Category Archives: Book Talk

Defining Moments By Jacquelin Thomas

Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: NAL Hardcover (April 4, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0451217756

Book Description – from Amazon.com
From the Essence bestselling author of The Prodigal Husband comes an inspiring novel about one woman’s spiritual journey to overcome the mistakes of her past-and face the truths of an inescapable future. A year ago, successful career woman Sheila Moore left her home on the South Carolina coast to escape the pain of loving a man who would never love her back-her married business partner, Jake. Now Sheila has returned to Charleston and the past, into the guarded lives of Jake and his suspicious wife, Tori, and into an unexpected journey to find peace, joy, and love.

This was a good cozy read to enjoy on a nice day. I was familiar with Sheila from the novel, The Prodigal Husband.

Her relationship with the co-owner of her company, Jake, caused a disastrous rift in Jake’s marriage, a rift that was eventually healed. Sheila is bitter because of the amount of hard knocks she had to endure in life. She’s always felt like an ugly person, a person whom God does not love. Nicolas encourages her to read her Bible and to accept God’s love, however, Sheila has a hard time doing this because she is now facing a major battle in her life: multiple sclerosis (MS).

Since she is now suffering from MS, she needs to rely on others to help care for herself. She also finds the need to forgive others in her life whom she felt have done her wrong. She nurses hatred in her heart for her father, who abandoned both Sheila and her mother when Sheila was five. She’s upset with her mother for raising her in a poor neighborhood, while speaking a dialect that brings Sheila much shame.

Since this is an inspirational novel, you can probably guess how it ends.

This book reminds me of another Jacquelin Thomas novel entitled A Change Is Gonna Come:

The reason why Defining Moments reminds me of A Change Is Gonna Come is because of the illness battle. One of the characters suffers a stroke in this novel, and she has to lean on her faith in order to see her through her ordeal.

Defining Moments also reminds me of an old Heartsong Presents title by Kristin Billerbeck entitled To Truly See:

The reason why Defining Moments reminds me of To Truly See is because of the MS battle. Like Sheila in Defining Moments, the main character (can’t recall her name) in To Truly See is unsaved in the beginning. She’s forced to learn to lean on others when she’s diagnosed with MS, and must rely on a wheelchair for her mobility. She must learn to accept God’s grace and learn to lean on Him.

Cecelia Dowdy

2007 ACFW Book Of The Year Finalists

Here are the ACFW 2007 Book Of The Year Finalists. The winner will be announced at the awards banquet this coming Saturday, September 22nd.

I will try and post a blog entry with the winners after the banquet is over, however, I might not post the winners until the following week. The winners are also listed on the ACFW website:

2007 BOTY Finalists

Contemporary Novella

A Recipe for Romance by Vickie McDonough
Diamond Place by Robin Lee Hatcher
Dreams of Home by Kathleen Miller Y’Barbo
Home for the Holidays by Christine Lynxwiler
Tea for Two by Carrie Turansky
A Carol for Christmas by Robin Lee Hatcher

GENERAL FICTION/SFF/YA

The Encore by Sarah Anne Sumpolec
Through Every Storm by Sharlene MacLaren
A Bigger Life by Annette Smith
Feather by Susan Page Davis
DragonKight by Donita K. Paul

HISTORICAL NOVELLA

Reuben’s Atonement by Lynette Sowell
A Gamble on Love by Tamela Hancock Murray
To Do Justice by Cathy Marie Hake
Joie de Vivre by Lynette Sowell
I Saw Three Ships by Pamela Griffin

LITS

Front Porch Princess by Kathryn Springer
At Home for the Holidays by Meredith Efken
The Secret Life of Becky Miller by Sharon Hinck
RV There Yet by Diann Hunt
Hot Tropics and Cold Feet by Diann Hunt

LONG HISTORICAL

Leather and Lace by Diann Mills
The Measure of a Lady by Deeanne Gist
Waiting for Summer’s Return by Kim Vogel Sawyer
Son of Perdition by Louise M. Gouge
William Henry is a Fine Name by Cathy Gohlke

