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

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Book Review: Rebekah by Jill Eileen Smith

Title: Rebekah (Wives of the Patriarchs, Book 2
Author: Jill Eileen Smith
Publisher: Revell

About the Book: Can love heal the rift between two souls?

When her beloved father dies and she is left in the care of her conniving brother Laban, Rebekah knows her life has changed forever.  Though she should be married by now, it's clear that Laban is dragging his feet, waiting for a higher bride-price to line his pockets.  But then Rebekah is given a chance to leave her home to marry Isaac, a cousin she has never even seen, and her hope for the future is restored.  Little does she know what a wondrous and heart-wrenching journey she is beginning.

As Rebekah experiences the joy of young love and the bitterness of misunderstanding and betrayal, her resolve is tested.  When the rift between Isaac and her grows so wide it is surely too great to be mended, can she trust the God of Isaac's father Abraham to bridge the gap?

Available February 2013 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.

My thoughts:  I really enjoy Biblical fiction books.  They give you the basic gist of the Bible story, but also bring the story to life - so while it might be hard to understand or see the timeline in the original Biblical text - you get a feeling for the who the person/people of the story were in real life.  Knowing that there have been some liberties taken to flesh out the characters, it is the big events in the characters lives that you remember.

In Rebekah's case, this would be her marriage to Isaac - the journey, both physically and spiritually to get to that point in her life.  The birth of Jacob and Esau and the betrayal with the blessing when they were older.  You are given some background into Isaac's childhood, and his relationship with Abraham and Sarai.  Something I had never really thought about before was how I would feel if one of my parents would be willing to sacrifice me if they thought they were following God's will.  Imagine what that does to a young child's relationship with their father - and how it affected the relationship between Abraham and Sarai. 

While a lot of this is conjecture on the author's part, it makes these Biblical stories not just stories any more, but makes you realize that these were real people.  They had the same struggles we do today with following God's will, betrayal and forgiveness.  I have really enjoyed this series so far and am looking forward to the third book, Rachel.  (Click to see my review of Sarai)
 
~I received a complimentary copy of Rebekah from Revell Blog Tours in exchange for my unbiased review.~
 
 
Publisher/Publication Date: Revell, Feb 2013
ISBN: 978-0-8007-3430-5
312 pages

 
 

Friday, February 15, 2013

Frosted by Wendy Sparrow (Giveaway, Book Review and Interview)

Title: Frosted
Author: Wendy Sparrow
Publisher: Entangled Publishing

About the Book: After falling through the ice one cold day, Kate is saved by a mysterious man named Jack and ends up marrying him.  Come to find out, she's committed herself to the king of winter himself.  Now Kate has cold feet about their life together...and cold everything else.
Forced to return to the frozen north for her job, Kate hopes to sneak-in and sneak-out of Colorado before Jack knows she's there.  After all, she's been living in sunny Florida for seven years, and he hasn't managed to come see her. But Jack has one last chance of convincing his runaway bride to come back to him, and he won't give up until he breaks through the ice that' frosted her heart.

My thoughts: This was a great quick read and I could definitely see this developing into a longer book or even a series of books.  Kate had been raised by two parents who didn't realize that their loveless marriage was setting in motion a lifestyle for Kate that would almost cost her her heart.  She had grown up seeing two people trapped in a marriage and eventually not even speaking to one another.  They divorced and went on to remarry, but instead of giving Kate the family that she deserved, she ended up feeling even more of an  outsider and unwanted.  When she marries Jack, she thinks it is only to give her an escape, because she doesn't think he will let her out of his winter wonderland unless she has married him.  She leaves, with no intention of returning.  

Jack finally catches up to her though, but Kate doesn't believe that he really loves her - as he has never said as much.  Even though for seven years they have been meeting in her dreams, they cannot speak there, but can only touch - but his touch in her dreams, while not unpleasant, leaves her cold and unsatisfied.  She knows what being trapped in a marriage is like, and doesn't want that feeling for herself.  But is she left cold because Jack?  Or because she isn't ready to admit what she herself feels?

