so this one is currently up for grabs on Twitter.

The 9th Judgement (audio)
#12 - Chris
#20 - Debs Desk
#15 - Stacybuckeye

Ravished by a Highlander
#19 - Bethie
#10 - winterbabe98
Third winner had already won - so currently up for grabs on Twitter.

Damaged
#25 - Debs Desk
#20 - bridget3420

Fever Dream (audio)
#9 - SandyJay
#3 - Denny, Alaska
#19 - Judy

Innocent (audio)
First winner had already won - so currently up for grabs on Twitter
#24 - Chanelle
#2 - ossmcalc

CONGRATS ALL!  WATCH FOR LOTS OF NEW GIVEAWAYS COMING UP IN AUGUST!

The Summer of Skinny Dipping by Amanda Howells (Book Review)

Title: The Summer of Skinny Dipping
Author: Amanda Howells
Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

My synopsis:  The summer Mia was 16, her and her family went to spend the summer in Southhampton with their cousins, Corinne and Bethy.  Being from Georgia, Southhampton might have well been another planet, but Mia and Corinne had always been close friends.  Mia could tell that something was different this time as soon as they arrived.

Mia had come expecting to spend a carefree summer with Corinne, recovering from her recent breakup with Jake.  Instead, she finds herself an outsider to Corinne and Bethy and their current circle of friends.  Drinking seems to be at the top of their list for summer activities, and their parents didn't seem to have a clue.

Mia had always wished that Aunt Kathleen, her mom's sister, had been her mom.  She seemed so put together and to take an interest in her kids.  Combined with her classic good looks and elegant manner, she was the sister who had the world at her feet and had married the love of her life.  Compared to Mia's parents, who lately always seemed to be fighting, it seemed like the charmed life.  Mia overhears her Aunt Kathleen telling Corinne to be nice to her, which makes Mia feel more left out than before.  Until she meets Simon.

Simon was the boy whose family had rented the house next door.  They first meet at one of Corinne's parties, which he had crashed.  A friendship slowly develops and they start to meet on the beach after everyone else was in bed.  Surprisingly to Mia, their friendship turns to romance.  Simon seems to understand her and together they carve out their own little niche that summer.  Much of their time on the beach is spent swimming in the dark.  Simon loves to skinny dip, but Mia is afraid to let go. 

My thoughts: This is a very poignant coming of age story that might have been set in the present or in the past.  Something about Southhampton conjurs up big white houses and large sweeping lawns with women idylly passing their time sitting on the veranda  sipping tea.  Now I realize that elements of this story would not be able to be set in the past, but the feelings that Mia and Simon share for each other and for their parents are timeless. Over the course of the summer, Mia realizes that not everything is as it appears - sort of like "All that glitters, is not gold." And yes, like any good coming of age story, I cried at the end.

~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Sourcebooks Fire in exchange for my review.~

Publisher/Publication Date: Sourcebooks Fire, June 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4022-3862-8
295 pages















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Starvation Lake by Brian Gruley (Book Review)

Title: Starvation Lake
Author: Bryan Gruley

My synopsis: Gus Carpenter, reporter for the Detroit Times -- wait, he used to be a reporter in Detroit.  That was before a source for one of his stories - a big story that had garnered a lot of attention -- turned out to be getting his information illegally.  It ended up costing Gus his job, but he still refused to give up the source's name.  So he returned to Starvation Lake, Michigan and the newspaper that had fostered his desire to become a reporter.

Gus had left Starvation Lake vowing to make something of himself.  He was trying to make up for the goal he missed that cost the River Rats, the local hockey team, the State Championship. Instead, he was back in Starvation Lake working on the local paper as editor.  Even though years had passed, memories are long in a small town and people still blamed him for the lost championship. It had seemed to jinx the River Rats, as they had never come that close to the state championship again.  Then when their coach, Jack Blackburn drowned in a snowmobile accident, dreams of the championship died with him.

