I am excited to announce that I have drawn the winner of the Power of A Praying Wife book and our winner is:
RITA!!!!!
Congratulations!!! Please email me your information and I will mail this out to you a.s.a.p.

Right.
So here is how this plays out:
Are you stuck in a rut? Do you always find yourself reading from set lists or feeling committed to reading one book while another book screams at you from your TBR mountain? Has your reading become completely scheduled? If so, the Random Reading Challenge may be just the thing to put the spontaneity back into your reading.
For this challenge, readers will be choosing books randomly from their TBR stacks. You may select one of three levels of participation:
Level I
You are just a tad compulsive about your reading – you love your lists and schedules. Being spontaneous is not something that comes naturally to you. To complete the challenge, force yourself out of your rut and read just six books
Level II:
You really want to break away from all those lists, but you do still have a responsibility to your reading groups, other challenges and all those review books. Six books is too little, but twelve is too much. Stretch a little and read nine books for the challenge.
Level III:
Throw away the lists, don’t look at your schedule, bring on the joy that comes with the freedom to chose books randomly. Read twelve books for the challenge.
Rules (come on, you didn’t think I would be THAT random did you?!?!?):NO lists allowed.
Books for the challenge are chosen one at a time when the mood strikes.
I am going in to this at the Level III Challenge. While reviewing the books is not mandatory in this challenge, I choose to do so and will use the Random Reading Challenge Meme to mark them and number them.
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.
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 lone
liness, 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:
I 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.

Reagan at Miss Remmer’s Review gave me the Lets Be friends award tonight! How sweet is that? This award if for bloggers who has really extended a hand of friendship by befriending others bloggers, being helpful, and a commenter.
I shall display it proudly! Thank you Reagan, if you have not been over to see Miss Remmer’s Review (and even if you have) go back again and again. her reviews are full of great information and I love that she is striving to find book reviews for Young Adults to encourage reading. If you have reviewed a great YA book, be sure to connect with her for her Guest Reviews.
I am pretty tired tonight, but in the next few days I will pass this award on to a few of the bloggers that come to mind that have really been friendly and helpful to me along this crazy journey through books and blogging. 🙂
Ok…. does this happen to anyone else?
I like to get up early in the morning and have my coffee while I visit some of my favorite book blogs. Oh, you know who you are….I am on your door step with coffee cup in hand and hair still wild as actually attempting to fix it prior to two cups of coffee is not a good idea…
So I go to a book blog and I am reading about some delightful book review or book related happening when my eye wanders over to their side bar. Whats this? Another book blog? So after I pay my comment respects to said blog owner, I click on the sidebar blog and find a whole new blog filled with book related things that make my typing fingers tingle with excitement to post a comment on what I have found. AND THEN, I see something on their sidebar… that’s right – another book blog that sounds interesting…. and I click on that…. (are you seeing the pattern?)
By the time I come out of the blogesphere (although there are times I wonder if I ever fully come out of it….) many things have happened:
1. I have no doubt added a book to my “TBR” list
2. I have no doubt found my way into a blog I have not read before and liked it
3. I have no doubt become lost, and by the time I snap out of it (usually because duty calls and I must go to work!) I can not remember
how I got to where I wound up.
Lately I have found that in work conversations I think in book titles or book quotes. Yesterday afternoon I handled a particularity difficult phone conversation well and hung up and and said “Crisis Management” (then wrote it down because I liked the “title”) Later I cleaned up around the coffee room where it can quickly become a disaster zone and satisfied with my job well done said, “Mischief Managed.”
Ok… enough morning rambling…. and I have to go to work. 🙂 Anyone else out there care to share?
Every once in a while, we as readers are lucky enough to find that hidden treasure – the book we cant
wait to read in its entirety… yet we are saddened when it is done, as though we just said good-bye to a good friend. I have just experienced such a read. ~Sheila
For a thousand years men have denied her existence — Pope Joan, the woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to rule Christianity for two years. Now this compelling novel animates the legend with a portrait of an unforgettable woman who struggles against restrictions her soul cannot accept.
When her older brother dies in a Viking attack, the brilliant young Joan assumes his identity and enters a Benedictine monastery where, as Brother John Anglicus, she distinguishes herself as a scholar and healer. Eventually drawn to Rome, she soon becomes enmeshed in a dangerous mix of powerful passion and explosive politics that threatens her life even as it elevates her to the highest throne in the Western world.
My thoughts: Endings are inevitable. In life…as they are in books. With each page of a great read you are excited to move on to the longed for conclusion…. yet at the end, you may sit there as I am now, almost feeling a loss. This book was such a find for me and I absolutely loved the historical value in this read. Joan was strong and determined from the moment she was born – until the moment she died. I found myself trying to find moments in my day when I could pick up this book and read even if it was only for a minute or two. Donna Woolfolk Cross writes with a brilliant stroke where at times I even laughed out loud at the witness of her words. 
Donna Woolfolk Cross graduated cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1969 with a B.A. in English. She moved to London, England, after graduation, and worked as an editorial assistant for a small publishing house on Fleet Street, W.H. Allen and Company. Upon her return to the United States, Cross worked at Young and Rubicam, a Madison Avenue advertising firm, before going on to graduate school at UCLA where she earned a master’s degree in Literature and Writing in 1972.
She is the coauthor of Speaking of Words and Daddy’s Little Girl. The product of seven years of research and writing, Pope Joan is her first novel. She is now at work on a new novel set in 17th century France.
More on Donna Woolfolk Cross here in my author interview
I for one hope that Joan really did live on this earth. A woman ahead of her time – I applaud her strength and conviction. Joan, fictitious or not, lived a life that few could live up to even today.
Thank you Donna for a read that I can honestly chalk up there with one of the best books I have read this year. I will treasure this book and our conversations, forever.
“Partout ou vous voyez une legende, vous pouvez etre sur, en allant au fond des choses, que vous trouverez une histoire.”
“Whenever you see a legend, you can be sure, if you go to the very bottom of things, that you will find history.”
~Vallet de Viriville
Information to the movie Pope Joan due out this Fall of 2009!
Enchanted by Josephine’s post and author interview for Pope Joan
*This book was purchased locally at our very own BookWorld in Brainerd Minnesota
I rate Pope Joan PG13 for some mild nudity and violence
Another cloudy morning in central Minnesota and I am a bit bummed as I was hoping to go biking a bit after work this afternoon… well, I can always read.
I love this meme! This is hosted by An Adventure in Reading
I am in Rome battling fiercely beside John Anglicus (aka Pope Joan) and helping him…. err…. her…. stay clear of the handsome Gerold. At this point I have just discovered I have been unsuccessful.
Is it possible in such a short amount of time… say the time it takes to read a book, that you can fall in love with the scenery… the musical flow of the words? Yes. It is possible. ~ Sheila

