Thursday, April 3, 2025
Show Me Your Glory movie trailer
Sunday, March 30, 2025
The Bible Companion Book 1 Genesis-Exodus Epic Book Launch
Book Title: The Bible Companion Book 1 Genesis-Exodus
Author Name: Karen Westbrook Moderow
Genre: Bible Study
Release Date: April 16, 2024
The Bible Companion series is a simple, flexible, and compelling Bible Study guide. Short daily readings link God’s story to yours, help you through difficult passages, and highlight the treasures in each chapter of the Bible. In Genesis and Exodus, God reveals Himself as a loving Creator who longs to walk through life with you. Book 1 takes you deep into God’s plan to share His life and wisdom with those who love and follow Him. The storytelling approach of the series will keep you reading, even through the parts that are challenging and hard-to-understand. Find hope in the stories of ordinary men and women in the Bible whose encounters with God transformed them and reversed the direction of their lives. Discover that what God has done for them, He can do for you.
Book Excerpt
Genesis 2 unveils God’s perfect world where rest is a holy ritual of life, we live in relationship with our Creator and each other, and work is a partnership with God. The first whisper of tension comes in verse 17 when God tells man not to eat of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. God’s gift—freedom to choose—sends fear down our spines. We know what will happen because we know ourselves.
The writer notes in Genesis that Adam and Eve are naked and do not feel ashamed. That will soon change. Adam’s rebellion puts man at war with himself, God, and others. But for this brief moment we glimpse life as it could’ve been—as God intended it to be. Today, God’s breath within gives us hope of recovering what we’ve lost. His breath sustains us every moment of life, reminding us that He is near. He has not given up on the beautiful world He has created, and He has not given up on us.
COMPANION THOUGHT
Is rest a priority in your life? When was the last time you went a full day without working?
About the Author
Karen Westbrook Moderow is a Bible teacher and author who brings a storyteller’s perspective to Scripture. She graduated magna cum laude from California State University at Long Beach with a BA in English Literature. She also holds an MFA from Chapman University in creative writing and a Master of Arts in Theology from Fuller Seminary. She has been published by numerous Christian periodicals and authored two previous books.
#CelebrateLit #Christian #BooksYouCanFeelGoodAbout #KarenWestbrookModerow
Saturday, March 29, 2025
Spectrum Mobile lies about buyout
We opted for the phone buyout and have been fighting for about three months to actually get the buyout money!
Our patience is at an end with this. T-Mobile does not show the phone numbers, just the IMEI number on the close out bills. Spectrum will not recognize them. They just give you the runaround and avoid actually coming through with the buyout money they promised.
WHAT A JOKE!
#spectrumlies #spectrumdoesntcare #spectrumbuyoutisajoke
#tmobiledoesntcare #dumptmobile
@spectrum @tmobile
When the Sky Burned: October 8, 1871 (A Day to Remember Book 6) by Liz Tolsma
About the Book
Book: When the Sky Burned (A Day to Remember Book 6)
Author: Liz Tolsma
Genre: Christian Fiction / Romance / Historical Fiction
Release date: March 1, 2025
A Tornado of Fire and Embezzlement Sweep through a Community
Enjoy a series of 6 exciting novels featuring historic disasters that transformed landscapes and multiple lives. Whether by nature or by man, these disasters changed history and were a day to be remembered.
Promising painter Mariah Randolph longs to have her canvases displayed in the world’s best museums, and Hollis Stanford, the heir of a railroad tycoon, is her ticket to success. The railroad’s bookkeeper, Jay Franklin, discovers discrepancies and is convinced that Hollis is stealing from the company. But any proof of his dirty dealings go up in smoke when fire utterly destroys the town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, October 8, 1871.
The fire leaves Mariah blind, but Jay befriends her and even helps her to start painting again. But a trip to Chicago to return Hollis’s daughter to him could put both Mariah and Jay in more danger than even the fire that devastated the town and their lives.
