Tales of Pruit Almus by Robert Belenky – Giveaway

tales of pruit

This giveaway is closed – congratulations winner!  🙂

I am so excited to have received a review copy of this book + one to give away.  I probably will not get to this read until closer to the end of August but in the mean time didn’t want to hold off on this great book and a chance for you to won a copy of this.

Thirteen-year-old Serogia was thrown out of his house by his drunken mother after his father died. Eleven-year-old Anya doesn’t have many friends and is always sad; when she looks in the mirror she sees an ugly girl. Her ten-year-old sister Sashinka is shy, tough and fun loving. Their only living relative is their drunken father.

These are just three of the children who were living at Priut Almus, a children’s shelter in St. Petersburg, Russia, when author Robert Belenky began his visits in 1998. He returned many times during the next ten years. In Tales of Priut Almus he presents his interviews with children and staff as he participates in this humane and innovative shelter unusual in that it focused on preparing children to create and live in a democracy. Finally, we meet Almus’ founding director, enigmatic man of the theater, Mikhail Markarievich, who provided the courageous vision.

This looks like a wonderful read and I cant wait to dig into myself.  Once read I will post my review, in the mean time. enter here to receive a copy for yourself! Here’s How….

1.  Comment here with what you would name a Children’s Shelter if it was your job to name it

2.  Earn an additional entry by blogging or tweeting about this giveaway (leave link to that here on a separate comment

3.  Earn a 3rd chance to win by becoming a follower of this blog (leave this info hre if you are on a separate comment)

US entrants only please and no PO boxes.  Giveaway will end on September 4 and winner will be emailed and announced here.  ** Be sure you have left an email for me to be able to contact you.

Thanks everyone for your comments!  have fun!  🙂


Freebie Friday: The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

Giveaway now closed…. Our winner on August 7 was WANDA!!!!!!

Thanks everyone for playing 😉

It’s Summer.  My favorite season!  In honor of Summer and all the movies recently that have come from books, I offer this weeks Freebie Friday as:

The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Kidd Monk.

secret life of beesSet in South Carolina in 1964, this is the tale of Lily Owens a 14 year-old girl who is haunted by the memory of her late mother. To escape her lonely life and troubled relationship with her father, Lily flees with Rosaleen, her caregiver and only friend, to a South Carolina town that holds the secret to her mother’s past. Taken in by the intelligent and independent Boatwright sisters, Lily finds solace in their mesmerizing world of beekeeping.

I recently learned at a festival where they had bees displayed in hives working the honey like nobody’s “beesness” (lol) that a bee in their lifetime will only produce one twelfth of a teaspoon of honey.   Not a typo.  That’s it.

So now knowing this…. here is how you can enter to win this great book! AND to sweeten the pot (LOL I am on a roll today!) I will add a jar of honey to this giveaway.

1.  Leave a comment here with an interesting insect fact or a comment about an insect incident you have had… (wow – say that fast….)

2.  Blog tweet or shout from the rooftop about this giveaway and leave link here in a separate comment (oh, if you go for the shout from the rooftop, that is going to require a picture!)

3.  For any comments you make during this week on any of my other posts (starting today thru next Friday) you will receive one extra chance to win per comment)  *You must have the original comment (#1) here first to qualify for this one.

US only entrants please and no po box numbers.  Be sure I have a way to contact you if you are the winner.

bee3

This giveaway will end Friday August 7.

Oh – Have fun!  😉

Blue Like Play Dough by Tricia Goyer (Review & Giveaway)

A delightful read about faith and about family, and about God’s Hands molding it all together into something beautiful.

Blog Tour
Blog Tour

~ShBlueLikePlayDougheila

The everyday push and pull of motherhood often leaves Tricia Goyer feeling, well, smooshed. Can you relate? In Blue Like Play Dough, Tricia shares her unlikely journey from rebellious, pregnant teen to busy wife and mom with big dreams of her own.

