Showing posts with label author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2021

Hide it in Your Heart with Thankfulness


Book Description:

Featuring inspirational verses from the Bible, these coloring pages will help you relax, unwind, and enjoy some creative fun while hiding God’s Word in your heart! All the passages have a theme of thankfulness, so you'll be encouraged to cultivate gratitude and be reminded of all you have to thank God for as you color.


The verses are printed in colorable word art with decorative borders, blank on the back to make them easier to remove and frame or display, if desired. Each coloring page is accompanied by thought-provoking journal questions that will help you dig into the Scriptures even more as you focus on their meaning and application in your life.


Hide it in Your Heart with Thankfulness is an ideal Scripture memorization aid for Christian schools, homeschool programs, Sunday schools, or your own personal use. Children and adults will enjoy learning, practicing, and meditating on these artistically presented verses from the New International Version Bible. Order your copy today and start hiding God’s Word in your heart with thankfulness!

Purchase on Amazon



About the Author:
Annie Douglass Lima


Annie Douglass Lima considers herself fortunate to have traveled in twenty different countries and lived in four of them. A teacher in her “other” life, she loves reading to her students and sparking their imaginations. Her books include science fictionfantasyYA action and adventure novels, a puppet scriptpoetryBible verse coloring books, and a fantasy-themed cookbook. When she isn’t teaching, writing, or editing, Annie can often be found sipping spiced chai or pomegranate green tea in exotic locations, some of which exist in this world.

Email: AnnieDouglassLima@gmail.com
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Thursday, December 10, 2020

Poetry by Annie Douglass Lima

 Across the Miles:

Poems of Fantasy, Faith, and Fun

by Annie Douglass Lima


Watch a violinist spin stars and snowflakes into existence and wake dragons. Step into a bookstore full of dusty treasures, and wander through a graveyard for poems that died before their birth. Join a solitary star treading the measures of its stately dance above a rainbow like a stream of dripping jewels. Then mourn with the alien who crash-landed on Earth and can’t get home - but be careful to avoid the deadly shadow creatures slinking through the darkness.

Grab your copy of this volume of poetry and embark on an unforgettable journey across the miles!

cover photography by Lisa Douglass

These poems touch on themes such as travel, friendship, nature, God, music, fantasy, animal encounters, and school. Some whimsical, some serious, they include specific, lesser-known varieties of poetry such as pantoum, rondeau, triolet, roundel, and villanelle.

Read on to sample two of the poems in Across the Miles!


Monopoly (a Pantoum)

A pantoum consists of four-line stanzas in which the second and fourth lines of one stanza become the first and third lines of the next stanza. It works well to describe noisy places or repetitive thoughts or conversations.


“Monopoly’s such a fun game.”

“So now how much more do I owe you?”

“Did you pay as much as you claim?”

“The rules are right here, let me show you.”

“So now how much more do I owe you?”

“You’re not getting Boardwalk from me!”

“The rules are right here, let me show you.”

“It’s ‘Get out of Jail for Free’.”

“You’re not getting Boardwalk from me!”

“Will all you guys please be more quiet?”

“It’s ‘Get out of Jail for Free’.”

“You landed on mine, don’t deny it.”

“Will all you guys please be more quiet?”

“I can’t hear a word that you say.”

“You landed on mine, don’t deny it.”

“Just pass me the dice, then I’ll play.”

“I can’t hear a word that you say.”

“Are Reading and Short Line for sale?”

“Just pass me the dice, then I’ll play.”

“So how do I get out of jail?”

“Are Reading and Short Line for sale?”

“She owes you nine hundred for rent.”

“So how do I get out of jail?”

“You know how much money I’ve spent?”

“She owes you nine hundred for rent.”

“Aha, he’s advancing my way now!”

“You know how much money I’ve spent?”

“You landed on Baltic, so pay now.”

“Aha, he’s advancing my way now.”

“Did she roll a three or a four?”

“You landed on Baltic, so pay now.”

“I don’t want to play anymore.”

“Did she roll a three or a four?”

“You owe me two hundred and twenty.”

“I don’t want to play anymore.”

“Don’t buy more hotels – you’ve got plenty!”