Click here to get your copy!
About the Author
Liz Tolsma is the author of several WWII novels, romantic suspense novels, prairie romance novellas, and an Amish romance. She is a popular speaker and an editor and resides next to a Wisconsin farm field with her husband and their youngest daughter. Her son is a US Marine, and her oldest daughter is a college student. Liz enjoys reading, walking, working in her large perennial garden, kayaking, and camping. She is also the host of the Christian Historical Fiction Talk podcast.
More from Liz
I stared at my computer screen in front of me. For years, I had been searching for my great-grandmother, Anna. I got no good information. Census records in the US weren’t helpful. Some listed her birthplace as Czechoslovakia, while others had it as Austria. I had heard before that she might have been born in Czechoslovakia before, but never Austria. There were no records that I had come across that listed the city or town where she was born.
Until that one day. While searching for my great-grandmother, I ran across a passport application recorded in Warsaw, Poland, for an Anna with the same last name, though spelled differently. Her birthday was listed as 1903, which matched the birth year I knew for my great-grandmother’s niece. As I read through the application, my heart was pounding. This Anna was born in the United States but went to Dubne, Poland, with her family in 1906. It was now 1923, and she wanted to return to the US, and she would be living with…
I started to cry when I saw who her sponsor was. My great-grandfather. The name and address were correct. There could be no doubt about it. It had taken me years, but I finally made the jump to Europe and discovered that my great-grandmother was not born in Czechoslovakia but in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire and is now Poland.
Of course, good little researcher that I am, I had to find out all I could about Dubne, the town they were from. That’s when I first came across the term Lemko. What on earth was that?
Lemkos are a Slavic people that settled in the Carpathian Mountains of Southern Poland, Northern Slovakia, and Western Ukraine. They are also known as Lemko Rusyns, Rusyns (especially those born in Slovakia, like my great-grandfather), and Carptho-Rusyns. The mountains kept the world at bay, and they developed their own language, customs, and form of Christianity. For the most part, they were very poor, many of them eking out a living from the rocky ground.
They lived in “black houses,” called that because the poorest people couldn’t afford to have a chimney built. The smoke from the cooking and heating fires stayed inside the house and covered the walls with black tar. If you look at the cemetery records from Dubne, you would be old if you lived into your fifties. Conditions were brutal.
The most the average Lemko could afford was one sheep or one pig. Since this was their most prized possession, they couldn’t take the chance of a wild animal or a neighbor taking it away, so it lived in the house with them.
With all of them. Up to eleven people would live in a two-room house. When I mentioned that in What I Left for You, my editor questioned if I had made a mistake. No, I didn’t. I have no idea how they fit all those people in there, but they did. As I was tracking one branch of our family tree, I kept coming up with people living in house 43. Over and over and over. They stuffed that house full. Grandparents, parents, and children all lived together. They may not have had much, but that forged the Lemkos into strong and resilient people.
I’m proud to be Lemko-Rusyn, and I’m thrilled to share this story with you. I infused Helena, the historical heroine, with as much of the Lemko spunk and spirit as I could. Last October, my daughter and I had the privilege to travel to Poland and Slovakia and see the Lemko homeland for ourselves. It helped me to write a better, richer story because I now understand where they came from and who they were. Enjoy Helena’s story and her journey during WWII and beyond. I hope you come to understand and appreciate the Lemko people as much as I have.
