Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Hero Interview from Sunset Beach by Trish Perry


This week I'm hosting Trish Perry with her book, Sunset Beach, and Allie Pleiter with Bluegrass Blessings. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (July 5th) evening.

INTERVIEW WITH SONNY MILLER, HEROINE OF SUNSET BEACH

1. Sonny, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

Compared to your average person, I know very little about myself. My family background, I mean. I know my mother, but all my life she’s refused to let me know who my dad is or anyone else in my family. She tells me it’s for my own good, but I’m an adult now, and I intend to find out what all the secrecy is about. So I guess you could say the most interesting thing about me is whatever is missing from my family album, and I haven’t yet figured out what that missing element is.

2. What do you do for fun?

I love going to the beach. I’ve been at UC San Diego for the past four years, so my friends and I spend plenty of time at the beach. And I enjoy hiking, parasailing, dancing, and going to the movies. It might sound weird, but I also read Psychology books and magazines for fun.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

All things math related. I just got my psychology degree, and I kept putting off the math courses required of me. So I had to take a bunch of them back-to-back. Statistics was the worst. Actually made me cry one day, I was so frustrated. I have some math-geek friends who saved me more than once over the past four years. I’m sure I’ll have to face that stuff in grad school too, but I hope to study more about counseling and less about calculating.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

This is going to sound awful, but I’m kind of afraid of my mother. Not afraid of her as if she’s some brutal monster. But she’s probably the strongest-willed woman I know. No, I’ll correct that—not probably. She is the strongest-willed woman I know. And I know she loves me, but if I’m honest I have to say I fear losing her love. Especially considering what I’m cooking up for our week at the beach house in San Diego. But at this point in our relationship, I feel I have no other choice. I can only pray she forgives me and our relationship survives that week.

5. What do you want out of life?

I want to meet my family. I’m pretty sure they’re out there, but they probably don’t know I’m out here. If my father’s alive, I want to meet him. If I have grandparents who are still alive, I want to meet them while I still have the chance. I want my own mother to come clean about her life before me. I want to know why I seem to be the secret she’s kept for the past 24 years.

6. What is the most important thing to you?

Well, of course God is the most important “thing” in my life. But other than God, I think the most important thing to me is a future different than my past. My past has been a big question mark. I want my future to be a big exclamation point.

7. Do you read? If so, what is your favorite type of book to read?

I love to read! As I mentioned above, I love my psychology magazines and books about psychological phenomena, like people who suffer from dissociative identity disorder—what’s commonly known as multiple personality disorder. But I also enjoy a good romance novel. Not the yearning, burning, heaving type of romance. I like real romances, the ones about committed, everlasting love.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I’m an eentsy bit of a control freak. I know how I like things, and I have a hard time bending to other people’s wishes sometimes. I’m trying to become more flexible and laid back.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

I’ve never had a pet. Mom always did a lot of traveling with her work—she’s a professional singer—so she always thought a pet would just add trouble to our schedule. Now I won’t be able to have one for several years, because I’ll be in grad school and renting a place. I expect to be too busy to care properly for a pet, anyway. But after I finish grad school and know where I’m going to live and work, I want to get a puppy. Sometimes I get lonely. I mean, I have a lot of friends, but a puppy of my own will feel more like a family member. I like the idea of that.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

This will sound egocentric, but I’d only want to go back four years, to a place here in California called Sunset Beach. Something happened there, and I had to make a difficult choice. It was the right decision at the time, but things have changed. Had I known then what I know now . . .

Monday, June 29, 2009

This week Trish Perry and Allie Pleiter


Congratulations to Edna for winning Diana Brandmeyer's Hearts on the Road and to Sarah for winning Cheryl St. John's The Preacher's Wife.

This week I'm hosting Trish Perry with her book, Sunset Beach, and Allie Pleiter with Bluegrass Blessings. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (July 5th) evening.

Sunset Beach's blurb:

In the popular Beach House series (more than 60,000 copies sold), a worn and comfortable coastal home in San Diego intersects with charming, contemporary stories—Sally John’s The Beach House and Castles in the Sand followed by Trish Perry’s Beach Dreams. In Sunset Beach, Perry delights fans by returning to the beloved backdrop where women gather and lives change.

Meet Sonny Miller, a recent college graduate with plans to get her master’s degree in psychology. With the intention of resolving some family drama and putting her academic interests to the test, Sonny cleverly invites her mother, Teresa, and her mother’s estranged twin, Aunt Melanie, to the quiet and quirky beach house. They both show up...and with surprises of their own. Teresa, a successful classical singer, brings her latest protégé, Irina, and Melanie brings along secrets about Teresa and the identity of Sonny’s long–gone father.

The strong personalities cause some big waves, and Sonny is in over her head. Soon she is drawn to Irina and Irina’s charming brother, Grigori. Her faith is strengthened by their story of being adopted as children from a Russian orphanage by a Christian couple from America.

Readers will love being a guest alongside these characters. Between each sunrise and sunset is another day for healing, laughter, rediscovering the importance of family, and embracing the hope of God’s care.


Allie Pleiter's bio:

An avid knitter, coffee junkie, and devoted chocoholic, Allie Pleiter spends her days writing books, doing laundry, running carpools, and finding new ways to avoid housework. She grew up in Connecticut, holds a BS in Speech from Northwestern University, spent fifteen years in the field of professional fundraising, and currently lives in suburban Chicago, Illinois.

Bluegrass Blessings' blurb:

Everyone in Middleburg, Kentucky, lines up for baker Dinah Hopkins's cinnamon rolls. Everyone except her handsome new landlord, Cameron Rollings. The jaded city man doesn't like anything about small-town life—from the fresh air to her fresh-baked snickerdoodles. And he clearly considers Dinah as quirky as her eccentric oven. The way to Cameron's heart is not through his toned stomach. But the Lord led him to Kentucky Corners for a reason. And Dinah plans to help him count his bluegrass blessings.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Tidbits about me

A friend sent me this questionnaire and I decided to post it here rather than send it to people on my email list.

1. High heels or boots? Boots or shoes that are flat
2. What time did you get up this morning? Around 7
3. Diamonds or pearls? Diamonds
4. What was the last film you saw at the cinema? Terminator: Salvation
5. What is your favorite TV show? Amazing Race
6. What do you have for breakfast? Peanut butter and apple/banana
7. What is your middle name? Kathleen
8. What food do you dislike? Fish
9. What is your favorite CD at this time? Celine Dion’s Christmas album
10. Favorite sandwich? Ham and cheese
11. What characteristic do you despise? Lying and cheating
12. Favorite item of clothing? Sweat pants and T-shirt
13. If you could go anywhere in the world on vacation? Australia
14. Are you an organized person? Yes
15. Where would you like to retire to? On a beach with a mountain behind me
16. When is your birthday? April 27th
17. Morning person or a night person? Morning
18. What is your shoe size? 6 1/2
19. Pets? 3 cats
20. Any new and exciting news you'd like to share? Family Ever After won the Holt Medallion in the short inspirational category
21. What did you want to be when you were little? A teacher
22. What is a day on the calendar you are looking forward to? Spending a few days with my husband in Hot Springs
23. What was the last thing you ate? Liver or fish
24. Any regrets in your life? Of course
25. If you were a crayon, what color would you be? Sunshine Yellow
26. How is the weather right now? Warm
27. Last person you spoke to on the phone? Angie
28. Favorite soft drink? Diet Dr. Pepper
29. Favorite restaurant? McAllister
30. Hair color? Brown
31. Summer or winter? Summer
32. Chocolate or vanilla? Vanilla
33. Coffee or tea? Tea
34. What is under your bed? Dust Bunnies? My Christmas ornaments
35. What did you do last night? Meet with my critique group
36. What are you afraid of? Snakes and rats
37. Salty or sweet? Sweet
38. How many keys on your key ring? 3
39. How many years at your current job? Just retired from teaching
40. Favorite day of the week? Friday
41. Positive or negative? Positive
42. Do you like finding out all this stuff about your friends? Yes

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Cheryl St. John's interview


This week I'm hosting Diana Brandmeyer with Hearts on the Road and Cheryl St. John with The Preacher's Wife. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 28st) evening.