~I received a complimentary Ecopy of this novella from Entangled Publishing in exchange for my unbiased review.~


About the author:  At home in the Pacific Northwest, Wendy Sparrow writes for both an adult and young adult crowd.  She has two wonderfully quirky kids, a supportive husband, and a perpetually messy house because writing is more fun than cleaning.  She enjoys reading with a flashlight under a blanket—the way all the best books should be read—and believes in the Oxford comma, the pursuit of cupcakes, and that every story deserves a happily ever after.  Most days she can be found on Twitter where she’ll talk to anyone who talks back, and occasionally just to herself.

Wendy can be reached at the following:


Wendy was gracious enough to stop by and answer some questions for me today!

1. Do you have a favorite place to write or “must haves” while writing?

My office is a corner of the couch and I usually keep either Sour Patch Kids or Oreos around. Also, I run on Mountain Dew. Which all sounds terribly unhealthy, and, okay, it is, but when I’m in a writing rut, I pull out the brain food, salmon, and go for a walk or run.

2. Do you have much say in the title or covers of your books?

I’ve yet to have any of my titles changed, but I’ve been told that my titles are pretty good. Entangled is awesome about covers. Not only are their covers consistently very striking, but they do ask you for input beforehand on what you’d like and dislike. Still, I did feel very lucky when I saw the cover for Frosted and he looked just like I pictured Jack Frost. I wanted to go high-five everyone.

3. What were your favorite books growing up?

I loved fantasy books—especially fairy-tale-style. I loved Enchanted Forest Chronicles by Patricia C. Wrede and Robert Asprin’s MythAdventures. Then, I skipped right into sweet romances and kept up with the happy-ever-afters.

4. Do you have a favorite quote?

“We’re all mad here.” The Cheshire cat, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

5. What do you come up with first when creating your character- the back story, the plot, the characteristics?

The dialogue. Almost always I have the dialogue running through my head like a film playing in the theater of my brain. I build the plot around the dialogue and the descriptions of the characters around their voices.

6. How does your family feel about having a writer in the family? Do they read your books?

I come from a very conservative family so I expected some surprise and shock, but they’ve always been very supportive. Many of them are beta readers for me. My husband and kids have been telling everyone they know my book is out. Additionally, my father has had a nonfiction book published; my mom has had poems published; and my brother is working on a book…so writing is imprinted in my DNA.

7. What time of day do you like to write?

Night. I’m a night owl. Sometimes I write all night and crawl into bed when my husband’s morning alarm is going off. I also have insomnia which leaves more time for writing.

8. What is the most you have written in one day?

Well, most romance novels run about 50K to 100K words. During November, which is National Novel Writing Month, I’ve written 9K in a day. It was crazy.

9. What themes do you love to read or write about?

I love to read and write about happy endings. I don’t read sad or dramatic. I’m a sucker for a rocky road that ends with the couple getting together. I like humor too. I need a few extra laughs now and then.

Silly questions –
1. If you could have a superpower, what would it be?

You tricked me into thinking about this…forever. Everything I thought of had a dark edge. Seeing through walls—can you imagine how many awful, naked visions that would lead to? Being invisible—if your clothing isn’t invisible, you’re running around naked. Super strength—you’d break a lot of things by accident. But the worst—the worst would be reading people’s thoughts. You’d never be able to be friends with anyone if they found out.

Okay. I thought of one. I’d like to be able to eat as much cheesecake as I wanted without gaining weight and without dealing with lactose intolerance. I cringe to think of what my superhero name would be.

2. Do you have any hidden talents?

I paint. I’ve painted portraits and landscapes. On my personal blog, the header is a painting I did of a ladybug roaring at a caterpillar. It was inspired by an experience with my daughter who made a ladybug puppet roar.

3. Favorite season?

Fall. I love haunted houses, picking pumpkins, crunching through leaves, and the vibrant colors of trees all around.

4. Cat or dog?

I have a giant husky/lab named Nanaimo. He’s an eternal puppy and frustratingly adorable.

5. Guilty pleasure tv show?

Do I have to feel guilty? I love Castle. The writing and dialogue are intelligent. The only thing I regularly question is how on earth can anyone run in high heels like that?

