Wednesday, September 30, 2009

It's Not About Him by Michelle Sutton


This week, the

Christian Fiction Blog Alliance

is introducing

It's Not About Him

Sheaf House (September 1, 2009)

by

Michelle Sutton



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Michelle Sutton, otherwise known as the Edgy Inspirational Author, is Editor-in-chief of Christian Fiction Online Magazine, a member of ACFW, a social worker by trade, and a prolific reader/book reviewer/blogger the rest of the time.

She lives in Arizona with her husband of nineteen years and her two teenaged sons. Michelle is also the author of It's Not about Me (2008) and It's Not About Him (Sheaf House 2009). She has nine other titles releasing over the next three years.





ABOUT THE BOOK

Susie passed out while drinking at Jeff’s party and later discovered she’s pregnant. She has no idea who the father is and considers having an abortion, but instead decides to place her baby for adoption. Following through ends up being more wrenching than she imagined, but she’s determined to do the right thing for her baby.

Jeff feels guilty that Susie was taken advantage of at his party and offers to marry her so she won’t have to give up her baby, like his birth mother did with him. But Susie refuses, insisting he should he marry someone he loves. Can he convince her that his love is genuine before it’s too late? Can she make him understand that it’s not about him—it’s about what’s best for her child?

If you would like to read the prologue and first chapter of It's Not About Him, go HERE

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Connections

I've just had the funniest conversation with a friend. We connected at a conference a couple of years ago and have built on the friendship again at a recent reconvening.

We both discovered that fame and fortune are foreign concepts. We started talking about someone we'd met recently that the world considers famous, and neither of us realized he was famous. We happened to be in the right spot at the right time to chat with him. (I had to go upstairs to my hotel room later and look him up online, lol.)

How do you feel about fame?

Is it something you want?

I'd like to have the opportunity to affect the world in a big way. Yes, that takes marketing and recognition. But fame seems hollow. I want to touch people's lives, not be "known."

What about fortune?

Do you want to be rich?

For me, money is a tool. It has a purpose. I hope that I'm able to use the tools God gives me to help people too. Yes, I want to pay my bills and grow my business. But I don't want to be a hoarder. I don't want to be like Scrooge so busy counting cold coins that I have no relationships.

How do you see fame and fortune?

Angie


www.MyGemofWisdom.com has a new class starting up on Oct. 5th. 8 weeks learning how to battle those pirates that hold you back from goals and dreams. Come see if the class will help you.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Stolen Identity by Kay Marshall Strom

Enormous eyes in a bony-thin face, and a baggy green dress that dragged the ground. Because of all the cast-off children at the village school in India, the raggedy girl stood closest to our translator, he gently asked her, "What is your name?"

The girl stared.

"Your name. What is it?" the translator asked again.

The girl whispered her answer: "I have no name."

A child with no name. A little girl abandoned so young she could not even remember what her parents had called her. She grew up begging at the train platform, snatching up the scraps harried passengers dropped, watching other children picked off by traffickers. Now that she was seven or eight--perhaps even a scrawny nine--the traffickers had come for her. But the girl screamed and kicked and clawed so ferociously that someone called the police. Someone with clout, evidently, because the police came and pulled her away from the traffickers. Somebody in the crowd suggested that instead of putting the child in jail, the police might take her to the village school, which they did. They dropped her at the door and left.

Human trafficking, especially sex trafficking, is rampant around the world. We think of it as an eastern European problem, or Indian or Nepalese or Thai. It is. But it's also a Western problem. The U.S. State Department estimates between 14,500 and 17,500 people are trafficked into the United States each year, but concede that the real number is far higher. According to the U.S. Justice Department's head of the new human trafficking unit, there is now at least one case of trafficking in every state.

The little girl with no name was fortunate that someone responded to her screaming pleas. What would you do if you heard a child shriek for help? Of course, if she were a trafficking victim in this country, she wouldn't likely scream or kick. She would probably shrink away in terror, or act submissively. You might see wounds--cuts, bruises, burns. Perhaps what would catch your attention would be the constant work: babysitting, cooking, washing dishes, scrubbing floors--never just being a child. Or maybe you couldn't say exactly what was wrong--only that something about the child's situation made you profoundly uneasy.

Please, please, if you suspect a person is being trafficked, call 911 and report it. Yes, it is okay. Yes, even it you are mistaken. In fact, eighteen states require citizens to report possible child abuse or neglect of any kind.