Cheryl St. John's interview

What made you start writing?

I used to read horror, true crime and westerns—primarily those by Louis L’Amour. Through a book club, I discovered gothic mystery-type romance and had my first peek into the possibilities of great storytelling plus a romance. Wow, I was hooked and started reading romances.

Up until then I’d been dabbling at writing, but I‘d never gotten serious. The defining year for me was when my youngest daughter went to first grade. I had been at home raising four children spread out over several years and felt the void of sending the youngest to school all day. Until then I’d been playing at writing, keeping handwritten notebooks and dallying with the stories like a hobby. Then and there I decided I was actually going to do what I’d always dreamed of doing and write an entire book. I started the manuscript in October and finished it during that school year.

I had the time of my life. I had no idea what I was doing, so it had no plot or conflict, but the characters were fun and I enjoyed creating a romance. I even submitted the manuscript to every publisher and agent I could find. Only years later did I understand how embarrassing that was. I did everything you’re not supposed to do. I chose an unmarketable time period, and I even bound my submissions in pretty folders. The story is still in a box where it deserves to be.


How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

As a young girl, I used to write stories, draw covers and make little books.

My first book was RAIN SHADOW, released in 1993.


How do you handle rejections?

It’s a mistaken assumption that an author with thirty books under her belt no longer deals with rejection. I’ve had as many as eight rejections in a year. I firmly believe my sales are a percentage of the number of my submissions. Rejections are frustrating, sometimes hurtful, and occasionally learning tools, but always an accomplishment in themselves.

We all probably know aspiring writers who have never submitted anything. Or who have submitted the same manuscript so many times, there’s nowhere left to send it. And it’s likely you know someone who gave up after one or two rejections. If I had given up any one of the times I considered it, I’d never have published that first book or all that followed. What I asked myself each time, was, “What if it’s the next one, but I give up?”

I don’t take a rejection personally. It’s not me the editors don’t like, it they don’t buy a story. Publishers want manuscripts they know will earn money. That’s the bottom line. This is a business for them, not a passion. Writers have to be business-minded and still write from the heart.


Why do you write?

There are a lot of reasons why I write. For one, I’m not good with regimen or schedules, and the restrictive confinement of a nine-to-five job makes me miserable. What I remember most about school is watching the clock! Of course, I’ve worked real jobs, but I wasn’t a happy camper. Setting my own schedule, being my own boss, is a freedom I appreciate more than I can say. I’m a really good boss, too: “Need a day off? Sure, take two.”

Writing is a creative outlet, and for a person who needs to be creative, it’s like having enough air to breathe. It’s incredibly rewarding to hear from readers who say your book helped them through a tough time in their life or gave them hope. And then there’s the whole working in my jammies thing.


What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

I’m an amateur photographer and an avid gardener, so I’d be embellishing my flowerbeds and taking photos. More ways to be creative, of course.


What are you working on right now?

A novella for the Mother’s Day 2010 Love Inspired Historical anthology.
It’s a story of a girl and two women who experience love, acceptance and forgiveness. I’m also putting together a sequel to THE PREACHER’S WIFE.

Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

My life is way too boring to write about, but I think a little of who I am goes into each story. I write romance because I want to share the same sweeping emotions with my readers that have been shared with me by my favorite writers. I want to feel. I want to experience the excitement of falling in love over and over, of facing my fears and winning over seemingly impossible odds.


Tell us about the book you have out right now.

THE PREACHER’S WIFE is a story I’d wanted to write for a long time. I had an idea for a series, but the whole thing didn’t come together for a while. Sometimes I’m inspired, but it takes a year or two or three before I know how to make the story work. This was the case with how Samuel Hart and Josie Randolph came together. Thinking that taking a job as a preacher in Colorado sounds like a challenge he wanted to face, Sam uprooted his wife and three daughters to cross the country with a wagon train. When his wife drowned, Sam not only feels responsible, but helpless as to how he will raise three girls by himself.

Josie Randolph is a young widow, hungry for acceptance, stifled in her current life. Josie has always felt as though she’s on the outside looking in at life and families. When the Harts temporarily stay in her little Nebraska town, she feels a part of something for the first time.

Sam sees how good Josie is with his girls and asks her to marry him and accompany them to Colorado. Josie jumps at the chance to start a new life, but reminds herself not to expect too much. Sam already loved and lost, and she is merely a substitute mother for his children.

The resulting trip and the establishing of a new home is a faith journey for both of them. Sam never expects to learn something from his new wife, and Josie has a lot surprises in store for him.


Do you have any advice for other writers?

Believe in yourself. There will be times when nobody else believes in you, so you must have confidence in your ability to learn and grow and develop your craft to the best of your ability.

Treat your writing time with respect and others will learn to respect it as well.


How important is faith in your books?

Faith is a natural extension of me. It’s who I am. Readers have always expressed appreciation for the values that are a natural part of my characters. I enjoy writing characters who look to God to help them make decisions and face difficult situations.


What themes do you like to write about?

My stories most often have themes of second chances, redemption, hope and forgiveness. I love an underdog story, and I enjoy taking a character out of a familiar setting and placing him somewhere completely foreign. I also like stories of false pretense or masquerade, where a person is pretending to be someone he or she is not. The book I just finished is one of those. The hero pretends to be the heroine’s husband and the father of her child. The two of them are the only ones who know he’s not. It’s a Harlequin Historical scheduled for 2010.


What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

I have a lot of favorites. I loved RAIN SHADOW because it was my first sale, and I was proud of the accomplishment and happy with the story. HEAVEN CAN WAIT was written first and took a lot longer and underwent more revisions, but will always be special because of the effort and learning curve.

SAINT OR SINNER and JOE’S WIFE have a couple of my all-time favorite heroes, and SWEET ANNIE and HIS SECONDHAND WIFE are two of my favorite heroines. THE DOCTOR’S WIFE and PRAIRIE WIFE are favorites because of the depth of emotion and healing.


What is your writing schedule like?

I most often get up and get my grandson ready for school, unloading the dishwasher while he’s eating, sometimes stopping for groceries on the way back. I check my email, open my file and get to work. I write all day, pausing to fold laundry, make lunch, run an errand. I’ve learned that even when I’m baking or driving, I’m writing. My husband finally believes me when I say I’m working while watching a movie. Writing energy is stored like energy in a flywheel, and when I get to the keyboard, the words fly onto the pages as though propelled by the accumulated power. So those breaks can be considered writing time.

Sometimes I pick him up from school, too, and finish my thoughts when I get home—or I go early and take my Alphasmart along in the car—and once home, I often write until time to fix supper.

I usually spend the evening with my family, watch my favorites shows, like American Idol, Bones and Gray’s Anatomy. Once the family has gone to bed, I either catch up on email or prepare my lesson for the online classes I teach. I tend to be a night owl.

I don’t write on weekends, unless I have a really pressing deadline, because that’s family, yard and church time.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Diana Brandmeyer's hero's interview


This week I'm hosting Diana Brandmeyer with Hearts on the Road and Cheryl St. John with The Preacher's Wife. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 28st) evening.

Hero's interview from Hearts on the Road:

1. Matthew Carter, tell me the most interesting thing about you. Not sure if it’s interesting, but I raised a blue ribbon calf in 4H.

2. What do you do for fun? I recently took up bowling, that’s a lot of fun if you aren’t too worried about knocking down the pins.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it? Cleaning out my truck. I have a hard time with that, it’s just easier to drop things over the seat and forget about them.

4. What are you afraid of most in life? Losing Randi and Emma.

5. What do you want out of life? Other than serve Christ? I suppose I want what most guys do, enough money to be comfortable, a happy family.

6. What is the most important thing to you? Letting others know that Christ died from them. Did you know that? It’s important that you do! God sent His Son to die for You. Doesn’t that rock your world?

7. Do you read books? I read mostly Christian apologetics, right now I’m reading Ravi Zacharias’s The End of Reason.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be? That’s a girl question isn’t it? Maybe taller.

