Monday, March 10, 2014

Book Review: Christmas story for any time by Tamera Kraft

Review: A Christmas Promise
Tamera Lynn Kraft
Pelican, November 2013


Purchase Kindle: .99
Purchase Nook: .99


During colonial times, John and Anna settle in an Ohio village to become Moravian missionaries to the Lenni Lenape people. When John is called away two days before Christmas to help at another settlement, he promises he’ll be back by Christmas Day.

When he doesn’t show up, Anna works hard to not fear the worst while she provides her children with a traditional Moravian Christmas.

Through it all, she discovers a Christmas promise that will give her the peace she craves.


My Review:
Lovingly crafted tale of life on the American frontier, pre-Revolutionary War. Traditional Moravian Christmas customs make this story of a young mother’s apprehension over her husband’s potentially dangerous mission to share the gospel with the transported Lenape tribe is an excellent example for us today.
Gathering branches to set on a wooden form and decorating them with beribboned white candles and Scripture verses is picturesque.

How we work out our fears while professing Christ and giving thanks in all circumstances isn’t always easy. Alone with their three young daughters and expecting again, who could blame Anna for fearing for the safety of her husband?

Already unhappy over their move from their comfortable and safe home in Pennsylvania, Anna must come to terms with more disturbing news about her husband’s mission trip when a friend tells her unexpected news that makes her think John lied.

Expecting to be gone only a day or two before Christmas, John considers his life, the loss of their first-born son, and his wife’s irrational fears and with the help of his Lenape friend, his role as husband.

Told through the eyes of both Anna and John, the story within, that of converted Lenape witnessing to their kin, the matter of obedience and custom play nicely with the theme of trust, which is the framework of this special holiday book.


Although written for Christmas, A Christmas Promise is a great trip back in time and a challenge for the faithful of today, any time of the year.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Teresa Slack, Runaway Heart, Book Drawing

Teresa Slack and RUNAWAY HEART

Teresa is offering an e copy of the book to one commenter chosen at random on Thursday, March 13, noon Central Time.




About the Book: Running at the first sign of opposition is nothing new to Kyla Parrish. She’s never held onto a relationship for more than a few months, and she’s quit more jobs than most people apply for. Until Will Lachland. He’s the first man who ever made her think of getting serious about something, about putting down roots. He seems like a dream come true, but like every other man she’s ever met, he expects more than she’s willing to give.

Kyla is determined not to end up like her mother with a string of bad relationships and dead end jobs behind her, but she can’t find a balance between trusting someone with her heart and losing control of her life. But she’s tired of running. Running from life and running from love.

A new man and a new life on the farm where she spent her childhood summers seem like the answer to her prayers. But things are never as simple as they seem. Her heart yearns for love and security. Can she find it even though she can’t forget Will? Or is something else, something greater, calling her heart toward home? 

ISBN: 978-0615958958
Paperback: $11.69
Buy the Print Book


Teresa, what do you love about this book? 
Only one thing is a tough choice. I really empathize with Kyla. She came from a broken home and is terrified of perpetuating her experiences on any future family she may have. She has a huge heart but is afraid of exposing it to loss. I love her plain, matter of fact Grandpa Max and his simplistic, yet wise way of looking at the world.

How did you research for your subject? 
When I decided to use freshwater shrimp in my setting, it was just a quick Google search. I found a small shrimp farm in a neighboring county and gave the lady a call. She was the inspiration behind the shrimp sale and barbeque Kyla organizes in the book. It was a fun topic to include and hopefully one that will stand out in readers’ minds.

Shrimp farming in Ohio?
Small family owned farms are shrinking or disappearing throughout Ohio. I wanted to explore viable options for farmers looking to create additional income. And of course, I’d never read a book about shrimp farming either. Investigating and learning about it was fun.

 Tell us one thing you learned during the writing and publishing process. Books don't get written by sitting around talking about writing. It's work. It takes a lot of time and discipline. Both of those things I don't often have. But any of us can find the time if we want it badly enough.

What do you hope readers will tell others when they finished your book? My vanity hopes they'll tell friends it's the best book they ever read. But other than that... I hope they are encouraged through Kyla journey and want to share that encouragement with others.
Tell us one thing about your heroine that may or may not have come out in the book.
She never told anyone, but she always dreamed of being part of a big family. She’s afraid of making the same mistakes as her parents and hurting any children she might bring into the world. It easier to avoid the whole situation than figure out a way to break the cycle. Though she’ll never admit it, she’s not as courageous as she likes to think

Why did you decide to self-publish?
Life is short. Over the last few years I’d gotten so far away from writing, I didn’t even feel like a writer anymore. I hated that feeling. I don’t want to be a busy person who writes books. I want to be a busy writer. I’m tired of spinning my wheels waiting for something to happen in my writing career. If it’s going to happen, I have to make it happen.


