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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Touched By Love Contest Detour

So I was supposed to spend last weekend working on my wip.

Didn't happen, but I did do some writing.

I worked on my entry for the Touched By Love Contest sponsored by the Faith, Hope, and Love chapter of RWA.

Initially, I thought I'd be able to use my current wip, which is in pretty good shape following the Genesis contest submission. But, the contest rules call for a romance (duh! RWA...) and my wip is not a romance. Not the boy meets girl kind anyway, as it involves all married couples.

I've dusted off the first 30 pages of last year's romance instead. It was actually kind of nice to revisit that as yet incomplete story, and find that I still have a lot of passion for it. I will definitely complete this story. I also found that taking a break from my wip loosened up my creative juices, flooding my head with all kinds of ideas, so maybe I'll bounce between the two, focusing primarily on my current wip until they're both done.

Anyway, I've got until midnight, Wednesday, April 1st to submit the first 30 pages and a two-page synopsis. I had to revise 35 pages down to 30. (It needed the chopping, trust me.) I had two versions of the synopsis, one six pages and the other one page, both single-spaced, which I needed to turn into a two-page, double spaced version. I started with the shorter one and added to it until I had a pretty good two pages.

Touched by Love, and the Genesis contest I entered earlier this month, are the two biggies for Christian fiction so that's why I've pushed to enter both this year. The rest of the year, I'll completely focus on finishing my stories. Just in case someone calls for more pages...

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Just Plodding Along in My WIP

This week's been a bit of a down week from a blogging standpoint. I was returning from CT on Monday, where my son participated in a Jr Phenom basketball tryout. If he is selected, he'll go to the National Invitational Camp in San Diego this summer. This year has been kind of his jumping off point since he'll be in high school next year, and from an NCAA Division 1 basketball scholarship standpoint, it's all pretty serious from this point forward.

I blogged over at RTB on Monday and had a few book features here, but I know what you're asking yourselves...

What's up with the wip?

I got my contest entry off and accepted before I left last weekend. Then, I did...nothing.

It was my intent to write but it didn't happen. I visited with my mother who I hadn't seen in a couple of years. She'll be 88 this year, and I've missed her greatly.

I sat through one of the two tryout days. 32 teams playing 16 games, 2 at a time, over the course of 5 hours. When I finally dislodged my rear from the hard wooden benches, I wasn't sure I'd be able to stand, much less walk. No opportunity to write because there was little space to sit, and parents of 168 kids were present, at least those who didn't drop their kids off and leave. We were squished on top of one another, with kids climbing over us in between their games.

When writing didn't work, I tried reading. No go. Too much chaos around me. (And I typically can block out with the best of them, so imagine!) Didn't write on the plane either because I spent the whole three hours, in each direction, sitting in the middle and trying to keep my elbows out of my neighbors' sides. (One was my son who didn't mind quite so much if he got poked but my other seat mates weren't having it.)

I also attended a wake while I was at home for a longtime family friend.

Hence, writing just didn't happen even though I had it on my original agenda.

Not a big deal. I've got a really good first chapter (my Genesis contest entry), a pretty solid second and third chapters, and parts of four more chapters. To reign it all in, I'm going to work on chapters two thru seven over the next couple of weeks, with help from my crit partners. When those chapters are done, I'll outline the next few scenes/chapters, and keep writing.

Oh, did I say I also have a pretty solid synopsis, thanks to the contest? I know where I'm headed. It's the getting there.

No reader/writer tips this weekend. Enjoy!

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Featured Book: Deadly Charm by Claudia Mair Burney

I am a huge Claudia Mair Burney fan. Her fiction is both heartwarming and challenging. Her characters seem like close friends, and she gets the cultural stuff right without hitting readers over the head. She also gets the spiritual stuff right, as in the right level of realism. No fake spirituality here.

I love the Amanda Bell Brown mystery series, which is really a misnomer because these stories are as much romance and suspense as they are mystery. The series began with Murder, Mayhem, and A Fine Man. I still haven't read the second book, Death, Deceit and Smooth Jazz but I will. I didn't miss much...and I missed a lot. But it was easy to enjoy this third book in the series anyway. Bell and Jazz have to be one of my favorite fiction couples. I hope Ms. Burney will find a way to bring them back again.

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:

Deadly Charm (Amanda Bell Brown Mystery Series, Book 3)

Howard Books (March 24, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Claudia Mair Burney is the author of numerous novels and the popular Ragamuffin Diva blog. She lives with her husband and their seven children in Michigan.

Visit the author's website and blog.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 400 pages
Publisher: Howard Books (March 24, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1416551956
ISBN-13: 978-1416551959

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Rocky showed up at my apartment door with an offer that, in his words, I “no coulda refuse.” Or maybe those were Marlon Brando’s words. I couldn’t be sure. My blond, dreadlocked former pastor slash ex-boyfriend locked me into a stare with those big, brown puppy eyes. He’d puffed out his jowls to utter the Godfather’s most famous line, while grazing his cheek with the back of his fingers—an excruciatingly amiss imitation. I’ve seen newborn babies’ smiles more intimidating.

“You look more like a hamster than a mobster, Rock.”

“Hamsters are cool.”

“But less compelling, you must admit.”

Rocky grinned and wagged his finger at me, “Never underestimate the power of a furry little creature.” He twitched his nose and started making hamster noises.

“Amen!” I said.

I thought of my vicious, former pet sugar glider, Amos. Although he’d become my friend and hero, I had to give him away to another nocturnal creature—otherwise, I’d never sleep again. My husband’s best friend, Souldier, had taken the murderous marsupial. Now Amos happily shreds his drapes.

“Come on in, my not-so-furry friend,” I told Rocky, mostly so he would stop making weird rodent sounds.

I moved aside so he could enter my little slice of paradise: shabby chic meets Africa is what Jazz, my husband called it. Rocky loved my funky, eclectically furnished place, too. He just didn’t describe it as aptly as Jazz did.

Who was I kidding? Rocky didn’t do anything as aptly as Jazz did. I had lost them both six weeks ago, and now here was Rocky, surprising me by showing up at my door like unexpected grace.

“Welcome back, Rocky,” I said. I know how lame I sounded, but I wanted him to know I was glad he’d come no matter what the reason.

He muttered a shy, “Thanks.”

We stood in my foyer exchanging reticent glances until I got bold enough to take a long look at him. I’d missed him so. He wore a typical Rockyesque uniform underneath his white down jacket—khaki pants and a long-sleeved Batman T-shirt. A cupid earring dangled in his right ear. Every year about this time he wore it to remind me to come to the Saint Valentine’s Day feast.

Without thinking I blurted out. “I see you and Cupid are still advertising our—” I bit my tongue. There’d be no “our” Saint Valentine’s Day feast this year for prodigal Bell. “Sorry,” I muttered.

“No problem,” he rushed to say, and then an awful silence descended on us like a cold, grey fog.

When I was still a member of his church, aptly named the Rock House, I never missed the event. Rocky would tell stories of the historical Saint Valentine; we’d eat candy conversation hearts, listen to live music, and share abundant amounts of food and laughter. It was Rocky’s way of making sure the lonely hearts wouldn’t spend the evening alone. There with my church family, not only did I get heaps of love, I could give out some from my meager supply.

That and we always had a chocolate fountain.

What was I going to do now?

I tried not to think about the sting of Rocky kicking me out of his church. I didn’t want to think about anything that had happened six weeks ago. Still, I figured whatever brought him to my door had an olive branch attached to it, and whatever he asked, short of sin, I’d be willing to do to reconcile with him.

Rocky hung up his jacket, kicked out of his Birkenstocks, and headed over to my rose-colored velvet sofa and sat. I followed, plopping down beside him.

“So, what’s the offer, Godfather?”

He stared at me. “Did you gain weight?”

Because I know it’s rude to kill your loved ones, I let that one slide and gave him a polite smile, but I did grab a mudcloth throw pillow and cover my expanding waistline.

“So, what’s the offer, Rocky?”

He gushed in a most un-Godfatherly like way. “I want you to go to a meeting with me. It’s only going to be the way-coolest event you’ve been to in forever.”

