Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Heeey ! What the ??? . . . . . .


Do you ever look forward to a day and eagerly plan for it? Seriously, I mean, you get up early and you even have lists. You can feel the anticipation building. And then . . .


Well, I've done it again. Not exactly a day late and a dollar short scenario . . . . this time I was early. Yeah, like a whole week early. But I was ready. Last night I went through my read list and then my wish list for authors and made another list of authors to look for at the County Library's annual sale. I had cash in my hand, comfy stand- in -line shoes on and a big empty canvas bag. They advertised over 65,000 books and I know quite a few had my name on them. Last time we came home with close to 100 books. Yes, we are crazy! Knowing that there is always a line, I left early and when I got to the auditorium, I had a sinking feeling. No cars in the parking lot, no people in line at the door. Oh, oh, now what? So I cruise past the sign and it boldly states ~ Library booksale Oct 2-6th. Hello, it's still September.

Hubby looked mighty surprised when I came home so soon with an empty bag. I reminded him of the Greek Festival we went to only to find it was the next week. But you can bet that next Tuesday I'll be more than ready for $3 a bag day! After all, I've even got my list ready. Sheeesh! At least I got to the post office and mailed off The Year of the Flood to Jemima, the contest winner.

Does anyone else ever do this or is it just me?And what did you do today? Anything exciting?

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Monday Mailbox



Mailbox Monday is kindly hosted each week by Marcia at The Printed Page. Anyone can play along. Just leave a link to your MM at Marcia's blog and follow the links to other blogs to see what books are finding their way to mailboxes around the world. Caveat: participation in MM can cause your tbr list to grow exponentially. But what fun it is! Here's what showed up last week.





Monday:
Melinda and the Wild West by Linda Weaver Clarke from author

The White Queen by Phillippa Gregory won from Diane at The Book Resort
Thursday :
Confections of a Closet Master Baker by Gesine Bullock-Prado from SA
The Last Ember by Daniel Levine won from Marcia at The Printed Page
Saturday:
Hot and Irresistable (no image) by Dianne Castell for Pump up your book tour

Monday, September 21, 2009

Giveaway: Supreme Courtship by Christopher Buckley

President of the United States Donald Vanderdamp is having a hell of a time getting his nominees appointed to the Supreme Court. After one nominee is rejected for insufficiently appreciating To Kill A Mockingbird, the president chooses someone so beloved by voters that the Senate won't have the guts to reject her -- Judge Pepper Cartwright, the star of the nation's most popular reality show, Courtroom Six.

Will Pepper, a straight-talking Texan, survive a confirmation battle in the Senate? Will becoming one of the most powerful women in the world ruin her love life? And even if she can make it to the Supreme Court, how will she get along with her eight highly skeptical colleagues, including a floundering Chief Justice who, after legalizing gay marriage, learns that his wife has left him for another woman.

Soon, Pepper finds herself in the middle of a constitutional crisis, a presidential reelection campaign that the president is determined to lose, and oral arguments of a romantic nature. Supreme Courtship is another classic Christopher Buckley comedy about the Washington institutions most deserving of ridicule.

Thanks to the generosity of Hachette Book Group, I am giving away 5 copies of Supreme Courtship. You probably know the drill by now but here it is anyway. No P.O. Boxes and open to residents of the US & Canada. Just leave me a comment that you would like to win and be sure to leave an e mail address; no e-mail, no entry.

Bonus entries can be earned by:

+2 Becoming a new google friends connect follower
+2 Already being a follower
+ 1 Post about contest and leave me a link
+ 1 Put contest in sidebar or tweet and leave me a link

Put all info in ONE box, please! If you are already a follower, remind me.

Deadline to enter is October 4th at 5 P.M. Good Luck !

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Show Me Five Meme: South of Broad by Pat Conroy

That's A Novel Idea has started a new MEME called Show Me Five Saturday. This meme will give each blogger an opportunity to give a brief description of a book they have read or reviewed during the week.It will work like this: Each Saturday You will post the answer to these questions. The number indicates the number of answers you will provide:


    1. Book you read and/or reviewed this week
    2. Words that describe the book
    3. Settings where it took place or characters you met
    4. Things you liked and/or disliked about it
    5. Stars or less for your rating?