9. Do you have a pet? I do now, it’s a Golden Lab. On the farm we always had Labradors, they’re great fun, always wanting to retrieve things and bring them back to you. Though most of the time they take things that you don’t want them to and when they return them the item usually isn’t in very good shape.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why? I’d like to talk to Martin Luther after he was struck by lightning. I want to ask him about the struggles he had that didn’t make it to the history books.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

This week Diana Brandmeyer and Cheryl St. John


Congratulations to Linda for winning Tina Ann Forkner's Rose House and Ann for winning Jeanette Windle's Veiled Freedom.

This week I'm hosting Diana Brandmeyer with Hearts on the Road and Cheryl St. John with The Preacher's Wife. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 28st) evening.

Diana Brandmeyer's bio:

Diana Lesire Brandmeyer is a multi-published author, who lives in Southern Illinois with her husband, Ed and their cat Wendell. They have three grown sons and a terrific daughter-in-law. Diana is a graduate of Webster University in St. Louis. She spends her spare time quilting, scrapbooking , bike riding and reading, but not at the same time.

Blog : http://www.pencildancer.com
Web: http://www.dianabrandmeyer.com

Blurb of Hearts on the Road:
Hearts on the Road
Love cannot be trusted.

Abandoned by her father, betrayed by her fiancé, and forsaken by God, truck driver Randi Davis crisscrosses Wyoming with a broken heart, vowing never to love another man. Suddenly Matthew Carter, a pastor in search of a mobile ministry, is thrust into her life and into her cab. And there’s nothing she can do about it.

Soon Randi and Matthew find themselves at cross-purposes. His life on the road has just begun. Her eight-year-old niece needs a parent to come home to every day. Is this the end of the road for Randi and Matthew’s romance?

Which road leads to God’s ultimate plan?


Cheryl St. John's bio:

From the heart....
Cheryl St.John
Real people. Real Emotion.
Cheryl St.John delivers every time.

Cheryl St.John is the author of more than thirty Harlequin and Silhouette books. Her first book, RAIN SHADOW was nominated for RWA’s RITA for Best First Book, by Romantic Times for Best Western Historical, and by Affaire de Coeur readers as Best American Historical Romance and since then her stories continue to recieve high acclaim from readers and reviewers. In describing her stories of second chances and redemption, readers and reviewers use words like, “emotional punch, hometown feel, core values, believable characters and real life situations.”

Cheryl is a student of RHEMA Bible School: www.rhema.org, studying Dynamics of Faith, Life of Prayer, Bible Interpretation and Christology. Upon completion, she will be a certified minister, though her reasons for the studies are for personal growth and to aid her ministry. She is the worship leader for the fastest growing faith church in her city. Cheryl’s gift as an exhorter makes her a sought-after motivational speaker at conferences, retreats and luncheons. She’s an active member of RWA and her local chapter.

The Preacher's Wife
Cheryl St.John
http://www.cherylstjohn.net/
Steeple Hill Love Inspired Historical
June 2009
ISBN #978-0-373-82813-5

There was nothing remotely romantic about widowed father Samuel Hart's marriage proposal. Yet Josie Randolph said yes. The Lord had finally blessed the lonely widow with the family she'd always dreamed of. And she was deeply in love with the handsome preacher, whose high ideals inspired everyone. Surely during their long journey across the western plains to his new post her husband would grow to love her.

Each mile brought them closer to home, yet drove them further apart. Samuel didn't seem ready to open his heart again. But Josie was determined to be not just the preacher's wife, but Samuel's wife.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Jeanette Windle's interview


This week I'm hosting Tina Ann Forkner with Rose House and Jeanette Windle with Veiled Freedom. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 21st) evening.

Jeanette Windle's interview:

1. What made you start writing?

Writing has always been such a part of my life, I can’t remember ever consciously wanting to write. The missionary kid boarding school I attended in the Venezuelan Andes put great emphasis on proper composition (we were doing term papers with footnotes in junior high), and we spent far too much time writing to ever daydream about it. I was newspaper editor and yearbook copy editor in high school. In college I did some short stories, then as a young missionary, my writing was mainly prayer letters and ministry material.

I can say wrote my first book literally out of boredom. My husband and I were the only expatriates at the time in the southern Bolivia city where we were living, working with a Christian ministry organization. While my husband was on traveling through the Andes mountains for two weeks at a time. I was stuck at home with three preschoolers, no car, TV, radio. Once my preschoolers were in bed, I had only the handful of English-language books I’d read dozens of times. I finally decided if I had nothing to read, I’d write a book instead.

That became Kathy and the Redhead, a children’s novel based on my growing-up years at boarding school. The book was published by TEAM (The Evangelical Alliance Mission), my parents' mission that ran the boarding school. Writing it rekindled my love of creative writing, and I've never really stopped since.

2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

See above for the first question. After Kathy and the Redhead, I began writing Spanish-language material for women and children at risk as well as writing as a journalist for a variety of international and Christian ministry publications. I also began working on a young adult mystery/suspense series set in a multi-cultural background. Multnomah published my first CBA title, Adventures in South America, in 1994 (a story in itself how that came about from Bolivia). That eventually grew to the six-book Parker Twins Series, published some years later by Kregel Publications.

My first adult fiction release, CrossFire, set in the counter-narcotics war in Bolivia, was released in July, 2000. Then came a teen novel, Jana’s Journal, and a second political/suspense novel, The DMZ, set in the guerrilla warfare in Colombia, followed by, FireStorm, a sequel to CrossFire. My first Tyndale House Publishers title, Betrayed, was released in 2008. My newest Tyndale release, Veiled Freedom, set in Afghanistan, is hitting bookstores right now.

3. How do you handle rejections?

Like most authors, I suspect, I collected a hefty file of rejection letters in those early days. They were especially discouraging since back then one had to provide the postage for a publisher to reject you--and postage to Bolivia, where we were still ministering, wasn't cheap! Nowadays at least, they generally come by email.

The rejections I’ve appreciated most were those that included feedback as to where I could improve the story. That these were snail-mailed at that time to Bolivia, from where I was blithely and ignorantly sending off my manuscripts to the top ten in Sally Stuart’s Christian Writers Market Guide, says much about the graciousness of some of those editors. I plowed every suggestion back into my writing and thank God those original poor excuses for manuscripts never made it into print.

I certainly remember my share of tears and discouragement. Because I was in full-time ministry, my constant prayer was that God would close the door completely if He didn't want me to write. I didn't want to waste time that could be used profitably elsewhere. But every time I was ready to give up, God would open a door to keep writing--usually an acceptance letter.

When we moved from Bolivia to a new ministry leadership position in Miami, those rejection slips were one thing I was quite happy not to have room to bring stateside. At the moment, I don't really do free-lance, since I have more than enough writing that has already been requested, so the rejection slips aren't part of my life. Which doesn't mean they'll never be again!

4. Why do you write?

I write because I am a story teller. We serve a wildly creative God who painted the skies and flowers, put music in the bird’s song and rivers, created universes of places and peoples. And just as God gave artists and musicians the ability to create with color and sound, so a story-teller's ability to create worlds and characters and drama of their own imagining is a small reflection of God’s own creative powers, one of the ways we were made in His image.

What I love about writing fiction is the tapestry it offers to weave together countless scattered threads—historical, political, social, spiritual—and the very real people involved, to create a single impact, a single focused spiritual theme. While the books I write are fiction, the peoples and places and issues they bring to life are only all too true.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

Probably what I do now when I'm not writing. More speaking, ministry travel, mentoring Christian writers around the world.

6. What are you working on right now?

I am writing now the sequel to Veiled Freedom, working title Freedom's Furnace. So if you enjoy Veiled Freedom, keep your eye out for another piece of Afghanistan's story in a few months.

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

While everything in my novels is based on actual occurrences and the situation on the ground of the countries about which I write, not all comes from my own life. A good example: depictions of the Colombian guerrilla camps in The DMZ came not from my own experience, but from personal friends who did spend up to years in captivity. However, one advantage of having traveled in thirty+ countries on five continents is that I can pull a lot of sights and sounds and smells from my own memory banks as well as research and interviews. More importantly, the emotional and spiritual threads of my novels and their protagonists have been birthed very definitely from the life journeys through which God has taken me and the spiritual battles and lessons involved.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.

