Friday, October 29, 2010

Feel Good Friday



It's Friday!! Yay!!! So that means it is time for Feel Good Friday. :)

Five things that made me smile this week:
  1. My husband was in a car accident this week (that didn't make me smile) and thanks to the good Lord he only had a sore neck and a cut on his knee. The other person was okay too. So I was very happy that he was okay...that made me smile.
  2. Finishing another book which makes me one book closer to my goal of getting 50 books read this year. I'm currently on book 43 of the year. So I'm really close!!
  3. Discovering the Kindle app for my BlackBerry.
  4. Seeing the Texas Rangers play in the World Series. Although, we won't discuss how they are doing thus far. ;)
  5. My German Shepherd, Gracie. She always makes me smile. :)

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Never Without A Book

Stack Of Old Hardcover Books

I went to Amazon today and on the front page it had "Free Kindle Reading Apps" and I saw where they have a reading app for the Blackberry!! Eek! So I downloaded that baby and now I will always have a book with me even if I forget my book or Kindle at home. How cool is that?? If you want to see if they have an app for your phone you can go here to check it out. Happy Reading!! :)

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Head In The Clouds by Karen Witemeyer

Head in the Clouds


Product Description from Goodreads.com:

Instead of returning home after a humiliating breakup, Adelaide Proctor becomes the governess at a ranch where Gideon Westcott's promise to a dying woman obliges him to raise 5-year-old Isabella. But when the girl's evil uncle comes to claim her---and her inheritance---can Gideon and Adelaide put their growing attraction aside to protect her?

My Thoughts:

I thought Karen's first book, A Tailor-Made Bride, was really good but I have to say her second book, Head In The Clouds is really, really good. You get action, adventure and romance all in one enjoyable read. Things in Fort Worth don't exactly work out like Adelaide hopes so she ends up answering an ad in the newspaper for a governess. Adelaide loves to read so when she meets Gideon Westcott for the first time ideas from Jane Eyre runs through her head. But she makes herself get her head out of the clouds and focus on her young charge, Isabella. As Gideon, Adelaide and Isabella grow closer so does evil in the form of Isabella's uncle. To see what happens once her uncle arrives in Texas you will just have to read Head in the Clouds for yourself. ;) I know you won't regret it. I certainly I didn't.

Thanks to Karen Witemeyer and Bethany House for sending me a free review copy

Friday, October 22, 2010

Feel Good Friday




I came across this meme and thought I would give it a try.  If you would like to particapate then just head over to The Girl Next Door Grows Up to check it out.  You have a few prompts to pick from and I picked this one:

Just make a list. List 5 things that made you really happy this week. No matter how bad or boring you think your week was, I bet you can find 5 things.

  1. I have started my Christmas knitting and I'm really pleased with the way the scarf I'm knitting is turning out. 
  2. I had to take my cat, Leo, to the vet this week.  He's been pulling out his hair and at first I thought it was because of fleas but I've been putting flea medicine on him and he still pulls his hair out.  So I was afraid something serious was wrong with him.  I was happy to learn he may just have allergies and so I'm getting him tested to find out.
  3. I finally took my wedding ring to the jewelers to get it resized.   Can't wait to get it back now.
  4. Leo sleeping...see *points down*  isn't he a cutie??
  5.  Watching the Rangers beat the Yankees!!  Go Rangers!!!

Thursday, October 21, 2010

First Wild Card Tour: Two Tickets To The Christmas Ball by Donita K. Paul

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:

WaterBrook Press (October 5, 2010)
***Special thanks to Ashley Boyer and Staci Carmichael of Waterbrook Multnomah for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Expertly weaving together fantasy, romance and Biblical truths, Donita K. Paul penned the best-selling, fan-favorite DragonKeeper Chronicles series. After retiring early from teaching, she began a second career as an award-winning author and loves serving as a mentor for new writers of all ages. And when she’s not putting pen to paper, Donita makes her home in Colorado Springs and enjoys spending time with her grandsons, cooking, beading, stamping, and knitting.


Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $14.99
Hardcover: 240 pages
Publisher: WaterBrook Press (October 5, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0307458997
ISBN-13: 978-0307458995

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:



Christmas. Cora had been trying to catch it for four years. She scurried down the sidewalk, thankful that streetlights and brightly lit storefronts counteracted the gloom of early nightfall. Somewhere, sometime, she’d get a hold of how to celebrate Christmas. Maybe even tonight.

      With snowflakes sticking to her black coat, Christmas lights blinking around shop windows, and incessant bells jingling, Cora should have felt some holiday cheer.

      And she did.

      Really.

      Just not much.

      At least she was on a Christmas errand this very minute. One present for a member of the family. Shouldn’t that count for a bit of credit in the Christmas-spirit department?

      Cora planned out her Christmas gift giving in a reasonable manner. The execution of her purchasing schedule gave her a great deal of satisfaction. Tonight’s quest was a book for Uncle Eric—something about knights and castles, sword fights, shining armor, and all that.

      One or two gifts purchased each week from Labor Day until December 15, and her obligations were discharged efficiently, economically, and without the excruciating last-minute frenzy that descended upon other people…like her three sisters, her mother, her grandmother, her aunts.