About the Author:
Teresa Slack began creating stories and characters about the time she learned to hold a pencil. Her first novel, Streams of Mercy, won the Bay Area Independent Publishers’ Assn award for Best First Novel. The third book in her Jenna’s Creek Series, Evidence of Grace, debuted nationwide according to Christian Retailing Magazine. Her latest novel is Runaway Heart.

She grew up in rural southern Ohio, which provides the background for much of her writing. Her down-to-earth characters and writing style have endeared her to readers and reviewers alike. Teresa believes people who think nothing ever happens in a small town just aren’t paying attention. She loves writing in many genres, especially suspense, mystery and romance with a touch of humor stirred in. Someday she even hopes to write a historical.  





Friday, February 28, 2014

Around the World of Inspired Fiction and friends blog hop! - Prizes!


Here is a special treat for our readers. From February 28 through March 7, more than one hundred bloggers have joined together to give you many opportunities to win some wonderful gifts. 

Every blog shown at the end of this message is giving away a prize worth at least $10. Here at Around the World of Inspired Fiction, for example, you could win either a $15 Amazon gift card or a $15 PayPal payment. But, as they say on TV, that's not all. Five other winners will receive e-books written by one of our authors. All full-length, excellent, clean adult novels. Prizes will be sent internationally.

It's easy to enter.

See the Rafflecopter below to enter. Everyone gets ONE FREE ENTRY just for stopping by. That means you don't have to do anything to be included in the drawing except click the button. However, you can increase your odds of winning by liking, following and tweeting. And, guess what, it is STILL EASY to do.

Enter here and then, with a simple click, increase your odds of winning even more by going on to each participating blog on the list below. 

Good luck.

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Monday, February 24, 2014

Review of Winter Watch by Anita Klumpers

January 20, 2014
Paperback: 258 pages - $13.99 Ebook - $3.99
Publisher: Prism Book Group (January 21, 2014)
 ISBN-13: 978-1940099460

From the publisher:
What’s worse than being stranded in a small town in northern Wisconsin? Being stranded during the worst winter in recent memory.

Claudia Alexander’s problems are piling up faster than the snow on Lake Superior’s shore. Her noble mission to find the owner of an old pocket watch is complicated by incessant snowstorms, a mysterious vandal and the appearance of an old flame.

The local dogcatcher, a blind street preacher and an arthritic bloodhound come to Claudia’s aid. A promising romance warms up even as the temperatures drop.

But something evil is at work in Barley. As another blizzard approaches, so does a killer. Claudia must choose between her mission and saving the lives of the people she has come to love. Even if it means losing her own. 
Buy on Amazon

My review:
Delightful Debut! Sometimes, even disasters are those course corrections we all need to get us back on the path of our destinies. 
Opening with a two-pronged prologue, Klumpers tantalizes the reader with the story of a pocket watch at the center of devastating events. How it comes to our heroine, Claudia, is gradually revealed throughout the book.

The back cover copy says it very well—if you have to be stuck in the dead of winter in northern Wisconsin, may you find a village like the charming one created by the author. Sure it has its issues, colorful characters including a mass murderer and a registered sex offender, an antique blind town pastor, and a Justice of the Peace/dog catcher named Ezra whom everyone loves. When Claudia is unceremoniously dumped by her boyfriend, she's close enough to her destination, Barley, to hitch a ride. Barley may hold the secret to the mysterious family heirloom and its rightful owner—if only she can figure out who that is, before another body shows up.

Claudia immediately instills an innocent vulnerability and trust to the customers at Blossom’s diner, and everyone offers helpful advice, from where to stay and how to get there and a character reference from said Justice of the Peace. The colorful family who runs the bed and breakfast open in the “off” season is a quirky, loveable set of characters who jump right into matchmaking schemes that leave the reader chuckling. A dinner date, an attempted murder, an actual murder, and boyfriend, create a funky olio of delicious reading.


Mayhem, absolutely delightful settings, a vocabulary for the intelligent adult reader (thank you!), and some very sweet romance make this novel a very clever read. Kudos! Told by Claudia, the twists will keep you turning pages. Recommended for those who like clean, smart reads.

Friday, February 21, 2014

Purvis and Tilley talk about Destined For Deception


Lisa, Sandra and I are thrilled to be on your blog and to tell you a little bit about our newest release from Prism Book Group , Destined for Deception.






Beneath the emerald waves, churn deception, corruption, and murder. 