6. If you could travel forward or backward in time, where would you go and why?

Forward. Forward. Forward. I shudder to think of losing modern conveniences. My worst nightmare would be to go without modern plumbing.

Thanks for letting me visit your blog and hang out.


Wendy - you are so welcome!  Come back and hang out again sometime!







Wendy is giving away this beautiful Sworovski Crystal necklace in sterling silver! Isn't it gorgeous!  Enter below!


a Rafflecopter giveaway

Mega Book Blitz! - Class of '85! - 5 FREE Books on Amazon!



These five books from The Wild Rose Press are FREE today and TODAY ONLY on Amazon!




To Be, Or Not by Margo Hoornstra

Barry Carlson had it all, a successful career in professional baseball and the adoration of any woman he wanted. Except one. Forced to retire in his prime, Barry returns to his hometown of Summerville, New York to coach the Minor League Hornets.

Twenty years ago, Barry broke through Amanda Marsh’s trust issues. He melted her ice, won her love, then walked away without a backward glance to survey the wreckage. Now Amanda is the head of public relations for the Hornets and happily single—until Barry slides back into her life.

Still reluctant to trust, Amanda gives Barry another chance. But the announcement of their twenty-fifth high school reunion leads to an asinine bet between Barry and his old buddies, and threatens to ruin their newfound relationship. As scandals of the past and present converge, can Barry and Amanda get beyond their differences to find their second chance at love? 




Website
Blog
Facebook
Twitter
Goodread
The Roses of Prose


The Lonely Road to You  by Jannine Gallant

Kate Abbott isn't looking for excitement and is perfectly content with the secure life she's built in Seattle, even if her son thinks she's in an uninspired rut.  Former rock star Tyler North has no intention of shaking up his life on the Montana ranch where he fled years before to escape the ravages of fame and fortune.  Neither plan to attend their 25 year high school reunion in Summerville, but fate throws them together on a lonely road, leading them on a journey of discovery. 

From the majesty of Yellowstone to the shores of Lake Ontario, Kate and Tyler fight unexpected attractions and old insecurities.  Their journey is full of surprises and odd twists.  From bison and bears to a deep crevasse and a crazy old man, they work together to overcome the obstacles in their path.  But will these two opposites be able to put aside fear of change and rejection to take a chance on the promise of love?






Promises Promises by Silver James


Betrayed former society wife Kelly Kincaid only wants to make things right.  Paying off her ex-husband's debt of honor is tough when a minimum-wage job back in her hometown is the only one she can find.  Could the answer to her problems be right in front of her?

The moment pub owner Michael Doogan sees Summerville High School's former golden girl at the train station, he loses his heart.  Again. He'd give Kelly Kincaid the world on a platter, but the stubborn woman is intent on going her way alone.  A threat to her safety provides him the incentive to stand up for what he wants, but will he have the patience to win her love?









Embraceable You by Kat Henry Doran 

Award-winning photojournalist Dru Horvath doesn't stay in one spot for too long.  Her vocation of documenting abuses against women worldwide prevents her from risking her heart.  Every day working stiff Rory McElroy is a two-time loser when it comes to women--and he doesn't plan to take a chance on a relationship again, thank you very much. 


But when Dru comes back into his life, he's not sure which poses the greater risk: protecting her from third world thugs who want to silence her permanently—or allowing the one woman who captured his heart years ago to embrace him for good.


Website
Twitter
Goodreads



Something More by Keena Kincaid

If she could, Nora Emerson would demand a "do over" of the last twenty-five years.  An emotionally abusive marriage, failed fertility treatments and a nasty, public divorce have left bruised, skittish and determined to remain independent at all costs.

With an all-consuming business and a furious teenage sister on his hands, Nora is a complication Nick McPherson doesn't need. It's one he wants. Her vulnerability and kick-ass competency intrigue him, and the sexual sparks between them could set Summerville on fire. The more she insists the sex is just for fun, the more determined he becomes to turn their fling into something more.



Website
Facebook
Twitter
Goodreads











Thank You Buy The Book Tours!



 

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Happy Valentine's Day! Giveaway of A Little Bit Cupid!

