Thursday, June 26, 2014

"SHIFTER" IS A FIVE STAR THAT YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST READ!!!

Shifter” is a story of transformations that reach beyond those which change the physical form and into the soul.

Rowena Portch unravels a tale that starts with the casting out and shaming of Zebastian by his father who accuses him of being a monster and for killing his brother. Though dejected and wanting to be left alone, his faithful friend Teak will not let him despair, believing him in spite of what everyone else believes. Another Spirian, Kaili, also believes in him and is somehow able to communicate with him and is bound to him. Remembering that the voice of an angel had been able to halt his rage, Zebastian falls hard for Kaili, the ice queen, who is struggling with allowing any man into her heart or her bed. Amidst the struggle of emotions between them is a plot by a powerful and sinister Shadow that desires to control Kaili’s clan with an army of super shifters. The struggle between Kaili and Zebastian is on borrowed time as the Shadows rise up in force and threaten to put an end to any hope for the future of the Spirians.




Rowena Portch pours out every ounce of emotion in the fantasy thriller “Shifter.” By using first person and shifting from the thoughts and emotions of one character to the other, the reader is hopelessly drawn in and held tightly in the grasp of the story as its many twists and tangles unravel themselves. The deeper battles within the souls of Zebastian and Kaili as they are transformed by love displays an intriguing dichotomy in which the heat of battle both hardens and softens the two of them. The hope that they will come together is intense throughout and controls the emotions even as the action keeps you on the edge of your seat. Inspiring, profound and riveting; “Shifter” is destined to be a best seller.






Saturday, May 31, 2014

Great Book to Kick Off Summer! “The Secret at Haney Field”

Youth Summer Reading

The smell of fresh-cut grass, hotdogs and roasted peanuts is the same in 2014


 as it was in the ball parks of the 1940s and the love of the game is felt in both eras in “The Secret at Haney Field.”R. M. Clark’s intriguing mystery which has captured the attention of April O’Day, Darren Plummer and owner of the stadium and the Harpoons crosses over between both eras in baseball history. Before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier, there were two leagues; one for whites and one for Negroes. Having been selected as a bat retriever for the Harpoons, April stumbles upon a ghostly sight, there seem to be ghost players involved in a game on the field after dark. She later discovers that the Harpoon’s owner, Walter Haney, can see them too and invites her friend Darren to see if he can also see them. While watching the shadow players on the field one night a shadow ball lands in the bleachers. When April picks up the ball, she is transported back into the 1940s and a bright, sunny day with two teams from the Negro League and tons of fans cheering them on. She later visits one of the shadow games from the dugout and meets one of the players, Oscar “Flash” Henderson, who holds the key to a deeper mystery involving Mister Haney.




As deeply moving as “Field of Dreams,” 

R. M. Clark has created a very memorable story that gives honor to those who played in the Negro league in that bygone age. “The Secret at Haney Field” captures your heart and a childlike way that recalls the simplicity of the game. The understanding of the game is portrayed in a twelve-year-old whose passion for it is beyond compare. As she and Darren peel back the different layers of the mystery, the reader is present in a very meaningful way. The intrigue, the game, the history and the righting of past wrongs are all felt on a deep level. Inspiring, intriguing and insightful; “The Secret at Haney Field” will place you in both eras of the game and deliver not only a wonderfully suspenseful mystery, but reveal a rich history as well.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

NEW RELEASE!!! CHULOS, CHUZOS AND HOTDOG CONDOMS

Do you really know Medellin, Colombia?
You'll discover that it is nothing like it used to be. In the 1980s and 1990s it was an extremely dangerous place to be. Since the beginning of the 21st Century, however, the development and renewal of this spectacular city in the Andes has changed it dramatically. Steeped in the rich traditions of the Antiqueños, the Medellin and the surrounding pueblos of Antioquia make this city tucked away in the Andes a virtual paradise. Explore some of the culture, language and natural beauty of Medellin as the author recounts his experience as a gringo among Paisas.

PURCHASE FOR $1 OFF




Novelist, Bil Howard, takes a humorous look at how he survived the last year as a gringo in Medellin, Colombia. Packed with plenty of travel tips on transportation, sites to see, food, shopping destinations and more. Bil also describes some of the cultural and language issues that he had to overcome as well. Laugh, learn and enjoy!

Sunday, May 11, 2014

EXTREMELY COLORFUL AND CREATIVE CHILDREN'S BOOK

Elsa Takaoka and Catherine Toennisson have combined their talents to create the delightful children’s book “Goo and Spot in the Do Not Wiggle Riddle.”
Packed with fun and full of color; this rhyming riddle progresses through a series of fun activities and funny creatures that captivate the imagination. Like all riddles there is something hidden in the story that must be solved. Each clue not only stirs the imagination of the two listeners Goo and Spot, but also excites them, and whenever Goo wiggles, Spot does too. Giant bumblebees and squishy, green slugs, dancing, flamingos in shorts and three toads with big, giant warts are only a few of the colorful creatures that are featured in this riddle. Ultimately, the riddle is about the importance of sitting still and listening whenever someone is reading or telling a story, but it is done in a very subtle way.



The magical imagination of children is stirred and their laughter can almost be heard as you work through the colorful rhymes of “Goo and Spot in the Do Not Wiggle Riddle.” Elsa Takaoka has created a riddle with a great lesson in it, but done so in a way that is certain to tickle the funny bone of every child (and even a few adults who never grew up). Catherine Toennisson has added her expertise in animation and storyboarding in a way that makes the action and color leap off of the pages. It is impossible not to wiggle when reading this book, because it simply draws it out of you. Fun, creative and colorful; “Goo and Spot in the Do Not Wiggle Riddle” is a fantastic debut for these two extremely talented artists and ought to be the first of many award winning children’s classics to come.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

"GENTLY AWAKENED," a Must Read for Christian Artists

Is it even possible to be a Christian artist and thrive?
In “Gently Awakened,” by Sara Joseph, you’ll come to understand that it is impossible not to.
Sara shows how the scriptures not only bring us to salvation, but direct us toward the meaning in our lives. Her illustration, taken from the book of Jeremiah, concerning the “good figs” sets the stage for creating an understanding of our need to bear the fruit that we were created to bear. She shows how Satan often tries to use the same tricks he has always used in order to derail our efforts, because by bearing our fruit we become more like our creator. Sara gives practical applications of the scriptures to help you commit to using your art in order to bear witness of Christ rather than hiding it under a bushel or abandoning it altogether. Through surrendering to your purpose in Christ, she shows how the miracles which seem to be distant and ancient stories can become a reality and the abundance which comes from God’s bounty is ours. Her book is illustrated with her own works of art throughout as a testimony to her commitment to the calling which God has placed upon her.



Sara Joseph touched a deep spot within me through “Gently Awakened.” Although I have already taken steps toward the transformation to a full time writer and novelist, there have been times that I have wondered if I am truly following the path which 40 years of faith has set before me. I have turned away from that path time and time again as I have pursued “making a living.” Sara very gently allowed me to see that the seasons of my art are moving forward, just like the seasons of the fig tree from planting, cultivating, blossoming and bearing fruit come through time as the tree is tended. Honest, inspiring and practical; “Gently Awakened” is essential reading for artists who are seeking God’s guidance for their vocation.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

"FRESH START SUMMER," Subtle, Inspiring and Profound... Five Stars!

Putting out fires, literally, wasn’t exactly what Grace Harkins had in
mind for her first summer after retiring from teaching school, but that is exactly what happens in “Fresh Start Summer” by Beverly Nault.
Her friend, Maggie Elmsley, informed her before movie production hit town that Cherryvale would never be the same again. As a rash of fires began to break out on Maggie’s property, the teen actress attempts suicide and movie star Jeff Field is searching for a way to have his daughter back in his life, Cherryvale really is in for some serious changes. Though Grace has a long list of ways that she wants to spend her retirement, she is drawn to taking care of others before she starts in on her own objectives. As Grace subtly works her way into the lives of the two actors, the town rallies around Maggie and her home for rescued animals. But there is something sinister going on. Is it merely coincidence that things start happening when the movie production hits town? Will Cherryvale indeed be dramatically changed?



