Friday, October 29, 2010

Author Spotlight Recap!

Welcome to Author Spotlight! Each week will feature a different author. We'll get the scoop behind their writing life and dish a little. The authors will also be giving away a copy of their latest book. FUN.

The winner from last week's Author Spotlight with Cheryl Wyatt is Kristie! Please send your mailing address to my assistant, Amy (amy@litfusegroup.com).

We've had so many great authors on the blog over the last few months that I thought we'd just have a quick recap of recent guests. Enjoy!

Follow the links to read their interviews:

Cheryl Wyatt

Vanetta Chapman

Sibella Giorello

B.J. Taylor

Sherry Gore

Cheryl Ricker

Julie Lessman

Rachel Hauck

Ann Shorey

Susan May Warren

Beth Wiseman

Amy Clipston

Jill Eileen Smith

Lena Nelson Dooley

Ocieanna Fleiss

Curt Thompson

Maureen Lang

Sarah Sundin

Thursday, October 28, 2010

And the Kindle Winner is ... Was it YOU?

As I said during the Facebook Party this evening I wish I could offer a prize to each and every one of you who entered the contest and helped to spread the word about The Waiting. You’ve all been amazingly gracious to me and I can’t thank you enough! Many people commented that they would love a Kindle—and I do hope someone wins it who really wants it and will use it! I’m very glad to provide a gift that keeps on giving, too. Thanks for your feedback that the Kindle is a wanted prize!

And for those of you who already have one, or who have the Kindle App for your PC or IPad…The Choice is being offered for free on Kindle. Grab it while it’s still available!

Now for the winner of the Kindle…Drumroll, please!    

It's Annalisa Kraft-Linder !!!!!

Congrats Annalisa - my assistant will be in touch for your mailing address!!!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

This Week on Amish Wisdom: The host becomes the guest!


Tune in on Thursday at 4:00 pm Central! To listen in - go here and just click on the player in the top right corner.

I'm truly looking forward to this week's show. The tables will be turned on me and I'll become the guest of my own show! Fun. Don't miss Thursday's show when the fabulous Sherry Gore (more about Sherry below), author of the scrumptious cookbook, Taste of Pinecraft, turns the spotlight on me and my latest release The Waiting!

Oh and don't forget - just a few hours after the interview on Thursday, I'll be hosting The Lancaster Secrets Book Club Party on Facebook. I'll be announcing the winner of The Waiting KINDLE Giveaway (have you entered yet?) and giving away lots of signed books and other fun prizes! Be sure to join me at 5:00 PM PST (6:00 MST, 7:00 CST & 8 EST) on my Facebook Author Page for all the fun!

During today's interview I'll be giving away a copy of Amish Peace or Amish Proverbs - winner's choice! Just leave a comment {HERE} (don't forget your email address) and we'll select one winner!

About today's host: Sherry Gore is the author of Taste of Pinecraft….Glimpses of Sarasota Florida’s Amish Culture and Kitchens. She's a writer/food reviewer for the Pinecraft Pauper, Florida’s first Amish newspaper, and a scribe for her community for the National Edition of The Budget. She co-hosted the Pinecraft Writer’s Presentation in Florida with Professor Emeritus Richard Stevick, author of Growing up Amish; the Teenage Years.

Sherry was featured in the 2010 spring edition AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT section of New York times best-selling author Cindy Woodsmall’s newsletter, Plain News.

She is a year-round resident in Sarasota, Florida, the vacation paradise of the Plain People, and is a member of a Beachy Amish Mennonite Church. She is currently chronicling the adventures of everyday life of the Plain people in Pinecraft for the second edition of Taste of Pinecraft, due to be released 2012.

This mother of three, and full-time caregiver of her twenty-year-old daughter, loves to swim in the Gulf of Mexico, as she attempts to combat her pathological fear of sharks. It is her life-long dream to ride in the Oscar Mayer Wiener Mobile.

She is the non-resistant owner of a double barrel shotgun with an affinity for pie. Her current WIP includes an Amish Mennonite cookbook devoted entirely to that affinity. She learned the hard way one spring day not to wear Chap-stick while driving an open buggy behind a shedding horse. Find out more about Sherry at her website: http://www.sherrygorebooks.com/

About Taste of Pinecraft:
Unbeknownst to many folks outside the Amish and Mennonite population in America, there's a village tucked away in the heart of Sarasota: Pinecraft, Florida, the vacation paradise of the Plain People.

Not your typical cookbook: Taste of Pinecraft is comprised of nearly seven hundred various recipes including traditional dishes like Sweet Potato Sweet Mash, Pan-fried Chicken, and Mrs. Byler's Glazed Donuts, from Amish and Mennonite women across the country. It's also chock full of new, refreshing recipes, such as Sunshine Baked Eggs and Strawberry Mango Smoothies. You'll also find Florida favorites, including Fried Alligator Nuggets and Grilled Lime Fish Fillets.

Follow along and experience everyday life in Pinecraft through stories and tidbits about births, engagements, weddings, deaths, funerals, birthday celebrations, ordinations, anniversaries, wildlife encounters, and accidents told through several years of "Letters from home" taken from The Budget, commonly known as the Amish newspaper.

With more than two thousand year-round residents, and over three thousand Amish snowbirds flocking south every winter to Sarasota, discover why Pinecraft is known as the most unique Amish/Mennonite community in the world.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Tomorrow is the last day to enter The Waiting KINDLE Giveaway!

Don't miss out on your chance to win a KINDLE - click the links below to enter the contest TODAY! Then join me Thursday evening at The Lancaster Secrets Book Club Party on Facebook - I'll be announcing the winner and giving away signed copies of The Waiting and The Choice, as well as other fun stuff. See below for more info.




One Grand Prize winner will receive a Kindle preloaded with Suzanne Woods Fisher titles and a Amazon.com gift certificate! The Prize Pack (valued at over $185.00) includes:

* A brand new KINDLE, Free 3G, 6", Latest Generation

* The Choice by Suzanne Woods Fisher

* The Waiting by Suzanne Woods Fisher

* A $15 dollar Amazon.com Gift Certificate

To enter, simply click on the icons below to fill out the entry form, then tell 5 or more friends about the contest. Oh, and enter soon! Winner will be announced on October 28th at Suzanne's Lancaster Secrets Book Club Party.