It's Valentine's Day! And you know what that means -- love is in the air! And nowhere is that more apparent that at Entangled Publishing. We're sharing A LITTLE BIT CUPID with you today, and wish you a day filled with romance and of course, CUPID.


A LITTLE BIT CUPID, by Jennifer Shirk: Finding love should be easy, but wedding photographer Pheobe Ward knows better. When Cupid shows up on a crazy mission to help her —and save the world in the process—Phoebe realizes love might be even more complicated than she thought. Even with Cupid showing her Mr. Right , she can’t stop thinking about his best friend, Mr. Wrong.

Cal Crawford has never had time for love, but now he’s falling for Phoebe. Which means it’s got to be just plain wrong to set her up with his best friend, right? But even though seeing Phoebe with someone else will break his heart, he can’t walk away from her.

Phoebe can’t afford to choose the wrong guy with the fate of the world at stake. But maybe Cupid has it wrong. Maybe she has to rely just a little bit on Cupid, and a whole lot more on her heart.

Get your copy today for only 99 cents!



To get you in the Valentine's Day mood, download A LITTLE BIT CUPID and then enter to win our CUPID inspired giveaway! One lucky winner will receive a swag bag that includes an eBook of A LITTLE BIT CUPID, an eBook of KISSING KENDALL, and a box of chocolates!

Just enter using the Rafflecopter widget below--today only, so spread the love this Valentine's Day!
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Winners of January giveaways!

Please congratulate the winners of the various blog hops and giveaways for January!  All winners have been notified and have 72 hours to respond and then a new winner will be chosen.

Clear Your Shelf Giveaway Hop - Crystal!

No Strings Attached Giveaway Hop - Mary Ann! - Confirmed

Dreaming of Books Giveaway Hop - Shelley! - Confirmed

Back to the Future Giveaway Hop - Dawn! - Confirmed

Melting the Millionaire's Heart - Renee! - Confirmed

The Confession - Samantha!

YA Giveaway Hop - Hannah! - Confirmed

Be sure to check out the new giveaways in the right sidebar!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Interview: Jon Clinch - author of The Thief of Auschwitz




Q & A with Jon Clinch:

(See my review of The Thief of Auschwitz and enter the giveaway!)

Part One: On The Thief of Auschwitz

Q:        Your first two books have been called “among a small handful of the most American novels since Huckleberry Finn.” What moved you to leave that territory behind and write about, of all things, the Holocaust?

A:        Kings of the Earth was in many ways a memorial to central New Yorkers of my parents’ generation—country people whose voices are dying out and whose stories are on the verge of vanishing forever. In The Thief of Auschwitz, I hope to have created a second memorial to that same generation, this time honoring those on my wife’s side of the family of man—the Jewish side—whose stories are likewise in danger of being lost.

Reading and rereading the first-person accounts of Wiesel and Frankl and Nyiszli over a period of a year or two, I had no plan to write a book. But along the way I discovered something within myself that disturbed me to no end: the more closely I studied the raw materials, the more repellent they became and the more difficulty I had in maintaining my focus on them. It was as if the facts themselves, horrible and numberless as they were, were conspiring to drive me away again and again, preventing me from connecting with the people behind them as fully as I needed to.

Supposing that other readers might face the same difficulty, and intent on the preservation of these voices and these stories, I wondered if fiction might provide an answer. I hope that it has, at least a little.

Q:        How much research did you do? Did you visit Auschwitz?

A:        I did most of my research in books. Laurence Rees’ Auschwitz: A New History was enormously helpful, as was the BBC television series made as a companion to it. Mainly, though, I relied on the well-known first-person accounts of Elie Wiesel and Viktor Frankl and Miklós Nyiszli.

            My aim was always to seek the heart of the experience, rather than to mire myself in technical and spatial detail.

            There are drawbacks to not visiting the scene, of course. I’m sure to have gotten a number of details     wrong, and those details may trouble some readers. That’s always the case, regardless of how well you research anything, if only because the demands of the story sometimes cause writers to take liberties with time and geography. On the other hand, I’m sufficiently aware of my limits as a researcher and as a writer to know that—in my case, at least—growing too intimate with the physical details of a place can get in the way of following the needs of the story.