Sure her life is messy and beset with doubts. But God keep showing up in the most unlikely places – in a bowl of carrot soup, the umpteenth reading of Goodnight Moon, a woe-is-me teen drama, or play dough in the hands of a child…

Blue Like Play Dough flowed from the moment I opened the first page. With moments that caused me to laugh in acknowledgment,

“One day while praying about the hard stuff in life an image came to mind of a lump of play dough.  As I focused on it I realized the lump was not something my kids held in their hands, but that God held in His.  I was that lump.  God was molding me and he had something in mind.

The image was there and then it was gone.  Donald Miller had Blue Jazz.  I had play dough.  I tried not to be disappointed.”

TriciaaboutTricia writes with experience of what it is like to be a young mom trying to raise children to the best of her ability yet still having dreams of her own.  Tricia is honest about her short comings and openly shares the triumphs and the trials of struggling to do it all.

When Tricia writes in this book about letting go and relaxing a bit allowing time for herself and time for the kids to learn to just play and be together I think I felt my own soul relax a little.  Having two grown boys I still go through moments of the what if’s (what if I hadn’t worked so hard when they were younger, what if I had been at home more, what if…)

Tricia speaks openly about her short comings and her fear of being judged my others.  She like many of us, carries with her that need – that desire for acceptance and I love how throughout the book God continues to show up.  As Tricia says,

“The problem isn’t whether God will show up.  It’s all about me not being aware that He is already here… that He has been in my life all along.  And that he doesn’t care about my mess.”

Author Bio:

Tricia Goyer is the author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction, including Generation NeXt Parenting and the GoGoButtonGold Medallion finalist Life Interrupted. Goyer writes for publications such as Today’s Christian Woman and Focus on the Family, speaks to women’s groups nationwide and has been a presenter at the Mothers of Preschoolers (MOPS) national convention. She and her husband, John, live with their family in Montana.


Random House has generously sent me a copy of this book to be given away to one of my readers.  To enter:

1.  Leave a comment here with a book title of Tricia’s that you would enjoy reading (besides this one)  Tricia has 18 books out, on her website you can see the books under the books tab.

2.  Blog or tweet about this giveaway on a separate comment and receive another entry

3.  Go to Tricias website *Give one Get one Promo... tweet or blog about this and leave a comment link here and earn 3 extra entries

Tricia Goyer’s Website

*Tricia Goyers Give One Get One Promo

Purchase Blue Like Play Dough Here

Follow The Blog Tour Here


I received this review book and an extra book to give away compliments of Elizabeth at Random House

This book is a G Rating




Guest Blogger/Author Interview with Rachel Stolzman (+ Signed giveaway copies!)

In recent weeks I have had the pleasure of chatting back and forth with author Rachel Stolzman.  Rachel is the author of the book, The Sign for Drowning.


Rachel Stolzman

When Anna is eight years old she witnesses the tragic drowning of her younger sister at the beach.  While her parents frantically search the waves for their child, Anna watches alone from the shore.  Desperate for hope, Anna begins silently communicating with her sister, begging her to resurface.

Anna’s  family emotionally breaks down in the years following the drowning.  In her grief and loneliness, Anna develops the belief she can communicate to her dead sister through sign language.

As an adult, Anna makes her living working with hearing impaired children, and she develops a close bond with a deaf foster child she works with, Adrea.  As Anna makes the momentous decision to adopt Adrea, she is driven to face her conflicted desire to hear her daughter speak and she is forced to delve into the connections between Adrea and her own, lost sister.

BIO:

rachel-thumbI was born in New York and at the age of seven moved to Los Angeles with my family.  My sister and I told everyone we were moving to a swimming pool.  I began writing poetry in my journal when I was about ten years-old.  My first poems were about children, a phony fortune teller, the question of an afterlife, and an anti-war poem called Warheads.  I attended the University of California in Santa Cruz.  It was during my college years that I began working in the HIV/AIDS field, work which I continue to do to this day.  At UCSC, I took numerous poetry workshops, participated in readings, and I had my first poems published.  Looking back, these poems were about solitude, escapism, and drunken love.  A year after college, living in San Francisco I decided to apply for MFA programs in creative writing.  I was surprised to see that the applications required you to choose between poetry and fiction, and I marked ‘poetry’ on each.  But while completing my applications, I thought- I don’t know how to write fiction, if I’m going to go back to school it might as well be to learn something I don’t know.  I sent for new applications and applied to three programs in New York.  I went to Sarah Lawrence College, and received my MFA in creative writing- Fiction.  An early draft of The Sign for Drowning was my thesis.  In 2008 my first novel, The Sign for Drowning was published by Trumpeter.  I am still writing about children, impermanence, loss and the workings of the heart.  I currently live in Brooklyn and am working on my second novel.