Join me for the Lancaster Secrets Book Club Party on October 28th! I’ll be announcing the winner of the The Waiting KINDLE Giveaway, hosting a book club discussion of The Waiting and The Choice, and giving away copies of both books and HEAPs of readerly prizes! Be sure to join us on Thursday, October 28th at 5:00 PM PST (6:00 MST, 7:00 CST & 8 EST) at Suzanne’s Author Page. 

Visit the blog tour and find out what the reviewers are saying!

Monday, October 25, 2010

The Amish..in their own Words

In their own words…

An optimist sees the glass as half full—a pessimist sees it as half empty—a realist sees it as one more thing to wash. Scribe from Worthington, Indiana

In their own words…

It seems like a farmer’s life can be filled with so much danger, but to me it gives the opportunity to do extra praying for my crew each and every morning as they go about their many varied duties. God delights in sending His protecting angels for His committed followers. Scribe from Mt. Hope, Ohio

In their own words…

The hotter the sun shines, the colder the ice cream is. That’s what Walter M. would be able to say. He has two solar panels mounted on the roof of his mountain home and Tim has it wired into an inverter and a battery bank. So now Walter has electric to run power tools, lights, and even a refrigerator with freezer. He doesn’t even need to run his generator, it’s all powered by the sun. Walter and Betty don’t need to plant flowers either, they have hillsides of wildflowers growing around them. And, of course, when the flowers pass their season, they still have the majestic tree-covered mountains to look at. Scribe from Fairfield, Montana

Friday, October 22, 2010

Author Spotlight: Cheryl Wyatt

Welcome to Author Spotlight! Each week will feature a different author. We'll get the scoop behind their writing life and dish a little. The authors will also be giving away a copy of their latest book. FUN.

The winner from last week's Author Spotlight with Vannetta Chapman is Some Lucky Dog! My assistant Amy will be in touch for your mailing address.

This week we welcome Cheryl Wyatt. To win a copy of the Cheryl's Steadfast Soldier, leave a comment on this post!


Share a little bit about yourself. Married with kids? Empty nester? Do you work full-time and write when you can squeeze it in?

I am married to the world's most cute and crazy rocker dude who is phenomenally funny. We have three girls who are going to take the music industry by storm as their "playroom" is a fully equipped A/V recording studio with every instrument known to man. LOL! Thankfully for me, it's totally soundproof.

And share something about your writing. What’s your genre(s), your areas of interest…

I LOVE to read and write action romance. If it has hearts and high adrenaline, I'm on it!

How did you get started writing? Did you have a dream of being a published author?

I dreamed of it since I was a little girl and started scribbling books by Crayon before I was five. I received my first rejection from Highlights Magazine in third grade. LOL!

After you started writing seriously--how long was it before you were published?

Seven years. I'd written about twenty novels by then but my seventh book sold. I've since sold seven to Steeple Hill Love Inspired. I'm starting to see a pattern here. LOL! Seven of my unpublished manuscripts finaled or placed in a dozen different RWA contests as well as ACFW's Genesis and previous Noble Theme. I've also placed in FHL's contest. I haven't submitted any of those stories yet.

Aside from a cup of good, strong coffee, what helps you get all of your “brain cylinders” firing so you can write well? Do you have any favorite places and routines when you write? How many hours a day do you spend writing?

I LOVE to have a jug of room temp water at my side, a 32 ounce cup of McDonald's Sweet tea for drinks. For snacks I love to have a baggie of baby carrots or celery with peanut butter slathered on it. I always have some sort of seeds (pumpkin, sunflower) or nuts. Almonds are my favorite. I spend an average of 7 hours through the day writing but try not to write on weekends unless I have a scary deadline stalking me. I really try to write when my children are in school and my hubby is at work.

What has been the biggest help to you in the journey to publication? Writers’ conferences? Writing groups? Your mom as your first draft reader?

My mom is my biggest cheerleader. She always told me I could do it, but she's not my first reader. LOL! Also part of my support system are my sister Lisa, my sister-in-law Tammy and my grandmothers Nellie and Veda.

My first reader is The Shredder...two of my best writing buddies collectively called that because they mince no words when critting my stuff. If my heroine is acting stupid, they will not hesitate to let me know. lol! They are also my biggest encouragers too though. They are Danica Favorite McDonald and Camy Tang. Other encouragers/caboose-kickers are Robin Miller w/a Robin Caroll, Pammer James, Cynthia Hawkins, Kristi Alexander, Marcie Sheumaker, Michelle Patula, Viv Gato, Bonnie Henry, New Cambrian Writers Group, FHL, and mentors like Margaret Daley. SO many people have encouraged me. The list could go on for days! LOL.

The biggest help was ddefinitely joining American Christian Fiction Writers www.acfw.com.

Also I'm part of a WONDERFUL group blog called The Seekers who are a tremendous support system. www.seekerville.blogspot.com. I also really learned and grew a lot from the eharlequin community and especially the Steeple Hill forums there: www.steeplehill.com

What are your biggest distractions?

Three yippee dogs who have cyber rivalry and who like to throw their bodes across my keyboard (photo attached) when they think I should be their chew toy rather than a typist. LOL!

What do you least like about being a writer? Most like?

I love everything except writing the synopsis. LOL! I'm determined to learn to love it though! LOL.

What advice would you give to new writers?

Write as worship.

What’s on the book horizon for you?

I'm excited to be working on a new military-medical romance miniseries right now. Can't say too much about it yet, but I'm already in love with the characters and the setting. Now, if I can just get the plots to obey...LOL!

Last question, how can readers find you and your books?

Anywhere books or sold or on my Web site www.cherylwyatt.com.  I hang out a lot on www.seekerville.blogspot.com too. I'm also on Facebook.

Thank you for sharing your writing life with my bleaders! (blog + readers = bleaders)

The pleasure is mine! Thank you so much for the opportunity. I look forward to getting to know your bleaders. LOL!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Thursday on Amish Wisdom: Mary-Ann Kirkby


Tune in on Thursday at 4:00 pm Central! To listen in - go here and just click on the player in the top right corner.