SHORT CONTEMPORARY SUSPENSE

Season of Secrets by Marta Perry
Hearts on the Line by Margaret Daley
Stormcatcher by Colleen Rhoads (Coble)
Strictly Confidential by Terri Reed
On Wings of Deliverance by Beth White

SHORT CONTEMPORARY

No Place Like Home by Debra Clopton
A Season for Grace by Linda Goodnight
That Wilder Boy by Kim Vogel Sawyer
Christmas Homecoming by Lenora Worth
My So-Called Love Life by Allie Pleiter

SHORT HISTORICAL

A Bridge across the Sea by Pamela Griffin
Spoke of Love by Cathy Marie Hake
The Prisoner’s Wife by Susan Page Davis
A Daughter’s Quest by Lena Nelson Dooley
Bayou Dreams by Kathleen Miller Y’Barbo
Spinning out of Control by Vickie McDonough

SUSPENSE

Fire Dancer by Colleen Coble
Alaska Twilight by Colleen Coble
Widows and Orphans by Susan Meissner
Dangerous Depths by Colleen Coble
Hazardous Duty by Christy Barritt

WOMEN’S FICTION

Coldwater Revival by Nancy Jo Jenkins
Wishing on Dandelions by Mary DeMuth
Watching the Tree Limbs by Mary DeMuth
The Fragrance of Roses by Nikki Arana
Promise Me Always by Christine Lynxwiler
Reclaiming Nick by Susan May Warren

CONGRATULATIONS FINALISTS!

Cecelia Dowdy

Sandy Cove Christian Writers Conference 9/30/07-10/3/07

I’ve never attended this conference, however, I’ve heard nothing but good things about it. North East, Maryland is my hometown, and I recall some of my high school buddies would work at Sandy Cove during Christian conferences and retreats to make extra money.

I am also acquainted with some of the people on the staff, and they’ve told me how much they enjoy working as faculty at the Sandy Cove conference each year.

If anyone goes, I’d also recommend a side trip into downtown North East. I’m using the term of downtown extremely lightly. The town is a main street with a few side streets, but since I left this town, when I went away to college, it has grown a bit. They’ve added a lot of quaint, interesting shops, and I understand that North East is now appealing to tourists.

Cecelia Dowdy

Heaven Sent By Jillian Hart

Heaven Sent By Jillian Hart
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN: 0373871503
Pub. Date: July 2001
Series: Steeple Hill Love Inspired Series

I’ve decided when I talk about the books I’ve read on my blog, that I’d provide a handy link to the author’s website. I just started doing this recently, however, from my limited searching on the internet, I could not find a website for this author.

This book has been on my shelf for a long time, and I’m not sure when or where I purchased it. It’s a Love Inspired title released back in 2001, and I couldn’t find a good cover image to upload from Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

When Hope Ashton’s grandmother is injured, she rushes from Italy to her small Montana hometown to help care for her. Hope is a renowned photographer who comes from a privileged background. She’s had some negative experiences in high school with Matthew Sheridan. When Hope returns to Montana, Matthew becomes her knight in shining armour when he rescues her from her broken down car in the rain.

She has experienced a lot of pain and heartache in her lifetime, and she has medical problems that are caused by her constant relationship worries. Hope feels that the Lord is telling her to remain single. Her parents had an unhappy marriage, filled with lots of pain and arguments, and she’s suffered through a broken engagement. She doesn’t feel she should trust her heart to anyone, not even hot and sexy Matthew Sheridan.

Matthew has been through some pains of his own. He’s raising toddler triplet boys alone (what a job!) and his wife died two years ago. He’s still grieving, and is unsure about the new feelings he has for Hope Ashton. His love grows as he finds his triplets becoming attached to Hope, and he finally can see that maybe she would make a good mother to his boys, and a loving wife for him.

