Sunday… week in review

If you go back the past 7 days you will see I did get a few reviews done as well as a few other book mailbox loverelated events.  Here is what came in the mailbox:


alvorAn exciting delivery from the author herself Laura Bingham.  Laura has given me a review copy as well as a giveaway copy.  Watch for this giveaway to be posted later this week.

emberFrom Bostick Communications I received The Light, The Dark, and Ember In Between

imposterImposters Daughter which is a giveaway that ends July 15!  (5 copies available!)

any minuteAny Minute by Joyce Meyer from Hachette Audio – I will be announcing the three winners tomorrow

JulieThanks to Hachette books this will be a giveway for July 15!  5 copies available

johnHachette Audio sent me this great audio to review plus 3 copies to give away – must sign up before July 15!

lostThis little treasure I found at a Book Store sale to support the local library.  It is an advanced reader copy

lizziBostick Communications sent me this read to review

pumpReceived from the author, Nancy Werking Poling and read this over the weekend… review is here

winsTwo books I won have arrived!!!  Y I P P Y!!!!!


Plans for this week:

I have book blog awards to give out tomorrow!

Hoping to read:  Pride and Prejudice, The End of Grace, Off Season, Hunter, Avalon, and I would love to squeeze in time to read the Harry Potter book that is coming out in the theaters this Tuesday.

I have Bookies Book Club on Tuesday and it is the annual Queen event!  (My dress and speech are ready!)  See last years event here

Tuesday at Midnight I am taking our Kinship Partner to the midnight showing of Harry Potter!

Lots of fun stuff this week so please visit often!

TOS 2

*Tour of Saints Bike Ride that was today – 50 miles.  This is me and my cousin Jarrod.

Out of The Pumpkin Shell by Nancy Werking Poling

pumpkin

A book centered around friendships and aging gracefully…. or in some case, not so much.

~Sheila

The book said: The teaching careers of lifelong friends Harriet (Hat) and Elise have come to an end in spectacular style, with the two women leaving more than burning bridges behind them. Now they are looking menopause straight in the eye–and they don’t care one bit for what they see. Fight, they vow, we’ll fight the interloper tooth and nail. More than a tad bruised and battered from the struggle, Hat and Elise undertake a journey to Bryson’s Mill, Indiana, birthplace of Elise s mother, Rose, who by any definition was inadequate to the simplest tasks of motherhood. Stella May and Margaret, old friends of Rose, hold keys to a past very different from Elise’s memory. When Elise adamantly refuses to accept their conflicting reality, Hat is confronted with choices–and risks–about what friendship with Elise actually entails. For both friends the journey to Bryson’s Mill becomes a pilgrimage of a different kind: into the past lives of women, into truth, into sisterhood, and most of all, into new possibility.

I said:  This book arrived Friday in the mail box and I  started it right away (sorry Elizabeth Bennet, I will get back to you soon!)

Is it possible to love and hate a book?  I loved the friendship between Hat and Elise.  I laughed out loud as they plotted together how to beat the aging process.  The begining of the book reminded me of some of my own friendships.  As the pair dives into Elise’s childhood memories of what she believes to be true, some discoveries are made that are hard to take.

Secrets of the past can be a heart wrenching journey.  As the book develops, I was saddened – even angered at Rose’s story and without giving away too much of the book, the storyline was hard to read – the book, while a great story of friendship, also deals with some very tough life issues.

Overall I enjoyed this read and loved the friendships that developed. Nancy has written a  women’s novel that will make you laugh, make you cry, and make you thankful of the great women in your own life.

I am excited to share with you my  interview with author Nancy Werking Poling!

Nancy, tell us a little about you.

Nancy: I was born a Hoosier (Indiana) but raised in Orlando, Florida, before Disney, when Orlando was a sleepy southern  town. After living in the Chicago area for more than twenty years, my husband, Jim, and I have recently retired to North Carolina. So I’m unclear about whether I am primarily a Southerner who has spent much of her life in the Midwest, or a Midwesterner influenced by years of living in the South. I often linger to chat with store clerks and say “y’all,” if those characteristics are any indication.