I'm so excited to have author Mary-Ann Kirkby back on the show this Thursday. We'll be hearing more about her fascinating book, I Am Hutterite and talk a bit more about what inspired her to write it.

About Mary-Ann: Mary-Ann Kirkby was born on a Canadian Hutterite colony near Portage la Prairie, Manitoba. One of nine children, Kirkby was raised in the Hutterite tradition, similar in some respects, to that of the Amish or Mennonites. At age10 her life was turned upside down when her parents abruptly left behind the comfort and security of the colony and relocated their family to a lonely farm house in the “English” world. The transition to a startling fast-paced society was overwhelming for a young Mary-Ann as she clashed head on with popular culture.

Growing up in the isolated self-sustaining Hutterite community of Fairholme Colony, Kirkby had little contact with the outside world. A primarily agricultural community dominated by male leadership, Kirkby’s childhood dreams included a happy marriage with healthy children, good food, strong friendships and a deep devotion to her unique way of life. Those dreams where shattered when her parents packed up their large family and moved to a new world, full of unknowns.

Thrust into a foreign universe that she didn’t understand, Kirkby worked hard to adapt to a new way of life and a new identity by abandoning the culture that had defined her. She struggled to reinvent herself by denying her Hutterite heritage in an attempt to avoid the stigma and cruelty associated with being different.

A graduate of the National Broadcasting Institute Kirkby made her way into the world of journalism as a news anchor and reporter. She was the senior reporter responsible for aboriginal issues at CTV in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan and worked in Ottawa for several years as a freelance journalist and as Media Relations Consultant for the National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. The recipient of two Can-Pro Awards, Kirkby has made a career of telling other people’s stories. She is gifted singer, a sought after speaker and member of the Canadian Association of Professional Speakers.

Finally embracing her role as a daughter of two cultures Kirkby has used her talents to chronicle her own life story. Her first book, “I Am Hutterite,” was published in Canada in 2007 and will be released in the U.S. by Thomas Nelson Publishing in May 2010. The book has garnered rave reviews as readers react to the Kirkby’s honest and compelling story told in her charming style. “I Am Hutterite” won the Saskatchewan Book Award for Best Non-Fiction in 2007.

About her fascinating book: Mary-Ann Kirkby revisits a hidden past and weaves it into her ground-breaking memoir “I Am Hutterite: The Fascinating True Story of a Young Woman’s Journey to Reclaim Her Heritage.” This compelling story will keep you glued to every page vicariously reliving the memories of Kirkby as a young child, now a storyteller in her own right as an award-winning author and news reporter. She was awarded the Saskatchewan Book Award for Best Non-Fiction and received notable acclaim in the first edition of “I Am Hutterite,” published for the Canadian audience in 2007. With outstanding reviews and affection from readers who were awed by her courageous story, she has partnered with Thomas Nelson Publishers to bring her book to the United States. Releasing in the U.S. in May 2010, Kirkby’s memoir will resonate with anyone who has ever experienced a desire to fit in. But perhaps those who will enjoy this book best are those eager to peel away their own defenses and embrace the simple truth that beneath every human exterior beats a heart longing for understanding and acceptance. For more information, please visit: http://www.polkadotpress.ca/

Don't forget to leave a comment {HERE} for your chance to win a copy of Mary-Ann's book! (Don't forget to leave your email address!)

Monday, October 18, 2010

The Amish..in their own Words

In their own words…

Dad is in the process of building the Dawdi Haus. It is far from ready to live in yet, but it served well as a hunting cabin on the last day of deer season when Dad decided to sit in there to watch for deer. Sure enough, here come five deer! The third shot he hit sported a 30 foot beam! Yes, he shot one of his new porch posts! So, folks, you are welcome to come for the day and help complete this new hunting cabin, then you can admire his “trophy” on the front porch. Scribe from Meyersdale, Pennsylvania

In their own words…

Recently a young family came home one cold evening with the horse and buggy. Dad forgot how cold it actually was until he popped the flashlight in his mouth so he could see to unhitch and put the horse away. Yes, it immediately stuck to his lips and tongue! He got it removed but not without some pain an a little bit of skin came along. Scribe from Glenmont, Ohio.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Post a review and enter to win an AMISH GIFT BASKET!!!


Hi friends!

Want to win an AMAZING basket filled with all things Amish? Just post a review about The Waiting on Amazon  or CBD and you'll be entered for a chance to win an Amish doll, the audio version of The Choice, an Amish cookbook - Country Lane Quilts and Family Cooking: Lancaster County Amish Recipes, and an Auntie Anne's Pretzel Kit.

Here's how the giveaway works: For those who have read The Waiting, write a short customer review (hopefully, a positive one!) on either Amazon or on CBD.  (Be sure not to include any spoilers in your review.) Then just come back here and leave a comment on this post (including your email address) and let me know where you posted your review. That's it! Contest ends November 14th. We'll announce the winner on the 15th.

And thank you! 

Dog not included. Sorry! 

Friday, October 15, 2010

Author Spotlight: Vannetta Chapman

Welcome to Author Spotlight! Each week will feature a different author. We'll get the scoop behind their writing life and dish a little. The authors will also be giving away a copy of their latest book. FUN.

The winner from last week's Author Spotlight with Sibella Giorello is Mike Duran! My assistant Amy will be in touch for your mailing address.


This week we welcome Vannetta Chapman. To win a copy of the Vanetta's A Simple Amish Christmas, leave a comment on this post!

If you missed Vannetta's interview on Amish Wisdom - listen here.


Share a little bit about yourself. Married with kids? Empty nester? Do you work full-time and write when you can squeeze it in?

Bob and I share 4 children together, and yes they are all grown. I recently was held back from DANCING across the collegiate stage as our last graduated, ending 14 years of college tuition. You can see why I would want to dance. I'm always happy to answer questions about family though, because family is integral to everything we do, right Suzanne? Our oldest daughter, Jordyn is a pharmacist. Next is Yale who is a veterinarian. His twin sister Kylie is a special needs girl - we're so proud of her. She recently moved into a new group home, which was a big step for the entire family. Then our youngest is Cody, and he recently graduated with a BS in Business and is on the job hunt. (Contact me if you know of an open position anywhere in the continental US).