I cuddled the pillow and eyed him cautiously. He didn’t mean the Valentine’s Day feast. I braced myself. Rocky’s idea of way cool could get scary. “Can you be a little more specific?”

He didn’t answer. Just reached out and touched my hand, rubbing his thumb across my knuckles. “I really missed you.”

Oh, man. That small gesture—him touching the hand nobody held anymore—that tiny movement had the effect of a pebble in a pond, creating ripples of unexpected sadness that circled out of my soul. Lord, have mercy. I didn’t fling myself at him, begging like a rhythm-and-blues singer for him to keep loving me, to not give up on me, but something in me wished I could.

I didn’t want to marry Rocky, or even date him. He had never been the love of my life. In that moment I simply wanted to banish the nearly incarnate loneliness that had been dogging my heels as a solemn, maddening companion, shuffling me through all those days with no best-friend Rocky.

And with no husband Jazz.

I gazed up at him with my own version of puppy eyes. “I missed you too, Rocky.”

We let a bit of silence sit between us on the sofa like a third and very quiet presence. Our heads hung low. Apparently we both still smarted over our mutual pain of separation.

Minutes passed, our hands still clasped together, but Rocky’s merciful presence soothed my dry soul patches like olive oil.

Thank God. Thank God for every kind soul I don’t deserve in my life who loves me anyway.

“Rocky.” I made my voice as soft and small as a baby’s blankie.

He turned to me, his face as open and vulnerable as that blankie’s little owner.

I squeezed his hand. “I’m so sorry I hurt you.”

Those puppy eyes shone with the compassion I knew like the backs of my freckled hands.

“I’m sorry for the things I did, too, babe. For the things I said that night.”

“Don’t call me babe.”

He chuckled. “Some things never change.” Again, those gentle peepers bore into me. “Why didn’t you tell me you married Jazz?”

“At the time I didn’t seem too clear on it myself. Things happened pretty fast, and the next thing I knew, I was a wife.” I paused, the weight of that statement shifting just a bit since Rocky had shown up to help bear my burden. “He’s mad at me.”

“Duh-uh. You were kissing your blond boy toy.” He nudged me with his tattooed arm. “What’s going on with the two of you now?”

“I’ve seen corpses on Carly’s autopsy tables more involved than our marriage.”

I wondered if I’d ever get over what I’d lost with Jazz.

“I can only imagine what his parents think of me. I guess they’d say I’m the nightmare that took his ex Kate’s place.”

He regarded me with the care and concern I’ve seen him lavish on the fortunate souls he counseled as a pastor. Rocky may be only twenty-seven years old, but he’d been a pastor for two years. Two good years. He didn’t have the life experience an older pastor would, but God had given him an extraordinary shepherd’s heart.

“You’re not a nightmare,” he said. “You jumped into a marriage with no spiritual or emotional preparation.”

Like I, the clinician, needed him to tell me that.

I sighed. “Yet another psychologist heal thyself thing.” I looked away from him, guilt gnawing at me. “Maybe Jazz and I just aren’t meant to be, Rocky.”

“Have you talked to him?”

I shrugged. “Just once. He came over for a few minutes on Christmas Eve. I let him know I wanted him in a way I knew he’d understand. And then I waited. He never came back.”

“Why didn’t you go to him?”

“The same reason I didn’t come to you. I wanted to give him some space to feel whatever he felt and then to decide on his own.”

“But, maybe he’s not like me, babe.”

“Ya, think? And don’t call me babe.”

“Maybe he needs you to help him decide. Like, some extra reassurance or something.”

“That’s crazy, Rock.”

“It’s not so crazy, babe.”

I took back every nice thing I’d just thought about him. What did he know? Yes, he pastors a church of more than two-hundred members. He did missions work. He had a shepherd’s heart. He took pastoral counseling classes in seminary, but, honestly! His voice sounded just like Patrick’s on Sponge Bob.

Rocky glared at me. “Babe. . . .”

“Don’t call me babe.”

“Babe! You gotta go to him.”

“But he yells. Sometimes he cusses like a fish wife.”

“What’s a fish wife?”

“I don’t know, but my great-grandmother used to say that and it stuck with me. Maybe only females cuss like fish wives. Maybe he cusses like the fish.” Now I sounded like Patrick!

“Fish don’t cuss.”

“Okay, I know I should have reassured him.”

He sighed. Looked at me with those eyes. Squeezed my hand. “Will you ever let anyone love you?”

“People love me, Rocky. My sister. My secretary. Sasha.”

“I have doubts about Sasha.”

I thought about that and chuckled with him. “You may be right. My mother has done a few things that make me wonder. Now I’m really depressed.”

“I want to see you happy.”

“I want to see you happy, too. Speaking of which, how are you and Elisa?”

He grinned, reddened, looked away.

“What? Did you marry her in six weeks? My goodness!” For the first time, I didn’t feel jealous that someone was interested in Rocky. Well, not much.

“No. I’m not married. I’m . . . .”

“You’re what?”

“She’s really special, but it hasn’t been that long since she left creepy cult dude. I’m not sure I should be involved.”

“How involved are you?”

“I’m involved, babe.”

“You’re in love?”

He wouldn’t say anything, but his goofy grin spoke for him.

“Rocky?”

He nudged me, “Cut it out, babe.”

So, Rocky was really in love. Wow. I always knew it would happen, but I didn’t realize I’d still have the teensiest bit of pain knowing he’d moved on from me for good. I could see a flower of astonishing beauty blossoming between them when I saw them together, even though it nearly killed me at the moment. But God knows Rocky deserved the biggest, juiciest love he could find. He needed to look beyond the non-existent us. And he still calls me babe.

“Just take it slow, Rock. Trust me. The cost of moving too fast is astronomical, even if you are in love.”

I could tell he didn’t feel comfortable talking to me about Elisa. I decided to let their love blossom without my tending, pruning, or pulling up weeds. I got back to the business at hand. “Are you ever going to tell me what your offer is?” I eased into the lush upholstery of my sofa.

Rocky’s face lit up. Honestly, if that guy had a tail to go with those puppy eyes, it’d be thumping my sofa with joy.

“It’s gonna be awesome, ba— I mean, Bell.”

Apparently our little chat about Elisa made him correct himself.

“You think everything is awesome, Rocky.”

“I don’t think everything is awesome.”

“You said my Love Bug is awesome. You said Switchfoot’s new CD is awesome. You said my new zillions braids are awesome, and you said the ice-cream at Cold Stone Creamery is awesome.” Okay, the ice-cream at Cold Stone happened to be awesome for real. Lately I’d craved it like the blind crave sight.

“But, babe . . . ”

There he goes again. Honestly! A holy war couldn’t make that man stop calling me babe.

He went on. “Those things are awesome.”

“God is awesome, Rock. Awesome meaning the subject inspires awe, as in reverence, respect, dread.”

“You reverence your tricked-out VW Beetle,” he said, “And I respect Switchfoot, especially Jon Foreman, and your way-cool, African-goddess hair inspired me to get dreads.”

I stared at him. Comments like these coming from Rocky tended to render me temporarily speechless.

He filled the silence with his proposal. “I want you to go see Ezekiel Thunder with me.”

My eyes widened. Electroshock therapy wouldn’t have given me such a jolt. “Ezekiel Thunder?” I screeched. I jerked up from my slouch. I’d heard the un-right reverend wanted to hit the comeback trail, taking his miracle crusade with him.

Rocky gave me a wicked grin and settled himself smugly into the soft folds of my sofa. He knew I’d left Thunder’s particular brand of Pentecostal fire many years ago and had no desire to go back.

Rocky bobble-head nodded, as if his physical movement would affect a change in my attitude.

“Stop all that nodding!”

“I’m just trying to encourage you.”

I did not feel encouraged.

“It’ll be fun,” he said, blasting me with the full puppy-eyes arsenal. Oh, those eyes. Powerful! Mesmerizing! Like a basket full of cocker spaniel puppies wearing red ribbons. I could feel myself weakening.

“Rocky, that meeting will torture me. It will torture you!”

“No, it won’t. Ezekiel is my friend.”

“Your friend?”

“He led me to Christ.”

“Ezekiel Thunder led you to Christ?”

