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April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month – Author Virginia McCullough Shares Her Story

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VEM AL FB BannerMy name is Virginia McCullough. I am an author…and a rape survivor. Although my attack occurred many years ago, in the ‘70s, the ripple effects of that single incident remain with me today. That’s why I am donating a portion of proceeds from my book, Amber Light, to The National Sexual Violence Resource Center to help end domestic abuse and sexual assault.

Why this book? Amber Light, my fourth novel, is dedicated to those who have survived this kind of assault and in memory of those whose lives were stolen. But it is also a tribute to those who devote their careers and volunteer time to helping the victims of sexual assault with the process of healing and moving forward in their lives.

Amber Light is the fictional story of Sarah, a young woman who becomes pregnant after being sexually assaulted. In this book, I follow Sarah from age 18 to 26, chronicling her journey of healing to once again embrace life.

I once spoke to a survivor who had finally told a counselor what had happened to her almost 20 years earlier, when she was still a teenager. This woman had carried that secret all those years. Sadly, that happened far too often—I hope less so today, because of increased attention and public awareness.

EXCERPT:

AmberLightNote from the author: I consider this section not only a pivotal part of the book, but in a very real way it’s my homage, a tribute, to the staff and volunteers at the Rape Center in Asheville, North Carolina, the facility where I was an on-call volunteer for several years. It’s also a tribute to the women who broke their silence and told their stories.

Setting the scene:  Eighteen-year-old Sarah Whitmore works as a pool attendant at resort on Hansen’s Island, but so far she’s refused to talk about the father of her baby. That’s about to change…

“You must tell me what happened—today,” Lillian said. “Who is the baby’s father, Sarah?”

I could have argued with her, but I didn’t bother. I knew I couldn’t keep my secret forever. But even the nurse-midwives at the Beaufort clinic didn’t know the truth. I stepped aside to let Lillian in. Then, without thinking too much or even bothering to sit down, I blurted out the short version.

She closed her eyes for just a second. Then, she wrapped her arms around me and rubbed my back while she held me in a tight hug. When she let me go, it was only to grab the phone book.

Lillian found the number she was looking for on the first page. She took her cell phone out of her pocket and I stood back as I watched her punch in the numbers. I listened while she asked the person who answered the call if she could bring someone in right away.

Lillian didn’t give me a chance to say no. She took me by the hand and said we would take her car. When I asked where we were going, she told me not to worry, that it would be okay.

Thirty minutes later, I was in a quiet office, sinking into the cushions of an overstuffed chair. A woman named Wanda handed me a glass of water and then sat in an identical chair opposite me. I drank half the glass of water before I told her a boy named Josh was my baby’s father. Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, she started asking questions.

“I only wanted to belong,” was my answer to the first one. I gulped down the rest of the water in the glass and wondered why I’d said that.

Wanda leaned forward, folded her hands across her knees, and searched my eyes. Her nails were the color of cranberries, her skin a warm brown like walnuts. I nearly giggled out loud about comparing the way she looked to food, but since I liked both cranberries and walnuts, I considered it a compliment.

“So, you’re saying you were an outsider?” Wanda asked.

I nodded, but I wished I’d started the story in some other place. The question she’d asked was how I happened to be with Josh the night I got pregnant. My answer popped out before I thought about it.

Wanda grabbed a yellow legal pad and pen off the end table and looked prepared to write. “So, being with him was part of belonging? Was he a real popular guy at school or something?”

I shrugged and shook my head. “Not so much. My friend Teresa fixed me up. I didn’t date, you see, because my dad wouldn’t let me until senior year, but by then, all the kids had paired up or were part of a group. Except for Teresa, I didn’t know my classmates all that well. Going out with Josh gave me a chance to belong to a group, even if they weren’t the most popular kids. I thought I could be part of a crowd until we graduated.”

I crossed my arms and pulled them tight under my breasts. The air conditioning blew cold air at me, making goose bumps rise on my arms. I started shivering and couldn’t stop.

Wanda grabbed a white crocheted shawl out of the basket next to her chair and handed it to me. “I think I understand,” she said.

I shook out the folds and wrapped it around my shoulders. “But he didn’t rape me on that first date. That came later.”

Like Lillian, Wanda closed her eyes for a second or two. Then she let out a long sigh as she put her clipboard and pen back down on the table. “Why don’t we back up for just a minute. Maybe you could start by telling me how you happen to be down here in Beaufort with your aunt and uncle rather than in Wisconsin with your parents? You’re a long way from home. We can work back to what happened.”

“My Aunt Lillian invited me to come down and live in the apartment over her garage. She’s the one who made me come here today.”

I’d never have gone to the Crisis Center on my own. I’d avoided talking about Josh for as long as I could, and Lillian let me stay silent about it for most of the summer. But in the car on the way to the center she’d said, “It isn’t good for you to keep this locked up inside you.” 

“I’m glad your aunt brought you here today,” Wanda said. “She mentioned you’d never told anyone about this—not even your mother?”

“No, I always knew I would talk about it one day, but I wasn’t ready.” I wrapped the long fringe of the shawl around my fingers. “I try not to think about it—I don’t want to scare the baby with bad thoughts.”

