“Fairy tales are more than true; not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.” ― G.K. Chesterton

Saturday, February 24, 2018

"The Saturday Night Supper Club" by Carla Laureano Blog Tour (Review) & GIVEAWAY!

The Saturday Night Supper Club FB banner copy

About the Book

 

The Sunday SupperTitle: The Saturday Night Supper Club

Author: Carla Laureano

Genre: Christian fiction/romance fiction

Release Date: February 6, 2018

Denver chef Rachel Bishop has accomplished everything she’s dreamed and some things she never dared hope, like winning a James Beard Award and heading up her own fine-dining restaurant. But when a targeted smear campaign causes her to be pushed out of the business by her partners, she vows to do whatever it takes to get her life back . . . even if that means joining forces with the man who inadvertently set the disaster in motion.

Essayist Alex Kanin never imagined his pointed editorial would go viral. Ironically, his attempt to highlight the pitfalls of online criticism has the opposite effect: it revives his own flagging career by destroying that of a perfect stranger. Plagued by guilt-fueled writer’s block, Alex vows to do whatever he can to repair the damage. He just doesn’t…

Click here to purchase your copy!


pic_LGb_Laureano_CarlaAbout the Author


 
 
Carla Laureano is the RITA® Award-winning author of contemporary inspirational romance and Celtic fantasy (as C.E. Laureano). A graduate of Pepperdine University, she worked as a sales and marketing executive for nearly a decade before leaving corporate life behind to write fiction full-time. She currently lives in Denver with her husband and two sons, where she writes during the day and cooks things at night.

Review

I love how much of this book involves food!  This is the perfect read for a foodie, but even if you’re not a foodie, you will still be able to appreciate all the wonderful descriptions of food.  I love the way this author describes the life of a chef and the food industry.  I really learned so much and had no idea the grueling life a chef lives.

The characters in this book are so well written!  The two main characters have great chemistry that practically leaps off the page and you can almost hear the sizzle.  I especially liked Alex’s character from the beginning.  I appreciate his thoughtfulness and willingness to be humble and admit when he is wrong and apologize.  He wants to do the right thing and seeks God’s direction in a certain situation, even when the “right” thing could be detrimental to himself and his business.
Ms. Laureano doesn’t shy away from writing about potentially controversial topics either.  This story deals with sexism in the workplace and how social media can be harmful (people often feel anonymous and do things they would never do in real life).  I think it’s so great Ms. Laureano is bringing these topics to people’s attention through her story. 
This book is a pure delight!  Reading “The Saturday Night Supper Club” by Carla Laureano is like going to an incredible feast, except you don’t come away with the extra weight gain (you’re just left very hungry). 
Content: This author’s writing seems to fall on the edgier side of Christian fiction.  I would probably rate this book PG-13.  Some examples of the content are: talk of a woman trading sexual favors to succeed in her business; reference to a woman’s butt; reference to drinking with a meal/in a social setting; joking about the “morning after;” a man ogles a woman; references to past verbal abuse; references to past alcohol abuse.

Rating: I give this book 4.5 stars.

I want to thank Celebrate Lit, Tyndale House and Carla Laureano for the complimentary copy of this book for review.  I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I express in this review are my own. This is in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s CFR 16, Part 255.

Guest Post From Carla Laureano


I’ve got a confession to make: I have a cooking problem.
It started early and innocently enough, flipping through my mom’s cookbooks and marking things I wanted to try. Making cakes and muffins from a mix. Flipping frozen steak patties. Doctoring canned spaghetti sauce.

It wasn’t long before I got into the hard stuff: muffins from scratch, slow-cooked marinara, cast-iron seared and oven-finished rib eyes. Over the years, I tried to kick the habit numerous times, but every time things got tough, I found myself falling off the wagon and heading back into the kitchen. Even hosting dinner parties. Yes, dear reader, I pulled my hapless friends into my madness. To my shame, I even got some of them hooked with their own addiction.

