Jul. 15, 2008 - Book Review: What's The Big Deal About Other Religions
Book Review
and their book:
Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2008)
List Price: $12.99
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0736921222
ISBN-13: 978-0736921220
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Christianity:
Whatís the Big Deal About Jesus?
ìChristianity is good for you, but itís not right for me. I think you ought to believe whatever makes you happy and gives you peace.î
ìChristianity is the ërightí religionóisnít that being naive?î
The label Christianity covers a broad range of people today. While over 2.1 billion people are statistically considered followers of Jesus Christ, polls by religious researcher George Barna have observed that only four percent of American Christians hold to a biblical worldview (that is, beliefs consistent with the Bibleís teachings), and just 51 percent of Christian clergy hold to such a view. As a result, even many who call themselves Christians have agreed with the quotes that appear above, asking if it is perhaps naÔve to claim Christianity is the only way to God.
However, the above quotes are inconsistent with Christianityís origins and founder. In this chapter weíll briefly review how Christianity began, consider its early beliefs, introduce its founder, and investigate the reliability of the New Testament, which is part of the Bible.
A Firm Foundation
All of Christianity is built around one basic belief: the resurrection of its founder, Jesus of Nazareth. On Passover Friday around A.D. 30, Jesus was executed on a Roman cross on the accusation of conspiracy against the government. The Sanhedrin (Jewish leaders) had insisted that the Roman leader Pilate condemn Jesus, though Pilate had not found him guilty of any crimes worthy of death. After the crucifixion, death, and burial of Jesus in a tomb, the body disappeared three days later. Immediately this was followed by many ìJesus sightingsî reported over the next 40 days. A social revolution began ten days later in Jerusalem, Israel, as over 3000 people joined the movement after a street message given by the apostle Peter (Acts 2). Christianity was off and running, and has been growing ever since.
Oxford University theologian Dr. Alister McGrath has noted,
The identity of Christianity is inextricably linked with the uniqueness of Christ, which is in turn grounded in the Resurrection and Incarnation.
How do we know Jesus came back to life? First, the 27 books of the New Testament are based upon this one eventóthe resurrection of Jesus. Despite the attacks of many, the writings of Christianity have been shown to have emerged during the first century with the courageous message that Jesus, a man executed by the government, was alive. This carried many implications about his life and death and beyond. What other motive did these writers have except that they truly believed all this had occurred?
In addition, many individuals of that day claimed to have encountered Jesus after his death. According to the Gospel writers and the missionary Paul, Jesus appeared a total of at least 12 times after his return from death:
The Post-Resurrection Appearances of Jesus Christ
# Sighting Source
1. Mary Magdalene--Mark 16:9; John 20:11-18
2. Women returning from the tomb--Matthew 28:9-10
3. Two men walking to Emmaus--Mark 16:12-13; Luke 24:13-32
4. Peter--Luke 24:34; 1 Corinthians 15:5
5. 10 disciples; two men from Emmaus--Luke 24:36-43; John 20:19-23
6. 11 disciples (including Thomas)--John 20:24-29
7. 7 disciples--John 21:1-24
8. 500 people at one time--1 Corinthians 15:6
9. James, the half-brother of Jesus--1 Corinthians 15:7
10. 11 disciples Matthew 28:16-20
11. 11 disciples before Jesus returned to heaven--Luke 24:50-53
12. Paul-- Acts 9:3-6; 1 Corinthians 15:8
In just one of these sightings, over 500 people claimed to see Jesus alive after his death. Did you know that if each of those 500 people were to testify in court for only six minutes, including time for cross-examination, we would have an amazing 50 hours of firsthand testimony? Few other events from over 2000 years ago find this level of support. None offer the number of witnesses the resurrection does for a supernatural event.
Further, the changed lives of the early followers of Jesus supported their report that Jesus was alive. All but one of Jesusí 11 followers died for his belief in the resurrection of Jesus. Hundredsóif not thousandsóof other Christians suffered or died within the first century of Christianity for their beliefs as well. The killing of the first Christian martyr, Stephen, led to the persecution of the Jerusalem church, which eventually forced many Christians to flee the area for safety.
ìCould you convince thousands of people in our own day that President Kennedy had resurrected from the dead? Thereís no wayÖunless it really happened.î
The amazing phenomenon of Christianityís growth also stands as a powerful testimony that this faith is based on a supernatural resurrection. How could a crucified Jew (Jesus), former tax collector (Matthew), Jesus-hater (Paul), and small town fishermen (including Peter) establish a movement that has resulted in the largest religion on Earth? How could this happen?
When Christianity began, the Roman Empire was the greatest government of the time. Yet 300 years later, the Roman Empire had crumbled, and Christianity was continuing to grow. This, in spite of its humble beginning as a grassroots network of individuals who witnessed that Jesus had come back to life. Even though the proclamation of Jesusí teachings produced persecution of the greatest kind, Christianity continued to spread across the Roman Empireóall the way to the palace of Caesar in Rome, the worldís political and social capital.
Christianity 101
So Christianity originated from a group of Jesus-followers who spread the message that they had personally witnessed his three years of teaching and miracles, watched him die on a cross, and then personally met, saw, talked to, ate with, and received instructions from him after his resurrection from the dead. But what are the core beliefs of Christianity? There are six central elements of
traditional Christianity.
First, there is the common understanding of Jews and Christians that there is only one true Godówho is infi nite, holy, loving, just, and true. In addition, Christians believe that in the nature (presence) of the one true God there exists three personsóFather, Son, and Holy Spirit. Christianity does not believe in three gods, but one. As Dr. Norman Geisler, bestselling author and cofounder of Southern Evangelical Seminary, has written,
The Trinity is not the belief that God is three personas and only one person at the same time and in the same sense. That would be a contradiction. Rather, it is the belief that there are three persons in one nature. This may be a mystery, but it is not a contradiction. That is, it may go beyond reasonís ability to comprehend completely, but it does not go against reasonís ability to apprehend consistently.
Further, the Trinity is not the belief that there are three natures in one nature or three essences in one essence. That would be a contradiction. Rather, Christians affirm that there are three persons in one essenceÖHe is one in the sense of his essence but many in the sense of his persons. So there is no violation of the law of noncontradiction in the doctrine of the Trinity.
Traditional Christianity also accepts the 66 books of the Holy Bible as revelation from God, perfect and authoritative for all spiritual matters. While Roman Catholicism accepts the additional authority of the pope and church tradition, and Eastern Orthodoxy accepts church tradition as equal in authority to the Bible, the earliest traditional Christianity and later Protestant Christianity have been based solely on Godís written revelation through his apostles and prophets.
Third, Christians believe every person who has ever lived (with the exception of Jesus Christ) has been born a sinner separated from God. It is our sin nature that keeps us from knowing and experiencing God and creates a need for reconciliation through a means only God can provide.
Fourth, in his infinite love, God has provided the solution to the barrier between himself and humanity through Jesus Christ. The Bible teaches that the death of Jesus provides payment for our sins, and on the basis of our believing, he is our sinbearer and he will forgive us the moment we believe. All this is confirmed by Jesusí resurrection from the deadóhe has paid the penalty for sin and conquered death. In this way God offers a basis for a person to place his or her faith in Christ and to enter into a personal relationship with Jesus, in which he enters your life and you walk through life with his power and guidance.
Fifth, this rescue or salvation God offers through Jesus is based solely on what God has done rather than on what people do. In other words, salvation is a free gift based on Godís grace to us (unearned favor) rather than good works or deeds we can accomplish, though these will accompany a person once he or she becomes a Christian. One of the major points of contention during the Protestant Reformation resulted from the Roman Catholic Churchís unbiblical teaching
that Godís grace consists of humans cooperating with Godís grace to merit salvation, rather than receiving salvation in full as a gift on the basis of faith alone the moment a person believes.
Sixth, Christians believe in an eternal afterlife. God allows individuals the ability to choose or reject him, and after death, that decision is final. Those who have chosen to believe in Jesus will enjoy eternity with him in heaven, while those who decline will spend eternity in hell, separated from God. God will accept every personís decision and not force him or her to change their mind. While all this may sound politically incorrect in our culture, it has stood as an essential component of Christian teaching from the earliest times. The choice we make here on earth will have eternal consequences.
Jesus: Founder and CEO of Christianity
Christian philosopher Dr. C. Stephen Evans points out that ìit is an essential part of Christian faith that Jesus is God in a unique and exclusive way. It follows from this that all religions [that disagree] cannot be equally true.î7 Again, if different religions teach contradictory things about who God is, salvation, the afterlife, and
even Jesus, then one or another could be true, but they canít all be true at the same time. What are the big super-signs that help us decide which religion is true? According to biblical Christianity, if Jesus claimed to be God and proved his claim by his resurrection, then he is God and Christianity is true. No other religious leader in history has claimed to be God and risen from the dead.
Further, there are at least seven concepts Jesus taught about himself that stand unique to Christianity. First, Jesus communicated that he fulfi lled biblical prophecy, given hundreds of years in advance, that he was the promised Messiah. He repeatedly claimed to be the person that Godís Messiah was predicted to be, and many scholars have created extensive lists of these prophetic connections. Here are some examples of prophecies Jesus fulfilled:
Prophecy--Old Testament Prophecy--New Testament Fulfillment
Born of a virgin-- Isaiah 7:14-- Matthew 1:18,25
Born in Bethlehem-- Micah 5:2-- Matthew 2:1
Preceded by a messenger-- Isaiah 40:3-- Matthew 3:1-2
Rejected by his own people-- Isaiah 53:3-- John 7:5; 7:48
Betrayed by a close friend-- Isaiah 41:9-- John 13:26-30
His side pierced-- Zechariah 12:10-- John 19:34
His death by crucifixion-- Psalm 22:1,11-18-- Luke 23:33; John 19:23-24
His resurrection-- Psalm 16:10-- Acts 13:34-37
Second, Jesus stands as a unique, unparalleled individual among the leaders of various world religions. He made predictions about the future that could only be made by someone who claimed to be God. Further, he noted in advance several of the things that would occur at the time of his death and resurrection. Unlike anyone else, he also promised to one day return to earth to set up his future kingdom.