I want to thank Rachel for taking time to join us here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books I have really enjoyed talking with you these past couple of weeks and I am excited to hear more about you and your books.

S:  As I read your biography on line about how you were really writing from about the age of ten, it reminded me of the books of short stories and poetry that I had written at about that age.  Did you feel at such a young age that writing would be a part of your future?

Rachel: As a kid I had a closet in my bedroom with sliding doors.  One side held clothes, and the other held a bookcase with all my books.  I was infinitely more interested in the book side of my closet.  I read my favorite books over and over.  I do remember thinking that these writers were leaving something in the world that would be here forever, long after the writer was gone.  It only now occurs to me that I was thinking about immortality.  Luckily, I didn’t know then about going out of print!

S:  Your book, The Sign For Drowning sounds wonderfully deep and dramatic.  I just read the synopsis again and I am so excited to actually get a chance to read and review this book.  How did the idea for this book begin to develop?

Rachel:  I had written a short story based on an actual event that happened to my family.  When my older sister was two she was washed out of a small boat in the waves, while playing with my father.  She was only underwater for a minute, but they couldn’t see her and it was very scary.  My mother was filming them playing as well.  A friend in the water felt my sister, Dana, brush against her leg and she pulled Dana out.  In the story I wrote, there is an older sister watching and narrating the story, and the child is not recovered, but drowns.  As an MFA student I returned to this story and became curious again about the family, especially, Anna, the sister who tells the story.  I wondered what happened to them afterwards, and if and how this loss would affect Anna as an adult. rachel reading

S:  This book centers around sign language.  Is this something you knew about before you wrote the book or something you learned to write the book?

Rachel:  While I was writing the book, I was taking American Sign Language classes for the fun of it.  I had always been interested in sign language and I stuck with it until I was pretty fluent.  I really enjoyed learning from my deaf teachers, not just the language but about deaf culture and history.  I decided to make Anna, in her grief and loneliness, develop a fantasy that she could communicate to her lost sister through sign language.  This childhood fantasy grew into an alternative family and home for her and a career working with deaf children.  And it would ultimately lead Anna to her adopted deaf daughter, Adrea.

S:  What sort of background prep work did you find yourself doing to write this book?

Rachel:  I read a lot of books about Deaf culture, and about the history of ASL and deaf education.  After becoming proficient in ASL, I got a job in New York City working with deaf people at Fountain House.  I was around interpreters everyday, a co-worker who was the child of two deaf parents, a deaf co-worker and many deaf members.  I was told amazing stories about being deaf in hearing families and vice-versa, living in deaf boarding schools, surviving during World War II- deaf and alone, and the many ways people learn to communicate and cope.  Those stories helped shape the lives of my characters.

S:  I just love that you are blogging your journey from your first book signing to the arrival of the paperback version.  How did you decide to do a blog?

Rachel:  I think I started blogging very hesitantly.  My agent and publisher had recommended I launch an author website, but I had declined to do so just feeling it wasn’t necessary.  Then I took a course on book promotion and it was heavily encouraged there too, especially blogging.  And the final push came when I did an author interview on the radio with Reading with Robin and she actually reprimanded me on the air for not having a website for my readers to go to!

S:  You are currently working on your second book.  Would you share a little hint about what that is going to be about and when we may expect to see it in print?