Before I knew it, my obsessions started creeping into my day job. No longer was it enough to write contemporary romance about normal people who order take-out. No, I had to write chefs and passionate home cooks and describe the food in the books just as lovingly as I did a first kiss. And then the final straw—a book series centered entirely on food and the culinary profession, beginning with The Saturday Night Supper Club.

All joking aside, cooking really is an addiction that I haven’t been able to kick. As a writer, I spend hours locked in my own imagination, creating things out of words and ideas. And while it’s immensely fulfilling, it’s a long, painstaking process that takes months, even years, before I can release the final product into the world. While there’s a large amount of planning and analysis involved in creating a book, the work is still mostly in my head.

Which is why I find cooking to be such a relaxing creative pursuit. Dicing a pile of vegetables into perfectly uniform cubes may take the same concentration and precision, but it’s concrete and measurable. It becomes a personal challenge to do something better than last time, improving by tiny, nearly imperceptible increments. It’s the closest to meditation that my always-on brain ever experiences, clear of all thought except for my activity at the present moment.

And yet, simultaneously, food is ephemeral. Mistakes last only as long as it takes to eat them or toss them directly into the trash can, depending on the nature of the mistake. If a sauce breaks, I toss it and start over. If I burn something, I either cut off the burned part or I order takeout and try again the next day. There’s an element of experimentation and instinct and whimsy that isn’t hampered by the pursuit of perfection. Let’s face it, a mediocre chocolate chip cookie beats a perfect celery stick any day of the week.

It was natural, then, to write a chef heroine who had dedicated her entire life to the pursuit of culinary perfection and explore all the ways that food makes our lives and relationships richer. How it anchors our memories. How we nurture others by feeding them. How a simple meal becomes meaningful not because of the food, but because of the connections we form with others over the dinner table.

In the end, I guess my cooking problem isn’t that much of a problem after all. If you need me, I’ll be in the kitchen.

Blog Stops

 
Rachel Scott McDaniel, February 20
Just Commonly, February 20
Mommynificent, February 21
Among The Reads, February 21
A Greater Yes, February 21
Fiction Aficionado, February 22
Quiet Quilter, February 22
The Power of Words, February 23
Janices book reviews, February 24
C Jane Read, February 24
Faery Tales Are Real, February 24
All of a Kind Mom, February 25
Inklings and notions, February 25
Jeanette’s Thoughts, February 25
Carpe Diem, February 26
Smiling Book Reviews, February 26
Splashes of Joy, February 27
Simple Harvest Reads, February 27 (Guest post from Mindy)
Radiant Light, February 28
Moments Dipped in Ink, February 28
Baker kella, February 28
Pause for Tales, March 1
Book by Book, March 1
Bigreadersite, March 1
amandainpa, March 4
By The Book, March 5
Pursuing Stacie, March 5
 

Giveaway

 

 
9db9c8f0-a3b9-487d-b9f8-d8a0c2618037
 
 
To celebrate her tour, Carla is giving away a grand prize of a $200 Visa Card for the winner and a friend to attend a cooking class!!
'
Click below to enter. Be sure to comment on this post before you enter to claim 9 extra entries! https://promosimple.com/ps/c9b4

Friday, February 23, 2018

"Phoebe's Light" by Suzanne Woods Fisher Blog Tour (Review) & GIVEAWAY!

Pheobes Light FB banner copy

About the Book

Phoebe's Light-Book Cover

Title: Phoebe’s Light

Author: Suzanne Woods Fisher

Genre: Historical romance

Release Date: February 6, 2018

Phoebe Starbuck has always adjusted her sails and rudder to the whims of her father. Now, for the first time, she’s doing what she wants to do: marrying Captain Phineas Foulger and sailing far away from Nantucket. As she leaves on her grand adventure, her father gives her two gifts, both of which Phoebe sees little need for. The first is an old sheepskin journal from Great Mary, her highly revered great-grandmother. The other is a “minder” on the whaling ship in the form of cooper Matthew Marcy, a man whom she loathes.