Wanda nodded as if she understood and then asked me questions for a while, in order, she said, to get a fuller picture of what happened. She was a clinical psychologist, so she could help me like a therapist would. I could talk to her more freely once she assured me that everything I said would be confidential. But describing what happened was harder than I thought and I stumbled over my words.

“Why don’t you begin at the point you think is most important,” Wanda said.

For me, it started the day the whole school heard about Josh and his girlfriend, Heather, breaking up. A few days after that, Teresa asked him if he’d like to be fixed up with me. I agreed to go out with him because I never went out on Saturday nights and wanted a chance to see what I’d been missing.

I met Teresa, her boyfriend, Keith, and Josh at the pizza place downtown. When we all walked in together, other kids stopped what they were doing and watched us pass by. They lowered their voices and the room filled with a low buzz. It felt mysterious somehow. No one had ever gossiped about me and a boy before. I tried to enjoy it and feel important, but then Heather, Josh’s old girlfriend, came in with a group of girls. They watched our table and suddenly, I wanted to go sit with her.

“Josh was boring,” I said, “and with Keith around, Teresa didn’t act like herself either. I didn’t know Heather, but it looked like she and her friends were having lots of fun. Josh watched her table the whole time. Turns out, going out with another girl’s ex-boyfriend wasn’t much fun.”

“But you went out with him again?” Wanda frowned and twisted her mouth to one side to show that she was perplexed.

“Uh huh. I was that stupid.”

“Let’s not do that, Sarah. Whatever happened, you weren’t and aren’t stupid.” 

“Maybe so, but what I did was dumb. I went out with Josh again just because he asked me. I didn’t like him very much, and when he kissed me on that first date while we were standing at my car, I really didn’t like him. His mouth was wet and tasted like onions.”

I explained that Cedar Lake High School wasn’t very big. Everyone knew my dad didn’t let me go out. I worked at the store, and that job, getting good grades, and swimming were my life. I drew pictures when I was alone in my room, but I never told anyone about that.

“This is going to sound really silly, but I thought I’d have a few pretend dates before I left for college—where I was going to start, you know, my real life.”

Wanda smiled. “Lots of young people think going away to college is the beginning of their real life. You weren’t alone to think that.”

I sat up straight and took a deep breath. “But that’s over now. I have a different life because I went out with Josh a second time.”

“A life here—with your aunt and uncle?”

“And the baby.”

On the second date, I’d met Teresa, Keith, and Josh at a burger place high school kids liked to go to outside of town. After we’d eaten, Josh asked if I’d like to go to his house for a beer. His parents had gone up north to their cabin for the weekend, and he said they wouldn’t notice if a few bottles were missing. Drinking with friends was another thing I hadn’t done during high school, and I figured one beer wouldn’t hurt. I’d still be able to drive home.

When I finally got to the important part, I wrinkled my nose because I could almost smell the lavender again. Josh and I had been sitting next to each other on the couch and I took gulps of beer out of the bottle to give myself something to do. I liked the taste of beer, so it wasn’t hard to stay occupied with it. We weren’t talking about anything in particular, and Josh opened a second beer before I’d finished my first. He drank it fast.

The whole thing started when he set his second empty bottle on the coffee table and grabbed mine out of my hand even though I wasn’t done. He turned quickly and with one hand he gave me a quick push back on the couch and jammed his mouth down on my lips. I twisted away from him, but that’s when I breathed in the scent of lavender coming from the couch cushion. I turned my head away from the smell but then my mouth collided with his. The cold wetness of him made me want to throw up. I tasted beer coming up from the back of my throat.

I told Wanda how much it hurt when he grabbed at me under my sweater and pinched my nipple through the thin cotton of my bra. I pushed at him, but he dragged his mouth back and forth across mine and tried to get his tongue between my teeth. Every time I escaped his slimy lips, the stink of the lavender got in my nose and I’d struggle to get away from it.

I stopped to take a breath and looked at Wanda. “I don’t remember how he smelled, but I get nauseated if I get the faintest whiff of lavender in my nose. That probably sounds silly.”

“Not at all,” Wanda whispered, “not at all.”

“I can’t get that smell out of my mind, or how cold and wet his mouth was, either. But maybe kissing is just something you have to get used to.”

Wanda shook her head. “We can talk more about that later. You said you tried to get him off of you. Did you yell at him, tell him to stop, tell him no?”

“When he wasn’t pressing down on my mouth I managed to tell him he was hurting me. I wasn’t thinking that he’d rape me. I wanted him to stop kissing and pinching me. I didn’t think beyond that, but all of a sudden he reached up under my skirt—that was another stupid thing, you know, wearing a skirt.”

Leaning in closer, Wanda spoke in a reassuring voice. “We’ll talk about that later, too. Tell me what happened next?”

“I remember shivering some,” I said, pulling the shawl tighter around me. “His hand felt like an ice cube on my skin. And then I felt this sharp, cutting pain on my thigh. I pushed at him, but he wouldn’t get off me, and then he reached way under my skirt and yanked my panties down and pushed my knee up. Then he shoved himself inside me. That hurt, but it wasn’t as bad as that other pain on my thigh. I jerked around to get him off of me and I kicked at his leg with my free foot. I’m sure my big boot left a bruise, but he didn’t budge until he was, you know, done.”

