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Easy Peasy Give-away of 55+ Inspy Novels!

Tue, 2016-11-15 14:49 -- Jocelyn Green
As we get ready to celebrate Thanksgiving, I want you all to know that I am thankful for you! So I’ve teamed up with more than 55 fantastic inspirational historical romance authors to give away a huge collection of novels, PLUS a Kindle Fire to one lucky winner! You can win my novel Spy of Richmond, plus books from authors like Connilyn Cossette, Elizabeth Camden, Kristi Ann Hunter, Michelle Griep, Roseanna White, Melanie Dickerson, Suzanne Woods Fisher, and more! This is the easiest drawing to enter I've ever seen. It will take less than a minute--maybe less than 30 seconds!  Enter the giveaway by clicking here: bit.ly/historical-inspy Good luck!

Interview with Amelia Rhodes + Giveaway!

Fri, 2016-11-04 16:13 -- Jocelyn Green
Happy Release Week to Amelia Rhodes for her new book Pray A to Z: A Practical Guide to Pray for Your Community! My copy of this book is already well-loved. Whether you’re a seasoned prayer warrior or just beginning to talk to God, Pray A to Z is guaranteed to bring new meaning to your prayer life. Profound in its simplicity, this book is an invaluable tool to keep us in conversation with God, and to keep the needs of others at the forefront of our minds. Because we pray to a God who answers, I can’t wait to see how this book changes the world around us. Amelia is here to answer a few questions for us today, and her publisher has generously offered a free copy of Pray A to Z to TWO winners! (Details on the giveaway after the interview.) Q: Pray A to Z is not an instruction book on the mechanics of prayer, but rather a guide to praying for one’s community, born from your personal experiences. Where did the idea of praying from A to Z come from? One day within the span of a few hours, I received phone calls and text messages from a number of friends who were all dealing with very heavy struggles. Each one asked me to pray for them.  Of course, I said I would, but at that point I recognized how often I fail to follow through on praying long-term for people. As I prayed that day, I also asked God to help me with my prayer life. I realized how many people I knew were struggling with the same types of things — adoptions, cancer, marriages. The idea of praying by topic seemed natural, and then I decided to see if I could make an A to Z list of all the needs and struggles facing our communities today.  Q: You lead readers in praying through the alphabet for their community, but there are more than just 26 topics in this book. Share with us how the book is structured and how you have organized the individual letters. Each letter features prayers and prompts on five topics. Three topics for each letter focus on prayers of petition, and two focus on praise. So we pray about adoptions, abuse and alcoholism and then praise God for His abundance and that He is almighty. We pray for marriages, missionaries and ministers and those in the military while praising God for His majesty and mercy. Q: Why did you feel it important to include aspects of praise and adoration, rather than having only need-based topics? The needs get heavy and overwhelming. I found that incorporating praise brings the focus back to our great God. Praising Him helps us recognize how every need we have is met in who God is. Q: What are some of the prayer needs you cover in the book? I covered the needs of families in our communities, such as foster families, special needs families, pregnancy crises, raising children, marriages, divorce, adoption and infertility. I also take a look at many of the justice issues facing our societies today, including prejudice, homelessness, hunger, human trafficking, refugees and violence. The prayers also include topics related to how we interact with our communities, including generosity, kindness, estranged relationships, joy, obedience to God, vanity and our yearnings. Q: Why is it hard for us to pray with focused intention for the requests of those around us? Our world has become increasingly chaotic, with an endless stream of chatter and alerts from our tech devices. Every week the news reports more heartbreaking tragedies. I find with so many things calling for my attention, it can be easy to let prayer get squeezed out of the day. Sometimes I just don’t know where to begin, or I can’t find the words to express the ache in my soul. My heart and mind often jump from need to need. Writing and then reading these prayers and verses has become a starting place to bring my focused attention to God in prayer for my community. About Amelia: Amelia Rhodes lives in Michigan with her husband and two children. Amelia encourages women to discover who they are in Christ and to deepen their relationships with each other. She is the author of Pray A to Z: A Practical Guide to Pray for Your Community (Worthy Inspired, 2016) and Isn't it Time for a Coffee Break? Doing life together in an all-about-me kind of world. Her writing has also been featured in Chicken Soup for the Soul, The Upper Room, and GEMS' Girls Clubs.  Connect with her online at www.ameliarhodes.com. Twitter: @amrhodes Facebook: @ameliarhodeswriter Instagram: @ameliamrhodes   Giveaway Details! To enter the drawing for your own copy of Pray to Z, please leave a comment telling us why you'd like it! If you have subscribed to my (Jocelyn's) newsletter, tell me that in your comment and receive an extra point.  (Psst, if you haven't subscribed yet, you can do so right here--and receive a free gift when you confirm your subscription!) Thanks for your patience as I approve the comments as I have time! Be sure to include your email address so I can contact you if you win! Looking forward to hearing from all of you. Winners will be drawn using random.org on November 22. Winners, I will email you to ask for your mailing address. Pray A to Z is available wherever books are sold, including: Amazon, BarnesandNoble, ChristianBook, and BooksaMillion.  