Here's mine:

  • South of Broad by Pat Conroy
  • Southern, contemporary lit
  • South Carolina, Leo King; son of science teacher and school principal, Sheba and Trevor Poe; twins with troubled past and trouble in their future
  • I liked the beginning and setting of the book, did not like several of the characters especially the Poe twins, thought Leo King as narrator was unbelievable as youthful character, some of the friendships seemed unbelievable also.
  • 2.5 stars (mixed feelings on this one)

Thursday, September 17, 2009

BBAW giveaway (US & Canada): The Day of the Flood by Margaret Atwood




Amazon.com Review Book Description : "The times and species have been changing at a rapid rate, and the social compact is wearing as thin as environmental stability. Adam One, the kindly leader of the God's Gardeners--a religion devoted to the melding of science and religion, as well as the preservation of all plant and animal life--has long predicted a natural disaster that will alter Earth as we know it. Now it has occurred, obliterating most human life. Two women have survived: Ren, a young trapeze dancer locked inside the high-end sex club Scales and Tails, and Toby, a God's Gardener barricaded inside a luxurious spa where many of the treatments are edible.

Have others survived? Ren's bioartist friend Amanda? Zeb, her eco-fighter stepfather? Her onetime lover, Jimmy? Or the murderous Painballers, survivors of the mutual-elimination Painball prison? Not to mention the shadowy, corrupt policing force of the ruling powers...

Meanwhile, gene-spliced life forms are proliferating: the lion/lamb blends, the Mo'hair sheep with human hair, the pigs with human brain tissue. As Adam One and his intrepid hemp-clad band make their way through this strange new world, Ren and Toby will have to decide on their next move. They can't stay locked away...
By turns dark, tender, violent, thoughtful, and uneasily hilarious, The Year of the Flood is Atwood at her most brilliant and inventive."
  • My Book Blogger Appreciation Giveaway is for an ARC of The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood. Somehow I ended up with two, so the giveaway copy has never been read. All you have to do to enter is leave me a comment stating you would like to win along with your e mail address in the same comment. No e mail, no entry.

Bonus entries can be earned by:

  • Becoming a follower through google friend connect
  • Being a follower already
  • Blogging (actual post) about the contest, however you must leave me a link
  • Tweeting, same as above
  • Put link in sidebar and let me know

Any of these extra efforts will earn a bonus entry. I'm trying to keep this contest simple. Please leave all pertinent info in ONE comment box. Deadline is September 27th at 5 P.M.US & Canada only. Good Luck!

Review: The Brutal Telling by Louise Penny



We first meet Inspector Armand Gamache, head of homicide at the Surete du Quebec, when he is called in to investigate the death of an elderly man found on the floor of Olivier Brule's bistro. Since the town of Three Pines does not have its own police force, nor does it have sidewalks, traffic lights or even a mayor, everyone in town knows each other but no one seems to know the dead man. Or at least not that they will admit.

The mystery deepens when the coroner announces the man was not killed on site but elsewhere and moved to the bistro. Who would do such a thing? And why? Does someone have it in for Olivier? The citizens of Three Pines begin to question could it be one of them. When a man long thought dead shows up in town, Gamache and the investigative team wonder if this is just coincidence or did he have something to do with the crime. Narrowing down the motive proves to be the hardest part of the investigation.

I became very fond of Inspector Gamache as he methodically searched into the past lives of the suspects looking for the murder motive. After all, his theory is that to catch a killer you don't move forward but backwards into the past. Characters are revealed layer by layer where nothing is as it seems on the surface and the reader is always learning another facet of these fascinating people who call Three Pines home. Even the victim is not what he appears to be at first glance.

Trying to solve this mystery is like entering a maze; you think you are going in the right direction until you hit a dead end and have to go in another direction and start all over again. Penny does a superb job of leading the reader down the garden path only to find it is the wrong path.

Penny deftly creates a vivid atmosphere that is almost dark and brooding, like the forest that surrounds Three Pines. It was very easy for me to get a vivid mental picture of the characters and places. The detailed descriptions are fantastic.I particularly liked her description of something as simple as the fire in the fireplace:
" it was not the roaring flames of a bitter winter fire, but a soft almost liquid flame of early autumn."

This is not a quick read thriller novel, but a complex character driven mystery that is more slowly developed and should be savored by the reader. Combine wonderful writing with an intriguing mystery and this book is a winner. I will have to say, though, that about one third of the way in, the story seemed to bog down a tad but in no time at all it picked right up again.

Hubby also read and enjoyed the book very much. Although The Brutal Telling is the fifth book in the Inspector Gamache series, it reads like a stand alone novel. This was our first time reading Louise Penny but it definitely will not be the last for us. Link to author's website is here.

Thank you to St. Martin's Press and shelf awareness for an ARC of The Brutal Telling.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Honestly baby, can we talk swanky cuz you know I love ya'!