I said all that so fast I could feel my pulse on the sides of my head, as if my heart had moved way up there. I looked down at my lap and stared at the inside seam on my white jeans. “But the worst part was the pain on my thigh. That, and the stinking lavender. I twisted away from the back cushion when he finally got off of me.”

Wanda winced and rubbed her nose, as if she could smell lavender in the air, too. But I kept on going and told her that when Josh pulled up his pants and went into the kitchen, I rolled off the cushion and landed on my hands and knees between the couch and the coffee table. When I straightened up, I felt a sticky liquid running down my leg. When I looked down at myself, I saw blood smeared across ragged, raw scratches on my right thigh. I assumed they came from the zipper on his pants. When I stood, one side of my panties was stuck around my boot, so I pulled them all the way off and wiped away the blood.

“I felt this big rush of…I guess it was relief. I figured that all the wetness was only blood, so I told myself he’d probably managed to put on a condom. Later I realized it had been a bunch of wishful thinking.”

I clasped my hands together to keep them from shaking. “Then Josh came back in the room with two more beers and held one out to me, but I said I was leaving. When he came toward me, I held up my hand and hollered at him to back off.”

He’d put the bottles on the coffee table and moved in closer. “Hey, don’t be so fuckin’ unfriendly. You wanted to be here with me—you know, alone.”

He’d reached out and grabbed at my arm. I yanked it free, but I lost my balance. I fell back and banged into the doorjamb. Thinking about it again made me rub the spot where my shoulder had hit the wood. It had taken a couple of weeks for the red and purple bruise to fade away.

“I yelled at him, asking him a couple of times why he hadn’t stopped when I kicked him. And I did kick him—hard.”

Wanda made more notes on the legal pad and then looked up again. “What did he say when you confronted him?”

“Nothing. But he had a sneer on his face when he put his hand above me and leaned on the wall, like he was trapping me. But I ducked under his arm and reached for my coat off the chair where I’d dropped it. Then I yanked the door open and ran out.” I told Wanda that I’d left a puddle of vomit under the tree next to the driveway before getting in my car and driving home.

“And you’ve never told anyone this before.”

“No, never.” I closed my eyes, but quickly opened them again, hoping I could shake off the memory of french fries and beer spewing out of my mouth and landing on patches of dirty snow under the tree. “I’ve never said any of it out loud before. Josh can’t ever know about the baby—ever. What if he tells his parents and they want to see the baby? That can’t happen.”

Wanda laid her cranberry fingertips lightly on my knees. Usually I flinched if strangers touched me, but with her it was okay.

“How do you feel now that you’ve finally put what happened to you into words and let the secret out?”

My arms and legs tingled and I heard buzzing inside my ears that got louder and louder. I wrapped one arm around the fattest part of my stomach and covered my eyes with my other hand. “I don’t know, but I still hate the smell of lavender.”

The force behind the burst of sobs doubled me over. I made a noise that might have sounded like a tiny scream. I covered my eyes and cried into my palms, then lifted my head and let out a long, low moan. And then I leaned forward and buried my face in my hands.

Wanda stayed quiet during the worst of the sobbing, and when I’d calmed a bit, she took my elbow and helped me out of the chair and led me to a couch where she gently arranged me on my side. I curled my knees as high as they’d go against my thick stomach. She handed me a wad of tissues and when I turned them into soggy shreds she handed me more.

Finally, I caught my breath and struggled to sit up. “I think I might be sick. My stomach feels weird.”

She looked around the room, then grabbed a vase filled with dried roses off her desk. After dumping the flowers into the wastebasket, she handed me the vase just in time for me to throw up the orange juice and whole-wheat toast I’d had for breakfast. I wiped my mouth with a tissue.

Wanda rubbed my shoulder and smoothed my hair. “You stay here and rest, Sarah. I’ll be back in a minute.”

Giving into the darkness behind my swollen eyes, I put my head down and sank into the comforting softness of the cushions.
Amber Light is available in both print and digital formats at Amazon and Barnes&Noble. Since the book’s launch in 2014, Virginia McCullough has used proceeds from her book sales to benefit assault victims. Her April campaign is a way to join the other individuals, groups and organizations working to educate the public about domestic violence and sexual assault. 

About the Author:
Publicity PhotoBorn and raised in Chicago, Virginia started her writing career when her family moved to the coast of Maine and she began writing articles on many topics, including family living, children’s literature, business, and women’s issues.  Over the last three decades Virginia has written or “rewritten” well over 125 books and edited many more.  Virginia is a long-time member of the Authors Guild and in the early 1990s, she served on the Executive Board of the National Writers Union (NWU). As a member of the Romance Writers of America (RWA) and several affiliate chapters, Virginia has held numerous service positions.

Learn more about multipublished author Virginia McCullough online at www.virginiamccullough.com.

For more information about Sexual Assault Awareness Month, visit the National Sexual Violence Resource Center online at www.nsvrc.org.
Amazon
Barnes&Noble  

Sneak Peek: Superhero by Megan Slayer

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SUPERHEROSuperhero by Megan Slayer – Hiding in Plain Sight Series, book 1

He can levitate objects and predict the future, but no one knows his powers…until he finds a man worth fighting for.