“You owe me two hundred and twenty.”

“Did you pay as much as you claim?”

“Don’t buy more hotels – you’ve got plenty!”

“Monopoly’s such a fun game.”


Flu

For best effect, read this poem aloud with a stuffy nose and hoarse voice.

I’ve decided I hate the flu – I really do!

The soreness and aching,

the temp’rature taking

which tries to make me a believer that I’ve only got a fever

of 99.2

but I’m pretty sure that thermometer’s a liar

’cause it feels way higher

and I think I may slowly be going insane

’cause my cough’s such a pain

with its racking and its hacking

while all of the drugs that I take are in vain

and my head and my chest

are both tight and congest-

ed, and I’m faced with issues

like running out of tissues

(’cause my drippy nose never stops)

and having to bring cough drops

everywhere I go

and my eyes getting runny

 – and NO! It’s not funny!

’cause I don’t like being in pain and congested and woozy

And inconvenienced and fevered and fluzy.


Want to enjoy nearly a hundred more poems like this? Click here to download your copy of Across the Miles as an eBook or paperback. You can even gift a copy to a poetry-loving friend or family member!



About the Author:
Annie Douglass Lima


Annie Douglass Lima considers herself fortunate to have traveled in twenty different countries and lived in four of them. A fifth-grade teacher in her “other” life, she loves reading to her students and sparking their imaginations. Her books include science fiction, fantasy, YA action and adventure novels, a puppet script, poetry, Bible verse coloring and activity books, and a fantasy-themed cookbook. When she isn’t teaching or writing, Annie can often be found sipping spiced chai or pomegranate green tea in exotic locations, some of which exist in this world.

Email: AnnieDouglassLima@gmail.com
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Thursday, September 17, 2020

Pippin Pals are Hero Helpers! Author Interview

Pippin Pals are Hero Helpers! Author Interview


Author Interview:
Donna Marie 


Meet the wonderful lady behind
Pippin Pals are Hero Helpers!

1. When do you find time to read and what do you usually like to read?
You know, that’s the most frustrating thing about my life now, more than ever. I very rarely allow time to read fiction during the day unless it’s my Barnes & Noble stint to catch up on picture books and that’s when I’ll sit in the café and read at least a couple dozen. My days are too full doing so many other things, so I’d typically read MG or YA novels in bed, but that’s become more uncomfortable and I don’t get very far. I would love when a book was SO good, it kept me up all night ‘cause I couldn’t put it down! I have thousands of books, so many I’ve yet to read and wonder if I ever will. Not likely *sigh* I’m constantly reading on line, but it’s all nonfiction-based, whether it’s news, health, research, information, social media.
 
2. How do you prefer to write your books - with a pen/pencil, typing, or dictation?
This is a question that I think only writers find appealing—I know I like to know too :D I thoroughly enjoy reading about writers’ and illustrators’ processes. For me, I am very fussy about the feel of the pen I use when I write. I want it to be smooth on the paper and comfortable to hold, so it can’t be bulky and I prefer a texture where I grip, rather than the plastic or metal. I never use a pencil to write (unless I’m doing math—like bills!), but I have a favorite mechanical pencil for sketching.

 
3. What was the best money you ever spent as a writer? What other authors are you friends with, and how have they inspired you?
I combined these two questions because they are connected. I hate to think of the $thousands I’ve spent over the years on my writing life, but I can’t say any was actually wasted. Because I could never afford them, I never attended our SCBWI conferences. Unusual circumstances got me involved, and then heavily involved, with our New Jersey Chapter. Through that I’ve met SO many people and have so many dear, cherished KidLit friends it would take a full blog post to name them all, none of whom I would’ve met otherwise. I’ll name just few your readers might be familiar with, IF they know children’s book authors: Ame Dyckman, Beth Ferry, Josh Funk, Annie Silvestro, Darlene Beck Jacobson, Robin Newman, Holly McGhee…OK, I’ll stop there. And there’s a lot of benefit to attending conferences. To me, if you can do it—do it! And be SURE to volunteer! You get to meet more people and experience it in a much better way.