This is the Honest Scrap award. It is for those bloggers who write from the heart. I received it from Carter at Creative Chronicler. The rules are to pass it along to seven bloggers and then list 10 honest things about myself. Here are those deserving of this honor, bloggers who write from the heart and touch me because of it:

Debbie at Wrighty's Reads
Dar at Peeking Between the Pages
Jenners at Find your Next Book Here
Alyce at At Home With Books
Kathryn at Virginia Kate Sagas
Molly at My Cozy Book Nook
Missy at Missy's Book Nook


  1. Ten honest things about me. Ooh, where do I start?

    1. I'd rather read than do housework any day. But then. . . . . who wouldn't? Well, maybe my sister-in-law, Kathleen. Anyone who feels the need to rev up the vac on Christmas eve because, "the wrapping paper is disturbing the carpet nap "......... Well, that's another story!

    2. Speaking of rather, I'd rather eat ice cream than brussels sprouts. But then again. . . . . ..who wouldn't? Well, maybe my sister-in-law, Kathleen. Hmmm, are you seeing a trend here?

    3. I don't like being short less than tall. Stinks, I have to drag the step stool around for everything.

    4. Technology just amazes and delights me at the same time that it baffles me. That's really not a surprise since I'm not too sure how they actually "make" electricity, no matter how simply my electrical engineer hubby tried to explain it to me. Anyone starting a sentence with, " you know how the nuclear reactor . . ." loses me pretty darn quickly.

    5. Reincarnation, yep, I do believe there is something to that.

    6. My only sister has been dead for 33 years and yet, I still miss her terribly and can still hear her voice in my head and picture her crystal clearly. She loved to read and recommended all her finds to me.

    7. One day I read one of those "get to know me" e mails and my younger daughter listed her greatest fear. I had no idea she worried about that. After watching my father-in-law and my sister-in-law Peg struggle with Alzheimers,this is now one of my worst fears. It's such an insidious, dignity robbing disease, I can see how hard it is on the rest of the family. Not something I ever want my children to have to deal with but chances are they will as Alzheimers seems to be hereditary.

    8. The more I read about dysfunctional families, drugs, abused and neglected children, the more I thank God for the upbringing and family I come from.

    9. On a lighter note, I am a collector of tea pots, bone china and penguins, not necessarily in that order.

    10. I have known my best friend for 55 years and count her as a huge blessing in my life. Love ya', T! Her hubby calls us the Bobbsey Twins. That sure shows our age! I wonder just how many of you readers can name the 4 Bobbsey twins without googling?

Rebecca of Lost in Books has just honored me with the Who Loves You Baby award. I want to pass this on to:

Carey at The Tome Traveller
Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea
Lisa at Books and Cooks
Drey at Drey's Library
Staci at Life in The Thumb
Luanne at A Bookworm's World
Lesa at Lesa's Book Critiques




Kelly of Enroute to Life has thrilled me by giving me the Swanky Blogger award. She thinks I'm spunky too. Now just how darn cute is she? A few of the new-to-me bloggers I want to share this with are:

Trin at Bloody Bad
Amy at Park Avenue Princess

Carolyn at Book Chick City
Gaby at Starting Fresh

One of my ultra-favorite bloggers, Bookfan Mary, has just splashed me with the Mermaid Award. Guess I won't need to dip in the pool today! Thanks, Mary. This is a really fun award that has been previously passed on.

Well, there you have it. Of course, during BBAW I have discovered a slew of wonderful new blogs to read. If you haven't read any of these great blogs, please do. They each have their own special niche in the blogosphere.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Review: Bookcase from CSN


Recently I had the privilege of holding a contest for an office chair from CSN (It's still going on actually until Sept 20th, if you haven't entered yet) with the opportunity to review a bookcase. Jason from CSN was a delight to work with. CSN is devoted to customer service and satisfaction. Shipping is free right to your door.


Since the space I have is between a bureau and the t.v. in my bedroom, I needed a bookcase that is tall,narrow and holds a lot of books. The 5 shelf Ameriwood SKU # AR 1074 fit the bill perfectly. Once I was notified that the item was shipped, it didn't take long at all to get here. Hubby helped me put it together and it took just about an hour. The instruction sheet was very clear and all the pieces were easily identifiable from the pictures. The most time consuming part was nailing the back on with 39 little nails. Luckily, all thumbs are still intact!

It just fits in the spot and when full of my books, it hold 115 books. You might have some smaller or larger books but that is what is on the shelves now. If I wanted to, I could double store paperbacks as the shelves are a generous 9.5 inches. Overall, the book case is 68" high and 30" wide. Three of the shelves are adjustable. I think it looks great in its new home and no more piles of books here, there and everywhere as our other bookcases are filled to capacity. This is not a fancy shmancy bookcase but that is not what I was looking for. I wanted utilitarian and that is exactly what I got. I'm very happy with my new bookcase.