Despite the ugliness of war, I rejoiced in the post-9/11 overthrow of Afghanistan's Taliban, believing it presaged new hope for freedom and peace in that region. Neither freedom nor peace ever materialized. Instead today's headlines reflect the rising violence, corruption, lawlessness and despair. The signing of Afghanistan's new constitution, establishing an Islamic republic under sharia law--and paid for with Western coalition dollars and the blood of our soldiers--tolled a death knell for any hope of real democracy. And yet the many players I've met in this drama have involved themselves for the most part with the best of intentions. The more I came to know the region and love its people, I was left asking, "Can outsiders ever truly purchase freedom for another culture or people?"

That question birthed VEILED FREEDOM. A suicide bombing brings together a disillusioned Special Forces veteran, an idealistic relief worker, and an Afghan refugee on Kabul's dusty streets. The ensuing explosion will not only test the hypocrisy of Western leadership and Afghanistan’s new democracy, but start all three on their own personal quest. What is the true source of freedom--and its cost?"

9. Do you have any advice for other writers?

Read, read, read and write, write, write. It is the saturation of mind and heart with good literature and prose that creates good writers as well as the practice of the craft. Any would-be writer who cannot tell me what they are currently reading or say they don’t care for reading but just want to write are immediately crossed off my list as serious potential writers.

Also, writing is hard work, not just inspiration. It is, in fact, a mind-numbing, hair-pulling, excruciating process of creation to which the birthing of one's own children pales. I always tell want-to-be writers, if you can keep from writing, do! It’s a hard, unforgiving field. If you have to write, whether it’s published or not, then you’re a writer, and like a musician or artist, you can’t be anything but. And it does feel wonderful after all the work of birthing the world and characters and message of a new book to hold it in your hands and see the finished product.

10. How important is faith in your books?

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, and I cannot write without that world view permeating every thought, plot line, character. I do not even understand how Christians can write a book that does not ‘leak’ their faith and outlook on this universe. For me personally, writing has always been a call to share my faith in such a creative and interesting fashion that readers who would not necessarily even set foot in church would be drawn in to the world I have created and the God who is there. My ultimate goal in every book I write, however much a "thriller," is to share with the reader my own heartfelt conviction that, for all the turmoil and conflict and pain in our world, this universe does make sense and has both a purpose and a loving Creator.

11. What themes do you like to write about?

Below are just a few of the themes that have spilled over into my writing from the people and places and heart lessons of my life:

The DMZ: “Those who are not willing to bleed and die for what they hold dear will always be held hostage by those who are.”
CrossFire: “Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vine . . . yet I will rejoice in God my Savior.” (Habakkuk 3:17-19)
FireStorm: We are not called to safety, but to stand strong in the storm.
Betrayed: ‘Do what is right and do not give way to fear’ (1 Pt. 3:6)

And, of course, Veiled Freedom: True freedom can never be attained through guns, aid, or any outside source, however well-intentioned, but only through the transforming love of Isa Masih (Jesus Christ) changing individual hearts. Change a heart, change a nation.

If those themes sound more troubling than joyous or peaceful, let me assure you that they are not because our safety, and the safety of our families and our country, are not, and never will be, in the absence of the storm, but in the presence of a Creator God who rides on the wings of the wind, whose laughter crashes through the thunder and lightning, and who in the midst of any storm cradles His children safely and tenderly in the palm of His Almighty hand. If I did not have that absolute assurance, I would not have the nerve to research, much less write, the stories that I do.


12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

My last book, whichever that currently is. My goal is to write each book better than the one before, and I think my readers would agree they’ve come a long way since my first children’s novel. In truth, I never look back or even read books I’ve already written. Since I am always in the process of having finished my last book while writing the next, I find myself always astounded at how well the last one turned out even while I’m pulling my hair out and sure I’ll never do as well on the current project. Different readers have different favorites. What thrills me is when readers write to say that one of my books, whichever one it might be, has impacted their lives and hearts.

13. What is your writing schedule like?

I basically write my current fiction manuscript from 7 AM (when my remaining teenager is out the door to school) to about 1 PM any day I am not on the road. By then my creative side of the brain is no longer at its best, and I do smaller projects and editing the rest of the day. Though once a book is birthed, I will be doing the rewrites a solid twelve hours a day until it is finished.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Why volunteer at the ACFW conference?

Enhancing Your Conference Experience Through Volunteering

One of the most important aspects of the conference is the role of volunteers in making it a success. In fact, the conference wouldn’t be possible without its volunteers. There are a lot of opportunities to volunteer this year. I have already put out a call for people to be hostesses/hosts for the classes offered. People were great. I have those slots filled. Now I’m looking to fill the other volunteer jobs needed. I’ve put the call out to the main loop. I hope you will think about doing something if you are planning on attending the conference.

Registration will open Wednesday afternoon and night because of the Donald Maass workshop that starts bright and early (8:00) Thursday morning and goes until 4:00 in the afternoon. The people who are taking the workshop will need to register the day before if possible. We will need most of our volunteers to man the registration desk on Wednesday afternoon and night and all day Thursday. On Friday and Saturday we will need a few to be at the registration desk for people who come in late or for only one day.

Then there will be a need for people to help in the bookstore, with the editor/agent appointments, serving as timekeepers, and greeters at the meals, taking up the meal tickets. Those activities happen during the conference. Beforehand, we’ll need people on Wednesday to help stuff the conference bags for all the attendees. Now you see how the conference wouldn’t be a success without its volunteers. Every aspect of the conference is manned by people giving of their time to make the experience the best it can be.

So why should you volunteer besides the fact we can’t have a conference without people helping? It’s a great way to give back to ACFW. I’ve volunteered in the past. I love seeing old friends but also meeting new people. One of the reasons to go to a conference is to network. What better way than while you’re helping others? Every year I’ve gotten to know some other writer a little better while we are working together. These friendships that develop have enhanced my experience at the conference and overflowed into my experience with ACFW in general.

So if you are going to the ACFW conference in September in Denver, think about volunteering to help out in one of the places I mentioned above. You won’t regret it. Working together as a group to make the conference the best it can be is such an uplifting feeling.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Tina Forkner's heroine's interview


This week I'm hosting Tina Ann Forkner with Rose House and Jeanette Windle with Veiled Freedom. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 21st) evening.

Interview with the heroine from Rose House:

1.Lillian Diamon, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

I am a chef. It’s something I always wanted to do when I was young, but when I got married and had my twins, I decided I was happy to set that dream aside and be a mom. I still cooked at our dinner parties and for special events, but mostly I was a mom. When I lost my family I was down for awhile until I started working part-time for a top chef at his restaurant in Sacramento.

2.What do you do for fun?

I don’t really get out much, but traveling is what helps me clear my head. I enjoy visiting La Rosaleda in the Sonoma Valley. It’s a charming little town and I just love the vineyards and the gardens.

3.What do you put off doing because you dread it?

This is going to sound silly, but I put off making friends. It’s just hard to know who to trust at times.

4.What are you afraid of most in life?

Being alone. Sometimes I worry that I will be alone when I am old.

5.What do you want out of life?

I want to meet a friend who is trustworthy. I want to be able to trust a friend. I am not looking for a man, but if I found one I could trust I would be happy. There is this one man I have grown to care about, but I don’t know yet if I can trust him.

6.What is the most important thing to you?

My children. I know it sounds odd to say that since they are already in heaven, but they are still the most important part of me. I have saved their things and their memories live on. I think of them every day.

7.Do you read? If so, what is your favorite type of book to read?

I love to read. I like to read romance novels, but I also like to read a little mystery.

8.If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I would be brave, like my sister Geena. She is brave to a fault, to be sure. Her gutsy personality has empowered her to do terrible things, but but it is better than being afraid.

9.Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

I don’t have a pet, but my friend Truman has a dog named Cody. I like him.

10.If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

I would go back to the day I lost my family and I would not let my husband drive my kids to their appointment. He left them there and had other things on his mind, so that when he went back for them, he wasn’t paying attention to his driving. I would have taken them to their appointment and I would have stayed with them like any good mother would do.