Only now, Coach Blackburn's snowmobile had washed ashore on Walleye Lake, not Starvation Lake where he had gone down -- and there wasssome evidence that made it look like it wasn't an accident at all. As Gus tries to get to the bottom of it, he is thwarted at every turn.  Even his mother seems to know more than he does.  As everything Gus believed growing up begins to unravel -- the present isn't giving him a strong foundation either.  Battling time trying to resolve the Detroit fiasco, while trying to connect the dots in his past, Gus is going to have to grow up and realize that the heroes from his childhood were tarnished and that the friends he left behind in Starvation Lake grew up long before he did.

My thoughts:  I loved the way this book was written.  Not in the flashy cliff hanger style, but in the comfortable pace of a small town, moving the story along at a natural pace.  As I neared the ending, I started to put the pieces together, but would never have guessed when I began the book that it would take the twists and turns it did.

Mr. Gruley has a second book coming out in this Starvation Lake Mystery series on Aug 3 called The Hanging Tree.  Keep a watch out for my review later this month!

Starvation Lake
Publisher/Publication Date: Touchstone, March 2009
ISBN: 978-1416563624
370 pages

Mailbox Madness (July 26 - Aug 1)

Bison roam the Black Hills of South Dakota

In My Mailbox is hosted Sundays at The Story Siren.  Mailbox Monday's host for August is Chick Loves Lit. Please visit these posts and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week!


By Gabe Rotter

The gripping story of the unraveling of one man's seemingly perfect life, and his struggle to get everything back.

A new baby, a loving wife, a solid career, a dream house in Beverly Hills: Dr. Bobby Flopkowski has it all. Until a complicated series of events snowball into a disaster that changes the course of his life forever.

Now, with a tent on the beach as his only home and an addiction that has cut him off from everyone he once loved, Bobby has a revelation that could put him back on track: he believes he has solved the puzzling crime that led to his downfall. But as the reality he's always known slips farther away, will he be able to convince someone -- anyone -- that his suspicions aren't merely the pleas of a desperate man?



by Susan Casey

For centuries, mariners have spun tales of gargantuan rogue waves, one hundred feet high or taller.  Until recently, scientists dismissed these stories -- waves that high would seem to violate the laws of physics.  But in the past few decades, as a startling number of ships vanished and new evidence emerged, oceanographers realized something scary really is brewing in the planet's waters. They found their proof in February 2000, when a British research vessel was trapped in a vortex of impossibly mammoth waves in the North Sea -- including several that approached a hundred feet.

As scientists scramble to understand this phenomenon, others view the giant waves as the ultimate challenge. These are extreme surfers who fly around the world in search of the ocean's most destructive monsters.  The pioneer of extreme surfing is the legendary Laird Hamilton, who, with a group of friends in Hawaii, figured out how to ride terrifyingly large waves of seventy and eighty feet -- and higher.  Casey follows this unique tribe of men as they seek to conquer the holy grail of their sport, the hundred-foot wave.

In this mesmerizing account, the exploits of Hamilton and his fellow surfers are juxtaposed against scientists' urgent efforts to understand the annihilating power of waves -- from the tsunami that wiped out 250,000 people in the Pacific in 2004 to the 1,740 foot wave that recently leveled part of the alaskan coast to the bigger and bolder waves of the future that climate change seems destined to bring.



by Alexandra Lebenthal

It's the day after Labor Day, 2008, and the elite universe of New York's Upper East Side is about to unravel along with the economy.  Socialite Grigsby Somerset is barely aware of her changing world and has no idea her investment banker husband, Blake, is about to enter into a devil's bargain with hedge fund owner John Cutter. As autumn unfolds, Grigsby's fairytale life starts to unwind.  Street-smart Renee Parker has been hired as John's executive assistant and is convinced that something is amiss with her new boss.  Renee enlists her friend Sasha Silver, CEO of Silver Partners, to help her decipher what is happening. They soon discover that John is nearly ruined, except for the assets he is hiding in the Cayman Islands from his wife, Mimi, and has concocted with Blake a scheme to redeem himself.  This tale of expulsion from a modern-day Garden of Eden captures what happens when economic decline spells ruin for Manhattan's pampered elite.



by John le Carre

For nearly half a century, John le Carre's limitless imagination has enthralled millions of readers and moviegoers around the globe.  From the cold war to the bitter fruits of colonialism to unrest in the Middle East, he has reinvented the spy novel again and again.  Now, le Carre makes his Viking debut with a stunning tour de force that only a craftsman of his caliber could pen.  As menacing and flawlessly paced as The Little Drummer Girl and as morally complex as The Constant Gardener, Our Kind of Traitor is signature le Carre.

