Showing posts with label National Library Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Library Week. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Announcing the Giveaway Winners

Well, if you've been stopping by lately you know that I was running a giveaway in honor of National Library Week, and that if you commented before midnight on April 18, your name would be thrown into the hat for a chance to win a signed copy of either Erin's Ring or Finding Grace.
Yes, [sheepish smile], I realize it's the 21st already, and I'm a little late notifying the winners.  But here's what's been keeping me otherwise occupied.
Hugs.

Snuggles.

Selfies with my little cuddle-bug.
Oh wow...I've sunk to new lows to make excuses for my lazy blogmanship of late--because yes, I've been spending the weekdays as a full-time nanny-Grammy to my sweet little G-Man, and that leaves me fewer opportunities for writing at my laptop; but he and his parents went out of town last weekend, so I had ample time on Sunday to put together a post announcing the winners of the giveaway.  It's just been hard for me to focus lately, dear readers.

But without further ado [imagine a drumroll here]: 

Joy (of Joy in the Morning) has won a copy of Erin's Ring.
Annie (of Annery at Home) has won a copy of Finding Grace.

As an added bonus, I decided to give away one extra copy of Erin's Ring, to the reader who left the very first comment after I announced the giveaway on March 31.  And that one goes to Donna--who said she has some Irish ancestry herself and is therefore intrigued by the story.

Ladies, contact me via the "Email me" button down there on the sidebar, and let me know where I should send your prizes.  Thanks a million for playing along.  (And if you enjoy the books, a short endorsement on Amazon, if you're so moved, would be much appreciated.)   ;)


**Next Tuesday, we'll have  meeting of the Grace-filled Tuesdays book club.  And I think we'll talk about character development in my first novel, Finding Grace, if you'd like to join me.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Celebrating "Celebrate Teen Literature Day"!

It's still National Library Week, and I'm still running a giveaway here at the blog.  Leave me a comment anytime before midnight on April 18, and you could win one of two prizes: a signed copy of my first novel, Finding Grace, or a signed copy of my second novel, Erin's Ring.
This is a good day to talk about these two books, because today has actually been dubbed "Celebrate Teen Literature Day," and both of my novels fall into the teen/young adult (YA) category.  (Although don't let the YA tag deter you from reading them if you're a full-blown adult; I tried to write these stories in such a way that they could be enjoyed by readers from middle school to middle age.)

When I set out to write Finding Grace, I wasn't even sure it would ever be officially published as a book, with a glossy cover and professionally printed pages.  I thought that when I finished, I might run off copies for my boys, so that when they had children of their own, they could hand my homemade book down to them. (Then wonder of wonders, Cheryl Dickow agreed to give the manuscript the imprint of her company, Bezalel Books, and a work of fiction that I thought would only be shared amongst my family members was listed on the Amazon mega-site.  Life is amazing!)

I had no grandchildren when I began work on Finding Grace in August of 2007--but by the time I completed it in December of 2011, I had become a grandmother to identical twin girls.  I have five grandchildren now, and counting; and if any of them grow up to be readers, I hope they will enjoy and feel inspired by their Grammy's books.

Over the years during which I was raising my sons, in the '90s and '00s, I noticed a disturbing trend: the amoral secular mindset, with all of its anti-God, anti-organized religion ideas, was creeping into every corner of the entertainment world.  Moral relativism was becoming the order of the day--on TV, in movies, and in books.  As I have always been an avid reader myself, from the time I was a young, impressionable girl, I wanted to write something that might be a sort of antidote to that kind of poison--a book that might actually inspire teens to swim against the tide and fight the good fight.  Inspire them to achieve what has always been a difficult task, even before the world became so God-less: to become saints.  I thought I'd write something about teenaged characters coming of age, with a strong pro-chastity, pro-life message--with characters who show how beautiful it is to let their Catholic Faith inform their life decisions.  My dearest wish was that it might resonate with young readers going through similar high school experiences.  But since just about every adult was once an unsure, angst-ridden teen, I hoped that more mature readers would enjoy it, too.

Although it hasn't found a wide readership yet, I have been gratified by the comments of readers--some teens, but mostly adults (and even some male adults)--who have read and endorsed Finding Grace.

My heart goes out to the young, it truly does.  And to the parents who must raise them these days.  Just recently, my publisher sent me a link that just about broke my heart.  There is an organization called "Negative Population Growth" that is offering a lucrative college scholarship to students, for an essay (or photo) illustrating why our government should be involved in population control.  Here's what they're advertising online:

Provided by: Negative Population Growth
Award:
$2500
Deadline:
April 23, 2015
The Negative Population Growth Essay Scholarship Contest is open to high school seniors and college freshmen, sophomores and juniors. You must submit an essay of between 500 and 750 words on the following topic: "Should the United States' government pursue population policies to protect our quality of life for future generations?" You must also be a U.S. citizen or permanent legal resident to qualify for this award.
 