4. What was the first book that you wrote and did you publish it?
I’ll choose the first book I wrote with serious intent (anything before that doesn't count 😀) because, ironically, it ultimately morphed into these books. I wrote it back in about 1993 when I first started concentrating on pursuing publication. It was called The Rainy Day. It had 6 diverse characters and was about a sunny day turning to rain and the mother encouraging them to think of unplugged things to do inside on a rainy day. Over the years those characters have morphed into other projects, but in the picture book realm ultimately became what you see in my “Pippin Pals” books. When the pandemic began and I wanted to contribute to the “stay at home” effort, instead of a blog post of “things to do” at home, that book ended up being rewritten and what you see here is what resulted. A very long, roundabout, unexpected journey!


5. If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be? What are common traps for aspiring writers?
These two questions go together too, for me. The first trap would be the ignorance and naivety that comes with being a newbie about the realities of the publishing industry—how difficult it is for virtually everyone to get published. My journey has been decades long, and though I came close to being traditionally published, the stars (acquisitions) didn’t align. I never wanted to self-publish, but here I am. The project warranted it! And I would tell myself—and any young writer—that writing talent may come naturally, but what you think is “good” writing is typically “first draft” quality. On my “Writer Side Up!” blog About page I put:

“To write well takes education and practice.

To write exceptionally well is an art—through revision.

It is in the revision that the work becomes a work of art.”


In other words: learn the craft, learn about the industry, know what the realities are. If writing is truly a passion, you will write no matter what your journey—published or not.

6. What would you like readers to know about your latest book or book project?
Once I realized I had the power to execute these books digitally to make diverse and inclusive versions, there was no stopping me! They were written with a great sense of purpose, and I had the news on the majority of the time during these many months, while working. I was feeling the pandemic in the same stressful way as the rest of the world, but the longer it took to accomplish all this work, the more pressure I felt because I wanted them and the downloads on the site to be of use to people when they were most relevant. Other countries are doing much better than we are in the U.S. (I won’t get into THAT nightmare), but it’s not “over” anywhere, so my hope still holds true—that these books, charts and info can help.


7. Do you hide any secrets in your books that only a few people will find?
I love the idea of “Easter Eggs” in picture books, though it’s not always on my mind while I’m creating. Sometimes it springs up later in the illustration process. In “Hero Helpers” I highlight healthcare and essential workers, and one of the fun things about that while illustrating was having specific people in mind for a handful of them. I was thinking of my daughter-in-law for the teacher; an ER nurse I saw on TV a lot; my ex’s police uniform is in there, having done the arm patch relatively detailed though it is small; New York Governor Cuomo with his state’s lapel medallion, also more detailed than necessary, considering it’s only a dot on the page; specific news reporters; a Sikh army officer I read about; and even a postal worker I know.

8. Does your family support your career as a writer? Do you use your own name or a pseudonym?
My family and close friends have been supportive of my writing and illustrating children’s book aspirations since I first mentioned it before my son was even born (he’s now 35!). It wasn’t until 1992, when I became officially disabled and could no longer work steadily, that I was encouraged by a friend to start writing again, my having written a poem at that time that she thought was wonderful. (Trust me, when I look back at a lot of my writing, man, do they need rewrites!) The people in my life have watched me create book after book, strive for years to get an agent and get published traditionally, and felt for me through all the ups and downs. It’s a very difficult pursuit and ALL the “stars have to align” for it to happen. Timing tends to be everything, at least in my experience. If I hadn’t written the book, then come up with a way to make this story in 6 (soon 8) diverse versions with choices of gender, skin and hair color, and had thought I could publish ebooks on Amazon for free (you can, but I chose to buy my own ISBNs), I wouldn’t have self-published. But here I am! And lucky me, I get featured on your blog :D 
 
Check out my book review of
Pippin Pals are Hero Helpers!


You can follow :Donna on Twitter and Facebook, and her Writer Side UP! and Creativity “Cookbook” blogs, and Pippin Pals at https://pippinherohelpers.com/, Twitter and Facebook.

COMING SOON: 2 more inclusive versions of Pippin Pals are Hero Helpers! by family type.
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Friday, April 17, 2020

Reformed: Supervillain Rehabilitation Project


Launching May 1st, the first in a new
superhero series by H.L. Burke!