In the 1700s, Quakers led the fight against the African slave trade. In 1885, the Salvation Army took up the abolition banner, and since then it has led the fight against a different kind of slavery. More and more, 21st century abolitionists are followers of Christ determined to see slavery of all kinds ended in our day.

Oh yes... Before I left the school in India, I asked if we might give the little girl a name. She is now Grace.


About the Author:

Author Kay Marshall Strom has two great loves: writing and helping others achieve their own writing potential. Kay has written thirty-six published books including Daughters of Hope: Stories of Witness and Courage in the Face of Persecution and In the Presence of the Poor. She's also authored numerous magazine articles, and two screenplays. While mostly a nonfiction writer, the first book of her historical novel trilogy Grace in Africa has met with acclaim. Kay speaks at seminars, retreats, writers' conferences, and special events throughout the country and around the world. She is in wide demand as an instructor and keynote speaker at major writing conferences. She also enjoys speaking aboard cruise ships in exchange for exotic cruise destinations.

Schedule Kay for an interview or request her book for review by contacting Kathy Carlton Willis Communications at WillisWay@aol.com or call 956-642-6319.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

ACFW Conference: People We Meet

Who has changed your life?

Who has poured into you teaching that framed the direction you would go?

Who has given you only a moment, but it twinkled up golden enriching the years to come?

These moments, teaching, chance meetings happen all day, each day here at the conference.

A lovely dinner with Randy Ingermanson, Mary DeMuth, Danica Favorite, Merritt Talbot, Mary Beth Whalen, Meredith Efken, and myself ran for over 2 hours. I felt like it changed my life, framed direction, and twinkled golden that each of these people shared a wealth of knowledge, fun stories with great lessons, and amazing brain boggling ideas for marketing and career.

I had the honor of meeting Debbie Macomber, Harry Kraus, and Ted Dekker.

Did I take classes today?

Absolutely.

Were they astounding?

Absolutely.

But the joy of the American Christian Fiction Writers conference doesn't lie in one class or one new connection-though it could. The joy is in the unexpected, continuous moments that string together until the flake of gold becomes a gold strike!

I am rich beyond measure because someone else poured their generous spirit out for me.

Thank you.
Angie

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Kiss Me Again by Barbara Wilson




Do you ever wonder why marriage can seem like the end of intimacy and sexual desire instead of the beginning?

Ever wonder why it was so hard to resist sex before marriage—and so easy to resist it now? If so, you’re not alone! Many married women genuinely want to feel more desire toward their husbands…and can’t figure out what went wrong. But there’s good news. In Kiss Me Again, Barbara Wilson shows how powerful “invisible bonds” from past relationships can cause heartache, disappointment, and distance for couples in the present. Then—with sensitivity, honesty, and hope—Barbara walks you step by step toward healing…and a rekindling of the closeness and passion with your husband that you really want.

You don’t have to live any longer with confusion, disappointment, resentment, or shame. You can rediscover desire. You can say Wow! again.

With assessment tools, write-in exercises, and gentle guidance, Kiss Me Again offers a biblical plan for rekindling the closeness and passion women long for in marriage. Because no past is beyond the reach of God’s healing touch.

In Kiss Me Again, Wilson:

· Shares her own story of healing and renewed desire

· Helps women forgive themselves and their husbands for past choices

· Shows readers how to break free from “invisible bonds”

· Explains God’s plan for helping a husband and wife to re-bond

· Includes conversation helps for both wives and their husbands

· Helps couples reignite the passion that they thought was lost



Author Bio:
Barbara Wilson is the author of The Invisible Bond and former director of sexual health education for the Alternatives Pregnancy Resource Center in Sacramento. She speaks nationwide to youth and adults with her message of sexual healing, and she teaches frequently in the women’s ministry at the multi-campus Bayside Church in Northern California. Barbara and her husband, Eric, have been married for twenty-eight years.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

American Christian Fiction Writers Meet in Denver This Week!


"The Premier Christian Fiction Conference"

STANDING FIRM...MOVING FORWARD

"Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord,
 forasmuch as ye know that your labor is not in vain in the Lord."
1 Corinthians 15:58 (KJV)

DENVER, COLORADO
 SEPTEMBER 17 - 20, 2009



Bestselling authors, publishing industry representatives, and newcomers to Christian fiction writing will gather in Denver at the American Christian Fiction Writer’s annual conference September 17-20 to compare notes, learn from each other, and encourage one another in the pursuit of publishing goals.