Behind the Scenes with Author Laurie Alice Eakes

Fri, 2016-11-04 15:26 -- Jocelyn Green
I'm so pleased to have author Laurie Alice Eakes on the blog today! The first book I read of hers was Lady in the Mist, and I absolutely adored it. So much so, in fact, that after hearing that Laurie Alice offered book coaching services, I hired her to coach me through writing my first novel, Wedded to War! She is a very talented storyteller, and I can't wait to dive in to her new book, My Enemy, My Heart.  Laurie Alice has written a behind-the-scenes guest post for us today, but first, I want to share with you more about her new book. Here's the blurb:  The sea has always been Deirdre MacKenzie’s home, and the crew of her father’s Baltimore clipper is the only family she loves. She’s happier wearing breeches and climbing the rigging of the Maid of Alexandria than donning a dress and learning to curtsey. But, when the War of 1812 erupts, the ship is captured by a British privateer . With her father, the captain, dead, Deirdre sees her crew herded into the hold as prisoners-of-war. Their fate is the notorious Dartmoor prison in England. Her fate as a noncombatant prisoner is uncertain, but the one thing she knows—she must find a way to free her crew.  Kieran  Ashford has caused his family one too many scandals. On his way to exile in America, he is waylaid by the declaration of war and a chance to turn privateer and make his own fortune. But he regrets his actions as soon as the rich prize is secured. Kieran figures his best chance at redeeming himself in the eyes of his family is to offer Deidre the protection of his name in marriage. He has no idea that secrets from his parents’ past and Deirdre’s determination to free her crew are on a disastrous collision course.  Love and loyalty clash, as Kieran begins to win Deirdre’s heart despite her plot to betray him and his family.  While Kieran works to mend the relationship with his family, he begins to love his bride in spite of what lies between them. Sounds fantastic. You all know I'm drawn to war stories anyway! And now without further ado, I'm handing the post off to Laurie Alice Eakes. She writes: The play “The Mouse that Roared” could have been written about the United States going up against Great Britain for what has become known as The War of 1812 in the United States and not even talked about in Great Britain, except by military historians. We had 18 ships in our Navy, most of which weren’t even seaworthy, and the British had 506 or so, all commissioned. Half of our country was against the war, and the Army was a joke. Yet in June, 1812, the United States declared war on Great Britain. We lost nearly every land battle, had our capital burned, and our First lady and president sent fleeing for their lives. Yet we signed a treaty giving us everything we wanted. No one should have been surprised by this turn of events. For over half a decade, we had been building up to such a momentous and drastic decision to go to war. The British thought they owned the seas. They impressed our sailors, declaring they were British citizens, not American. They told us where and with whom we could trade our raw and finished materials. They were just generally arrogant about what was their empire—the entire world, if they had their way. We were just trying to survive as a nation. We had tried peaceful means of resolving these issues, from an embargo against British goods, which went over like a crowd volunteering for the flu—that is to say, it didn’t make Mr. Jefferson popular. Diplomatic means failed. That left war. Against this background, I have, for many years, wanted to set a book. The idea has lived in my brain and partially on my computer for well over ten years. What if an American lady ends up stranded in Great Britain during the war. But no, I had to make it worse. She had to be in Great Britain against her will. Into the research tomes I delved. Out of them I picked up bits and pieces of information about British privateers, noncombatant prisoners of war, and, most of all, Dartmoor Prison. Dartmoor was built in 1809 for French prisoners. When America declared war on Great Britain, the English began to cram Americans into this stone fortress built on the bleak and inclement wasteland of Dartmoor in Devonshire. That is near Plymouth in the West Country, maybe 40 miles east of Poldark country, for those who follow that series. It is still a prison today, and I could write more just about Dartmoor and the St. Bartholomew Day massacre. Another time, should Jocelyn invite me back to talk about prisoners of war. For My Enemy, My Heart, I don’t talk much about the battles or loss of ships and money; I focus on the human toll of the war. Deirdre loses her father, her crew, and the merchantman on which she has lived for most of her life. Losing her freedom and having to act like a proper lady is possibly the hardest thing she has ever done. Falling in love with an Englishman is worse, for Deirdre plans to free her crew from prison, but to do so, makes her a traitor to the family who have shown her nothing but love and kindness. The enemy is good. Her crew have always been her family. Deirdre is loyal to both. She must betray one or the other. I can’t tell you how My Enemy, My Heart ends, and I can tell you how the war ended. On Christmas Eve, 1814, we signed the Treaty of Ghent. The British stopped impressing our men. They stopped telling us where and with whom we could trade. And we stopped scarfing up their merchantmen like children at a Halloween candy bag. Yes, our Navy, though vastly improved by the war experience, didn’t win the war; our privateers did. We built fantastic and fast merchant ships we turned into fighting vessels and sailed off to scoop up rich, British prizes. Our vessels were so fast we could cut out those sluggish British merchantmen and sail them off as prizes. We took so many, the merchants of Great Britain hollered ‘uncle’ and demanded an end to the war. Thank you so much for sharing that with us, Laurie Alice! I'm beyond intruiged. Happy reading, everyone! You can find My Enemy, My Heart at Amazon, Goodreads, ChristianBook, BarnesandNoble, and more. About Laurie Alice Eakes: “Eakes has a charming way of making her novels come to life without being over the top,” writes Romantic Times of  bestselling, award-winning author Laurie Alice Eakes. Since she lay in bed as a child telling herself stories, she has fulfilled her dream of becoming a published author, with more than two dozen books in print. She has recently relocated to a cold climate because she is weird enough to like snow and icy lake water. When she isn’t basking in the glory of being cold, she likes to read, visit museums, and take long walks, preferably with her husband, though the cats make her feel guilty every time she leaves the house.