And share something about your writing. What’s your genre(s), your areas of interest…           

All four of my contracted books are Amish, and I have adored researching and writing about this special group in our society. I write Amish romance for Abingdon Press and Amish cozies for Zondervan. However, I've also written Christian romantic suspense and even Christian historicals which we're still shopping around!

After you started writing seriously--how long was it before you were published?

I started writing for publication after receiving my MA in English. At that time I was a single mom in my 30s teaching full time, and I didn't see a lot in Christian magazines that spoke to what single moms were going through. I had a wise professor who said if you wanted to be published, listen to the "conversation," listen for what isn't being said, and then jump in - so that's what I tried to do. I ended up publishing over 100 articles for magazines such as Homeschool Today, Christian Family Life, Single Parent Family, Evangel, etc. Some of those can still be found on my website at http://www.vannettachapman.com/Articles.html. After 5 years of writing articles though, the novel bug hit. That was six years ago, and A Simple Amish Christian is my first inspirational book.

Aside from a cup of good, strong coffee, what helps you get all of your “brain cylinders” firing so you can write well? Do you have any favorite places and routines when you write? How many hours a day do you spend writing?

I'm a big fan of Margie Lawson and have taken many of her courses. She started me in the habit of writing a gratitude journal first thing each morning. It's very short-just 5 things I'm grateful for, then my goals for the morning. So my routine is up at 5 a.m., start the coffee (brew it strong), do a little yoga to work the kinks out, then write in my journal. By 5:20 I'm at the keyboard,and I write until 7:00 when I head for the shower. I can be ready for work in 25 minutes. So I manage almost 2 hours in the morning, and then I try for another 2-3 in the evenings.

What is the role and importance of an agent?

It would be hard for me to describe how much of a help and a supporter my agent has been. She's a wonderful Christian woman, so I trust her advice on many levels. She also represents many of the most successful writers in Christian fiction, which helps me to know that she's been down this road with others. I think an agent is first and foremost your advocate. I might go 6 or 8 weeks without talking to mine, but then we might correspond 3 or 4 times in one day if necessary. At contract time she thinks to negotiate things that it would never occur to me to ask for - like extra author copies or a change in what exclusivity a publisher has. I really cannot say enough how much my agent has helped me. I will say that during our first two years together she didn't make any money at all from our association, but she kept me as a client nonetheless.

What advice would you give to new writers?

To do those periodic gut checks at the first of every month. Take your journal, go to a quiet place, and reflect. Assess what you've done and what you need to do. Have you made the progress you wanted to make? Do you feel like you're moving in the direction God would have you go? Writing success occurs in incremental steps, but six months can slip away before we're aware of it. Also, I think it's important to let a manuscript go at some point and move on to the next idea. A Simple Amish Christmas was my 9th completed manuscript.

Pretend I’m a customer at a bookstore looking for a good book. Give me a one or two sentence promo to convince me to buy your book.

It's Christmas, and Annie Weaver misses her family after leaving her Amish community to work at a distant hospital. But when she hears that her father has been gravely injured in a buggy accident, she rushes home to care for him. Her passion for healing catches widower Samuel Yoder's attention. Will she also capture his heart?

What’s on the book horizon for you?

A 3 book Amish mystery series set in Shipshewana, Indiana.

Two women, a quilt, and a dead body. Will Shipshewana ever be the same?

Last question, how can readers find you and your books?

http://www.vannettachapman.com/

http://vannettachapman.wordpress.com/

Facebook and myspace

Thank you for sharing your writing life with my bleaders! (blog + readers = bleaders)

Thank you, Suzanne! By the way, your book The Waiting arrived yesterday from the little UPS man, and I can't wait to read it!


Yes! Hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed A Simple Amish Christmas, Vanetta!


Listen to Vanetta's October 7th interview on "Amish Wisdom!" She's as warm and funny in person as she is on the written page! 

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Like memory books, movies & Starbucks?

Then be sure to enter the AMAZING Sarah Sundin's Movies & Memories Giveaway! If you missed Sarah's great interview from a few months ago, you can read it here!



Sarah Sundin presents The Movies and Memories Giveaway in honor of book 2 in the Wings of Glory series. A Memory Between Us is available for purchase wherever fine books are sold. From the English countryside to the perilous skies over France, A Memory Between Us takes you on a journey through love, forgiveness, and sacrifice.

The book is receiving GREAT reviews. See for yourself here.


AMBU_button


To celebrate Sarah is giving one lucky winner A Movie and Memory Prize Package! One grand prize winner will receive:

* Make-your-own-photo book from Mypublisher.com (Capture your own Memories)

* Netflix Subscription (New or Nostalgic Movies delivered right to your house)

* Starbucks gift card (To keep your engine revvin’)

*Gourmet chocolate (A favorite in the 1940’s and now)

* British specialty teas in carved wooden box (Timeless tradition)

* Miniature model of a B-17 Flying Fortress bomber & C-47 cargo plane (Everyone needs a few toy planes)

*Big Band music CD (Break out your dancing shoes)

* WWII authentic poster playing cards (Cards – a perfect game for two)

* Keep Calm and Carry On (Uplifting sayings WWII, a boost for troubled times)

To enter simple click on the icons below (Contest ends 10/17!)

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Thursday on Amish Wisdom: Mindy Starns Clark


Tune in on Thursday at 4:00 pm Central! To listen in - go here and just click on the player in the top right corner.

This Thursday's interview is with prolific author Mindy Starns Clark.I've heard great things about Mindy's writing, like this from Crosswalk.com, "Author Mindy Starns Clark masterfully weaves the threads of mystery and suspense...giving readers a burning desire to keep reading to discover what will happen next." Looking forward to getting to know Mindy and learn more about her books. (I'm expecting that she'll be funny - she used to be a stand-up comedian!)

Also, if you'd like a chance to win Mindy's latest release, Secrets of Harmony Grove, be sure to leave a comment {HERE}. We'll select one commentor at random as the winner. (Don't forget your email address!)