Chase Bender moves objects with his mind and can read the immediate future. If anyone found out the man behind the mask had a lot in common with the regular man character, they wouldn’t believe him. What’s a man with super hero abilities supposed to do to get a date? Dylan Foreman isn’t interested in jumping into the dating pool, but can’t deny the attraction when he meets Chase. Can the burning lust between a simple book keeper and a man in spandex, and sporting a cape really last?
Excerpt:

Dylan.

He shouldn’t say anything. Should keep on walking.

“Hi there. Do you come here often?” Hell. Of all the things he could’ve said, Chase picked one of the worst pick-up lines…ever.

Dylan’s eyes narrowed. “Do I—we’ve met, haven’t we?”

“I’m sorry. I’m horrible at manners sometimes.” Chase offered his hand. “I’m Chase. We met at the Riley party.” He dropped his voice to a whisper. “I’m Mind Bender.”

“Oh!” Dylan’s eyes widened. “I hadn’t recognized you…but I bet that was the point.” His cheeks burned bright red and the color spread down his neck. “Can I say that was a good show, or will I get you into trouble?”

“Won’t get me into trouble. I appreciate the kind words.” Chase nodded to the cart. “I needed to get a few things. Care to walk with me, or are you nearly done?”

“I’m trying to get my shopping done while Nathan’s at swim camp.” Dylan gripped the cart. “The kid is a fish.”

“He’s your only child?” Chase pulled up beside Dylan and walked the rest of the way down the frozen food aisle.

“Just one. My partner and I couldn’t decide on another one.” Dylan’s blush deepened. “It’s a long story.”

“But I bet it’s a good one.” Chase missed being able to converse with other adults. The people at the store were okay, but they weren’t Dylan. The spark from the party hadn’t been in his imagination. He and Dylan seemed to be able to talk quite well.

“The story has its good parts, but there are bad parts, too.” Dylan stopped. “How much more do you have to buy?”

“Truth be told, I’m done.” Chase grinned. “I didn’t need much.”

“If you’re done, do you want to grab a cup of coffee? The little shop allows carts. I’ve only got a few more things to get.” Dylan flexed his fingers on the cart handle. The indentation of a wedding ring was evident, but not deep. Divorced? Split up? Chase wanted to know and yet, he didn’t want to ask.

“I’d like that,” Chase said. “I’ll pay for my things while you finish, then meet you at the coffee shop in, what, ten minutes?”

“Sounds good.”

Paying for his items didn’t take the entire ten minutes. For once, the lines at the store moved quickly. Chase tucked his change into his wallet. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d gotten through the line in less than fifteen minutes. He pushed the cart to the coffee shop. Most of the tables were empty and one of the booths was free. He pushed the cart behind the booth and plopped onto the wooden seat.

His skin prickled. Being around Dylan heightened his senses. What was it about the dad that kept him on the edge? He eased his phone from his pocket and switched the ringer to silent. If anyone needed him that bad, they could wait. As he sat there, the salt shaker began to levitate. Oh fuck. He grabbed the glass container and held it to the table top. No, no, no. His powers weren’t allowed to go haywire. They weren’t.

About the Author:

0WendiWelcome to my corner of the universe. I’ve always wanted to write. I love storytelling and weaving images with words. There’s something magical about a happily-ever-after that draws me to a story. Be it spicy and suspense-filled or lusty hot and bothered, I’m game for a good book.I’m still learning and growing and I hope you’ll join me. It’s been a crazy ride, but it’s totally worth it. You’ll see.

I’ve always dreamt of writing the stories in my head. Tall, dark, and handsome heroes are my favorites, as long as he has an independent woman keeping him in line.  I love playing with words and letting the characters run wild.

NASCAR, Ohio farmland, dirt racing, animals and second chance romance  all feature prominently in my books.  I also write under the pen name of Megan Slayer. I’m published with Total-E-Bound, Changeling Press, Liquid Silver Books, Shara Azod Publishing, Turquoise Morning Press, Decadent Publishing and The Wild Rose Press. Come join me for this fantastic journey!

To read more follow this link. And you can visit Megan online here.

Available from MLR Books
And at AllRomance Ebooks

 

Sneak Peek: The Last Hero by Hildie McQueen

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Last Hero SmlThe Last Hero by Hildie McQueen 

Mega star Jensen Ford returns to his home state of Tennessee, to film a blockbuster film. Although the pretty local bakery owner catches his eye, she could never survive his Hollywood lifestyle. His mind knows its best to keep her at arms length, but how to convince his heart?

Cassie Tucker doesn’t like arrogant Jensen Ford, definitely doesn’t want to get to know him either. With a cupcake shop to run, an ex harassing her and her younger brother moving in, she doesn’t have time for the movie star’s antics.

Is it fate or happenstance that they end up alone together time after time?
Ooey Gooey Cupcake

Excerpt from The Last Hero

In the distance a bell rang and Cassie considered how appropriate to hear chimes at the precise moment her legs wrapped around his waist. He lifted back, his eyes half closed. “I think your oven is ringing.”

“What?” It took a few seconds before the words made sense. She wasn’t sure, but he may have repeated it twice. “Oven?”