Forensic accountant Drew Arnoud could be on vacation. Instead, he’s investigating misappropriation of BP’s oil spill settlement funds in the beachside town of Destin, Florida. Having his kayak tipped by head hunting specialist Bree Finley could be a coincidence, or could she be involved? Either way he’s keeping her close, maybe too close. In his search to reveal the truth, he finds his life and his heart in jeopardy. And Bree Finley has been betrayed before by her ex-husband, but is it possible he’s involved her and their company in fraud? Who can she trust? She must decide, but the wrong decision may prove deadly.

Here’s the intriguing teaser trailer:



From Suzanne Purvis:
Sandy and I wrote the first draft of Destined for Deception while spending three days together at a beach front condo in Destin, Florida. Just us girls with nothing to do but write. It was a dream come true for both us. We had an inkling of an idea and of course the setting.  Then we spurred each other on to write, write, write. 

All the places mentioned in the book are either real, like Pompano Joes, and the East Pass Bridge, or are based on real places. We also capitalized on truth being stranger than fiction, and loosely based some of our plot on bizarre events that occurred in Destin after the BP oil spill. Then after months and months and months of revising we finished our first novella.

Sandy and I both agree what we love most about the book is the setting. Blue-green water, white sand beaches and small town politics made the perfect backdrop to develop our plot and characters.

Writing a book together was such a fun experience. Think about hanging out with your best friend and discussing mutual friends (our characters) over coffee. Or wine. Shared responsibility is a definite plus to co-writing. Everything from developing plot points, to finding the perfect title, to writing loglines and blurbs all seem a little easier when you can share the stress. The biggest negative is we live 50 miles apart. But if we lived closer, who knows how much writing we’d get done. :)
The writing and publishing process wasn’t new to either of us, but we found working with Jacqueline and Joan of Prism Books was a delight. Everything from re-working edits to sharing the phenomenal trailer Jacqueline produced for us went smoothly and timely.

Of course we would love our readers to be ask when they finish the book “when does the next one come out?” But seriously, we hope our readers enjoy the suspense, drama and breathless ride through the streets and waters of Destin with Bree and Drew.

Destined for Deception is available: On Amazon  



About the authors, a tale of North meets South.

Sandra Tilley After trading my Sweet Home Alabama for Pensacola, Florida, I'm still Southern--through and through. I was born and raised in a small town near Birmingham, Alabama. For twenty-five years, I taught sixth and seventh grades in the Chalkville-Trussville area. In 2001, I said good-bye to Trussville, Alabama, and hello to beautiful Pensacola, Florida. I taught English at Bailey Middle School in Pensacola for six years and spent many hours sitting on the beach grading essays. Now, on any given day, you might find me on the white sandy beaches of Perdido Key enjoying the sparkling blue-green waters of the Gulf of Mexico. But I won't be grading essays. I'll be plotting my next novel or short story.
Sandra Fetner Tilley on Facebook
Sandy FTilley on Twitter



Suzanne Purvis, a writer and artist transplanted from Canada to the Florida Panhandle. Wedged up against Alabama and Georgia, the Deep South oozes into this corner of Florida, and once you visit you won't want to leave. That's what happened to me. Hard to resist the sweet tea, sweeter accents, and the sugar-white-sand beaches. I write fiction of the long, short, and flash variety for both children and adults, usually with a touch or more of humor. I've garnered a few awards including first place in the University of Toronto, Trinity College Short Fiction Contest. I’m a huge football fan, love the beach in winter, small rodents freak me out, and my favorite holiday is April Fool’s Day which just happens to be my son’s birthday. My favorite color is lime green, but not to wear. My favorite food is popcorn, but I rarely get it at the movie theatre. I’m adding yoga to my life, but I won’t attempt a headstand. And I still love hanging out in the children’s section of the library.

You can find me on my website or at my blog or on Facebook.


Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Debut Novel: Winter Watch by Anita Klumpers



ISBN: 1940099471
Ebook: $3.99
Paperback: $13.99

About the Book:
What’s worse than being stranded in a small town in northern Wisconsin? Being stranded during the worst winter in recent memory. Claudia Alexander’s problems are piling up faster than the snow on Lake Superior’s shore. Her noble mission to find the owner of an old pocket watch is complicated by incessant snowstorms, a mysterious vandal and the appearance of an old flame. The local dogcatcher, a blind street preacher and an arthritic bloodhound come to Claudia’s aid. A promising romance warms up even as the temperatures drop. But something evil is at work in Barley. As another blizzard approaches, so does a killer. Claudia must choose between her mission and saving the lives of the people she has come to love. Even if it means losing her own.