Refresh: FREE ebook TODAY ONLY!

Fri, 2016-11-04 14:58 -- Jocelyn Green
FLASH SALE! Today only, download your FREE ebook copy of Refresh: Spiritual Nourishment for Parents of Children with Special Needs. Find it FREE at Amazon and BarnesandNoble. . You can read more about the book here. Here's one reviewer's take on Refresh: Being a parent to a special needs child is challenging and exhausting. Not only physically, but emotionally, mentally, and even spiritually. In-between being mom, therapist, caregiver, and nurse, there's little time for anything else.But as a parent and a person, I need what everyone else does too... friendship, encouragement, inspiration, and a connection. That's why on this journey it's so important to continue to pursue a relationship with God, our Creator. We need that connection and relationship. We need to find hope and encouragement in His Word and that's why authors Kimberly Drew and Jocelyn Green wrote this devotional book. I love this devotional because it is written by and filled with encouragement and stories from real special needs parents that were interviewed before the book was even written. I can relate to so many of the devotionals and stories as a special needs parent and it's nice to feel like I'm not alone when reading along. It's hard for other parents to understand what we're going through, but none of this is a surprise to God. We only need to rely on Him to continue on. ~Kathryn Sneed Read "Crushed Spirit," an excerpt from Refresh, here. If you know someone who could use this resource, please let them know the ebook is free today only! Thank you!

Interview with Heather Day Gilbert + Giveaway!

