Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday #14: Change of Fortune

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're
eagerly anticipating.

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:

A Change of Fortune by Jen Turano
Bethany House - November 2012

About
Lady Eliza Sumner is on a mission. After losing her family, her fiancé, and her faith, the disappearance of her fortune is the last straw. Now, masquerading as Miss Eliza Sumner, governess-at-large, she's determined to find the man who ran off with her fortune, reclaim the money, and head straight back to London.

Much to Mr. Hamilton Beckett's chagrin, all the eyes of New York society--all the female ones, at least--are on him. Unfortunately for all the matchmaking mothers and eligible daughters, he has no plans to marry again, especially with his hands full keeping his business afloat and raising his two children alone.

When Eliza's hapless attempts to regain her fortune put her right in Hamilton's path, sparks instantly begin to fly. The discovery of a common nemesis causes them to join forces, but with all their plans falling by the wayside and their enemies getting the better of them, it will take a riot of complications for Hamilton and Eliza to realize that God just might have had a better plan in mind all along.

Why I want to read it
Governess in disguise stories are usually a lot of fun. Not only do you get the story of the young lady who is experiencing life from a new perspective but you also know that the family she is working for will also be changed forever by her actions. Plus the red and grey cover is very eye catching

Where you can find it
Amazon and ChristianBooks (as of 10/18 it's cheaper at ChristianBooks.com)


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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Monday, October 29, 2012

A Wreath of Snow by Liz Curtis Higgs

A Wreath of Snow: A Victorian Christmas Novella by Liz Curtis Higgs. WaterBrook Press, 2012. 224p. (9781400072170)

It’s fun but kind of strange to read a story where a snowstorm plays an important part when you’re in a country that doesn’t really have snow and when you won’t see snow for over a year or two.

Goodreads Summary:
Christmas Eve 1894

 All Margaret Campbell wants for Christmas is a safe journey home. When her plans for a festive holiday with her family in Stirling crumble beneath the weight of her brother’s bitterness, the young schoolteacher wants nothing more than to return to the students she loves and the town house she calls home.

 Then an unexpected detour places her in the path of Gordon Shaw, a handsome newspaperman from Glasgow, who struggles under a burden of remorse and shame.

 When the secret of their shared history is revealed, will it leave them tangled in a knot of regret? Or might their past hold the threads that will bind their future together?

 As warm as a woolen scarf on a cold winter’s eve, A Wreath of Snow is a tender story of love and forgiveness, wrapped in a celebration of all things Scottish, all things Victorian, and, especially, all things Christmas.

My review:
I enjoyed this novella. It didn’t strike me as being too short or as if something were missing, although 224 pages seems like a novel and not a novella to me. (I read an ebook version and didn’t know the length until just now.) I did think it odd that Margaret and Gordon would fall in love so quickly – a day or two, especially considering their history.

This wasn’t really a romance though; it was a story of forgiveness. A story that reminded you not to withhold forgiveness and harbor bitterness and anger. A reminder that it’s best to seek forgiveness even if it digs up past pain because healing can’t truly happen until forgiveness is given and received.

Liz Curtis Higgs has done a lot of research on Scotland and many of her books are set there. I particularly loved Here Burns My Candle and Mine is the Night. Check out her website about Scotland to learn more about the author and her love for that country.

In this book she does a great job describing the setting, scenery, traditions and general feel of Christmas in the 1890s. An interesting fact from the author’s note at the end is that the word wreath is “also the Scots word for ‘a bank or drift of snow.’”





Disclosure: I received this book for free from the publisher through the Blogging for Books book review program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission.
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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Searching for Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede

book cover for Searching for Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede shows Cimorne and Mendanbar fighting rock snakesSearching for Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede. Harcourt, 1991. 242p. (9780152045654) Series: Enchanted Forest Chronicles, #2.

A few weeks ago I read the first book, Dealing with Dragons, and this week the books I ordered for the library arrived and this was one of them. Between reading book one and the arrival of the books two kids asked me if we had this book. I was so happy that I could tell them it would be here soon.

Back Cover:
Kidnap a dragon? How daring!

How stupid

Cimorene, the princess who refuses to be proper, is back – but where is Kazul the dragon? That’s what Cimorene is determined to find out.

Luckily – or perhaps not-so-luckily – she’s got help: Mendanbar, the not-very-kingly King of the Enchanted Forest, has joined her in her quest. So with the aid of a broken-down magic carpet, a leaky magical sword, and a few buckets of soapy lemon water, they set off across the Enchanted Forest to tackle the dragon-napping and save the King of the Dragons.