If you haven't been to CSN's website yet, you might want to take a look. CSN has many products: bookcases, file cabinets, chairs, baby furniture, decor and much, much more in varied sizes and finishes ranging from economical to pricey. Lots of choices and a great company. Thank you Jason and CSN for this wonderful opportunity.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Review: Sworn to Silence by Linda Castillo

Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Minotaur Books (June 23, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0312374976
ISBN-13: 978-0312374976

Kate, a young former Amish woman, along with her two siblings, has kept a secret for years. Sixteen years ago, Kate was brutally attacked and raped. Somehow, she managed to shoot the attacker and she thought she killed him. Since the Amish prefer to keep these things to themselves and handle it their own way, her father and brother took care of the body. Or so she thought. When Kate left the community she took her nightmares and secret with her.

Now horror has come to the small Ohio town of Painters Mill and Kate Burkholder is back as chief of police. The MO of the latest killing is exactly the same as murders, dubbed the slaughterhouse murders, committed 16 years ago. Could he still be alive or is there a copy cat serial killer out there? When Kate has to investigate the latest crime, she hesitates to call in outside help because they might uncover more than just the perpetrator's identity.

The City council and the mayor go behind her back and call in several other agencies to help with the investigation. The county sherriff, Nate Detrich, along with an agent from BCI are called in. Who does the BCI send but John Tomasetti; an agent the bureau could do without. He's a former rogue cop, just barely holding onto his job, who needs pain killers to get him through the day and booze to get him through the night. His involvement in this case may be his saving grace. In the end, he might just surprise the agency and Kate along with himself. Even with all his vices, I found John to be a very likeable character with his own code of honor.

This is a well paced, excellently written thriller. It kept me on the edge of my seat with the gripping suspense, chilling detail and very believable dialogue. I liked the way Castillo set the scene and ratcheted up the suspense:

"My eyes have adjusted to the darkness. My feet are silent on the snow as I wend through trees and over deadfall. Overhead, a milky half moon casts just enough light for me to see my shadow. Cold stings my face. The Steel Mag-Lite makes my fingers ache with cold. But those minor discomfors are
nullified by my need to know who's out there and why.

Twenty yards from the crime scene, I stop and listen. Around me, the wind sighs. In the distance, a dog barks his outrage at being left outside on such a cold night. The snap of a breaking branch sounds behind me. Startled, I spin . I see movement within the trees and flip on the Mag-Lite. I set my other hand on my sidearm and thumb off the leather catch."

Can't you just feel the penetrating cold and her sense of trepidation? One caveat if you are squeamish: there are some gruesome details of the murder victims. Do not let that deter you from reading this book as it will be easy to just skip over those parts if you are so inclined. Sworn to Silence is the first in a planned series. Highly recommended for fans of mystery, thrillers or police proceduals. 4.5****

A big thank you to goodreads for the review copy.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Winner of Melinda and the Wild West by Linda Weaver Clarke




Say, did I tell you the story about our great-uncle Percival? Or our great-great grandma Petunia? No? Wow, I better write down these family stories before they get lost !

That's just what Linda Weaver Clarke teaches people in her Family Legacy Workshops. Recently, she visited with P.P.P. and shared her thoughts about such stories and told us all about some of her books. In case you missed the interview, you can read it here. Linda is generously allowing me to give away two copies of her first book, Melinda and the Wild West. Autographed, of course!! Thank you, Linda.

Through random.org., 2 winners were selected and they are:
Nancye and Sarah O. Watch for the e mail from me with the subject : Winner at Pudgy Penguin Perusals.

A big thanks to all the entrants and congrats to Nancye and Sarah. I just know you'll enjoy the book. Didn't win this one? Don't despair, there are plenty more contests coming up! Kinda sound like LibraryThing, don't I?

Show Me 5 Saturday: Hollywood is Like high School with Money

That's A Novel Idea has started a new MEME called Show Me Five Saturday. This meme will give each blogger an opportunity to give a brief description of a book they have read or reviewed during the week.It will work like this: Each Saturday You will post the answer to these questions. The number indicates the number of answers you will provide.

1. Book you read and/or reviewed this week
2. Words that describe the book
3. Settings where it took place or characters you met
4. Things you liked and/or disliked about it
5. Stars or less for your rating?