Tue, 2016-11-01 08:08 -- Jocelyn Green
Friends, I am so excited for two reasons. First, I turned in the manuscript for Free to Lean: Making Peace with Your Lopsided Life last night! Woohoo! (It releases from Discovery House in August 2017.) Second: today is RELEASE DAY for Heather Day Gilbert's amazing Viking tale, Forest Child! Find it on Amazon, BarnesandNoble, iBooks, Kobo, and Goodreads. I had the privilege of reading this early and endorsing it. Here's what I had to say: Forest Child is one of the bravest works of fiction I’ve ever read. Brimming with tension, yet laced with tenderness, this powerful saga is sure to keep you turning the pages far into the night. An ingenious blend of Viking history and timeless issues of the heart still relevant today. Heather graciously answered a few burning questions I had after reading Forest Child: Heather Day Gilbert 1) What first inspired you to write inspirational Viking stories?  I was interested in my Viking heritage (I'm allegedly related to Eirik the Red/Leif Eiriksson via my Norwegian blood), so I bought a copy of The Sagas of Icelanders. I read up on them and found stories of Viking women who did heroic things—one was a Christian named Gudrid, and one was a warrior named Freydis. 2) Well that is the coolest thing, being allegedly related to Eirik and Leif! I love both God's Daughter and Forest Child so much, but I think Forest Child is my favorite. Do you have a favorite character that you've written? If so, which one and why?  That is always such a tough question. I'm a little bit in love with each of my leading men (and some of the side men, like Leif Eiriksson and Snorri Thorbrandsson!). I think it's because I'm in my main characters' heads, so I'm writing men I know fit with that character—but the men, as you know, are far from perfect! I would say I love Thorfinn Karlsefni for a fave male character and probably Freydis for female in my Viking series, but don't tell Gudrid I said that! She would probably stew over that slight for weeks. Gudrid tends to ruminate on things, whereas Freydis just rushes right into situations. Let's just say I relate to Freydis a bit more. ;) 3) I had a hard enough time doing research on eighteenth-century France for my upcoming novel. How on earth did you research for these books?  It is tough, because there are limited written records of the Viking era. I based both novels so closely on The Saga of Greenlanders and Eirik the Red's Saga that the plotlines stemmed from there. One fantastic resource I discovered while writing Forest Child is the Hurstwic.com site. They study/replicate Viking weapons and warfare, but have also compiled some helpful articles on things like Viking farm life and the Althing council meetings. Vikinganswerlady.com is another helpful online resource. And of course I've accumulated a lot of books on the period! As you know, when you write book 2 in a series set in a particular time period, you have a better grasp of the foods they ate then, materials used for clothing, houses, etc., so that makes those details easier to integrate the second go-round. 4) Freydis, daughter of Eirik the Red, was quite a strong, brave character! In telling her story, were you tempted to gloss over some aspects if her life or character? How did you handle that?  Oh, yes. Yes indeed. I would have loved to leave out one of the most defining moments of her warrior "career", but I knew that was impossible. Every Norse historian knows exactly the event I'm referring to—it was that famous. So I knew there would be no glossing over it! But because I have a strong Christian reader base, I knew I had to make sure the violence wasn't over-the-top and graphic. It was a real tightrope of balancing her real-life actions with a story that wouldn't make you hate her. It took years of pondering and a heavy blanket of prayers to finally break through and discover a reason I thought could explain why a woman would have taken the action she did. After I wrote that pivotal scene, I felt such a sense of relief. It still seemed a bit edgy compared to most Christian fiction, but I felt God helped me handle it in a way that (hopefully!) wouldn't alienate any of my loyal readers. And as it turns out, many of my readers are saying they love this book more than God's Daughter, so that is just evidence that God did this thing, not me! 5) I thought you handled that scene amazingly well. I'm so thrilled that you have another Viking tale coming out in March in the Message in a Bottle Romance Collection! Can you tell us just a little about what we can look forward to in that story? I'm so excited about this collection, because you know I'm dying to read YOUR novella that's in it! My novella shares the tale of a Viking, Ari, who sails to Ireland to take vengeance for his brother's death, but through a series of God-directed events, he winds up getting to know a rather solitary and bookish Irish princess named Britta. Will they learn to overcome their cultural differences and trust each other? I'd probably better stop right there, because I have a tendency to be a walking "spoiler alert"! Thank you so much, Heather! It's going to be a fantastic collection, I can't wait for it to release in March! Thanks so much for letting me visit, Jocelyn! And right now, I have four softcover book bundle giveaways going on to celebrate the release of Forest Child. Here's the link for your readers to check those out: http://bit.ly/2e0eHCi ! Enter before November 13 for a chance to win!  Yes, these are amazing book bundle packages! See the photo collage below and then jump to the link Heather provided to enter the drawings! Congrats, Heather, on your truly wonderful new book.  