My Review:
This was another very fun book. The back cover gives you the idea it is more about Cimorene, when it’s really about Mendanbar and his quest to find out why there are large bare, almost burnt out patches of nothing in his forest. He is sent by a squirrel to see Morwen who tells him to visit Kazul. Only problem is Kazul is missing.

Thus Cimorene and Mendanbar set off together to find the Dragon King. Along the way they meet the usual giants, dwarfs, magicians and royalty. Except none of them are actually “usual” as you may suspect if you’ve read book one.

For example, the giant is fed up because “every three months, regular as clockwork, one of those boys shows up and there’s never been a Tom, Dick or Harry among ‘em. Just Jacks. The English have no imagination.” (p.101-102)

Similar to the first, this book has a dash of romance but in this tale it’s mainly friendship and mutual interests that then blossoms into love at the very end. There is also plenty of adventure, mystery and lots to chuckle about.




Disclosure: I borrowed this from the library. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday #13 - Starflower

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're
eagerly anticipating.

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:

Starflower by Anne Elisabeth Stengl
BethanyHouse - November 2012

cover of Starflower by Anne Elisabeth Stengl shows a young maiden with a lily in her hair sitting by a pond looking at her reflectionAbout
The Black Dogs Are on the Hunt, But Who Is Their Prey?

When a cursed dragon-witch kidnaps fairest Lady Gleamdren, the Bard Eanrin sets boldly forth on a rescue mission... and a race against his rival for Gleamdren's favor. Intent upon his quest, the last thing the immortal Faerie needs is to become mixed up with the troubles of an insignificant mortal.

But when he stumbles upon a maiden trapped in an enchanted sleep, he cannot leave her alone in the dangerous Wood Between. One waking kiss later, Eanrin suddenly finds his story entangled with that of young Starflower. A strange link exists between this mortal girl and the dragon-witch. Will Starflower prove the key to Lady Gleamdren's rescue? Or will the dark power from which she flees destroy both her and her rescuer?

Why I want to read it
This is book four in a fabulous series that I absolutely love! I can't wait to read this! In this book we get to lean about some of Goldstone Wood's history! Make sure you read Heartless, Veiled Rose, and Moonblood first.

Where you can find it
Amazon and ChristianBooks


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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Top Ten Tuesday: Books to get in the "Halloween" Spirit


Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish

This week's topic is Top Ten Books To Get In The Halloween Spirit. I'm not one to celebrate Halloween or to read scary stories. But there are ten suspenseful books, a few nonfiction books about the spirit world, and a few about Martin Luther in honor of All Saints Day

Top Ten Books to Get in the "Halloween Spirit"

1. The Messenger by Siri Mitchell
There is a creepy guy in there actually.

2. The Last Jihad series by Joel Rosenberg
A very intense fiction series written 2002-2008 about politics in the Middle East and the End times. The crazy thing is that Mr. Rosenberg started the first book in the spring of 2001 and began his novel with terrorists using an airplane to wreck havoc in America. It's amazing how many times events in his novels foreshadowed actual events in the Middle East.

These were intense stories and I could not read the series straight through without taking a break and reading something more lighthearted and less sobering.

3. Kitty, My Rib by E. Jane Mall
A wonderful biography of Katharina von Bora, Martin Luther's wife. If you have not read this you should!

4. The Healer's Apprentice by Melanie Dickerson
Perhaps an odd choice for this list, but I'm including it because it's one of the few novels I've read that actually acknowledge (and include) that there is a spirit world and that demons or demonic forces can affect our lives.

5. The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis
Hard to mention demons without including this classic.

6. Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
Plenty of suspense. Especially in The Hound of Baskerville - there's a creepy story for you.

7. What would you add?

Sorry I couldn't come up with ten, although there are five books in the Last Jihad series if you want to count that.

Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Monday, October 22, 2012

The Bridge by Karen Kingsbury

The Bridge by Karen Kingsbury. Howard Books, 2012. 258p. (9781451647013)

This is the first Karen Kingsbury book I’ve read. And I loved it. It is very likely that I’ll be reading more of books in the near future. For some reason I thought her novels tended to have a lot of romance but this one didn’t, it had a very sweet love story.

Back cover:
Number one New York Times bestselling author Karen Kingsbury delivers an instant classic with this heartwarming Christmas story about a hundred-year flood, lost love, and the beauty of enduring friendships.

Molly Allen lives alone in Portland, but she left her heart back in Tennessee with a man she walked away from five years ago. They had a rare sort of love she hasn’t found since.

