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Lyn Reviews Author Betty Neels’ Ring in a Tea Cup

booksbylyncote.com Posted on April 8, 2013 by Lyn CoteApril 8, 2013

Ring In A Teacup (The Best Of Betty Neels)Ring In A Teacup by Betty Neels

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I’m a Betty Neels fan.

I love her distinctly English period (mid-20th century) romances. Since Betty Neels married a Dutch doctor and was a nurse, I suppose no one should be surprised that ONCE AGAIN her heroine is a nurse and the hero is –you guessed it–a Dutch doctor (a nice successful and rich one too). The richest kind–as in the old coffee commercial.

I’m not one for writing or reading many stories with alpha male heroes,

which are Betty’s favorite. But I do often write Waif heroines. This time however Betty’s heroine definitely shows temper–hence the title!

To pre-order the upcoming release in either paperback or on kindle, click here. Ring in a Teacup

View all my reviews

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Posted in Book review | Tagged Betty Neels, Harlequin Romace | Leave a reply

Lyn Reviews Author Suzanne Young’s Murder By Yew

booksbylyncote.com Posted on April 3, 2013 by Lyn CoteApril 3, 2013

Murder by Yew (An Edna Davies Mystery, #1)

Murder by Yew by Suzanne Young

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I’m happy to find another cozy mystery series I can cozy up to!

This was my first time reading a mystery by Suzanne Young. If you enjoy heroines who have lived long enough to possess wisdom, you will like Edna Davis, the wife of a newly retired physician. The setting is Rhode Island on the Atlantic shore.

Lovely quirky characters, strong emotion, and an interesting mystery. The only flaw I found was a too providential coincidence, which kept it from 5 star. HOWEVER, I will be purchasing and reading more of Suzanne Young’s mysteries. Thanks for doing such a great first book in a series, Ms. Young!

Ms. Young will guest later this month!

All three of Suzanne Young’s mysteries in her Edna Davis series are on sale on Kindle for 99 cents. Click here to purchase. Murder by Yew (Edna Davies Mysteries)

View all my reviews

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Posted in Book review, New Book Release | Tagged cozy mystery | 2 Replies

Author Maureen Lang Tackles Frail Sisters?

booksbylyncote.com Posted on April 1, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 31, 2013

My guest today is Author Maureen Lang, a frequent and welcome guest here. She is offereing a free ebook to EVERYONE (GOOD ONLY ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY APRIL 1 & 2) and a print copy of her latest book (see below) to one person who leaves a comment. So DON’T FORGET TO LEAVE A COMMENT!

Today she’s going to tackle a difficult subject–what used to be called a the problem of the FRAIL SISTER. Here’s Maureen.

“Frail Sister? I don’t think so.

For my latest book, All In Good Time, I researched what’s often called “the world’s oldest profession” — prostitution. Such women have been called many names through the years, and believe it or not, Frail Sister used to be one of them. It was meant as a derogatory term for a woman who was frail in the morality department if she chose such a life.

But these women—particularly women on the low end of the profession—were anything but frail. I came across many tragic stories of young women whose families had cast them out for one reason or another, either because they couldn’t afford to feed them or because they’d made the fatal mistake of letting their reputation be ruined.

Prostitution was big business out west,

particularly once the Gold Rush lured so many men out there alone. What many men found rather than gold was long hours of work that led to little or no reward, and loneliness. Perhaps it was no wonder there were few laws against the love-for-rent district, at least in mining camps, tent cities and boom towns that had yet to welcome many families—or respectability—into their fold.

I saw these women through the eyes of my story’s heroine, Dessa Caldwell, whose goal was to help fallen women find a way out. But offering such women an alternative wasn’t easy. Living in an age when polite society would have nothing to do with them and forgiveness was rare certainly added to the trapped feeling many prostitutes lived with. As one woman I read about said: there are only two ways out of this profession: death or disease, and the latter always leads to the former.