“I told you I came to Christ at a Bible camp.”

“Yes? And?”

“It was a Sons of Thunder Bible camp. I’m a Thunder Kid!” He beamed with what I hoped wasn’t pride.

“You never told me that!”

Honestly! You think you know somebody! He was my ex-boyfriend for goodness’ sake. We’d talked about marriage. I couldn’t believe I had no idea he was close friends with the infamous Ezekiel Thunder!

“You can be kinda judgmental about guys like Ezekiel.” He went on. “I didn’t mean to upset you or trigger bad memories of your tongues-talking days.”

“Then don’t ask me to go see him.”

“He’s a different man. He and his family want to buy a house in Ann Arbor. He’s living at the Rock House house until one comes through for him. ”

“God forbid!”

“He needs support. People to show up and cheer him on.”

“Cheer him on? We should stop him!” Had Rocky forgotten that Ezekiel Thunder had fallen as hard as many of his televangelist contemporaries in the eighties—and for a tawdry little tryst with a young intern? May it never be!

“How hard would it be for you to sit there and listen? Maybe say a few prayers for him.”

“God bless you as you do that for him.”

“I was there for you, supporting Great Lakes Seminary when they were struggling and going to lose their building. I did it because of how much you love Mason May.”

“Rocky! That’s not even comparable. Mason is a fine theologian training good men and women for powerful, effective ministries. He’s not a snake-oil peddler.”

“It’s not snake oil. It’s miracle prosperity oil.”

I stared at him. He’d stunned me to silence once again. I waited for Rocky to fill the silence with testimonies about the healing properties of miracle prosperity oil. Thankfully, he refrained. But he didn’t look like he’d let me off the hook.

I tried to reason with him. “You shouldn’t ask me to do this. You’re Emergent, Rocky, not a dyed-in-the-wool charismatic.”

“You don’t like post-modern, post-denominational, Emergent folks either.”

“I like them more than Ezekiel Thunders.”

“What’s that thing you say about the Emergent Church?”

“This is not about the Emergent Church. I’d go to an Emergent meeting with you anytime. You name the place: Mars Hill, Ann Arbor Vineyard. How ‘bout Frontline Church? ”

He didn’t budge. “Come on, babe. He’s like a dad to me.”

“A dad?”

“You always say Mason is like a dad to you.”

“But Mason has a PhD. He doesn’t sell ‘miracle prosperity oil’.”

“Ezekiel doesn’t sell it, either. He gives it away for a love offering.”

“A considerable love offering, if I remember! It’s plain olive oil he’s pushing to gullible babes in the faith who don’t know any better. How can I support his money-lusting schemes?”

“Ummm. By going with me?” Hope burgeoned in his voice as if I hadn’t just accused his mentor of being a hustler.

“Did you hear what I said, Rock? Ezekiel Thunder is everything I walked away from.”

“You walked away from a lot more than that, babe. And you’ve been known to hang out with people with worse theology than his. People way more dangerous.”

He had a point.

“Rocky . . . .” I didn’t want to go. Please, God, don’t make me go.

“He’s changed, babe. Give him a chance. For me.”

The eyes again, and a smile with an invisible tail wag.

I grumbled.

He grinned.

I gave him a dramatic sigh. “What time are we leaving?”

“If you’re not busy, and you’re not, we can leave in a few hours. I’ll pick you up at six.”

“How do you know I don’t have plans?”

“Because you have antisocial tendencies.”

“Don’t hold back, Rock. What do you really think about me?”

“Don’t worry,” he said, ignoring my insolence. “You’re gonna fall in love with Ezekiel.”

I rolled my eyes. “Not likely.”

He put his face right in front of mine until we were eye to eye. “You are feeling veeeeeery tired. You’re getting sleepy. You’re going to enjoy yourself at the crusade.”

“No fair,” I said, “Those eyes of yours are potent hypnotizers.”

“You are going to love Ezekiel Thunder.”

“I am going to love Ezekiel Thunder.”

Rocky got out of my face. “You’ve gotta admit, babe. This will be safer than sleuthing.”

No, it won’t, a disembodied voice--also known as the still, small voice of God--informed me.

I tried to ignore it. Maybe this Spirit prompting was speaking figuratively.

Couldn’t ignore it.

What, Lord, am I some kind of trouble magnet?

Don’t answer that, God.

I started rationalizing immediately to take the edge off what I truly hoped was not a prophetic warning. Maybe I could fall in love with the guy and respect him. Maybe he could even heal the egg-sized growth on my lower abdomen that scared me to death each time I ran my index finger across it. Maybe I could even find the keys to unlock the little room inside my heart where all the Ezekiel Thunders I’ve ever known were locked. I’d stored them there to keep me safe from the particular brand of harm only they could inflict.

I could feel my defenses shoot up as if a rocket propelled them.

Fall in love with Ezekiel Thunder?

I wished.

I shouldn’t have wished. My great-grandmother and namesake Amanda Bell Brown use to say, “Be careful what you wish for, baby. You just might get it.”

She ain’t never lied.



Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Featured Book: Turning The Paige by Laura Walker Jensen

I haven't read much "chick-lit" in recent times, in part, I'm sure, because there's such a knock on the genre right now that less of it is being released. I however enjoy a good chick lit so I hope publishers will keep them coming, if in slightly higher quality than the genre had descended to before the "bust". Turning The Paige features a slightly older than average heroine and is more about this 35-year old divorcee's relationship with her mother than it is about finding another love, although she manages to do so while working out her mother-daughter issues.


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Turning The Paige

Zondervan (March 1, 2009)

by

Laura Jensen Walker



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Laura Jensen Walker is an award-winning writer, popular speaker, and breast-cancer survivor who loves to touch readers and audiences with the healing power of laughter.

Born in Racine, Wisconsin (home of Western Printing and Johnson’s Wax—maker of your favorite floor care products) Laura moved to Phoenix, Arizona when she was in high school. But not being a fan of blazing heat and knowing that Uncle Sam was looking for a few good women, she enlisted in the United States Air Force shortly after graduation and spent the next five years flying a typewriter through Europe.

By the time she was 23, Laura had climbed the Eiffel Tower, trod the steps of the Parthenon, skied (okay, snowplowed) in the Alps, rode in a gondola in Venice, and wept at the ovens of Dachau. She’d also learned how to fold her underwear into equal thirds, make a proper cup of English tea, and repel the amorous advances of a blind date by donning combat gear and a gas mask.

Laura is a former newspaper reporter and columnist with a degree in journalism who has written hundreds of articles on many subjects ranging from emu ranching and pigeon racing to goat-roping and cemetery board meetings. However, realizing that livestock and local government weren’t her passion, she switched to writing humor, which she calls a “total God-thing.”

Her lifelong dream of writing fiction came true in Spring 2005 with the release of her first chick lit novel, Dreaming in Black & White which won the Contemporary Fiction Book of the Year from American Christian Fiction Writers. Her sophomore novel, Dreaming in Technicolor was published in Fall 2005.

Laura’s third novel, Reconstructing Natalie, chosen as the Women of Faith Novel of the Year for 2006, is the funny and poignant story of a young, single woman who gets breast cancer and how her life is reconstructed as a result. This book was born out of Laura’s cancer speaking engagements where she started meeting younger and younger women stricken with this disease—some whose husbands had left them, and others who wondered what breast cancer would do to their dating life. She wanted to write a novel that would give voice to those women. Something real. And honest. And funny.

Because although cancer isn’t funny, humor is healing.

A popular speaker and teacher at writing conferences, Laura has also been a guest on hundreds of radio and TV shows around the country including the ABC Weekend News, The 700 Club, and The Jay Thomas Morning Show.

Another book in this series is Daring Chloe

She lives in Northern California with her Renaissance-man husband Michael, and Gracie, their piano playing dog


ABOUT THE BOOK

At 35, Paige Kelley is feeling very "in between." She's still working her temp job after two years, still not dating three years after her divorce, and still melting at every chubby-cheeked toddler she sees while her biological clock ticks ever louder. Paige even moves back home to help her ailing, high-maintenance mother.It's not exactly the life she'd dreamed of!