As simple and quiet as “Fresh Start Summer” is, it is impossible to put it down. Beverly Nault draws the reader into the story of Cherryvale in a very subtle and emotional way. Each character is easy to relate to and the reader becomes concerned for how things turn out for them. The gentle message of Christian love and grace penetrates through every incident in one form or another. There is no blaring trumpet call, but a very recognizable difference in the thoughts and actions of a town where people really do care about each other. Inspiring, heartwarming and profound; “Fresh Start Summer” is a picture of how true Christians face adversity together and heal the pain that comes along with it.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

My Three Books Check Them Out!!!

Electronic copies of my books can be purchased directly through my bookstore in PDF, Kindle and EPUB formats.
Paperback copies can be purchased through the CreatSpace store.
They can be purchased in either format through Amazon. Below are book covers. For descriptions and purchasing visit the Belle of Colombia Series Page and click on the "Book One" tab for "The Birth of a Dream" or "Book Two" tab for "The Desperation of Liberty."




Las copias electrónicas de mis libros se pueden comprar directamente a través de mi tienda de libros en PDF, Kindle y formatos EPUB.
Copias Rústica pueden adquirirse en la tienda CreatSpace.
Se pueden adquirir en cualquier formato a través de Amazon. Arriba están cubiertas de libros. Para obtener descripciones y compra visita a la Pagina de Bella Colombiana y click en la pestaña "Libro Uno" para "El nacimiento de un sueño" o "Libro Segundo" pestaña de "la desesperación de la Libertad."








Monday, March 31, 2014

"Defining Pearl" and "Kiss on Her Wings": Two Five Star Reads You Might Enjoy

“Defining Pearl” is indeed a pearl of great price. This memoir of Pearl Matibe is written by an extraordinary woman who was a
part of the political opposition to a dictator in Zimbabwe and lived to tell about it. In an attempt to define who she is, Pearl chronicles her childhood and education, both of which were very segregated from the world outside the closed curtains of her home. She was taught strict etiquette and proper English from early on and was often mistaken for a white woman over the phone. Her dream was realized as she and her husband settled into raising and family on a farm, something that typically was done by the white landowners. But everything went wrong when her husband became a part of the opposition against the dictatorial rule of Robert Mugabe. The taking of their farm, numerous arrests and threats on her life and the lives of her family finally drove her from Zimbabwe and she eventually found herself in the U.S. where she was forced to learn a new culture and begin to define herself in a different way.

Pearl Matibe has an excellent story to tell in “Defining Pearl.” She doesn’t tell it out of a sense of vanity, but rather to communicate the pride that she has in her family and heritage. She takes an honest look at the double-standards that exist in our world based upon race and culture. Her observations are an accusation toward all of us because we do not truly see who a person is, but rather make an assumption based upon outward appearances, accents or heritage. I felt a slight bite, also, as she described an America that is very different from the one that I grew up in. Yet, I also understood her disenchantment because I have experienced the very same things from my own country as the culture has continually morphed itself into something unrecognizable. Ultimately, however, I found “Defining Pearl” to be honest, tragic and inspiring; a lesson in our failure to really getting to know people.




Kiss on Her Wings
“I’ve only known two men’s souls in my life, one the devil, the other the birds wings which picked me up and carried me back to the freedom of being.” This quote from “Kiss on Her Wings” is a powerful statement of love and trust which Wendy Gibbins illustrates in a profound way in this novella. Simon and Beth have a deep love that is true and lasting. When Simon stumbles across a journal among the books on Beth’s shelf, he begins to read the story of a horrible crime, the person who committed it and the victim. As he continues to read he is filled with numerous changing emotions. Interrupting his reading are mysterious phone calls and the discovery of a bank book with large sums being withdrawn every few months. He wonders if Beth has gotten herself into something. As he continues reading, he begins to put the pieces together. Will his discoveries destroy their love? Will he be able to help Beth escape the problems that she is facing?

The depth of this love story is brought to light in a very subtle, but genuine manner. “Kiss on Her Wings” contrasts the depths of evil with the height of genuine love. Wendy Gibbins has subtly created a masterpiece in this novella, touching both worlds in a very real way. The patience, endurance and honesty of genuine love, even at the risk of losing it all is expertly demonstrated by Simon’s quiet commitment to Beth. Genuine, intriguing and inspiring; “Kiss on Her Wings” will raise your spirits as well and restore your confidence in the existence and power of true love.







Thursday, March 27, 2014

Young Adult, Teen Novella, "Sophia's Dilemma" gets Five Stars

Second Book in The Teen Mayhem Series... Loved the first one and this one is just as good.

Sophia has plenty of struggles to sort through and learns plenty about jumping to conclusions and running off on a whim to help her boyfriend Dane in “Sophia's Dilemma: This Too Shall Pass (The Teen Mayhem Series).” K. T. Bowes has extended the romance, mystery and thrill of the Teen Mayhem Series in this excellent sequel. Having parted ways with her friends Maddie and Heather, Dane is the only person that Sophia has in her life and she intends to take good care of him. When his birth certificate is needed for a scholarship application, Sophia takes it upon herself to go retrieve it from his mother’s house, in spite of the fact that Dane has said that no scholarship was worth the trouble that might come about for him to retrieve the birth certificate. Dane was right. Her actions soon have Dane in the hospital, chained to his bed with a handcuff and facing the possibility of criminal charges for murdering his stepfather. With things in the dumps, everything seems to be crumbling around Sophia when she overhears some gossip that sends her entire life into a tailspin. Nothing seems real to her any more as she pushes forward to clear Dane of the charges, while secretly knowing that it was over between them.



Sophia's Dilemma: This Too Shall Pass (The Teen Mayhem Series)” is expertly written in a way that draws every possible emotion from the reader. K. T. Bowes has done an excellent job of dragging the reader into the subjective feelings of the main character, while subtly showing that though everything looks bad from Sophia’s perspective, everything is, in fact, getting better. The thrilling suspense of an added mystery following the murder of Dane’s stepfather is an added twist that injects even more intrigue into a story which is already spell-binding. Suspenseful, tragic and revealing; “Sophia's Dilemma: This Too Shall Pass (The Teen Mayhem Series)” will have you quietly whispering to the young heroine words of encouragement and repeating the words, “this too shall pass,” to her over and over again.







Monday, March 24, 2014

Unlimited Reading for $4.95 per Month

Inkbok Promotional Release

In the fast-paced ever changing landscape of the book industry, one company, Inkbok.com, is planning to shake things up a bit by first breaking all of the rules.

Set to launch March 28th, Inkbok will offer unlimited reading of thousands of books, articles, poetry, short stories and more on Android, iOS and web for $4.95 per month. Romance, mystery, children’s, self-help, business, fitness, science fiction and biography are a just a few of the over 50 genres represented on the site. Inkbok arrives on the heels of similar subscription-based e-reading services launched in the past few months, though at roughly half the cost - other services at $8-$10 per month and Inkbok at $4.95 per month.


The question on everyone’s mind, however, is how could $4.95 unlimited reading possibly be good for publishers and authors?

“The truly unique and innovative aspect of Inkbok is our community model of business,” says 30-year-old entrepreneur, Joey Ebach, founder of Inkbok. “It allows us to meet our three foundational goals: low cost reading, fair royalties, and giving back.” For authors and publishers, this “community model” means sharing in the total gross revenue of the website, meaning every dime of member fees, advertising, email blasts, book promotions and more is shared with authors.

Each month, Inkbok takes the total gross revenue generated from the site and splits it three ways: 60% to authors/publishers based on how many times their work was read, 30% to Inkbok, and 10% to a charity that the community votes on. “As Inkbok grows, it will benefit all of our authors and increase our impact on the outside community. There is nothing like this in the literary industry today,” says Konrad Urbanowicz, Inkbok’s Vice President and head developer. With Inkbok taking only 30% of it’s gross revenue to cover all of it’s expenses to run the site, pay employees, and make a profit, Urbanowicz is certainly correct that there is nothing else like this.

This gross revenue sharing model is a new alternative to the traditional royalty system the publishing industry has used for years, and Inkbok may have struck a chord. In the past three months, they have gained 80 publishing partners and over a thousand authors. “The response thus far has been nothing short of amazing; our collection is growing exponentially,” says Urbanowicz.