NancyWhat was it like writing this book?

Nancy: Unlike writers who snatch an hour or two in the early morning, I need large blocks of time to myself. So I couldn’t really start writing seriously until my children were grown and out of the house—which partly explains my being a late bloomer. Out Of The Pumpkin Shell is my first novel to be published but not the first I have written.

How long did it take you to write Out of The Pumpkin Shell?

Nancy: About two years. It started as a short story, which I read at an open-mic literary event. Someone said, “I assume that’s the beginning of a novel.” The thought hadn’t occurred to me, but I liked the characters Hat and Elise so much that I just kept going. After two drafts I knew the narrative wasn’t yet all that it could be, so I met weekly with a writing coach, Bonnie Kustner. She helped me maintain the momentum of the story and keep the humorous voice in spite of the serious events that developed.

Where did the idea for this book come from?

Nancy: So many places. Over lunch one day a friend, who had a hilarious way of relating even the grimmest events, had me in stitches over the story of how her cousin was terrified of menopause. The cousin was convinced that like her mother she’d go into a deep depression and never come out. That’s how the book’s humorous tone came about too. Another inspiration was the friendship between my mother, Ethel Mae, and Geneva. They went to school together in Indiana. To my knowledge, though, they never engaged in the kind of wacky exploits Hat and Elise carry out. My family moved to Florida when I was six, but we returned to Indiana every summer to visit Geneva and her family, along with my grandparents. That’s how Indiana came to be the setting for the story.

Emotional and clergy sexual abuse are in the book too. I said earlier that I’ve always been fascinated by stories. Sadly, I have listened to many women tell of being abused. In the nineties I edited a book titled VICTIM TO SURVIVOR: WOMEN RECOVERING FROM CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE. Six women tell their stories of having been sexually abused as adults. These stories left me concerned not only about victims but also about the wives of abusing clergy.

Of course, a major challenge was combining the hilarity of Hat and Elise’s perspective and activities with the seriousness of emotional abuse.

My original intention was simply to tell a good story. From the feedback I’ve been getting, I’ve discovered that the book speaks to women on several different levels. Some women see their own lives in Elise’s mother, Rose. One reader commented on how the book reminded her of how stubbornly we cling to a notion from childhood about ourselves or our family. The book has made others think about the importance of female friends and the absence in their life of a Best Friend.

Any advice on aging gracefully?

Nancy:  When I find the secret, I’ll market it, maybe sell it on e-bay.

No, seriously. Why should we age GRACEFULLY? Why not step on a few toes? I think that’s what Hat and Elise figure out. No matter our age, we need to continue to search for adventures and skills that excite and enliven us.


Thank you Nancy for sending me your book for review and for taking the time to share with us about Out of The Pumpkin Shell!

**Readers please note that this book contains some strong language**

I received this book from the author, Nancy Werking Poling

This book rates a PG13 for strong language


Morning Meanderings (sort of…)

a meme for meI am actually in a great little town this morning about 90 miles form my home (and my computer) called St Joseph, Minnesota.  My cousin and I are participating in the Tour of Saints, a 50 mile bike ride through the area.  Its a lot of fun, this will be my 5 year, his 2nd.  This is my third bike tour this year, gearing up for the big 175 mile tour this September (never done that one before!)

I was hoping to find  a meandering moment for you Saturday evening but alas…. I am just too tired.  I will be posting later on Sunday with a couple book reviews and my Sundown Sunday (Week in Review) post…..

Have an awesome Sunday!bike gif

Morning Meanderings…

So my morning starts out like this…. I get up and see another beautiful day coming across the horizon.  I start the a meme for mecoffee, prep my work space, pour a cup of coffee, and set it by my computer, let the dogs out, stand on the deck and feel much joy in the warmth of my favorite time of year, pour myself a cup of coffee and sat down to get started.

Did you catch that?