Perry and Gail are idealistic and very much in love when they splurge on a tennis vacation at a posh beach resort in Antigua.  But the charm begins to pull when a big-time Russian money launderer enlists their help to defect.  In exchange for amnesty, Dima is ready to rat out his vory (Russian criminal brotherhood) compatriots and expose corruption throughout the so-called legitimate financial and political worlds.  Soon, the guileless couple find themselves pawns in a deadly endgame whose outcome will be determined by the victor of the British Secret Service's ruthless internecine battles.



by Richard L. Mabry, M.D.

Dr. Anna McIntyre's life was going just fine until someone else started living it.

Her patient dies because of an identity mix-up; her medical career is in jeopardy because of forged prescriptions; and her credit is in ruins.  She thought things couldn't get worse, but that was before she opened the envelope and saw a positive HIV test with her name on it.



Strangers at the Feast
by Jennifer Vanderbes

On Thanksgiving Day 2007, as the country teeters on the brink of a recession, three generations of the Olson family gather.  Eleanor and Gavin worry about their daughter, a single academic and her newly adopted Indian child, and about their son, who ha been caught in the imploding real-estate bubble.  While the Olsons navigate the tensions and secrets that mark their relationships, seventeen-year-old Kijo Jackson and his best friend Spider set out from the nearby housing projects on a mysterious job.  A series of tragic events brings these two worlds ever closer, exposing the dangerously thin line between suburban privilege and urban poverty, and culminating in a crime that will change everyone's life.

In her gripping new book, Jennifer Vanderbes masterfully lays bare the fraught lives of this complex cast of characters and the lengths to which they will go to protect their families. Strangers at the Feast is at once a heartbreaking portrait of a family struggling to find happiness and an exploration of the hidden costs of the American dream.

What goodies did you get last week?

Saturday, July 31, 2010

So Over It by Stephanie Morrill (Book Review)

Title: So Over It (Book 3 - The Reinvention of Skylar Hoyt)
Author: Stephanie Morrill
Publisher: Revell

My synopsis:  Skylar has made it through her last year in high school.  She had started out with such high hopes in changing herself, but by the end of the year was slipping back into the old Skylar's skin.  Connor had disappointed her by playing the hero to Jodi's damsel in distress, so even though she loved him, she broke up with him.  Eli saw this as his open door and made a play for her whenever the opportunity arose.  He had had feelings for Skylar for awhile, and even though she knew it was wrong, whenever she had a run-in with Connor, she ended up having a drink or too and hooking up with Eli.  She always felt bad about making out with him, and kept trying to tell herself that it was okay.  She was headed to Hawaii to stay with her grandparents for the summer and figured she could start over on her reinvention while she was there. 

Hawaii didn't prove to be the oasis that she thought it would be.  Her Grammy immediately started matchmaking with Justin, the boy next door, and Skylar found herself using him to try and forget Connor.  After just a few days he called her on it and told her he wasn't into summer flings and didn't like being used if she was truly going to go home after 2 months.  Turns out she realized that she couldn't run from her problems and returned home with her family after only 2 weeks. 

The crux of all the problems and changes in her life had started in Book 1 when Eli rescued her from a possible date rape situation.  She had not gotten over it and had also not shared it with anyone except for Eli, Connor and her sister Abby.   As it continues to color her relationship with her other friends, she wonders if she will ever be able to move forward.

Available July 2010 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.

My thoughts: This was book 3 of the series (read my reviews Book 1 - Me, Just Different and Book 2 - Out With the In Crowd).  As Skylar reconnected a little with her mom in this book, it made me look at my own relationship with my teenage daughter, and what she might be needing to hear from me these days.  She is living with her grandmother in Iowa as she just graduated in May.  It brought tears to my eyes and I will be making a phone call to her later tonight.   Besides all that though, this book did a nice job of showing how it isn't always peaches and cream when you become a Christian.  It dealt with repairing relationships with family, friends and even with yourself.  This would be a great series for any girl in high school and maybe even in junior high. 