 The Magdalen Society existed for the sole purpose

of helping such women out of their desperate circumstances, and that was part of the inspiration behind my heroine’s goal. She had to offer them hope and forgiveness, not the censure and condemnation that was really more common back then. Both women needed to be strong—my heroine for offering a viable alternative, and the fallen women themselves, for trying to reenter a society that would all too easily condemn rather than forgive.

These days we may live in a society that seemingly accepts any behavior,

so long as no one gets hurt in whatever they wish to do. But the truth is most of us, even those with the widest definition of morality, think of sex as something special. I’m rarely grateful for loosening values but I am glad these days if a woman chooses to come to God for forgiveness of whatever is in her past, we know she won’t be turned away. So I learned something from my heroine: that forgiveness may not be easy, but why else did Christ die on the cross, but to forgive?

To purchase the FREE EBOOK (GOOD ONLY ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY APRIL 1 & 2), click here. All in Good Time (The Gilded Legacy)

To purchase, print book (NOT FREE), click here. All in Good Time (The Gilded Legacy)

About Maureen’s Book:

Denver, 1887

Dessa Caldwell has a dream, to offer refuge for fallen women. All she needs is a loan so she can open Pierson House sooner than she ever expected.

Henry Hawkins has a secret—but he also owns one of the most successful banks in Denver. He hasn’t earned that success by granting foolish loans, but when his manager gives Dessa the money she needs, Henry’s best efforts to stop it fail—and in the process the fortress he’s built around his heart begins to crumble. But will their secrets keep them apart?

The flaws and secrets of Dessa Caldwell and Henry Hawkins may very well keep them apart .  . until they realize it’s those very flaws and secrets that make them perfect for one another.

Yes, Maureen, today it seems “Anything Goes.” But we know that isn’t true of God. His laws are for our good, not to harm us.

If you’d like to be entered into the drawing for the free print copy of All in Good Time, give an example of FORGIVENESS. From the Bible OR from life. Or QUESTION: do you find it harder to accept forgiveness or give it?

Visit Maureen’s Website and Blog at: www.maureenlang.com

Or on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Maureen-Lang/77586161029?ref=ts&fref=ts

Winners of Christa Allan’s book are Lane Hill and Liz. Congrats!

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Posted in Book Giveaway, Free Kindle ebook, Interesting History, New Book Release | Tagged c, Western | 13 Replies

Author Christine Lindsay With a Different Kind of Heroine

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 27, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 28, 2013

My guest today Author Christien Lindsay writes about an unusual setting and unusual stories. I like that! And I love it when she is my guest because I learn so much about a culture that fascinates me. AND DON’T MISS THE BOOK TRAILER AT THE END! Here’s Christine:

A TRUE INDIAN CHRISTIAN HEROINE—by Christine Lindsay

Two extraordinary true-life heroines were the inspiration behind the Award-winning Shadowed in Silk and in my recently released Captured by Moonlight.

Today I will tell you about one—the inspiration behind my oh-so-integral Indian character, Eshana.

In both books, Eshana is a young Indian woman who is a former child Hindu widow. After Eshana is rescued from a Hindu ashram for widows by my fictional Miriam, she puts her faith in Christ as Miriam teaches her about the Lord Jesus. After Eshana’s conversion, she follows in her mentor’s footsteps, going about rescuing other abused and abandoned women and children, and helping to run a small clinic and orphanage.

The inspiration behind my fictional Eshana is the real Pandita Ramabai.

This brilliant Indian woman died in 1922, but she had done so much for women and children in India that England awarded her the Kaisar-I-Hind Gold Medal. India has since issued a commemorative stamp in Ramabai’s honor, and she was given the honorary acclaim of ‘Pandita’ in Hindu tradition, meaning ‘learned master’.

Born into a high caste Hindu family, Ramabai’s father broke with tradition and taught her to read. This was the beginning of my heroine’s search for enlightenment. As a family they walked the length of India. Ramabai’s eyes were opened to the incredible suffering of Indian women and children at a time when child marriages were common. Often these little girl widows were abused—and continue to be abused today—and lived a life of misery. If their husbands died, they were considered a curse and abandoned.