            Folks have asked me the same question, by the way, about Finn and the Mississippi River—and the answer is the same. A few telling details are sufficient to bring a place to life in the reader’s mind, and that’s what’s important.

Q:        We know from the beginning that certain characters in The Thief of Auschwitz are doomed. How do you go about maintaining interest and narrative momentum in a case like that?

A:        That was an issue in Finn, too—except that it was Mark Twain, not the Third Reich, who had doomed my characters in advance. Either way it adds up to the same thing. In Finn, I played with the presentation of time—twisting and winding the narrative thread to bring the past and present together, just as they met in the mind of the alcoholic protagonist. In The Thief of Auschwitz I rely on Max, the only member of the Rosen family who survives Auschwitz, to provide some perspective. As one of the narrators—the rest of the story is told in the third person—he speaks for himself, reminding us that he’s escaped the horrors of the camp, and causing us to be curious about exactly how that might have happened. His periodic appearances, which bring the New York art world into contrast with the world of the camp, also lighten the book’s mood and provide a separate narrative interest of their own.

Q:        Violence is a steady current in The Thief of Auschwitz—and yet the truth is that violence at Auschwitz was often even worse than you depict it. How do you reconcile that?

A:        I was definitely sparing with the most brutal violence, but not because I wanted to spare the reader any pain. On the contrary. I wanted to keep readers engaged. It seemed to me that the key to communicating the true evil of Auschwitz was first to help readers commit themselves to a handful of vividly drawn, realistic, living, breathing people. That’s why the novel begins in a resort town in the mountains of Carpathia, where Jacob and Eidel meet and marry and begin their lives. Once readers have committed to the Rosens, I don’t have to punish my characters every second of every day. I can exercise restraint, keeping certain things off-screen and letting various horrors play out at second hand. The real truth, the compounding of wickedness documented in the first-person accounts, would have made the novel unreadable and therefore worthless.

Q:        The Thief of Auschwitz is quite cinematic. Are there plans for a film adaptation?

A:        Not at the moment, although you never know. Hollywood is a funny place. Finn has been optioned for several years now by a first-rate production outfit—I’ve read the screenplay, and it’s terrific—but I haven’t yet had the chance to buy a ticket at the box office.


Part Two: On Publishing

Q:        We hear a lot these days about the death of big publishing. Are the rumors true, or premature?

A:        It’s not over yet, that’s for certain. What becomes of publishing in the months and years ahead will be a matter of making the best use of technology on one hand and humanity on the other. Technology is really good at the physical stuff—at solving manufacturing and distribution problems. Witness e-books, and the electronic marketplace that has sprung up around them. But when you start looking beyond the physicality of the book as an artifact, you begin to see the parts of it that technology can’t touch. Not just the skill that goes into writing it, but the intelligence that goes into vetting it, the insight that goes into marketing it, and the personal connection that goes into getting it into the hands of readers. Big publishers have been fairly competent at those things all along—particularly as regards large, commercial projects—but the distribution side of things has begun falling apart under its own weight.

I believe that the technology-savvy independent who managed to deliver on the human part of the equation—the connecting with readers part—will be the one who thrives.

Q:        What have you given up by going independent? Editorial input? Marketing support? Credibility?

A:        Editing is a very personal thing that varies by the writer. When the time came for a detailed discussion of Finn, for example, my editor had three little Post-It notes stuck to the manuscript. We dispatched them in a couple of minutes.

            Marketing support, of course, is huge. Big publishers create bestsellers by spending energy and money on them. They also create failed books by ignoring them. It’s pretty simple. As a long-time marketing guy myself, I believe that I can make something happen in that department on my own. I can certainly make enough happen on my own. (A big publisher will, of course, define enough very differently than I do.)


Part Three: On Pen Names

Q:        Why did you publish What Came After as Sam Winston, not as Jon Clinch?

A:        To begin with, I wrote the book as an experiment. I was weary of seeing what at that time was a real spate of literary writers crossing over into science fiction and horror, only to bring with them their usual stylistic and structural tics. What was showing up in stores as a result was a bunch of genre books that didn’t feel right to genre audiences, and that literary readers turned away from because they were full of monsters.