About Mindy: Mindy Starns Clark is the bestselling author of the inspirational Million Dollar Mysteries, the Smart Chick Mysteries, and three standalone mysteries, as well as the nonfiction books The House That Cleans Itself and A Pocket Guide to Amish Life. Her novels include A Penny for Your Thoughts, Don't Take Any Wooden Nickels , A Dime a Dozen, A Quarter for a Kiss, The Buck Stops Here, The Trouble with Tulip, Blind Dates Can Be Murder, Elementary, My Dear Watkins, Whispers of the Bayou, Shadows of Lancaster County, and Under the Cajun Moon. Her next mystery, Secrets of Harmony Grove, will be released in October 2010.

Mindy is also the author of numerous plays and musicals which have been performed all over the United States. She has written textbooks, articles, short stories, and more than 75 computer software manuals. Other writings appear in the anthologies What the Wind Picked Up (Inspirational Fiction), Death Knell V (Mystery Fiction), Divine Secrets of the Yahweh Sisterhood (Inspirational Anthology), and A Novel Idea (Inspirational Nonfiction).

A former singer and stand-up comedian, Mindy lives with her husband and two teenage daughters near Valley Forge, PA. She enjoys speaking to churches, civic groups, and libraries across the country. Her unique blend of humor and insight make her an audience favorite.Learn more about Mindy by visiting her website at www.mindystarnsclark.com.

About Secrets of Harmony Grove: From the bestselling author of Shadows of Lancaster County comes an exciting new romantic mystery set in Amish country.

Sienna Collins, owner of the Harmony Grove Bed & Breakfast in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, learns that she is under investigation by the federal government for crimes she knows nothing about. A few hours later she finds her ex-boyfriend, Troy, dead, and her life and livelihood begin to spin wildly out of control. She begins to doubt everyone around her, even the handsome detective assigned to the case.

As Sienna tries to clear her name, she is forced to depend on her faith, the wisdom of the Amish, and the insight of the man she has recently begun dating. She'll need all the help she can get, because the secrets she uncovers in Harmony Grove end up threatening not just her bed-and-breakfast, but also her credibility, her beliefs, and ultimately her life.

Monday, October 11, 2010

The Amish..in their own Words

In their own words…

This week this neighborhood had quite a loss, or at least that’s what some people think. The pair of bald eagles that built their huge nest, probably had their hopes high to raise one little eaglet. On Sunday, the mommy eagle was seen feeding her baby by watching her drop something into its mouth. Daddy eagle was not seen for a few days, leaving the mother with all the feeding responsibilities. When daddy showed up two days later, we think it was too late. As the bird watchers looked on, the pair sat beside each other on the brim of the nest just looking at each other for hours, sometimes staring down into the nest. Daddy eagle, the first one to leave, flew to another tree close by while mother put her head down into the nest and stayed in that position for over an hour. It is estimated the little 12 day old eaglet died on Tuesday. Yesterday both were seen sitting beside each other in the nearby tree. We wonder how long they will stay? Scribe from Gordonville, Pennsylvania

In their own words…

The awesome forces of nature can make a body feel quite insignificant. What a difference it makes when we lift our eyes upward and fix them on God’s majesty! Scribe from Mt. Hope, Ohio

Sunday, October 10, 2010

10-10-10 and Free Books!

Author Judy Christie is offering 10 free copies of her latest book, Gone to Green, in honor of 10-10-10!
To celebrate 10-10-10 (she loves the way that sounds), Judy is giving away 10 signed copies of Gone to Green, first in 'The Green Series.' If you'd like a copy for you, a friend, book club, church library (you get the idea), send Judy a message! She'll draw for winners. Thanks for going to Green!
Judy's e-mail is: judypchristie@aol.com
 

Friday, October 08, 2010

Author Spotlight: Sibella Giorello

Welcome to Author Spotlight! Each week will feature a different author. We'll get the scoop behind their writing life and dish a little. The authors will also be giving away a copy of their latest books. FUN.

The winner from last week's Author Spotlight with B.J. Taylor is Judy Lynn! My assistant Amy will be in touch for your mailing address.

This week we welcome Sibella Giorella. To win a copy of the Sibella's The Clouds Roll Away, leave a comment on this post!


Share a little bit about yourself. Married with kids? Empty nester? Do you work full-time and write when you can squeeze it in?

Married, kids, homeschoolers. I have a schedule that either inspires or dismays.

Most days, I get up at 4 a.m. and write until 7. That’s when the kids get up and our day dovetails into the happy wonderment of family, homeschooling, sports, and music.

Since that makes it sound like Mary Poppins lives here, I’ll give you a summary of yesterday: I woke at 4 a.m. and started to write but the dog went ballistic when the Home Depot guys arrived --early-- with our new washing machine (the old one kept peeing on the floor). Hearing the commotion, my kids woke up, then began playing with the fancy dials on the washer, which might explain why the old one had incontinence. Surrendering any hope of more words on the page, I started a load of laundry, made breakfast, and went running while the kids ate. After that, we jumped into homeschooling. Math, music, history, Bible, lunch. Deep breath, cup of tea. Drive to drum lessons, play soccer in the field across the street with my oldest while waiting for drums to end, stop by the library, discover we have $21.54 in overdue fines, drive home, start dinner, and praise God for the millionth time for my elegant yet un-fussy husband has come home, tossed the wet laundry into the dryer and says he doesn’t mind hotdogs for dinner.

Those days happen -- and yesterday was a mild one. But I’ve learned to surf those waves. As a writer, the important thing is not to let yourself drift. You need a compass point, and you need to get back to the computer as soon as possible.

I’m thankful that writing a novel is not a sprint; it’s a marathon. Slow and steady gets me to the finish line. Frantic and frenzied will get you there, too, but everyone around you will be miserable. And no book is worth that.

And share something about your writing. What’s your genre(s), your areas of interest…
I write mysteries that feature Raleigh Harmon, forensic geologist and Special Agent with the FBI. She solves crime through mineralogy, which includes everything from the clay kitty litter to priceless gemstones to titanium dioxide in makeup foundations.

How did you get started writing? Did you have a dream of being a published author?

I only dreamed of having an interesting adulthood. My parents were eccentric, and had idiosyncratic friends -- bohemian artists and pro-bono attorneys and people who made soup from the fungus off forest trees (I am not kidding). Their lives looked good to me; they seemed curious and engaged with the world. More than anything I wanted a life that made each day new.