When her Getaway Girls book club members urge Paige to break free and get on with her life, she's afraid. How will her mother react? How can Paige honor her widowed mother and still pursue her own life? The answers come from a surprising source.

A trip to Scotland and a potential new love interest help launch an exciting new chapter in her life, and lead Paige to discover that God's plan for her promises to be more than she ever imagined.

This latest release in the Getaway Girls collection delivers a smart, funny, and warm account of one woman's challenge to reconcile who she is - a dutiful Christian daughter - with the woman she longs to be.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Turning The Paige, go HERE

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Taking The High Road in Romance

Was on the road since Friday, mostly away from Internet. Forgot to tell you that I would be over at Romancing the Blog on Monday, talking about author's taking the high road in romance.

You can still pop over and check it out.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Reader/Writer Tidbits -- March 22, 2009

If all is well, I'm in Connecticut with my oldest son at a basketball camp. I'm drafting this in advance so I'll let you know.

From Cindi Myers' newsletter comes the following announcement: Mainly Murder Press is an independent, Connecticut- based publisher whose niche is New England-based mystery novels. (Adult and juvenile mystery novels written by New England authors, even if set outside the region, will also be considered.) Publisher Judith K. Ivie plans to publish in both trade paperback and hardcover formats, with authors retaining e-publishing rights. "We offer strong discounts and other attractive terms to retailers and libraries," Ms. Ivie writes. "Authors will receive generous royalties -- and of course, we charge no fees of any kind to authors." Complete information and a sample contract are available at http://www.mainlymurderpress.com.

The Christian Book Expo is taking place in Dallas this weekend, Fri thru Sun. American Christian Fiction Writers has a booth and a number of member authors will be signing. If you use discount code "cbe50ff" when ordering tickets online, you'll get $5 off admission.

Cheerios is sponsoring the third annual New Author Contest for children's writers. Winning books will be distributed inside cereal boxes. The grand prize is $5,000 and consideration by children's editors at Simon & Schuster.

Entries will be accepted between March 16 through July 15, 2009, and the rules are here. This spring, 1.5 million paperback copies of the first winning book will be distributed for free inside Cheerios boxes.

Enjoy the early days of Spring!

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Friday, March 20, 2009

My Genesis Entry is Done and Resting

Whew! Preparing a submission is no joke!

I think I've gone to the ms formatting requirements page on the Web at least four times a day for the past several days.

Then, there are all the things that aren't answered there.

Like, with the synopsis and the chapter in a single file, should they share the same header with continuous page numbers or different headers?

Should the names of the characters, first mention only, be all caps in the synopsis?

Is there a way to get rid of the squiggly spelling/grammar lines in Word so they don't pop up when the judges open the document? (Someone else asked, and it got me to thinking...)

These, and a host of other nit picky things that can either disqualify an entry, or at least leave a less than favorable impression.

But I hit the wall yesterday. The wall that screamed, "LEAVE IT ALONE!"

So I am.

It's resting, in case something super important that really matters jumps into my head. If it doesn't, and I don't see how it could after the scrutiny already applied, then I'll submit.

And move on.

I've got one really good chapter now, and parts of five other chapters. I need to finish those chapters and keep writing, especially now that I have a better sense of how the story gets from beginning to end, thanks to that pesky synopsis.

Back to writing!

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Preparing for the Genesis

What's been going on with my writing?

Aside from ideas popping into my head at the strangest of times--usually in rush hour traffic--and scrambling for a scrap of paper to write them down or reciting them like a litany so that I don't forget before I reach my destination (no, I haven't got a voice recorder yet), I've been preparing for the 2009 ACFW Genesis contest.

The Genesis, formerly known as the Noble Theme, is the annual contest for authors unpublished in fiction of 20,000 words or more, sponsored by the American Christian Fiction Writers. For this contest, the writer may submit the first 15 pages plus an optional 1 page synopsis. The contest is very particular, providing formatting requirements, and disqualifying entries not meeting those requirements. But it's a great contest for feedback, as every entrant receives her scoresheets and ms back, with comments from three judges.

I started 2009 with the goal of submitting to this and to the Romance Slam Jam contests. Every year, as the deadlines rolled around, I'd not felt ready. And sure enough, this year I missed the RSJ deadline for that reason. Once that deadline passed, I redoubled my determination to submit to the Genesis. Because the act of submitting to a major contest is a milestone for me.

Thanks to my crit group, I hunkered down, wrote, and got the feedback I needed to feel confident about my submission. I also sought feedback from a trusted author friend whose comments helped me put the icing on my written cake.

The chapter has been polished and I have whittled my story, still largely unwritten, down to a 1-page synopsis. I've got a few remaining questions about the contest that I'll seek answers to from one of the contest coordinators and then, it's clicking "Send" on the email submission.

After that, I'll be writing, writing, writing. What if I final or get a request from an agent or editor? I have to be ready. If I know anything about me, I know I do some of my best work when I have a hard deadline.

Finalists are notified in May; winners are announced at the September conference, to be held in Denver this year. No plans to go, but hey, plans can change!

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Featured Book: Breach of Trust by DiAnn Mills

High suspense--drive-by shootings, arson, attempted murder--combined with romance--small town librarian (or is she?) meets high school history teacher/football coach (or is he?)--with the faith element added in. That's how I'd describe Breach of Trust by DiAnn Mills. I eat lunch at my desk most days but I forced myself at least twice when I was reading this to get up and get out just so I could read further into this story. I think what I loved most was the way Ms. Mills continued to ramp up the romantic tension in parallel with the suspense.


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

Breach Of Trust

Tyndale House Publishers (February 5, 2009)

by

DiAnn Mills



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Award-winning author, DiAnn Mills, launched her career in 1998 with the publication of her first book. Currently she has over forty books in print and has sold more than a million copies.

DiAnn believes her readers should “Expect an Adventure.” DiAnn Mills is a fiction writer who combines an adventuresome spirit with unforgettable characters to create action-packed novels.

Six of her anthologies have appeared on the CBA Best Seller List. Three of her books have won the distinction of Best Historical of the Year by Heartsong Presents. Five of her books have won placements through American Christian Fiction Writer’s Book of the Year Awards 2003 – 2007, and she is the recipient of the Inspirational Reader’s Choice award for 2005 and 2007. She was a Christy Awards finalist in 2008.

DiAnn is a founding board member for American Christian Fiction Writers, a member of Inspirational Writers Alive, Romance Writers of America’s Faith, Hope and Love, and Advanced Writers and Speakers Association. She speaks to various groups and teaches writing workshops around the country. DiAnn is also a mentor for Jerry B. Jenkins Christian Writer’s Guild.

She lives in sunny Houston, Texas. DiAnn and her husband have four adult sons and are active members of Metropolitan Baptist Church.



ABOUT THE BOOK

Paige Rogers survived every CIA operative’s worst nightmare.

A covert mission gone terribly wrong.

A betrayal by the one man she thought she could trust.

Forced to disappear to protect the lives of her loved ones, Paige has spent the last several years building a quiet life as a small-town librarian. But the day a stranger comes to town and starts asking questions, Paige knows her careful existence has been shattered.

He is coming after her again. And this time, he intends to silence her for good...

Paige Rogers is a former CIA agent who lost all she treasured seven years ago when her entire team was killed in a covert mission. She blames their leader—Daniel Keary—whom Paige believes betrayed them. Disillusioned and afraid for her life, she disappeared and started a new life as a librarian in small town Split Creek, Oklahoma.

But her growing relationship with high school football coach Miles Laird and the political ambitions of her former boss threaten to unmask her. When Keary announces his candidacy for governor of her state, he comes after Paige to ensure that she won't ruin his bid for office by revealing his past misdeeds. He threatens everything she holds dear, and Paige must choose between the life of hiding that has become her refuge . . . or risking everything in one last, desperate attempt to right old wrongs.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Breach Of Trust, go HERE

Watch the Book Trailer:



Happy 4th Birthday to Littlest One! Mommy loves you.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Francis Ray on the Bestseller Lists

One of my all-time favorite authors, Francis Ray, cracked the USA Today Bestsellers List (#144 out of 150 fiction titles) and the NYT Bestsellers List (#32 out of 35 Mass Market Paperbacks).