            I wanted to go all the way: to write a real science fiction adventure with a real rollercoaster of a plot, about real people facing real problems—problems that aren’t, as it turns out, a very big stretch from where we are today. That’s what sci-fi has always done best, right? And I wanted to write it in a style that was different from my own, with machine-gun sentences that just kind of rat-a-tat along to keep the reader in motion.

            So that’s what I did. And then, to complete the experiment and see how the book did without interference from my name and reputation, I put it out there under a pen name.

            I must say that how nicely it took off came as a surprise. A few weeks in, it was actually Amazon’s #8 bestseller in the category of science fiction adventure. Not just e-books, but printed books as well. George R. R. Martin, watch out.


Q;        Having been published conventionally as a literary writer, and then having published yourself independently as a sci-fi writer, what have you learned?

A:        I’ve learned that the dynamics of literary versus genre writing are nothing compared to the dynamics of conventional versus independent publishing.

            The whole do-it-yourself aspect has set the bar pretty low in self-published books. How low? Low enough that among certain crowds a review on Amazon or Goodreads that says, “This book didn’t actually have too many typos,” is a rave. I know. As Sam Winston, I’ve been proud to be on the receiving end of it.

            On the other hand, folks whose expectations can be satisfied by one good round with a spell checker can bring other limiting expectations to a book. I have a feeling that if I had published What Came After as Jon Clinch, literary novelist crossing over into sci-fi, its highly stylized and telegraphic prose style would have been recognized (at least by some folks, and for better or worse) as an interesting experiment. Coming from a total unknown, on the other hand, it seemed to a certain percentage of readers as if poor Sam Winston simply lacked the basics of a third-grade education. Was that a miscalculation on my part? Should I have established a different and more conventional narrative voice? Hard to say, and what’s done is done.

            Pricing is strange in the world of independent e-books, too. Amazon encourages giveaways, and Kindle owners seem to be overloading on the endless stream of free and nearly-free books. That means the market’s understanding of a book’s value is changing, and not entirely for the better. Still, readers are readers. And when one of them writes your alter ego on Facebook to say, “I love your book; please don’t yield to the pressure to give it away,” you know you’ve made a connection.

Q:        Do people respond to Sam Winston differently than they respond to Jon Clinch?

A:        Oh, for sure. We’re talking about public response on the internet, of course—since that’s the only kind of response Sam can get, given that he doesn’t exist in the real world.

            Total strangers seem a little more eager to “friend” and “follow” Sam than to do the same to me. (That could be because I’ve been around for longer, or it could also be just that I’m amazed when anybody wants to connect with a nonexistent individual. I can’t say for sure. I think they’re a little  bit faster to write Sam an email, too.) Regardless, I suppose the reason gets back to that literary-versus-genre divide. Genre writers are more approachable than super-serious literary guys, even when they’re not real. Perhaps especially when they’re not real.


            On the other hand, Sam behaves himself a little bit differently out there than I do. He’ll never fail to respond to a kind note from a reader by suggesting that he go write a review online someplace when he gets the chance. I’d never think of doing that. But it does let readers know how they can do you a favor that adds up to something tangible.

Q:        How much fun has it been, keeping Sam a secret?

A:        Tons. And it’s been eye-opening, too. The best thing is that you can get a square and unbiased response to your work from people you know. For example—my wife and I were having supper a couple of months back with a friend who asked what I’d been writing lately. I told her I’d done this science fiction book, but had ended up publishing it independently under a pen name, Sam Winston. She just about dropped her fork. “You’re Sam Winston?” she said. “My husband bought that book, and he loved it! He told me I absolutely had to read it, and I loved it too!” So that was cool.

            Another cool moment was when the novelist and critic Caroline Leavitt sent Sam an email, saying that she was crazy about the book and would like to interview him for her blog. Now it was my turn to drop my fork. I confessed right up front, of course. There would have been no honor in keeping up the charade. But I went ahead and did the interview as Sam, since I wasn’t ready to show my hand to the wide world.

            Here’s the resulting story: http://carolineleavittville.blogspot.com/2012/01/sam-winston-talks-about-his.html 


(This interview was provided to me by Kelley and Hall Book Publicity.)

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...