When asked why a platform like Inkbok is needed, Todd Ebach, President of Inkbok, stated that people have a natural desire to search and discover, readers included, but they don’t want to pay for the process by buying each book. The team at Inkbok believes that offering readers the freedom to discover through a subscription model will result in more people reading and more exposure and royalties for authors. “We want to recapture that exciting feeling of spending hours in an old used bookstore and never knowing what you might find.”

The word “community” seemed to be the driving force of our conversation. When asked about this, Joey Ebach replied, “Reading is a conversation between the author and the reader. Our desire is to bring this conversation into real time, connecting authors with readers, and readers with other readers.” The team views Inkbok as more than just a business, but a place where stories and ideas are created, discussed and shared. “Early on, we chose not to seek out funding from investors or venture capitalists,” says Ebach. “If we did, they would have never allowed us to give 60% of our gross revenue to authors and 10% to charity; that’s not exactly profit maximization. Rather, we are a group of book lovers working to create the best reader writer community in the world.”

LAUNCHING MARCH 28TH. YOU CAN READ MY BOOKS RIONEGRO AND ZIPAQUIRA ON THIS SITE AS WELL AS FUTURE RELEASES.

Friday, March 14, 2014

HOME FIRES (My Five Star Review)

Though there were some painful parts to this novel, all in all, I enjoyed it.

When things come crashing in on Myra Benning’s idyllic life in “Home Fires,” she has to reach deep inside to find the strength to continue on. Judith Kirscht tells the story of how the awkward girl who grew up on the Minnesota Prairie faces a life and family that has fallen apart. Having discovered her husband’s infidelity, she decides that she will stick it out until her oldest son has gone on to college and her daughter is adjusting better to school. Things take a turn of her own when her husband carries things into deeper issues and she has some difficult decisions to make. While facing down the Benning family’s string of issues that have been passed down from father to sons, she refuses to turn a blind eye to things and faces it head on. Though she takes the hard road, it is the beginning of healing, but will it be enough to get her life back on track again?

Judith Kirscht has brilliantly chronicled the deep emotions and struggles that go along with unfaithfulness and the way it ruins families in “Home Fires.” As she develops the emotions of the characters and unravels the plot, the added touch of her “venting” comic strip provides a unique twist to the telling of the story. I found myself deeply wrapped up in the emotions and struggles and had a tendency to wander off and explore issues from my own experience. Honest, real and profound; “Home Fires” will challenge you on a very deep level and open your heart on another.









Saturday, March 8, 2014

BECOMING A WOMAN OF WORTH (Five Star Review)

I was thrilled to have the opportunity to read this book. It is meant to appeal mostly to women, but the truth is universal for
all of us.



What we become and how we develop is directly related to our self-confidence. In “Becoming a Woman of Worth: Creating a More Confident You”, “Kristen Clark” not only illustrates this point, but shows women how to get over the numerous hurdles that often stand in the way of being self-confident and self assured. This book is meant as a compliment to an online program called 21 Day Journey which meant to help change the patterns of how women view themselves by developing a daily habit of finding their worth through the scriptures. She bases her beginning premise on Psalm 139:17-18 from which she poses a question. How precious are your thoughts about yourself? Kristen then begins a definition of self-esteem and responds to some of the myths about it. She then progresses into some practical ways of building self-esteem. The crowning jewel is the section on making confidence into a spiritual mindset. Using God’s Word as the foundation for each part of her work, Kristen allows Christian women to see that it’s okay, even encouraged by the scriptures to be self-confident and that all of us can find our worth in how God views us and build upon that.

Though I am a man, my experience as a residential treatment counselor for adolescent women drew me to this book. “Becoming a Woman of Worth: Creating a More Confident You” was and is exactly what many of the young ladies that I have worked with needed to have in their hands and in their hearts. Kristen Clark gives true, practical suggestions, many of which we used in our program, but she goes a step further and shows how God blesses rather than frowns upon building our self worth. The truth of what Kristen has written applies not only to women, but to everyone. Much of what was written about placing the needs of others before our own applied directly to me and I gained a great deal personally from many of her practical suggestions. Honest, practical and inspiring; “Becoming a Woman of Worth” ought to be in the hands of every young lady you know; their future will be completely altered by it.








Wednesday, March 5, 2014

EXPANDING YOUR HORIZONS

You might not like broccoli, but if you've never tried it, then you don't know if you do or not. It isn't always easy to try new things and expand your horizons, but it is the way that we learn, grow and become better people.

I've driven for at least 34 years. Every day! I started before it was even legal for me to drive and I had driven in any and every kind of weather or situation imaginable by the time I was 25. I've driven everything from a tiny Ford Escort to a diesel truck with a flatbed and a Hay Swather (12 foot to 20 foot wide head for cutting hay), tied down to it. I've driven into the tightest corners in driveways and alleys in the world with large machinery on a truck and gotten along just fine. Needless to say, my driving ability exceeds the average. And then I came to Medellin.

There are no rules in Medellin. People drive however they want and where ever they want. Motorcycles do not stay in their lanes, they zip up between, in front, behind and all around the other cars in traffic. Having observed this chaos from bus and taxi, I believes that it was not something that I wanted to do. So, when a friend asked me to drive their car through Medellin and out into the country to visit a farm, I was more than nervous about it. I really didn't want to. I couldn't really get out of it. I did it. And...

It wasn't bad. I actually never noticed the difference.

There are people out there who have never sat down and enjoyed a fiction novel. There are various reasons why they haven't. Many have to do with High School literature teachers that completely destroyed their desire to read, however, most simply have never developed a taste for it. They have yet to plunge themselves into an imaginary world, in an imaginary place and time, doing the impossible and overcoming the world. Because of this, most of them even lack imagination and creativity. Television, computers, video games, iPods, etc. are ruining the brains and imaginations of people all over the world. I've spoken before of how dangerous it is for people to be this way in previous posts "The Threat of Not Reading."

Join my crusade to get more people reading fiction and literature. There are several ways that you can help:

- First, sign up for my blog and share it with your friends and family. It's extremely easy. Fill in the info below to sign up and click on the share buttons for Twitter, Facebook and Google+ below each of my blogs.

- Second, purchase my books and share them with your friends. Request them at your local library. My books are purposely thin and only about 100 pages. To a new reader, a Tom Clancy thickness novel is completely overwhelming and intimidating. Use my books to help get them started.

- Support my publishing campaign on Indiegogo to print two of my novellas in Spanish. Click on the campaign advertisement in the side column. This will allow me to get these books into the hands of readers in Colombia. Less than 5% of Colombians read fiction and that is simply not an acceptable number for a democratic country.

READING EXPANDS HORIZONS. You can help that happen.








Friday, February 28, 2014

Life Can Be A Miracle (five star book review)

Life Can Be a MiracleLife Can Be a Miracle by Ivinela Samuilova

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Opening up your world and allowing everyday life to become laced with miracles is an avenue that too few people explore and therefore do not fully understand that life can actually become much richer and much fuller. “Life Can Be a Miracle” by Ivinela Samuilova is the story of how one woman’s world was opened up to the possibilities of the beauty that can suddenly appear before us when we go beyond and above the boundaries that society and culture use to restrict us. As Adie works through several different levels of discovering who she is, she begins to see the miracles that happen all around her in everyday life. Through the guidance of Alexey, she begins to unlock and discard the preconceived ideas that have kept her bound and unable to discover who she really is.

“Life Can Be a Miracle” was more than a pleasant discovery for me. Ivinela Samuilova has literally taken me to another level of discovery of which I was right on the edge of coming to and pushed me right on over. The joy of discovering that one can actually trigger their own potential and then just let it flow rather than fighting every step of the way is exactly what I needed to encounter. Though it is written as a fictional novel, in many ways, it is a self-help book to those who are open to the message. Honest, direct and enlightening; “Life Can Be a Miracle” is a must read for anyone who is searching for the beauty and miracle of living.




View all my reviews

Thursday, February 27, 2014

HOW DO YOU PUT ON YOUR CLOTHES?

I realize that is a strange title. What exactly does it mean? Why would I ask such a simple question?

I'm not going to answer that for a minute. First, I'm going to tell you about a short book that I'm writing, which actually grew out of a Sunday School Lesson that I taught nearly a dozen years ago.