After her parents and siblings died, Ramabai broke with tradition and married a lawyer of a lower Hindu caste, but he died of a cholera leaving her alone with a tiny daughter.

One day, looking through her husband’s papers, Ramabai found a Bible, and found fulfillment to her spiritual search in the person of Jesus Christ. This prompted her to translate the Bible into her local language.

To name just a few of Ramabai’s accomplishments—she started the first  Braille School in India, promoted the need for female medical doctors, and was the founder of the Ramabai Mukti Mission, a home for sexually abused Hindu widows and children. In that home she created schools where young Indian women were given an education.

That mission is still in existence today. It is also a joy for me to have my true-life birthdaughter, Sarah,—the child I relinquished to adoption many years ago—working with the Ramabai Mukti Mission in India through Global Aid Network.

Click cover to purchase

The extraordinary Ramabai is showcased in my fictional novel Captured by Moonlight. This book is currently available as an Ebook at the purchase links below. The printed book version will be available on the same sites as of May. You can pre-order from these sites at this time though.

Christine Lindsay

Newest Release, Feb. 15, 2013: Captured by Moonlight ~ Book 2 in the Twilight of the British Raj series—-Click here to view Captured by Moonlight Book TrailerAmazon purchase link for Captured by Moonlight
SHADOWED IN SILK, WhiteFire Publishing, Gold winner of  the 2009 ACFW Genesis for Historical, Winner of the 2011 Grace Award, finalist in the Readers Favorite 2012 and Book One of the series, Twilight of the British Raj.
Hope you’ll drop by my website  www.christinelindsay.com

Twitter @CLindsayWriter

https://www.facebook.com/ChristineLindsayAuthor

Subscribe to Christine Lindsay’s blog for Monday’s Inspirational stories, Wednesday’s help for recovering addicts, and Friday’s Adoption Stories.

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Posted in Author Shares Story of Strong Woman, Interesting History, New Book Release | Tagged East Indian, Hindu child widow | Leave a reply

Author Christa Allan And a Daughter’s Journey

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 25, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 23, 2013

My guest today is Author Christa Allan. She is offering two copies in her GIVEAWAY so be sure to leave a comment to enter the drawing for one of the two. Here’s Christa:

“Andrae and my daughter Erin were first married in January of 2000 by Andrae’s uncle, one of the most amazing pastors I’ve ever met.

After their son Bailey, my first grandchild, went to heaven just thirty days after God blessed us with him, Erin and Andrae faced extraordinary challenges.

They divorced. Erin went on to earn her paralegal certification, and Andrae eventually wound up working in Kuwait. But God had determined that would only be a chapter in the story of their lives, not the end.

Seven years later, I stood in her father’s backyard and heard Pastor Edwards repeat the words that had, once before, united them as husband and wife. As I heard the fervent “Amen” and “Praise Jesus” echoed by Andrae’s family during the ceremony, I smiled remembering how constipated I felt in my Christianity all those years ago hearing the congregational participation of Andrae’s church.

So, at the end, when Pastor introduced us to the couple God has once again brought together, I heard myself actually speak out loud, my own “Amen.” Perhaps, in those same seven years, I’ve come to terms with my weaknesses, my faults, my spiritual dumbness. But God showed me on Saturday, life is full of second chances. Life is full of “Amens” just waiting for us.

And I am certain Bailey in heaven is “Amen” rejoicing along with his parents.”–Christa

To purchase, click here. Threads of Hope: Quilts of Love Series (Quilts of Love (Unnumbered))

BLURB:

While Nina O”Malley, the heroine in Threads of Hope, did not have these same experiences, the thread that connects us is second chances.  When the story opens, Nina is a woman eager to succeed and yet hesitant to speak the truth. She’s devastated when she discovers the man and the job opportunity she wanted belong to someone else.

What Nina doesn’t know, her spiritual “dumbness,”  is that we serve a God of second chances for whom nothing is impossible. She learns, though, that sometimes the gifts we want are not always in the wrapping we expect.