Book Description:

Once a villain, always a villain?

Optimistic and idealistic superhero Prism is determined to redeem her father’s legacy by rebooting his super villain rehabilitation program. To do so, she sets her sights on Fade, the relapsed super villain who was the reason the government canceled the original program in the first place. However, when she petitions for Fade to be released into her custody, she finds out things might not be as simple as she thought.

Convicted of an unforgivable crime, Fade received a choice: surrender to trial and possible execution or endure a memory erasure so he could start fresh. Now with no recollection of his time before incarceration, Fade doubts he has the ability to be anything but the villain the public believe him to be.

A series of attacks by a mysterious power-swapping villain points back to Fade’s past and the crime that cost him his freedom and memory. With her father's legacy and her own reputation on the line, even Prism has to wonder: can a villain truly be reformed?


Pre-order sale on now!

My Review:

Watch out for this brand new series by the genre hopping author, H.L. Burke! I beta read this one and it was so much fun! It has wonderful characters, witty banter, romance, action, and suspense. Prism is the optimistic team leader who has a vision to see supervillains reformed and working as superheroes. Her first project is to take on Fade, a particularly challenging case. He was given a second chance previously and messed it up abominably. Has Prism bitten off more than she can chew? It certainly seems that way when things begin going horribly wrong. I'm already looking forward to the next book!




About the Author:
H.L. Burke


Born in a small town in north central Oregon, H. L. Burke spent most of her childhood around trees and farm animals and was always accompanied by a book. Growing up with epic heroes from Middle Earth and Narnia keeping her company, she also became an incurable romantic.

An addictive personality, she jumped from one fandom to another, being at times completely obsessed with various books, movies, or television series (Lord of the Rings, Star Wars, and Star Trek all took their turns), but she has grown to be what she considers a well-rounded connoisseur of geek culture.

Married to her high school crush who is now a US Marine, she has moved multiple times in her adult life but believes that home is wherever her husband, two daughters, and pets are.

She is the author of a four part fantasy/romance series entitled "The Dragon and the Scholar," the Award Winning (2016 Realm Award for Young Adult Fiction) Nyssa Glass Steampunk series, and MG/Fantasy "Cora and the Nurse Dragon," among others.





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Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Easter and High Tea with a Linky


We've been on lockdown since March 26, so Easter was a very simple affair. Hubby is the only one to leave the house for necessary groceries, so he made sure we had Easter chocolates. He hid a few chocolate bunnies around the house for Amanda. He even decorated the table! Isn't he a real sweetie?

So, the other day he came home with dragon fruit that was reduced to clear. I never worked with dragon fruit before. All you have to do is slice it through and the skin peels away easily with your fingers, no knife skills required. It doesn't have much flavor, but it is a superfood, so you can always blitz it with other fruit to make a smoothie.

The girls and I have been enjoying cooking and baking during lockdown. The other day, Amanda decided she wanted to put on a high tea for all of us. She prepared dragon fruit and gooseberries, Brazilian kisses (condensed milk truffles), no bake oatmeal cookies, cheese sandwiches, and cucumber slices. Samantha picked flowers from the garden to decorate the table. Everything was scrumptious!









High tea made with love by Amanda

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Here's a peek at
my latest post
on 1camera1mom:

Visiting Du Toitskloof Cellar


Sisters: Jessica and Samantha

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My Latest Book Posts:

Reformed by H.L. Burke and
Author Interview

Reformed Author H.L. Burke

Quote from Reformed

LAST DAY TO ENTER!
Fabulous eBook giveaway of
2 of Jeffrey L. Kohanek's
Eye of Obscurance on Instagram!