What comes to mind when you think of a wolf in sheep's clothing? Call me nuts, but I have always had the image of Warner Brothers' characters of Ralph and Sam. Do you remember the coyote and the sheep dog? They punch a clock every morning and then go about their own specific jobs. In nearly every episode, the coyote, Sam, zips himself up into the costume of a sheep in order to try to get into the herd. That's the image I have. From that I developed a Sunday School Lesson and from the Sunday School Lesson, I developed a short book, which I am still writing called "Sheep Don't Wear Wool... They Grow It."

That brings me back around to answering the reason for the question and the question itself. Right before I awakened this morning, I had a dream. In that dream, there was a very simple message. We can't put on the clothing and robes of Christ to become Christlike, just like anything other than a sheep cannot put on a wool costume and become a sheep. It is the same with everything we are and do in our daily lives. We can't put on a surgical gown, gloves and mask and start doing a coronary bypass surgery, simply because we're wearing the clothing. I brushed by the point of the question, but that's still not the answer.

In the case of becoming Christlike, we were promised the Holy Spirit to dwell within us and change us. Let that sink in a minute.

An apple tree produces apples because it has the make up of an apple tree within it. Somewhere in the sap of the tree is the nutrients necessary to make those apples grow to be large and sweet, small and bitter or some combination in between. The outer clothing of a sheep is not a wool costume, but actual wool which grew out of the nature of whatever genetic makeup causes sheep to grow wool.

When you do what you do; when you get out of bed in the morning and go through the ritual of going to your job or vocation; how do you put on your clothes? Do you put them on a someone who is adding something to themselves that is not a part of who they really are or are they an actual part of who you are?

How do you put on your clothes?

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

"Bookworm" by Jason Srebnick Destined to Be a Classic!!!

This book fits my blog like a glove and it fits my philosophy of books and reading like a sock. This book explains the kind of world that we are destined to live in if we do not continue to appreciate, pursue and educate others of the intrinsic value of reading FICTION NOVELS!

How much of our current society and culture do you take for granted? Image a world where the Corporation comes first and controls everything in your life from birth to death. Along the lines of 1984, “Bookworm” by Jason Srebnick will draw you back to an appreciation of many of the things that you now take for granted. Aaron Cogwell is an ideal citizen in the Corporate world of New Boston. He works seven days a week for seventeen hours a day, aided by chemicals that keep his mood in balance. Every thirty-six days he enjoys a four hour stoppage of work, in which he enjoys a few hours of free time with his family. His dream is to have a more spacious living space and more things to display in his display case. He simply doesn’t know that there is any alternative to the world in which he lives until destiny, fate or luck would come his way and he is suddenly thrust out of that life and into a much simpler and more primitive way of life when his pod crashes into the forest. The strange new things in this new, anti-corporate world are at times more than he can take. Will he ever be the same again? Will he ever be able to be happy in the Corporate world?



“Bookworm” is painful at times in its truth. Jason Srebnick has done an excellent job of giving us a look into what our world would look like if everything was run by huge corporations and work and getting ahead was all that mattered. It does this in a way that reminds those of us who have a deep love for the freedom that we have found in our leisure and more importantly in our books. The glaring difference between reading a book by turning the pages and having a book read to you or watching a book on a video is developed in stark contrast. I give high praise to Jason Srebnick for reminding us all that there are a lot of things in this world worth holding onto, even while we reach for our next ebook. Superb! "Bookworm" is destined to be a classic.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Sneak Preview from "Chorros Blancos" (Book 3 of the Belle of Colombia Series)

Here is a short sneak preview from "Chorros Blancos" (Book 3 of the Belle of Colombia Series)

Colonel Cordoba paused as the men of his staff passed the reins of their horses to their aids and waited for his order. “At ease gentleman.” He strode forward toward the steps that lead up onto the wide porch.

“Welcome Colonel,” Santiago said as he saluted his commander. “You know my wife’s cousin Esteban, of course.”

“Colonel,” Esteban saluted sharply.

“Yes, of course,” he replied, returning his salute as he started up the steps. At the top of the steps he spoke over his shoulder. “Lieutenant Garcia, please present Sergeant Marquez with his new commission.” He extended his hand toward Esteban. “Congratulations Sergeant.”

“Thank you Colonel,” Esteban replied. A question lingered a moment.

“You will be replacing Sergeant Ochoa,” he said. “Effective immediately.”

“Please come in sir,” Santiago said with a sweeping motion toward the open door. “Gentlemen. You are all welcome.” He turned toward the staff with a broader wave.

“With your permission?” Colonel Cordoba asked as he crossed the threshold into the house.

In turn each officer approached Santiago and Esteban with a greeting and then asked permission to enter the house. Rafael brought up the rear, beaming as he shook Esteban’s hand and slapped him on the back. “Sergeant Marquez,” he chuckled.

“Replacing Sergeant Ochoa?” Santiago asked as they stepped through the door behind the staff.

Santiago suddenly stepped in front of the men who had gathered, uncomfortably fidgeting in the main room of the house which was rather small for the number of men present. Juanito, Camila and Maribel were standing in a line at one end facing the group with large, timid eyes. Jorge peeped out from behind his mother’s skirts with frightened eyes.

“Colonel. Gentlemen,” he said. “May I present my niece Camila Vasquez, my nephew Juan Vasquez, my son Jorge and above all, my beautiful wife Ana Maribel Arboleda Rios.”

Each of the men nodded and then Colonel Cordoba stepped forward and took the hand of each and spoke softly to them while the staff waited. Jorge would have nothing to do with the Colonel and dashed away to hide.

“Please forgive him Colonel,” Maribel said, smiling.

“It is quite alright ma’am,” he said. “Ma’am, it is a very distinguished pleasure to meet you.” He took her hand, bowed and kissed it softly.

“The pleasure is mine Colonel,” she beamed.

“Ma’am,” he began, straightening himself. “I do apologize for the interruption. It will be brief. We have a presentation to make.”

“It is quite alright Colonel,” she replied. She turned toward Camila and Juanito. “The refreshments.”

“No wait!” Colonel Cordoba put up his hand.

Camila and Juanito froze, their eyes moved back and forth between Maribel and Colonel Cordoba with a startled question.

“Lieutenant Garcia,” he said, stepping aside and at the head of the two lines which had divided themselves within the room. “Would you please join me here.”

“Yes sir!” Garcia stepped forward quickly, beaming.

“And you too Captain Vasquez,” he smiled.

“Sir?” The question lingered on his face as he moved forward.

“You are now commissioned a Captain,” Cordoba announced. “Lieutenant Garcia?”

The lieutenant produced the proper insignia which Colonel Cordoba then presented to Captain Vasquez. “Gentlemen!” he snapped as he turned. “And Dona Arboleda. I present Captain Vasquez of the Army of New Granada!”

“’Tention!” Garcia snapped. All of the military gentlemen in the room snapped to a sharp salute, which Santiago then returned.

“At ease,” Captain Vasquez said after returning their salute, and then turning toward the general. “Thank you sir.”

“You have earned it and more,” Cordoba replied. “Gentlemen. Please greet your new Captain and then return to your duties. Sergeant Marquez and Mister Ochoa will accompany me upon my return.”

Rafael’s chest swelled with pride as he watched each of the officers congratulate Santiago. There was no leader more deserving of the honor that they presented to him. He watched Maribel’s eyes glistening as each officer bowed slightly as they greeted her, and then stepped through the door. She was a beautiful, young woman with grace that was well beyond her years. She had transformed before his very eyes from the timid woman who saw an invasion of military officers enter her home, to a gracious hostess in only a matter of seconds. She certainly had the dignity to be a captain’s wife.

“Colonel,” she beamed, grasping his elbow after the last of the officers had left. “Let’s go out to the patio.” With a turn of her head toward Camila and Juanito, the signal to serve them was given and the two jumped to their duties. “Mister Ochoa, Sergeant Marquez, would you join us as well?”

“Thank you Dona Arboleda,” Colonel Cordoba replied as she lead him to a seat on the patio.

Maribel then turned to Santiago, “Congratulations, my love.” She stood on her toes to kiss him.

Santiago hesitated a moment, looking at the Colonel who took the cup that Camila offered him, bowing slightly as a thank you and doing the same as Juanito offered him a pastry.

“Kiss your wife,” Cordoba chuckled. “No more formality.”

“Yes sir,” he beamed and leaned in to kiss her.