      Cora refused to behave like her female relatives and had decided not to emulate the male side of the family either. The men didn’t buy gifts. They sometimes exchanged bottles from the liquor store, but more often they drank the spirits themselves.

      Her adult ambition had been to develop her own traditions for the season, ones that sprouted from the Christianity she’d discovered in college. The right way to celebrate the birth of Christ. She avoided the chaos that could choke Christmas. Oh dear. Judgmental again. At least now she recognized when she slipped.

      She glanced around Sage Street. Not too many shoppers. The quaint old shops were decked out for the holidays, but not with LED bulbs and inflated cartoon figures.

      Since discovering Christianity, she’d been confused about the trappings of Christmas—the gift giving, the nativity scenes, the carols, even the Christmas tree. Every year she tried to acquire some historical background on the festivities. She was learning. She had hope. But she hadn’t wrapped her head around all the traditions yet.

      The worst part was shopping.

      Frenzy undid her. Order sustained her. And that was a good reason to steer clear of any commercialized holiday rush. She’d rather screw red light bulbs into plastic reindeer faces than push through a crowd of shoppers.

      Cora examined the paper in her hand and compared it to the address above the nearest shop. Number 483 on the paper and 527 on the building. Close.

      When she’d found the bookstore online, she had been amazed that a row of old-fashioned retailers still existed a few blocks from the high-rise office building where she worked. Truthfully, it was more like the bookstore found her. Every time she opened her browser, and on every site she visited, the ad for the old-fashioned new- and used-book store showed up in a banner or sidebar. She’d asked around, but none of her co-workers patronized the Sage Street Shopping District.

      “Sounds like a derelict area to me,” said Meg, the receptionist. “Sage Street is near the old railroad station, isn’t it? The one they decided was historic so they wouldn’t tear it down, even though it’s empty and an eyesore?”

      An odd desire to explore something other than the mall near her apartment seized Cora. “I’m going to check it out.”

      Jake, the security guard, frowned at her. “Take a cab. You don’t want to be out too late over there.”

      Cora walked. The brisk air strengthened her lungs, right? The exercise pumped her blood, right? A cab would cost three, maybe four dollars, right?

      An old man, sitting on the stoop of a door marked 503, nodded at her. She smiled, and he winked as he gave her a toothless grin. Startled, she quickened her pace and gladly joined the four other pedestrians waiting at the corner for the light to change.

      Number 497 emblazoned the window of an ancient shoe store on the opposite corner. She marched on. In this block she’d find the book and check another item off her Christmas list.

      Finally! “Warner, Werner, and Wizbotterdad, Books,” Cora read the sign aloud and then grasped the shiny knob. It didn’t turn. She frowned. Stuck? Locked? The lights were on. She pressed her face against the glass. A man sat at the counter. Reading. How appropriate.

      Cora wrenched the knob. A gust of wind pushed with her against the door, and she blew into the room. She stumbled and straightened, and before she could grab the door and close it properly, it swung closed, without the loud bang she expected.

      “I don’t like loud noises,” the man said without looking up from his book.

      “Neither do I,” said Cora.

      He nodded over his book. With one gnarled finger, he pushed his glasses back up his nose.

      Must be an interesting book. Cora took a quick look around. The place could use stronger lights. She glanced back at the clerk. His bright lamp cast him and his book in a golden glow.

      Should she peruse the stacks or ask?

      She decided to browse. She started to enter the aisle between two towering bookcases.

      “Not there,” said the old man.

      “I beg your pardon?” said Cora.

      “How-to books. How to fix a leaky faucet. How to build a bridge. How to mulch tomatoes. How to sing opera. How-to books. You don’t need to know any of that, do you?”

      “No.”

      “Wrong aisle, then.” He placed the heavy volume on the counter and leaned over it, apparently absorbed once more.

      Cora took a step toward him. “I think I saw a movie like this once.”

      His head jerked up, his scowl heavier. He glared over the top of his glasses at the books on the shelves as if they had suddenly moved or spoken or turned bright orange.

      “A movie? Here? I suppose you mean the backdrop of a bookstore. Not so unusual.” He arched an eyebrow. “You’ve Got Mail and 84 Charing Cross Road.”

      “I meant the dialogue. You spoke as if you knew what I needed.”

      He hunched his shoulders. The dark suspenders stretched across the faded blue of his shirt. “Reading customers. Been in the business a long time.”

      “I’m looking for a book for my uncle. He likes castles, knights, tales of adventure. That sort of thing.”

      He sighed, closed his book, and tapped its cover. “This is it.” He stood as Cora came to the desk. “Do you want me to wrap it and send it? We have the service. My grandson’s idea.”

      Cora schooled her face and her voice. One of the things she excelled in was not showing her exasperation. She’d been trained by a dysfunctional family, and that had its benefits. She knew how to take guff and not give it back. Maintaining a calm attitude was a good job skill.

      She tried a friendly smile and addressed the salesclerk.

      “I want to look at it first and find out how much it costs.”

      “It’s the book you want, and the price is eleven dollars and thirteen cents.”