Guest Post & Giveaway Basket from Jordyn Redwood!

Wed, 2016-10-26 11:13 -- Jocelyn Green
It's my pleasure to welcome back to the blog suspense author Jordyn Redwood! Her latest release is Fractured Memory. Also an emergency room nurse, she's sharing with us today about the important topic of resilience. Stay tuned for your chance to win this amazing fall basket of prizes at the end of the post! (Blog susbribers, if the formatting is still wonky, please click the title of the blog post to read it on the Web instead of in the email. So sorry!) ****** What Is Resiliency? by Jordyn Redwood If you’re like me, then you’re busy. Not just days upon days of a full agenda but balancing a myriad of tasks and responsibilities. A spouse. Children. Aging parents. More than one career. Stressful jobs. And your down time is used to catch up on life—housecleaning, doing laundry, and maybe squeezing in a volunteer activity or hosting a play date to try and ease the guilt of how you’re burning the candle at both ends.      I’m an ER nurse. It’s my “day job”. Though I will say sometimes writing can be just as hard as nursing can be just on a different level. Over the past several months, our emergency department has gone through a little bit of a rough patch. Staff turnover. The overall experience level of the nursing staff as a whole decreasing (which puts added stress on us old timers), and several patient deaths. In reality, a death in the ER isn’t necessarily a surprise but it is a rare occurrence.      You could just see it in my coworkers’ eyes. In my eyes after a shift. Bone weary tiredness. But nurses are a proud bunch. We put ourselves in stressful—even risky situations—to care for you and your loved ones, but when it comes to us we’re the last on the list. Some of it (okay, maybe a lot of it) is pride. We consider it a badge of honor almost to not need anyone else. If our patient dies and we turn around and take the next critical patient without batting an eye then we’re strong. We’re still standing. We’re resilient.      What I learned is standing up after a crisis—just pushing forward—is not resiliency. It’s merely survival.      The morale of our staff became a concern for the management team of our unit and they invited one of the chaplains to come and do a one hour talk on this very issue. He said imagine an adolescent lost his hand in a tragic accident, but what he really wants to do is play guitar. His father, realizing this is a passion of his, comes and asks him if he wants to keep playing. The conversation might go something like this.      “Son, do you still want to play guitar?”     “Dad, hello, do you see I don’t have a hand anymore?”     “That’s not what I asked you. I asked you if you wanted to play not if you could play.”     After thinking it over, the son responds. “Yes, I still want to play, but—”     “Great. Then we’ll find a way.” And he did.     In the chaplain’s terms, resiliency is coming through a tragedy better on the other side—not merely standing up, brushing yourself off, and going through the motions of life. But what we know about resiliency is that it’s connected to passion. That in order to lead a resilient life we have to connect with what we’re passionate about to help us through those periods where we are merely surviving.      What are you passionate about? Can you think of a way to connect with that passion a little bit every day? For me, though I love writing and sharing my stories, I am passionate about needlework. I know, crazy right? Truly, it is the one thing that relaxes me—where I don’t have any extra expectations from others.     I’m curious to know what you think. What would you say the difference is between surviving and resiliency? Tell me something you’re passionate about? Does it help you deal with life on more solid footing?    About Jordyn: Jordyn Redwood is a pediatric ER nurse by day, suspense novelist by night. She hosts Redwood’s Medical Edge, a blog devoted to helping authors write medically accurate fiction. Her first two medical thrillers, Proof and Poison, garnered starred reviews from Library Journal. Proof was shortlisted for the 2012 ForeWord Review’s BOTY Award, 2013 INSPY Award and the 2013 Carol Award. Poison shortlisted for the 2014 INSPY Award and the 2014 Selah Award. In addition to her novels, she blogs regularly at Redwood’s Medical Edge and the WordServe Water Cooler. You can connect with Jordyn via Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, her website and via e-mail at jredwood1@gmail.com. Give-away! Jordyn is generously offering a loaded basket of prizes celebrating all things Pumpkin and Pumpkin Spice! Only her newsletter subscribers are eligible to win. To subscribe click here. This prize will be given away via her newsletter on November 30th, 2016. Here's what's in the basket: 1. Hand stitched (by Jordyn!!) Pumpkin Sampler Decorative Pillow. 2. One print copy of Fractured Memory. 3. One package Starbucks Pumpkin Spice Latte packets.  4. Bath and Body Works Salted Caramel Pumpkin Ultra Shea Body Cream. 5. Pumpkin Spice scented candle.  6. Pumpkin Spice Candy Corns. 7. Brach's Autumn Mix Candy. ***Pumpkin Basket Not Included*** You are welcome to leave a comment on this blog post, answering Jordyn's questions and joining in the conversation. We'd both love to hear from you! But remember, to be entered for this prize package, you must sign up for Jordyn's newsletter. Again, that link is here. Happy Fall everyone!