By the time she realized she was sitting on the counter and a moment ago had her legs wrapped around a man in plain view from any passerby, Jensen had donned oven mitts and was pulling overly browned cakes from the oven. He placed them both on the counter with smooth moves of someone used to being in the kitchen. When he pulled the second pan, he set it next to the first. “There, they look fine don’t you think?”

Cassie stared at him with rounded eyes. “I don’t like you. I’m not sure what just happened.”

The one shoulder shrug didn’t tell her anything, so Cassie grabbed his arm and turned him to face her. “I mean it. I’m not sure what that was all about.”

Jensen lifted a brow, his darkened eyes traveled down her body. “Women like bragging rights. You’re probably no different.”

“What the hell is that supposed to mean?” Cassie slammed her hand down on the counter, which hit the edge of the pan sending hot cupcakes askew, a few landing on the floor. She ignored them and glared at Jensen. “I’m not a groupie.”

“You just said you don’t know what happened. You don’t like me.” Jensen’s voice was neutral, a blank expression on his face. He looked down at her, and there was a hard, icy edge to his voice. “It happens to me all the time. It’s enjoyable sometimes.”

Her hands curled into fists. She had to hold back the urge to slap the look of disdain from his face. “You came here, behind the counter, so don’t put it all on me.”

“I’m not. Just helping you figure out why you threw yourself at someone you claim not to like.” He walked around her and straight out the front door.

“What the hell just happened?” Cassie glared at the doorway. Perhaps she shouldn’t have said she didn’t like him after humping him like a bitch in heat. “Ugh!” She picked up a cupcake and took a big bite only to spit it out when it burned her tongue. Outside a motorcycle rumbled to life and she saw Jensen ride by and head out of town.

The bell over the door jingled and woman with arms full of shopping bags walked in. “It’s hot in here.”

“You have no idea.” Cassie turned to see the oven door was still open.

About the Author:
MeAmazon bestselling author Hildie McQueen loves action, love and unusual settings. Author of western historical, Highland historical, paranormal and contemporary romance, she writes something every reader can enjoy.

Most days she can be found in her pajamas hiding from deliverymen while drinking tea from her David Gandy coffee mug. In the afternoons she browses the Internet for semi-nude men to post on Facebook. Hildie’s favorite past-times are romance conventions, traveling, shopping and reading. She resides in beautiful small town Georgia with her super-hero husband Kurt and two unruly boy Chihuahuas and a spoiled rotten girl Chi named Lola. 

McQueen Logo Color copy

 

 

Visit her website at www.hildiemcqueen.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HildieMcQueen
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HildieMcQueen
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+HildieMcQueen

 

Reader’s Entertainment Radio Presents: Stacey Kade

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It’s amazing how fast the time goes by when you’re having a ball! I tell you, I could’ve chatted with Stacey Kade for hours, and hours. If you haven’t checked out this YA Author yet, definitely stop by her website and learn more about her and exciting novels! Her latest novel, Project Paper Doll: The Trials is the final book in The Paper Doll series, and was just released on Tuesday, April 21st!

Stacey Kade The TrialsBook Blurb:

After being on the run, Ariane Tucker finds herself back where she started-under Dr. Jacobs’s cruel control. Now she must participate in the upcoming trials: a deadly competition pitting her against other alien hybrids, each representing a rival corporation.

But Ariane is no one’s weapon, and she is prepared to die if it means taking down those involved in Project Paper Doll. They destroyed all that she holds dear, including Zane Bradshaw, the one person she trusted and cared for the most. The person she was forced to leave behind, bleeding and alone.

As her plan takes shape, Ariane will need now more than ever to depend on the other side of her heritage-the cold, calculating instincts born from her alien DNA. With Zane gone, she has nothing left to lose.

Heart-pounding action and thrilling twists will lead Ariane down a dangerous path, where shocking truths and the chance for revenge await.

 

Click on the book cover image for details on Stacey’s upcoming show!

 

Connect with Stacey Kade on Social Media:

www.facebook.com/staceykade

www.twitter.com/staceykade

www.staceykade.com

Stacey Kade
Stacey Kade

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Great Young Adult Fiction!

In Faith Network Radio Show Presents: Dr. Frank Turek

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It was such a pleasure sitting down with Award-Winning Author, Dr. Frank Turek, to discuss his latest book, Stealing From God: Why Atheists Need God to Make Their Case. If you missed this dynamic speaker, you will definitely want to go back and listen to the podcast for this show!

Dr. Turek has co-authored other books: “I Don’t have Enough Faith to be an Atheist,” “Correct, Not Politically Correct” and “Legislating Morality.” As the President of CrossExamined.org, Frank impacts young and old alike at colleges, high schools and churches with hard yet entertaining evidence for Christianity.  You can also get quick answers to tough questions on Christianity with the Crossexamined App!

What if your best reasons to doubt God prove that He exists?
stealing_from_god__34148Book Blurb:

If you think atheists have reason, evidence, and science on their side, think again! Award-winning author Dr. Frank Turek (I Don’t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist) will show you how atheists steal reason, evidence, science, and other arguments from God in trying to make their case for atheism. If that sounds contradictory, it’s because it is! Atheists can’t make their case without appealing to realities only theism can explain. In an engaging and memorable way, Stealing from God exposes these intellectual crimes atheists are committing and then provides four powerful reasons for why Christianity is true.

