An Open Book

An Open Book Logo

Welcome to the April 2020 edition of An Open Book, hosted both at My Scribbler’s Heart AND CatholicMom.com!

It’s sad that shortly after my husband received Pocket Guide to Adoration by Fr. Josh Johnson, adoration was indefinitely suspended in our parish due to the global pandemic. Even so, he’s made use of this attractive, leather-bound manual with chapters devoted to Sacred Scriptures, the Rosary, the Catechism, and Lives of the Saints.

I’ve been listening to Try Softer: A Fresh Approach to Move Us Out of Anxiety, Stress, and Survival Mode—and into a Life of Connection and Joy by Aundi Kolber with a group of women this Lent. I’m falling a bit behind because I have little opportunity to listen to audiobooks now that I have nowhere to drive and there are five other people in the house 24/7. But the author has a lot of valuable things to say to those who have suffered the effects of trauma and have been white-knuckling through life for years, maybe even decades, instead of truly living.

This Lent, my bible study group began an Ascension Press study designed around Jesus: The Way, the Truth, and the Life by Marcellino D’Ambrosio. That too has been canceled due to COVID-19, but I am continuing the study alone when I can spare a few minutes. The book has helped me to grasp the Holy Land geography better than anything I’ve studied and does a remarkable job of presenting both Jesus’ human and divine natures.

Channel of Your Peace by Veronica Smallhorn is an honest look at the lies we tell with our bodies when we live in a way that doesn’t honor God’s design for marriage, family, and self-sacrificial love. In her debut novel, the author captures the heroine’s journey in a genuine, nonjudgmental way, allowing the reader to witness her heartache, suffering, and conversion in a gradual, natural way.

Desperate Forest by Cece Louise is a YA historical novel about a princess on the run, kingdoms in jeopardy, a menacing forest, and a bit of mystery. Add the uncertainty of whom our refugee Princess Roselynn can trust and a little romance, and it’s a recipe for a fun escape. I will pass this recommendation on to my daughter.

My high school junior recently won a Scholastic Gold Key Award for his science fiction story entitled “Asimov.” Appropriately, one of his teachers recommended he read some Isaac Asimov, so he’s been reading Foundation, Foundation and Empire, Second Foundation. With the libraries closed, he now has unlimited, free renewals on this science fiction tale about psychohistorians trying to mitigate a 30,000-year dark age.

In sixth grade, my daughter is reading The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke with her class. A gang of orphans on the streets of Venice steal from the wealthy, and a pair of runaway brothers find their home with them.

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett is also being shared by the girls here. I’ve somehow never read this children’s classic in which a girl discovers the hidden garden of her widowed guardian’s deceased wife. Based on A Little Princess, by the same author, I’d give this a try.

My younger daughter recently received Belt of Truth by Theresa Linden as a sort of First Reconciliation gift. This charming knight-in-training story includes a lesson about honesty for chapter-book readers. It includes great illustrations by the multi-talented author too.

This girl of mine loves everything dogs, and she also picked up The Berenstain Bears Epic Dog Show by Stan, Jan, and Mike Berenstain. It sounds like Bear Country bully Too-Tall is faced with juvenile detention or some community service. Which will he choose?

My youngest loved Arnie, the Doughnut by Laurie Keller. Unfortunately, this story left him asking me for doughnuts. I’m baking our bread now, but I’ve not yet ventured into doughnut territory. You need a fryer for that, don’t you? Anyway, he read this tale of a doughnut who doesn’t know he’s meant to be eaten on Storyline Online.

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99-cent ebook sale!

Through March 30, all of my ebooks will be on sale for only 99-cents!

That includes my new release, Come Back to Me, and last year’s release, All in Good Time, neither of which have been available at a reduced price – until now!

Stay With Me, Come Back to Me (Stay With Me #2), Rightfully Ours, and Ornamental Graces are available on Kindle or Kindle app only.

All in Good Time is available on a wide variety of ebook platforms, including Kindle.

Here’s an easy link to all of my books on Amazon.

And here’s where to find All in Good Time on those other platforms.