#BRIAEpicGiveaway time: A fabulous fantasy epic filled with magic, adventure, and intrigue. . Eye of Obscurance (Fate of Wizardoms #1) by Jeffrey L. Kohanek - ebook . To win a free copy, here’s what you have to do: 1. Like this post 2. Follow the author @jeffreylkohanek, the host @tinarobmorley, and the organizers: @magicbookcorner and @catrinrussellauthor 3. Tag a bookish friend and 4. (optional) For an extra entry! Answer this question: What is your favourite fantasy series? . Each comment counts as an entry. Shares in stories and reposts are counted as triple entries. Be sure to tag the host when sharing. . 2 WINNERS WILL BE SELECTED 1 lucky winner randomly chosen As well as the person with the highest number of entries – to them a guaranteed copy. . This giveaway is not associated with Instagram. It is international and open for 3 days! The ebooks will be sent to the lucky winners by the author himself. May the odds be in your favour! . #EyeofObscurance #JeffreyLKohanek #BRIAEpicGiveaway #yafantasy #fantasybooks #bookstagram #bookgiveaway #bookgiveaways #readersofinstagram #bookish #booklover #indiebook #bibliophile #bookworm #lovebooks #giveaway2020 #bookgiveaway2020 #freebooks #freebies #bookstagrammer #igreads #booknerd #bookblogger #books #book #bookaddict #ebookgiveaway #ebooks
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Saturday, April 11, 2020

Reformed by H.L. Burke and Author Interview


Launching May 1st, the first in a new
superhero series by H.L. Burke!


Book Description:

Once a villain, always a villain?

Optimistic and idealistic superhero Prism is determined to redeem her father’s legacy by rebooting his super villain rehabilitation program. To do so, she sets her sights on Fade, the relapsed super villain who was the reason the government canceled the original program in the first place. However, when she petitions for Fade to be released into her custody, she finds out things might not be as simple as she thought.

Convicted of an unforgivable crime, Fade received a choice: surrender to trial and possible execution or endure a memory erasure so he could start fresh. Now with no recollection of his time before incarceration, Fade doubts he has the ability to be anything but the villain the public believe him to be.

A series of attacks by a mysterious power-swapping villain points back to Fade’s past and the crime that cost him his freedom and memory. With her father's legacy and her own reputation on the line, even Prism has to wonder: can a villain truly be reformed?


Pre-order sale on now!

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H.L. Burke Interview

H.L. Burke with Bruce

When did you start out as an indie author? Where were you living at the time? Were you already a mom needing to squeeze time in to write?

I joke that I didn't write for the first five years of my marriage because I was just too happy and things just kept moving too fast. It was like BOOM! Marriage! BOOM! Matt deploying. BOOM! Baby! BOOM! International movie! BOOM! Another baby! BOOM! Another move! BOOM! A new puppy!

And weirdly I didn't stop being happy and things did not stop moving quickly, I just one day decided, "Huh, I have a 4 year old, an infant, a new puppy, and we just moved from Japan to Florida where I know nobody ... this is a good time to start writing seriously again." I think this was 2012. I started doing NaNoWriMo 2012, wrote consistently through 2013, finished the fourth book in my first series during NaNoWriMo 2013, then published my first book in January of 2014.

I never thought of it as having to squeeze things in. I'm chaotic. I don't do routine. The more haphazard and crazy my schedule is, the more in the groove I get.

How long does it normally take you to write a book? Would you say editing takes longer than the initial first draft?

This depends a lot on the length of the book. I do have a series of novellas. Those can take around two weeks for writing and maybe two weeks for editing because they are short. A full-length book, a good guess is a month and a half for writing, another month and a half to get it publishing ready. When I first got started, editing did take a lot longer than writing, but I've internalized how I want things to work enough that my first drafts are now basically 90% of what goes to print. I do still seek outside input on the books, which does slow the editing process down a little, but generally editing is faster than writing, just with a lot of waiting for beta readers and proof copies and stuff.

How many books do you write in a year on average?

This sounds like math. Is this a math question? I'm not very good at math. I think four. Not always full length, though. I do love novellas. They're tight and get the story wrapped up in a neat little bundle.

Where do you normally like to write?

Wherever I am. If everything is normal, I'll write in the evening in the office/computer room where my desktop is. I also sneak writing at my day job. Write on notebooks if I'm in waiting rooms. I've been known to type a little on my phone if I'm stuck somewhere and get an idea.

What time in the day do you enjoy writing the most?