“Good,” Cordoba said, enjoying a sip of the coffee and a bit of the pastry. “Now. Where is that baby?”

“Camila,” Maribel said softly, taking the tray of coffee from her and serving her cousin and Rafael while Camila scrambled back into the house.

“Captain,” Cordoba addressed Santiago, who having taken a seat, accepted his refreshments from his wife. “Sergeant Marquez will be assigned to you permanently. He will replace Mister Ochoa who has asked for his discharge.”

Rafael noticed Santiago’s questioning glance. They hadn’t discussed it and he felt bad about it. He had arrived at the decision as he was sitting on the stone slab which overlooked the gorge of the river. The quiet peace of the mountains, the pines whispering to him and the gentle wave of the grass had spoken their mind to him and had presented an invitation that he couldn’t resist. He shrugged an unspoken reply to Santiago. He started to speak, but was interrupted by the arrival of Sara, who took over the entire attention of the group present, just as new babies have a tendency to do.

“May I present Sara Maribel Vasquez Arboleda,” Maribel said, taking Sara from Camila and gently extending her toward a suddenly uncomfortable Colonel Cordoba. For all of his rank and prowess as a military leader, he was still a very young man and not accustomed to holding a baby in his arms. He took her awkwardly and held her as though she were a fragile piece of glass.

“Well now,” he said, smiling as he held the baby stiffly in his arms. “She is nearly as beautiful as her mother.” Sensing the Colonel’s tension, Sara immediately began to cry. The distraught Colonel looked up at Maribel with fear in his eyes as he struggled to regain control of a situation that was beyond his experience.

Seeing Cordoba’s obvious discomfort, Maribel scooped Sara out of his arms and calmed her. The moment Sara was in her mother’s arms, she began to settle herself and soon stopped crying.

“Nothing like a mother’s touch,” Cordoba smiled. “I apologize ma’am. I don’t have much experience with babies.”

“It is quite alright,” she replied, moving over to take a seat beside Santiago, while she rocked the baby and talked to her quietly. She tilted Sara’s face so that she could see her father. “This is Captain Vasquez.”

“Just Daddy to you sweetheart,” Santiago replied, rubbing a finger on one of her chubby cheeks as he spoke.

Rafael looked around the group of men, warriors all, who had become suddenly transformed from rugged and fierce to soft and tender with Sara in their presence. Even in Cordoba’s discomfort there was a wistful look of gentility and longing for an end to death and destruction. As they chatted quietly about homes and families, Rafael couldn’t help hardening himself. He had lost all of that. The Spanish had taken it from him. He had exacted plenty of revenge, but the feeling was empty. Dying faces did not offer an adequate elixir for the illness which ravished his body.

He had enjoyed a drunken night or two with some of the other llaneros who had continued on with Cordoba’s command in Rionegro, but the bottle had never appealed to him as a means of escaping it all.

He grinned as he remembered the drunk he and the boys had tied on the night before, when he had announced that he was going to ask for his discharge. The revelry had continued into the early morning hours and spilled out into the plaza, where they had loaded some passed out drunk onto a wagon bound for the Magdalena River; telling the driver to put him on a boat to Barranquilla. They roared with laughter as the wagon rolled out of town and then noticed that the glow of the sun was lighting up the sky behind one of the green ridges.

As the others shuffled off toward their beds, Rafael had sat quietly in the plaza, watching the shadows of night begin to creep away as sunlight began to retake its command of the day. A thought had come to him suddenly as he observed the changing of the guard. Darkness and light constantly changed possession of the land in something that was so ordinary that no one ever considered it. Was it like that with all things? Was New Granada’s independence nothing more than the changing of darkness and light? How long would it last? As the questions repeated themselves throughout the day, Rafael knew that he had made the right decision. He needed to sort things out.

“Mister Ochoa. Sergeant,” Cordoba’s voice boomed, interrupting Rafael’s thoughts. “We have taken advantage of Dona Arboleda’s hospitality long enough. Sergeant, I need you to accompany me in order to bring the gift that I have for Miss Sara. If you will make ready to leave, we will depart shortly.”

“Yes sir,” Esteban replied, standing. Rafael stood as well.

“I already have your horse ready, sir,” Juanito announced. His eyes were wide and serious as though he was conducting an official duty.

“Thank you,” Esteban said. “I guess I’m ready when you are sir.”

“Then we’ll be on our way,” Cordoba said, rising from his seat. “Dona, you have a lovely baby, a lovely home and an excellent husband. I promise to take good care of him.”

“Thank you Colonel,” Maribel replied simply.

“Captain,” he said. “The main body will be moving out tomorrow. I am extending your time here for an additional ten days. Sergeant Marquez will accompany you when your leave is up. The rest of your staff will be in position and have everything in order when you arrive in Medellin. Lieutenant Garcia will be assigned to your staff, as well, and will discharge your duties until you arrive.”

“Thank you sir,” Santiago replied.

“Enjoy your lovely family,” he said.

Maribel passed Sara off to Camila and took the Colonel’s arm to escort him to the door and Santiago turned to follow.

“Captain Vasquez,” Rafael said to catch Santiago’s attention for a private word between them. He had made the decision to leave as soon as his discharge was signed and he wanted to be alone with his friend to say a more private good bye.

“Santiago,” he corrected turning back toward his friend. “Nothing has ever been formal between us.”

“I just wanted to try it out,” Rafael chuckled. “Sounds pretty good.” His face suddenly turned serious. “Please forgive me for not telling you about my discharge.”

“It’s not a problem Rafael,” he smiled.

“I ought to have talked to you about it. We’ve been pretty close these past months. You have been a good friend. Thank you.” Rafael extended his hand.

“We can discuss it later this evening,” Santiago said. “We’ll have a dinner to celebrate.”

“I won’t be coming back,” Rafael replied. When he saw Santiago’s brow wrinkle at his announcement he continued. “Well, not today anyway. I’ll be around. I kind of like it in these mountains.”

Santiago looked deep into his eyes as though he was searching his soul. Rafael wasn’t sure what he was seeing there, but he suddenly saw the searching stop and a twinkle replace it. Before the words were actually spoken, Rafael knew what they were going to be. “I understand,” Santiago said, drawing him in for a strong embrace.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Egyptian Reading Challenge

This week I'm featuring a fellow reviewer and blogger who resides in Egypt.
Nada Adel is not only an excellent book reviewer who wrote a fantastic review for my debut novel "The Wolf of the Highlands" published by Senserial Publishing, but she has started a reading challenge which includes novels and books about or set in her homeland of Egypt. This is a very intriguing challenge to me and maybe to some of you who enjoy the mystique of the Nile, pyramids, mummies and pharoahs. To learn more about this challenge visit Nada's blog by following this link. Nadaness In Motion

Monday, February 10, 2014

Goodwill Tour: Paying It Forward... Guest Post From Keith Maginn

I decided to start making my Monday posts guest posts from other authors and other persons of interest. I ran across Keith when I did a review of his book and discovered that we have some common ideas and decided it was time to share them. So... here is my first guest with a blog talking about a tour he took through the Southeastern US and the memoir that he wrote about the experience. Goodwill Tour: Paying It Forward —How Our Trip Came About

My name is Keith Maginn and I released my second book, Goodwill Tour: Paying It Forward in January of 2013. GWT is a travelogue about a journey that I went on with my friend in mid-July of 2011. Emily and I set off from Cincinnati, Ohio on a 3,000-mile road-trip through the southeastern United States. We gave our own money to hand-picked strangers that we met along the way, with the stipulation that they had to pay the money forward to someone else. Goodwill Tour recounts how Emily and I tried to spread kindness and make a difference in the lives of others while having a once-in-a-lifetime journey.

The idea for the trip actually started out as a joke. Emily and I met through my memoir, Turning This Thing Around. A friendship developed over time and we started half-seriously daydreaming about doing a tour to sell my books. The two of us brainstormed how we could combine having an adventure with doing something philanthropic. Emily had read Bill Clinton’s book Giving and was well aware of the “Pay-it-Forward” cause. Ultimately, she came up with the idea to go out on the road, meet deserving strangers and give them money that they had to give to someone else. Meanwhile, I would be taking notes along the way that I would turn into a book.