I thought this as a sweet book, and I felt the author did a good job with using words to appeal to the senses. She describes the scenery very well, making me want to hop on a plane and ride down to Montana!

Cecelia Dowdy

Meet My Sister Tess By Kristin Billerbeck

Meet My Sister Tess by Kristin Billerbeck
H S #329
Publisher: Heartsong Presents/Barbour

ISBN: 9781577485544

Binding: Mass Market

From Heartsong Presents website:
Clark is everything Tess Ellison thinks she wants in a husband. He is stable, a good provider, the kind of man who can allow Tess to fulfill her mother’s dying wish: that her mentally-handicapped brother, Robby, will never be put into an institution. Robby loves to introduce his sister to every new person he meets, including Greg Wheaton, the new social worker in town. It is obvious that Robby is encouraging Tess and Greg to become friends. Soon Tess is forced to admit a marriage of amiable partenership may not be for her. Can she trust God to keep her mother’s dying wish and give her the man she loves?

I thought this book was a cute enjoyable read. I felt that the depiction of Robby was extremely realistic, and I could imagine a lot of the events happening as such with an autistic man. I would recommend this book to read. However, I just wanted to point out that since this title is so old the writing style is a lot different than Billerbeck’s later works.

It was so different that it almost seemed like it was written by a different author! I’m thinking it appears that way because Billerbeck’s Heartsongs are written in the third person, and as far as I know, her titles released over the last few years are all written in first person. Plus, since she doesn’t really do straight-up category-style romances anymore, that might be why the writing style is so drastically different. I enjoyed this book, and I wish Billerbeck would write more category-styled romances. I enjoy her more recent titles too, but I enjoy her older stuff just as much.

When I was browsing in a Christian bookstore awhile back, I noticed the following Billerbeck title on the shelf:

From the decription, it seems like an enjoyable read. I didn’t buy it, because I have books at home that I haven’t read yet, and I am living on a budget! Maybe I’ll get around to buying it and reading it in the future. I’d be interested in seeing some comments from anybody who has read either of these books.

Cecelia Dowdy

Unlikely Hero By Marta Perry

ISBN: 0373872976
ISBN-13: 9780373872978
Format: Mass Market Paperback, 256pp
Publisher: Steeple Hill Books
Series: Steeple Hill Love Inspired Series, #287

This book was released the same month that my Love Inspired novel, First Mates, was released.

Claire Delany is a successful executive assistant. Her job means everything to her, and she doesn’t want to do anything to ruffle her strict boss’s feathers. However, she harbors a dark secret: she was the victim of abuse, and she’s lost a lot from her pain and suffering.

Pastor Brendan Flanagan is smitten with Claire. As they work together to plan the wedding of Claire’s best friend, Nolie, and Brendan’s cousin, their attraction deepens. However, Brendan has secrets of his own. When he discovers that Claire was an abuse victim, he’s forced to come to terms with his own abusive childhood.

Claire is also forced to think about her past as she and Brendan help an abused pregnant teenager and her overbearing, violent boyfriend.

The author did an awesome job with creating a strong conflict. I enjoyed reading about how Claire and Brendan overcame these conflicts as they finally learned to love one another.

This book is the second in the Flanagan series. I read the first one and it’s just as good. In the first book the hero is injured in while doing his firefighting duties.

As a result, he has unpredictable seizures. He needs a seizure dog and Nolie, his future love interest, trains dogs for handicapped individuals. I recall Nolie had terrible and negative experiences with religion, which is why she shunned God. This book was also a good read, and I highly recommend this one.

Cecelia Dowdy

When Joy Came To Stay By Karen Kingsbury


Paperback: 400 pages
Publisher: Multnomah (September 15, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1590527518
ISBN-13: 978-1590527511

From Amazon:
Book Description
Maggie Stovall is trapped inside a person she’s spent years carefully crafting. Now the truth about who she is—and what she’s done—is bursting to the surface and sending Maggie into a spiral of despair. Will she walk away from everything, or can Maggie allow God to take her to a place of ultimate honesty—before it’s too late?