Monday, June 15, 2009

This week Tina Ann Forkner and Jeanette Windle



Congratulations to Debra for winning Debby Mayne's Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, Sandy for winning Mary Connealy's Montana Rose and Linda for winning Steve Bonenberger's Through Gates of Fire.

This week I'm hosting Tina Ann Forkner with Rose House and Jeanette Windle with Veiled Freedom. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 21st) evening.

Tina Ann Forkner's bio:

Tina Ann Forkner is the author of Ruby Among Us and the newly released Rose House. She grew up in Oklahoma and now lives in Wyoming with her husband and three children. She stays busy serving on her library's foundation board of directors and helping with her local MOPS group. You can learn more about her at www.tinaannforkner.com.

Blurb of Rose House:

Amid a tangle of rose blooms and thorns, widow Lillian Diamon's private moment of grief is captured in a spectacular painting on display in a Sonoma Valley, California art gallery. Her quest to find the artist unravels a greater mystery changing everything about her loss-and her future. Will Lillian and her sister Geena ever see eye to eye to again? And who is the mysterious artist who captured her private pain? Filled with romance and intrigue, Rose House is a story of one woman's journey for hope, faith and truth.


Jeanette Windle's bio:

As a daughter of missionary parents, award-winning author and journalist Jeanette Windle grew up in the rural villages, jungles, and mountains of Colombia, now guerrilla hot zones. Her detailed research and writing is so realistic that it has prompted government agencies to question her to determine if she has received classified information. Currently based in Lancaster, PA, Jeanette has lived in six countries and traveled in some thirty, including Afghanistan. She has more than a dozen books in print, including best-selling CrossFire and Tyndale House Publishers release, Betrayed.

Blurb of Veiled Freedom:

Kabul, 2001--American forces have freed Afghanistan from the Taliban. Kites have returned to the skies. Women have removed their burqas. There is dancing in the streets.

Eight years later, Afghanistan is a far cry from those first images of a country freed from Taliban rule. When Special Forces veteran Steve Wilson returns to Kabul as security chief to the Minister of Interior, he is disillusioned with the corruption and violence that has overtaken the country he fought to free. Relief worker Amy Mallory arrives in Afghanistan ready to change the world. She soon discovers that as a Western woman, the challenges are monumental. Afghani native Jamil returns to his homeland seeking work, but a painful past continues to haunt him.
All three search for truth and freedom when a suicide bombing brings them together on Kabul's dusty streets. But what is the true source of freedom--or its cost?

Friday, June 12, 2009

Steve Bonenberger's interview


This week I'm hosting Debby Mayne with her book, Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, Mary Connealy with her book, Montana Rose, and Steve Bonenberger with his book, Through the Gates of Fire. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 14th).

Steve Bonerberger's interview:

1. What made you start writing?

I have been writing for many years. I have been interested in story-telling for sometime. Most of my first sets of writings were sermonic—as I was a pastor in another life. From there, the writing evolved into creating and crafting short-stories & then I got the ideas that grew into the Through Gates of Fire series.

2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

I have never ‘sold’ a book. I work through Tate Publishing & this is a self-publisher that has some strength but does little for distribution. As I stated, I have been writing for many years.

3.How do you handle rejections?

Very difficult question. Rejection(s) are never easy on me. The reason is that I love what I put down on paper. The other side is that rejection(s) are very helpful when they are accompanied with letters or points of explanation. I find that most ‘criticism’ has the potential of acceleration & improvement attached as you work hard to understand & find such.

4. Why do you write?

I write now to tell stories mostly. I am drawn to the power of story & how it impacts my life first & than hopefully the lives of others. For me, the epic tale of adventure & travel and journey is highly compelling. I remember once in high school, a teacher made us read (Cliff Note version I am sorry to say) The Odyssey. I remember that teacher telling us with a great deal of animation that each real story-teller has been creating their own renditions of that work since that day.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

I am not a full-time writer. I have a ‘day job’. I write now as I am able.

5. What are you working on right now?

I have mostly been working on my work items. I am constructing a new business portal for micro-lending and am hard at this task. The creating process is swallowing up most of my writing time.

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

I work hard not to do this. As I find myself appearing, I ferret out those passages or portions. To me, the characters have to be real & each one has to be authentic in their self-expressions. The individual ‘ticks’ & winsome features that show forth from their unique flaws are what draw me.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.

Through Gates of Fire Volume Three: Lifting Breezes is the completion of the trilogy. This book is the ending portion of the main character’s life. This book brings the hero to full flex of his muscles which have been diminished in size and proportion but extended via his faith. The book shows that some do, some will and some can. These are the people that speak to all of us.

9.Do you have any advice for other writers?

WOW! I learned long-ago the peril of advice giving. But I will take my salvo over the bow of this boat. First and foremost, just write. By this I mean, don’t censure your thoughts & emotions. The passion play that you are creating has meaning & will find its own audience.

Second, outcomes are uncertain. My experience is that the book/tale will unravel. Having the answers to the conundrum at the start is a vexing issue because you have to write/target to that mark. I find it now better to let the tale unfold itself to you. Third, be patient and write something each day. Inspiration equates to time in the chair. Hope this helps!

10. How important is faith in your books?

Faith is the friction for all of my books. I view faith as the primary antagonist. As I review how faith impacts my life, I find continually this to be the case. I know this may in fact grate upon some, but that is the point isn’t it?

11. What themes do you like to write about?

I like to write about the epidemic of isolation. I find that as life progresses—especially for men—that events shrink a life. Many lives are smashed and shipwrecked on these rocky shoals. It is the life redeemed that somehow continues to muster the strength to spit in the eye of this peril that impacts so many & has certainly & continually impacted me.

12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

My favorite book is the least favorite of all to most others. Through Gates of Fire Volume One: Wingless Flight. This is a modern-day adaptation of The Book of Job. For me, this is the ultimate & pinnacle book of scripture. (Please hold your darts as I know the gospels are the telling of the story & passion of Christ). But to ponder the notion that God & Satan discuss our lives—individually—and have the option of creating wager over them, I mean wow! That is a story. I still read portions of Book One and am amazed at the reality of paradise found, paradise lived and paradise lost. The notion that maybe there is some ‘bigger contributing factor’ that pushes this schedule as agenda is something for me to ponder. And it still causes me to pause…


13. What is your writing schedule like?

My writing schedule has never changed. I love the mornings. “Morning by morning new mercies I see.” I am an early riser. I love to get up and see what it is that God has in store for me on that day. I am zealous and jealous about this time. I know it must make & drive my wife crazy but I am pulled to the time of morning contemplation. All of my life springs forth from this font of joy and expression.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Mary Connealy's heroine's interview


This week I'm hosting Debby Mayne with her book, Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, Mary Connealy with her book, Montana Rose, and Steve Bonenberger with his book,
Through the Gates of Fire. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you
can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 14th) evening.

Heroine interview from Montana Rose:

1. Cassie Griffin Dawson, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

I’m the descendent of a Spanish countess. My father owned a railroad and I was the coddled daughter of wealthy, loving parents. After my father’s death, my mother arranged for my money and guardianship to be handled by a business man she trusted. When my mother died, when I was twelve, this man became the only real presence in my life and I married him when I was fifteen and he was about forty. Now, three years later, my wealth is gone. Griff moved us from our home in Chicago to avoid the gossip about our marriage, and I’ve been taught to be completely submissive to my older and wiser husband. Sometime he teaches me with a very harsh hand, but only when I’m bad.
And now Griff is dead, I’m penniless and with child and dozens of men stand on my husband’s just-filled in grave and demand I pick one of them because woman don’t survive in the rugged west alone.

I picked Red Dawson, a man I attacked with my fists and fingernails and feet to try and stop him from digging my husband’s grave. The most outrageous behavior of my life. But Red was the best of the awful choices. And now, as his wife, I am determined to accept whatever punishment I deserve for my attack, as a woman should.