The Seven ìI Amsî of Jesus in Johnís Gospel
? ìI am the bread of lifeî (John 6:35,48; see also verse 51).
? ìI am the light of the worldî (John 8:12).
? ìI am the gate for the sheepî (John 10:7; see also verse 9).
? ìI am the good shepherdî (John 10:11,14).
? ìI am the resurrection and the lifeî (John 11:25).
? ìI am the way and the truth and the lifeî (John 14:6).
? ìI am the true vineî (John 15:1; see also verse 5).
Further, Jesus is unique in his nature, being fully divine and fully human nature in one person. Jesus was born as a man without sin through a miraculous virgin birth. He challenged his own family, disciples, and even his enemies to prove him guilty of sin, but none could do so. Think of the reaction you would receive if you asked your parents, brothers, sisters, and friends, ìCan any of you point to one sin I have committed?î Those closest to us know our faults. We all have them. Yet Jesus lived a perfect life free of sin.
As Godís divine son, Jesus performed miracles, healings, and exorcisms; fulfi lled Jewish prophecies; and accomplished his own resurrection. In these ways he affi rmed his divine nature, displaying power far beyond that of any person who has ever lived. Today people downplay the miracles, but they are documented in careful detail in the Bible, and even Jesusí enemies did not deny his miracles. They werenít able to. So they just claimed that he performed them with
the help of evil powers (Matthew 12:24).
The Exorcisms of Jesus
Exorcism-- Source
1. Healed a demon-possessed man at Capernaum ---Mark 1:21-28; Luke 4:31-37
2. Drove out demons and evil spirits Matthew 8:16-17; Mark 1:32-39; Luke 4:33-41
3. Healed the man possessed by demons at the Gadarenes-- Matthew 8:28-34; Mark 5:1-20; Luke 8:26-39
4. Drove a demon out of a mute man, who then spoke-- Matthew 9:32-34;
Mark 3:20-22
Christianity is also the only major religion whose founder sacrificed his life for the sins of those who would choose to believe in him. Jesusí horrifi c death on the cross stood as proof of his statement that ìthe Son of Man [Jesus] did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.î
The Nature Miracles of Jesus
The MiracleóSource
1. Calming the wind and waves-- Matthew 8:26; Mark 4:39; Luke 8:24
2. Walking on water-- Matthew 14:25; Mark 6:48; John 6:19
3. Money in the fishís mouth-- Matthew 17:27
4. Withering of the fig tree-- Matthew 21:19; Mark 11:14
5. Miraculous catch of fish-- Luke 5:4-7
6. Turning water into wine-- John 2:7-8
7. Second miraculous catch of fish-- John 21:6
8. Feeding the 4000-- Matthew 15:32-38; Mark 8:1-9
9. Feeding the 5000-- Matthew 14:13-21; Mark 6:34-44; Luke 9:12-17; John 6:5-12
Sixth, as mentioned earlier, Jesus also rose from the dead. Those in his time could never account for his empty tomb and the disappearance of his body. Jesusí followers spanned the known world testifying of his resurrection (his actual bodily appearing to them), teaching his words, and dying for their belief in him.
Finally, Jesus promises, at the end of time, to personally judge every person who ever lived. It would be eternally disappointing to have Jesus look at us, fairly judge us, and conclude, ìI never knew youî (Matthew 7:23).
Christianity by the Book
Those who want to investigate the truthfulness of the original Christian message can look to a wealth of manuscript evidence regarding the transmission of the 27 books of the New Testament through the years. The New Testament manuscripts offer more supporting evidence than any other ancient book. Christians also accept the Jewish scriptures (the Old Testament) as part of their holy book, the Bible. Traditional Christianity believes in the inerrancy of Scripture, meaning the original words of the Bibleís books are without error and perfect in every way.
As a result, Bible translation, distribution, and teaching stand as important responsibilities within Christianity. The Bible is the most translated book in history, has been used as the script for the most-watched fi lm in history (the Jesus fi lm), and has enjoyed greater distribution than any book in the world. Over 100 million copies of the New Testament or Bible are sold every year worldwide.
Interesting Statistics About the Bible
The Bible was written over a period of 1600 years,
? by more than 40 authors of every sortókings, peasants, fi shermen, poets, shepherds, government offi cials, teachers, and prophetsó
? in three languages (Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek),
? on three continentsóAsia, Africa, and Europe.11
What Makes Christianity Unique?
ìChristianity isnít about people in search of God, but rather God in search of
people.îóSTEVE RUSSO
Many have suggested that Christianity is about having a personal relationship with Jesus, and not performing good works and following rituals. Religious movements throughout history ultimately hold to a signifi cantly different common threadóthat certain actions or works are required to obtain a blissful afterlife. In Christianity, however, the key to reaching God here and now and dwelling with him for eternity is to receive and trust in a gift already provided by its founder, Jesus Christ. As the apostle Paul made clear to Christians at Ephesus, ìGod saved you by his grace when you believed. And you canít take credit for this; it is a gift from God. Salvation is not a reward for the good things we have done, so none of us can boast about it.î
Godís gift of salvation also brings assurance. If Jesusí righteous life and atoning death on the cross is the sole basis for Godís gift, then a Christian doesnít have to worry about earning or losing that gift. Once the gift is received, it belongs to the Christian forever because it rests on what Jesus didónot what the Christian did or does in the past, present, or future.
Christianity in Summary
As we compare and contrast the beliefs of various religions throughout this book, we hope to make the distinctives of each one as clear as possible. Here, we summarize the key teachings of Christianity:
Belief-- Basic Description
God-- One God in three personsóFather, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Holy Book-- The 66 books of the Holy Bible are the authoritative
works of Christianity.
Sin-- All people have sinned (except Jesus).
Jesus Christ-- Godís perfect son, holy, resurrected, divine (second person of the Trinity) yet also fully human.
Salvation-- Obtained only by Godís grace through faith in Jesus Christ, not by human effort.
Afterlife-- All people will enter heaven or hell upon death based on whether they have salvation in Jesus Christ. The Bible does not teach reincarnation, annihilation (ending of the soul), or the existence of purgatory.
Some people assume that biblical Christianity and Roman Catholicism are essentially similar. But is that the case? What differences exist? Are these differences really a big deal, or only minor details? Our next chapter will address these questions head-on.
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Jul. 9, 2008 - Book Review -- Love In The House by Chris and Wendy Jeub
Book Review
Love In the House by Chris and Wendy Jeub
I just have to tell you, this book is fantastic. I have been wanting to purchase this book for a while; and finally got the chance to buy it used a week or two ago. I am now planning on ordering another copy directly from the Jeub family, and gifting my first copy to someone else. The message of this book is powerful and simple. The book briefly chronicles the Jeub's lessons learned as they have raised 13 children. I read the book in it's entirety in about two hours. It is not long; but it just might change the way you parent! I can't wait to implement some of the ideas, and especially the concept of Love In The House. Read it! And you know I don't say that very often. You can purchase a copy of the book at the Jeub's web-site for $14.95.
Amy
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Jul. 8, 2008 - Book Review -- Love Starts With Elle by Rachel Hauck - 2nd Post
I am re-posting this review because I cannot remember which Fiction Alliance I got this book from. It might have been from the First Wildcard tour, which was today. I have to say that Love Starts with Elle was one of the most fascinating books I have read recently. Of those books I have reviewed, this was one of the first books I truly did not want to put down. I wouldn't say Ms. Hauck is on par with Michael Phillips (yet) but she could get there.
Love Starts With Elle is fictional romance, set in Beaufort, Louisianna. The characters are interesting and charming. Ms. Hauck deals with grief in an informed and personal way. I could not find anything objectionable in this book.
Amy 
It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Today's Wild Card author is:
and her book:
Love Starts with Elle
Thomas Nelson (July 8, 2008)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Rachel Hauck is a graduate of Ohio State University, and is a former software trainer. She published her first novel in 2004. Rachel lives in central Florida with her husband, Tony, a youth pastor.
Some of Rachel's other books are: Sweet Caroline Diva Nash Vegas Lost In Nash Vegas
Visit her at her website.
Product Details:
List Price: $14.99 Paperback: 320 pages Publisher: Thomas Nelson (July 8, 2008) Language: English ISBN-10: 1595543384 ISBN-13: 978-1595543387
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Chapter One
BEAUFORT, SC December 21
From the loft of her Bay Street art gallery, Elle Garvey leaned against the waist-high wall, admiring GG Galley’s “Art in Christ-mas” show. Visitors and patrons—some Beaufort residence, others curious tourists—milled among the displays, speaking in low tones, sipping hot cider.
The mellow voice of Andy Williams serenaded them. “It’s the most wonderful time of the year . . .”
“Elle,areyouthequeen,surveyingherkingdom?” Arlene Coulter gazed up from the bottom of the loft stairs, her bright red Christmas suit its own fashion work of art.
“Yes, and are you my loyal servant?”
Arlene curtsied,her bottle-blonde hair falling forward like silky angel hair, the hem of her skirt sliding up her knee. “Yours and yours alone, O you of whom Art News wrote, ‘One of the lowcountry’s finest galleries.’”