Woo-hoo!

I'm very happy for her. I've got her latest title, Nobody But You right next to my bed. I think I'll grab that one next. It's the story of racecar driver, Cameron Dunlap, another of the Grayson friends.

Don't know the Graysons? Well, lucky for you, the very first story that began this family's saga was recently re-released. That book is Until There Was You. (The only Grayson book I haven't read yet but that one's as good as finished before Spring is over.)

If you love smart, romantic stories about a family--in this case, a family of brothers and one sister plus a matchmaking momma--that tug at the heartstrings, you'll enjoy the Graysons.

I did a three part interview with her on this blog back in 2007. You can read it via these links: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3. (Hey, just realized I haven't done any author interviews in a while. Gotta fix that.)

You can check over the full list on Amazon by clicking here. Or, go to your favorite online bookstore, neighborhood store...wherever you need to go to hook up with Ms. Ray and the Graysons.

Congratulations Ms. Ray!

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Reader/Writer Tidbits -- March 14, 2009

Not so much writing this week. I've been poring over feedback from my critique group as well as my online class, trying to shore up my submission for the ACFW Genesis contest. One thing that's at issue in this first chapter is the pacing. It's a bit too slow for an opening, although everyone seems to like the story and want to read more.

As I sat in a meeting this past week, I realized this first chapter was really my third or fourth chapter. Uh-oh! But not to worry. I've already got another chapter one in mind but since I've only begun to craft it, it won't be ready for the contest. I read somewhere that author James Scott Bell drafts his story then swaps chapter two for chapter one, and that usually works better for him. I'm thinking about that because the second chapter, rather than one long scene, has two shorter scenes and more action.

But I've got to work quickly. The contest deadline is March 31st. Entering the Genesis this year, for me, is as much about another step toward putting myself out there as it is about getting feedback and way more than it is about placing. So I will have an entry in the contest.

This past week was eBook Week, promoting the reading of eBooks. eBooks are here to stay, and I predict, will become a much bigger, and more accepted, part of the literary landscape. Like self-publishing, eBooks initially took a really bad rap. They were associated with low quality, unedited works, largely from writers who didn't invest the time and money to polish and produce good product and from newly minted publishers looking to take advantage of the technology to make quick bucks. Much of that has changed. So if you're still of the old mindset, or you think you'd just hate reading a book online, take a chance and read an eBook this week. I was going to list sites with free eBook offerings but I found too many so do a quick search and I'm sure you'll turn up a few.

The next time I hear someone complain or worry about criticism of their writing--or, I slip myself--I hope to remember a Scripture that came to my inbox the other day. Proverbs 13:18, in the New Living Translation, says, "If you ignore criticism, you will end in poverty and disgrace; if you accept criticism, you will be honored."

And because we're heading into the NCAA's March Madness but this blog is about literary things, let's combine books with basketball. The Word Bookstore in Brooklyn, NY has begun a basketball league for writers. Read more here.

Last, I came across a blog post about another blog post. That latter one was about racism in publishing. Now before you groan, it was not a rant. It was an invitation to a productive discussion and a challenge to think outside the box relative to your reading habits, if you're a reader, or your work habits/decision making processes, if you're in the publishing industry. You can find that post here. Be sure to read the comments.

It's the end of Conference Week in the NCAA. Our local USF Bulls bowed out of the Big East tournament on Tuesday with a loss to Seton Hall. The SEC tournament is underway here in Tampa, and we're probably going to take in a few games since Hubby used to play for LSU. Geaux Tigers!

Enjoy the weekend, everyone.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The End of Book Advances?

I've updated my left sidebar to include links to recent book reviews I've written. I've updated my right sidebar to include my latest wip with its current status. I'd love to finish a first draft of both of these books before year end.

----------------------------

I read an intriguing post over on the Guide to Literary Agents site yesterday.

Seems, as publishers thrash about for ways to stay afloat, one cost up for grabs is the author's advance.

A book advance is just that, advance monies against future royalties. Let's say you work a 9-5 job and your boss paid you now what you would normally get through June for revenues yet to be realized from your work. That's what a book advance amounts to.

Of course, most, if not all, authors want advances. First, they are money in the pocket for the hard work of having completed the ms in the first place to be used for living expenses, book promotion, etc. Second, they are "free" money, in that they don't have to be paid back if the book doesn't earn out its advance. (Oh, you'll pay eventually, all right, probably on your next contract if you get one. You just don't have to write a refund check to the publisher.) Third, the size of the advance says something--I'll let others conjecture as to what exactly--about your perceived stature in the publishing industry, or at least about what the publisher believes, if the book-buying public cooperates, you'll be able to earn for the publishing company.

But think about it. Rather than authors simply taking less or waiting forever for royalties, why not combine the two proposals Chuck mentions? Pay lower advances upfront. How much lower would vary by publisher but overall they'd be lower enough to significantly reduce publishing company outlays and risk. But why stop there? Why not also give the authors a bigger stake of the back end, i.e. royalties for sales? Authors are doing more of their own marketing and promotion anyway. Who wouldn't want to be rewarded for a job well done, as evidenced by increased sales?

Authors with a strong history of sales will do well in this model, once they adjust for not having their monies upfront. This, of course, might increase the pressure on the author for marketing and promotion, as well as pressure to turn out more books faster.

Yet it makes some sense to me. A lot of e-book publishers and smaller independent companies are run this way.

Maybe it's time for the big boys to tweak their business model. Pay attention, authors. Change is coming/here!

Would you prefer a lower advance in exchange for higher royalties? What other ideas for author compensation might you suggest?

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Reader/Writer Tidbits -- March 7, 2009

Attending the Strawberry Festival this weekend with the family. Doing some writing. Finish a good suspense novel. Maybe doing a little spring cleaning.

I've crossed the 10,000 word mark on my wip. Based on some very encouraging feedback I've received, I uncovered a possible theme I didn't see. Opens up the possibilities as to plot and scenes so I'm excited about that.

I'm resubmitting the first chapter, now in it's 3rd version, to my crit group on Monday. I'll use that feedback to shore it up and get those first 15 pages (plus one page synopsis) ready for submission to the ACFW Genesis contest. I'm going to try storyboarding my plot, per a format that Chicki provided. I've sketched a couple of scenes out that came to me but may work for a later part of the story. Meanwhile, I'll keep moving forward with my story. Finishing the first draft is the most important thing.

Here're this week's tidbits:

A new inspirational romance publisher is open for business. White Rose Publishing, an offshoot of The Wild Rose Press, was launched on March 1st and is accepting submissions. As some authors and readers were offended by the sometimes more racy offerings on the main website, a separate publishing entity and website were created for the inspirational line. The new editor is Nicke Martinez. Queries should be sent to queryus@whiterosepublishing.com.

Ever wish you could have a story in multiple formats without having to pay more than once? Well, now you can. Thomas Nelson introduces NelsonFree. Read this blog post by Mike Hyatt, President & CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers, for more info.

Barnes & Noble just purchased Fictionwise, the largest e-book seller, and is planning an e-bookstore. More here.

It's going to be 80 and sunny here in central FL this weekend. Hope everyone enjoys the weekend wherever you are.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Thursday, March 05, 2009

Why Didn't You Finish The Book?

I'm taking an online writing course. The first question the course instructor has posed to the group has to do with reading: What was the last book we put down unfinished and why?

My answer was easy because, although this is a rare circumstance for me, it wasn't long ago. The book didn't satisfy me because I thought it was too long for the story being told. The story would have been more interesting at 100 fewer pages...and a lot less whining.

I realize I've put down two other books recently, in part because I've decided that I'd rather spend my time writing rather than reading books I just don't enjoy. That was an "a-ha" moment from the last year. The reasons for these two "put-downs" were that I didn't like the voice in one and the other was more sexually explicit than I thought interesting or necessary for the story, especially since it was a YA book.

From the responses, there were lots of the usual reasons you'd expect: cliched, too much head-hopping, unbelievable characters, absence of or unbelievable plot.