 What a wonderful ending to a sad story, Christa! I wish your daughter and sil all the joy that the Lord gives. If you’d like to be entered in this week’s drawing, visit her website and tell me one fact about her. Each commenter must find something different about Christa, no copying please. Have fun with it!–Lyn

Twitter: @ChristaAllan

Facebook: 

www.facebook.com/ChristaAllan.Author


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Posted in Book Giveaway, New Book Release, Personal story | Tagged Christian fiction | 7 Replies

Are You in the Mood for an Easter Egg Hunt with Real Prizes???

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 21, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 21, 2013

Author Deborah Hale has organized this second annual event at GoodReads Love Inspired Historical Group, but anyone can attend! Here’s Deb:

Hi Everyone! We had so much fun with our Easter Egg Hunt last year that we decided to do it again.

It will run from March 21st until March 28th, with two hunts on each of the weekdays. As with last year, you will be hunting for three pieces of information about our featured authors on their websites or other social media. You’ll be given an email address where you can send your entries. The next day the authors will do a random draw from among all correct entries for a giveaway.

The featured authors will also be dropping by each day to give hints about their hunt if needed and chat about our Easter preparations and celebrations.

Hope to see you there!

Here’s the line up of authors who are offering prizes:

Thursday March 21st: Winnie Griggs and Christine Johnson
Friday, March 22nd: Janet Tronstad and Deborah Hale
Monday, March 25th: Noelle Marchand and Louise Gouge
Tuesday March 26th: Mary Moore and Renee Ryan
Wednesday March 27th: Regina Scott and Dorothy Clark
Thursday March 28th: Lyn Cote and Karen Kirst

Here’s the link-JOIN US FOR THE FUN!  http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1256869-easter-egg-hunt

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Posted in Event | Tagged Love Inspired Historical | 2 Replies

How Much Do You Know About Your Family?

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 20, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 20, 2013

Lyn here,  Pat Simmons post on Monday got me thinking about family history. Pat is doing a lot of research into her forebears. And I’ve done almost none on my own.

My husband’s cousin has done  A LOT of research into the genealogy of the Cote family. My husband’s ancestor was Jean Cote who immigrated from France to Quebec in the 1600’s. Evidently Jean was a prolific father and there are  A LOT of Cotes.

I recently heard from another Lyn Cote–who like me married a Cote.

My mother’s family was German on her mother’s side and Scot on her father’s side.

My father’s family was from Texas and Oklahoma and supposedly Irish and Cherokee. But who knows?

As a born storyteller, I was always fascinated by family stories. But how to know if they were true or not?

I’d love to take time to research my family history but I always so busy researching history and making up people and their stories that I haven’t had time.

We did have our son give a DNA sample to Family Tree DNA http://www.familytreedna.com/

We found out info about both our families WAY BACK, thousands of years to when the first people began migrating from the Middle East. That didn’t really tell us much that was useful but we did contribute to the effort to connect the dots of DNA around the globe.

So what is your family history? How much do you know? Have you done any research? I’d love to hear what you know and what you’d like to discover.  So do tell!

Remember I like to hear that someone is out there–and I’m really interested in hearing about your family–when they came to the US and where they were from. It might spark me to write a new story!–Lyn

PS-The book cover is a story that one of Steve’s forebears sparked. Do you know who?

 

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Posted in Interesting History, Personal story | Tagged Genealogy | 1 Reply

Author Pat Simmons & What Makes Her Blood Start to “Pump”

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 18, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 18, 2013

My guest today is African American author Pat Simmons whom I count as a writing friend. She has been my guest before and will again I hope. This is a longer than usual post, but I didn’t cut a word because I found it fascinating. I hope you will too! Here’s Pat:

2 Corinthians 12:10:  “…when I am weak, then I am strong.” Although the content here refers to suffering for Christ’s sake, I’m tempted to use this scripture for a different mindset. A person should never underestimate the determination of the weaker vessel—the woman.