Maggie Stovall.
One of the golden people. She has it all together. At least on the
surface…

Ben Stovall.
Godly husband. Successful attorney. Has no idea of the darkness about
to overtake his life…

Amanda Joy.
Child of society. Abused, broken, thrown away. But her trust in God
is still alive…

When Joy Came to Stay is the heart-wrenching story of one woman’s
descent into the shadows of depression, her husband’s search for
understanding, and a precious child’s unwavering faith.

================================

This book grabbed me from the beginning and wouldn’t let me go! It’s a fast, emotionally charged book, and once you start, I’m sure you’ll finish fairly quickly you’ll be so anxious to see what happens to the characters.

Ben Stovall is a judgemental Christian, however, he doesn’t realize how his views have almost cost him his marriage.

Maggie Stovall loves her husband so much, that she gives up the ultimate sacrifice just to marry him, her child.

Her secret hides with her for years, festering, until it drives her crazy to the point that she admits herself to a mental hospital.

When Ben goes searching for the truth to his wife’s mental illness, he finds a lot of unpleasant surprises, however, he needs to learn to trust in God, and not lean on his own understanding. Maggie learns this lesson too as she heals from past pains.

I highly recommend this book. I loved it much more than the book I reviewed a year or so ago, A Thousand Tomorrows.

I think I prefer this one so much is because of the deep faith element throughout the story. This is the second book I’ve read by Kingsbury, and I’m anxious to read more of her novels. I have another one on my shelf entitled A Moment Of Weakness. I’m sure I’ll be reading that one within the next month or so.

Cecelia Dowdy

Black By Ted Dekker


Paperback
ISBN: 1595540210
Pub. Date: February 2005
Book Description

Enter an adrenaline-laced epic where dreams and reality collide.

Fleeing his assailants through deserted alleyways, Thomas Hunter narrowly escapes to the roof of a building. Then a silent bullet from the night clips his head…and his world goes black.

From the blackness comes an amazing reality of another world-a world where evil is contained. A world where Thomas Hunter is in love with a beautiful woman. Then he remembers the dream of the chase as he reaches to touch the blood on his head.

Where does the dream end and reality begin? Every time he falls asleep in one world, he awakes in the other-both facing catastrophic disaster. Thomas is being pushed beyond his limits…even beyond the limits of space and time.

Black is an incredible story of evil and rescue, betrayal and love, pursuit and death, and a terrorist’s threat unlike anything the human race has ever known.

Some say the world hangs in the balance of every choice we make. Now the fate of two worlds hangs in the balance of one man’s choice.

==============
This book was very strongly written. As a novelist, I can see that it took Dekker a lot of time and effort to create an alternate world where Thomas Hunter traveled through his dreams. The ‘other’ fantastical world where he travels when he ‘dreams’ kind of reminds me of the paradise that God promises us in the New Testament. It also reminded me of the Garden of Eden in the Old Testament. I noticed in this other place that they did not eat meat (that I can recall). They would eat different fruits and the fruits had healing powers.

POSSIBLE SPOILER BELOW:

Also, in this other place, Tom is ‘chosen’ by Rachelle. She wants him to woo her and win her over so that she can be his woman. This is not soemthing that Tom particularly wants to pursue initially, but he does get into the Great Romance as time goes on, and he figures out what needs to be done to win Rachelle over. I sense The Great Romance is symbolic of something else? Since fantasy and sci-fi is not my usual genre, I don’t always get all of the points that are being made. I’m not a deep reader, so sometimes I might miss something if it’s sci-fi/fantasy.

When Tanis is tempted by Teelah with the fruit and he eats it, and then the black bats attack the perfect-like world, well, that was obviously like the serpent tempting Adam in the Old Testament.

The ending left me stunned, though. I guess it was written that way so that you would automatically read the next book in the installment. I would highly recommend this book to all who want a good sci-fi/fantasy read.

Cecelia Dowdy