Reporting fulfilled that wish for awhile. But I grew tired of the strictures of journalism, not to mention the lock-step liberalism of the newsroom. When I was home with kids, I read a lot of mysteries and noticed that the Christians were usually twisted dirt eaters.

I decided to write the mystery I wanted to read. Something gritty yet literary, with complex and struggling Christians.

Raleigh Harmon waltzed onto the page and now the series’ third book is out, The Clouds Roll Away. The fourth appears next March, The Mountains Bow Down.

After you started writing seriously--how long was it before you were published?

Serious writing began with newspapers. Nothing’s more serious than having an editor screaming about a hole in the next edition -- that was when papers had multiple editions.  And editors.

It was a great boot camp for fiction. I worked on my first novel off-and-on for almost eight years. But once it was done, I found an agent rather quickly and he sold the book within a few months. Again, it sounds facile; it wasn’t. Plenty of days I was tired enough to quit. But if you have a passion, you ignore normal human weariness -- the kind that comes when Home Depot shows up early and the dog goes ballistic and  . . .

Aside from a cup of good, strong coffee, what helps you get all of your “brain cylinders” firing so you can write well? Do you have any favorite places and routines when you write? How many hours a day do you spend writing?


I drink tea -- black, lots of it -- in the morning. When I’m feeling sorry for myself, when I don’t feel like writing or I’m tired or I’m wondering why does the rest of the world get to sleep in, I bring something delicious and salty to my office. The 4 a.m. feels less like sleep deprivation and more like a secret club of one, plus imaginary friends.

What has been the biggest help to you in the journey to publication? Writers’ conferences? Writing groups? Your mom as your first draft reader?

When stuck, read other writers. Good writers, particularly those masters who swashbuckled the sleuth market. John D. MacDonald, Elmore Leonard. Dash Hammett and Agatha Christie. And actually Tolstoy. For some reason that Russian gets my creative juices primed.

Writer’s groups are wonderful, but personally my productivity plummets. I get too excited about other people’s work and forget to concentrate on my own. And with a deadline every 12 months, I can’t do that.

But above all this, the best help comes from God. For me, that help shows up most poignantly when I admit there is no way can I research, write and polish a 300-page novel in one year.  That point of surrender is when the writing can take on a sheen not my own -- in other words, better.

Is the “writer’s life” what you thought it would be?

Yes. I’m living that engaged and curious adulthood I always hoped for. Although I would add homeschooling does that, too. The difference is I would feel the urge to write even if I didn’t have a contract from a publisher. Writing is what I do to make sense of the world.

What are your biggest distractions?

Name an activity. My idea of torture is immobility.

In fact, I might prefer waterboarding to sitting still.

What was one of the best moments in your career and what was one of the worst?

All the best moments have tiptoed into my heart on soft paws. They’re not even tangible. It’s that sensation of discovering a scene actually works on the page. Sometimes it works because of some supernatural blessing. But more often, it’s the result of hours and days spent slogging through the word bogs, searching for a way out of the swamp. Then, on the third or fourth draft, the pieces come together. That’s the greatest feeling.

Which is why you won’t be surprised when I say the worst moments are when the writing doesn’t work. With my third novel, I hoped to avoid the usual morass of emotion and outlined the book with minute details even before I started writing. Everything was in order -- and it was awful. Reading that manuscript was like listening to somebody on a diet talk about what they can and can’t eat. Gruesomely boring. With only weeks to spare, I had to rip the whole book to shreds and rewrite. Remember that “point of surrender” when I realize I can’t write the book? This episode was that, times one-hundred-thousand. So were my prayers.

What do you least like about being a writer? Most like?

The least enjoyable part, for me, is that when deadline approaches, I pretty much have to stay inside my head. I can’t even chat on the phone because reality clouds my imagination. So sometimes I miss out on some friendships and fun events.

The best part is being my own boss. I come from a long line of people who work for themselves. Now I can see why.

What is the role and importance of an agent?

I only know about my agent. I don’t ask him to read drafts. I turn to him for solid advice. He holds me accountable, and keeps me focused on priorities, looking ahead several steps in this constantly shifting market.


What advice would you give to new writers?

Stop thinking about “making it.” Thought is imaginative poison.

Think about telling a story -- the same way you would try to write a great letter home from some war-torn territory. Make the page come alive. Love the reader, love the words. And let go of any outcome.

Pretend I’m a customer at a bookstore looking for a good book. Give me a one or two sentence promo to convince me to buy your book.

My favorite books take me inside the head of a character and make me feel as if I’m right there with them. That’s what it’s like reading about Raleigh Harmon and her adventures in law enforcement. And when I close the covers, my world looks more interesting for having been in hers.

What’s on the book horizon for you?

I’m writing the fifth book in the Raleigh Harmon series, The Stars Shine Bright. And outlining the sixth, something I’m very excited about -- the girl is always on the move, always searching for God.

Last question, how can readers find you and your books?

Find me at www.sibellagiorello.com. Or Facebook.  My books are in the bookstore leper colony, otherwise known as the Christian Fiction section. But they roam freely on Amazon.

Thank you for sharing your writing life with my bleaders! (blog + readers = bleaders)

Bleaders. Interesting term. Makes them sound very tough.

I like it!

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Thursday on Amish Wisdom: Vannetta Chapman


Tune in on Thursday at 4:00 pm Central! To listen in - go here and just click on the player in the top right corner.

I'm excited to interview this week's guest -  debut author, Vannetta Chapman. Vannetta writes for Abingdon Press as well as Zondervan and her book A Simple Amish Christmas has just released. Leave a comment (HERE} for your chance to win a copy! (Don't forget to leave your email address!)

About Vannetta: Vannetta Chapman has published more than 100 articles in Christian family magazines. She discovered her love for the Amish while researching her grandfather’s birthplace in Albion, Pennsylvania. Vannetta is a multi-award-winning member of Romance Writers of America. She currently teaches in the Texas hill country. A Simple Amish Christmas is her debut novel. She is hard at work on a three book Amish murder mystery series set in Shipshewana, Indiana. Written for Zondervan (a division of Harper Collins), these cozy mysteries will begin releasing in 2011. For more information about Vannetta or her books, please visit her website, http://www.vannettachapman.com.