      Cora rubbed her hand over the cover. It looked and felt like leather, old leather, but in good repair. The book must be ancient.

      “Are you sure?” she asked.

      “Which?” the old man barked.

      “Which what?”

      “Which part of the statement am I sure about? It doesn’t matter because I’m sure about both.”

      Cora felt her armor of detachment suffer a dent. The man was impossible. She could probably order a book online and get it wrapped and delivered right to her uncle with less aggravation. But dollar signs blinked in neon red in her mind as she thought how much that would cost. No need to be hasty.

      Curtain rings rattled on a rod, and Cora looked up to see a younger version of the curmudgeon step into the area behind the counter.

      The younger man smiled. He had the same small, wiry build as the older version, but his smile was warm and genuine. He looked to be about fifty, but his hair was still black, as black as the old man’s hair was white. He stretched out his hand, and Cora shook it.

      “I’m Bill Wizbotterdad. This is my granddad, William Wizbotterdad.”

      “Let me guess. Your father is named Will?”

      Bill grinned, obviously pleased she’d caught on quickly. “Willie Wizbotterdad. He’s off in Europe collecting rare books.”

      “He’s not!” said the elder shop owner.

      “He is.” Bill cast his granddad a worried look.

      “That’s just the reason he gave for not being here.” William shook his head and leaned across the counter. “He doesn’t like Christmas. We have a special job to do at Christmas, and he doesn’t like people and dancing and matrimony.”

      Bill put his arm around his grandfather and pulled him back. He let go of his granddad and spun the book on the scarred wooden counter so that Cora could read the contents. “Take a look.” He opened the cover and flipped through the pages. “Colored illustrations.”

      A rattling of the door knob was followed by the sound of a shoulder thudding against the wood. Cora turned to see the door fly open with a tall man attached to it. The stranger brushed snow from his sleeves, then looked up at the two shop owners. Cora caught them giving each other a smug smile, a wink, and a nod of the head.

      Odd. Lots of oddness in this shop.

      She liked the book, and she wanted to leave before more snow accumulated on the streets. Yet something peculiar about this shop and the two men made her curious. Part of her longed to linger. However, smart girls trusted their instincts and didn’t hang around places that oozed mystery. She didn’t feel threatened, just intrigued. But getting to know the peculiar booksellers better was the last thing she wanted, right? She needed to get home and be done with this Christmas shopping business. “I’ll take the book.”

      The newcomer stomped his feet on the mat by the door, then took off his hat.

      Cora did a double take. “Mr. Derrick!”

      He cocked his head and scrunched his face. “Do I know you?” The man was handsome, even wearing that comical lost expression. “Excuse me. Have we met?”

      “We work in the same office.”

      He studied her a moment, and a look of recognition lifted the frown. “Third desk on the right.” He hesitated, then snapped his fingers. “Cora Crowden.”

      “Crowder.”

      He jammed his hand in his pocket, moving his jacket aside. His tie hung loosely around his neck. She’d never seen him looking relaxed. The office clerks called him Serious Simon Derrick.

      “I drew your name,” she said.

      He looked puzzled.

      “For the gift exchange. Tomorrow night. Office party.”

      “Oh. Of course.” He nodded. “I drew Mrs. Hudson. She’s going to retire, and I heard her say she wanted to redecorate on a shoestring.”

      “That’s Mrs. Wilson. Mrs. Hudson is taking leave to be with her daughter, who is giving birth to triplets.”

      He frowned and began looking at the books.

      “You won’t be there, will you?” Cora asked.

      “At the party? No, I never come.”

      “I know. I mean, I’ve worked at Sorenby’s for five years, and you’ve never been there.”

      The puzzled expression returned to Serious Simon’s face. He glanced to the side. “I’m looking for the how-to section.”

      Cora grinned. “On your left. Second aisle.”

      He turned to stare at her, and she pointed to the shelves Mr. Wizbotterdad had not let her examine. Mr. Derrick took a step in that direction.

      Cora looked back at the shop owners and caught them leaning back in identical postures, grins on their faces, and arms crossed over their chests.

      Bill jerked away from the wall, grabbed her book, rummaged below the counter, and brought out a bag. He slid the book inside, then looked at her. “You didn’t want the book wrapped and delivered?”

      “No, I’ll just pay for it now.”

      “Are you sure you wouldn’t like to look around some more?” asked Bill.

      “Right,” said William. “No hurry. Look around. Browse. You might find something you like.”

      Bill elbowed William.

      Simon Derrick had disappeared between the stacks.

      William nodded toward the how-to books. “Get a book. We have a copy of How to Choose Gifts for Ungrateful Relatives. Third from the bottom shelf, second case from the wall.”

      The statement earned him a “shh” from his grandson.

      Cora shifted her attention to the man from her office and walked a few paces to peek around the shelves. “Mr. Derrick, I’m getting ready to leave. If you’re not coming to the party, may I just leave the gift on your desk tomorrow?”

      He glanced at her before concentrating again on the many books. “That’s fine. Nice to see you, Miss Crowden.”

      “Crowder,” she corrected, but he didn’t answer.

      She went to the counter and paid. Mr. Derrick grunted when she said good-bye at the door.