Here's mine:

  • Hollywood is Like High School with Money by Zoey Dean
  • comedic, chicklit.
  • Hollywood major movie studio, Taylor Henning : main character who quickly loses her naivete after she lands a job as second assistant to Iris, Quinn: Iris's jaded teen daughter who teachs Taylor how to get ahead in this cutthroat business but has her own agenda that comes back to bite Taylor in the hindquarters. Ouch!
  • Comedy, friendships fake and real, movie business inside scoop, the ending
  • 4 stars

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Blog Tour: Stray Affections by Charlene Ann Baumbich


Format: Trade Paperback
320 pages
On Sale: September 15, 2009
Price: $13.99


From the Publisher: "In Stray Affections, the last thing that Cassandra expects out of her Sunday is to be mesmerized at a collectors’ convention by a snowglobe. She’s enjoying some shopping time, with husband Ken at home tending their brood of four young boys, when she’s utterly charmed by the one-of-a kind globe containing figures of three dogs and a little girl with hair the color of her own. She can’t resist taking the unique globe home—even if means wrestling another shopper for it!
The beautiful snowglobe sparks long-dormant memories for Cassie, of her beloved Grandpa Wonky, the stray she rescued as a child and the painful roots of her combative relationship with her mother, “Bad Betty” Kamrowski. Life in Wanonishaw , Minnesota is never dull, though, and Cassie keeps the recollections at bay, busy balancing her boys, her home daycare operation, and being a good friend to best pal Margret. But after a strange—flurrious, as Cassie deems it—moment happens with the remarkable snowglobe, Cassie and the people she loves are swirled into a tumultuous, yet grace-filled, and life-changing journey.
“As a believer, I know the power of forgiveness and new beginnings, and of a God, and family and friends, who love me the way I am,” Charlene Ann Baumbich says. “The heartbeat of change flows through those wonderful gifts.”


"With the quirky, close-knit Midwestern small-town feel that made Charlene Ann Baumbich’s acclaimed Dearest Dorothy novels so popular, Stray Affections invites readers to experience the laughter and the healing of second chances."


My thoughts: *Sigh* .... Oh, I just loved this whole book, but what was most endearing to me was the change in the relationship between Cassandra and her mother, Betty. Since childhood Cassandra called her mother Bad Betty, "our lady of the no wishing, wanting or being" whose favorite admonishment to Cassandra was, "No crying!" As an adult, Cassandra still had issues with her mother and their relationship was strained at best, but when long remembered childhood hurts took on adult perspective, the gift of forgiveness became possible. The inexplicable incident with the snowglobe was the catalyst for change in a lot of lives.

Although Cassandra is the main character, her mother Betty has her own remarkable story fraught with a deep sadness that turns to intense happiness. The book would not have been complete without Betty's story. Baumbich does an amazing job letting the reader into Betty's head. The reasons for all her past actions and how they affected her entire life and Cassandra's life become crystal clear. I reveled and rejoiced as Betty found the way to let go of the past and find contentment and joy again. With her new found love of life, she also found a sense of humor that astounded her family.

There are many more delightful characters (loved Sam the butcher) in the book but I want you to experience them for yourself. Suffice it to say, Stray Affections is a wonderfully written, warm -the- cockles -of -your- heart kind of story. All the characters are so well fleshed out, I feel as if I really know them. Baumbich sure knows how to get to the heart of her characters' hearts! Every emotion, whether painful or joyous, is believable and felt by the reader. 4****

The book is categorized as contemporary fiction but it does have a Christian overtone to it. Not a preachy, beat- you- over- the- head tone, but you know it is there. Interspersed throughout are many humorous incidents.This book would make another candidate for book clubs as there are many topics that could be discussed. In fact, at the end of the book there is a readers discussion guide.

To see Charlene on video talking about the book, visit the following links:
The video is available on facebook and/or YouTube.
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/video/video.php?v=101927788491
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWwya52SkjU


Author Bio: Charlene Ann Baumbich is a popular author and speaker and an award-winning journalist. In addition to her Dearest Dorothy series of novels, she has written seven nonfiction books of humor and inspiration. A bungee-jumping, once motorcycle-owning grandma and unabashed dog lover, Charlene lives with her husband and rescued dog Kornflake in Glen Ellyn , Illinois . She loves telling stories, laughing whenever possible, and considers herself a Wild Child of God.

For more information on Stray Affections, please visit Waterbrook/Random House here.

A big thank you to Ashley at Waterbrook/Random House for a review copy and the invitation to participate in the tour.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Review: Laced with Magic by Barbara Bretton


Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Berkley Trade (August 4, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0425227529

From the back cover: " Ever have the feeling that the fates finally got it right? That's how I felt when I met Luke MacKenzie. And no one could have convinced me otherwise-not the trolls, selkies, or spirts who also call Sugar Maple, Vermont, home. Bit since I live in a town that thrives on secrets, why am I surprised that the man I love has a few of his own? Beccause out of nowhere his ex-wife has suddenly shown up, claiming to see the spirit of their daughter, Steffie- a daughter I knew nothing about.