“Best hundred-dollar bribe I ever spent.” Elle descended the stairs, catching sight of her baby sister, Julianne, selling a bronze sculpture to a young woman wearing pearls.
“Darling”—Arlene linked arms with Elle and led her to the back wall—“your artist eye is truly God gifted.Tell me now . . . is this the work of the great Alyssa Porter?”
“It is.” Elle surveyed the paintings. They spoke to her each time she viewed them. She envied Alyssa and artists like her—the ones who had the courage to chase the dream.
Elle had lost hers a long time ago.
“And what do you like about this artist?” Arlene squeezed Elle’s arm tighter.
“Her paintings move me.” Elle freed herself from Arlene and moved to Alyssa’s Rose Garden, convinced it’d be a masterpiece one day.
“Move you?” Arlene studied one of the abstracts through a one-eyed slit, her short, red-tipped fingers squeezing the point of her chin. “I suppose they move me too. I’m just not sure where.”
“You’re looking for a definite image, Arlene. Don’t be so con-crete. Let your imagination run ...” Elle hooked her arm around the woman’s shoulders. “Follow my hand. See how you just moved out of the sunlight into the shade?”
“No, but, girl, I really love your bracelets. Where’d you get those?” Arlene grabbed Elle’s wrist to study the tricolor bangles.
“You beat all, Arlene.” Elle twisted her hand free.
“Well,a good set of bracelets is hard to find.” Arlene gazed again at the painting. “So, what should I do about Miss Porter?”
“Buyher.The New York art scene has discovered Alyssa and if you don’t purchase something before her first auction, you’ll never be able to afford it. Here...” Elle walked to the other side of the display. “This one on the bottom right is only two thousand dollars.”
Arlene stood an inch way from the bottom painting,tipping her head to one side. The track lighting haloed the back of her head.
“I’m afraid if I buy one of these I’ll wake up one night with the dang thing hanging over my head whispering,‘I see dead people.’”
“If it does, call Pastor O’Neal, not me.”
Arlene bent in half as if she hung upside down, then snapped upright. “What about this artist over here. Coco Nelson. Now this I get. Look—a woman’s face, with eyes and hair.”
“Coco’s a wonderful artist,” Elle said. “Very realistic work. This series is called ‘Love and Romance.’”
“Very fitting for you, sugar.” Arlene arched a brow at Elle.
“This piece, Proposal, is stunning.” Her voice rose and fell into a sing-song.
Elle ignore her subtle teasing. “Yes, there’s something about it. An ordinary gentleman down on one knee proposing to an ordinary woman.”
But the emotion Coco evoked in the scene was anything but ordinary. When she’d sent in the piece, Elle couldn’t hang it at first. Too embarrassed after last year’s Operation Wedding Day fiasco when she tried to date every available bachelor in Beaufort. She wanted no reminders of love and romance.
Until Jeremiah Franklin.
“Okay.” Arlene spun around. “I’ll take the Alyssa Porter and this Coco Nelson.”
“You won’t regret it.”
“Says who?” Arlene passed Alyssa’s abstract piece again, sidestepping the image as if it might spring to life and spar with her.
Elle laughed, leading the way to her desk across the old, former hardware store. She treasured the talented, sometimes whacky, interior designer who landed lowcountry clients like doctors, lawyers, and hotel developers. In the early days of GG Gallery, business from Coulter Designs had helped keep the gallery lights burning and Elle’s hopes alive.
“What’s the damage?” Arlene flashed her checkbook.
“Hold on, now, let me add a few more zeroes.” Elle jammed her finger on the adding machine’s Zero button.
“Add all you want. I’m only writing three.” Arlene fanned her face with her opened checkbook. “So, how’s it going with the good pastor?”
The mere hint of Dr. Jeremiah Franklin made Elle feel bubbly. “Good.”
“If the glow on your cheeks is any indication, I’d say it’s more than good. How long y’all been together now? Few months?”
“Two.” Elle wrote up Arlene’s order with a ten-percent discount.
“And it’s love?” Arlene leaned to see Elle’s eyes. “Don’t tell me it ain’t ’cause I can see it written all over your face.”
“Here.” Elle laughed low, passing over the order ticket with the total circled. “I appreciate your business—and nosiness—Arlene.”
“Any time, sugar. Any time.” Arlene peeked at the total, then started to write.
“Hey, babe.”
Jeremiah.
He still took her breath away after two months. When he’d told her he loved her in the setting sunlight during a beach walk, Elle had handed him her heart on a silver—no, gold—platter. Key included.
“Jer, what are you doing here?” She met him on the other side of her desk and stepped into his arms. His fragrance awakened her yearnings.
“I’m on my way to rehearse tomorrow’s sermon. Couldn’t pass the gallery without stopping in for a minute.” His kiss was soft and sweet, a pastorly display of public affection. But enough to make Elle glad to be a woman. His woman. “We’re still on for dinner?”
“Absolutely. You still haven’t said where you wanted to go.”
Jeremiah’s hazel wink teased her. “Patience, girl. Do you have to know everything?”
“Do you not know me after these few months?”
“Exactly . . .” He stooped for another soft kiss and backed away. “Good to see you, Arlene.”
“You too, Dr. Franklin.” Arlene watched Jeremiah exit the building with a wave. “Hmm-um, Elle, it must be breaking your heart.” Rippp. She handed over her check.
“What? What are you talking about?” Elle brushed the check absently between her fingers.
Arlene gaped at Elle with an “Um, what now?” expression, then punched the air with a darn-it fist, chewing her bottom lip. “Me and my mouth. Shoot fire, my Dirk will kill me.” She clutched her buttercolored Dooney & Burke to her chest. “Just forget I said anything, Elle. I am so sorry.” She whirled around and hurried away with a swirling, swing-swing of her hips. “See you in church.”
“Oh no you don’t.” Arlene’s diverse network of informants was infamous—a mixture of truth and town lore, and eerily accurate. Elle scurried after her, blocking her before she reached the door. “You can’t drop a bomb like that then wiggle out of here with a ‘see you in church.’ What were you talking about?”
“First of all, I have a very natural swing to my hips. It’s what caught Dirk’s eye in the first place, mind you. As for the other, well, Elle, Jeremiah can tell you himself. Don’t worry. It’s good, I think.” She squared her red-jacketed shoulders. “Like I said, see you in church.”
Elle watched her go, thoughts racing. Jeremiah had just been here. He’d acted perfect, like always. What was Arlene talking about? This time her information network must have supplied the wrong details. What did you hear, Arlene Coulter?
“Elle, Mrs. Beisner is curious about a discount for buying three pieces.” Julianne held out an order pad, tapping the total. During art show openings and art fairs, Elle’s baby sister worked part time for GG Gallery. “What do you think, fifteen percent?”
“Sure.” Elle raked her hair with her fingers. “Whatever she wants.”
Julianne observed her sister through narrowed eyes. “Whatever she wants? Elle, are you okay?”
“I don’t know.” Elle walked around Jules to her desk and opened the bottom drawer where her handbag lived. “Can you watch the gallery for me?”
“Where are you going?”
“To uncover a rumor.” She didn’t feel like waiting until dinner to hear his news—if there was any news.
“Now?” Julianne called after her.
“I won’t be long.” But the front door was blocked by Huckleberry Johns and his fish tank of eco art. Oh, please, not tonight. “Huck, what are you doing? You’re dripping muddy water all over my clean floor.”
With a lopsided grin, he scanned the gallery, vying for attention. “I call it Death at Coffin Creek.” He raised his composition of reeking pluff mud and marsh grass. “Developers are ruining our ecosystem.”
Elle dropped her shoulders in fake defeat. “Huckleberry, you are too good-looking and too young to be so weird.” She grabbed his shoulders and turned him around. “Out. You’re stinking up the place. Julianne, we need a mop up here.”
Huck was an art school dropout—or, rather, they’d dropped him—and he hit the sidewalk, protesting, “I deserve to be heard.”
“Not in my gallery.” Elle stepped out after him. “Right message, wrong venue, Huck.”
“Snob.”
Elle’s smile broke. “Slob. Talk about it later?”
“It may be too late.”
“For who? You or Coffin Creek?” Elle backed up the sidewalk in the direction of her car.
“You.” Huck hollered between his wide grin, spinning off in the opposite direction, disappearing around the corner.
Elle held the sanctuary door so it closed quietly without squeaking or thudding. She paused for her eyes to adjust to the dim light, then spotted Jeremiah up front, striding across the stage as he rehearsed his sermon, his lips moving in silent recitation.
His movement was graceful and controlled, an extension of his inner being.
“He can preach up a storm, that one.” A slight, round-shouldered, snowy-haired Miss Anna Carlisle emerged from one of the sanctuary’s dark pockets, jabbing her finger toward Jeremiah.
“Then we should bring our umbrellas tomorrow,” Elle said, giving Miss Anna’s shoulders a hug.
“Best to be prepared, I suppose.” Miss Anna’s pushed open the sanctuary door. “I’m praying for that boy,” she said with a wag of her finger. “And you.” Her words were intentional and steady.
“For me?” Elle asked.
“For you.”
Elle regarded her for a moment. “Are you walking? Can I give you a ride?” Elle went with the older woman through the foyer to the outer doors.
“I do believe it’s a fine, crisp evening for walking.” She buttoned the top button of her blue sweater and buried her hands in the frayed pockets. Elle thought the garment’s spacious weave would do little against the night’s chill. “Good night, Elle.”
“Are you sure you want to walk, Miss Anna?”
“I’m sure.”
Elle watched her until she disappeared between the trees and night lights. Then, back inside, she slipped into the back pew and watched Jeremiah practice his message. She’d never met a man like him—one who breathed in confidence and exhaled all doubt.