 

 

 

 

Click on the image above for the link to Dr. Turek’s upcoming interview.

 

Dr. Frank Turek
Dr. Frank Turek

Connect with Dr. Frank Turek on Social Media:

www.crossexamined.org

https://www.facebook.com/CrossExamined.org

https://twitter.com/Frank_Turek

https://www.youtube.com/user/TurekVideo

 

 

Dynamic Christian Non-Fiction!

 

 

 

George Lucas to be Featured in Comic Book Biography

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OrbitGeorgeGeorge Lucas, best known as director, scriptwriter and founder of LucasFilm is going to be the latest celebrity to have a featured comic book biography release from Blue Water Productions.

Here are details from their press release:

Bluewater Productions is proud to announce the release of a comic book featuring the life of filmmaker and geek icon George Lucas. “Orbit: George Lucas: Rise of an Empire” is available in print and digital this week.

A creative force whose pioneering efforts in the area of sound production and special affects forever changed the way we view movies, George Lucas found fame in 1977 with the release of his magnum opus, “Star Wars.” In that moment, the master filmmaker shaped geek culture for generations.

The 26-page graphic novel was written by John Michael Helmer and Brian Smith and features art by Smith. Smith and Chris Fischer illustrated the comic book’s variant covers.

“Bluewater receives a lot of requests from fans and famous people to tell the stories of the famous and the infamous using this unique medium, and George Lucas has been at the top of that list for a long time,” says publisher Darren G. Davis. “With interest in his creative work swelling, now was the time to tell his amazing story.”

Bluewater has focused on other personalities such as Conan O’Brien, David Letterman, Carrie Fisher, Ray Harryhausen, and Stephen King. All are available on Amazon as well as Nook, Kindle, and ITunes. Bluewater’s biographies have hit the top ten books on Amazon as well drawn the attention of hundreds of news outlets, including New York Magazine, People Magazine, Forbes, MTV, CNN, and The Today Show

“Orbit: George Lucas: Rise of an Empire” is available for your e-reader from iTunes (to order the book on iTunes: http://apple.co/1zSWYwQ , Kindle, Wowio, ComiXology, DriveThru Comics, Google Play, Madefire, My Digital Comics, Overdrive, Iverse, Biblioboard, Flipkart, Axis360, Epic!, Blio, Entitle, Comicblender.com, Indie Comic Tracker, Wheeler, Scoop, Nook, Kobo and wherever eBooks are sold. The print version of the book is available only at Comic Flea Market at www.comicfleamarket.com

 

Women to be Lead Writer’s on Marvel’s Latest Movie

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captain_marvelCaptain Marvel will be the first movie by the comic empire to feature a female superhero. So, Marvel has tapped Nicole Perlman, co-wroter of Marvel Studios’ Guardians of the Galaxy, and Meg LeFauve, co-writer of Pixar’s upcoming Inside Out, to write and oversee the script for Captain Marvel. 

The central character Carol Danvers aka Captain Marvel is “a US airforce pilot who develops cosmic superpowers including flight, super-strength and “energy projection” after gaining extra-terrestrial DNA during an accident on a restricted military base.” This character was first seen in 1977 and was called Ms. Marvel before becoming Captain Marvel nearly 35-years later.

The movie is has an expected release date of 2018. Marvel Studios has announced that between 2016 -2019, they will be releasing nine ‘superhero’ movies, and many of these will feature female leads.

There have been rumors that Marvel has asked Angelina Jolie to direct, but there has been no confirmation at this time. You can read more about Captain Marvel here.

 

All Aboard for Books!

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Amtrak-logoAmtrak and Penguin Random House have partnered to offer free ebook excerpts to passengers on the Boston to Washington, D.C. train, the Acela Express. Via Amtrak’s WiFi (AmTrakConnect) passengers can read excerpts of select titles, and if they like what they read, a ‘buy button’ is available to purchase the book.

The option to purchase will include links to several retailers, and Penguin Random House titles will include; The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg , The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins , Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng , and Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham ,and many others.

Christine McNamara, vice president and director of partnerships for PRH said in a press release: “We’re thrilled to work with Amtrak to share great books with readers. The partnership allows us to help thousands of train passengers each day discover their next book.”

This seems to be a trend, as last year Reader’s Entertainment reported, that Beijing, China was offering book titles on their subway system. JetBlue also partnered with HarperCollins to offer free ebooks via JetBlue’s Fly-Fi Hub, and those titles can be purchased in-flight from multiple retailers.

More details from Penguin’s Press Release:

Amtrak Acela Express passengers will have access to a selection of bestselling fiction and nonfiction from Penguin Random House, the exclusive book content partner for the launch of the newly redesigned AmtrakConnect® on-board Wi-Fi page.  Acela Express customers using the Amtrak service between Boston and Washington, D.C., via New York and Philadelphia, will now be able to read more than twenty free excerpts from a variety of genres across all Penguin Random House’s adult imprints.