Buy the Book:


What do you love about Winter Watch, Anita?
The people. Even the local mass murderer. The setting. I wish Barley really existed. I would move there in a heartbeat. Even with the never-ending snow.

This is your debut novel. How does it feel to be an author in print?
Like I am missing something. As though I should either be Jessica Fletcher with sudden insight into solving murders and globetrotting—I would especially like to trot the globe—or in a garret somewhere with cobwebs in my hair shaking my fist at the world and saying ‘Someday you will appreciate me!’

The biggest ‘feeling change’ is appreciation for family and friends and complete strangers who are willing to encourage me with kind comments and wonderful luncheons. I know all the nicest people.

Share three things you learned during the writing and publishing process.
Oh Lisa. You don’t know me very well. ‘Slow learner’ would be a kind adjective to apply. I did learn the importance of proofreading. It is so aggravatingly easy to miss little details. I usually worked my waitresses in the book to death. They would take orders twice, deliver meals twice, clear away dishes twice. And I never caught it. My editor Susan Baganz and publisher Joan Alley had their work cut out. So I learned one thing of triple importance: get others to read the manuscript. Several others. Maybe faster writers don’t have this problem but if you are a protracted, stop-and-start writer like me you will need help.

What do you hope readers will tell other readers about Winter Watch?
That the people were real to them. That they won’t regret the money and time spent on reading this book.

What are you working on now?
Funny you should ask. I’m picking up the action in Barley about a week after ‘Winter Watch’ ends. Many of the same people will show up and so will some new characters.

~Lisa: Yay! We were just talking about that on BarnDoor.net

What do you like to read?
Fiction. Suspense, mystery, good writing in most genres. Martha Grimes is an incredible writer. Some of her work is dark, some a bit more lighthearted, but all is excellent. Mary Stewart, especially her older suspense/romance. I read and reread, among others, Airs Above the Ground, My Brother Michael, This Rough Magic. Elizabeth Peters/Barbara Michaels. PG Wodehouse. Catherine Aird books are hard to find but she is a delightful mystery writer. Agatha Christie. Dickens.


I avoid self-help books like the plague, which may explain a lot.




About the Author
Winter Watch is Anita Klumpers’ first novel, but she has previous experience writing skits and short plays. These have been performed for dozens of audiences and hundreds of people. Lately she has been doing some technical writing and editing and content marketing. Romantic suspense is her favorite genre, especially when a bit of humor is interjected. In an attempt to make the world a tidier, more civil place, she blogs as The Tuesday Prude. Anita lives with her husband and mutt in south central Wisconsin. Spare time is spent meddling in her grown children's lives, spoiling grandbabies, teaching drama class and acting in an independently produced movie.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Sid Frost and The Vengeance Squad

Welcome to Sid Frost who shares about love, writing, grief, and his latest news.




buy on Amazon
ISBN 978-0983070887

$2.99 ebook
$12.95 pbook


About the Book:
The Vengeance Squad helps one of its own when the bookmobile fund is stolen. Two years after the death of his fiancée, Chris McCowan begins to feel normal again. As normal as the situation allows. Sarah had told him to find a new love and be happy, but he never dreamed he would. That was before he fell in love with Angela. Did she feel the same about him? Perhaps he would soon find out. She had invited him to visit her at her home in Bath, England during his time off between semesters. He had his plane ticket before his fall teaching obligations were finished. 

Tex Thompson had worked part time at the library while attending college full time ever since he'd married Jane. Adding the Vengeance Squad's criminal investigative work on top of that left little time for her or the children. This time, Tex's wife had put her foot down. No more Vengeance Squad activities until he'd stayed home long enough for his children to get to know him again. And, she added, she expected some quality husband and wife time as well. This semester break would be different, Jane said, and Tex was looking forward to it. Chris and Tex were ready to spend more time with the ones they loved. But that was before they learned Liz Siedo, the third member of the group was the victim of a crime that could break her heart. 

Will Liz, the hugger, the cheer leader, the one who was always optimistic and always supportive, need their help? Will Chris and Tex abandon their plans to assist her? Will Liz allow the guys to break the law to rectify her mistakes? 


What you love about this latest book?

What I love about The Vengeance Squad Goes to England is the way Liz has evolved. Everyone seems to like her and she is in all my books. However, she has been a supporting character at most. In this latest book we get to know her a little better. Even though she always puts on a happy face, we now know she has feelings the way we all do. She lets her guard down a little in this book. I didn’t plan it that way, but it seemed natural. To tell the truth, Liz was supposed to be the main character in my first book, originally called Mrs. Pickle’s Bookmobile. But as I wrote, it turned into a book about Brian and Karen getting back together after thirty years, with Liz’s help. I’m working on the next book now, and am pleased to say it is all about Liz. It is told in first person and in a cozy mystery format just perfect for her. She’s also retired, married, and living on a farm near Georgetown. There’s a bookmobile, of course.