2. What do you do for fun?

Griff insisted I learn restraint. I haven’t laughed in three years. He proposed to me and, when I laughed and said, “Yes,” and threw my arms around him, he shook me until my neck stung and my arms were bruised. I have, ever since, been doing my best to be mature and worthy of Griff’s exacting standards.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

I do as I’m told. The only thing I put off is speaking my mind, even though Red insures me he wants to know what I’m thinking. But he doesn’t really. He’d be horrified to know about the tumult and anger and rebellion that boils inside me. He keeps insisting I defy him. Instead I’m trying so hard to obey. . .except of course obeying him about defiance. Marriage to Red is very confusing, but he’s so sweet. And I want to much to please him

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

The childish thoughts that rage inside of me and how everyone would hate me if I once gave them voice.

5. What do you want out of life?

I want to be safe. I want to trust, Red, but I can’t, I just can’t. I’ve been trying to work around the ranch because he said he wanted me to do my share. Griff always said a woman’s place was firmly within the home and he wouldn’t even allow me to garden or feed the chickens. An now, I’ve let his flock of chickens escape and I’ve nearly burned down his barn and I was nearly killed by a mama pig that got loose, and Red’s horse hates me and bucked him off when it ran from me. I keep waiting for Red to get angry, but he doesn’t. I wonder when he’ll finally have enough of my foolishness?

6. What is the most important thing to you?

I’ve found my faith again with Red. I was raised in a family of believers but Griff had no use for religion, so I’d lost that important part of myself in my hears with him. Now I’m with a man who is a strong believer and being allowed to pray and read the Bible and worship is like water soaking into my weary, thirsty soul.

7. Do you read? If so, what is your favorite type of book to read?

I do read. Red made me realize how unusual that was in Montana Territory. I’d gotten used to believing I was stupid, because Griff told me so all the time, but I used to do well in school. I’d forgotten that. I really am NOT stupid. Red has his well worn Bible. That’s the only book in the house and he reads it to me in the evening.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I wish I could get the riotous thoughts in my head to calm down. I’ve learned self-control outwardly, thanks to Griff, but I could never control my unruly thoughts.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

On Red’s ranch was have a nervous horse named Buck. A kicking cow named Rosie and a visious mama pig named Harriet. They’re not pets, and each has given a good try at killing me. Some days I think Red likes them more than he likes me. He’s certainly known them longer.

Although he did kiss me the other day. But he’s never done such again. I wonder why? What did I do wrong?

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

I’d go back to the time before my parents died. It was a nice life, full of love and comfort. Wishing to be somewhere else though, is just another way I’m childish, I’m sure.

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Debby Mayne's interview


This week I'm hosting Debby Mayne with her book, Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, Mary Connealy with her book, Montana Rose, and Steve Bonenberger with his book, Through the Gates of Fire. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 14th) evening.

Debby Mayne's interview:

1. What made you start writing?

I’m not one of those people who always wanted to be a writer because it required sitting still—something I didn’t do very well when I was younger. After I gave birth to my first daughter, I spent quite a bit of time researching childcare, and I jotted notes that I taped all over my house. A friend suggested using that information and writing an article for other clueless new moms, so I did. Not expecting anything to come of it, I mailed it to a regional parenting magazine. A month later, I got a call from the editor saying she wanted to buy it! I wound up writing approximately 100 articles for parenting magazines. As my children grew up and I became more comfortable with the craft, I decided to try writing what I love to read—romance novels.

When I was in college, one of my English professors told me I was a good writer, and he encouraged me to consider a career where I could use this skill. I think it was always in the back of my mind because I didn’t hesitate to move forward once the publishing gate was open.

2. How long have you been writing?

I’ve been writing for almost 27 years.

When did you sell your first book?

My first book sold in 1999, and it was released in 2000.

3. How do you handle rejections?

I allow myself to feel bad for a day or two. Then I do a self-lecture to snap out of it, and I work on something new.

4. Why do you write?

I enjoy coming up with fun and interesting stories and sharing them with others. My whole process is enjoyable because I make new friends (my characters), I learn new things (research), and I can solve problems (conflict) without ever having to leave home.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

My favorite pastime has always been reading. My idea of heaven on earth is to have a stack of unread books, a comfortable chair, and a good lamp.

6. What are you working on right now?

I’m working on Special Mission, my second Heartsong Presents set in West Virginia.

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

I think most authors have at least a small part of themselves in their characters. Even when the people in my stories look different and have different experiences from mine, everything they do reflects how I see their lives and what I believe their reactions should or would be.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.

Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida is a triple romance with a web of other relationships. The longer format enabled me to deal with issues that I care about, such as the processes and challenges of aging, single parenting, multigenerational relationships, and the need for family. The setting, Treasure Island, is a beautiful beach town set on a barrier island about a half hour south of where I live.

9. Do you have any advice for other writers?

Continue to learn, no matter how many books you sell. Then share your knowledge with others to give back. If writing is truly your passion, never give up, no matter what.

10. How important is faith in your books?

Since my faith is strong and growing, it will be reflected in everything I write.

11. What themes do you like to write about?

I grew up with a military dad, and he had to travel without the family quite a bit when I was younger. Although I wasn’t an abandoned child, I probably experienced some of the same feelings that often come through in my stories. I also like a strong community where people know everything about each other. This enables me to show people’s quirks and foibles in how they relate to each other.

12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

At the risk of sounding cliché, it’s always the book I’m currently writing. Of all my books that are actually available, my favorite is Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida because I was able to explore all the different relationships.

13. What is your writing schedule like?

I’m a morning person, so after I pour my first cup of coffee, I sit down at the computer and read what I wrote the day before. After tweaking it a bit and getting back into the story, I work on my daily pages (a set number based on my deadline for that particular book). I do this each day, all the way through the book, then I put it aside for a while before I go back and look at it with fresh eyes. With each revision, I generally add layers and texture to the characters and settings to give the readers more of a sense of being there. Each book will go through three or four rounds of revisions before I send it to my editor.

Monday, June 08, 2009

This week Debby Mayne, Mary Connealy and Steve Bonenberger



Congratulations to Carolyn for winning Missy Tippens' book, His Forever Love and Cindi for winning Bonnie Grove's book, Talking to the Dead.

This week I'm hosting Debby Mayne with her book, Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, Mary Connealy with her book, Montana Rose, and Steve Bonenberger with his book, Through the Gates of Fire. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 14th) evening.

Debby Mayne's bio:

Author and speaker Debby Mayne grew up in a military family, which meant moving every few years throughout her childhood. Debby was born in Alaska, and she has lived in Mississippi, Tennessee, Oregon, Florida, Hawaii, and Japan. Her comfort foods are as diverse as her interests. You might find her eating sushi while reading a cozy mystery novel or fried catfish while watching a Tampa Bay Buccaneers football game.
Her husband of almost 30 years has accepted the fact that outside of her faith and family, books are the most important thing in her life. She and Wally have two grown daughters, Lauren and Alison, a son-in-law, Jason, and a granddaughter.
Debby has published 16 books, more than 400 short stories and articles, 6 novellas that have been printed in 7 anthologies, and a slew of devotions for busy women. She has also worked as managing editor of a national health magazine, product information writer for a TV retailer, a creative writing instructor, and a copy editor and proofreader for several book publishers. Debby currently enjoys writing Christian fiction, which allows her the freedom to tell stories without restraining her convictions.
She lives on Florida’s west coast with her husband and two cats. To learn more about Debby, visit her website at http://debbymayne.com.

Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida's Blurb:
Every year, Jerry Simpson rents a bicycle-built-for-two from Amanda Burns at her store in Treasure Island, Florida. Between Jerry's parents' well-meaning interference and Amanda's family responsibilities, there seems to be no hope for taking their relationship beyond the attraction stage. However, Gramps and his little friend Timmy have ways of turning everyone's lives upside down.



Mary Connealy's bio:

Mary Connealy, author of the Lassoed in Texas series. Montana Rose it the first book in a new series of romantic comedies with cowboys. She also has a cozy mystery newly released called Nosy in Nebraska. A lighthearted romantic comedy murder mystery where nobody gets hurt. . except for the dead guy.
And she has a stand alone Christmas romance coming in September called Cowboy Christmas.
Mary is married to her high school sweetheart, Ivan, a Nebraska farmer/rancher. She is the mother of four beautiful daughters Josie, married to Matt, Wendy, Shelly, married to Aaron and Katy. She’s got one beautiful granddaughter, Elle.