I think that verse describes so many women in my family, and they are the blueprint for the female characters in my Christian novels. I believe Elnora Cole Baker was such a woman who I’d never met or heard of. Yet, we share not only the Cole maiden name, but a love of our family history and her determination to preserve it as well as Black history.

My quest for my ancestors was already underway when I started my writing career. As a tribute, I decided to name one or more of my characters after my ancestors like Callie Lowe, Rhoda Brownlee, William Wilkerson and Charlotte Jamieson. My goal was to plant enough information in the storyline in hopes that one of the readers would recognize the clues for a connection.

This is how it started. In my first novel, I chose “Charlotte” for my main character’s mother. Charlotte was my maternal grandmother who was named after her maternal grandmother. Giving someone the same name from one generation to the next could be a blessing for genealogists to connect the dots, or a headache figuring out who is the son, grandson, nephew—you get my point—for example, my four generations of Marshall Cole.

So I had a first name tribute in Guilty of Love, but I needed something distinguished for my hero’s last name. It seems out of nowhere Jamieson stuck, thus creating Parke K. Jamieson VI, son of Charlotte Jamieson. He and his brothers became the strong, successful, confident and family-loving Black men who were tenth generation descendants of a royal African tribe.

As I continued to build my story, I didn’t let up on my family research. My maternal second great grandmother, Charlotte’s last name was Wilkerson. I located Charlotte Wilkerson along with her two sons: William (my great grandfather b. 1866) and his brother Samuel (b. 1868), on the 1880 census.

But when I searched the 1870 census for them, I hit a wall and couldn’t locate them. I turned to other genealogy enthusiasts to help in the hunt for Charlotte Wilkerson and her two sons who would have been four and two. It’s amazing how savvy some of these sleuths are. A few days later, they came back with information that made me hold my breath, actually blew my mind.

It appears that Charlotte’s last name was actually Jamieson. Eerie, huh?  I had no idea that giving my character the exact FIRST and some random LAST name would be a perfect match of an ancestor.

With my adrenaline pumping, I became an addict as went through the 1860 Slaveholders Schedule. Since I knew Charlotte last lived in Chickasaw County, Mississippi, I looked for former slaveholders in the same area. Sure enough, there was a Jamieson—Robert Jamieson. However, the first rule I learned as a genealogist is never to assume. I needed to show how Charlotte Jamieson became Charlotte Wilkerson.

Hold your breath again. Living in the slaveholder’s house was a guest, a teacher in the academy, John Wilkerson (my white great great-grandfather) who also fought with the Confederate States of America. I would have screamed when I saw the connection, but I was in a public library.

At that moment, I wondered what my second great grandmother must have endured as a mulatto woman in slavery. Yet, she died free in 1930 at the age of eighty “living in the backyard”, according to an article of another former slave-holding family—the Caradines in Mississippi.

Recently, I got another hit, but in an indirect way. As an active author who participates in many events, I met Monique Bruner, a young woman, who is an avid supporter of African-American authors, clocking in more than 200 books a year. A few times she tipped the 250 mark.

Last month, she attended a Black History program in Kingfisher County, Oklahoma. When I mentioned that I had Cole ancestors from that county, Monique asked, “Really? There is a tribute to an Elnora Cole Baker, any relations?”

“I don’t know.” By now, my blood is pumping, wondering, hoping, maybe there is a connection somewhere. “When you get there will you ask around?” I said. “I know I had a second great grand uncle name John Cole who once lived there.”

Monique did better than that. In less than an hour later, she delivered pictures via text that she had taken with her cell phone of John Cole’s obit—the front, the inside, and other obits.

I was insane with giddiness. I’m still trying to tie in Elnora Cole Baker with John Cole, where they cousins, or a niece to an uncle? One thing was for sure, without Elnora’s determination and that of her daughter to preserve her memories and artifacts of more than sixty years of Black history, including the first Black towns in Oklahoma, then I might not have made that connection. Thank You Jesus!