The whole trip came about quickly and we didn’t have time to plan much of anything. Emily and I only had a 15-day window for our trip, so the route had to be within driving distance of Cincinnati, our hometown. We knew the Southeastern U.S. route would put us in the Deep South in the middle of a very hot summer, but that course would allow us to visit more places that we had never been previously. Just a few days before we were going to leave, Emily and I decided to go to Memphis, Tennessee - New Orleans, Louisiana - Savannah, Georgia - Charleston, South Carolina - Asheville, North Carolina…and many towns in between.

Other than a loose idea of destinations, Emily and I decided we would just take a leap of faith and trust our instincts. We wanted to put ourselves into positions to meet deserving people. In some cases we were able to work alongside volunteers, at a soup kitchen for example, and other times meeting our donation recipients was more serendipitous. Believe it or not, giving money to strangers was harder than we expected!

The people that we chose ranged from a nun to a mother of three young children to a monk. As you can imagine, all were quite surprised when complete strangers handed them cash. What struck me the most about these people is that they kept thanking us for what we were doing, while they were the ones really making a difference—Emily and I were travelling around for a few weeks, while the people we met worked or volunteered to help others on a daily basis for little or no credit.

Stepping off of the trolley in our first stop (Memphis, Tennessee) was when it first hit me—we were actually going through with this crazy idea! Emily and I had the next several days to do whatever we wanted. No deadlines, no 9-5 job, just a goal to have fun and to touch some lives.

Giving away the first donation to a special young woman in Memphis made us realize that things might work out after all. She was genuinely grateful and all three of us were in tears. (The first interaction also gave us a false sense of how smooth the trip and the giving would be, as things were not that easy the rest of the trip!)

Emily and I easily could have backed out of this trip, could have put it off for “another time”…a time that likely would never come. I am glad that we took a chance. No one can ever take that away from us. In the words of John F. Kennedy: “There are risks and costs to a program of action. But they are far less than the long range risks and costs of comfortable inaction.”

You only live once. You don’t want to have regrets the rest of your life because you didn’t go after something you were passionate about. When my aunt found out that Emily and I were going on this journey, she said “One of my regrets is that I didn’t do once-in-a-lifetime things when I was young and unencumbered.” You will never know unless you step out of your comfort zone and follow what your heart is telling you to do. If you go forward, you might be surprised how things just seem to work in your favor. I hope Goodwill Tour: Paying It Forward inspires others to take their dream trip and/or to make a difference in the lives of others.

[As an unknown, independent author, I am grateful to Bil Howard for giving me a platform to help spread my message. I also appreciate people like you for reading my story! I would love to connect with you on Twitter (@Keith_Maginn) or at my website (keithmaginn.com). In addition to Goodwill Tour: Paying It Forward, I have also written an inspirational self-help memoir, Turning This Thing Around, about overcoming challenges. Both books are available on my author page at Amazon.com (http://amzn.to/1fJUAPC). Thank you and all the best!!]

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Two "Quarter Inchers" to Enjoy

Somewhat along the lines of Aesop’s Fables, “Farm of Wisdom: 25 Unforgettable Tales That Will Ignite a Wiser You” by Warren Cassell Jr. is full of tidbits of wisdom that are taught from short parables using animals one would find on or near a farm. Each of the tales tells a story which is then related to a bit of wisdom, one such is the story of the lazy chipmunk who didn’t want to go gather more berries and ended up not having anything to eat when the big storm came. Another is about the insecure grey hound who is jealous of the border collie. Still another is the story of Hapy the Chatty Toad who was all talk on the outside, but just as much of a coward as anyone else on the inside. Each of these twenty five short tales teaches a keen little piece of wisdom about living life and coping with the world around us.

The delightful collection of tales that Warren Cassell Jr. has put together in “Farm of Wisdom: 25 Unforgettable Tales That Will Ignite a Wiser You” are excellent teaching tools for young and old alike. Just like the old favorites of Aesop, the reader will be entertained by the whimsical nature of the tales, but also made wiser by the lessons that can be learned in each. Entertaining, thought provoking and often profound; “Farm of Wisdom: 25 Unforgettable Tales That Will Ignite a Wiser You,” if given enough thought is likely to change the way you look at life and the attitudes that you take in various situations.


The minute Dane McArdle bumped into her as she was leaving the doctor’s office, her whole world began to change drastically and Sophia Armitage had some significant decisions to make about how she was going to handle her future and who was going to be in control of it in “Free From the Tracks: The Teen Mayhem Series Book 1.” K T Bowes tells the story of what ought to be a somewhat normal twelfth year at an inner city New Zealand high school which is suddenly ripped apart by the disappearance of Sophia’s mother who is dying of cancer and left her and her father alone. Added to that drama, which has caused her to distance herself from her friends and her only protection from, the “plastics,” a mean set of girls who had already beaten her up in ninth year, is the new friendship that she has developed with Dane. Dane is from the “wrong side of the tracks,” but the line that the tracks forms in order to divide the two becomes more and more dim as she comes to realize the truth about Dane. The new problem that she faces is that the jealous “plastics” won’t stand for letting her and Dane be together and they have plenty of abuse laid out for her. Will she fight back or go down without a fight?

K T Bowes has written an excellent beginning to a series that is sure to be exciting and full of drama in “Free From the Tracks: The Teen Mayhem Series Book 1.” The action and drama is all too real as Dane and Sophia navigate their way through crippling circumstances that challenge the depths of their strength as they are forced to press forward practically alone. The reader will feel the depth of emotion and the struggle that each of them faces as they work out their challenges both separately and together. Deep, realistic and in many ways inspiring; “Free From the Tracks: The Teen Mayhem Series Book 1” is not only a fantastic coming of age novel on its own, but a great beginning to a promising series.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

The Threat of Not Reading

The US Department of Labor estimates that American businesses lose about $225 billion a year in lost productivity due to illiteracy. However, the uncounted cost of this growing problem is not only limited to dollars and cents, but to a destruction of our future. High illiteracy rates in children multiply to adulthood, throughout history illiteracy has been used to keep the elite class in power and elitist rulers will continue to grow their power base if we continue to ignore this problem.

High illiteracy rates in children multiply to adulthood. Statistics show that 36 percent of American fourth graders cannot read at a basic level. Those same statistics also show that most of them never catch up. Between 21 and 23 percent of adults have the same problem. How does it multiply? Because illiteracy in adults leads to poverty and poverty, in turn, leads to illiteracy. Therefore, the cycle continues to worsen from one generation to the next.

Throughout history illiteracy has been used to keep the elite class in power. One of the worst offenders was the early Catholic Church who allowed their own leadership to be educated, but not the masses. This trend was not broken until Martin Luther began using the printing press to make copies of the bible in German. Though today's Church is not as extreme as in the past, it still continues to keep most of its believers in the dark. A far worse example it the how Muslim leadership uses the same methods to keep its subjects in line and especially women. The most frightening part of it all is that the trend is growing in social settings outside of religious boundaries.

Elitist rulers will continue to grow their power base if we continue to ignore this problem. As poverty increases, social welfare increases as well. As social welfare programs increase, government power increases. This cycle continues to repeat itself and slowly erodes freedom from the hands of individuals and passes it over to the control of a government institution. Until this cycle is stopped, the United States and democratic nations all over the world are at risk of being subdued under elite leadership.

We have to reverse the trend of history if we are going to conserve our freedom. The cycle of illiteracy and poverty will not go away. The longer we set by and watch this problem increase itself, the larger the threat becomes.

I am truly concerned with this issue and see it as a very real and very devastating threat to freedom. I pride myself on writing smaller books to which I apply the 1/4 inch rule as a means of getting non-readers back to reading. When your child sees you reading, they read as well. Even if it is a 1/4 inch book, it is reading. Let your children catch you reading one of my novellas.

To help your children along and to show them that you are willing to invest in their literary future, consider this excellent reading program by clicking here Teaching Children to Read! And visit my own web site where you can purchase my books Bil Howard, Author. Once again, I hope you don't mind if I make a little money off of the work that I do.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Encouraging and Uplifting Book Every Teen Girl Needs to Read

I was incredibly impressed with this very easy to read and very profound work of fiction which was based on a true event from history. These are the types of lessons, filled with emotion of which I was speaking in my last two blogs.