But here are some of the more interesting ones:
  • The villain's name was a word spelled backwards
  • Questionable assertions about history
  • Enjoyed first series with characters but 2nd series, although same characters, trailed off
  • Prose was elementary
  • Continuous flow of books from author has begun yielding lots of books that are all pretty much the same
  • Obvious little research by author
  • Writing was too technically correct to be inspiring or interesting
This, remember, comes from a bunch of writers, who because of their knowledge of storytelling are a picky bunch of readers. It's a downside of being in the business.

Why did you put down the last book you decided not to finish?

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Writing An Ensemble Piece

I'm writing more so I'll talk more about my writing. Getting in a crit group will make that happen.

What was three itty-bitty chapters has now become one solid chapter. I've gone over it a few times to add in some stuff, take out some stuff, and make the stuff that remains more clear.

But I haven't stopped there. I now have two more chapters and I'm working on chapter four.

This is an ensemble piece with four main characters but what I've discovered is that one of the characters, the one that came to mind first, is really the main character. It's primarily her story.

I learned that lesson when critiquing for my friend, Chicki, last year. She's got a great manuscript about four friends, which we critiqued chapter by chapter but as the story progressed, it became clear one character stood out more than the others. It became her story.

If you think about most ensemble pieces, this is always true. Savannah was the narrator in Waiting to Exhale as well as one of the four friends. Because she had that extra role, it was her story (although I always thought Bernadette's story was much more compelling).

If you watch ER, which is wrapping up it's final season, over the years, there has always been one character who stood out for a period of time. Dr. Ross was one of the early ones. Then Drs. Benton, Lewis, Greene, Carter and others each took a spin. All the while, it remained an ensemble with multiple story lines. Yet at any given time, only one story/character took center stage.

I think there are two ways I can go with this. One, the subplots will all tie into the main story in some way or two, the subplots will each standalone with an overarching shared theme. I envision my story the first way but who knows? With a little over 8300 words and the barest of outlines, it's hard to say.

I'll need to outline soon in order to keep the story moving forward but the trick will be keeping all the characters and subplots straight while writing. Any tips?

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Your Blog Is Fabulous Award


Yep, I won one of these. Fabulous?! I'm humbled.

Rules: Tell you 5 things I'm addicted to and bestow the award on five other bloggers.

My 5 addictions:
Books -- Is there such a thing as Reader-holics Anonymous?

Hugs and kisses from my boys...and Hubby, of course!

Potato chips, which are bad for me and I try very desperately to avoid

Peanut butter, which, in reasonable quantities and if it's the right brand, is good for me and that's how I justify consuming it almost daily

What if I'm realizing I have more than 5 addictions??? Okay, okay...

Reality TV -- I can watch reality shows all day. The interior home design or house-hunting ones, not the exterior yard design ones. The "follow your dream" ones, like Top Chef, not the sell-your-dignity ones like The Bachelor. Cooking contests, like Iron Chef America or Challenge. Positive, family-oriented ones like Run's House. Certainly nothing involving Flavor Flav, Ray J, or any real life desperate housewives.

And so I pass on this award to the following bloggers:

Me, My Muse, and I -- Author Jennifer Shirk finds the weirdest news stories, shares yummy recipes, and gives the same energy to exercising as to writing, inspiring me in both areas

The Seekers -- I think I gave them a blog award before but I continue to be inspired and encouraged but this wonderful group of writing ladies seeking publication. And if, after they've all left the Seeker Island, there's an opportunity to repopulate it, I'm game.

The Brown Bookshelf -- You may have no idea how difficult it is to find books that feature African-American faces for children and young adults. If you too struggle with this for your children, look no further than this blog.

My Book Therapy -- Two multi-published authors spend a year teaching the craft of writing online for free. Then, knowing that some of us need a little extra, they put their lessons into practice and begin writing an entire novel online (with the help of their loyal followers), while providing step by step instructions. If you're a new writer, one struggling with completing the book or one needing help to make your work shine, this is the blog for you. (You'll get a lot out of it even if you don't join the Ning group.)

Writer's First Aid -- Author Kristi Holl takes the blinders of the writing process, and comes clean in ways that few authors do about the challenges of being writer. Somehow, in the midst of it all, she finds a way to be encouraging, and even offer a kick in the rear from time to time. (I think Chicki turned me on to this one.)

Okay, I'm done.

Thanks so much for this award, Vicki Lane. Vicki pointed me in the right direction to convert from two columns to three on this blog, something I've been wanting to do for a while, even if I don't have much of a plan for that other column yet. (You'll be hearing more about Vicki soon. She's been working on edits for her first contracted novel!)

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Featured Book: The List by Sherri Lewis

I have this book but I refuse to read it because the premise is eerily similar to the story I worked on all of last year (before I heard about this book). And I just know I would love it because Sherri is one of new favorites but I'm funny that way. I will finish my story, if only to bury it beneath my bed, before I read this book. I've got an Ann Christopher I just know I'll enjoy on the top shelf of my closet for the same reason. There's nothing new under the sun so maybe I'd better start writing faster.

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


The List

Urban Books (February 24, 2009)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:





Dr. Sherri Lewis is an MD, author, ordained minister and conference speaker. She is the staff physician at a Georgia Department of Corrections’ women’s prison. She lives in Atlanta, GA.

Visit the author's website.



Product Details:

List Price: $14.95
Paperback: 300 pages
Publisher: Urban Books (February 24, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1601629826
ISBN-13: 978-1601629821

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Tick, tock, tick, tock…

There it was. The sound that had been growing louder and louder in my brain – until now, it was no longer background noise. Groaning, I rolled over in bed and pulled a pillow over my face. I peeked out and cast an annoyed glance at my nightstand clock, but it was digital, so it couldn’t be blamed for the relentless ticking in my head. No, it was my own internal clock – the proverbial biological one. And now there was an alarm to go with it. An alarm with no snooze button to make it stop. The AMA alarm. Today was my thirty-fifth birthday and I was officially AMA – advanced maternal age. The age at which my eggs, encased in my ovaries since birth, started to get old and decrepit. If by some magic I were to meet Mr. Perfect tomorrow and we fell overwhelmingly in love and got married within the next six months, then got pregnant right away, I would still be considered a high-risk pregnancy just because of my age.

I sat up on the edge of the bed and stretched my arms upward, resolving that today, I would celebrate my life with thanksgiving, hope, and faith.

Hey, God. Thanks for waking me up healthy, beautiful and strong this morning. Thanks that I turned thirty-five today…

And then, for no apparent reason, I burst into tears. Sobs actually. I rolled onto the floor and curled into a fetal position, crying like someone had died.

I guess someone had. The thirty-five year old woman I had dreamed I would be when I was a little girl. Married to a gorgeous, black Ken look-a-alike – plastic smile and all – with two beautiful children living in a castle on the hill with two ponies in our stable and a thriving career as a firewoman or a ballerina.

Okay, so I was seven.

But still. I didn’t expect to be thirty-five, single and childless. I was supposed to wake up to breakfast in bed cooked by my wonderfully loving husband and two beautiful daughters – all bouncy, bubbly and giggly. They were supposed to burst into the room and scream, “Happy Birthday, Mommy” and cover me with little girl kisses. My husband was supposed to kiss my cheek, say “Happy Birthday, Dear” and give me a knowing look that said as soon as the girls got off to school, he was going to really wish me Happy Birthday.

But instead, I was all alone in my king-sized bed. Well, actually on the floor next to it. I grabbed a pillow, then pulled the comforter off the bed and snuggled underneath it. I could see God looking down from heaven shaking His head. He’d elbow Jesus who would roll His eyes. They’d both look at the Holy Spirit as if to say, “Please, go help our pitiful child.”

I imagined the Holy Spirit swiftly coming to my rescue. He’d come and get under the comforter with me and hold me in His arms, promising to love me until my earthly husband came along.

“God, for the millionth time – why can’t You take it away? Just make me completely satisfied with You and You alone. If You’re not going to fulfill it, then take away my desire for a husband and kids.” I yelled at Him from under the comforter. I imagined the Holy Spirit hugging me tighter. I appreciated the fact that He wasn’t moved by my angry outburst. He loved me no matter what.