Ryan Kelly lives in Nashville after a broken engagement and several years on the road touring with a country music duo. He can still hear Molly’s voice encouraging him to follow his dreams; Molly, whose memory stays with him. At least he can visit The Bridge—the oldest bookstore in historic downtown Franklin—and remember the hours he and Molly once spent there.

For thirty years, Charlie and Donna Barton have run The Bridge, providing the people of middle Tennessee with coffee, conversation, and shelves of good books—even through dismal book sales and the rise of digital books. Then in May, the hundred-year flood swept through Franklin and destroyed nearly every book in the store.

Now the bank is pulling the lease on The Bridge. Despondent and without answers, Charlie considers the unthinkable. Then tragedy strikes, and suddenly, everything changes. In the face of desperate brokenness and lost opportunities, could the miracle of a second chance actually unfold?

The Bridge is a love story set against the struggle of the American bookstore, a love story you will never forget.

My review:
I loved the setting, not just because it revolved around a bookstore, but because the author did such a great job describing the scenes and letting the reader feel the joy and contentment, the sorrow and the helplessness right alongside the characters.

The romance was sweet and it was very easy to understand Molly’s thoughts and actions. The reader also gets to know the other side of the story as well and feels Ryan’s pain and frustration. Neither party is innocent yet neither party is completely guilty either. It’s a good reminder that our impressions and thoughts can deceive us.

This isn’t just the story of the young couple though, more so it is the story of Charlie Barton and his love for his wife, Donna, and his desire for the book store to succeed and be a blessing.

It’s a fun read, great for Christmas and chances are I’ll curl up with it again in December.




Disclosure: I received this book for free from the publisher through NetGalley. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission.

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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday #12 - Tangled Ashes

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're
eagerly anticipating.

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:

Tangled Ashes by Michelle Phoenix
Tyndale - October 2012

book cover of Tangled Ashes by Michele Phoenix shows a scarf clad woman with a chateaux in the backgroundAbout
When Marshall Becker arrives in Lamorlaye, France, to begin the massive renovation of a Renaissance-era castle, he unearths a dark World War II history few in the village remember. The project that was meant to provide an escape for Becker instead becomes a gripping glimpse into the human drama that unfolded during the Nazi occupation and seems to live on in midnight disturbances and bizarre acts of vandalism.

Why I want to read it
I have greatly enjoyed Michelle's blog about MKs (missionary kids). Her insights are thought provoking and she's a good writer. I didn't know she was also a published author; this is her fourth novel. This story sounds quite interesting and since the author has lived in France and Germany I'm sure she captures the setting very well.

Where you can find it


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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Christ Our Mediator by C.J. Mahaney

Christ Our Mediator by C.J. Mahaney. Multnomah Books, 2004. 96p. (9780307563804)

When I requested this book to review from Blogging for Books I didn’t realize it wasn’t a recent book. Therefore I was a bit confused when the author used the attacks of 9/11/01 and the movie The Passion of the Christ as examples. It’s a great book though.

In the introduction Mahaney asks, “Do we adequately understand the deepest reasons behind the cross?” In the following eight chapters he seeks to remind and show the reader why Jesus had to die, the agony he endured, and God’s great love for all mankind.

The chapter that stood out to me the most was chapter four, Staring into the Cup. I read this chapter aloud during staff devotions last week. Keith and Kristyn Getty’s latest CD has a song that almost perfectly sums up this chapter and gives you a glimpse of what Jesus went through in the Garden of Gethsemane for you.

Please listen to the song and then think about the quote below.


Listen to this verse for the very first time: For God so loved the world … that He’s silent at this moment when His son appeals for an alternative. (Christ Our Mediator, Chap 4)

But the pain Christ experiences in the Garden is nothing compared to what he endured on the cross. In chapter six, The Scream of the Damned, the author describes Jesus’ suffering (what an inadequate word!) thus:

[Jesus is] experiencing on the cross what no one in human history ever has or ever will experience. He’s receiving what you and I should be receiving – His Father’s full ad furious wrath. He’s experiencing what every other human being in history deserves and which He alone does not deserve.
And He’s experiencing it alone. (Christ Our Mediator, Chap 6)

I can try to continue to summarize and give you key quotes but reading this book for yourself and pondering its message will be much better.




Disclosure: I received this book for free from the publisher through the Blogging for Books book review program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission.

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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

The Trouble with Cowboys by Denise Hunter

cover of Trouble with Cowboys by Denise Hunter shows a man and a woman near a fence in a hay fieldThe Trouble with Cowboys by Denise Hunter. Thomas Nelson, 2012. 304p. (9781595548030) Series: A Big Sky Romance, #3.