Now it seems Steffie's spirit is being held hostage by a certain Fae leader. And if I weave a spell to free her spirit, my nemesis will also be free- free to destroy my yarn shop, all of Sugar Maple, and everyone in it. But if I don't, Steffie won't be the only one spending eternity in hell. I'll be joining her cursed with a broken heart."

My thoughts: I really never read books with a paranormal theme to them but this one sounded interesting to me mainly because it is set in Vermont and the protagonist owns a knitting shop. It also involves a romance. All good things!

It's an interesting premise: in a picture perfect town, a la Norman Rockwell, all is not what it seems on the surface; the town is populated with vampires, selkies, witches and shapeshifters. Chloe, half human-half- sorceress woman and Luke, totally human man fall madly in love. When they say sparks fly, they mean it literally. Golden sparks fly from fingertips to fingertips of the two lovers.Things are not all idyllic though and are about to become complicated.

When Luke's ex-wife, Karen, comes to Sugar Maple and seeks his help finding their late daughter Steffie, Chloe tries to do what she can to move the process along. Not knowing what she is up against, Karen goes off by herself to try to find Steffie. Chloe and Luke must step up the pace to thwart Isadora, a powerful fae leader Chloe had managed to banish a long time ago. With a little assistance from an unexpected source, Chloe comes up with an idea. Unfortunately, this will involve a fight to the finish confrontation with Isadora. With only hours to spare, Chloe and Luke must manage to find Karen, save Steffie's soul from Isadora's hostage and at the same time save the entire town of Sugar Maple. Will evil prevail or will magick triumph?

At first, I was a little bit leery that the characters would be too "weird" for me. Happily, it turns out they weren't. In fact I really liked the characters and got engrossed in the story right from the beginning. The ending was dramatic and had an unforseen twist to it. Have I found a new genre to explore? Maybe, although I do know I am definitely going to read Casting Spells, the first book in this series. The ending of the book leads me to believe there will be a third. If you are a fan of romance with a little bit of
paranormal drama thrown in, you just might fall under the spell of Laced with Magic. 3.5****

Barbara Bretton is the author of numerous books. To see the complete list of all her books or to read an excerpt from Casting Spells and Laced with Magic, please visit her website.

A big thank you to Dorothy at VBT for a review copy and allowing me to participate in the tour.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Rocking Award



Missy at Missy's Book Nook has given me this ultra-cool award. Even though I could be that icon's grandmother, it's sheer heaven to be thought to have a blog that rocks!

I think I need to come up with the feisty old lady award. Anyway, I digress. Thank you so much Missy for thinking of me. You are too sweet!

There wasn't any criteria posted or number of blogs to be nominated (aha, free rein) so I am giving the award to several very enjoyable and recently new-to-me blogs and they are:

Tina at Tutu's Two Cents
Marie at Daisy's Book Journal
Debbie at Bookmagic
Nonna at Cheli's Book Shelves

If you haven't checked out these rockin' blogs, what are you waiting for? Go, shoo, scat. Peruse and enjoy!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

CSN office chair giveaway !



As computer users, we sit in front of our monitors for hours and certainly need a comfy seat. One that not only looks good but feels good and is oh so comfortable. CSN is a company that sells all types of office furniture and decor, including some fabulous office chairs. If you need it, chances are they have it in many choices of size and finish. Please visit their website to see the wide array of products with FREE shipping. Does it get any better than that?

Yes it does, because this is your lucky day! Through CSN's incredible generosity, they are allowing me to give away an office chair . Yep, you read that right. Not only will they give away a chair but they will ship it free right to your door if you are the fortunate winner. How wonderful is that !

Here's how to enter:


Tell me why you would like to win the chair and what other office accessory is on your wish list. Please leave a separate comment for each entry and also put your e mail address in each comment box. Thanks!

Bonus entries:
  • +5 ~ write a regular blog post linking back to this contest post or tweet about the contest and leave me a link. Let's help spread the word about this generous company.
  • + 3 ~ Become a google friend connect follower. Already one? You already have the extra entries. Thanks!
  • +1 ~ Put the contest link in your sidebar

Giveaway is open to residents of the US & Canada. No P.O.Boxes. Deadline to enter is September 20th. Good luck!

Coming soon: a review of a bookcase from CSN.

Want to win a bookcase? Karen at Bookin with Bingo is giving one away here. She's even throwing in a lot of new books to put on the shelves. Is she not fabulous, I mean really!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Interview: Linda Weaver Clarke


Today it is my privilege to welcome Linda Weaver Clarke. Linda writes about something near and dear to my heart: family history and stories. Here is a little info before you read the Q & A. Enjoy ! Don't miss the giveaway at the end.