Yup…. I look across my work space and I have poured myself not one… but two cups of coffee.  LOL.  Whatever…. I drink them both.  🙂

So… the “coffee cups” and I start our ritual of email checking, and blog visiting.  This morning is a bit different because I am not returning to write this post with a book to check out (well, in a way I am….) but more with a question and an answer.

Over at My Friend Amy’s, she presented her Faith N’ Fiction Saturday question as to what is the best Christian Fiction book we have read so far this year.  Hmmmm….. great question!

I came back with the answer as In Search of Eden by Linda Nichols.    The question is timely too because I have several great reads in this category that I have purchased and are now waiting on the book shelf.  I actually pulled a couple off the shelf and added them to my TBR pile.

Faith_Fiction2

Freebie Friday: The Beach House by Jane Green

beach houseThis weeks freebie is in honor of my absolute FAVORITE time of year… Summer!  So this weeks book is a beautiful hard cover copy of The Beach House by Jane Green.

Sixty-five-year-old Nan Powell has lived comfortably and happily in Nantucket since the suicide of her husband, Everett, so she is thrown for a loop when she learns that she is in danger of losing her beloved house. After weighing her options, Nan decides to turn her home into a bed-and-breakfast. The guests she gets for the summer are all at a crossroads in their lives in one way or another. Daniel has just separated from his wife and is facing something he has denied for years; Daff is recovering from the heartbreak of a divorce and getting a much-needed break from her anger-filled 13-year-old daughter; and Nan’s son Michael is on the run from a disastrous affair. Nan finds herself opening up to her guests and enjoying their company, but she is shocked when she discovers a person close to one of them has a startling connection to her.

To enter:  post a comment here with the type of house you would love to live in if you could choose ***You must answer the question to be in for the giveaway***

For a second entry (and please put this on a separate comment to be counted correctly, Twitter or blog about this giveaway and leave the link here.

US entries only please and no P.O. box numbers.  Be sure that your comments have a way for me to get a hold of you if you are the winner.  Winner will be posted next Friday on July 17th.

Have fun and good luck!!!

Congratulations to last weeks winner:

Click here to see what Jamie won!!!

Jamie from For The Love of All That is Written

Morning Meanderings….

a meme for me

Good morning!  I am off and running this morning with a list of “to do’s” and then I will be back this afternoon to post the winner of last weeks Freebie Friday (that means you still have time to sign up!)  and put up the new contest.  Make a memo to stop back later today…

In the meantime, as me and the coffee cup traveled this morning I found this little treasure at Books, Movies, and Chinese Food:  Faking Grace by Tamara Leigh. The review made me laugh, and I really like Deborah’s blog.  It’s clean looking and fun!  Take some time today to stop by Book’s Movies, and Chinese Food and tell her hi as well as check out this great read.  I might just hit the book store and pick this up before I come home.

(Thank you to Mike at A Few Minutes With Michael who is working on a Morning Meanderings meme for me!  This is the first draft… he is still tweaking  a bit but couldn’t wait to use it!)

Jane Austin Challenge Phase 2

Tonight I watched “Becoming Jane”.  If you are following my Austin posts you know that before the Austenchallenge I was in an “Austen Free Zone”.

Meaning?  I had not read her, followed any of the recent books or ever watched an Austen related movie.  I really dont know why…

I have had Pride and Prejudice (which I am reading now) and Emma on my shelves for years.  So I planned to…. I just didn’t.  Thank you to this challenge for forcing my hand!

So this is the 2nd movie, having watched Pride and Prejudice Last week.  I really liked this one as well.  I found Jane’s character to be a lot like Elizabeth in P & P…. in the sense that they were both so very strong willed, independent women.   The ending was unexpected to me… I did not know that Jane Austen had never married. I guess I need to add to my personal challenge here to brush up on some Austen basics.

My Hearts Desire by Mary Singer Wick

My hearts desire

Mary Singer Wick offers a poignant and honest portrayal of her myriad experiences, and how she eventually comes to find herself through a direct relationship with God. For anyone who doubts the presence of a higher power, this book will give your heart wings.