Like Butter Scraped Over Too Much Bread

Tue, 2016-10-04 11:23 -- Jocelyn Green
 “I feel thin, sort of stretched, like butter scraped over too much bread.” ~Bilbo Baggins, The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien Have you ever felt like Bilbo Baggins, thin and stretched, like butter scraped over too much bread? I know I have. Too many responsibilities, time commitments, priorities. Too many items on my to-do list at the end of the day, too many requests unfulfilled, emails unanswered, words unwritten.  But what if the answer isn't more butter, but less bread?  In other words, what if the solution isn't staying awake longer and dredging up more energy to tackle the unfinished business, but instead, to cover less territory with our time? I'm talking about paring down the number of things we do so we can actually reach realistic goals, rather than setting ourselves up to come up short against ridiculously high expectations.  I'm working on my new nonfiction book for women right now, title Free to Lean: Making Peace with Your Lopsided Life. The current chapter is about focusing on a few things rather than spreading ourselves too thin over many things. If you've done this in your own life--if you've cut out some good things to make room for the best things--I'd love to hear about it in the comments below. How did you get to a place where you decided something had to be cut from your schedule? Or, how did you know when to start saying "no" to requests for your time and energy? What difference did that make for you?  Or, if you have a hard time saying "no," what are your biggest reasons for defaulting to "yes"?  

Goodreads Give-away for Refresh!

Tue, 2016-09-20 10:46 -- Jocelyn Green
In case you haven't heard: Refresh, the new devotional book for parents of kids with special needs, has officially launched! To help celebrate, Kregel is offering 15 copies in a Goodreads give-away. Enter here by Sept. 30: https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/184667-refresh-spiritual-nourishment-for-parents-of-children-with-special-need  At this point, I could tell you more about this book, but I'd much rather let a reader do that for me. Tonya Nash blogged about Refresh earlier this week. Read what she had to say about her experience with the book here: http://tonyanash.com/2016/09/a-new-devotional-for-parents-of-children-with-special-needs.html  If it just so happens that you've been reading Refresh, too, would you like to be part of the "launching" of this book? A huge part of any book release is that all-important word-of-mouth that tells other potential readers about the book. Consider telling your church, your support groups, extended family members (so they can better understand what you're dealing with!), your child's therapists, counselors, etc. Finally, posting a customer review on Goodreads and retail sites (Amazon, ChristianBook, BarnesandNoble) is extremely helpful and valuable to those considering reading the book. Thank you for considering participating in the launch in these ways!