Her emotions tugged between the man she knew and Arlene’s slipup. What’s going on, Jeremiah? If anything?
Even for a Saturday-night sermon rehearsal, Jeremiah wore gray slacks and a starched cotton button-down. For the hundredth time, Elle wondered how he’d survived three years in the National Football League, three years of Bible college, and seven years of full-time ministry single.
But she wasn’t complaining. God had saved the best for her.
Under the low stage lights, Jeremiah paused as if waiting for a response. He acted out a laugh, making his way to center stage with an even gait. At the podium, he gripped the sides and leaned toward the empty sanctuary, bobbing his head to the beat of internal words. Can I get an “Amen,” somebody?
Why not oblige? “Amen.” Elle rose from the pew as Jeremiah squinted beyond the spotlights into the shadowy sanctuary.
“Elle, babe? Is that you?” He came off the stage with a touchdown power stride. “Is everything all right?”
“Yeah, fine, but”—she met him in the middle of the aisle—“I heard a rumor.”
He growled, teasing her. “Is that ever good?” He touched his lips to hers with the passion that came when they were alone. “What kind of rumor?”
“Something about you and my breaking heart, Jeremiah.”
“And who delivered such almost horrifying news?” He locked his arms around her waist, his hazel eyes searching hers.
“Arlene Coulter, though she stopped herself when she saw I didn’t know what she was talking about.”
“She heard from her husband, one of our trusty elders?”
“Who else?” Elle broke her gaze from Jeremiah’s, smoothing her hand over the crisp surface of his shirt.
“You’d think the man would know better after twenty-five years of marriage.”
“And what should I know after two months of dating?”
He brushed her hair away from her shoulder, letting his fingertips graze her skin. “Can it wait for dinner?”
His touch was fiery to her. “You tell me. Can it?”
“Are we answering questions with questions?”
“Are we?” Some time in the past week they’d started this new back-and-forth questions-with-questions dance.
“Did I start this, or you?”
“Does it matter?”
“Only if we want to get off this ride.” He pressed his lips to hers again, breathing deep.
His kisses defied all bad news.
“Tell you what.” He held up his wrist to see his watch in the stage light. “I’m almost done here. Another thirty minutes. What time does the gallery close?”
“Nine.”
“Can Julianne close up for you? We’ll slip off to dinner.”
“If I pay her.” Elle brushed her hand down the sleeve his oxford shirt. “That girl’s all about moh-ney.” She eyed him. “Monet. Mo-net . . . Get it?”
“Yes, I get it. Artist jokes. So, meet me here in thirty?” He walked backward to the stage. “Remember, I love you.”
“What’s up, Dr. Franklin? If I have to remember . . .” She caught the high and low contours of his face as he stood under the lights. “Not a good sign.”
His smile dried up the beginnings of her self-pity. “Just remember, Elle.”
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Jul. 5, 2008 - Product Review -- Of The People by Lynda Coats, an Election Unit Study
Product Review
Of The People by Lynda Coats
an Election Unit Study
Of The People is a collection of 106 activities designed to be completed during an election year. The activities target junior high and high school students, however some of them can be altered for younger siblings. One activity actually targets younger children, and is a book suggestion.
The pages include one page titled How to Use This E-Book, one page titled How It Works (referring to the unit study), one page titled Objectives of This Study, and one page titled Subject Codes (a key for the codes listed after each activity, followed by nine pages of activities. The cost for the e-book is $7.
Here are a few samples of the suggested activities.
2. Study the appointment of leaders for the Israelites in Deuteronomy 1:13-16 and the extension of it in Deuteronomy 16:18-20 when God directed the Israelites to choose their own judges, the first example of self-government in the Bible and one of the concepts on which our system of government is based.
18. Prepare arguments for either or both sides of a debate on the topic "Resolved: The two-party system has improved the way the President is elected and the involvement of the average voter in the process."
82. Design and publish a website in support of your candidate, giving your reasons for supporting him /her. Be sure to state somewhere that it is not officially approved by the candidate, as that is required by law.
If you are looking for independent activities that will help your student understand the election process this study will fit the bill. Independent students will enjoy choosing their own activities and tailoring the study to fit their learning style. Jr. High students may need some help creating a plan of action to complete this study, as it is simply a list of activities.
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Jul. 1, 2008 - Book Review -- A Mile In My Flip Flops By Melody Carlson
A Mile In My Flip Flops is a fun new read, but it is not one I am saving for my library. It is written in the trendy first person style, and I have to admit this is not my favorite style to read. Nonetheless, I did thoroughly enjoy reading the book today and found nothing objectionable at all.
Amy

It is July FIRST, time for the FIRST Blog Tour! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and her latest book's FIRST chapter!
The feature author is:
Melody Carlson and her book:
A Mile in My Flip-Flops
WaterBrook Press (June 17, 2008)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
 In sixth grade, Melody Carlson helped start a school newspaper called The BuccaNews (her schoolís mascot was a Buccaneer...arrr!). As editor of this paper, she wrote most of the material herself, creating goofy phony bylines to hide the fact that the school newspaper was mostly a "one man" show.
Visit Melody's website to see all of her wonderful and various book titles.
Don't miss her latest teen fiction, Stealing Bradford (Carter House Girls, Book 2).
Product Details:
List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: WaterBrook Press (June 17, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1400073146
ISBN-13: 978-1400073146
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Iím not the kind of girl who wants anyone to feel sorry for her.
So after my fiancÈ jilted me less than four weeks before our wedding date, and since the invitations had already been sent, my only recourse was to lie low and wait for everyone to simply forget.
Consequently, I became a recluse. If I wasnít at work, teaching a delightful class of five-year-olds, who couldnít care less about my shattered love life, I could be found holed up in my apartment, escaping all unnecessary interaction with ìsympatheticî friends.
And that is how I became addicted to HGTV and ice cream. Okay, that probably calls for some explanation. HGTV stands for Home and Garden TV, a network that runs 24/7 and is what I consider the highest form of comfort TV. It is habit forming, albeit slightly mind numbing. And ice cream obviously needs no explanation.
Other than the fact that my dad, bless his heart, had seven quart-sized cartons of Ben & Jerryís delivered to my apartment the day after Collin dumped me. Appropriately enough, dear old Dad (who knows me better than anyone on the planet) selected a flavor called Chocolate Therapy, a product worthy of its name and just as addictive as HGTV.
But now, eighteen months and twenty-two pounds later, I seem to be in a rut. And apparently Iím not the only one who thinks so.
ìCome on, Gretchen,î urges my best friend, Holly, from her end of the phone line. ìJust come with usñplease!î
ìRightÖ,î I mutter as I lick my spoon and dip it back into a freshly opened carton of Chunky Monkeyñalso appropriately named, but letís not go there. Anyway, not only had I moved on to new ice cream flavors, but I also had given up using bowls. ìLike I want to tag along with the newlyweds. Thanks, but no thanks.î
ìLike I keep telling you, weíre not newlyweds anymore,î she insists. ìWeíve been married three months now.î
ìYeahÖwellÖî
ìAnd itís Cinco de Mayo,î she persists, using that little girl voice that I first heard when we became best friends back in third grade. ìWe always go together.î
I consider this. I want to point out that Holly and I used to always go to the Cinco de Mayo celebration togetherñas in past tense. And despite her pity for me, or perhaps itís just some sort of misplaced guilt because sheís married and I am not, I think the days of hanging with my best friend are pretty much over now. The image of Holly and Justin, both good looking enough to be models, strolling around holding hands with frumpy, dumpy me tagging along behind them like their poor, single, reject friend just doesnít work for me.
ìThanks anyway,î I tell her. ìBut Iím kind of busy today.î
ìSo what are you doing then?î I hear the challenge in her voice, like she thinks I donít have anything to do on a Saturday.
I slump back into the sofa and look over to the muted TV, which is tuned, of course, to HGTV, where my favorite show, House Flippers, is about to begin, and I donít want to miss a minute of it. ìIím, uhÖIíve got lesson plans to do,î I say quickly. This is actually true, although I donít usually do them until Sunday evening.
She snickers. ìYeah, thatís a good one, Gretch. Iíll bet youíre vegging out in front of HGTV with a carton of Chocolate Fudge Brownie.î
ìWrong.î Okay, Holly is only partially wrong. Fortunately, I havenít told her about my latest flavor.
ìCome on,î she tries again. ìItíll be fun. You can bring Riley along. Heíd probably like to stretch his legs.î
I glance over to where my usually hyper, chocolate Lab mixed breed is snoozing on his LL Bean doggy bed with a chewed-up and slightly soggy Cole Haan loafer tucked under his muzzle. ìRileyís napping,î I say. ìHe doesnít want to be disturbed.î
ìLike he wouldnít want to go out and get some fresh air and sunshine?î
ìWe already had our walk today."
Holly laughs. ìYou mean that little shuffle you do over to the itty bitty park across the street from your apartment complex? Whatís that take? Like seven and a half minutes for the whole round trip? Thatís not enough exercise for a growing dog like Riley.î
ìI threw a ball for him to chase.î
ìSo thereís nothing I can do or say to change your mind?î House Flippers is just starting. ìNope,î I say, trying to end this conversation. ìBut thanks for thinking of me.î
ìWant me to bring you back an empanada?î
ìSure,î I say quickly. ìYou guys have fun!î Then I hang up and, taking the TV off mute, I lean back into the soft chenille sofa and lose myself while watching a hapless couple from Florida renovate a seriously run-down split-level into something they hope to sell for a profit. Unfortunately, neither of them is terribly clever when it comes to remodeling basics. And their taste in interior design is sadly lacking too. The womanís favorite color is rose, which she uses liberally throughout the house, and she actually thinks that buyers will appreciate the dated brown tiles and bathroom fixtures in the powder room. By the time the show ends, not only is the house still on the market despite the reduced price and open house, but the coupleís marriage seems to be in real trouble as well.