      “Come back again,” said Bill.

      “Yes,” said William. “We have all your heart’s desires.”

      Bill elbowed him, and Cora escaped into the blustering weather.

      She hiked back to the office building. Snow sprayed her with tiny crystals, and the sharp wind nipped her nose. Inside the parking garage, warm air helped her thaw a bit as she walked to the spot she leased by the month. It would be a long ride home on slippery roads. But once she arrived, there would be no one there to interrupt her plans. She got in the car, turned the key, pushed the gearshift into reverse, looked over her shoulder, and backed out of her space.

      She would get the gift ready to mail off and address a few cards in the quiet of her living room. There would be no yelling. That’s what she liked about living states away from her family. No one would ambush her with complaints and arguments when she walked through the door.

      Except Skippy. Skippy waited. One fat, getting fatter, cat to talk to. She did complain at times about her mistress being gone too long, about her dinner being late, about things Cora could not fathom. But Cora never felt condemned by Skippy, just prodded a little.

_

      Once inside her second-floor apartment, she pulled off her gloves, blew her nose, and went looking for Skippy.

      The cat was not behind the curtain, sitting on the window seat, staring at falling snow. Not in her closet, curled up in a boot she’d knocked over. Not in the linen closet, sleeping on clean towels. She wasn’t in any of her favorite spots. Cora looked around and saw the paper bag that, this morning, had been filled with wadded scraps of Christmas paper. Balls of pretty paper and bits of ribbon littered the floor. There. Cora bent over and spied her calico cat in the bag.

      “Did you have fun, Skippy?”

      The cat rolled on her back and batted the top of the paper bag. Skippy then jumped from her cave and padded after Cora, as her owner headed for the bedroom.

      Thirty minutes later, Cora sat at the dining room table in her cozy pink robe that enveloped her from neck to ankles. She stirred a bowl of soup and eyed the fifteen packages she’d wrapped earlier in the week. Two more sat waiting for their ribbons.

      These would cost a lot less to send if some of these people were on speaking terms. She could box them together and ship them off in large boxes.

      She spooned chicken and rice into her mouth and swallowed.

The soup was a tad too hot. She kept stirring.

      She could send one package with seven gifts inside to Grandma Peterson, who could dispense them to her side of the family. She could send three to Aunt Carol.

      She took another sip. Cooler.

      Aunt Carol could keep her gift and give two to her kids. She could send five to her mom…

      Cora grimaced. She had three much older sisters and one younger. “If Mom were on speaking terms with my sisters, that would help.”

      She eyed Skippy, who had lifted a rear leg to clean between her back toes. “You don’t care, do you? Well, I’m trying to. And I think I’m doing a pretty good job with this Christmas thing.”

      She reached over and flipped the switch on her radio. A Christmas carol poured out and jarred her nerves. She really should think about Christmas and not who received the presents. Better to think “my uncle” than “Joe, that bar bum and pool shark.”

      She finished her dinner, watching her cat wash her front paws.

      “You and I need to play. You’re”—she paused as Skippy turned

a meaningful glare at her—“getting a bit rotund, dear kitty.”

      Skippy sneezed and commenced licking her chest.

      After dinner, Cora curled up on the couch with her Warner, Werner, and Wizbotterdad bag. Skippy came to investigate the rattling paper.

      Uncle Eric. Uncle Eric used to recite “You Are Old, Father William.” He said it was about a knight. But Cora wasn’t so sure. She dredged up memories from college English. The poem was by Lewis Carroll, who was really named Dodson, Dogson, Dodgson, or something.

      “He wrote Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” she said. “There’s a cat in the story, but not as fine a cat as you. He smiles too much.”

      Skippy gave her a squint-eyed look.

      Cora eased the leather-bound book out of the bag. “The William I met at the bookstore qualifies for at least ancient.”

      She put the book in her lap and ran her fingers over the embossed title: How the Knights Found Their Ladies.

      She might have been hasty. She didn’t know if Uncle Eric would like this. She hefted the book, guessing its weight to be around four pounds. She should have found a lighter gift. This would cost a fortune to mail.

      Skippy sniffed at the binding, feline curiosity piqued. Cora stroked her fur and pushed her back. She opened the book to have a peek inside. A piece of thick paper fell out. Skippy pounced on it as it twirled to the floor.

      “What is it, kitty? A bookmark?” She slipped it out from between Skippy’s paws, then turned the rectangle over in her hands. Not a bookmark. A ticket.


Admit one to the Wizards’ Christmas Ball

Costumes required

Dinner and Dancing

and your Destiny


      Never heard of it. She tucked the ticket in between the pages and continued to flip through the book, stopping to read an occasional paragraph.

      This book wasn’t for Uncle Eric at all. It was not a history, it was a story. Kind of romantic too. Definitely not Uncle Eric’s preferred reading.

      Skippy curled against her thigh and purred.

      “You know what, cat? I’m going to keep it.”

      Skippy made her approval known by stretching her neck up and rubbing her chin on the edge of the leather cover. Cora put the book on the sofa and picked up Skippy for a cuddle. The cat squirmed out of her arms, batted at the ticket sticking out of the pages, and scampered off.