~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Baker Publishing in exchange for my review.~


So Over It
Publisher/Publication Date: Baker, July 1, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-8007-3391-9
262 pages















.

Friday, July 30, 2010

First Wild Card Tour: Online with God by Laurie Lazzaro Knowlton (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:

Zonderkidz (April 9, 2010)
***Special thanks to Pam Mettler of Zondervan for sending me a review copy.***


REVIEW:  Written in the style of a young girl blogging to God, this puts Him smack dab in the middle of a junior high girl's life.  Even though the writing is simple enough for a tween/teen to understand - reading as an adult there was still a lot of gems that would apply to my life as well.  Each devotion is only 2 pages long with a short "Stepping Up" section that pretty much lays it on the line about how you should act in certain situation.  What I liked was if the Internet came into play at all, they gave all the safety features you could install or what the proper etiquette would be online.  It ends with a "Let's Talk" which is a short prayer you can pray.  Would be a great gift for any girl just entering junior high, but I am going to share it with my high schooler as well.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Laurie’s first published work was a note passed to a boy in elementary school. You would have thought that this most embarrassing moment would have stopped her writing career. But instead, Laurie is the author of thirty five books and author/illustrator of two more. Laurie lives in rural Ohio with her husband and two daughters.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $9.99
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: Zonderkidz (April 9, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0310716152
ISBN-13: 978-0310716150

Press the browse button to view the first chapter:


Thursday, July 29, 2010

And One Last Thing. . . by Molly Harper (Book Review)

Title: And One Last Thing. . .
Author: Molly Harper
Publisher: Gallery Books


My Synopsis/Thoughts: Lacey Terwilliger was a happily married woman, well - maybe not happily, but she thought it was implied with her husband that they didn't sleep with other people.  When some flowers from her husband get delivered to the wrong address, Lacey's eyes are opened to what a low-life he really is. 

Not willing to sit back and take it anymore, she continues to act like nothing has happened to make her aware of her husband Mike's philandering ways - but when it comes time for her husband's monthly business newsletter to be sent out - by her, Lacey lets it all fly.

Immediately regretting sending this email to over 300 of their friends, family and husband's business associates, Lacey at least feels that now she doesn't have to keep the facade about her life in place.  High tailing it to her mom's she spends a few days there and then runs to her cabin at the lake - a cabin that her grandmother had bequethed to her.  Here she can decide what she is going to do with what is left of her life.

She meets Monroe quite unexpectedly early one morning as she is enjoying the sunrise on her porch in tee shirt and panties.  He walks out of the cabin next door, which Lacey thought was empty, and an embarassed Lacey hastily goes in doors.  Well, Monroe makes it perfectly clear that he doesn't want to have anything to do with her, especially after learning that she is newly separated.  He goes out of his way to freeze her out, but tends to keep running into her anyway.  When he finally realizes that she is not going to "need" him to recover from her marriage, a strange friendship is begun.

Meanwhile, Lacey's fame has virally spread through out the country and brought a young lady named Maya to her door.  Maya has a business proposition for her which would put to use her scathing email abilities.  Lacey is very tempted by this offer and genuinely likes Maya, so tells her she will consider it.  She does need to do something to live as Mike didn't allow her to work outside the home. In her solitude at the cabin though, she does begin to write.  Her writing and her friendship with Monroe lead her to make some very serious decisions that will affect the rest of her life.

Seriously laugh out loud funny in places, this was not a woman for whom you felt sorry..  As they say - "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned" and Lacey accurately fit this description.  But she didn't curl up in a ball and expect someone to come take care of her.  She saw what she had done and realized it was going to be up to her to take control of her life - in all aspects.  As she lives alone she realizes all the parts of herself that she lost somewhere along the way - from who she was allowed to be friends with to the kind of food she ate.  You get to see the empowerment that comes back to her as she begins making decisions on what she really wants to do.  A fun, quirky read with plenty of sarcasm and some romance.  This was a great summer read.