About A Simple Amish Christmas: Annie Weaver longs to once again experience A Simple Amish Christmas. She no longer lives in Mifflin County though. She works in an Englisch  hospital—far from her family, far from her friends, far from the community that nurtured her. It’s the first of December, and Christmas season has begun among the Englisch, bringing for Annie an over-whelming sense of loneliness.

That loneliness and Annie's rumschpringe years come to a screeching halt when she receives a call that an Englisch driver has collided with her father's buggy. She hurries home to nurse her daed, and finds herself face to face with Samuel Yoder--the Amish famer her community turns to for most of their medical needs.

Samuel believes he has recovered from the loss of his wife and child in a snowstorm eight years before. Then Annie Weaver upsets his world again--with her youth, energy, and passion for healing.

Annie spends the next month in Mifflin County, nursing when she can, helping her family, and slowly falling in love with Samuel. Christmas day brings Samuel a glimpse of the family he could have. It's a sacred day--a holy celebration that will remind Samuel and Annie of God's promises. Annie will also have several important choices to make, and the most important one will be made Christmas morning.

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

And the winners are ... was it you?

In advance of my next release, book 2 in the Lancaster County Secrets Collection, The Waiting, (available now!) I took a poll. I asked readers to share what appealed to them about the Amish, their life-style, their customs, and/or their traditions. You can read their responses here. I also selected three winners to receive either The Choice or Amish Proverbs.

Those winners are:

Jane Maritz

Abi Buening

Kristina Carter

Congrats - and my assistant will be in touch for your book choice and mailing address! Thanks to all who shared their thoughts. I LOVED reading the entrees


**Be sure to check back later this week. I'll be announcing the fun KINDLE giveaway I'm hosting to celebrate the release of The Waiting!

The Amish..in their own Words

In their own words…

A dog (Sheltie) was here to welcome us when we got home Sunday night and was here until this morning when the rightful owner came to claim him to the boys’ sorrow and the cat’s relief. Scribe from Dover, Delaware

In their own words…

We have a purple martin colony of 121 pair. We are close to 500 eggs now and 500 of these have now hatched and around 50 have left the next. When you watch them coming in to feed their young and then leaving again, it reminds you of a big airport. And they always land into the wind and sometimes you get hit by black and white droppings. Mrs. Phillip Ropp had the experience of being dropped on. Scribe from Jamesport, Missouri

In their own words…

One of the neighbors was having some skunk problems around the buildings, so one evening the husband was out after dark and thought he saw a skunk and even the eyes glaring in the dark out back of the house. He got the gun and shot it and came back in and told his wife it’s as dead as a hammer! So they went to bed and the next morning his wife went out to look for the skunk and here he had shot a jug of spoiled cream cheese that his wife had set out back. For more details, ask Joe Y. Scribe in Heuvelton, New York

Monday, October 04, 2010

Tune in Today at 4pm EST!

Tune in today at 4pm EST! www.toginet.com
Hope you'll tune in today at 4-4:30pm EST when I'm interviewed by Pat Sloan about the history of Amish quilts in America.

It's a fascinating study! Amish quilts, like their makers, are diverse and varied and express the story of their settlement.

For example...did you know? Even the earliest Amish-pieced quilt tops from the 1870s and 1880s were sewn together entirely on the treadle sewing machine.   

Did you know?  In Ohio and Lancaster, where community solidarity was never much of an issue (like it has been in smaller Old Order Amish communities), there seems to be a much greater tendency toward self-expression and experimentation in quilting.

Did you know...Ohio Amish women developed a larger repertoire of pattern designs. By the 1940s, many liberal groups in Ohio began adopting "English" styles and influences. Lancaster Amish have fewer patterns.

Did you know? Until the late 1940s, Amish women in Lancaster used fine wool for their quilts almost exclusively. In contrast, women in Ohio preferred very different materials.

Pat and I will be discussing influences on Amish quilting, how collectibles got started, and so much more! And if you leave a comment on Pat's blog, you'll be entered into a giveaway of my book, Amish Peace: Simple Wisdom for a Complicated World (Revell).

Hope you'll join us! Today at 4pm EST!

Sunday, October 03, 2010

How has the recession improved your life?

I asked a question on Facebook last week that generated some interesting thoughts and discussion: 

How has the recession improved your life? Here are some responses:


  • We tighten our belts and get creative!

  • I have to be much more careful with how I spend. I combine errands so I don't have to drive to town too often, clip coupons and look for the bargains.

  • I think the way the recession has improved our lives I try to buy more at small businesses like farm stands and butchers and, of course, the Amish market in town. It may cost just a bit more in price but know that I am directly improving someones business it makes me feel good, not some big corporation. Most of the time the product is much better and lasts longer.


  • Cooking more meals at home, including pizza. Waiting until I really need something and making a list before going shopping.

  • I am learning to simplify. Going through closets, garage and shed, getting rid of *stuff*. Had a garage sale last weekend and made $500. Still going through things to have another one. Why do I have all this stuff? Sure was fun getting it.
 
  • We have taken our "rose colored glasses off" and have realized we didn't need to go out to dinner 3 times a week, we aren't too good to use coupons and we have family fun night right in the comfort of our own living room..We take nature walks, ride bikes, go to the local farmers market. We find things that do not cost a lot of money to do and make the most out of them.


  • We lost our home to foreclosure two years ago. I was one we had built and truly enjoyed. it was hard to lose it..but. I learned there is life after that and that we need to be thankful for what God gives us. A house is just that- a house, but a HOME is different and I can make MY home anywhere.


  • I DO believe that we can learn how to improve our lives despite the recession. We can learn to appreciate the tremendous abundance we have -- even when we don't think we have.

What about you? How has the recession changed the quality of your life for good? 
I'd love to hear your response. In fact, I'd like to offer a copy of "Amish Peace: Simple Wisdom for a Complicated World" to someone who leaves a comment (chosen by a random counter thing) as a thank you! This giveaway will end by next Thursday night (October 7th).  