      “I love you too,” called Cora.

      She pulled the ticket out and read it again: Wizards’ Christmas Ball. She turned out the light and headed for bed. But as she got ready, her eye caught the computer on her desk. Maybe she could find a bit more information.

Angie here....I don't know what happened but this tour totally caught me by surprise.  So I haven't read this yet but I plan on reading it very soon so be on the look out for my review in a week or so.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

My Book Journey

I hope Renee @ Black 'n Gold Girl's Book Spot doesn't mind if I steal her idea.  She had a post today about the books she grew up with and I thought I would share some that I grew up with too.  So let the journey begin....

In a People House (A Beginning Beginner Book)


I loved this book when I was kid.  I have no idea why but I read it over and over and over.

Danny and the Dinosaur


This book has a little story to it.  When I was eight we moved from Indiana to Texas and for whatever reason my reading wasn't that good.  I actually made an F in reading in the second grade!!  So my dad started working with me to help me read better and this is the book we read together. :)

Harry the Dirty Dog


This is another favorite of mine as a kid.  I loved Harry. :)

Kristy's Great Idea (The Baby-Sitters Club, #1)


Then as I got older I started reading The Baby-Sitters Club series. I loved this series I wish I hadn't gotten read of them all.  *sigh*

Remember Me


I have no idea how I stumbled upon Christopher Pike's books but I did and I read a ton of them.  Not good.  I learned I really shouldn't read freaky, scary stuff. 

A Model Crime (The Nancy Drew Files, Case #51)


So I started reading Nancy Drew to get my mystery fix.  Ahhh, much better. ;)

The Black Opal


In high school I discovered Victoria Holt and have read almost all her books.  The Black Opal is one of my favorites, if you like Gothic romances you should check her out.

Love Comes Softly (Love Comes Softly, #1)


Then after I got out of school I discovered Janette Oke's Love Comes Softly series and I've been hooked on Historical Christian Fiction ever since. 

I hope y'all enjoyed my book journey.  So what about you?  What books did you read growing up?  Be sure to check out Renee's post, after all I did get this idea from her. :)

Monday, October 18, 2010

Hope's Growing!

Today I received a phone call from the vet where we took Hope to have her surgery.  They were wanting to know if it was okay if they featured her in their November newsletter.  Of course, I said that it was fine and now I'm looking forward to seeing my "famous" dog is the pet spot light.  So I thought I would share a couple of pictures with y'all.  The first picture was taken a week or so after her surgery and the next picture was taken just last week.  Can you tell she's gotten bigger?  You might also notice what she does during the day if you look behind her in the second picture.  Yep, she spends a hard day of sleeping, eating, and tearing up stuff at work. 

The Least Among You (DVD) Review

Product Description:

Leaders are not chosen, they are called. Inspired by a true story.

Arrested in the 1965 Watts riots, Richard Kelly (Cedric Sanders) must serve probation at an all-white seminary. Although encouraged to break racial boundaries by its president Alan Beckett (William Devane), the school wants black followers not leaders. Even former missionary, Kate Allison (Lauren Holly), initially rejects Richard. A prison sentence looming, Richard meets Samuel Benton (Louis Gossett, Jr.) -- “the gardener in the basement.” As Samuel guides Richard through his many trials, Richard must choose between his dreams and his destiny.


My Thoughts:

This is a powerful story about learning to trust God and do what He asks of you even when it feels like doing the right thing may not be in your best interest. Richard Kelly is the first black student at a seminary and one would think that surely everyone at the seminary would be more accepting of Richard. Sadly, that wasn't what happened. I know some people don't watch Christian movies because sometimes the acting may be a little on the bad side but I thought this one was nicely done. It was a little slow at times but all in all I did enjoy it and would recommend it.

**Thanks to Booksneeze.com for sending me this DVD

Friday, October 15, 2010

First Wild Card Tour: Lady in Waiting by Susan Meissner

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:

WaterBrook Press; Original edition (September 7, 2010)
***Special thanks to Cindy Brovsky of WaterBrook Press, a division of Random House, Inc., for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



Susan Meissner has spent her lifetime as a writer, starting with her first poem at the age of four. She is the award-winning author of The Shape of Mercy, White Picket Fences, and many other novels. When she’s not writing, she directs the small groups and connection ministries at her San Diego church. She and her pastor husband are the parents of four young adults.


Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: WaterBrook Press; Original edition (September 7, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0307458830
ISBN-13: 978-0307458834

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Jane

Upper West Side, Manhattan

ONE

The mantle clock was exquisite even though its hands rested in silence at twenty minutes past two.

Carved—near as I could tell—from a single piece of mahogany, its glimmering patina looked warm to the touch. Rosebuds etched into the swirls of wood grain flanked the sides like two bronzed bridal bouquets. The clock’s top was rounded and smooth like the draped head of a Madonna. I ran my palm across the polished surface and it was like touching warm water.

Legend was this clock originally belonged to the young wife of a Southampton doctor and that it stopped keeping time in 1912, the very moment the Titanic sank and its owner became a widow. The grieving woman’s only consolation was the clock’s apparent prescience of her husband’s horrible fate and its kinship with the pain that left her inert in sorrow. She never remarried and she never had the clock fixed.