I relaxed in His arms. Imagined myself snuggling into His chest and instantly felt better. “God, why can’t You send me a husband just like You? Send me You wrapped up in chocolate.” How awesome that would be. To be married to a guy like God.

I must have fallen back asleep in His arms, because when the phone rang and I looked at the clock, it was two hours later. I wasn’t in the mood for the onslaught of phone calls from people wishing me happiness for my birthday. I should have gone out of town like I originally planned. Instead, I had let my friends talk me into a “Girls’ Day” – some big surprise they had planned. Much as I loved them, I wasn’t in the mood for surprises.

All I wanted to do for my birthday was be alone with God.

The phone rang again and I ignored it. I thought about getting up to do a quick half-hour Taebo tape. Maybe some kicking and punching would get rid of some of my frustrations. Billy Blanks had become my best friend in the year right after my divorce. There was just something about being violent and calling it exercise. I had joined a gym with a big punching bag that I pretended on a regular was my ex and his mistress. I got a reputation at the gym as the girl no one wanted to spar with and would never want to meet in a dark alley.

My stupid ex. This was all his fault. My marriage should have never ended. After eleven years he decided that twenty-one was too young to have gotten married and that he needed to see what else was “out there”…

Fresh tears flowed down my face. What in the world?

Was I really crying over my ex? Really? My divorce was final almost three years ago. I hadn’t cried over him, or even thought much about him in the past two years. Had to check the calendar when I got up off the floor. This had to be my hormones.

I guess it wasn’t my ex I was crying over. It was the fact that the marriage hadn’t worked. That I was thirty-five, divorced, childless, and oh yeah, hormonal.

My cell phone chimed to indicate that I had gotten a text message. I picked it up and looked at the screen.

Get up off the floor. Dry your eyes. Get dressed and get ready to be celebrated. I promise the day will get better, but you have to get up first. Happy Birthday. Please, girl – get over it. Thirty-five is not that old! Love you!!!

I had to laugh. My girl, Vanessa. I decided to take her word for it. Maybe the day would get better if I just picked myself up off the floor.

***

I pulled up at Vanessa’s house an hour later – fresh faced and comfortably dressed as I had been instructed. As I got out of my car, I took authority over my hormones as I did every month. I could overcome in most battles in my life, but once a month, the day before my cycle started, I wound up crying endlessly and reacting irrationally to the dumbest things. Amazing that a strong, successful woman – producer at the nation’s newest up-and-coming black television station – and experienced spiritual warrior could be reduced to such ridiculousness by some estrogen. Please, God. Not today.

Vanessa must have been watching for me, because before I got out of my car, she threw open the door and held her arms out wide, walking toward me. It was rare that her petite frame was casually dressed in jeans and a simple blouse. She was one of those elegant suit ladies who wore shimmery stockings and 4-inch heels with the perfect short, sassy haircut. In spite of her casual attire, her make-up was flawlessly done as if she was about to do a photo shoot. Wearing her signature brilliant smile, she sang out, “Happy Birthday, Michelle!”

She looked so happy to see me and her eyes were so filled with love that I burst into tears. A look of horror flashed across her face. “Oh no!” She shook her head slowly in disbelief. “Hormone day on your birthday? What was God thinking?”

I laughed a little. She took me into her arms and held me for a few minutes. Her comforting voice spoke directly in my ear. “Oh, Father, help us today. We take authority over estrogen gone awry.”

I laughed a little more.

She broke our embrace and grabbed me by the shoulders. “Fix your face, girl, and snap out of it. It’s your birthday brunch.” She rubbed my arm and smiled. “Actually you know what? It’s your party and you can cry if you want to.” I laughed more and sniffled.

I wiped my eyes as she led me into the house. Vanessa was my shero. She had kept me alive and sane during my separation and divorce. She was the ministerial counselor at our church. Through our sessions, I decided that not only did I want to live, but that life could be good after divorce. Not too long after she released me from therapy, her husband died tragically in a car accident. I could only hope I was half the friend to her then that she had been to me. Our losses and our relationship with God had bonded us together into one of the best friendships I’d ever had.

Vanessa’s house was immaculate as always. I was amazed that a single mother of two teenagers, full-time counselor and minister could keep her five-bedroom house perfectly clean without a housekeeper. I, however – single with no kids – couldn’t seem to keep my townhouse straight to save my life.

As we entered her two-story foyer, I looked above the winding spiral staircase and saw a huge banner reading “35th Annual Michelle Bradford Celebration Day”. Simultaneously, I heard several voices cry out, “Happy Birthday, ‘Chelle!”

At the foot of the steps stood my girlfriends, Nicole, Lisa, and Angela. I burst into tears again. Lisa and Angela ran over to hug me.

Nicole stared at me. “Are you serious?” She looked over at Vanessa who winced and nodded. Nicole picked up her purse. “I’m out. You know I can’t stand her when she’s like this.” She got halfway to the front door before Vanessa grabbed her.

“Stop playing, Nicole.” Vanessa put her hands on her hips.

“Who’s playing? I can’t stand being around her snotting and crying because a butterfly splattered on her windshield or Revlon discontinued her favorite lipstick color. Naw, I’m out. I’ll meet you guys for the big celebration later.” Nicole turned toward the door again.

“Nicole.” Vanessa put on her mother voice and evil eye that always snapped her kids into perfect obedience.

Apparently it worked on Nicole too, because she took her purse off her shoulder and came over to hug me. “Happy Birthday, Michelle. You know I love you like a sister, but dang – can’t you take the pills for this? I know God is a healer, but for real though, until your manifestation comes, you need some earthly medicine. ”

“Nicole.” Vanessa said it like Nicole had one more time before she got sent to her room for a time-out. Lisa and Angela disappeared into Vanessa’s massive gourmet kitchen.

I had to laugh. It was funny to hear Nicole using spiritual lingo. She had just gotten saved two years ago and was still a little awkward when it came to using spiritual terms.

She gave me a big hug, which set off a new flood of tears. “Dang, girl.” Nicole called into the kitchen. “Can y’all see if Vanessa has some olive oil or something? Shoot, some Crisco will do.” She looked at Vanessa. “Can’t you lay hands on her and cast out this estrogen demon so we can all enjoy our day?”

That sent me into a fit of uncontrollable giggles. When I laughed really hard, I couldn’t stop myself from snorting. Snorting the snot from crying made me cough until I could hardly breathe. Vanessa pounded me on the back.

Nicole stared at me and let out an exasperated sigh. “What a crackhead.” She disappeared into the kitchen to help Angela and Lisa with whatever they were doing.

I was glad Vanessa had only invited my closest sister circle for brunch. At least they all understood my condition. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder was what my doctor called it. Insanity was what my friends called it. Hell on earth was what I called it. Fortunately, it usually only lasted a day in my case. I hoped it would pass before the big celebration later Nicole had mentioned.

Vanessa led me to the breakfast room table and sat me down. Angela, Lisa, and Nicole emerged from the kitchen a few minutes later, each carrying a tray. Vanessa fastened a tiara onto my afro, wavy from being let loose from two-stranded twists. “Today, we’re celebrating you with your favorite things. Sit back, relax and enjoy.”

I looked down at the trays my girls had brought from the kitchen. There were finger sandwiches – peanut butter, honey and bananas on wheat bread – chocolate covered strawberries, mango slices, crab cakes, jerk chicken wings with rice and peas, fried plantains, and ginger beer to wash it all down with. I clapped my hands and laughed. “All my favorites. Kind of weird together, but still. It’s so nice to be loved and for you guys to know what I love.” I looked up to see everyone holding their breath, as if they were afraid I was going to cry. “Loosen up, guys.” I smiled. “This brunch is perfect.”

I frowned at two capsules filled with greenish stuff on the side of my plate. Vanessa answered before I could ask. “It’s St. John’s Wort. The herb I told you about. I picked up some at the health food store.”

I stared at the pills.

Nicole put a hand on her hip. “God gave us plants for natural cures so it’s not like you’re not having faith for healing.” She picked up the pills and shoved them at me. “Look, we’re the ones that have to spend the whole day with you. The least you could do is try them.”

Angela tsked at Nicole. “Girl, stop being evil. You’ll only make it worse.”