Montana Rose's Blurb:
Left pregnant and widowed in the unforgiving west, Cassie is forced into an unwanted marriage to rancher Red Dawson. No decent man could turn away from Cassie and leave her to the rough men in Divide, Montana. Red Dawson can't turn his back on the spoiled, snooty, beautiful woman. Now he's got himself a wife he's sure God never intended. And when he informs her there'll be no more silk dresses and she has to do some work around the ranch he's surprised she immediately tries to help with everything. Too bad she's a walking disaster. His ranch may not survive her efforts to pitch in.
Now, instead of a spoiled wife he's got himself an overly obedient and badly incompetent one, and poor Red is so charmed by her he can't bear to scold. He's not much for bossing people around, anyway.
While Red tries to survive Cassie's help and Cassie tries to use her own mind instead of meekly obeying for the first time in her life, an obsessed man plots to make Cassie his own, something he can't do as long as Red lives.
Montana Rose was actually inspired by Janette Oke's beautiful classic novel Love Comes Softly, only with romantic comedy, mayhem and gunfire. Which make it, I guess, Love Comes Loudly, or Love Hardly, or maybe Love Comes. . .Unfortunately.


Steve Bonenberger's bio:

Mr. Bonenberger has served hundreds of companies in the tasks of product development, product positioning and imaging, product sales and other related tasks. The Financial Power Network radio program has generated thousands of calls for our client companies that have resulted in millions of dollars in sales and recurring revenues.

Currently, Mr. Bonenberger is the President & CEO of Angel Acquisition Corp. Angel Acquisition Corp is a business development company that has two operating divisions: financial services and corporate finance. The financial services division is establishing itself as a premier lending firm in Southern California. The corporate finance division is the sole owner & operator of the proprietary Angels In Action Micro-Finance System.

Other books authored by Steve Bonenberger:

Your Personal Financial Revolution: A piece about financial strategies for growth and protection. (1998).

Breaking Through: Your Personal Revolution: A piece about personal strategies for growth and change. (1994).

Steve Bonenberger as a talk show host:

The Steve Bonenberger Program: The Common Bond of Common Sense:

A nationally syndicated program that directs entrepreneurs to find their passions & propel their dreams into sustainable income streams.

The Financial Power Network:
A nationally syndicated program that focuses upon networking issues, business development ideas, financial strategies for success and featured companies and their product sets that bring benefit and value to the end user.

Channel 10 News:
A local ABC affiliate in San Diego, CA. Mr. Bonenberger has served as a spot financial contributor for over six years.

It’s Your Time:
A local, call in formatted program that focused upon people and the everyday issues of their lives. This program was the ‘proving ground’ for the Financial Power Network.

Book blurb about the series of Through the Gates of Fire:

A reality based trilogy that leads the reader thru the passionate pursuits of faith, hope and love. In this series, Doctor Flash Bastion, Senior Pastor to the largest evangelical congregation in the world is forced against his better wishes to embrace the role of superhero. This spellbinding tale is full of turns, high-tech gadgetry and end-times associations. (2004-2008).

Saturday, June 06, 2009

June New Releases

1. A Case of the Heart , by Beth Shriver from The Wild Rose Press. An overzealous social worker develops a relationship with a cop while they keep her client safe from involvement in a drug ring.

2. A Dream to Call My Own, Brides of Gallatin County Book 3 , by Tracie Peterson from from Bethany House Publishers. Love and adventure still hearts in the rugged Montana frontier, while a killer threatens the peace and happiness of an entire community.

3. A Soldier’s Reunion,by Cheryl Wyatt from Steeple Hill Love Inspired. A reunion romance between a U.S. Air Force Pararescue Jumper (PJ) and a pediatrician and first love from his past who fears their careers will push them apart again.


4. A Family for Tory/A Mother for Cindy, by Margaret Daley from Steeple Hill Love Inspired Classics. Two stories that illustrate what happens when children decide to matchmake and bring two people together.

5. Above all Things, by Deborah Raney from Steeple Hill. Evette must decide if she can be a mother to her husband's 6-year-old mixed race child. A baby neither of them knew existed until a fateful phone call.

6. Child Finder, by Mike Angley from TotalRecall Publications, Inc. An Air Force Special Agent discovers he has a psychic gift that enables him to find missing children, but the government's exploitation of his skills leads to murder!

7. Critical Care, Mercy Hospital Series Book #1, by Candace Calvert from Zondervan. When a nurse initiates disaster counseling, the process re-opens her own emotional wounds--as God prepares her heart for a love that was nowhere in her plans.

8. His Forever Love, by Missy Tippens from Steeple Hill Love Inspired. Can former high school buddies find love while fighting over "custody" of his grandmother?

9. Love Finds You in Revenge, Ohio, by Lisa Harris from Summerside Press. Morgan finds herself torn between saving her sister's heart and losing hers to the man who jilted her seven years ago.

10. Love Finds You in Treasure Island, Florida, by Debby Mayne from Summerside Press. The attraction between Amanda and Jerry is overshadowed by their sense of responsibility.

11. Love’s Pursuit, by Siri Mitchell from Bethany House Publishers. Susannah Phillips obeys the rules. But when love interferes, she faces a choice: Follow the rules or follow her heart.

12. Nosey in Nebraska, by Mary Connealy from Barbour Publishing. Murder, Romance, Comedy and a really big mouse.

13. Snow Melts in Spring Seasons of the Tallgrass Series, by Deborah Vogts from Zondervan Publishing. Mattie Evans, a young veterinarian in rural Kansas saves a horse inured in a terrible accident but finds herself tending the wounded relationship between a prodigal son and his ailing father.

14. Sunset Beach, The Beach House Series by Trish Perry from Harvest House Publishers. Sonny Miller invites her mother and estranged aunt to a week at the beach, not telling one about the other; but they bring a few surprises of their own.

15. The Night Watchman, The Ray Quinn Series Book One by Mark Mynheir from Multnomah/Waterbrook. When the case of a lifetime is thrust upon him, retried homicide detective Ray Quinn must decide rather he’ll succumb to his depression and pain or use the God-given gifts he still has left to catch a killer. Crawling from the wreckage of his former life, Ray struggles to find healing and purpose as he tracks a madman.

16. Witness to Murder, by Jill Elizabeth Nelson from Steeple Hill Love Inspired Suspense. When a TV reporter witnesses a murder--she thinks--only unearthing the sinister secrets of her painful past can save her from becoming the next victim.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Bonnie Grove's interview


This week I'm hosting Missy Tippens with her book, His Forever Love and Bonnie Grove with her book, Talking to the Dead. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 7th) evening.

Bonnie Grove's interview:

1. What made you start writing?

Simply not knowing I shouldn’t, I suppose. I was a storyteller from the beginning (just ask my parents!) and in middle school I discovered acting. I played Tom Sawyer (yes, I know, I’m a girl – didn’t stop me) and brought the house down. That summer, I went to bible camp and discovered that my love for acting wasn’t just a gift from God; it was a gift I could offer back to God. From then, I started writing monologues and scenes for myself and my acting buddies. By the time I was in high school I was writing what I thought of as “emotionally complex” stuff. Then my parents bought a typewriter and I wanted to try it. I wrote a very bad romance novel my mother loved, and I’ve been pounding out prose ever since.

2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

Well, there’s writing and then there’s writing. I never stopped writing, and while I was in Bible College and university I suppose I wrote a jillion papers. I loved writing papers. Loved the research involved and putting the facts together so they told the story. It didn’t matter if the story was the role of automatic thoughts in Beck’s Cognitive Therapy, or CIA involvement in the 1970’s Iran hostage crisis (two papers I actually wrote). All of it served as a training ground for what was to come. Three years ago I sat down and wrote two books I hoped would be published – I’m blessed to say they both are.

3. How do you handle rejections?

I’m one of the lucky ones who haven’t had to face much rejection – at least not yet! The first book I ever pitched was Your Best You: Discovering and Developing the Strengths God Gave You. It was picked up by Beacon Hill Press, the only publisher I pitched it to. My novel generated a fair amount of interest so, while there were publishers who ended up turning it down, it was sold very quickly thanks to my agent.