ìToo bad,î I say out loud as I mute the TV for commercials. Rileyís head jerks up, and he looks at me with expectant eyes.
ìYou just keep being a good boy,î I tell him in a soothing tone. Hopefully, heíll stretch out this midday nap a bit longer. Because once Riley starts moving, my tiny apartment seems to shrink, first by inches and then by feet.
My hope for an elongated nap crumbles when his tail begins to beat rhythmically on the floor, almost like a warningñthump, thump, thumpñand the next thing I know, heís up and prowling around the cluttered living room. Riley isnít even full grown yet, and heís already way too much dog for my apartment. Holly warned me that his breed needed room to romp and play. She tried to talk me into a little dog, like a Yorkie or Chihuahua, but I had fallen for those liquid amber eyesÖand did I mention that heís part chocolate Lab? Since when have I been able to resist chocolate? Besides, he reminded me of a cuddly brown teddy bear. But I hardly considered the fact that he would get bigger.
After he climbed into my lap that day, licking my face and smelling of puppy breath and other things that I knew could be shampooed away, there was no way I could leave him behind at the Humane Society. I already knew that heíd been rejected as a Christmas present. Some dimwitted father had gotten him for toddler twins without consulting Mommy first. Even so, Holly tried to convince me that a good-looking puppy like that would quickly find another home.
But it was too late. I knew Riley was meant for me, and that was that. And I had grandiose ideas of taking him for long walks on the beach. ìHeíll help me get in shape,î I assured Holly. Sheíd long since given up on me going to the fitness club with her, so I think she bought into the whole exercise theory. She also bought Riley his LL Bean deluxe doggy bed, which I could barely wedge into my already crowded apartment and now takes up most of the dining area, even though itís partially tucked beneath a gorgeous craftsman-style Ethan Allen dining room set. Although itís hard to tell that itís gorgeous since itís pushed up against a wall and covered with boxes of Pottery Barn kitchen items that wonít fit into my limited cabinet space.
ìThis place is way too small for us,î I say to Riley as I shove the half-full ice cream carton back into the freezer. As if to confirm this, his wagging tail whacks an oversized dried arrangement in a large bronze vase, sending seedpods, leaves, and twigs flying across the carpet and adding to the general atmosphere of chaos and confusion.
My decorating style? Contemporary clutter with a little eclectic disorder thrown in for special effect. Although, to be fair, thatís not the real me. Iím sure the real me could make a real place look like a million bucks. That is, if I had a real placeÖor a million bucks.
I let out a long sigh as I stand amid my clutter and survey my crowded apartment. Itís been like this for almost two years now.
Overly filled with all the stuff I purchased shortly after Collin proposed to me more than two years ago. Using my meager teacherís salary and skimpy savings, I started planning the interior dÈcor for our new home. I couldnít wait to put it all together after the wedding.
ìHave you ever heard of wedding presents?î Holly asked me when she first realized what I was doing.
ìOf course,î I assured her. ìBut I canít expect the guests to provide everything for our home. I figured I might as well get started myself. Look at this great set of espresso cups that I got at Crate & Barrel last weekend for thirty percent off.î
ìWell, at least you have good taste,î she admitted as she stooped to admire a hand-tied wool area rug Iíd just gotten on sale. Of course, she gasped when she saw the price tag still on it. ìExpensive taste too!î
ìItíll last a lifetime,î I assured her, just like the Karastan salesman had assured me. Of course, as it turned out, my entire relationship with Collin didnít even last two years. Now Iím stuck with a rug thatís too big to fit in this crummy little one-bedroom apartmentñthe same apartment Iíd given Mr. Yamamoto notice on two months before my wedding. It was so humiliating to have to beg to keep it after the wedding was cancelled, but I didnít know what else to do.
And now, a year and a half later, Iím still here. Stuck. Itís like everyone else has moved on with their lives except me. It wouldnít be so bad if I had enough room to make myself at home or enough room for Riley to wag his tail without causing mass destructionÖor enough room to simply breathe. Maybe I should rent a storage unit for all this stuff. Or maybe I should move myself into a storage unit since it would probably be bigger than this apartment.
As I pick up Rileyís newest mess, I decide the bottom line is that I need to make a decision. Get rid of some thingsñwhether by storage, a yard sale, or charityñor else get more space. I vote for more space. Not that I can afford more space. Iím already strapped as it is.
Kindergarten teachers donít make a whole lot. I feel like Iíve created a prison for myself. What used to be a convenient hideout now feels like a trap, and these thin walls seem to be closing in on me daily. Feeling hopeless, I flop back onto the couch and ponder my limited options. Then I consider forgetting the whole thing and escaping back into HGTV, which might call for some more ice cream.
But thatís when I look down and notice my thighs spreading out like two very large slabs of ham. Very pale ham, I might add as I tug at my snug shorts to help cover what I donít want to see, but itís not working. I stare at my flabby legs in horror. When did this happen?
I stand up now, trying to erase that frightening image of enormous, white thunder thighs. I pace around my apartment a bit before I finally go and stand in front of an oversized mirror thatís leaning against the wall near the front door. This is a beautiful mirror I got half price at World Market, but it belongs in a large home, possibly over a fireplace or in a lovely foyer. And it will probably be broken by Rileyís antics if it remains against this wall much longer.
But instead of admiring the heavy bronze frame of the mirror like I usually do, I actually look into the mirror and am slightly stunned at what I see. Who is that frumpy girl? And who let her into my apartment? I actually used to think I was sort of good looking. Not a babe, mind you, but okay. Today I see a faded girl with disappointed eyes.
Some people, probably encouraged by Holly, a long-legged dazzling brunette, used to say I resembled Nicole Kidman. Although they probably were thinking of when Nicole was heavier and I was lighter. Now itís a pretty big stretch to see any similarities. To add insult to injury, Nicole has already hit the big ìfour o,î whereas I am only thirty-two. Her forties might be yesterdayís twenties, but my thirties look more like someone elseís fifties. And I used to take better care of myself. Okay, I was never thin, but I did eat right and got exercise from jogging and rollerblading. Compared to now, I was in great shape. And my long strawberry blond hair, which I thought was my best asset, was usually wavy and fresh looking, although you wouldnít know that now. Itís unwashed and pulled tightly into a shabby-looking ponytail, which accentuates my pudgy face and pale skin. Even my freckles have faded. It doesnít help matters that my worn T-shirt (with a peeling logo that proclaims ìMy Teacher Gets an A+î) is saggy and baggy, and my Old Navy khaki shorts, as Iíve just observed, are too tight, and my rubber flip-flops look like they belong on a homeless personñalthough I could easily be mistaken for one if I was pushing a shopping cart down the street.
Then, in the midst of this pathetic personal inventory, my focus shifts to all the junk thatís piled behind meñthe boxes, the myriad of stuff lining the short, narrow hallway and even spilling into the open door of my tiny bedroom, which can barely contain the queensize bed and bronze bedframe still in the packing box behind it. If it wasnít so depressing, it would almost be funny. I just shake my head. And then I notice Riley standing strangely still behind me and looking almost as confused as I feel. With his head slightly cocked to one side, he watches me curiously, as if he, too, is afraid to move. This is nuts. Totally certifiable. A girl, or even a dog, could seriously lose it living like this. Or maybe I already have. They say youíre always the last to know that youíve lost your marbles.
ìItís time for a change,î I announce to Riley. He wags his tail happily now, as if he wholeheartedly agrees. Or maybe he simply thinks Iím offering to take him on a nice, long walk. ìWe need a real house,î I continue, gathering steam now. ìAnd we need a real yard for you to run and play in.î Of course, this only excites him more.
And thatís when he begins to run about the apartment like a possessed thing, bumping into boxes and furnishings until I finally open the sliding door and send him out to the tiny deck to calm himself.
After he settles down, I go and join him. Itís pretty hot out here, and I notice that the seedling sunflower plants, ones weíd started in the classroom and Iíd brought home to nurture along, are now hanging limp and lifeless, tortured by the hot afternoon sun that bakes this little patio. Just one more thing I hate about this place.
So much for my attempt at terrace gardening. Iíd seen a show on HGTV that inspired me to turn this little square of cement deck into a real oasis. But in reality itís simply a barren desert that will only get worse as the summer gets hotter. I feel like Iím on the verge of tears now. Itís hopeless.
This is all wrong. On so many levels. This is not where I was supposed to be at this stage of the game. This is not the life I had planned. I feel like Iíve been robbed or tricked or like someone ripped the rug out from under me. And sometimes in moments like this, I even resent God and question my faith in him. I wonder why he allows things like this to happen. Why does he let innocent people get hurt by the selfishness of others? It just doesnít make sense. And itís not fair.
Oh, Iíve tried to convince myself Iím over the fact that my ex fiancÈ, Collin Fairfield, was a total jerk. And I try not to blame him for being swept away when his high school sweetheart decided, after fifteen years of being apart, that she was truly in love with him. I heard that the revelation came to Selena at the same time she received our engraved wedding invitation, which I did not send to her. She wasnít even on my list.
And I actually believe that Iíve mostly forgiven CollinÖand that sneaky Selena too. And I wish them well, although I didnít attend their wedding last fall. A girl has to draw the line somewhere.