4 New Historical Novels Not to Miss

Sun, 2016-09-18 12:27 -- Jocelyn Green
*A note to blog subscribers: since we are still experiencing formatting issues in the emailed blog posts, please click the title of this post to read this on my Web site so you can see paragraph breaks and links. So sorry! Thanks for your patience! Over the past few months, I've had the pleasure of reading and endorsing four historical novels covering a broad range of history and subject matter. Each one is so different from the next, and yet they are all wonderful works that I'd highly recommend! Here's my take on each of them. (I'm putting them in chronological order according to time period.) Forest Child by Heather Day Gilbert Releases in November! Book blurb: Viking warrior. Dauntless leader. Protective mother. Determined to rise above her rank as the illegitimate "forest child" of Eirik the Red, Freydis launches a second voyage to Vinland to solidify her power and to demand the respect she deserves. She will return home with enough plunder to force her brother, Leif, to sell her the family farm in Greenland. But nothing can prepare her for the horrors she must confront in Vinland...and nothing can stand in her way when her family is threatened. In her race to outrun the truths that might destroy her, Freydis ultimately collides with the only enemy she cannot silence—her own heart.  Historically based on the Icelandic Sagas, Forest Child brings the memorable, conflicted persona of Freydis Eiriksdottir to life. This immersive tale is Book Two in the bestselling Vikings of the New World Saga. My take: Forest Child is one of the bravest works of fiction I’ve ever read. Brimming with tension, yet laced with tenderness, this powerful saga is sure to keep you turning the pages far into the night. An ingenious blend of Viking history and timeless issues of the heart still relevant today. A Moonbow Night by Laura Frantz Releases Jan. 3, 2017 Book blurb: After fleeing Virginia, Temperance Tucker and her family established an inn along the Shawnee River. It's a welcome way station for settlers and frontiersmen traveling through the wild Cumberland region of Kentucke--men like Sion Morgan, a Virginia surveyor who arrives at the inn with his crew looking for an experienced guide. When his guide appears, Sion balks. He certainly didn't expect a woman. But it is not long before he must admit that Tempe's skill in the wilderness rivals his own. Still, the tenuous tie they are forming is put to the test as they encounter danger after danger and must rely on each other. With her signature sweeping style and ability to bring the distant past to vivid life, Laura Frantz beckons readers to join her in a land of Indian ambushes, conflicting loyalties, and a tentative love that meanders like a cool mountain stream. My take: As timeless as it is historical, A Moonbow Night is the shining embodiment of everything Laura Frantz does best, from her trademark attention to detail to the unfolding of rich and textured love in a setting no less complex. To read this novel is to take a journey along with the characters, inhabiting the story with all five senses. Truly, a book to savor and revisit. Newton and Polly: A Novel of Amazing Grace by Jody Hedlund Releases Sept. 20! Book blurb: Amazing grace! How sweet the sound  that saved a wretch like me.  I once was lost, but now am found  Now remembered as the author of the world s most famous hymn, in the mid-eighteenth century as England and France stand on the brink of war, John Newton is a young sailor wandering aimlessly through life. His only duty is to report to his ship and avoid disgracing his father until the night he hears Polly Catlett s enchanting voice, caroling. He s immediately smitten and determined to win her affection.  An intense connection quickly forms between the two, but John s reckless spirit and disregard for the Christian life are concerns for the responsible, devout Polly. When an ill-fated stop at a tavern leaves John imprisoned and bound, Polly must choose to either stand by his side or walk out of his life forever. Will she forfeit her future for the man she loves?  Step back through the pages of history, to uncover the true love story behind a song that continues to stir the hearts and ignite the faith of millions around the globe." My take: A sweeping tale rife with adventure, love, and God’s relentless pursuit of his own. With her signature depth and detail, Hedlund plunges her readers into a fascinating and powerful story that has gone untold—until now. Set sail with Newton and Polly and become anchored in amazing grace. The Lady and the Lionheart by Joanne Bischof Released in August already! Book blurb: Raised amid the fame and mystique of the Big Top, Charlie Lionheart holds the audience in the palm of his hand. But while his act captivates thousands, it’s away from the spotlight where his true heart lies. Here he humbly cares for his pride of lions as if they were his brothers, a skill of bravery and strength that has prepared him for his most challenging feat yet—freeing an orphaned infant from the dark bondage of a sideshow. A trade so costly, it requires his life in exchange for hers, leaving him tarnished by the price of that choice. As the circus tents are raised on the outskirts of Roanoke, nurse Ella Beckley arrives to tend to this Gypsy girl. All under the watchful eye of a guardian who not only bears a striking resemblance to the child, but who protects the baby with a love that wraps around Ella’s own tragic past, awakening a hope that goodness may yet reign. When their forbidden friendship deepens, Charlie dares to ask for her heart, bringing her behind the curtain of his secret world to reveal the sacrifice that gave hope to one little girl—boldly showing Ella that while her tattered faith is deeply scarred, the only marks that need be permanent are his own. My take:  The Lady and the Lionheart isn’t a book to read so much as it is a world to inhabit, a story to relish, a love to cherish. It is lyrical, achingly beautiful, and larger than life. This novel is Joanne Bischof at her very finest. Happy reading, everyone! By the way, if you read and enjoy any of these titles, would you consider posting a review on Amazon or Goodreads (or copy and paste to both)? We authors hate asking, but reviews are really, really important since they increase visibility and credibility for books. I know these ladies would greatly appreciate your taking the time to post one or two. But even if you don't, we'll all be glad and grateful for you taking the time to read the novels! 

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