This is the third book in the series and I have not read book one, A Cowboy's Touch. Book two, The Accidental Bride, was just alright so I didn't have high hopes for book three. But I was pleasantly surprised.

Back cover/Goodreads summary:

Annie Wilkerson is Moose Creek's premiere horse trainer and equine columnist for "Montana Living." Money is tight as she tries to put her kid-sister through college and provide for her young nephew.

When Annie's column is cancelled, she's given first shot at a new lovelorn column-and she can't afford to turn it down. Only problem is . . . Annie's never been in love.

Always resourceful, she reluctantly strikes a deal with the town's smooth-talking ladies' man Dylan Taylor: She'll work with his ailing horse, Braveheart, if he'll help her answer the reader letters.

Working closely with Dylan is harder than Annie imagined, and she quickly realizes she may have misjudged him. But her unwavering conviction that cowboys are nothing but trouble has kept her heart safe for years. And she can't risk getting hurt now.

The more Annie tries to control things, the more they fall apart. Her feelings are spinning out of control, and her sister's antics are making life increasingly more difficult. Annie knows she needs to turn the reins over to God, but surrender has never come easily.

My review:

old barn with Montana's misty rolling hills and mountains behind
From Denise Hunter's Pinterest page
It might help to read books one and two first as that would give you the back stories of a few characters. But it isn't extremely necessary. If you are able to read either of the first two books then read book one. According to another reviewer Dylan Taylor is introduced in book one and she’s thrilled that he gets his own story.

Dylan is a fun character. At first he appears to be a big flirt who can smile at any lady and get a date with her, but along with Annie the reader slowly starts to realize that there’s more to him than he lets on.  

Annie is independent, proud, fiercely loves her sister and nephew, and distrusts cowboys. Yet for some reason she feels desperate enough to ask a cowboy for help in answering magazine readers’ relationship questions.

Both Annie and Dylan need to learn to trust God and overcome fears based on past experiences. Annie is also a very protective (and bossy) older sister who needs to stop worrying and controlling, and trust that God knows best.

There are a number of kisses in this book – some just pecks on the cheek or a quick, unromantic thanks-for-a-great-date-goodnight kiss. But some are long, soul stirring, go-weak-at-the-knees kisses. I don’t have anything against kisses, and I think the author did a great job with the kissing scenes.

a man and a woman wearing cowboy boots standing close, only the legs can be seen
From Denise Hunter's Pinterest page
(minor spoiler alert, except you should have guessed the ending)
What I didn’t appreciate was that some of those passionate kisses where between non-dating people who then take months to get engaged. Don’t start kissing like that if you’re not dating and don’t be kissing like that if it’s going to be many months before you’re even close to a wedding. That’s my opinion at least.

I did like how Annie thought about one of the chemicals in the brain that gets activated during a soul stirring kiss. Made me think of Dannah Gresh’s book What Are You Waiting For?: The One Thing No One Ever Tells You About Sex. A great book by the way that every teen and college student (especially girls) should read.

Back to Trouble with Cowboys, if you like light Christian, contemporary romance, then you would probably enjoy this book.



Disclosure: I received this book for free from the publisher through NetGalley. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission.

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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday #11: Against the Tide

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're
eagerly anticipating.

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:

Against the Tide by Elizabeth Camden
Bethany House - October 2012

cover of Against the Tide by Elizabeth Camden a woman wearing a red dress and black shawl with her back towards the viewer looking at a sailing ship
About
After a childhood rampant with uncertainty, Lydia Pallas has carved out a perfect life for herself. She spends her days within sight of the bustling Boston Harbor, where her skill with languages has landed her an enviable position as a translator for the U.S. Navy.

Lydia's talents bring her to the attention of Alexander Banebridge, a mysterious man in need of a translator. Driven by a campaign to end the opium trade, Bane is coolly analytical and relentless in his quest. He cannot afford to fall for Lydia and must fight the bittersweet love growing between them.

When Bane's enemies gain the upper hand, he is forced to turn to Lydia for help. Determined to prove her worth, Lydia soon discovers that carrying out Bane's mission will test her wits and her courage to the very limits.

When forces conspire against them from without and within, can their love survive?

Why I want to read it I love historical fiction (this is set in the 19th century), I've been to Boston, translators are cool, and my grandpa worked for the US Navy. How can I not want to read this book? Plus the cover is so intriguing. (Apparently this has already released even though the publisher's site says Oct 12th?)