Is this what we've come to in the US?  Do we want to become communist China, and limit the number of children a family is allowed to have?  To storm into homes and force abortions on pregnant women who have gone over the legal limit?  To force sterilization on women who have had their quota of babies?  Have Americans any idea what getting the government involved in population control will really mean?  Have we abandoned the principles of our Founding Fathers, who created a country where its citizens were promised "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"?
 
This scholarship offer makes me feel sick, people.  Not to mention terrified.   Earth worship--environmentalist fanaticism--has turned human beings into the enemy.  If you don't believe me about this group and their scholarship offer, check out their website: http://www.npg.org/scholarships.html

So in my own little way, with my small works of Catholic fiction aimed at teens, I hope to fight such anti-God, anti-life, anti-freedom forces at work in the world.  I hope these books can be, to use the motto of my boys' Catholic high school, Lux in Tenebris ("Light in the Darkness").

Because there is indeed darkness.  As if the Negative Population Growth scholarship story isn't disturbing enough, my husband and I were listening to Glenn Beck on the radio recently, and he was alerting his listeners about an incredibly awful book that he'd been made aware of: he was reading aloud from a children's book on the subject of abortion.

Yes, you read that right: there is a children's book about abortion out there that features a child named Lee talking about the sister his mom and dad aborted, referring to her as a "happy ghost" and putting a positive spin on the whole experience.  This abomination is called Sister Apple, Sister Pig.  Here's a little excerpt, if you can stomach it:

When Lee’s Papa asked, “[D]oes that make you sad or scared?” Lee changed his tune. “I’m not sad that my sister is a ghost! If you kept my sister, you would be tired, and sad, and mad!” When his father questioned why, Lee continued:
Because we would be wild and loud and sometimes we would fight. Mama might be scared that she could not buy enough food for us. Mama might not have enough time to read to me, to paint with me, to play with me, to talk with me…. 
Papa also noted “good reasons” Lee doesn’t have a sister “right here right now.” “Maybe you will have another sister when there is more time, and there is more money,” Papa said.

I have no words.  Only tears.  Imagine the tears in Heaven.
And that is one more reason that I may just keep on writing Catholic fiction for young people!  I thought I was a one-book author, that I would never write another novel after Finding Grace.  Then about a year ago, Cheryl Dickow approached me with a surprising offer to write another YA title for her company, and the result was Erin's Ring.  Published in November of 2014, it was a delight to work on from beginning to end.  "Okay," I told myself, "I'm a two-book author now.  But that's it.  Never again.  Now I'm in full-time Grammy mode."

However, I should never say "never."  Because when I hear about groups that are celebrating negative population growth and children's books that are glorifying abortion, I think there's a possibility that I'll keep on writing.  I'm too shy when it comes to the spoken word, so I don't I think I'm meant to spread the Good News that way.  But I do a little better with the written word.  And I'm beginning to get the feeling that that's the method God would like me to use, to add even a small flicker of light to the world's darkness.

Let's all celebrate teen literature that has spiritually enriching messages for our young people!  (And on that note, don't forget to enter the giveaway!) 

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

It's National Library Week! And National Library Workers Day!

National Library Week is underway!  I blogged about this already (here's that post, in case you missed it), but I'm going to blog about it a lot more in the coming days.
I am a great believer in libraries--and in actual books, ones that have covers you can open, and spines with titles on them, and pages fashioned out of paper and ink.  Although I am not a great fan of John Dewey's progressive ideals, I do get nostalgic about my own school days long, long ago, when I used his Decimal System regularly.  We Stone Age types didn't employ an Internet search bar to find a book; we thumbed through index cards filed in the library's card catalog.

Dear reader, are you old enough to remember actually using these babies?



Card catalogs have pretty much gone the way of the dinosaurs.  I guess some  libraries still use them, but they are becoming an endangered species.  Although you can find them being repurposed in interesting ways on Pinterest and other online sites...

...and they look pretty cool.  Now that's home décor with oodles of character, if you want my opinion.

Card catalogs might become extinct before long, but I sure hope that doesn't happen to libraries.  Because as swell as reading books on Kindle might be, it would be a pretty sad world if all printed books disappeared forever.  In this woman's opinion, anyway.  (And hey, dear reader, are you old enough to remember actually using the word "swell"?)

This Tuesday of this wonderful week-long library extravaganza has been dubbed "National Library Workers Day," so you should show your favorite librarian some love...and what better way to do so than with a book?  Right?