Readers will be able to preview excerpts from bestselling titles such as Gray Mountain by John Grisham, The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg, The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, Believer by David Axelrod, Ruby by Cynthia Bond (an Oprah Book Club 2.0 Pick), Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng, Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) by Mindy Kaling, Wild by Cheryl Strayed and others. Each excerpt will include buy buttons to enable customers to purchase any of the available titles from a variety of retailers, directly, while onboard.

“Reading for pleasure is an activity that many passengers look forward to during their rail journey. We’re thrilled to work with Amtrak to share great books with readers. The partnership allows us to help thousands of train passengers each day discover their next book,” said Christine McNamara , Vice President and Director of Partnerships on behalf of Penguin Random House.

In the coming months, this program will be rolled out onto all Northeast Regional trains that are Wi-Fi enabled, connecting  every Amtrak rider directly with Penguin Random House books. As well, audio book content will be included for listening pleasure. The partnership will continue throughout the year, with updated selections as the titles publish.

“As part of our enhanced AmtrakConnect web page, Amtrak is delighted to have entered into a partnership with Penguin Random House,” said Lenetta McCampbell, Sr. Director of Passenger Experience. “Providing exclusively-free excerpts of today’s most popular titles is a great way to round out a platform that will keep passengers more entertained, and better-informed, and enjoy their journeys.”

Five Authors Pick Their Favorite Pranksters in Literature

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eloise-sunglasses-700x394By  @ bookish.com

Everyone loves a good prank this time of year, though perhaps none more than Anna Banks. In her upcoming novelJoyride, Banks leaves behind mermaid mythology and instead dives into a contemporary town where a pair of pranksters spend their midnights blowing off steam. Here, Banks teams up with four other authors to share the books, characters, and even authors who have pranked them good.

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Tom Sawyer

Pranksters tend to get a bad rap: that they’re morally deficient just because they enjoy harassing/surprising/scaring unsuspecting victims. Incorrect, haters, incorrect. Even pranksters hold to a certain moral integrity. For instance, they usually won’t target old people, and if they do, the prank is mild and generally safe; perhaps the application of a false skid mark, to give an example.

My favorite literary prankster with high moral standards is Tom Sawyer. He pranked, but when it came down to the heart of a serious matter—the whole incident with Injun Joe—he came through wearing his moral britches, not a skid mark in sight. Sawyer taught kids that all-important balance between harmless pranking and committing felonies. My hero. Anna Banks, author of Joyride

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Robert “Tricky Vic” Miller

In general I don’t like pranks—not in real life and not even in fiction. They make me too nervous. (This is the same reason why I am a terrible guest at surprise parties. Everyone else jumps out to shout “SURPRISE!” and I’m still hiding under the table.) But I’m totally into this brand-new picture book biography about a world-class prankster: Tricky Vic: The Impossibly True Story of the Man Who Sold the Eiffel Tower byGreg Pizzoli.

Tricky Vic tells the story of a con artist who scammed his way all around Europe, across the Atlantic Ocean, and throughout the United States. This really happened. Vic sold strangers a machine that he claimed produced hundred dollar bills (here’s what it actually produced: nothing), he convinced people to pay him money for the Eiffel Tower (somehow, this worked), and he even tricked Al Capone! I would not want to play any of these pranks, or have any of them played on me, because I am a big fat fraidy-cat. But it makes for a fascinating story. —Leila Sales, author of This Song Will Save Your Life

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Frankie Landau-Banks

My favorite prank comes from a recent read, The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart, whose brilliant We Were Liars I loved. “A criminal mastermind,” Frankie is intelligent and shrewd with a killer sense of humor (my Achilles heel in books). She conducts the ultimate prank by assuming the identity of “Alpha,” a male student and leader of the boarding school’s secret society, and manipulating others into carrying out a series of elaborate schemes. Upon discovery, she challenges notions of how males and females are perceived with the pointed: “Why is it psychotic if I did it, and brilliant if Alpha did it?” She’s not only one of my favorite pranksters but one of my favorite characters in literature. —Lori Goldstein, author of Becoming Jinn

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Eloise

My favorite prankster from literature is dear, wee Eloise, who lives at the Plaza. (Ooooh, I just love the Plaza, don’t you?) Though Eloise has quite a few prankish moments throughout the book, it’s the last page of the book, where she plans to pour a pitcher of water down the mail chute that is the most delightful to me.

I grew up in an apartment on West 90th street in Manhattan and we had a mail chute right next to the elevator. As a child I loved to slip a letter in and listen to the bright pinging sound it made as it bumped its way down the shaft. A pitcher of water?! I never dreamed of such a wonderful prank. But that is what literature is for—to inspire us! Emmy Laybourne, author of Monument 14 and Sweet

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Beatrice Sparks

This is not a prank from a book. The prank is the book: Go Ask Alice by Anonymous. And I totally fell for it. I’ll never forget reading Go Ask Alice back in junior high. Other kids learned about drugs at parties and in friends’ basements. A bookish, nerdy girl, I learned about them by reading this “diary”—full of what seemed to me, at the time, to be realistic, terrifying experiences suffered by a teen drug addict. She goes to a party and someone spikes her drink with LSD! She steals sleeping pills from her innocent grandparents! She runs away to California and does heroin!