Soon Phoebe discovers that life at sea is no easier than life on land. Lonely, seasick, and disillusioned, she turns the pages of Great Mary’s journal and finds herself drawn into the life of this noble woman. To Phoebe’s shock, her great-grandmother has left a secret behind that carries repercussions for everyone aboard the ship, especially her husband the captain and her shadow the cooper. This story within a story catapults Phoebe into seeing her life in an entirely new way—just in time.

In this brand-new series, bestselling author Suzanne Woods Fisher brings her signature twists and turns to bear on a fascinating new faith community: the Quakers of colonial-era Nantucket Island.
Click here to purchase your copy!
 
My Review
 
“Phoebe’s Light” by Suzanne Woods Fisher is a unique story set on Nantucket Island during the 1600s and 1700s when whaling was prevalent.  I used to read a lot of books about the Amish, Quakers and Mennonites.  It has been awhile now since I’ve picked one up and I was especially excited that this book is about Quakers since I don’t know as much about them.
Ms. Fisher weaves history and detail deftly into her story.  I love the setting of Nantucket, especially since I have visited there before.  I learned a lot about whaling, ships, Quakers and Nantucket during this time period.  The author obviously put a lot of research into her book.  It is fascinating to learn about the Quakers and their faith, and what sets them apart.  It is helpful that Ms. Fisher includes terms and a character list in the beginning of the book.
I really enjoy the way Ms. Fisher writes the characters in this story; especially Phoebe, Matthew and Great Mary.  All three of them have wonderful character arcs, and their characters undergo transformations throughout the book.  At the beginning of the story, I did not like Phoebe and thought the choices she made were unwise.  By the end, the author made me admire the way Phoebe handles certain situations and she really becomes a stronger and much more likeable person.  I loved reading the journal entries of Great Mary, and laughed at how she sometimes crosses out her real feelings (which you could still read).
“Phoebe’s Light” is an inspiring and original story that will hopefully help us each examine our faith.  Ms. Fisher explores what it means to truly be a Christian and the difference between religion and true Christianity. 
Content: I would give this book somewhere between a PG and PG-13 rating for some content.  Examples: Some graphic descriptions of violence against Quakers and sailors; indicates a man is a drunkard and fights a lot; a man smokes tobacco; reference to the wedding bed; says a man curses, but the actual curses are not written; a woman mentions a demon is the cause of her low spirits and there is thought that a demon possesses a baby; a short scene where a man tries to force his wife to fulfill her marital duty, but they are interrupted; a woman uses opium to escape, becomes addicted and goes through withdrawal.
 
Rating: I give this book 4 stars.
 
Genre: Christian fiction; Historical; Romance.
 
I want to thank Suzanne Woods Fisher, Revell and Celebrate Lit for the complimentary copy of this book for review.  I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I express in this review are my own. This is in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s CFR 16, Part 255.


About the Author

 

Fisher_SuzanneWoods
Suzanne Woods Fisher is an award-winning, bestselling author of more than two dozen novels, including Anna’s Crossing, The Newcomer, and The Return in the Amish Beginnings series, The Bishop’s Family series, and The Inn at Eagle Hill series, as well as nonfiction books about the Amish, including Amish Peace and The Heart of the Amish. She lives in California. Learn more at www.suzannewoodsfisher.com and follow Suzanne on Twitter @suzannewfisher.

Guest Post from Suzanne Woods Fisher

 

A Stroll down Petticoat Row

Thirty years ago, I talked my sister into going on a trip to Nantucket Island. It’s one of those places that had always intrigued me. As a girl in the 1930s, my mother’s family vacationed in Nantucket; she even has a lightship basket to show for it. I expected the island to be interesting and beautiful, and it certainly did not disappoint. But something else happened as I walked down Centre Street one morning. This island captured my imagination in a way that’s hard to put into words. At the risk of sounding a tiny bit sun touched, I could practically see 19th century people on the roads, hear the “thee’s and thou’s” in their speech, even smell the strong scents of a bygone century—the musky perfume of rendered whale oil, the burning wood of the blacksmith, all mingled with the bracing sea air.