I bought it sight unseen for my great aunt’s antique store, like so many of the items I’d found for the display cases. In the year and half I’d been in charge of the inventory, the best pieces had come from the obscure estate sales that my British friend Emma Downing came upon while tooling around the southeast of England looking for oddities for her costume shop. She found the clock at an estate sale in Felixstowe and the auctioneer, so she told me, had been unimpressed with the clock’s sad history. Emma said he’d read the accompanying note about the clock as if reading the rules for rugby.

My mother watched now as I positioned the clock on the lacquered black mantle that rose above a marble fireplace. She held a lead crystal vase of silk daffodils in her hands.

“It should be ticking.” She frowned. “People will wonder why it’s not ticking.” She set the vase down on the hearth and stepped back. Her heels made a clicking sound on the parquet floor beneath our feet. “You know, you probably would’ve sold it by now if it was working. Did Wilson even look at it? You told me he could fix anything.”

I flicked a wisp of fuzz off the clock’s face. I hadn’t asked the shop’s resident and unofficial repairman to fix it. “It wouldn’t be the same clock if it was fixed.”

“It would be a clock that did what it was supposed to do.” My mother leaned in and straightened one of the daffodil blooms.

“This isn’t just any clock, Mom.” I took a step back too.

My mother folded her arms across the front of her Ann Taylor suit. Pale blue, the color of baby blankets and robins’ eggs. Her signature color. “Look, I get all that about the Titanic and the young widow, but you can’t prove any of it, Jane,” she said. “You could never sell it on that story.”

A flicker of sadness wobbled inside me at the thought of parting with the clock. This happens when you work in retail. Sometimes you have a hard time selling what you bought to sell.

“I’m thinking maybe I’ll keep it.”

“You don’t make a profit by hanging onto the inventory.” My mother whispered this, but I heard her. She intended for me to hear her. This was her way of saying what she wanted to about her aunt’s shop—which she’d inherit when Great Aunt Thea passed—without coming across as interfering.

My mother thinks she tries very hard not to interfere. But it is one of her talents. Interfering when she thinks she’s not. It drives my younger sister Leslie nuts.

“Do you want me to take it back to the store?” I asked.

“No! It’s perfect for this place. I just wish it were ticking.” She nearly pouted.

I reached for the box at my feet that I brought the clock in along with a set of Shakespeare’s works, a pair of pewter candlesticks, and a Wedgwood vase. “You could always get a CD of sound effects and run a loop of a ticking clock,” I joked.

She turned to me, childlike determination in her eyes. “I wonder how hard it would be to find a CD like that!”

“I was kidding, Mom! Look what you have to work with.” I pointed to the simulated stereo system she’d placed into a polished entertainment center behind us. My mother never used real electronics in the houses she staged, although with the clientele she usually worked with—affluent real estate brokers and equally well-off buyers and sellers—she certainly could.

“So I’ll bring in a portable player and hide it in the hearth pillows.” She shrugged and then turned to the adjoining dining room. A gleaming black dining table had been set with white bone china, pale yellow linen napkins, and mounds of fake chicken salad, mauvey rubber grapes, and plastic croissants and petit fours. An arrangement of pussy willows graced the center of the table. “Do you think the pussy willows are too rustic?” she asked.

She wanted me to say yes so I did.

“I think so, too,” she said. “I think we should swap these out for that vase of Gerbera daisies you have on that escritoire in the shop’s front window. I don’t know what I was thinking when I brought these.” She reached for the unlucky pussy willows. “We can put these on the entry table with our business cards.”

She turned to me. “You did bring yours this time, didn’t you? It’s silly for you to go to all this work and then not get any customers out of it.” My mother made her way to the entryway with the pussy willows in her hands and intention in her step. I followed her.

This was only the second house I’d helped her stage, and I didn’t bring business cards the first time because she hadn’t invited me to until we were about to leave. She’d promptly told me then to never go anywhere without business cards. Not even to the ladies room. She’d said it and then waited, like she expected me to take out my BlackBerry and make a note of it.

“I have them right here.” I reached into the front pocket of my capris and pulled out a handful of glossy business cards emblazoned with Amsterdam Avenue Antiques and its logo—three As entwined like a Celtic eternity knot. I handed them to her and she placed them in a silver dish next to her own. Sophia Keller Interior Design and Home Staging. The pussy willows actually looked wonderful against the tall jute-colored wall.

“There. That looks better!” she exclaimed as if reading my thoughts. She turned to survey the main floor of the townhouse. The owners had relocated to the Hamptons and were selling off their Manhattan properties to fund a cushy retirement. Half the décor—the books, the vases, the prints—were on loan from Aunt Thea’s shop. My mother, who’d been staging real estate for two years, brought me in a few months earlier when she discovered a stately home filled with charming and authentic antiques sold faster than the same home filled with reproductions.

“You and Brad should get out of that teensy apartment on the West Side and buy this place. The owners are practically giving it away.”

Her tone suggested she didn’t expect me to respond. I easily let the comment evaporate into the sunbeams caressing us. It was a comment for which I had had no response.