Where you can find it
Amazon and ChristianBooks

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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Dealing with Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede

cover of Dealing with Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede shows a princess in white with really long black hair talking to a grumpy and angry looking dragonDealing with Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede. Harcourt, 1990. 212p. (015204566X) Series: The Enchanted Forest Chronicles, #1.

I am so glad Natalie recommended this! I absolutely loved it. And my housemate can attest to the fact that it made me laugh several times; it was so good I even read a few parts out loud to her.

Back cover:

Princess by birth. Adventurer by choice.

Meet princess Cimorene – a princess who refuses to be proper. She is everything a princess is not supposed to be: headstrong, tomboyish, smart…

And bored.

So bored that she runs away to live with a dragon. And not just any dragon, but Kazul – one of the most powerful and dangerous dragons around. Of course, Cimorene has a way of hooking up with dangerous characters, and soon she’s coping with a witch, a jinn, a death-dealing talking bird, a stone prince, and some very oily wizards.

If this princess ran away to find some excitement, it looks like she’s found plenty!

My review:

Cimorene is not your ordinary princess and she most definitly lives in fairytale land. Where else would a talking frog (who isn’t a prince) advise you to run away to the home of dragons? Where else do you borrow suffle pans from witches?

All the characters are quite delightful, the dragons’ personalities are varied and colorful, the knights sufficiently vain, and cats still think themselves superior to everybody. The wizards are the bad guys and the witch is helpful in this tale.

Patricia does a fabulous job weaving in bits and pieces of other fairytales (I love it when authors do that!). For example, did you know there’s a special school for people who are supposed to do special things? George (the dragon slayer), Art (who pulled the sword from the stone) and Jack (the bean stalk climber) all attended that school.

The plot has a bit of mystery, quite a bit of adventure, the slightest bit of romance (after all there are princes, knights and princesses), and plenty of surprises to laugh at. I am really looking forward to reading the rest of the books in this series!

My rating:





Disclosure: I borrowed this from the library. The opinions I have expressed are my own.

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Remember - Anytime you visit Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com or ChristianBooks.com use an affiliate link to get there. Any purchase you make from a link on my site generates a small kickback. You need not purchase the item I'm featuring, any purchase counts. It costs you nothing extra and is an easy way to support this site.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Cover Reveal: Dragonwitch by Anne Elisabeth Stengl



cover of Dragonwitch by Anne Elisabeth Stengl has a woman in a smoldering red dress reaching for a sword

An Ancient Evil

Long ago, Etanun buried his sword in the depths of the Netherworld then vanished from all known history. One day, it is said, his heir will find the sword, and the Dragonwitch, firstborn of the Dragon King, will be finally slain.

A Desperate Hope

These stories are no more than nursery rhymes. In a world of cold reality, what room is left for fairy tales? Lady Leta of Aiven is pledged to marry a man she does not love . . . sleepless Lord Alistair struggles to unite the stubborn earls of the North Country . . . Mouse is lost, far from home, slaving as a kitchen drudge . . .

. . . and the reclusive Chronicler, keeping the records of Gaheris Castle, bears a secret so dangerous it could cost him his life and plunge the North Country into civil war.

An Impossible Journey

But when nursery rhymes begin to come horribly true, will these unlikely heroes find the strength they need to fulfill a prophecy of fire? For the Dragonwitch lives. And she has vowed vengeance on all who have wronged her.
______


Coming Summer 2013
Tales of Goldstone Wood
Timeless Fantasy that will keep you Spellbound!
(www.anneelisabethstengl.blogspot.com)


Thank you Anne Elisabeth for allowing me to participate! I can hardly wait for next summer! Nor for book 4, Starflower.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday #10: A Promise to Love

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event that spotlights upcoming releases that we're
eagerly anticipating.

This week's pre-publication "can't-wait-to-read" selection is:

A Promise to Love by Serena B. Miller
Revell - October 2012

About
Ingrid Larsen arrives in Michigan in 1871 with little more than the clothes on her back and a determination to find her brother, who has disappeared into the dangerous lumber camps. Destitute and barely hanging on to hope, the young Swedish immigrant crosses paths with Joshua Hunter, a newly widowed farmer with eyes the color of the ocean she had crossed and five rambunctious children to raise on his own.

Marriage would solve both of their problems, and Ingrid finds herself proposing in broken English to a man she barely knows. Many difficulties lie ahead--but the hardest battle of all will be winning the heart of her new husband.

Why I want to read it
It's historical fiction. It's a marriage of convenience story. Need I say more? 
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