Rachel:  My current book is about a pair of twins born in NYC in the early 70’s.  One twin, David, is born a reincarnated enlightened Buddhist.  The Dalai Lama is a character in the novel, and he becomes David’s teacher.  Jamila, the twin sister, struggles to find her soul, her purpose and her own journey as a bodhisattva’s twin sister.

I will definitely let you know when you can find it in stores, and thank you so much for having me as a guest at One Person’s Journey Through a World of Books!

Peace, Rachel

Rachel’s Official Website

Rachel’s Blog

♥Rachel has generously offered two signed copies of her book, The Sign For Drowning to the readers here at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books.

To enter your name to win:

1.  Leave a comment here about Rachel’s interview

2.  Receive 2 extra chances to win if you blog/twitter about this giveaway

3.  Earn a BONUS chance by commenting on any other of my posts

US only and no PO box numbers.  Please be sure to leave me an email so I am able to contact you if you win.

The Giveaway will end August 16.  Have fun and good luck!






Pope Joan by Donna Woolfork Cross Giveway!

I recently started an amazing book called Pope Joan by Donna Woolfork Cross. I am still reading it and Pope Joanhope to finish it today and have my review posted, but this I felt couldn’t wait!

The author, Donna Woolfolk Cross and I have been emailing back and forth and we have been discussing the movie coming out this fall based on this book. What? You didn’t know? Yes, this fall the movie is going to be out in theaters.  See trailer here

Chatting with Donna, who is just a delightful person, she has offered my readers a signed copy of Pope Joan autographed and inscribed just to you! I am very excited about this giveaway and want to get started on it right away!

Book sales on this book over the next 3 weeks will determine in part how widely the movie will open in the U.S. So from our little corners of the world I would love to see if we could help out.

Here are the ways you can earn entries for this giveaway:

1 entry for leaving your comment here of how (if you were the winner) you would want the book signed and inscribed.

2 extra entries for blogging or twittering about this giveaway and leaving the link here in a separate comment.

Earn 2 extra entries by calling the biggest name bookstore in your area and seeing if they have Pope Joan in stock. If not, they should! With this link here they can download posters about the book and the red carpet giveaway.  (On a separate comment post what store you called)

5 extra entries if you go out and purchase the book either at a local book store or online and let me know where you did.  (If you have book clubs or reading groups that purchase the book, let me know and earn the points for how many books total were purchased)  * this entry as well need to be on a separate comment.

And don’t forget that your receipt for the purchase of this book can by mailed for a chance to go to the premier of the movie with Donna Woolfolk Cross!   More information here on this.

For every 25 comments I will add to this giveaway so please share this with your friends and other book lovers.

For a thousand years her existence has been denied. She is the legend that will not die–Pope Joan, the ninth-century woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to become the only female ever to sit on the throne of St. Peter. Now in this riveting novel, Donna Woolfolk Cross paints a sweeping portrait of an unforgettable heroine who struggles against restrictions her soul cannot accept.

Brilliant and talented, young Joan rebels against medieval social strictures forbidding women to learn. When her brother is brutally killed during a Viking attack, Joan takes up his cloak–and his identity–and enters the monastery of Fulda. As Brother John Anglicus, Joan distinguishes herself as a great scholar and healer. Eventually, she is drawn to Rome, where she becomes enmeshed in a dangerous web of love, passion, and politics. Triumphing over appalling odds, she finally attains the highest office in Christendom–wielding a power greater than any woman before or since. But such power always comes at a price . . .

I hope you all go and pick up your copy of Pope Joan and enjoy a great read!  As we are a part of the reading community, I would love to see what we can do!

This giveaway will end August 15.

redcarpetUpdate July 28:  My review of Pope Joan

Winner of This Weeks Freebie Friday: The Wedding Nicholas Sparks

I am heading out of town in about an hour here so as I had announced last week, I would be posting weddingthis Freebie Friday winner a day early.

Our winner for this weeks giveaway (using random.org) is:

(drumroll please…)

Julie H

her response to the question of what they consider to be the best wedding gift was:

One of our best wedding gifts has wound up being something we use the most, sets of our towels! A lot of people don’t think they’re special enough to give, but we use them everyday!