Sid, share something new you learned during the process of writing/publishing this one.

I learned to build the Kindle edition before publishing the paperback. I use a process of converting a scene at a time into html for the Kindle. For some reason, several errors popped out when I did. Unfortunately, I had already approved the paperback edition and ordered three dozen copies. I fixed the paperback and used the copies already printed as review and giveaway copies.

What are some of the challenges writing a series?

In general, I think writing a series is easier than not. You already have a good handle on your characters as well as settings. I thought I had two separate series. The first being Where Love Once Lived and Love Lives On and the second The Vengeance Squad and The Vengeance Squad Goes to England. However, I complicated things by having some characters in all four books. There is a chronology from the first to the last, but the vengeance squad books are different from the Brian and Karen books. The biggest challenge has been to make each book enjoyable on its own without repeating too much.

What do you like to read?

As a reviewer for several major Christian publishers, I read authors such as Davis Bunn, William Sirls, and Dee Henderson. I always learn something about writing from these authors. I also read many others that are different from what I might ever write. In addition, I am a member of a neighborhood book club where I find many excellent books I might never have read otherwise. I also enjoy Grisham and Sparks, but never read their books while I’m writing. They don’t tend to worry much about POV. Finally, there are a bunch of books I read for fun. I like Kathy Reichs, Elizabeth Berg, and Susan Wittig Albert, all quite different. I intend to follow Albert’s China Bayles series as a guide for my next book.

You’ve been a Stephen Minister and talk about it in your books. What does the ministry mean to you, Sid?

When my wife got sick in 2008, we were both Stephen Ministers and Stephen Leaders. She was a hospital chaplain as well. We had attended classes on dying and had taught classes on grieving. I had ministered to eight men over a period of a couple of years. But, when we learned my wife had pancreatic cancer, it became the only thing my life for the next eight months. I was with her around the clock even when she was in the hospital. I needed a Stephen Minister myself, but there was no time. When one of the kids or a friend gave me a break all I wanted to do was shower and sleep. My wife and I had time to talk, though, and I’m thankful for that. In the end, she taught me how to die.

She died the day before Thanksgiving in 2008. I spent Christmas and New Year’s alone in Halifax, a place we’d never been. I thought it would give me time to write and finish Where Love Once Lived, but it didn’t work. However, I grieved and returned ready to go back to work. I still didn’t get a Stephen Minister, because I didn’t want to talk about it. And I never went back to ministering to others. In a way I feel more qualified because of my experience, and I may volunteer again. I didn’t return to church for about six months and when I did, I met Celeste, a new member, and the woman I eventually married.

What’s new at Christian Bookmobile?

The Christian Bookmobile is my blog. I post book reviews, and talk about things of interest to both readers and writers of Christian books, fiction and nonfiction. Recently, I’ve started a new blog. It’s called Around the World of Inspired Fiction and is coauthored by writers from Australia, Canada, Scotland, and the United States. We plan to slant it for readers of Christian fiction. You can check it out here: http://christianfictionreaders.blogspot.com/.


Thank you, Sid, and best wishes with your newest endeavors.

About the author:
Sidney W. Frost is a former Stephen Leader and Stephen Minister, and is a member of his church choir at First United Methodist Church in Georgetown, Texas. He has served on the session at a Presbyterian church, and has been on the vestry at Episcopal churches. 

While singing with the Austin Lyric Opera Chorus, he was in 42 productions. He and his wife, Celeste, sing with the San Gabriel Chorale and have been in several Berkshire Festivals.

He was an Adjunct Professor at Austin Community College where he taught computer courses for more than thirty years. He received the adjunct teaching excellence award in 2005. 

While attending the University of Texas in the 1960's he worked part-time at the Austin Public Library driving a bookmobile after completing service in the U.S. Marines.

He is a member of the American Christian Fiction Writers, the Writers League of Texas, and the San Gabriel Writers' League.

He has a Master of Science degree from the University of Houston and a Bachelor of Arts from the University of California at Long Beach. 

Awards for Where Love Once Lived include First Place -- 2007 SouthWest Writers Contest in the Inspirational/Spiritual Category, First Place -- 2007 Writers' League of Texas Novel Manuscript Contest, Romance Category, Third Place -- Fourteenth Annual Lone Star Writing Competition, Northwest Houston Chapter of the Romance Writers of America, Inspirational Romance Category and Finalist -- 2006 Yosemite Writers Contest Novel Category.