“A person, whether king or peasant, can surround himself with many, and still be lonely. He needs that one rare person, one to confide in and with whom he can be at ease.” Hadassah was that one rare person in whom King Ahasuerus found the answer to his loneliness and Jim Baumgardner tells the story of how she was brought to him, prepared for him and became his queen in “Esther Queen of Persia: A Courageous Woman for a Dangerous Time.” Being taken from the home of her cousin, Mordecai, who took her into his home and raised her since she was a child, Esther was placed in the care of Hegai who was tasked with preparing her along with hundreds of other virgins who were being prepared for the same purpose. Hadassah stood out beyond all of them and was given the name, Esther (which means star), because she was brighter and more lovely than all of the rest. Little did Esther know, as she spent her days being made ready to be presented before the king, that God was preparing to use her and her cousin to bring about great things on behalf of his people; Israel.

Jim Baumgardner has done a fantastic job in bringing the life and emotion to the characters and plots from his fictional account of a part of history in “Esther Queen of Persia: A Courageous Woman for a Dangerous Time.” The demonstration not only of the faith of the servants of the Lord in the characters of Esther and Mordecai first rate, but the demonstration of the power of God to prepare things years in advance to be used at the appointed time bears witness to his might. Inspiring, emotional and uplifting; “Esther Queen of Persia: A Courageous Woman for a Dangerous Time” will bless you in a real and profound way. Every man’s daughter ought to have a copy as a means of encouraging their faith and as a demonstration of what qualities inspire true beauty.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Blog Facelift... More Focused

I'm reworking my blog a little bit. Although I intend to post book reviews and odd things of interest on occasion, I am tightening my focus on encouraging reading, literacy and language development.

One of the things that worries me most about our world right now is the changes in society that have made reading a forgotten past time. What we are failing to understand and point out to our children and to society in general is that to maintain the principles of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness that were addressed in the Declaration of Independence, we must read. Not just reading books that advance our careers and keep us up to date on the newest trends and buzzwords, but fiction, poetry and other verbal artistic works. The privacy and intimacy of the conversation between reader and author is perhaps the most valuable form of communication given to man. Why else do you think that God chose to have his Word written down?

As I was teaching my English classes here in San Antonio de Prado, Colombia and also in Itagui, Colombia, I discovered that my students were ignorant not only of world history and the history of their own country, but of their culture as well. This is not a trend limited to Colombia, but is a world wide trend that is a result of social media, video games, wandering the streets, the rap/thug culture and a profound failure of the educational systems of across the globe to place reading in a premium position in their curriculum. Whether by plan or by ignorant error, our educational systems have put our world at risk for tyrannical leaders to easily take control of every facet of their lives.

Tyranny, in its complete history, has rarely walked in as the bold and overpowering thug that it is, but typically creeps in through much more subtle means. It typically preys upon the poor, the weak, the illiterate and then the uninformed. It makes promises that on the surface appear just and good, but behind them is a club posed to beat them back down and steal their freedom. Literacy and reading hold back tyranny, because those who read have also learned to think for themselves. However, merely reading text books and non-fiction books or literature related to one's career does not foster the clear thinking that I am discussing. It requires reading of fiction, poetry and other verbal artistic works in order to penetrate the thoughts and emotions of a person.

Television, movies and video games provide too much of the picture to be useful in expanding thought and imagination. Social media simply expands those things which the person already associates themselves and for the most part are mind killers just like the first three. Next to reading, music stimulates the emotions and imagination, but it lacks the necessary penetration into the mind which helps to form sounds, images, smells, tastes, thoughts and emotions that are necessary to transport someone to a place and time where the conversation begins with "What if..?" and a discussion unfolds between the author and the reader.

Because I value the principles of the Declaration of Independence; of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, I am refocusing my blog to encourage and promote reading, literacy and language development. I will focus most of my attention on reviewing smaller books and works in order to help encourage new readers or non-readers to get their feet wet. My own books are written in smaller chunks that adhere to the 1/4" rule (anything more than a 1/4" thick is intimidating), and my reviews will follow it as well. I ask you to not only subscribe, but to assist me in this task. If you know non-readers or new readers, send them my way and let's get them started into an adventure that will not only open their minds, but by the grace of God will help protect us against the loss of liberty.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

ENCOURAGING READERS FROM THE HEART

Most writers are bookworms. It is simply a part of what draws them toward their craft, however, I was not always that way. I was a high-octane child who had plenty of other things to do besides stick my nose in a book. It wasn’t until later in life that I developed my love of reading and consequently writing as well. My hope, as I continue with my craft, is that I will be able to encourage and develop non-readers into readers.

I never could understand how my sisters could spend an entire day with their nose stuffed in some romance novel. Living on a ranch in the mountains of Colorado I always had plenty of other things to do and 98% of them were outside. Reading any book beyond Dr. and the Berensteins was a waste of time and effort and I simply didn’t have the patience for anything much larger. I did develop a taste for “The Sugar Creek Gang” books, but that was pretty much the extent of my literary tastes until I was older and started reading Louis L’Amour westerns and I read the entire New Testament of the bible three times during my high school years. What I did learn from my younger years of sparse reading was that books allowed me to live in another place and time and enjoy things that were beyond my reach.

I fought reading all of the way through high school, in spite of the requirement for English classes. I was able to interview my classmates who willingly spilled the information that I needed to pass the tests and survived my English classes because even in high school I could write an impressive line of B.S. I did manage to read “Red Badge of Courage,” because it was only about a half inch thick and didn’t take a long time to read. When I had to write papers, I did them on Louis L’Amour books.

When I arrived in college, all of that changed in a hurry. I started reading like a man who had just left the desert desired water. A whole new world was suddenly opened up to me and I never looked back. Those dull and boring “classics” that I was supposed to read in high school came alive in the mind of an adult reader who was eager to learn and eager to explore. The high-octane with which I had pursued life as a non-reader was transformed into my new life as a reader. As a result I began to think more clearly and blend that with the practical knowledge which came from my non-reading youth. With that came my ability to see through the B.S. that comes out of people’s mouths, pens, typewriters and computers; especially those who think they are wise. “Believing that they are wise; they will become fools”… that’s from my bible reading days.

As a writer, I don’t write as a bookworm. I understand the mechanics and the tricks of the trade, but my thought process is to enjoy a conversation with my reader and tell a story. I have intentionally made my books small, because I understand the half-inch rule (if it’s more than a half-inch thick, it aint worth reading), not because I don’t enjoy larger books, but because I know how some readers think. Connected to that was the publishing of my first book with Senserial. Senserial’s main thrust is the serial novel which was the way that most people read books in the early 20th century. With Senserial, however, the weekly episodes also include graphics and a sound track. Read my book “Wolf of the Highlands” in all 12 episodes at Senserial.com. Read my two historical romance novels from the Belle of Colombia Series; “Zipaquirá” and “Rionegro” (each only 100 pages), by stopping by my website at www.bil-howard.net and encourage others to check it out as well.

I am not only practicing my art but I am encouraging others to read, including children. I will soon have two children’s picture books available as well. In the mean time, check out the link to this excellent reading program, Children Learning Reading (Click Here!), and learn how you also can help turn a non-reader into a reader and expand their world. This is an essential task if we are going to preserve our freedom and our future. I hope you don't mind if I make a little profit off of my efforts in both areas so that I can continue to do what I love.