This year’s conference theme , Standing Firm…Moving Forward, will especially inspire the full range of talent and dreams in the ever-changing publishing world today.

This amazing conference will feature representatives from major publishing houses like B & H, Guideposts, Zondervan, Harvest House, Barbour, Steeple Hill, Summerside Press, Bethany House, Waterbrook Multnomah, Marcher Lord Press, Tyndale House, and Thomas Nelson, and top literary agents who will meet with writers and identify promising proposals from both new and veteran novelists. Conferees will have access to publishing panels, professional critiques, and customized workshops based on skills and interests.

The keynote speaker is New York Times bestselling author, Debbie Macomber, who has more than 100 million copies of her books in print worldwide.

Learn more about the American Christian Fiction Writer’s Conference by visiting www.acfw.com. Click on the left sidebar on Annual Conference.

You Were Born For This by Bruce Wilkinson



Angie's Take: I admit it. I love books like this that shift my thinking and grow my faith. I like to be challenged to live a bolder faith life. That's scary! Sometimes it feels like I don't know how and that's even scarier. A practical book that helps me understand how to live out my faith every day...now that builds my confidence!

Check out this cool video with Bruce.

Summary:

His New York Times phenomenon The Prayer of Jabez changed how millions pray. Now Bruce Wilkinson wants to change what they do next.

Anyone can do a good deed, but some good works can only happen by a direct intervention from God. Around the world these acts are called miracles—not that even religious people expect to see one any time soon. But what would happen if millions of ordinary people walked out each morning expecting God to deliver a miracle through them to a person in need? You Were Born for This starts with the dramatic premise that everyone at all times is in need of a miracle, and that God is ready to meet those needs supernaturally through ordinary people who are willing to learn how Heaven works.

In the straightforward, story-driven, highly motivating style for which he is known, Wilkinson describes how anyone can help others experience miracles in such universally significant arenas of life as finances, practical help, relationships, purpose, and spiritual growth.

You Were Born for This will change how readers see their world, and what they expect God can do through them to meet real needs. They will master seven simple tools of service, and come to say with confidence, “I want to deliver a supernatural gift from God to someone in need today—and now I know how!”


Author Bios:
One of the world’s foremost Christian teachers, Bruce Wilkinson is best known as the author of the New York Times #1 bestseller The Prayer of Jabez. He is also the author of numerous other bestsellers, including A Life God Rewards, Secrets of the Vine, and The Dream Giver. Over the past three decades, Wilkinson has founded several global initiatives, including organizations that recruited and trained thousands of Americans to address hunger, AIDS, and poverty in Africa. Bruce and his wife, Darlene, have three children and six grandchildren. They live outside Atlanta.

David Kopp has collaborated with Bruce Wilkinson on over a dozen bestselling books, including The Prayer of Jabez. He is an editor and writer living in Colorado.


Get your copy here:
http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperlisbn=9781601421821&ref=externallink_mlt_youwerebornforthis_sec_0728_01

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Chaos & Busyness

Chaos & busyness are some of the worst pirates. They just climb on deck and seem to throw the whole crew into panic.

Does that feel like your life sometimes?

Me too. The hard part of being boarded by these pirates is that they sneak up on a woman. You just don't even realize they've boarded your ship until you're grabbed from behind.

I had a lovely chat today with another woman on this very topic.

We determined a few possibilities to help manage the stress.

When life starts to feel overwhelming, ask yourself what really needs to get done that day. You're not asking, "what can I get done on every project on my to-do list?" No. You are looking at the amount of time available and then assessing the highest importance to the real needs. Now dedicate the available time to meet those real needs.

When there are more real needs than time in the day, sit down with your calendar. Block out the time each day to systematically work on each issue or project.

What if that's not enough?

Then you have the most amazing tool. The ability to ask for help.

Take the time to determine what you can delegate. What would ease up the pressure in your chest if someone else could do it for you? Is it the actual project? Are you really that important?

If the answer is no, find someone else to help with it. Impress on them your need, not just a yes or no question. Say something like, "I really need your help. I've realized I can't do this alone. Would you be willing to help me ______?"

If the answer is yes, you're not out of options. Just pick something else on your list to delegate. If you have to run a meeting or write a specific report, ask a family member to take over dinner or kid activity transportation until you can finish the necessary task.