The sales begin at noon EDT, March 24 and run through March 30, 2020 with a couple exceptions. Because of the unfortunate timing of when Ornamental Graces is renewed in Amazon’s Kindle Select program, the soonest I could drop the price is Wednesday, March 25. Sorry. Couldn’t be helped. Come Back to Me will also drop on March 25.

Take advantage of this 99-cent sale on other FQP Kindle books including those shown below. Visit the FQP catalog for all selections.

All in Good Time, Gifts Receive Seal of Approval

All in Good Time and Gifts: Visible & Invisible have both received the Catholic Writers Guild Seal of Approval.

CWG Seal of Approval

According to the Catholic Writers Guild, “The purpose of the Catholic Writers Guild Seal of Approval is to help Catholic bookstores and venues in their determination of the Catholicity of a work. This reassurance from a professional organization can assist authors in marketing and promoting their works. Books are also judged by their editorial integrity as well.”


Relevant Fiction Reviews: Classics (III)

Relevant Fiction Reviews
The Romance of Tristan and Iseult (Dover Books on Literature & Drama)The Romance of Tristan and Iseult by M. Joseph Bédier
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This classic of romance literature, which obviously influenced subsequent classic works, had eluded me for decades. I’d only heard mention of it in recent years and came across this Hillaire Beloc translation at a low cost.

I wish I’d read this in the context of a classroom or group/club rather than independently because there is much absent in the text that would make for great discussion. Responsibility, the nature of love, honor, duty, sacrifice – these are all found within Tristan and Iseult, but not in any depth.

There’s some lip service to God and honor, but the lovers absolve themselves from any responsibility because they just can’t help themselves. They (mistakenly) drank a love potion, you see. Whoopsie.

Despite that disappointment, I found this worth reading as a seminal work, and it did mostly hold my attention.
Classics Dracula, A Christmas Carol & The Romance of Tristan and Iseult: My takes in Relevant Fiction Reviews. Share on X Continue reading

Corona Life: 10 Tips to Keep You Sane

A large part of my days revolve around serving my family. You’d think that they’d be the beneficiaries in that equation, but I’ve been reminded lately how good these people are for me.

For a person who has the propensity to live in her head too much, they are refreshingly grounding. They are real. With real physical needs, real childish silliness, real human interactions, and delightful senses of humor.

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A Channel of Your Peace Blog Tour

About the Book:

Would a God who truly loves you allow things to get this bad?

Lapsed Catholic Erin Rafferty has the life she always wanted. Or at least she did, till the moment her fiancé of five years announces he’s leaving her for another woman. Heartbroken and humiliated, a further devastating development leaves her wondering if she can ever live a normal life again.

Mark Ashcroft is a devout Catholic looking for an equally devout Catholic wife. A chance encounter with Erin leaves Mark completely captivated, yet deeply unsettled, knowing Erin is not in a place to accept him, nor is she the model Christian woman he’d hoped to start a life with.

A tentative friendship begins, and Erin finds herself questioning her long-held rejection of her faith, while Mark finds himself healing from memories of his own wounded past.

But as love grows, further tragedy in Erin’s life threatens her burgeoning faith and her hope for a future with Mark.

What follows is a difficult journey of love, surrender, trust, and faith in the ultimate knowledge that Christ is always in the midst of our sufferings.

Continue reading

An Open Book

An Open Book Logo

Welcome to the March 2020 edition of An Open Book, hosted both at My Scribbler’s Heart AND CatholicMom.com!

My husband recently listened to An Exorcist Explains the Demonic: The Antics of Satan and His Army of Fallen Angels  by Fr. Gabriele Amorth (renowned exorcist of Rome). He found its insights into the evil forces in our world both enlightening and frightening at the same time.

You may see some repeated themes in the books my husband reads. (See above.) Another one of them is alcohol, though I promise no one here has a drinking problem! Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition by Daniel Okrent, however, is I book I first picked up many years ago and for some reason not related to the book’s quality, did not finish. But this book isn’t about alcohol. Not really. It’s about the culture and politics related to America’s failed experiment with prohibition. My husband walked away from it with a new understanding of the racist, anti-immigrant, and anti-Catholic motivations behind the temperance movement. A fascinating read.

Moonshine: The Celebration of America’s Original Rebel Spirit by John Schlimm is about alcohol. It tells the tale of moonshine’s origin in Appalachia on through prohibition to today. This book includes recipes too.