~I was provided a copy of this book by Gallery Books in exchange for my review.~


About the author: Molly Harper is the author of the acclaimed paranormal romance series for Pocket Star Books featuring librarian Jane Jameson: Nice Girls Don't Live Forever; Nice Girls Don't Date Dead Men; and Nice Girls Don't Have Fangs, which was a Romantic Times Top Pick.   She is a former humor columnist and newspaper reporter who lives in western Kentucky with her husband and children.  Visit her on the web at mollyharper.com, at her blog Nice Girls Don't Write Naughty Books or on Twitter.

And One Last Thing. . .
Publisher/Publication Date: Gallery Books, July 27, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4391-6877-6
310 pages















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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

First Wild Card Tour: The Wiersbe Bible Sutdy Series: John: Get to Know the Living Savior

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:

David C. Cook; New edition (July 1, 2010)
***Special thanks to Karen Davis, Assistant Media Specialist, for The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


A man who has given his life to a deep examination of the Word of God, Dr. Warren W. Wiersbe is an internationally known Bible teacher, former pastor of The Moody Church in Chicago and the author of more than 150 books. For over thirty years, millions have come to rely on the timeless wisdom of Dr. Warren W. Wiersbe’s “Be” Commentary series. Dr. Wiersbe’s commentary and insights on Scripture have helped readers understand and apply God’s Word with the goal of life transformation. Dubbed by many as the “pastor’s pastor,” Dr. Wiersbe skillfully weaves Scripture with historical explanations and thought-provoking questions, communicating the Word in such a way that the masses grasp its relevance for today.

Dr. Warren Wiersbe’s commentaries and his world-renowned knowledge of God’s Word can now be enjoyed in a format that allows everyone to enjoy spending time getting to know the Savior. David C Cook plans to release additional volumes in the Wiersbe Bible Study Series over the next few years.

Product Details:

List Price: $8.99
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: David C. Cook; New edition (July 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1434765075
ISBN-13: 978-1434765079

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Lesson 1

God in the Flesh

(JOHN 1—2)

Before you begin …

• Pray for the Holy Spirit to reveal truth and wisdom as you go through this lesson.

• Read John 1—2. This lesson references chapters 1–2 in Be Alive. It will be helpful for you to have your Bible and a copy of the commentary available as you work through this lesson.


Getting Started


From the Commentary


Much as our words reveal to others our hearts and minds, so Jesus Christ is God’s “Word” to reveal His heart and mind to us. “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father” (John 14:9). A word is composed of letters, and Jesus Christ is “Alpha and Omega” (Rev. 1:11), the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet. According to Hebrews 1:1–3, Jesus Christ is God’s last Word to mankind, for He is the climax of divine revelation.

—Be Alive, page 20


1. As you read John 1:1–2, what stands out to you about the description of

“the Word”? What does it mean that the Word was “with” God? That the

Word “was” God? How does this opening contrast with that of the other

three gospel accounts (Matthew, Mark, and Luke)? What does this tell us

about John, the writer of this gospel?


More to Consider: Why do you think John refers to Jesus as “the Son

of God” so many times in his gospel? (See John 1:34, 49; 3:18; 5:25;

10:36; 11:4, 27; 19:7; 20:31.)


2. Choose one verse or phrase from John 1—2 that stands out to you.

This could be something you’re intrigued by, something that makes you

uncomfortable, something that puzzles you, something that resonates with

you, or just something you want to examine further. Write that here.


Going Deeper


From the Commentary


Life is a key theme in John’s gospel; it is used thirty-six times. What are the essentials for human life? There are at least four: light (if the sun went out, everything would die), air, water, and food. Jesus is all of these! He is the Light of Life and the Light of the World (John 8:12). He is the “Sun of righteousness” (Mal. 4:2). By His Holy Spirit, He gives us the “breath of life” (John 3:8; 20:22), as well as the Water of Life (John 4:10, 13–14; 7:37–39). Finally, Jesus is the Living Bread of Life that came down from heaven (John 6:35ff.). He not only has life and gives life, but He is life (John 14:6).