Thanks everyone as always for playing!  I do not have time to post another Freebie Friday this week however this feature will be back next week!

Note that although I will be gone the next couple of days… posts have been written and will be posted here so keep coming back and seeing what is new!  Have a super awesome weekend!!!

Jantsens Gift by Pam Cope – Giveaway!

Jantsens giftThis giveaway is closed.  Winners have been announced on September 9.  Thank you!  🙂

I am so excited to be offered not only a review copy of this book but 5 copies to give away to you the readers!

For Cope, life in her small Missouri town seemed perfect; she ran a hair salon, enjoyed a happy family life and lived in a beautiful home. Yet, she explains, I have to say, I put on a hell of a performance. For a long time, I even had myself convinced of how good and right everything was in my life. Her ideal was shattered in 1999 when Jantsen, her 15-year-old son, died suddenly from a heart ailment; this moving memoir recounts Cope’s transformation and growth after her world collapsed. Her metamorphosis began after she accepted an invitation from a friend to visit Vietnam. Though Cope was wrapped in personal grief following the death of her son, the trip illuminated for her the superficial environment she inhabited. After visiting a local orphanage, Cope found for the first time in her life a sense of wholeness and purpose. Soon she stepped outside her own circumscribed world and began creating better lives for the abused, neglected and at-risk children she encountered, first in Vietnam then in Cambodia and Ghana. This is a wonderful story of a woman whose personal tragedy gave birth to a gift and how she fulfilled that legacy to make the world a better place.

To win a chance for one of these books:

1.  Receive one entry for commenting here with if you could help anywhere in the world and money was not an object, where would you go and what would you do?  (actually – that’s such a great question you get two entries for answering.)

2.  A third entry (optional) and by blogging about this giveaway or twittering about it

3.  And a fourth entry is available for commenting on any one of my other reviews… please be sure to let me know here that you did.

Remember to please leave different comments for each entry – it is easier to count out the winners that way.  No po boxes and please USA entries only.   Make sure I also have a way to contact you in the event that you are one of the winners.

Giveaway ends on August 16th EXTENDED to 26th.  Thanks everyone and good luck!  🙂

Author Interview with Sarah Beth Lindberg (+ Giveaways!)

SarahThis giveaway is closed – winners announced

Thank you to all who entered…  🙂

Today I am very excited to interview the author of two great reads (a third in the making) and she is also a friend of mine who I have had the pleasure of working with, rollerblading, and talking with for hours .


Good morning Sarah!  Thank you so much for joining me here today at One Persons Journey Through a World of Books!  I had watched you work on your first book and had the pleasure of being one of your proof readers before it went in for the final ok to go to print.  I am wondering, when did you first know you wanted to be a writer?


Sarah: I don’t know if I can pinpoint an exact time when I decided I was going to be a writer.  I just know that I have always had a passion to write.  I remember when I was in elementary school, my teachers always had great things to say about the stories I wrote.  All my stories had inspirational meaning behind them.  Writing was the one thing I truly enjoyed when I was in school.  In college, I knew I wanted to some day write a book that would glorify God with the life He has given me.

When did you take that step to actually start making this desire to write a reality?


Sarah: I started praying about what to write in 2004 and pursued writing in 2005.

What was it that gave you clarity on what your book would be about?

Sarah:  In my prayer time, I felt like I needed to write on the passage of Scripture that has guided my life.  Psalm 37:3-6 has seen me through many hard times.  It was my compass when I was a little girl and has continued to be my road map throughout life.  The words in the book literally flowed from my heart through my fingers.  They were words that simply shared the experience I had known of God’s faithfulness in my life.  I had a few bumps in the road where the words didn’t quite flow, so I would stop.  I put the pen down until the fluidity of the message came back.

Describe what that time was like from the point of finishing the book and then looking for a publisher.