4. Why do you write?

Like many people, I’m creative. I can’t play piano, and I’m the absolute worst scrapbooker you’ve ever seen (which is a total bummer!)My creativity flows with concepts and communication – words. Writing comes naturally for me and is simply an expression of who I am acted out in the world – just like all other forms of creativity we encounter every day.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

I’m a mom of two young kids, so my free time is about them.

6. What are you working on right now?

My second novel, due out June 2010. I don’t have a title yet, but I’m loving this book. A high energy story with lots of twists and fun.

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

Am I a character in my books? Nah. But characters are a creation of the writer, so yes, I’m *in* there. Bits and pieces of me, and my take on people. When you write fiction you talk to people, research, and explore the ideas and concepts you want to talk about in the book. But, at the end of the day, you choose which angle you will come from, which side of the issue, which voice needs to speak, and ultimately, how the story will end. On that level it’s all me. But in time the characters move and breathe and make choices too, and that’s when I take my hand off and say, “go.”

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.

Talking to the Dead is what happens when a young widow’s husband speaks to her from beyond the grave, and she consults a spiritualist, a shrink, and an exorcist before a warmhearted pastor helps her find the grace to forgive—and go on.

It’s a story of hope, grace, and forgiveness – and healing. It’s been called quirky, and I think that’s because, even though the subject is “heavy” the storytelling isn’t.

I’ve been blessed to have amazing writers read and endorse Talking to the Dead. People like Alison Stroble, Susan Meissner, Mary DeMuth, and Francine Rivers, which makes this journey even more exciting.


9. Do you have any advice for other writers?

Keep the first thing the first thing. Hone your craft daily and take it seriously. Learn all you can, not just about writing but about the history of literature in western culture.

Do everything because of love.

10. How important is faith in your books?

I’m a Christian first in my life, before anything else. I live from a Christian worldview and I write from one. The way I approach faith in my writing is that I’m privileged to contribute to the ongoing discussion about what it means to be human. For me that means also discussing what it means for humanity to encounter God.

11. What themes do you like to write about?

Grace. I’m endlessly fascinated by God’s grace and what it looks like in the world. How it enfolds us, how it chases us down, how it strips us bare and shows us our need. Everything I’ve ever written is an exploration of some facet of God’s grace.

Within that over arching theme, I also like to explore the idea of “life as journey” or “process” as opposed to a rigid set of ideas about what life is and what we should be doing.

Lastly, I asked my husband what he saw as a theme in my writing. He said that all my work explores some kind of loss. After we talked about that for awhile, we decided that what I love to explore is the things we hold on to, and believe are “ours”, but they never were really ours.


12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

Well, I’ve only written two novels and one non-fiction and I like each of them for different reasons. But I think Talking to the Dead will always hold a sweet spot in my heart. It’s my first novel and even though I spent over a year writing it, I can still sit down with a cup of tea, open the book and get lost in the story.

13. What is your writing schedule like?

I write every day. When I’m not writing a book, I read other works as research (I read for pleasure too – sometimes even the same books I read as research. Yep, I love my job!), and I read books on the craft of writing. But the focus of my day is writing, even in the midst of research and collecting ideas for the next book.

Thanks for this interview, Margaret. I enjoyed chatting about writing and books!

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Missy Tippens' hero's interview


This week I'm hosting Missy Tippens with her book, His Forever Love and Bonnie Grove with her book, Talking to the Dead. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 7th) evening.

Interview with the hero of His Forever Love, Bill Wellington:

1. Bill, tell me the most interesting thing about you.
Well, most people seem interested in the fact that I’m a physicist—at least until I get carried away talking about particle physics. Then their eyes tend to glaze over. :)

2. What do you do for fun?
I’m spend most of my time on campus or in the lab. But I do enjoy cooking for friends and see an occasional movie. I really should get out more, but I love my work.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?
I’ve always dreaded having to go home to face the townspeople where I grew up. I never felt like I fit in. And when Lindsay got engaged to someone else, I left and never looked back. But my grandmother still lives there, so I make quick visits sometimes. And now that she’s taken a fall, I’ll have to put aside my feelings to go check on her.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?
Not having a place where I’m accepted—a place that feels like home.

5. What do you want out of life?
I want success in my career. The respect of peers. The joy of doing something I love. And if I were totally honest, I’d admit that I dream of having a wife and family.

6. What is the most important thing to you?
Right now, taking good care of my grandmother. Family is most important.

7. Do you read books? If so, what is your favorite type of book?
When I was young, I read mostly non-fiction—books about space and the planets. Now most of my reading has to do with my research, things like professional journals.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?
I would love to be more outgoing and less awkward—especially around Lindsay. I wish I could be charming.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?
No, I’m afraid I don’t have a pet. A dog would be nice. Maybe someday if I ever realize that dream of a family and white picket fence.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?
I would go back to the day I was going to tell Lindsay I loved her, the day she showed up with an engagement ring from someone else. If I had a do-over, I would find the nerve to tell her the truth about my feelings to see if she might reconsider the engagement. If she might give me a chance.

Thanks for the interview, Margaret. I enjoyed being on your blog today. And for readers, you can find out more about how my visit back to Magnolia, Georgia, goes in my story, His Forever Love.

Monday, June 01, 2009

This week Missy Tippens and Bonnie Grove


Congratulations to Sherry for winning Robin Shope's Wildcard and desertrose for winning Elizabeth Baker's Living with Eeyore.

This week I'm hosting Missy Tippens with her book, His Forever Love and Bonnie Grove with her book, Talking to the Dead. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (June 7th) evening.

Missy Tippens' bio:

Missy Tippens is an award-winning writer and was a finalist in the Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart Contest. She has a story included in Blessings of Mossy Creek, published by BelleBooks. After ten years of pursuing her dream, she made her first sale of a full-length novel to Steeple Hill Love Inspired. Her debut novel, Her Unlikely Family, was a February 2008 release. Her next, His Forever Love, is on the shelves now! It will be followed by A Forever Christmas in November.

Missy would love to hear from readers through her website, www.missytippens.com, or by e-mail: missytippens@aol.com.


The blurb for His Forever Love:

In Magnolia, Georgia, local legend says that a couple who holds hands around the “forever” tree will have an unending love. Even so, Bill Wellington held Lindsay Jones’s hands around that tree years ago...and then left her behind. He chose the big city, and now he wants to bring his grandmother there. But to his amazement, he finds that Granny has a boyfriend—and a vibrant life. A life that includes Lindsay, Granny’s caregiver. Bill never thought he’d want to come home, yet Magnolia clearly has its charms. As does Lindsay, who makes him long for a second chance at forever love.



Bonnie Grove's bio:

Bonnie Grove started writing when her parents bought a typewriter, and she hasn’t stopped since. Trained in Christian Counseling (Emmanuel Bible College, Kitchener, ON), and secular psychology (University of Alberta), she developed and wrote social programs for families at risk while landing articles and stories in anthologies. She is the author of Working Your Best You: Discovering and Developing the Strengths God Gave You; and Talking to the Dead: a Novel. Grove and her pastor husband, Steve, have two children; they live in Saskatchewan.

Talking to the Dead's blurb:

Twenty-something Kate Davis can’t seem to get this grieving widow thing right. She’s supposed to put on a brave face and get on with her life, right? Instead she’s camped out on her living room floor, unwashed, unkempt, and unable to sleep—because her husband Kevin keeps talking to her.

Is she losing her mind?

Kate’s attempts to find the source of the voice she hears are both humorous and humiliating, as she turns first to an “eclectically spiritual” counselor, then a shrink with a bad toupee, an exorcist, and finally group therapy. There she meets Jack, the warmhearted, unconventional pastor of a ramshackle church, and at last the voice subsides. But when she stumbles upon a secret Kevin was keeping, Kate’s fragile hold on the present threatens to implode under the weight of the past…and Kevin begins to shout.

Will the voice ever stop? Kate must confront her grief to find the grace to go on, in this tender, quirky first novel about embracing life.