Introduction: Have you ever made a promise you really didn’t think you’d have to keep? You know–something you say in passing that you’ll do someday, but you’re not exactly making a sincere commitment to do it. You don’t really believe it will ever be brought up in conversation again, and you’ve forgotten yourself that you even said it.

Mary’s book roped me in right away.  She tells her story of a long series of meaningless relationships and then battling her way through many years of illness including the diagnosis that she would more than likely not be able to have children.

Mary’s book is all about walking in faith, and I had to admire her strong and consistent will as she was misdiagnosed, and struggled with poor self esteem brought on by what the illness did to her body and the fact that she couldn’t seem to find Mr. Right.

Her book read well and shared a message of encouragement and hope – no matter what.  At times I had to wonder where Mary found her strength as she seemed to battle on against the odds, then I remembered, Mary found her strength in God – time and again.   Mary’s book recently hit the best sellers list at Amazon.

About the book:

My Heart’s Desire by Mary Singer Wick

ISBN: 978-1607251521

Publisher: Outskirts Press

Date of publish: Feb 20, 2009

Pages: 198

S.R.P.: $15.95Mary Wick

About the author:

In 2002, shortly after becoming a first-time bride at the age of 44, Mary sensed the Lord asking her to share her story of hope with other women. After wrestling with God’s call on her life, she finally stepped forth in obedience in 2008 when she wrote My Heart’s Desire: A Journey Toward Finding Extravagant Love.

You can find out more about Mary and her book at Extravegant Life

Humane Award (x2)

When my husband’s birthday comes around in September, he likes to claim it not only the day of his Humanity Awardbirthday, but as his “birthday week”.  (Pause for a sigh here).

Honestly, after today, I think I finally understand.  My Blogoversary was yesterday, but well wishes have still come in today and I have met so many new people and been introduced to many more great blogs.   I am kind of thinking I am having a Blogoversary week.  🙂

So – that being said, a thank you to J. Kaye’s Book Blog for presenting me with my 2nd Humane Award!

The Humane Award is to honor certain bloggers that are kindhearted individuals. They regularly take part in my blog and always leave the sweetest comments. If it wasn’t for them, my site would just be an ordinary book review blog. Their blogs are also amazing and are tastefully done on a daily basis. This award is to thank them for their growing friendships through the blog world.

Thank you so much J.Kaye!  This is really nice!   In a few days I will pay it forward.


Blogoversary Recovery and Winners!

party hat

Wow.  If you stopped by yesterday and celebrated my two year blogoversary with me – thank you.  It was so much more than I had imagined.  I met new people, I am thankful for those who I am already getting to know.

Thank you to Michael at A few Minutes With Michael who is making me a button for my blog.  What a great gift!  Thank you to Never Not Reading who graciously posted on her blog the “balloon post” for this event as well as Loving Heart Designs.  Thank you also to Miss Remmers’ Review for posting my review of The Book Thief in order to try to draw Young Adults (YA) towards books they may enjoy.

It has been a very good day.

So as I pick up the falling down streamers and cake frosting off the wall (Laurel?  Was that you? )  I have to just breathe a big happy sigh.  That was a great party.

Our winners of the package drawings as as follows (I use Random.org to choose the winning comment numbers):

Package #1


Congratulations to Raidergirl at An Adventure in Reading




package #2


Congratulations to:  Anna at Diary of an Eccentric!!!



Package #4

Congratulations to Kerri!!!




package #3



Congratulations to Roseanne!!!



CONGRATULATIONS WINNERS!

Emails have gone out to each of you please.  Please email back with your mailing address as soon as possible so I may get these in the mail to you.  Emails not responded to by Monday will result in my having to draw another name.


Be sure and check out all the action going on today in the below posts.  I have new reviews to post today.  That’s right… while you all partied at my place yesterday, I was in the corner curled up with a good book.  ; )  LOL