But all that aside, this is still so wrong. I do not belong in this stuffy little apartment thatís cluttered with my pretty household goods. I belong in a real house. A house with a white picket fence and a lawn and fruit trees in the backyard. And being single shouldnít mean that I donít get to have that. There must be some way I can afford a home.
Of course, Iím fully aware that real estate isnít cheap in El Ocaso. Itís on the news regularly. Our townís prices certainly arenít as outrageous as some of the suburbs around San Diego, but theyíre not exactly affordable on a teacherís salary. I try not to remember how much I had in my savings account back before I got engaged and got carried away with spending on my wedding and my home. That pretty much depleted what mightíve gone toward a small down payment on what probably wouldíve been a very small house. But, hey, even a small house would be better than this prison-cell apartment.
And thatís when it hits me. And itís so totally obvious I canít believe I didnít think of it sooner. I will become a house flipper! Just like the people on my favorite HGTV show, I will figure out a way to secure a short-term loan, purchase a fixer-upper house, and do the repairs and decorating myselfñwith my dadís expert help, of course!
And then, maybe as early as midsummer, I will sell this beautifully renovated house for enough profit to make a good-sized down payment on another house just for meÖand Riley. Even if the secondhouse is a fixer-upper too, I can take my time with it, making it just the way I want it. And itíll be so much better than where I live now.
Iím surprised I didnít come up with this idea months ago. Itís so totally simple. Totally perfect. And totally me!
ìWe are going house hunting,î I announce to Riley as I shove open the sliding door and march back inside the apartment. His whole body is wagging with doggy joy as I quickly exchange my too-tight shorts for jeans and then reach for his leather leash and my Dolce & Gabbana knockoff bagñthe one I bought to carry on my honeymoon, the honeymoon that never was. I avoid looking at my image in the big mirror as we make a hasty exit.
ìCome on, boy,î I say as I hook the leash to his collar at the top of the stairs. ìThis is going to be fun!î And since this outing is in the spirit of fun, I even put down the top on my VW Bug, something I havenít done in ages. Riley looks like heís died and gone to doggy heaven as he rides joyfully in the backseat, his ears flapping in the breeze. Who knows, maybe weíll find a house for sale on the beach.
Okay, itíd have to be a run-down, ramshackle sort of place that no one but me can see the hidden value in, but it could happen. And while I renovate my soon-to-be wonder house, Riley can be king of the beach. The possibilities seem limitless. And when I stop at the grocery store to pick up real-estate papers, I am impressed with how many listings there are. But I canít read and drive, so I decide to focus on driving. And since I know this town like the back of my hand, this should be easy.
But thanks to the Cinco de Mayo celebration, the downtown area is crowded, so I start my search on the south end of town, trying to avoid traffic jams. Iím aware that this area is a little pricey for me, but you never know. First, I pull over into a parking lot and read the fliers. I read about several houses for sale, but the prices are staggering.
Even more than I imagined. Also, based on the descriptions and photos, these houses already seem to be in great shape. No fixer-uppers here. Then I notice some condo units for sale, and I can imagine finding a run-down unit in need of a little TLC, but itís the same situation. According to the fliers, theyíre in tiptop, turnkey shapeñrecently remodeled with granite counters and cherry hardwood floors and new carpeting and prices so high I canít imagine doing anything that could push them a penny higher. My profit margin and spirits are steadily sinking. Maybe my idea to flip a house has already flopped. Just like the rest of my life.
Excerpted from A Mile in My Flip-Flops by Melody Carlson Copyright © 2008 by Melody Carlson. Excerpted by permission of WaterBrook Press, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Jul. 1, 2008 - Book Review -- Love Starts With Elle by Rachel Hauck
I have to say that Love Starts with Elle was one of the most fascinating books I have read recently. Of those books I have reviewed, this was one of the first books I truly did not want to put down. I wouldn't say Ms. Hauck is on par with Michael Phillips (yet) but she could get there.
Love Starts With Elle is fictional romance, set in Beaufort, Louisianna. The characters are interesting and charming. Ms. Hauck deals with grief in an informed and personal way. I could not find anything objectionable in this book.
Amy
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Jun. 26, 2008 - Book Review -- A Bride So Fair by
Truly, I enjoyed this book. I wouldn't consider it the most amazing fiction I have ever read, but it was a fun read.
Amy
It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!
Today's Wild Card author is:
and her book:
A Bride so Fair
Barbour Publishing, Inc. (April 1, 2008)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
CAROL COX is a native of Arizona, whose time is devoted to being a pastor's wife, mom to her grown son, and a home-school teacher to her daughter, church pianist, and youth worker. She loves anything that she can do with her family: reading, traveling, historical studies, and outdoor excursions. She is also open to new pursuits on her own, including genealogy research, crafts, and the local historical society. She plans to write more historical inspirational romance, in which her goals are to encourage Christian readers with entertaining and uplifting stories and to pique the interests of non-Christians who might read her novels.
Other Novels by Carol:
Fair Game, Ticket to Tomorrow, Land of Promise, Golden Gate Gazette-Love and Suspense Make Headlines in Historic San Francisco
Visit her at her website.
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Chapter One
SEPTEMBER 1893
Stop, thief!” The commanding bellow cut through the pleas-ant chatter of the crowds strolling the grounds of the World’s Columbian Exposition.
Emily Ralston shielded her eyes against the noonday sun and scanned the gaily dressed fairgoers on Government Plaza, trying to spot the source of the commotion.
A lanky youth burst through a cluster of women and children on the far side of the plaza, scattering them like tenpins. Shrill exclamations followed him as he bolted past the ladies to the middle of the open area, where he slowed and glanced quickly from one end of its broad expanse to the other.
A stocky man in shirtsleeves charged through the same group, evoking more outraged squawks. He stopped short, gasping like a winded horse while he scanned the crowd.
“Hey, you!” he bellowed and started off in hot pursuit of the boy. In his haste, he collided with a young matron holding a small girl in her arms, nearly toppling them to the ground. The man halted long enough to steady the pair, although the infuriated look he cast in the boy’s direction showed his longing to continue the chase.
At the man’s angry shout, the fleeing youth looked over his shoulder and picked up speed. Emily saw him snap his hand to one side and watched a paper container arc through the air and disappear behind a potted palm.
Emily recognized the signs of someone doing something he shouldn’t. She balanced on the balls of her feet, poised for action. She could never keep up with the long-legged adolescent if she tried to follow him across the fairgrounds, but there was more than one way to foil a troublemaker.
The boy changed course and pounded across the pavement in her direction.
(Read the rest of the first chapter here. )
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Jun. 23, 2008 - Book Review -- Sir Kendrick and the Castle of Bel Lione by Chuck Black
Sir Kendrick And The Castle of Bel Lione
My husband pre-read Mr. Black's book for my son; and he informs me that they are biblically based allegories. For instance, in an earlier novel the knights are actually figures of several different profits. One character is a picture of Christ. My son (age 7, slightly advanced reader) loves these books. I am so glad he is happily reading something with a great message. I highly recommend this author and this book.
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Jun. 15, 2008 - Book Review -- Exposing Darwin's Weakest LInk
It's June 15th, time for the Non~FIRST blog tour!(Join our alliance! Click the button!) Every 15th, we will featuring an author and his/her latest non~fiction book's FIRST chapter!
The feature author is:
and his book:
A career biology instructor, Kenneth Poppe holds a doctorate in education and taught in secondary schools for more than 25 years. He is now senior consultant with the International Foundation for Science Education by Design (www.ifsed.org). In addition to working in teacher education and assisting in DNA research of stream ecology, he has authored Reclaiming Science from Darwinism. Product Details: List Price: $14.99 Paperback: 304 pages Publisher: Harvest House Publishers (March 1, 2008) Language: English ISBN-10: 0736921257 ISBN-13: 978-0736921251
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER: The majority is not trying to establish a religion or to teach it. It is trying to protect itself from the effort of an insolent minority to force irreligion upon the children under the guise of teaching science. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN BRYAN WAS THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PROSECUTION AT THE 1925 ìSCOPES MONKEY TRIALî IN DAYTON, TENNESSEE THAT MADE EVOLUTION A HOUSEHOLD TERM. THE ABOVE WORDS ARE FROM HIS WRITTEN CLOSING STATEMENT, WHICH WAS NEVER READ IN COURT.

1 EXAMINING YOUR FAMILY TREE
A Monkey for an Uncle?