—Be Alive, page 22


3. As you go through the gospel of John, underline the references to “life.” Why do you think John’s gospel touches on this theme so frequently? How do the themes of “light” and “life” relate to one another in John 1?


From the Commentary


John the Baptist is one of the most important persons in the New Testament. He is mentioned at least eighty-nine times. John had the special privilege of introducing Jesus to the nation of Israel. He also had the difficult task of preparing the nation to receive its Messiah. He called them to repent of their sins and to prove that repentance by being baptized and then living changed lives. John summarized what John the Baptist had to say about Jesus Christ (John 1:15–18).

—Be Alive, page 24


4. What is significant about the gospel writer’s mention of John the Baptist (John 1:6–28)? Why would this have been important to the early believers?


From Today’s World


Although the skepticism of the modern age has diminished their impact, self-proclaimed modern “prophets” continue to speak about the end of the world (or other events) as if they have exclusive insight into “insider information” from a source they often claim is God Himself. Some gain a following as people clamor for wisdom about why the world is in its current state. Whether out of fear or frustration, they look to the so-called prophets for answers.


5. Why are people so fascinated (whether they agree or disagree) with modern prophets? Do you agree that people today are more skeptical about prophets and their reliability? Why or why not? How does today’s culture compare to the culture in which John the Baptist appeared? What does this suggest about the role of prophecy in modern Christianity?


From the Commentary


The people of Israel were familiar with lambs for the sacrifices. At Passover, each family had to have a lamb, and during the year, two lambs a day were sacrificed at the temple altar, plus all the other lambs brought for personal sacrifices. Those lambs were brought by people to people, but here is God’s Lamb, given by God to humankind! Those lambs could not take away sin, but the Lamb of God can take away sin. Those lambs were for Israel alone, but this Lamb would shed His blood for the whole world!

—Be Alive, pages 27–28


6. How might John’s Jewish followers have responded when he announced Jesus as the “Lamb of God”? Why is John the Baptist’s testimony important? How does John’s description of the “Spirit” compare to the coming of the Holy Spirit as recorded in the book of Acts? What does this teach us about the Holy Spirit?


From the Commentary


“We have found the Messiah!” was the witness Andrew gave to Simon. Messiah is a Hebrew word that means “anointed,” and the Greek equivalent is “Christ.” To the Jews, it was the same as “Son of God” (see Matt. 26:63–64; Mark 14:61–62; Luke 22:67–70). In the Old Testament, prophets, priests, and kings were anointed and thereby set apart for special service. Kings were especially called “God’s anointed” (1 Sam. 26:11; Ps. 89:20); so, when the Jews spoke about their Messiah, they were thinking of the king who would come to deliver them and establish the kingdom. There was some confusion among the Jewish teachers as to what the Messiah would do. Some saw Him as a suffering sacrifice (as in Isa. 53), while others saw a splendid king (as in Isa. 9 and 11). Jesus had to explain even to His own followers that the cross had to come before the crown, that He must suffer before He could enter into His glory (Luke 24:13–35).

—Be Alive, page 29


7. Why were the Jews expecting the Messiah to appear as a king? What does this tell us about the culture and circumstance of the Jews at the time? How might the Jewish leaders have received the pronouncement of Jesus as the Messiah? There had been others who claimed messiahship prior to Jesus’ arrival. What argument does John make in chapter 1 to support the fact that Jesus is the One they’ve been waiting for?


From the Commentary


“The third day” means three days after the call of Nathanael (John 1:45–51). Since that was the fourth day

of the week recorded in John (John 1:19, 29, 35, 43), the wedding took place on “the seventh day” of this “new creation week.” Throughout his gospel, John makes it clear that Jesus was on a divine schedule, obeying the will of the Father. Jewish tradition required that virgins be married on a Wednesday, while widows were married on a Thursday. Being the “seventh day” of John’s special week, Jesus would be expected to rest, just as God rested on the seventh day (Gen. 2:1–3). But sin had interrupted God’s Sabbath rest, and it was necessary for both the Father and the Son to work (John 5:17; 9:4). In fact, John recorded two specific miracles that Jesus deliberately performed on Sabbath days (John 5; 9). At this wedding, we see Jesus in three different roles: the Guest, the Son, and the Host.