One of the best decisions I ever made was rotating driving duties. I used to spend from 3p.m. to 9p.m. in the car shutting kids to activities. When you have 6 kids with only 1 or 2 activities per child, that's still too much for anyone. I'd gotten used to eating in the car and the kids all did too. That's ridiculous. But it had built over time. I was like the frog put in cold water. The heat turned up and I never noticed until one day, I looked back at several years of 6 hour car sessions.

I decided to get creative. When my oldest earned his driver's license, one of his chores was to help shuttle his siblings to activities. As each successive child needed to get to an activity or work, the rules were that in order to go out and play, the kiddo who had to work had top car priority. All those needing a ride had to work out the schedule with those needing to get to work. Our teens became adept at scheduling their own activities and taking into consideration other people's work schedules.

That's one of my examples of how to creatively delegate and relieve stress from chaos & busyness.

What are some of yours?

If you haven't begun to de-stress through delegating, did you get any ideas from this post that will help you start?

Angie
http://www.MyGemofWisdom.com

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Honest Scrap Award


Yes, I was honored with the Honest Scrap Award.

It is for those bloggers who write from the heart. I received it from L. Diane Wolfe, one of my favorite bloggers. The rules are to pass it along to seven bloggers and then list 10 honest things about myself. Here are those deserving of this honor, bloggers who write from the heart and touch me because of it:

Ten Honest Things About Myself:
10. This is really my hair color, lol, and yes I get asked.
9. I am 45 and have never really worried about people knowing my age.
8. I stay up way too late and never get enough sleep.
7. I love the wind in all it's forms. Wind is magic.
6. I talk back to my cats, dogs, horses...well, they talk first ;-)
5. I laugh easily, but I'm not the best joke-teller.
4. I'm a terrible secretary. That's why I need one.
3. I have public speaking, singing, teaching in my DNA, just ask my grandpa, he told me so 30 years ago.
2. I am stunned and honored that people read my blog. Thank you!
1. I have awe attacks. My husband titled them after I continuously drove him nuts with all the things I comment about that keep me in awe. I can stare at a sunset, a rainbow, a blade of grass and wonder how God thought of the creativity to make such a thing. Don't get me started on my grandson...Awe is such a tiny word when I look at him.

7 Bloggers who write from the heart:
Missy Tippens
Belinda Peterson
Shar McLaren
Mindy Obenhaus
Jennifer Hudson-Taylor
Christy LaShae
Tosca Lee

Monday, September 07, 2009

Stray Affections by Charlene Ann Baumbich


Summary:

The last thing that Cassandra Higgins expects out of her Sunday is to be mesmerized at a collectors’ convention by a snowglobe. She’s enjoying some mommy time, with husband Ken at home tending their brood of four young boys, when she’s utterly charmed by the one-of-a kind globe containing figures of three dogs and a little girl with hair the color of her own. She can’t resist taking the unique globe home– even if means wrestling another shopper for it!

The beautiful snowglobe sparks long-dormant memories for Cassie, of her beloved Grandpa Wonky, the stray she rescued as a child, and the painful roots of her combative relationship with her mother, “Bad Betty” Kamrowski. Life in Wanonishaw, Minnesota is never dull, though, and Cassie keeps the recollections at bay, busy balancing her boys, her home daycare operation, and being a good friend to best pal Margret. But after a strange–flurrious, as Cassie deems it–moment happens with the remarkable snowglobe, Cassie and the people she loves are swirled into a tumultuous, yet grace-filled, and life-changing journey.

With the quirky, close-knit Midwestern small-town feel that made Charlene Ann Baumbich’s acclaimed Dearest Dorothy novels so popular, Stray Affections invites you to experience the laughter and the healing of second chances.

Get your copy here.


Author Bio:

Charlene Ann Baumbich is a popular author and speaker and an award-winning journalist. In addition to her Dearest Dorothy series of novels, she has written seven nonfiction books of humor and inspiration. A bungee-jumping, once motorcycle-owning grandma and unabashed dog lover, Charlene lives with her husband and rescued dog Kornflake in Glen Ellyn, Illinois. She loves telling stories, laughing whenever possible, and considers herself a Wild Child of God.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Learning New Weight Loss Skills

Side note: For your chance to win a coaching session, go to Sep. 3rd's post and share your opinions & thoughts on future blog content on God Uses Broken Vessels (here.) What brings you back and keeps you intrigued? The winner will be drawn on Sunday.