My mother’s gaze swept across the two large rooms she’d furnished and she frowned when her eyes reached the mantle and the silent clock.

“Well, I’ll just have to come back later today,” she spoke into the silence. “It’s being shown first thing in the morning.” She swung back around. “Come on. I’ll take you back.”

We stepped out into the April sunshine and to her Lexus parked across the street along a line of townhouses just like the one we’d left. As we began to drive away, the stillness in the car thickened, and I fished my cell phone out of my purse to see if I’d missed any calls while we were finishing the house. On the drive over I had a purposeful conversation with Emma about a box of old books she found at a jumble sale in Oxfordshire. That lengthy conversation filled the entire commute from the store on the seven-hundred block of Amsterdam to the townhouse on East Ninth, and I found myself wishing I could somehow repeat that providential circumstance. My mother would ask about Brad if the silence continued. There was no missed call, and I started to probe my brain for something to talk about. I suddenly remembered I hadn’t told my mother I’d found a new assistant. I opened my mouth to tell her about Stacy but I was too late.

“So what do you hear from Brad?” she asked cheerfully.

“He’s doing fine.” The answer flew out of my mouth as if I’d rehearsed it. She looked away from the traffic ahead, blinked at me, and then turned her attention back to the road. A taxi pulled in front of her, and she laid on the horn, pronouncing a curse on all taxi drivers.

“Idiot.” She turned to me. “How much longer do you think he will stay in New Hampshire?” Her brow was creased. “You aren’t going to try to keep two households going forever, are you?”

I exhaled heavily. “It’s a really good job, Mom. And he likes the change of pace and the new responsibilities. It’s only been two months.”

“Yes, but the inconvenience has to be wearing on you both. It must be quite a hassle maintaining two residences, not to mention the expense, and then all that time away from each other.” She paused but only for a moment. “I just don’t see why he couldn’t have found something similar right here in New York. I mean, don’t all big hospitals have the same jobs in radiology? That’s what your father told me. And he should know.”

“Just because there are similar jobs doesn’t mean there are similar vacancies, Mom.”

She tapped the steering wheel. “Yes, but your father said . . .”

“I know Dad thinks he might’ve been able to help Brad find something on Long Island but Brad wanted this job. And no offense, Mom, but the head of environmental services doesn’t hire radiologists.”

She bristled. I shouldn’t have said it. She would repeat that comment to my dad, not to hurt him but to vent her frustration at not having been able to convince me she was right and I was wrong. But it would hurt him anyway.

“I’m sorry, Mom,” I added. “Don’t tell him I said that, okay? I just really don’t want to rehash this again.”

But she wasn’t done. “Your father has been at that hospital for twenty-seven years. He knows a lot of people.” She emphasized the last four words with a pointed stare in my direction.

“I know he does. That’s really not what I meant. It’s just Brad has always wanted this kind of job. He’s working with cancer patients. This really matters to him.”

“But the job’s in New Hampshire!”

“Well, Connor is in New Hampshire!” It sounded irrelevant even to me to mention the current location of Brad’s and my college-age son. Connor had nothing to do with any of this. And he was an hour away from where Brad was anyway.

“And you are here,” my mother said evenly. “If Brad wanted out of the city, there are plenty of quieter hospitals right around here. And plenty of sick people for that matter.”

There was an undercurrent in her tone, subtle and yet obvious, that assured me we really weren’t talking about sick people and hospitals and the miles between Manhattan and Manchester. It was as if she’d guessed what I’d tried to keep from my parents the last eight weeks.

My husband didn’t want out of the city.

He just wanted out.



My Thoughts:

I absolutely loved this book.  Lady in Waiting is about Jane Lindsay and Lady Jane Grey.  Jane Lindsay finds a ring, a very old ring, that has her name on it.  Intrigued, she starts searching to find out who the ring could have belonged to all those years ago.  That's where Lady Jane Grey enters.  We go back into time and learn the history of the ring and the sad story of Lady Jane Grey.  Few books can make me cry and this is one of the few that had me in tears.  But this wasn't a sad, depressing story it was a story about choices and how we always have a choice even if we don't feel like it.  Both Janes had to discover that they indeed did have choices to make. 

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

In Every Heartbeat by Kim Vogel Sawyer

In Every Heartbeat


From Goodreads:
As three friends who grew up in the same orphanage head off to college together, they each harbor a cherished dream. Libby wishes to become a famous journalist, Pete plans to study to become a minister, and Bennett wants to join a fraternity and have as much fun as possible. But as tensions rise around the world on the brink of World War I, the friends' differing aspirations and opinions begin to divide them, as well. And when Libby makes a shocking discovery about Pete's family, will it drive a final wedge between the friends or bond them in ways they never anticipated?

My Thoughts:
In Every Heartbeat has a little bit of everything in it and I really enjoyed reading it.  Libby and Pete are more of the main characters while Bennett is kind of in the background.  I'm hoping that she writes another book with Bennett has the main character because I would like to see what happens to him.  But anyway, In Every Heartbeat is a story about discovering life.  Libby has dreams of becoming a famous journalist and wants to run before she crawls.  Then you have Pete who wanted to be a minister since he was a kid but he still harbors some anger towards his parents which leads him to find them.  And last but not least is Bennett who deals with the feeling of never fitting in and never being good enough.  As the three each deal with their hopes, fears, and doubts their friendship starts to slip away.   But when Libby discovers something shocking about Pete's family the three friends come together and start to discover what really matters.