Sarah:  I had finished writing my book in about 6 months, but I still had a ways to go in the publishing end of it.  I looked at many different places.  All the publishers that are well known did not want to accept an unknown author.  That was understandable because you never know what book sales are going to be like for a new author, but I wasn’t accepting no for an answer.  I had looked at some of the self-publishing options, but didn’t like what I saw.  I wanted something that was going to invest in my talent.  I waited a few months and prayed for God to show me who to go through.

How did you come to choose the publisher you are with, Tate Publishing?

Sarah:  I was at church one Sunday and someone mentioned to me that there was this great top of the line self-publishing company called Tate Publishing.  The big thing was that they only accept less than 3% of the manuscripts they get a year.  I was excited about that because I knew if God wanted me to publish with them, it would all go through.  The manuscript was read by their board and I received a phone call letting me know it had been accepted.  I had to go through the same process for my second book.  They have been a wonderful company to work with because they partner with me every step of the way.  They have my best interest in mind.

Your first book, Life’s Compass for Eternal Treasure, came out and what did you do to help promote your book?
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Sarah:  The sales did very well and are continuing to do well.  I have a marketing representative from Tate Publishing who works with me to market the book in various avenues.  I did many book signings in book stores, coffee shops, retirement homes, malls, Bible studies, etc.  I was able to speak at a few women’s conferences and at a couple church services.  I have been able to speak to youth at different events.  I have a website and a blog to promote the book.  Also, I do a daily devotional online.  A lot of promoting comes through word of mouth.   The best marketing tool is yourself and others who have read your book.

Since then you have written a second book, His Hope for Your Destiny (which came out in March of this year), married, and started on a third book!  When do you find the time to write?
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Sarah:  The best way for me to answer this is to say that if you are looking to find the time to write you will never find it.  You simply need to designate time every day to write.  It needs to be something you want to do, not have to do.  If I lived each day trying to find time to write, I don’t think I would ever get anything written.  I have to discipline myself to set aside time to write, to study, and to learn.  Writing is one of my passions, so I choose to make it a part of my day.

How do you promote your books now?

Sarah:  I continue to call book stores for book signings and am willing to have them in even unconventional places.  Coffee shops are great and I’ve since learned that a book signing at Chick-fil-A can be very profitable.  There are two things I’m strongly promoting right now.  One is the devotional I write on a daily basis because it gives people a way to find out who I am and how I write before they buy an actual book.  I know I always like to know the authors I read.  Second I have been given an opportunity to get as many books as possible into Prison Ministry Fellowship.  This excites me greatly, as I write desiring to see people draw close to the Lord.  If anyone would like to support this ministry, please email me and let me know.  Every book donated will go to the prison for the inmates.

Of your books, which is your favorite?

Sarah: Now, what kind of question is this?  It’s like asking a mom which child is her favorite.  I enjoy both my books for different reasons.  I love how the first book brings you through a journey of trusting in the Lord.  I enjoyed writing out the testimony of who God has been in my life and how He has always been faithful.  Then there is the second book.  This book I wrote during some major storms in my life based on my second favorite passage, Isaiah 40:31.  I was so encouraged by God through the writing of this book.  God continued to remind me that He had a plan and a purpose through the storms I faced.

Sarah, thank you for sharing your books with us today!  I can’t wait to see you again this fall and then we can chat about what is on the horizon for you!

Sarah has generously offered to give away two copies of each of  her books Life’s Compass For Eternal Treasure and His Hope For Your Destiny, as well as an audio version copy of His Hope For Your Destiny.

For a chance to win (1) post a relevant comment here about this interview and (2) earn a 2nd entry by blogging of tweeting about this interview and giveaway.
US entries only please and no po box numbers.  Giveaway will end August 25 EXTENDED to August 31 and winners will be posted here.
Sarah’s:
Faith1

Winner Announced for Beach House by Jane Green

congrats this one

Our winner from this past weeks Freebie Friday contest for The Beach House by Jane Green is…

Cindy

who’s answer to my question about what type of house would you live in if you could choose any, responded with, “a log cabin in the mountains.”

I kind of like that Cindy!  Congratulations on your win!  Please email me your address and I can drop that in the mail for you!

Note that new Freebie Friday is going on now:  Here!