A Will To Love is the story of Benton Jessup, a widower who is still mourning the loss of his wife Carla, to cancer the previous year. Together Carla and Benton had ran a Bed and Breakfast, and now Benton is left only with his memories and the work of trying to make the Bed and Breakfast a success.
When Kitty Beebe comes to stay, with plans to write a book based around the beautiful area around the Bed and Breakfast, Benton thinks this may be just the ticket to draw people to the Inn. A fast friendship develops between Benton and Kitty and causes Benton to rethink who he is.
This book is a quick read that tugs at your heart. It is about hope and dreams, past hauntings, and new beginnings. I enjoyed the characters and the great setting of this book. 
Author Kim Smith a lifelong Memphian who has been married for nearly 16 years and have two wonderful adult children. You can visit Kim’s website at: http://www.mkimsmith.com/
Red Rose Publishing offers a Southern Drink after a Southern Book:
Aunt Tillie’s Sweet Tea
Ingredients
3 Family size tea bags
2 Cups of cold water
1 Cup of sugar
Directions
We in the south make the best iced tea you’ll find.
Maybe it’s how it’s done, or maybe it is the water
in the south, or maybe it’s just that
a southern belle has put a lot of TLC
into making the tea. Who knows!
We recommend Luzianne Tea Bags if available.
Place the two cups water in a pot and add the tea bags.
Bring to a boil, do not continue boiling.
Remove from heat and let steep.
Pour warm tea into empty pitcher.
Add the sugar and stir until the sugar is dissolved.
Fill remaining pitcher with cold water.
Optional – some women say they use less water and add ice to the tea.
*This book came to me as a E book to me from Dorothy Thompson of Pump up Your Book Promotion
I rate this book PG13 for some mild nudity
Most of us have a few favorite blog stops we like to keyboard our way over to frequently to see whats new. Today’s question is… what do you look for in a good blog, one that you go back to again and again to see what they are reading, what they recommend, etc…
For me… I look for a blog that:
How about you?