The Solid Grounds Coffee Company by Carla Laureano is the final book in the Saturday Night Supper Club series. The author does a great job uncovering the hero and heroine’s muddled pasts and fears and breaking open their hearts to foster healing and hope (even if I don’t totally dig the millennial hipster vibe in this series).

Courtney Walsh has become one of my favorite Christian contemporary romance authors. She excels at taking well-developed, complex characters through the paces of self-realization, making peace, and falling in love against a backdrop of interesting minor characters, and, in the case of If For Any Reason, a beautiful ocean side setting.

The Ring by Sarah Anne Carter is a sweet romance and an honest look at the challenges faced by military families. The reader glimpses everything from decisions about dating, marriage, and family to deployments, moves, benefits, practical support, and loss.

The second book in the Kaely Quinn Profiler Series, Fire Storm by Nancy Mehl, is a fast-paced contemporary suspense/mystery novel. Kaely Quinn is an intriguing, if somewhat self-absorbed character, but I still managed to like her. The mystery kept me guessing, and I only figured it out shortly before the big reveal. I was a little disappointed that Kaely’s FBI partner/love interest remained on the sidelines, but hopefully we’ll see more of him in the next novel.

 The Dating Charade by Melissa Ferguson juxtaposes light humor and banter with the heavy issues of childhood neglect, abuse, and abandonment in a way that didn’t quite work for me. I like both Cassie and Jett though, and the humorous scenes of children’s antics are the best parts of the book.

My high school son is reading The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a book I haven’t read myself since high school. Maybe when he’s done we’ll watch the recent movie adaption. The only reactions I’ve gotten thus far are about it being about “a bunch of rich people.”

After reading Leslea Wahl’s The Perfect Blindside, my middle school daughter moved right on to Extreme Blindside, which we gave to her for her birthday. She zipped right through this teen mystery, coming to me occasionally with her suspicions as to whom was putting the extreme winter athletes in jeopardy. A fun book!

She’s also begun reading Little Women: The Original Classic Novel with Photos from the Major Motion Picture by Louisa May Alcott, another birthday gift. I took her and her little sister to see the movie adaption after Christmas, and it was time for her to read the source! I suspect a lot of irritation at Jo’s choices by the time she gets to the end.

My youngest daughter snapped up a copy of Saint John the Baptist: A Voice Crying Out in the Desert by Ezekiel Saucedo and quickly read this graphic novel from Pauline Kids. She lingered over the (very appropriate, discreet) illustrations of Herod being presented with the saint’s head on a platter. She gives this a thumbs up!

One of her favorite books, one that is toted all over the house all the time, is National Geographic Kids Dog Breed Guide: A Complete Reference to Your Best Friend Fur-ever by T.J. Resler and Gary Weitznman. This girl wants a puppy, and she is the most puppy-educated kid I know! Every day she shows me pictures of this or that breed, sharing details about its grooming needs or intelligence. Worth every penny she spent on it!

With the littlest boy in the house, we’ve been reading God the Father and the Best Day Ever by Gracie Jagla. It’s an Easter book with a twist. Instead of focusing on the earthly events following the crucifixion, this fun rhyming book follows those souls awaiting the opening of the gates of Heaven and their joyful reception following Jesus’s resurrection.

Milk Goes to School by Terry Border has come home from the school library a couple of times now. On first read, I didn’t care much for this one, but as we read it again, I got a few smiles out of the anthropomorphic foods and beverages in the classroom, including milk. (She’s spoiled.) A cute read aloud picture book.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
What are you reading? Share it at An Open Book and find new book recommendations too! #openbook Share on X

Want more details on An Open Book? You can also sign up for An Open Book reminder email, which goes out one week before the link-up. No blog? That’s okay. Just tell us what you’re reading in the comment box.


THANKS FOR STOPPING BY! STAY A WHILE AND LOOK AROUND. LEAVE A COMMENT. SHARE WITH A FRIEND. IF YOU LIKE WHAT YOU SEE, PLEASE SIGN UP FOR MY AUTHOR NEWSLETTER TO KEEP UP-TO-DATE ON NEW RELEASES, EXTRAS, AND HOT DEALS!

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.