Monday, January 20, 2014

NEW RELEASE!!! RIONEGRO BY BIL HOWARD

Here is a short excerpt from "RIONEGRO"

There was no hurry to be moving. They were far away from the danger near the Plain of Bogota and it was likely any Spanish troop movements using the river had already taken place shortly after the conflict. Santiago maintained, however, that it was very likely that the Spanish army was still busy hunting for rebels in the mountains around Bogota and reestablishing themselves in the town which had rebelled all around Bogota and would not likely be venturing back toward Cartagena and Barranquilla. With that little bit of information, he gave them leave to rest for a few days and saddled Ganador for a ride to the settlement to buy supplies and make inquiries. He knew a little bit about the settlement, having ridden through it a few times and had even stayed the night there after he first left Rionegro. Esteban and Maribel took advantage of the situation and stretched out in the shade of the trees using the extra saddle and the rolled up pack of the silleta to lean against as they watched the lazy flowing river pass by. “He’s a very good man,” Esteban said. “Yes,” she said. “I am lucky to have him.” “It’s not all luck Maribel,” he said. “You deserve him.” “Thank you,” she said. She was a bit confused by the direction of the conversation, but she could tell that Esteban wanted to talk. There was a look of contemplation on his face that told her that he had something deeper to tell her. When he finally spoke, it wasn’t at all what she expected to hear. “You are a very good woman too,” he began. “You always have been. You’ve always had a stubborn strength which defied all of the harsh things that were thrown at you. It must have been hell losing your mother and for the most part never having a father. The rest of the family was horrible in the way that they treated you and regretfully, I was maybe the worst. I don’t know how I became so lucky to get a second chance, but I did and I’m not going to screw it up.” “What do you mean by a second chance?” she said. “It seems you have the one who has been through all of this completely unscathed.” “That’s something that I don’t understand at all,” he replied. “I’m not sure I deserve it. I treated you horribly and you weren’t the only one. Saint Patrick has sustained me for some reason and the only possible reason that I can come up with is that he wants me to serve you.” She was silent. How could she possibly respond to this confession? She was a little bit uncomfortable with the fact that Esteban felt that he had to serve her. She didn’t want anyone to serve her. She could take care of herself. She was very grateful that Esteban had been there to take care of Santiago and bring him back to her. In some ways, perhaps that was a sort of service to her, but she wasn’t sure why Esteban had the idea in his head that he ought to serve her. “Why would you need to serve me?” she asked. “To set things right,” he replied, staring at the design that he was drawing in the grass with a stick. “Haven’t you already set things right?” she said. “You repented and apologized. I accepted your apology and you brought me to Santiago. I think that you have done enough.” “I don’t,” he said. “I’m the only family you’ve got.” “Yes,” she said. “You’re my only tie to my old family, but Santiago and I are going to start a new family. I am grateful for your company and for your help. You have been a God send to us, but please don’t feel like you have to serve me.” He looked directly into her eyes and she saw something very deep in them that made her trust his words. “I don’t think that you, I or anyone else can make that decision,” he said. “It’s the lot I’ve been given and the recompense for being saved on the battle field. Maribel, there is no logical reason that I can come up with that one of those musket balls did not kill me and God knows the Spanish were certainly more powerful and seasoned than I. In the exact moment when I ought to have perished, I was delivered and when I was on my feet again, I had the strength of Samson. I will never forget that for as long as I live and I will never shirk the duty that God has given me.” There was nothing more for her to say. She leaned back against the saddle, closed her eyes and listened to the sounds around her. She could hear the birds moving about through the grass, trees and shrubs around them. There was a soft breeze rustling the leaves in the trees and its gentle fingers reached beneath her hair to cool her while she rested. Centella was cropping grass nearby, once again content after raising a fuss when Santiago rode away on Ganador. She thought it was amazing how her ability to rationalize the situation made her completely comfortable with Santiago riding away to obtain supplies for them in contrast to the reaction that Centella had. The only companionship of the horse species that the mare had was Ganador and it must have been something of a moment of panic for her to have that companionship leave her. She was content with human’s a trusted them, but it wasn’t exactly the same. Could Centella rationalize that Ganador would return? Horses certainly didn’t have that rational ability. The conclusion that she reached before she drifted off for a mid morning nap was that an enormous amount of trust existed between her and the mare in order for Centella to calmly crop grass next to her without any understanding of what the future would hold. Her nap was interrupted by the very same mare raising her head from cropping grass and calling in a shrill whistle to a horse and rider approaching from down river. Startled awake, she felt her heart pounding and sat up abruptly, looking at Centella’s face pointed toward the newcomer with both of her ears focused in on the location of the sound of the hoof beats. “It’s probably Santiago,” Esteban said, slipping into cover with the musket and pistol just in case it wasn’t. Maribel wasn’t certain what she should do. She was horribly exposed. The only thing that she could think to do was to stand beside the mare and stroke her softly while she waited. In another moment, the mare nickered softly at the approaching horse and rider and not long after, she recognized the figure of Santiago on Ganador as they emerged through the brush. She heard and felt Esteban step out of his cover behind her and come up beside her. “Did you rest?” he asked, grinning broadly as he stepped from the saddle and came straight to her with his arms open for an embrace and a quick kiss. “I slept for a little while,” she said. “I don’t know about Esteban.” “I dozed off a few times,” he smiled. “It’s impossible not to with the sound of the river to keep you company.” His face suddenly fell. “No supplies?” Maribel hadn’t noticed that he was not carrying any supplies until Esteban asked the question. She wrinkled her brow at the thought that he was unable to find anything in the settlement. Perhaps there had been trouble. “Plenty of supplies,” he answered. Seeing the confused look on both of their faces, he explained. “I left them in a little house in the settlement.” He looked directly at Maribel. “How would you like to sleep in a bed tonight?” “Oh my God,” she replied. “You can’t be serious.” “I am,” he said. “I made an arrangement.” “So, when do we go?” she asked. She hadn’t noticed that Esteban had already taken up the saddle to put on Centella’s back. “Knowing how long it takes Esteban to saddle a horse,” he grinned. “I’d say right away.” It was only a few minutes before the saddle was ready and the bridle was in Centella’s mouth. Maribel scrambled up into her seat eager to actually be in a house with a bed and food cooked on a stove. It might be okay for men to sleep on the ground and eat the way they had been eating, but for Maribel a house and a bed were like heaven after haven’t not been in one for several weeks. With the silleta strapped onto his back, Esteban stepped out to head down river toward the settlement which Santiago had informed them was called Puerto Triunfo. There wasn’t much of a need for Santiago to be in the lead. If a person followed the river, it was impossible for him to miss the settlement, so Santiago mounted and stayed back with Maribel to take a leisurely ride along behind Esteban. “I’m so excited to get to sleep in a real bed,” she beamed. “Only the best for my love,” he smiled. “How did you do it?” she asked. “Someone recognized the horse,” he said. “What does that have to with anything?” she asked, once again wrinkling her brow. “It seems, Sir Ganador is quite famous,” he replied. “One of the patriots had returned home to his family here in the settlements and a woman saw me in the streets and brought me to her home.” “Do you always follow strange women home?” she asked, a little bit concerned about how he had been led home by a woman. “An old woman,” he said, knowing where Maribel’s mind had already wandered off to. “She is the boy’s grandmother. She had heard her grandson talking about a silver stallion on the Plain of Bogota and how that very stallion had defended its master as the Spanish soldiers were surrounding him. He also told her how a man who most certainly must have been possessed was fighting right beside the stallion. The two of them together had completely eliminated at least a dozen Spanish soldiers before the demon possessed man put the Spanish Lieutenant on the silver stallion and led him off of the battlefield. They disappeared in the smoke and though he had tracked them, he was never able to catch up with them. The way he had told the story, the three of them simply disappeared and no one knew where they went or if they were even real.” “That’s almost the story that Esteban tells,” she said. “Only, he never said how many surrounded you.” After hearing the story and after hearing what Esteban had told her earlier about feeling like he had been delivered by Saint Patrick, she fell silent, contemplating what really happened when Esteban rescued Santiago. “Do you think it’s true?” she finally asked. “I have no idea,” he replied. “I don’t remember much about it. I have a feeling that our young sillatero isn’t telling all of the story. Or at least he’s certainly holding back his part in it.” “Do you think something happened out there?” she asked. She paused a moment trying to put together the right words. “Something… from God?” “Something extraordinary must have happened,” Santiago replied. “The truth may have gotten stretched a bit in the telling. Most things like that are, but something profound happened to turn that event into a legend. What do you think?” “Esteban and I had a talk while you were gone,” she said. “He said that he believed that Saint Patrick had sustained him and kept him alive in spite of all of the odds in order to serve me.” “He had certainly served us both,” he replied. “He is a very good man. I’m glad he was there. There must be some special blessing running through your family.” “Why would you say that?” she asked. She could only think of how dark and horrible her youth had been and how her family had treated her. Her grandparents had been good people, but her aunts, uncles and cousins hadn’t impressed her very much; with the exception of Esteban as of late. “Because you are both strong and your hearts are good,” he answered simply. They both fell silent as they continued to follow the meandering Magdalena River toward Puerto Triunfo where she would sleep in a real bed under a roof.
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