I'm a night owl. I tend to get distracted easier during the day, so after the kids are in bed for the night is ideal.

Keeping in mind that you have pets, which one interrupts you the most when you’re writing?

Currently, the dang border collie, Gideon. He has this trick where he gets under my elbow and nose bumps me until I pet him. The cat will sometimes walk in my face or attack my hands, but mostly he's off doing his cat thing.

Gideon and Brownie Bite

You are a genre hopping author. Is there a genre you haven’t written in yet? Do you have a favorite genre?

There are a lot of genres I haven't really touched. Hard science fiction. Contemporary romance. Historical. Mystery. I tend to avoid any that have a stricter framework or more genre 'rules.' Honestly, almost all my books are some form of fantasy. There are the Steampunk books, but even those are "this technology might as well be magic" level "science" fiction, and I see Superhero as a subset of Urban Fantasy. I think the subgenre I find the easiest in is fairy tale, but all of my work is very 'fantasy but outside of the box.' I make my own genre conventions rather than subscribe to any particular set.

What does a normal week’s schedule look like for you (before COVID-19)?

I don't have a normal. Part of it is personality. I have never been able to keep up a routine for long without getting bored and changing it all around ... which is a good thing because military wife life means that every time I've come close to getting a routine, something has disrupted it. A move. A deployment. Base wide power outages. Hurricanes and earthquakes have also been factors. The answer to this question has changed roughly every six months for as long as I can remember, and right now I am in a transition period with my husband getting medically separated from the Marines where I'm honestly not sure what my life is going to look like in a month let alone a year.

It's a weird sort of privilege that Covid did not disrupt my life, because my life has never not been disrupted. It's just how I live. It frustrates my family because they're used to civilian life where vacations are planned months in advance, and I'm like, "Look, I can't promise that if I make a plan now I'll be able to stick to it because too much is out of my control, so I'd just rather not make a plan."

It drives my mom crazy. She is a schedule/planner/routine person, and I think she'd implode if she had to live my life for even a week. I think she thinks I'm just messing with her when I don't give her straight answers about long term plans.

I'd say ask me this question again in a year. Maybe Matt getting out of the Marine Corp will mean we settle into a life that doesn't have radical shifts, but I also know that he's planning on going back to school and then finding a new job ... I very much doubt settled will happen until that's all done, so ... ask me in four to five years?

Where do you find inspiration?

Where don't I?
Spice Bringer and Heart of the Curiosity were inspired by 'weird history facts' videos. Ashen (coming August 2020) was inspired because I was cold. That's pretty much it. I was cold and started thinking about a character where her primary state of being is cold and what if she also made other people cold ... my superhero book was because way back in the day I got bored in the theater watching the Edward Norton Hulk ... sorry, Hulk.

I actually love Marvel movies, but I don't think they'd figured out what they wanted at that point. I didn't get "into" Marvel movies until (weirdly) Thor. I don't know what it is about Thor because it's NOT the best of the Marvel movies by any means, but I think that's when I realized that Iron Man wasn't a one off and that this "universe" could actually exist.

So anyway, during Hulk I was like, "This is okay, but I don't know. It's missing things. If I were writing a super hero story..." so I started making my own list of superhero tropes that I liked and how I would play with them and every so often would revisit the idea, add a little to it, until it came into being. My stories are often like that. I'll get a hint of an idea, throw it in the back of my mind with all the other ideas, let them stick to each other, bump against each other, and then check on them in a year or two and see if they've developed into something interesting.

With my superhero story, especially, the things I tossed into that "simmer pot" to see what flavors would develop were numerous. The renaissance of superhero art in the last decade or so means that a lot of different things have been explored and there was a lot of me going, "Oh, I like that, but what if..." or "Captain Marvel proved that we need more cats in superhero fiction. Gonna have a cat."

In case you are wondering, I do have a cat in my superhero book.

Bruce memorialized as a superhero cat

Where/How do you get recharged?

Mostly gaming. Game of choice differs from time to time. Stardew Valley is my current favorite. I love my little farm. I have a bunch of livestock and fishponds and fields that take me two 'in game days' to plant every season.

Thanks for Reading,
H.(Heidi) L. Burke



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