Lisa chimed in, “Yeah, Nicole. At least she can blame emotional craziness on hormones and it only happens once a month. What’s your excuse?”

Nicole shot Lisa an evil stare.

I obediently swallowed the pills, ignoring the organic taste in my mouth.

We filled our plates with my special treats. Everybody was silent for a few minutes as we started eating.

Lisa finally spoke. “So, Michelle, you’re thirty-five today. How does it feel –”

She stopped talking when Angela elbowed her in the side and shook her head. Everybody kept eating.

After a few minutes, Vanessa said, “Michelle, we want you to know that…” her voice trailed off.

Nicole rolled her eyes. “This is ridiculous. We’re all afraid to talk because we don’t want her to cry? I tell you what. Michelle, talk about what’s bothering you – what we know you cried about when you woke up and in the car on the way over here. Let’s get it out in the open and deal with it so we won’t be dancing on eggshells all day. This is supposed to be a celebration. Sheesh…”

Everyone stiffened a little and looked at me.

I stared past Angela and Lisa out Vanessa’s breakfast room bay window at the lake behind her house. The water moved slowly with the sun reflecting off it, creating a tranquil glow.

“Well…” I nibbled on a chocolate strawberry. The bitter sweetness of the dark chocolate blended with the natural sweetness of the strawberry. “I woke up alone this morning. No husband. No babies. And I’m thirty-five. This wasn’t the life I dreamed of. But I have no choice but to accept it.”

I took a bite of mango. Its tropical, tangy sweetness contrasted sharply with the strawberry-chocolate combi-nation. I wondered if being hormonal made my taste buds more sensitive. I watched everyone waiting for the tears as I continued sampling the fruit. I was more surprised than they were when no tears came.

I decided to continue. “I’ve asked God countless times to send my husband, but I guess He’s not listening. Or maybe He doesn’t think I’m ready. I’ve done therapy. I’ve healed and forgiven and realized my mistakes. I think my heart is ready to love again. But I guess He doesn’t.”

I stopped for a minute to listen to the wind chimes tinkling outside the breakfast room door. It was a breezy, spring day and I could imagine how sweet the wind would feel kissing my cheeks. I almost wanted to move the party onto the patio but didn’t want to upset Nicole’s allergies. Her sneezing and snotting, and my crying and snotting would make for a very bad day.

“It’s pure torture. Wanting something you can’t have. Craving something, needing something and it not being there. I’m tired of begging. I want to not want it anymore. Just focus on my career, my friends, and chasing after God and let that be enough.”

Angela and Vanessa nodded. Lisa shook her head like she couldn’t get with me on that.

Nicole reached over and took my hand. “See? That wasn’t so bad. If that’s the worst, we can talk about anything now.”

I smiled. “Yeah. Thanks, Nicki. You can be pretty all right when you want to be.”

Everyone let out a collective sigh of relief, myself included. Maybe today could be a good day after all. Nicole squeezed my hand. As much as she could be evil and blunt, she was full of love – that ride or die chick a sistah always wanted around to have her back. I looked around the table and appreciated God for my friends. Maybe I didn’t have a man, but I had some beautiful, strong women in my life that loved me. For now, that would have to be enough.

I looked out the window at the lake again. There was a long-necked duck with her babies trailing behind her on the water. “Look! Baby ducks.” I pointed and everyone turned to look out the window. “They’re so cute.”

And with that, I burst into tears.

Nicole dropped my hand and shook her head in disgust. “Crackhead…” she muttered as she disappeared into the kitchen.

Vanessa passed me a napkin and I wiped my eyes and blew my nose.

“Oh well, it was nice while it lasted.” Lisa got up and followed Nicole into the kitchen. They both came back a few moments later – Nicole carrying champagne and orange juice, Lisa carrying Vanessa’s crystal flutes.

Nicole set the bottles down on the table. “I’m not sure how smart it is to mix alcohol, herbs, and hormones, but it can’t get much worse than crying over baby ducks.”

Lisa cut her eyes at Nicole. “You were the one that wanted her to talk.”

Nicole answered, “How was I supposed to know there would be ducks on the lake?”

Lisa said, “All we had to do was –”

“Ladies!” Vanessa interrupted. “Chill.” Vanessa opened the orange juice and began filling the flutes. “Honestly, I think Nicole had a good idea.”

Nicole crossed her eyes and stuck out her tongue at Lisa like she was five years old.

“In fact…” Vanessa topped off the glasses with a small splash of champagne. None of us were drinkers, but we always had a drop or two of champagne when we celebrated. I guess it made us feel grown, even though we always ended up throwing away almost a full bottle of the expensive stuff. “…I think it’s a perfect idea for a birthday celebration. Instead of going to the spa, shopping, and eating cake, every woman’s birthday party should be a look at her life.”

Nicole muttered, “Oh boy, here goes the latest Vanessa psychobabbleology. Just when I thought this party couldn’t get any worse.”

Vanessa ignored her. “Yeah. That’s exactly what it should be.” Vanessa stared into space as she pushed the cork back into the champagne bottle.

“What?” Nicole tapped her fingers on the table.

“Shh, she’s thinking.” Lisa smacked Nicole’s arm.

Vanessa handed each of us a mimosa glass and sat back down in her seat, the wheels in her brain ticking. “For a woman’s birthday celebration, she should be surrounded by her sister-circle in a safe, loving environment. She should look at her past and see where she made it and where she missed it. Look at her present and see where she is and where she wants to be, and look at her future and if she’s doing the right things to get there.” Vanessa nodded and smiled to herself. “Then her friends should celebrate her by telling her wonderful things about her, giving her affirmations, blessings and prayers to press her toward her future.”

Angela and Lisa nodded. “I like it.” Lisa said. She turned to Nicole.

Nicole shrugged. “Y’all know I don’t like all that touchy-feely, psychobabble stuff.”

Lisa rolled her eyes. “Lord, Nicole, can’t you get over yourself and help us celebrate Michelle’s birthday?”

“I didn’t say I wouldn’t do it. I’m just saying…” She pursed her lips together and glared at Lisa.

“Okay, then.” Vanessa glared at both of them like they were about to get a beating. “Since Michelle has identified what’s bothering her the most, let’s focus on that. If there are other areas you come up with, we’ll deal with that, too. We’ll break away for an hour or two and everybody take some paper and write something special for Michelle. Michelle – like I said, take an honest look at past, present, and future and whatever else you need to get out, and then we’ll reconvene. Pick your favorite spot – out by the lake, in the sunroom, by the fireplace, wherever you can get comfortable. Okay?”

“But I don’t want to spoil whatever you guys already had planned for me just because I woke up hormonal and lonely,” I said.

Nicole sucked her teeth. “Please, girl. We had planned to watch all your favorite movies. Love and Basketball, Love Jones, Brown Sugar...” She looked around the room. “There’s not enough tissue in the house for that. Even though it’s warm and fuzzy, touchy-feely, this is way better than you snotting and crying all day over a bunch of movies. And we still have your surprise for tonight.” She looked at Vanessa with a nod of approval. “It’s actually a good idea.” She frowned. “Just don’t expect to be psychoanalyzing me for my birthday.”

Vanessa laughed. “I wouldn’t dream of it. I don’t think my years of training or experience have in any way prepared me for that.”

Nicole’s eyes widened with obvious surprise at Vanessa’s dig.

Lisa laughed. “Good one, V.”

“Whatever.” Nicole lifted her champagne flute and indicated for us all to do the same. “To Michelle and celebrating her life. The good, the bad, and the ugly.”

“Nicole!” Lisa, Angela, and Vanessa said in unison.

Nicole looked around at everyone and shrugged her shoulders. “What?” She lifted her glass again. “For real though, we love you, girl. I haven’t known God long, but what I do know is that He’s good. And faithful. And you’re a beautiful example of Him living and breathing on earth. And no matter what, man or no man, your future will be bright and beautiful. I’m looking forward to being a part of it.” She looked around the table. “Is that better?”

Everybody laughed and lifted their glasses. “To Michelle.”

And, of course, I burst into tears.




Peace & Blessings,
Patricia
Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.

Peace & Blessings,
Patricia

Stay focused. Be deliberate. Believe.