Consider your biological father. He is responsible for half of the genetic codes that shaped your body, and probably some of your personality as well. Now consider his father, your grandfather. If typical, I would guess at least a couple of your body traits are more grandpaís than dad's having somehow skipped a generation. And how about your great-grandfather? Were you lucky enough to know him, even if just like me, through those vague and shifting memories as a very small boy? Dare I throw in a great-great-grandfather in my case known only through legend and those grainy black-and-white photos of a roughly dressed man beside a horse and buggy? Consider that when your great-great-grandfather was your age, for surely he once was, he could try to reconstruct his lineage just as you have done. What names and faces would he have recalled? And if you could piece great-great-granddad's and your recollections together, that would create a timeline taking you back eight generations perhaps 250 years or so! Where would you find your ancestors then? In my case, I'm told, the Hamburg, Germany, area. And would my ancestors then be traced to the nomadic Gaelic stock that inhabited Western Europe before formal countries were established there? And then to where? Ancient Phoenicians, Sumerians, Egyptians? And how about yours? Now to get to the main point. If you kept traveling back in time in this manner, generation after generation, where would you end up? Where would your dad's ancestors have been living 1000 years ago? 2500 to 5000 years ago? And so on? Those who believe in strict Darwinism would say an extended family schematic would show your ancestors going back several million years ago where they first evolved on the African continent. And on this reverse journey you would see slowly reappearing total body hair, steadily shrinking brains, increasingly sloping foreheads and jaw protrusions, and extending arms whose knuckles would eventually be dragging the ground, assisting a clumsy, bent-over gait. In other words, strict evolutionists say if you could backtrack your family tree for, say, 5 million years, your ancestors would now be closer in appearance to a chimp than a human. And if you continued farther back in time, the coccyx bone at the bottom of your pelvis would extend into a prehensile tail, and the reappearing grasping toes on your feet would send you back to swinging in the trees from whence you came some 10 to 15 million years ago. Stop and ponder your supposed family tree in this way, a videotape in rewind. Is this really how it went down? Did humans come from monkeys? (Often a Darwinist will answer no to this question by saying it wasn't a direct path of evolution. But monkeys have to be on the path before apes, right? And apes would have to be on the path before humanoids, right? So it most absolutely is, in theory, monkey to man, no matter how crooked the line.) Now if this isn't the truth, what's the alternative? Unless you consult primitive worship superstitions, I've stated before that the world's five major religions give you one origin -Genesis- and it includes a tantalizing tale of an innocent man Adam and his companion woman, Eve, in a pristine garden. But for so many, that's a fairy tale of bigger proportions than monkeys becoming humans. So what is the truth? Here's my response. Regardless of which religious view(s) might supply the answer(s), I will stand firmly on this: There is absolutely no scientific support for the monkey-to-man scenario -- absolutely none. On the contrary, science, and even philosophy, validate the title of this book and its overriding message as stated a few pages ago. Either-Or If there is an alternative answer to the totally unscientific view that monkeys slowly turned into people, ostensibly it is one of the religious variety. But before we tackle the idea, let me first share the concept I find continually bubbling up from the origins cauldron: Almost every major issue concludes with just two choices --either it could have happened this way, or it couldní'. So grab a writing instrument and check your choice of one of two for each of the ten statements below. It Could or it Couldn't Happen _______ ______ 1. The most violent accidental explosion ever, the big bang, was sufficiently self-appointed to create the largest and most fine-tuned object ever known, the universe. _______ ______ 2. The sheer number of planets in the universe, and the number of years these planets have existed, give us a mathematical chance that at least one would become a fully interactive biological world --ours- by accident. _______ ______ 3. Blind luck had the ability to construct the approximately 80,000 different life-required protein chains of specifically sequenced amino acids (from an alphabet of 20 different amino-acid choices) even those proteins 10,000 amino acids long. _______ ______ 4. The RNA/DNA molecules, containing information equivalent to all the books in 20 standard libraries, suddenly appeared by chance in the "primordial soup" before the first cell was a reality. _______ ______ 5. Almost as soon as Earth's conditions permitted, a functional cell appeared, self-prepared with a wide array of metabolizing and reproductive mechanisms. _______ ______ 6. A half billion years ago, in the blink of an evolutionary eye, the Cambrian explosion self-generated the completely interactive gene pool of all 32 animal phyla with complex organ systems. Once complex life didn't exist, then it was all there. _______ ______ 7. After the Cambrian explosion, random scramblings of genetic information kept producing improved genetic codes. This allowed life to surge forward as animals kept giving rise to improved offspring with which, suddenly or eventually, they could not mate. _______ ______ 8. These accidental genetic surges adequately explain a whole host of large-scale advances, for example, straight bones in fins turning into jointed bones in legs, reptile scales turning into bird feathers, photosensitive cells turning into eyes, births from amniotic eggs turning into births from a placenta, and chordates like cows or hippos going back into the ocean to become whales. _______ ______ 9. While animals randomly surged forward within 32 phyla from sponges to mammals, plants accomplished a similar advance in complexity from moss to cacti, but did it in only 8 steps, often called divisions instead of phyla. And central to this book: _______ ______ 10. Primates like monkeys left the trees and kept getting bigger, stronger, and smarter. About 5 million years of natural selection was sufficient time for hominids to adapt to walking on their hind legs, learn to use tools, fashion clothes to wear, master fire, develop first spoken and then written communication, and finally organize societies in cave homes among maple groves that eventually became cottage homes on Maple Street. So how did you score on this checklist? The two most extreme scores would be to have all ten checks in the right column of "it couldn't happen" like me, or all ten checks on the left column of it could happen. Of course, you realize that one single check in the right column dooms Darwinism to immediate failure. All it takes is one legitimate "couldn't" check in this either-or set-up and natural evolution has no chance to produce me the writer, or you the reader. If you can, actually imagine trying to agree with all ten statements as checked on the left, and I'll wager youíll feel the full weight of the folly of self-made life. Therefore, if you find evolution insufficient in even one instance, you need to consider a bigger-than-science connection. unless, of course, you want to remain apathetic. So, if evolution or apathy is not the answer, I suggest you begin a quest to come to grips with the God who engineered this miracle. Rejecting statement #10 above reflects this chapter's opening rejection of the idea that all our ancestral lines slowly become more stooped and stupider as we observe the reverse of totally natural processes. If the world generally rejected that notion and stood on the "God alternative" with confidence, it would dramatically change the debate on the other nine statements. And yet if monkeys are not our uncles then how do you explain human origin? How do you explain the master plan of God the Designer?
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Jun. 12, 2008 - Book Review: Homeschooling Bible by Anne Elliott
Book Review
Homeschooling BIble Curriculum by Anne Elliott
Anne Elliott has offered several of her products for free on her personal website (Anne's School Place) for a number of years; and I have frequently seen both her Bible curriculum and her P.E. curriculum recommended. Recently, Anne finished three full levels of her Bible curriculum and began offering these for sale in both bound and e-book editions. Cost for the bound version is $24.95, and cost for the e-book version is $19.95. Sample pages are available on Anne's new website.
Homeschooling Bible can be purchased at three levels: Foundations 1, Foundations 2, and Foundations 3. Each level is a chronological study of the entire Bible. Each level of Homeschooling Bible is designed to be used with the entire family, and thus allows the entire family to be studying the same material at the same time. This is a big deal for those of us teaching multiple children!
Using Homeschooling BIble, your student read a new section of Scripture daily. Your student will also be memorizing one verse per week by working with it a different way daily. In Foundations 1, the first day you illustrate the verse with a drawing; the second day you write the verse out, etc. Each day your children will review the books of the Bible as you teach the list. Many days also include Bible drill (practicing finding passages of Scripture), links to coloring pages, and extra activities such as journaling or auxiliary reading. The prescribed daily lesson is presented on an easy-to-read grid-schedule for Monday through Friday, and is followed with instructions for exactly how to teach the week's material. The teacher's notes are the meat of the schedule, while the grid makes it simple to see at a glance what you need to cover.
I will preface these remarks by stating that I have just received my copy of Homeschooling Bible Foundations 1 in the past week; and have therefore not used it with my family. However, I have indeed spent time looking over the material. Homeschooling Bible is a thorough study of the Bible from start to finish each year; with many optional fun activities to help reinforce each lesson. Homeschooling Bible looks like a great study to use for your entire family!
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Jun. 11, 2008 - Audio Book Review -- Rascal by Sterling North, read by Jim Weiss
Audio Book Review
Rascal by Sterling North, read by Jim Weiss
Classic? I had no idea that Rascal by Sterling North was considered a classic. I saw a copy of the audio book at our library and noticed that it was read by Jim Weiss. In fact, I think my friend Cristi might have recommended it, since we use the same library and she knows what is available, she recommends a lot of great audiobooks! You already know how much my family enjoys listening to material read by Jim Weiss. Even my husband listens! We think it is like having a favorite uncle sitting in the chair by the fire reading aloud to the family... Anyway, my point is Rascal. My older sister is taking our 9 year old nephew and my 9 year old daughter on a trip out West this summer, and when she saw the title of my new e-book (Turning It Up A Notch! Using Audio Files in Your Homeschool) she asked me for recommendations for audiobooks to take on the ten day trip. Well, Rascal was at the top of my list of books a 9 year old boy would enjoy. My sister's response? "Of course, Rascal is a classic!" She knew about Rascal! Well, she doesn't "know" about Jim Weiss (yet) but she will in a few weeks... If you have a boy in the 7 to 15 age range, you should listen to this book. It's a classic coming of age story for boys, and girls enjoy it too. We thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook, in spite of a brief and vague reference to evolution which created a great talking point for our family.
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Jun. 9, 2008 - Book Review -- I Heart Bloomberg by Melody Carlson
Book Review
I Heart Bloomberg by Melody Carlson

I Heart Bloomberg by Melody Carlson sounds like a charming book, but I admit I have not had time to read it yet. I will be adding a full review to this post just as soon as I read the book. In the meantime, you can read the first chapter here.
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Jun. 2, 2008 - Book Review -- Washington's Lady by Nancy Moser
Book Review
Washington's Lady by Nancy Moser
This book is fantastic! Not only could I not put it down, I actually learned something from this piece of historical fiction. In fact, I came very close to suggesting that my nine year old daughter read this book. But for a few vague references to marital intimacy, this book would be perfect even for younger readers. I think this book would work well for a Living Book for High School readers, possibly even for Junior High readers.
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Jun. 1, 2008 - Book Review -- Dragonlight by Donita K Paul
I should make it clear that this is not "my kind" of book. It is filled with dragons and wizards, and is Science Fiction. Nevertheless, I did thoroughly enjoy it. While I found this book to be fascinating and interesting to read; I definitely do not think it is a "book for all ages" as the cover suggests. At least one section made a reference to intimacy between husband and wife which was clear enough to elicit questions from my nine year old. My only other concern with the book were references to "auras" and the presence of "mindspeaking" (reading others thoughts) which hint at new age religion.