Centre Street has a local nickname: Petticoat Row. It comes from the 1800s, when men were at sea for long periods and women stepped into their shoes to keep businesses going. Nantucket women gained a reputation for being strong and capable. Their competence was encouraged by the Society of Friends (Quakers), the island’s dominant religion, which believed in the equality of men and women in all aspects of life. That hasn’t changed. Today, half of all Nantucket businesses are run by women.

Petticoat Row stuck in my mind, and eventually became the hook to contract a series of historical fiction with Revell Books. The ‘Nantucket Legacy’ series covers the rise and fall of Nantucket’s whaling period, when it became the wealthiest port in the world.

First up is Phoebe’s Light, releasing in February 2018, a novel about a spirited young woman who seeks her fortune only to find out she already had it.

After reading about Phoebe, I hope you’ll consider planning a trip to Nantucket (though try to go off-season. The population swells five times in the summer!). When you go, include a stop at the Petticoat Row Bakery (35 Centre Street)—the very location where Phoebe grew up, albeit a few centuries ago. Don’t leave the island without trying the Morning Glory Muffins, an island favorite. So worth the trip!

Nantucket’s Famous Morning Glory Muffins

Ingredients:
1 ¼ cup sugar
2 ¼ cup flour
1 tablespoon cinnamon
2 tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt
½ cup shredded coconut
½ cup raisins
2 cup grated carrots (4 large)
1 apple, shredded
8 oz. crushed pineapple, drained
½ cup pecans or walnuts
3 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla

Instructions:
Sift together sugar, flour, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt into a large bowl. Add the fruit, carrots and nuts and stir to combine.

In a separate bowl, whisk eggs with oil and vanilla. Combine with dry ingredients and blend well.

Spoon batter into cupcake tins lined with muffin papers. Fill each cup to the brim. Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven for 35-40 minutes. These muffins needs 24 hours to ripen their full flavor. They freeze extremely well.

Recipe courtesy of Pamela A. McKinstry, Sconset Café

Blog Sops

 
Aryn The Libraryan, February 15
With a Joyful Noise, February 16
D’S QUILTS & BOOKS, February 16
A Greater Yes, February 16
ASC Book Reviews, February 17
Book by Book, February 17
Texas Book-aholic, February 18
The Power of Words, February 18
Splashes of Joy, February 18
A Reader’s Brain, February 19
Karen Sue Hadley, February 19
All of a kind Mom, February 20
Baker Kella, February 21
Mommynificent, February 21
Janices book reviews, February 21
Lighthouse Academy, February 22
Readers cozy corner, February 22
Mary Hake, February 22
Jeanette’s Thoughts, February 22
Pause for Tales, February 23
Have A Wonderful Day, February 23
Faery Tales Are Real, February 23
Blogging With Carol, February 24
Among the Reads, February 24
Carpe Diem, February 24
Red Headed Book Lady, February 25
Just the Write Escape, February 25
By The Book, February 26
For The Love of Books, February 26
Margaret Kazmierczak, February 26
Simple Harvest Reads, February 26 (Guest post from Mindy)
Maureen’s Musings, February 27
Bigreadersite, February 27
Bibliophile Reviews, February 28
Pursuing Stacie, February 28
 

Giveaway

 
 
02716175-5193-469c-a810-81ff258ecc81
 
To celebrate her tour, Suzanne is giving away a grand prize of a Kindle!!
 