Friday, October 01, 2010

Author Spotlight: B.J. Taylor

Welcome to Author Spotlight! Each week will feature a different author. We'll get the scoop behind their writing life and dish a little. The authors will also be giving away a copy of their latest books. FUN.

The winner from last week's Author Spotlight with Sherry Gore is LENIJAY! My assistant Amy will be in touch for your mailing address.


This week we welcome B.J. Taylor. To win a copy of the BJ's The Complete Guide to Writer's Groups That Work, leave a comment on this post!

Share a little bit about yourself. Married with kids? Empty nester? Do you work full-time and write when you can squeeze it in?

I started writing later in life, in my forties. Late can mean great...I had more time to invest in what had become a passion. I'm married, work part-time and am blessed to have my mornings for writing, blessed because mornings are my most creative time.

And share something about your writing. What’s your genre(s), your areas of interest…

I like to think of myself as a Mitch Albom sort of writer. Non-fiction is where I began, but writing novels has become a guilty pleasure. Why guilty? Because it's a place where I get to write outside the box, break all the rules, tell little white lies and big globby fibs. I love my plots and my characters and how they grow and learn throughout each book.

How did you get started writing? Did you have a dream of being a published author?  

I took writing classes at a local college. I never dreamed back then that I would be a published author, I just wanted to write. Maybe a small nugget in my brain thought I could possibly help someone with what I wrote, and so I learned the craft. The classes taught by Kay Strom and Dan Kline were just what I needed to fit writing into my life--it gave me deadlines and made me accountable. Then the classes ended. I knew I'd stop writing the first time I submitted and was rejected, so I formed a writer's group for encouragement, support, and motivation.

After you started writing seriously--how long was it before you were published?

Shortly after starting up the first writer's group back in 1995, my career was kick-started by John Gray, author of Men are From Mars, Women are From Venus. When he asked for people to tell him how his first book affected their relationship, I jumped right in by sending him four single-spaced pages. He printed my words in his follow-up book, Mars and Venus in Love. There was no byline, and no paycheck, but the fact that John Gray thought my writing was good enough to be in his book was a huge boost to my self-confidence. Thereafter, I submitted to many markets, preferring to believe in the old adage "Don't put all your eggs in one basket," and thus have been published most notably in Guideposts and many Chicken Soup for the Soul books.

Aside from a cup of good, strong coffee, what helps you get all of your “brain cylinders” firing so you can write well? Do you have any favorite places and routines when you write?

I drink one cup of flavored coffee each morning. No more. No less. I'm not sure it does much to jump start my brain, but I love it. For me, there's nothing like BIC (butt in chair), at my desk, in my home office with the big window overlooking the backyard with hummingbirds flitting around once in a while and butterflies wafting by on a breeze. I guess I could write anywhere, and I have, but I like this view the best.

What has been the biggest help to you in the journey to publication? Writers’ conferences? Writing groups? Your mom as your first draft reader?

Having a good, professional writer's group is the key to getting published. If you're able to let others read your work, offer suggestions, and listen to their comments, then you have what it takes to be a published writer. Why? Because when you submit your work for publication, there'll be an editor who is going to read it. And if he/she says, "We like it, but change this and this and add that and that," are you going to say no? A writer's group is the proven testing ground. Develop a thick skin, listen to others, but remain true to who you are as a writer (see "The Rule of Three" in my book, The Complete Guide to Writer's Groups That Work).

Is the “writer’s life” what you thought it would be?

Yes, and more. I love working with editors to fine-tune a story for publication. I love the interaction with readers who comment on something I've written. I love developing a story that entertains and enlightens. The life of a writer is extremely fulfilling. Of course, there's what some call "rejection" but which I like to call "non-acceptance." That comes with the job. I remain cautiously excited and hopeful about all of my projects.

What are your biggest distractions?

Life. Things like social networking, taking care of the house, the bills, making dinner, planning trips to see family. But I love every bit of it and wouldn't change a thing.

What was one of the best moments in your career and what was one of the worst?

I'm extremely blessed to have had many memorable moments in my writing career, including winning the Pacesetter Award at the Mount Hermon Christian Writer's Conference, and a coveted spot in the Guideposts Writers Workshop Contest. But there are many others that are just as cool and I can't wait to see what's on the horizon.

What do you least like about being a writer? Most like?


What I like least about writing is the marketing I must do. Why can't I just write? But it must be done, and so I do it. What I love the most is hearing from readers. I once received an email from a pre-teen who read my story "Hot Potato/Cold Potato" in Chicken Soup for the Preteen Soul II. She'd been thinking about running away from home too, and said the story really helped her to see how much she loved her home and family.

What is the role and importance of an agent?


I love my agent. Met him and clicked instantly. He looks just like my brother and has a sense of humor to match. His role is to help me to sell my books, and my role is to give him my very, very best to make his job easier.

What advice would you give to new writers?

Never give up. I know that's been said before, but it's true. Try everything. You never know what you're going to like. Take every class you can. Learn as much as possible about all aspects of being a writer. Join or start a writer's group and never stop learning.

Pretend I’m a customer at a bookstore looking for a good book. Give me a one or two sentence promo to convince me to buy your book.

The promo sentence for the future book I hope you'll find on the shelf will have the most adorable puppy on the cover possibly holding a fortune cookie under his paw:

Fortune Puppy is the story of 32-year-old Melanie, a divorced young woman searching for love, and the capricious dog that helps her find it.

What’s on the book horizon for you?

More dog-lit type books are in the works (think Chick-Lit for dog lovers!). Fortune Puppy would be the first in a three-book series and I have another book featuring an adorable Cocker Spaniel in the works right now.

Last question, how can readers find you and your books?

For news and up-to-date information on dog-lit and my upcoming books, stay tuned to my dog blog: www.bjtaylorblog.wordpress.com or look on my website at www.bjtayloronline.com If you're a dog lover, and a writer, the blog offers a lot of things dog, some things writing, and book reviews and comments. Fun stuff!

To purchase The Complete Guide to Writer's Groups That Work through Infinity Books you can click here: http://bit.ly/aU7eCC 

Thank you for sharing your writing life with my bleaders! (blog + readers = bleaders)