On facebook the other day, I had a comment from a friend. She mentioned working on some new skills each month like changing her eating one month and then focusing on upping her exercise the next month. It's a slow, but productive process.

We get discouraged in the slow results. We forget to look back and see how far we've come. We forget to celebrate.

Maintaining change is building on each new skill and choice until your life and weight are entirely different. I had to learn everything three years ago. I didn't realize how much I lacked in knowledge.

The Weight Watcher meetings are only once a week. But that was perfect because it gave me the chance to focus on ONE thing each week to create a healthier me. (Now I can go all week long to as many meetings I want, but they are the same topic for one week.)

Yesterday, my baby grandson took 8 steps. Such tiny, tiny steps. Then he fell. But we clapped and praised him. Not because he fell, but because he'd made it 8 steps! I think he crossed 2 feet on the floor. It was 2 feet he practiced.

That's what change is like...crossing 2 feet of floor you've never been able to do before. Then you sit down and rest for a moment before practicing some more. But the key is to clap and celebrate during the resting so you want to get up and try again.

It's the same with those we love. We can cheer them on even as they are in the process of falling. They wouldn't be falling if they hadn't tried!
:-)

Have you cheered for someone else lately?

Have you cheered for yourself even as you rest?

Angie
http://www.MyGemofWisdom.com

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Please share your opinion with me

Are you a regular reader of this blog? Are you a new reader?

Do you have favorite blogs? What makes them a favorite?

I would like to make a request. If you respond, you'll have the chance to win a purposeful life coaching session with me. (For those who haven't had a chance to explore purposeful life coaching, please see my website www.MyGemofWisdom.com for some ideas of things you might like to talk about or gain insight.

Please share what you find valuable in this blog. What you'd like to see more of so that I can continue to hone, meet your needs, and become one of your favorites. Not for empty accolades, but because I am trying to improve my blog to better meet your needs and interests.

The goal of God Uses Broken Vessels is to add value to the lives of others. Help me to know you, your challenges, and dreams so that I can better support you through intriguing posts.

Do you like book reviews/blog tours?
Do you like discussing women's issues?
Do you like learning about life, job & interview skills?
What about weight loss, fitness, & recipes?
Family issues?
Relationships?
Brain donation?
Something else? I'm open to suggestions :-)

Now is your chance to share what you'd like to see.

I'm in the process of taking speaking/workshop/women's retreat bookings as well as finishing my certification requirements. I'd love to know what topics truly intrigue you? What would you like to know more about?

If you comment, I'll be sure to read them (I always do) and address your interest. I'm going to give away a purposeful life coaching consultation to one commentary today. So comment away for your chance at a 45 minute purposeful life coaching session. I'll draw the winner by Sunday.

Thank you,
Angie

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Maggie Rose by Shar MacLaren



Angie's Take: I am thoroughly enjoying the romp I'm having with the orphans in Shar MacLaren's new book, Maggie Rose, from Whitaker House Publishing. I have a heart for orphans and also love history. The story is a perfect fit for me. Shar builds characters that matter not only in her story, but also to me-the reader. I've had the honor of meeting Shar MacLaren, the author of Maggie Rose. I have to say that she is genuine. Her writing comes off as genuine as well. I'm pleased to recommend Maggie Rose to you as a worthy read.

A Pursuit of a Calling:
The year is 1904, and Maggie Rose, the spunky, friendly, twenty-year-old middle daughter of Michigan resident Jacob Kane, feels compelled to leave her beloved hometown of Sandy Shores to pursue what she feels in her heart are God's plans for her life---in New York City.

A Heart for the Homeless:
Maggie Rose adjusts to her new life at Sheltering Arms Refuge, an orphanage that also transports homeless children to towns across the United States to match them with compatible families. Most of the children have painful pasts that make Maggie aghast, but she marvels at their resiliency. As she gets to know each child, her heart blossoms with new depths of love and compassion.

An Unexpected Attraction:
When a newspaper reporter comes to stay at the orphanage in order to gather research for an article, Maggie is struck by his handsome face-and concerned by his lack of faith. She can't deny their mutual affections, though. Will she win the struggle to maintain her focus on God and remain attuned to His guidance?

Get your copy here at Amazon or here at Christian Books.


Shar MacLaren *Writing romance for the heart...fiction for the soul.*
http://www.sharlenemaclaren.com
http://www.sharlenemaclaren.blogspot.com
http://www.shoutlife.com/sharlenemaclaren