Years later as a college student, I found a copy of this 1971 publication and reread it. The once frightening entries now seemed laughable. Not only are the voice, vocabulary, and register of the book clearly an adult’s, are we honestly to believe the drug-addled diarist kept detailed, grammatically-correct entries while shooting smack and living on the streets? And what teen girl writes in her diary about bringing a gelatin salad to a Christmas party? What teen girl brings a gelatin salad anywhere? So I decided to do some research. (What can I say?  I was still a bookish nerd.)

Turns out Go Ask Alice was actually written by youth counselor and therapist Beatrice Sparks who went on to write several other “diaries” about teens who got pregnant, got HIV, and got involved in worshipping Satan. (Seriously.) While Go Ask Alice may have been responsible for scaring the living daylights out of millions of impressionable teenagers, including yours truly, there was no Anonymous. Just a grown-up who apparently had a thing for gelatin salads. —Jennifer Mathieu, author ofThe Truth About Alice and Devoted

REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM BOOKISH.COM

 

SNEAK PEEK: In High Cotton by Bestselling Authors Nancy Naigle and Kelsey Browning

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In High CottonHoney, these are not your momma’s grannies…

When a tree topples over onto Miss Lillian’s prized 1948 Tucker Torpedo, the grannies are once again scrambling for money and keeping Lil in the dark. Lucky for them, they have their choice of two cases, but which to take—a suspected art forgery or mysteriously disappearing trash from the county landfill?

As usual, things aren’t exactly as they first seem, and the grannies soon find themselves going undercover and dumpster diving to track down both bad guys. And now that Lil has scored an unexpected early release from prison, the grannies have more at stake than ever.

Will they find the culprits in time to repair the Tucker before Lil gets home, or will she arrive and unravel their lies?

From the beginning of IN HIGH COTTON:

Summer Haven’s front doorbell rang in rapid-fire succession, making Sera freeze mid-stretch into a janu sirsasana pose on the kitchen floor. She glanced over at Maggie and Abby Ruth sitting at the farm table with Sheriff Teague Castro. “Were we expecting anyone?”

“Not that I’m aware of.” Maggie straightened her dark ponytail and tucked her appliquéd shirt into her pants.

“So help me.” Abby Ruth’s tone was as sharp as the creases on her trademark slim jeans. “If it’s Angelina Broussard coming around to stir up more trouble, I’m gonna wring that woman’s neck.”

Teague’s voice dry, he said, “Aunt Bibi, it’s not smart to plan a murder right in front of the sheriff.”

“No offense,” she said. “But you’re like family, and you know what a pain that woman is. Don’t you think I could get off on an insanity charge?”

Teague shook his head, obviously not daring to step into that conversation, especially not with the mother of his dream girl.

Sera hopped to her feet. “I’ll get it.” To forestall violence against the woman who had final say over Summer Haven remaining on the historic register, Sera raced for the foyer, her bare feet slapping against the wooden floor. She flung open the door and there stood Hollis Dooley with that stinky hound dog of his.

The man was a hundred and sixteen if he was a day. Bundled up in a coat that made him look like a cross between a Ninja Turtle and the Michelin Man, Hollis leaned on his silver walker. Goodness, it wasn’t that cold outside. Here at the end of March, the shrubs had already taken the hint that spring was around the corner, displaying buds and tender greens so welcome after the cold of winter. Still, his false teeth were chattering.

Amazon Link: http://www.amazon.com/High-Cotton-Granny-Series-Book-ebook/dp/B00TQ8IIAG/ref=pd_sim_kstore_2?ie=UTF8&refRID=09MEK44EXH8CCG90AZXK

www.TheGrannySeries.com

https://www.facebook.com/KelseyBrowningAuthor

About The Authors:

Kelsey Browning writes sass kickin’ stories of love, humor, and adventure. s. Originally from a Texas town smaller than the ones she writes about, Kelsey has also lived in the Middle East and Los Angeles, proving she’s either adventurous or downright nuts. These days, she hangs out in northeast Georgia with Tech Guy, Smarty Boy, Bad Dog and Pharaoh, a (fingers crossed) future therapy dog. For info on her upcoming single title releases, drop by www.KelseyBrowning.com.

Also by Kelsey Browning:

TEXAS NIGHTS Series

Book 1:: Personal Assetsz
Book 2:: Running the Red Light
Book 3:: Problems in Paradise
Book 4:: Designed For Love

BY INVITATION ONLY Series
Amazed by You – currently part of the Get Lucky box set
Nancy Naigle writes love stories from the crossroad of small town and suspense. Born and raised in Virginia Beach, Nancy now calls North Carolina home. She’s currently at work on the next book in The Granny Series, and a new women’s fiction novel. Stay in touch with Nancy on Facebook, twitter or subscribe to her newsletter on her website ~ http://www.NancyNaigle.com

Also by Nancy Naigle:

The Adams Grove Series

Book 1:: Sweet Tea and Secrets
Book 2:: Wedding Cake and Big Mistakes
Book 3:: Out of Focus
Book 4:: Pecan Pie and Deadly Lies
Book 5:: Mint Juleps and Justice
Book 6:: Barbecue and Bad News

Single Title
Life After Perfect