—Be Alive, pages 35–36


8. Read John 2:1–11. Why do you think the Scriptures record this as Jesus’ first miracle? What is the significance of turning water into wine? Of the timing of the miracle?


More to Consider: Moses’ first miracle was a plague—turning water into blood (Ex. 7:19ff.), which speaks of judgment. How does Jesus’ first miracle speak of grace?


From the Commentary


Jesus revealed His zeal for God first of all by cleansing the temple (John 2:13–17). The priests had established a lucrative business of exchanging foreign money for Jewish currency and also selling the animals needed for the sacrifices. No doubt, this “religious market” began as a convenience for the Jews who came long distances to worship in the temple, but in due time the “convenience” became a business, not a ministry. The tragedy is that this business was carried on in the court of the Gentiles in the temple, the place where the Jews should have been meeting the Gentiles and telling them about the one true God. Any Gentile searching for truth would not likely find it among the religious merchants in the temple.

—Be Alive, page 41


9. Why was Jesus so upset about the money changers? (See John 2:12–16.) What is significant about Jesus’ comment in verse 19? How does this foreshadowing help us to see God’s divine timetable for Jesus’ earthly work?


From the Commentary


While in Jerusalem for the Passover, Jesus performed miracles that are not given in detail in any of the Gospels. It must have been these signs that especially attracted Nicodemus (John 3:2). Because of the miracles, many people professed to believe in Him, but Jesus did not accept their profession. No matter what the people themselves said or others said about them. He did not accept human testimony.

—Be Alive, page 44


10. Why didn’t Jesus accept human testimony? What does John mean when he writes, “He did not need man’s testimony about man, for he knew what was in a man” (2:25)? What does this say about Jesus’ feelings toward those who followed Him because of His miracles?


Looking Inward


Take a moment to reflect on all that you’ve explored thus far in this study of John 1—2. Review your notes and answers and think about how each of these things matters in your life today.


Tips for Small Groups: To get the most out of this section, form pairs or trios and have group members take turns answering these questions. Be honest and as open as you can in this discussion, but most of all, be encouraging and supportive of others. Be sensitive to those who are going through particularly difficult times and don’t press for people to speak if they’re uncomfortable doing so.


11. How do you respond to the different descriptions of Jesus in John 1 (the Word, the Lamb, the Son of God)? In what ways does the father/son imagery connect with you? Why is it important for you to know Jesus was God’s Son and not just a prophet sent to preach good news?


12. In what ways do you see your own life as a “light” to those around you? How have others been light to you? What are some ways you’ve struggled to be a light to others? How can the picture of Jesus as the light inspire you to be a light to others?


13. What sort of “Messiah” do you think you’d be hoping for if you were among the Jewish people before and during Jesus’ time? In what ways might you have been pleasantly surprised by the way the Messiah arrived? In what ways might you have been disappointed? How do you see the Messiah’s role in your life today? In what ways is Jesus’ role like that of a king? Of a servant?


Going Forward


14. Think of one or two things that you have learned that you’d like to work on in the coming week. Remember that this is all about quality, not quantity. It’s better to work on one specific area of life and do it well than to work on many and do poorly (or to be so overwhelmed that you simply don’t try). Do you want to know more about John’s description of Jesus as “the Word”? Do you want to better understand the Jews’ expectation about the Messiah? Be specific. Go back through John 1—2 and put a star next to the phrase or verse that is most encouraging to you. Consider memorizing this verse.


Real-Life Application Ideas: John the Baptist contrasts his method of baptism with Jesus’ in 1:26–34. How well do you know your church’s stance on water baptism? Learn what your church teaches on this

important topic. Consider what baptism has meant to you. Or, if you haven’t yet been baptized, consider talking with your pastor about being baptized.


Seeking Help


15. Write a prayer below (or simply pray one in silence), inviting God to work on your mind and heart in those areas you’ve previously noted. Be honest about your desires and fears.


Notes for Small Groups:

• Look for ways to put into practice the things you wrote in the Going Forward section. Talk with other group members about your ideas and commit to being accountable to one another.