I enjoyed reading this book, but I have no intention of purchasing or reading other books in this series.

It is June FIRST, time for the FIRST Blog Tour! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and his/her latest book's FIRST chapter!
The feature author is:
and her book:
DragonLight
WaterBrook Press (June 17, 2008)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
 Donita K. Paul is a retired teacher and award-winning author of seven novels, including DragonSpell, DragonQuest, DragonKnight, and DragonFire. When not writing, she is often engaged in mentoring writers of all ages. Donita lives in Colorado Springs, Colorado where she is learning to paint–walls and furniture! Visit her website at www.dragonkeeper.us.
The Books of the DragonKeeper Series:
DragonSpell
DragonQuest
DragonKnight
DragonFire
DragonLight
Visit her website.
AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:
Castle Passages
Kale wrinkled her nose at the dank air drifting up from the stone staircase. Below, utter darkness created a formidable barrier.
Toopka stood close to her knee. Sparks skittered across the doneel child’s furry hand where she clasped the flowing, soft material of Kale’s wizard robe. Kale frowned down at her ward. The little doneel spent too much time attached to her skirts to be captivated by the light show. Instead, Toopka glowered into the forbidding corridor. “What’s down
there?”
Kale sighed. “I’m not sure.”
“Is it the dungeon?”
“I don’t think we have a dungeon.”
Toopka furrowed her brow in confusion. “Don’t you know? It’s your castle.”
“A castle built by committee.” Kale’s face grimaced at the memory of weeks of creative chaos. She put her hand on Toopka’s soft head.
The doneel dragged her gaze away from the stairway, tilted her head back, and frowned at her guardian. “What’s ‘by committee’?”
“You remember, don’t you? It was just five years ago.”
“I remember the wizards coming and the pretty tents in the meadow.” Toopka pursed her lips. “And shouting. I remember shouting.” “They were shouting because no one was listening. Twenty-one wizards came for the castle raising. Each had their own idea about what we needed. So they each constructed their fragment of the castle structure according to their whims.”
Toopka giggled.
“I don’t think it’s funny. The chunks of castle were erected, juxtaposed with the others, but not as a whole unit. I thank Wulder that at least my parents had some sense. My mother and father connected the tads, bits, and smidgens together with steps and short halls. When nothing else would work, they formed gateways from one portion to another.”
The little doneel laughed out loud and hid her face in Kale’s silky wizard’s robe. Miniature lightning flashes enveloped Toopka’s head and cascaded down her neck, over her back, and onto the floor like a waterfall of sparks.
Kale cut off the flow of energy and placed a hand on the doneel’s shoulder. “Surely you remember this, Toopka.”
She looked up, her face growing serious. “I was very young then.”
Kale narrowed her eyes and examined the child’s innocent face. “As long as I have known you, you’ve appeared to be the same age. Are you ever going to grow up?”
Toopka shrugged, then the typical smile of a doneel spread across her face. Her thin black lips stretched, almost reaching from ear to ear. “I’m growing up as fast as I can, but I don’t think I’m the one in charge. If I were in charge, I would be big enough to have my own dragon, instead of searching for yours.”
The statement pulled Kale back to her original purpose. No doubt she had been manipulated yet again by the tiny doneel, but dropping the subject of Toopka’s age for the time being seemed prudent.
Kale rubbed the top of Toopka’s head. The shorter fur between her ears felt softer than the hair on the child’s arms. Kale always found it soothing to stroke Toopka’s head, and the doneel liked it as well.
Kale let her hand fall to her side and pursued their mission. “Gally and Mince have been missing for a day and a half. We must find them. Taylaminkadot said she heard an odd noise when she came down to the storeroom.” Kale squared her shoulders and took a step down into the dark, dank stairwell. “Gally and Mince may be down here, and they may be in trouble.”
“How can you know who’s missing?” Toopka tugged on Kale’s robe, letting loose a spray of sparkles. “You have hundreds of minor dragons in the castle and more big dragons in the fields.”
“I know.” Kale put her hand in front of her, and a globe of light appeared, resting on her palm. “I’m a Dragon Keeper. I know when any of my dragons have missed a meal or two.” She stepped through the doorway.
Toopka tugged on Kale’s gown. “May I have a light too?”
“Of course.” She handed the globe to the doneel. The light flickered. Kale tapped it, and the glow steadied. She produced another light to sit in her own hand and proceeded down the steps.
Toopka followed, clutching the sparkling cloth of Kale’s robe in one hand and the light in the other. “I think we should take a dozen guards with us.”
“I don’t think there’s anything scary down here, Toopka. After all, as you reminded me, this is our castle, and we certainly haven’t invited anything nasty to live with us.”
“It’s the things that come uninvited that worry me.”
“All right. Just a moment.” Kale turned to face the archway at the top of the stairs, a few steps up from where they stood.
She reached with her mind to the nearest band of minor dragons. Soon chittering dragon voices, a rainbow vision of soft, flapping, leathery wings, and a ripple of excitement swept through her senses. She heard Artross, the leader of this watch, call for his band to mind their manners, listen to orders, and calm themselves.
Kale smiled her greeting as they entered the stairway and circled above her. She turned to Toopka, pleased with her solution, but Toopka scowled. Obviously, the doneel was not impressed with the arrival of a courageous escort.
Kale opened her mouth to inform Toopka that a watch of dragons provides sentries, scouts, and fighters. And Bardon had seen to their training. But the doneel child knew this.
Each watch formed without a Dragon Keeper’s instigation. Usually eleven to fifteen minor dragons developed camaraderie, and a leader emerged. A social structure developed within each watch. Kale marveled at the process. Even though she didn’t always understand the choices, she did nothing to alter the natural way of establishing the hierarchy and respectfully worked with what was in place.
Artross, a milky white dragon who glowed in the dark, had caught Kale’s affections. She sent a warm greeting to the serious-minded leader and received a curt acknowledgment. The straight-laced young dragon with his tiny, mottled white body tickled her. Although they didn’t look alike in the least, Artross’s behavior reminded Kale of her husband’s personality.
Kale nodded at Toopka and winked. “Now we have defenders.”
“I think,” said the doneel, letting go of Kale’s robe and stepping down a stair, “it would be better if they were bigger and carried swords.”
Kale smiled as one of the younger dragons landed on her shoulder. He pushed his violet head against her chin, rubbing with soft scales circling between small bumps that looked like stunted horns. Toopka skipped ahead with the other minor dragons flying just above her head.
“Hello, Crain,” said Kale, using a fingertip to stroke his pink belly. She’d been at his hatching a week before. The little dragon chirred his contentment. “With your love of learning, I’m surprised you’re not in the library with Librettowit.”
A scene emerged in Kale’s mind from the small dragon’s thoughts. She hid a smile. “I’m sorry you got thrown out, but you must not bring your snacks into Librettowit’s reading rooms. A tumanhofer usually likes a morsel of food to tide him over, but not when the treat threatens to smudge the pages of his precious books.” She felt the small beast shudder at the memory of the librarian’s angry voice. “It’s all right, Crain. He’ll forgive you and let you come back into his bookish sanctum. And he’ll delight in helping you find all sorts of wonderful facts.”
Toopka came scurrying back. She’d deserted her lead position in the company of intrepid dragons. The tiny doneel dodged behind Kale and once more clutched the sparkling robe. Kale shifted her attention to a commotion ahead and sought out the thoughts of the leader Artross. “What’s wrong?” asked Kale, but her answer came as she tuned in to the leader of the dragon watch.
Artross trilled orders to his subordinates. Kale saw the enemy through the eyes of this friend.
An anvilhead snake slid over the stone floor of a room stacked high with large kegs. His long black body stretched out from a nook between two barrels. With the tail of the serpent hidden, she had no way of knowing its size. These reptiles’ heads outweighed their bodies. The muscled section behind the base of the jaws could be as much as six inches wide. But the length of the snake could be from three feet to thirty.
Read more at the FIRST blog.
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May. 29, 2008 - Book Review -- A Voice In The Wind By Francine Rivers
Realistic historical Christian romance, A Voice in the Wind by Francine Rivers walks a very fine line between historical accuracy and purposeful appealing to the flesh. I freely admit that the book was captivating and difficult to put down. In fact, I read it straight through and at 515 pages and four children that was no small task! In fact, I stayed up half of one night to finish it. However, I am not certain I will be reading the sequel, no matter how compelling. The sinfulness of the lives of the non-Christian characters were the greatest focus of this book, and the faithfulness of the Christian stood in stark contrast. I personally did not want to know the details of what a gladiator thinks as he makes his kill, or what a woman thinks when she makes her conquests. Below is a part of the first chapter.
Amy
It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today's Wild Card author is:
and her book:
A Voice in the Wind
Tyndale House Publishers (March 1, 1998)(Re-released June 2008
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Francine Rivers began her literary career at the University of Nevada, Reno, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Journalism. From 1976 to 1985, she had a successful writing career in the general market and her books were awarded or nominated for numerous awards and prizes. Although raised in a religious home, Francine did not truly encounter Christ until later in life, when she was already a wife, mother of three, and an established romance novelist. Shortly after becoming a born-again Christian in 1986, Francine wrote Redeeming Love as her statement of faith. First published by Bantam Books, and then re-released by Multnomah Publishers in the mid- 1990s, this retelling of the biblical story of Gomer and Hosea set during the time of the California Gold Rush is now considered by many to be a classic work of Christian fiction. Redeeming Love continues to be one of the Christian Booksellers Association’s top-selling titles and it has held a spot on the Christian bestseller list for nearly a decade.
Since Redeeming Love, Francine has published numerous novels with Christian themes – all bestsellers-- and she has continued | |