To purchase, click here. THE ACQUITTAL (A Guilty Parties Novel)

So, I take my quest for African-American history to the continent of Ghana, Africa, in my ninth novel The Acquittal. From the slave castles to custom-made coffins to the female hawkers, pick up a copy of The Acquittal and Akwaaba to Ghana. Here’s a sneak peek:

Two worlds apart, but their hearts dance to the same African drum beat.

On a professional level, Dr. Rainey Reynolds is a competent, highly sought-after orthodontist. Inwardly, he needs to be set free from the chaos of revelations that make him question if happiness is obtainable. His father, the upstanding OB/GYN socialite is currently serving prison time after admitting his guilt in an old crime.

His older sister refuses to move past the betrayal and attempts to use Rainey as a crutch, but her bitterness is only keeping the family at odds. His twin sister, Cheney Reynolds Jamieson, tries to rebuild a damaged relationship caused by decisions she made in the past.

To get away from the drama, Rainey is willing to leave the country under the guise of a mission trip with Dentist Without Borders. Will changing his surroundings really change him? If one woman can heal his wounds, then he will believe that there is really peace after the storm.

Ghanaian beauty Josephine Abena Yaa Amoah returns to Africa after completing her studies as an exchange student in St. Louis, Missouri. She’ll never forget the good friends she made while living there. She couldn’t count Rainey in that circle because she rejected his advances for good causes. Josephine didn’t believe in picking up the pieces as the rebound woman from an old relationship that Rainey seems to wear on his sleeve.

Although her heart bleeds for his peace, she knows she must step back and pray for Rainey’s surrender to Christ in order for God to acquit him of his self-inflicted mental torture. In the Motherland of Ghana, Africa, Rainey not only visits the places of his ancestors, will he embrace the liberty that Christ’s Blood really does set every man free.

To read more about Elnora Baker Cole and read excerpts of The Acquittal, log onto www.patsimmons.net.

Thanks Lyn Cote for allowing me to share my story.

PAT SIMMONS
Award-winning & Bestselling Author
*Guilty by Association, **The Guilt Trip,* * Free from Guilt
**Visit www.patsimmons.net

 Well, I hope you enjoyed Pat’s story of genealogy of her family as much as did.

QUESTION: Pat chose the name Jamieson and then discovered that it was a name that belonged in her family history.  Do you think this is just a coincidence? Do you believe in coincidence or not? Have you ever had a “coincidence”?

Here’s how www.dictionary.com defines COINCIDENCE:

“a striking occurrence of two or more events at one time apparently by mere chance.”


I have read Pat’s books and reviewed them. Here’s the link to one. Hope you will try one of Pat’s excellent stories since now you know THE REST OF THE STORY!–Lyn

PS-LAST WEEK’S WINNERS!

Glenda won CJ Darlington’s Ebook and Kristal won my slightly used copy of NIGHTWATCH.

 

 

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Posted in Interesting History, New Book Release, Personal story | Tagged Africa, African-American author, Genealogy | 7 Replies

Lyn Reviews Author Valerie Hansen’s Nightwatch & Book Giveaway

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 13, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 13, 2013

NEW QUESTION BELOW-
NightwatchNightwatch by Valerie Hansen

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Nightwatch is not my first Valerie Hansen romance, nor my last!

I decided to read it since Nightwatch won the coveted American Christian Fiction Writers’ CAROL Award in 2012.

Nightwatch is still available used and in ebook form. I think the story had the right amount of suspense to keep the plot moving along at a fast clip and the hero and heroine, a firefighter Mitch and a foster mom Jill respectively, were warm and believable characters.

The plot hinges on the mysterious fiery death of the parents of three children and then the kidnapping of the youngest, a little girl. Why were the parents killed and why was the little girl snatched from the crib at Jill’s? Who wants what?

The story also portrays CASA, which means Court Appointed Special Advocate, volunteers who help children in difficult court situations. Altogether it was a well done, fast and heart-felt read. Highly recommended.