And hey, funny coincidence: I just happen to be giving away a copy of my second YA Catholic novel, Erin's Ring, in honor of National Library Week...and Erin's Ring just happens to prominently feature a public library and a kindly and helpful librarian.   How perfect is THAT?  Wouldn't it make a great gift for that special library worker in your life?  (Or for you?  Or your daughter?)

Aside from a copy of Erin's Ring, I am also giving away a copy of my first novel, Finding Grace.   Both books are populated with plucky Irish-American characters, unabashedly celebrate the beauty of the Catholic Faith, and have chaste love stories thrown in for good measure.   If you are interested in entering to win a copy of one of these novels, just leave me a comment by midnight on April 18--and feel free to let me know which one you'd prefer.  (If you'd like to find out more about them, click on the images of their covers on the sidebar and those will take you to the Amazon pages, where you can read a synopsis and some reviews.)

Stay tuned for more on National Library Week.  But for now, leave me a comment if you're so moved.  I'd love to hear from you!

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

For the Love of Books: National Library Week--and a Giveaway!

It's Tuesday, which is supposed to be set aside for meetings of the "Grace-filled Tuesdays" book club. There will be no meeting today; but we will talk books.  Oh yes we will.

You've probably guessed this about me already, but...I am a big fan of books.  The biggest.  This meme really speaks to me.
A non-reader might say that reading makes a person boring, but I beg to differ. (Please, I beg you, don't think I'm boring!)
 
Full disclosure: I've always got a stack of reading material on my nightstand--mostly novels, but every now and then a non-fiction title sneaks its way into the line-up.  This is what my "to read" pile looked like a few months ago here at my son's house in VA.
Part of the reason I shared this picture with you is that I wanted you to see that framed drawing of the Blessed Mother, lovingly rendered in pencil by a friend of my daughter-in-law Preciosa.  I'm so glad that this beautiful drawing lives in the guest room that my husband and I are using while we're here!   Such beauty cries out to be shared.

I have already read the top three books in that stack up there.  And a number of others, not pictured.  But I've finally just started the one on the bottom, Fulcrum, by my on-line pal Dan Flaherty (who, incidentally, interviewed my first and third sons and their wives about meeting on CatholicMatch.com and wrote articles about them for the Catholic Match website).
I've actually been wanting to read Dan's book for a long time now, but since it's a story about Irish-Catholics in America, I was afraid to read it while working on my own story about Irish immigrants, Erin's Ring, because I thought the subject matter might be too similar.  For instance, in my book there is a real neighborhood in Dover that was nicknamed "Dublin," and in Dan's there is fictional one in Boston called "Shamrock."  But actually, I don't like to read any other novels while writing one of my own.  (For me, reading and writing fiction simultaneously is kind of like trying to dribble and chew gum at the same time--and if you can do that, my hat's off to you.)  But listen to this enticing synopsis on the back cover of Fulcrum:

A fictional neighborhood of Shamrock in the historic city of Boston is the setting for this Irish-American drama. Set in the immediate postwar period, Fulcrum portrays the lives of six teenagers who see their traditional neighborhood changing and wrestle with a response that will be true to their roots and to their conscience.

The tale is set against the backdrop of a classic Red Sox-Yankees pennant race, an old-fashioned mayoral campaign and the passion of football in autumn, all intertwined with the powerful presence, teaching and piety of the Catholic Church.

Fulcrum is an epic blend of Field of Dreams, The Last Hurrah and The Bells of St. Mary all rolled up into one, and destined to be a classic of Irish Catholic fiction.

This book is obviously a must-read for a Hibernophile like me!  (Yes, I just learned a new word, and I could hardly wait to use it.)

Okay, we've established my love of books.  And mind you, I mean the kind made out of ink and paper--and stored at an establishment that I hope will not go the way of the dinosaurs, now that eBooks are so popular: the public library.

And that was my neat little segue into my next topic: National Library Week.

In honor of National Library Week, I'm going to give away one copy of each of my novels here at the blog.

Tuesday April 14 is "National Library Workers Day," and I thought that was a perfect reason to give away a copy of Erin's Ring--a book that features the public library and a kindly and helpful librarian who works there.  If you win, perhaps you could give it to a special librarian in your life as a gift (or then again, you could keep it and share it with your favorite reader, middle school-aged and up).

Thursday April 16 is "Celebrate Teen Literature Day," and I thought that was a perfect reason to give away a copy of Finding Grace--a book that I wrote with high school-aged readers in mind.  If you win, perhaps you could give it to your favorite teen as a gift (or your favorite adult, for that matter!).

To enter the giveaway: leave me a comment anytime between now and Saturday April 18.  In your comment, let me know which of the two titles you would prefer to win.  It's a short window of opportunity, so if you want to throw your name into the hat, don't shilly-shally!

I look forward to your comments, fellow bookworms!