Bio: Linda Weaver Clarke is an author and lecturer. She travels throughout the United States, teaching a “Family Legacy Workshop” at various libraries, encouraging others to turn their family history and autobiography into a variety of interesting stories. Clarke is the author of Melinda and the Wild West, a semi-finalist for the “Reviewers Choice Award 2007.” The historical fiction series, “A Family Saga in Bear Lake, Idaho” include the following novels: Melinda and the Wild West, Edith and the Mysterious Stranger, Jenny’s Dream, and Elena, Woman of Courage.

Q: What do you teach in your Family Legacy Workshops?

Linda: I teach people how to take their family history or their own autobiography and turn it into interesting stories. It’s important to teach our children their heritage. Each of us has a story from our ancestors to tell. If these stories are unwritten, then they’ll be lost forever. It’s up to us to write these experiences down. Our children need to be proud of their ancestors. Leon Garfield said: “The historian, if honest, gives us a photograph; the storyteller gives us a painting.” What I’m teaching people to do is how to paint their stories, to be the storyteller. To learn more about what I teach and read samples of my ancestor’s stories, you can visit my website at http://www.lindaweaverclarke.com/.

Q: What do you encourage people to research?

Linda: The area your ancestors settled and the time period. First, find out everything you can about the area to both educate your readers and to make the setting feel real. If possible, go to the area you want to write about, walk around, find out where your ancestors lived, went to school, and played. If you can’t go there in person, then do research and find pictures of that area.

The time period is very important. If they lived during the depression or World War II, then write about it. What happened during those years of conflict? What did your ancestors have to endure? I found out that in 1942 they rationed gas to three gallons a week. To me, that was amazing. In 1896, they painted pencils yellow for the very first time, and for a very good reason. (I included this in my first novel, Melinda and the Wild West, and received many e-mails about it.) I found out that in the 1920s, women bobbed their hair and raised their hemlines. This new style brought about a lot of trouble. If women bobbed their hair, they were fired from their jobs. A teacher in Jersey City was ordered to grow her hair back by the school board or she would be fired. A preacher warned his congregation that a “bobbed woman was a disgraced woman.” Men even divorced their wives over the new hairstyle. Amazing! I love research!

Q: A reviewer wrote: “Jenny’s Dream tells a beautiful story that incorporates the value of loyalty, love, family and forgiveness into it. I also enjoyed how the author put real experiences, taken from her family and friends, into the plot. This is a great touch. Jenny’s Dream is a wholesome novel that will be enjoyed by family members of all ages who would enjoy a great historical romance. I think this series is destined to be a classic.” Why do you put true family and ancestral experiences in your novels and can you give us a few examples?

Linda: I love inserting real experiences. It brings a story to life. I feel close to my ancestors and wanted to add their experiences to my fictional characters.

In “Melinda and the Wild West,” I inserted an experience that happened to my dad. When he was young, his father asked him to bury the skunks that he shot because they were getting into the chicken coop. Before my dad buried them, he drained their scent glands into a bottle. He called it “skunk oil.” Then he took it to school to show his friends. While explaining how he had done it, he must have gotten a little too excited because he accidentally dropped the bottle and it splattered on the floor. The scent of concentrated skunk oil permeated the room with a stench that was indescribable. Everyone ran out of the school as fast as their little legs would go. And the teacher followed close behind. They let school out so it could be cleaned up. My father said that he was a hero for one day because he got school out for his classmates. This novel eventually won an award as one of the semi-finalists for the “Reviewers Choice Award 2007.”

In “Edith and the Mysterious Stranger,” I based this story around the courtship of my parents. They wrote letters to one another before they ever met. She said that she fell in love with the soul of my father, what was deep down inside and they didn’t even know what one another looked like. The day they met, my mother told me that her heart leapt within her and a warm glow filled her soul and she knew she would marry this man. I knew this would be the basis of my next novel, but there’s one difference. In my story, you don’t know who the mysterious stranger is until the end of the book. Some readers guessed right while others were pleasantly surprised.

My great grandmother, Sarah Eckersley Robinson, was my inspiration for “David and the Bear Lake Monster.” Sarah lost her hearing as a child but she never let her deafness stop her from developing her talents. I took a lot of her experiences from her biography and gave them to my heroine to bring some reality into my story. To me, the experiences of my ancestors have always intrigued me.