To purchase, click here. Nightwatch (Love Inspired Suspense)

View all my reviews

To win my slightly read copy of Nightwatch, please tell me about any Love Inspired SUSPENSE book you’ve read and anything about it. OR tell me if you enjoy romance with your suspense or vice versa.–Lyn

Just for fun. Here’s a cat video!

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Posted in Book Giveaway, Book review | Tagged Love Inspired Suspense | 7 Replies

Author CJ Darlington Encourages Us to Take the First Step Toward Our Dreams

booksbylyncote.com Posted on March 11, 2013 by Lyn CoteMarch 11, 2013

My guest today is a young writer whom I think showed a lot of wisdom. When she became discouraged, she asked for help and guidance. I hope you will read her story and apply it to whatever you are struggling with. And share your thoughts at the end FOR A CHANCE TO WIN A GIVEAWAY. Here’s CJ:

“Years ago I read a novel by Jeri Massi called Some Through the Fire. It was everything I wanted my writing to be. Massi had created compelling characters, a plot I couldn’t stop thinking about, and a great message. I was sure my writing could never come close to being so engaging and powerful, and I was thoroughly discouraged. Why bother with all the hard work I was doing? What could I possibly write that anyone would want to read?

I had great respect for author James Scott Bell, so I took a chance and sent him an email, sharing how I was feeling. I would understand if he never responded, as busy as he was. But he did. I was blessed when he took the time to write me a thoughtful response that gave me the encouragement to press on with my writing journey. Jim told me that no two writers are the same, and no one can truly duplicate the other. No one had my calling but me. He compared it to what God does with spiritual gifts. I had something unique to contribute.

“Be the best C.J. there is,” Jim said. “There is no other. And if you give your full attention to your own writing, not comparing yourself to anyone but just digging deeper into your story, the concerns will go away. Writing itself is always the best antidote to the writing blues.”

I’ve never forgotten his words, even all these years later, or the fact that he cared enough to write them. Do they speak to you, as well? No one can write your story. If God has put it in your heart to write, there’s no need to question your calling. He wouldn’t have given you the desire if He didn’t have a purpose for it. I never looked back after that, and I’ve been blessed to see some of my writing dreams come true (although I’ve got plenty more!)

I encourage you today to be brave and take that first step toward your dreams. It might be as simple as writing an entry in your journal, or maybe it’s to finish a chapter in your novel.

To purchase for 99cents on Kindle, click here. 112 Christian Authors and Publishing Professionals Share Their Best Advice for Novelists

My new ebook “112 Christian Authors and Publishing Professionals Share Their Best Advice with Novelists” might also be an encouragement. You’ll find a vast array of perspectives within its pages. I hope it will be a jump start to your fiction writing dreams!”

Book Blurb:  Imagine a coffee shop packed with award-winning Christian novelists, top editors, literary agents, and publicists. Each one is taking turns sitting down with you, giving you their best writing advice. Sort of like speed dating for writers.

Within these pages the most recognized names in Christian publishing share their personal answers to the question, If you could say one thing to aspiring novelists, what would you say?

In the ever-changing publishing world, you must stay on top of your game to succeed. This book will give you a leg up, with practical tips and advice you can use on your novel writing journey. Includes advice from Karen Kingsbury, Frank Peretti, Ted Dekker, Jerry B. Jenkins, Josh McDowell, Liz Curtis Higgs, Francine Rivers, James Scott Bell, Terri Blackstock, Randy Alcorn, Melody Carlson, and many more!”–CJ

I also recommend James Scott Bell’s writing books as well. If you’re interested, click here and find his books on my For Writers Page.

CJ showed courage in reaching out. HERE ARE THE QUESTIONS FOR THE DRAWING TO WIN A COPY OF THIS BOOK.

Have you ever asked for help and been given encouragement? What has encouraged you? Please share.–Lyn

http://www.cjdarlington.com/

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Posted in Book Giveaway, Info for Writers, New Book Release, Non-fiction book, Personal story | Tagged aspiring writer, James Scott Bell | 5 Replies

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