I really enjoyed this book and even though it's part of a series I never felt lost or anything.  This is one of those books where I kept saying to myself, "okay, after this chapter I'll go check on the laundry." I'm sure you can guess what would happen, I ended up saying that about five times before I finally made myself put the book down and go do whatever. Definitely going to read more books by Kim Vogel Sawyer. So it will come as no surprise that I highly recommend this book. :)

**Thanks to Bethany House for my free review copy**  

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

The Tail of Emily Windsnap by Liz Kessler

The Tail of Emily Windsnap


From Goodreads:
For as long as she can remember, twelve-year-old Emily Windsnap has lived on a boat. And, oddly enough, for just as long, her mother has seemed anxious to keep her away from the water. But when Mom finally agrees to let her take swimming lessons, Emily makes a startling discovery - about her own identity, the mysterious father she's never met, and the thrilling possibilities and perils shimmering deep below the water's surface. With a sure sense of suspense and richly imaginative details, first-time author Liz Kessler lures us into a glorious undersea world where mermaids study shipwrecks at school and Neptune rules with an iron trident - an enchanting fantasy about family secrets, loyal friendship, and the convention-defying power of love. 

My thoughts:
My cousin's oldest daughter loves to read which just thrills me to bits. :)  So I'm always on the look out for books I can give her.  I always read them first as I don't want to give her anything that might upset her or her parents. ;)  So anyway, Sunday my husband wanted to go to B&N and asked me if I wanted to go with him.  Now is that a sill question or what?? lol  So while he check out car magazines (boring!) I wandered around the store and ended up in the kids section and this was just one of the four books I bought for my cousin's daughter.  I picked this book because I thought it was such an original idea and it sounded like something an eight-year-old girl would enjoy.  I'm far from eight but I really enjoyed The Tail of Emily Windsnap, so much that I plan to get the other books in this series.  In it we meet Emily Windnap she doesn't feel like she fits in and doesn't have a best friend which is something she would like.  Emily has always wanted to learn how to swim but her mom wouldn't let her until now and that's when the adventure begins. Something amazing happens when Emily jumps into the pool for the first time.  This was a cute book and I would recommend it no matter what your age.  


If you would like to read a little of this book just go here.

Awards

I received three awards in one day! Boy, do I feel love. :) Here are the awards I received:


Lee @ Butterfly Blessings gave me this beautiful award.  I love daisies! :)  Thank you, Lee!! :)

I love this award!  It is soooo cute and cheerful. :)  Lee also gave me this award as did Lori @ Some of My Favorite Books.  Thank you so much, ladies!

And I received the Awesomesauce Award from Hannah @ Project Journal.  She's a real sweetie and very creative...if you don't believe me just go check out her blog and see for yourself.  Thanks, Hannah for this award. :)

Thank you, ladies, for these cute and awesomesauce awards.  They've brighten my day and I need it.  I think I'm coming down with a cold plus I had to take my German Shepherd to the vet today.  She's having some cysts removed today.  I hated leaving her at the vet's.  :(  Please say a prayer everything goes smoothly.  Thank you! :)

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

FIR 2010: Reading Question #2

This week's reading question is: What do you think about e-books? Do you engage in e-reading or do you prefer to stick to good ol’ physical books?

I received a Kindle from my hubby last year and I love it.  I love that if I'm going on a trip I can take my Kindle and not have to know right then what book I want to read.  I love how you can download samples to see if you will like a book.  I love, love that they offer free books.  Right now you can get Terri Blackstock's Intervention for free, so if you have an e-reader you might want to check that out.  But I still like to read actual books.  I love the way the feel, smell, and that I can gaze at the cover from time to time.  So even though I do love my Kindle I still read actual books.  In fact out of the ten books on my FIR list only two are on the Kindle.  So I guess the bottom line is even though I love my Kindle, actual books will always have a place in my heart. :)

To see what others had to say about e-books check out Katrina's post.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Seasons in the Mist by Deborah Kinnard

Seasons in the Mist


Product Description from goodreads.com:
Stranded in 1353 Cornwall, American graduate student Bethany Lindstrom knows she must find a way back to her own time or face a life of falsehoods and peril. But with the stern overlord Sir Michael Veryan, she is swept into the intrigues of King Edward's court, which will test their mettle and their faith in God to the limits-and forever bind their lives together. 

My Thoughts:
I've only seen two reviews for Seasons in the Mist but both of them raved about it and after reading it I can see why.  I've never read a Christian time travel book and I really enjoyed it.  We meet Bethany who dreams of becoming a famous historian.  She gets to go to Oxford to help on a dig but once she lands in England things don't go the way she thought they would and without giving anything away she finds herself transported back into time...to 1353 to be exact!  This book has a little bit of everything: action, romance, and a nice message without being preachy.  I really enjoyed this book and highly recommend it.


*I purchased this book from amazon.com