Click below to enter. Be sure to comment on this post before you enter to claim 9 extra entries! https://promosimple.com/ps/c9e0

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

A Down-to-earth Manual on Style, Health and God--"Staying Stylish: Cultivating a Confident Look, Style and Attitude" by Candace Cameron Bure Review




I have many good memories of watching "Full House" with my brother growing up.  If you didn't know, the author of this book, Candace Cameron Bure, starred as DJ Tanner in "Full House."  I was even more thrilled to find out Ms. Bure is a Christian and pretty outspoken about her faith.  We need more of that, especially in Hollywood.

"Staying Stylish: Cultivating a Confident Look, Style and Attitude" by Candace Cameron Bure is a non-fiction book written as a type of manual.  The main topics it covers are style/fashion, health and faith.  The book itself is a beautiful hardback book with a ribbon bookmark to mark your place.  I really love all of the pictures to illustrate the different things covered in the book.

Ms. Bure writes in a down-to-earth manner.  Her tips and tricks are very practical and ones a normal person can implement.  I found myself recently consulting the book on the best way to wear a skirt.  What I love most is that Ms. Bure doesn't just talk about beauty and style, but also how important it is to take care of oneself physically, mentally and spiritually.  She talks about prayer, journaling and having a quiet time.  Lastly, she stresses that you should be true to yourself!

Content: This is a clean read.  The only problem I can see one having is that people have different convictions on modesty and some Christians may not be comfortable with some of her outfits. 

Rating: I give this book 5 stars!

Genre: Christian; Non-fiction

I want to thank Candace Cameron Bure, Zondervan and Book Look Bloggers for the complimentary copy of this book for review.  I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I express in this review are my own. This is in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s CFR 16, Part 255.

About the Author:
 

Candace Cameron Bure, actress, producer, New York Times' bestselling author, inspirational speaker, and Dancing With The Stars Season 18 finalist, is both outspoken and passionate about her family and faith. Known to millions worldwide from her role as "D.J. Tanner" on the iconic family sitcom, "Full House," Candace continues to flourish in the entertainment industry as role model to women of all ages. She lives in the Los Angeles area with her husband and three children.


To visit the author's website click here

To purchase the book click here

Saturday, February 3, 2018

"The Silent Song of Winter" by Robin E. Mason Cover Reveal & GIVEAWAY!

1


3
 
Series: Seasons
Genre:  
Historical, Romance
Publisher: Bird’s Nest Books
Publication date: February 28, 2018

When all the noise has gone silent, all that is left is her song.

The southern town of Saisons lies at the crossroads between North and South, progressive and genteel antebellum life. Between East and West, between history and heritage, and new frontiers. Downton Abbey meets Gone With the Wind.

It’s 1912, in a world where slavery is dying and women’s rights are rising, and four young women who once shared a bond—and experienced a tragedy—question their own truths.

Pearl had lived under the impossible taskmaster of perfection. Nothing she does or ever did pleased her mother. And nothing she ever did could disappoint her father.

Caught up in the mystery of her friend’s curious—and secretive—return, Pearl wrestles with her own decisions, and flees lest her own secrets are exposed.

4
 
robin-e-mason_1_orig
 
I’ve always had voices—er, stories in my head. I once said I should write them all down so someone could write them someday. I had no idea at the time that someone was me!

I have been writing since 1995, and began working in earnest on my debut novel, Tessa in 2013.  Meanwhile, I cranked out a few dozen poems, made countless notes for story ideas, and earned my BFA in Interior Design.  I lived with depression for many years, and the inherent feelings of worthlessness and invisibility; I didn’t want to be who I was and struggled with my own identity for many years.  My characters face many of these same demons.

I write stories of identity conflict. My characters encounter situations that force the question, “Who am I really?” For all who have ever wondered who you are or why you’re here, my stories will touch you in a very real—maybe too real—and a very deep way. I know, I write from experience.

 
5
 
 
6
 
Enter the giveaway HERE.
 
7
 
 
cropped-rsz_1rsz_1rsz_2slbt_reviewer_blogger_button