Sarah was known as one of the most graceful dancers in town. She was known for gliding across the floor with ease, with just a touch of her partner’s hand. Sarah had such agility and gracefulness while swimming, that people would actually throw coins in the water so they could watch her dive after them. Once an intruder hid in her bedroom under her bed, thinking he could take advantage of her since she was deaf. He must have thought she was an easy victim but was sadly mistaken. She swatted him out from under her bed with a broom, and all the way out of the house, and down the street for a couple blocks, whacking him as she ran. What a courageous woman!

In my research about the “hearing impaired,” and talking to a friend who became deaf in her youth, I became educated about the struggles they have to bear. After all my research, I found that I had even more respect for my great grandmother and her disability.

Q: Do you put any of your own experiences into your books?

Linda: Yes. “Jenny’s Dream” was inspired by events that happened to me in my youth. I learned that forgiveness was essential for true happiness and well-being, and that is why I felt this story needed to be told. Jenny must learn to forgive and put her past behind her. Of course, I add a little love story, but it’s not the complete focus of this novel. When she realizes that her kindred friend means more to her than she thought, then she has to make a decision whether to follow her dream or matters of the heart. This story is about accomplishing one’s dreams and the miracle of forgiveness.

Q: Can each of your books be read separately or do you have to read them in order since they’re a series?

Linda: Each story has its own plot and can be read separately, but the main characters grow up. In the first book, “Melinda and the Wild West,” this book is about how Gilbert and Melinda get together.

Q: What is the synopsis of your new book, “David and the Bear Lake Monster”?

Linda: Deep-rooted legends, long family traditions, and a few mysterious events! David quickly becomes one with the town and its folk and wonders why they believe in this Bear Lake Monster. It just has to be a myth. While visiting the Roberts family, he finds himself entranced with one very special lady and ends up defending her honor several times. Sarah isn’t like the average woman. This beautiful and dainty lady has a disability that no one seems to notice. He finds out that Sarah has gone through more trials than the average person. She teaches him the importance of not dwelling on the past and how to love life. After a few teases, tricks, and mischievous deeds, David begins to overcome his troubles, but will it be too late? Will he lose the one woman he adores? And how about the Bear Lake Monster? Does it really exist?

Q: What about this Bear Lake Monster? Does it really exist?

Linda: The mystery of the Bear Lake Monster has been an exciting part of Idaho history ever since the early pioneers arrived in 1863. The legend of the Bear Lake Monster made life a little more exciting for the pioneers. Some people claimed to have seen it and gave descriptions of it.
The monster’s eyes were flaming red and its ears stuck out from the sides of its skinny head. Its body was long, resembling a gigantic alligator, and it could swim faster than a galloping horse. Of course, it only came out in the evening or at dusk.

Throughout the years, no one has ever disproved the Bear Lake Monster. A bunch of scientists tried to discredit the monster and said it was a huge codfish that was shipped in from the East but could not prove this theory. Does the Bear Lake Monster exist? Whatever conclusion is drawn, the legend still lives on and brings a great deal of mystery and excitement to the community.

Q: When is the last book in this series going to be released and what is it about?

Linda: “Elena, Woman of Courage” is the last in this series and should be released soon. It’s set in 1925. It was a blast to research. I found out about words that I didn’t even know such as: Cat’s pajamas! Ah, horsefeathers! Attaboy! Baloney! You slay me! When referring to a woman, they used doll, tomato, and bearcat. When a person was in love, they were goofy. If a person was a fool, they were a sap. And when a woman wasn’t in the mood for kissing or romance, she would say, “The bank’s closed.” I was able to use all these words and much more in my book. The language was great!

It’s about a “Happy-go-lucky Bachelor” that is completely fascinated with a woman doctor: Elena Yeates. Of course, women weren’t encouraged to go to college back then, let alone become a doctor, and this fascinates him to no end. With the 1920’s rise of women’s rights, this novel gives you great insight at the struggles women had to go through, all the while watching a young love blossom! You can read an excerpt from each of my books at http://www.lindaweaverclarke.com/samplechapters.html.

Q: Page One Literary Book Review wrote something about this series that I would like to quote. “Linda Weaver Clarke displays an easy and excellent style of writing, blending adventure, romance, history, humor, and courage. A Family Saga in Bear Lake, Idaho is an instant classic and should put this author on the literary map all over the world. A MUST read!” How did you feel when you received this review?

Linda: Surprised, astonished, amazed, speechless! I had to read it over and over again to make sure I had read it right. Needless to say, it touched my heart beyond words and I was in seventh heaven.

To learn more about Linda, visit her blog at http://lindaweaverclarke.blogspot.com/.
Thank you, Linda, for sharing some of your feelings and stories with us today. We appreciate you taking time out of your busy schedule.


Linda has generously agreed to give away a signed paperback copy of her first book, Melinda and the Wild West.

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