• During the coming week, ask the Holy Spirit to continue to reveal truth to you from what you’ve read and studied.

• Before you start the next lesson, read John 3—4. For more in-depth lesson preparation, read chapters

3–4, “A Matter of Life and Death” and “The Bad Samaritan,” in Be Alive.

Sand in My Eyes by Christine Lemmon (Book Review)

Title: Sand in My Eyes
Author: Christine Lemmon
Publisher: Penmark Publishing

My synopsis:  Fairly early in Anna's marriage, she discovers that her husband has had an affair.  Believing that a change of scenery, and getting her husband away from his co-worker with whom he cheated, she quits her high power publishing job and moves her family to Florida, to a house on stilts. She has always wanted to write a novel and figures now is a good time to start.

New to the stay-at-home-scene she is overwhelmed by the demands of twin boys and a little girl.  Feeling like all she does is clean the house, feed, or change the kids, or grab some much needed sleep, her novel isn't a priority.

"All I wanted was to finish an act from start to finish without interruption, so I set the egg I wanted to fry on the counter and steadily walked to the sink, trying hard to block out the noise hitting me from every direction. To an ordinary person, washing a pan is simple. But for a mother, who is also like a ringmaster in a three-ring circus, doing dishes is more hair-raisingly difficult than swallowing fire." ...

"You can do it," I chanted under my breath, trying hard to be the little engine that could. "You can make it through this day." At least I thought I could, thought I could, thought I could.  There was nothing I wanted more this very moment than to become an escape artist and disappear, but then I saw from the corner of my eye the egg I was going to make for my children's breakfast, the only egg in the house, the extra large one sitting on the counter, roll to the edge and take a great fall. I dropped to my knees, trying to save old Humpty, but hard as I might, he slipped through my fingers." (Sand in My Eyes, p44)

I think that gives you a good picture as to Anna's state of mind.  I know that I have been at this point before.  It is actually this scene that sort of sets up the rest of the book.  Anna's husband is leaving on a business trip, so he arranges for his parents to come and pick up the kids for a week.  He doesn't really get why Anna can't get everything done with the kids there, but I think he doesn't really trust her to leave the kids alone with her.

Anna decides that this is the week to start her novel.  So she does.  She gets a lot of inspiration from her next door neighbor, Fedelina Aurelio, a geriatric gardener who shares with her much wisdom about life as it relates to flowers. She also meeds Fedelina's professor-son Liam and we learn about yearning and love lost. But I am leaving out an important part.  We are learning all of this 20 years later, as she has gone to visit Fedelina in a nursing home, to share with her the novel that she has actually spent the last 20 years writing.  The one she started the week she was home alone. 

So you see, it is actually a story within a story.  We learn all about Anna and Fedelina and the relationship that developed between them 20 years ago.  But we also see the stage of life they are now in, and how their relationship has changed.  Fedelina  had shared with Anna letters from her mother Cora which she had written to her daughter over the years.  As Anna lost her mother when she was in college, I believe that both Fedelina and Cora's letters served as a surrogate to her. They made it into her book, so they were definitely an inspiration to her. 

I loved the way that whenever she felt stressed she would throw in children's rhymes (like the little engine that could, or Humpty Dumpty from the quote above).  It gave the story a little whimsy. I enjoyed this book very much as I could relate to Anna so well (quitting a management job to stay home with the kids - it was quite a shock to the system!) There was so much inspirational, but not sappy, stuff in the book that I wanted to write down so I would remember it. The ending was a complete surprise and I never saw it coming, but it did wrap it up nicely. I would highly recommend this book to any mother at whatever stage of mothering she happens to be at!


I received a review copy for this book tour from Book Sparks, in exchange for my review.







About the author: Christine Lemmon is the author of Sanibel Scribbles, Portion of the Sea and Sand in My Eyes. She lives on an island off Florida’s Gulf Coast - in a house on stilts! - with her husband and children.


For more on Christine Lemmon and her books, visit: www.christinelemmon.com or find her on Facebook and Twitter.
 
 



 
 
 
Sand In My Eyes
Publisher/Publication Date: Penmark Publishing, July 1, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-9712874-2-6
353 pages
 

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