Blog Stops
Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, March 27
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, March 28
Pens Pages & Pulses, March 28
Books You Can Feel Good About, March 29
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, March 29
Simple Harvest Reads, March 30 (Guest Review from Marilyn)
Texas Book-aholic, March 30
Betti Mace, March 31
Lily’s Corner, March 31
Life on Chickadee Lane, April 1
Devoted Steps, April 1
Locks, Hooks and Books, April 2
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, April 3
Blogging with Carol, April 4
Connie’s History Classroom, April 4
Tell Tale Book Reviews, April 5
For Him and My Family, April 5
Stories By Gina, April 6 (Author Interview)
Mary Hake, April 6
Bizwings Book Blog, April 7
Cover Lover Book Review, April 7
Becca Hope: Book Obsessed, April 8
Jodie Wolfe, April 8
Holly’s Book Corner, April 9
Pause for Tales, April 9
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Liz is giving away the grand prize of a $25 Amazon e-Gift Card and a print copy of the book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/00adcf54187
Friday, March 28, 2025
Spark of the Revolution by Megan Soja
About the Book
Book: Spark of the Revolution
Author: Megan Soja
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release date: March 4, 2025
A spark ignites a flame that could burn down everything they hold dear.
Contrary to her name, Patience Abbott has long felt unsettled and anxious to leave behind her painful memories in England for a fresh start in America. But her new life isn’t quite what she expected, and as tension grows in her new home of Boston, so does the distance between Patience and her estranged father. So when Josiah Wagner walks into her life, it finally feels like she’s not alone. If only his patriotic leanings didn’t put him at odds with her father’s loyalties.
Josiah Wagner has spent his life yearning for a true home and family, something he works toward each day, forging tools as a blacksmith, and each night, forging plans with the Sons of Liberty. But when the destruction of tea in Boston Harbor lights the spark of the Revolution, Josiah finds himself drawn into its tumultuous wake, pulling the woman he loves along with him.
As tensions mount, will their search for belonging lead to each other, or will the obstacles between them be too great to overcome? In a land on the brink of war, can they find the home they seek in the One who calls them His own?
Click here to get your copy!
About the Author
Megan Soja is a multi-award-winning author who writes stories with strong faith, rich history, and sweet romance. She lives in western NY with her husband and two daughters and loves having adventures, both big and small, with her family. When she’s not writing, she enjoys reading, hiking, canoeing and kayaking, and playing French Horn.
More from Megan
I have a confession. When I was in school, I didn’t really enjoy history classes. That sounds awful coming from a writer of historical fiction, doesn’t it? But it’s true. The whole concept of memorizing dates and names and places just didn’t excite me.
And yet, I have loved reading historical fiction for as long as I can remember, and have always found living history museums fascinating. I think it’s because those things made history feel real and made me feel like I was part of it. They took me deeper, beyond a list of events and famous names, into the everyday lives of ordinary people who made a lasting impact, whether they realized it or not.
It was the stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things that captured my attention when I began researching for Spark of the Revolution.
They were names most of us would never recognize. Ordinary people living ordinary lives, who stepped up one night to take part in something extraordinary. Who joined an event that would go on to impact history in ways few of them likely imagined.
Names like Sarah Bradlee Fulton, who has been credited with the idea of disguising men as Mohawks and helped her husband and brothers do just that. She later rallied women to care for wounded soldiers after the Battle of Bunker Hill and traveled across enemy lines to deliver an urgent message to General George Washington.
Or David Kinnson, a farmer from Maine who journeyed to Boston with the express purpose of destroying the tea. He went on to serve in multiple battles of both the Revolution and the War of 1812, was the father of twenty-two children, and lived to be one hundred and fifteen years old.
Or Samuel Sprague, who was on the way to visit the woman he loved when he saw what was happening at the harbor and decided to join. He climbed onto a rooftop to gather soot as a disguise. Don’t worry, he did later marry his sweetheart – Joannah Thayer – and they went on to have fourteen children together. Both lived to be ninety and are buried at the Central Burying Ground on Boston Common.
I was drawn in by these stories and so many others. They reminded me that each of us are living our own stories too. And while we may often feel ordinary, we are treasured and precious in the sight of God. He has a plan and purpose for every one of us, and whether or not our names are recorded or remembered in history, we are fully known by Him.
I hope you’ll see that message when you read Spark of the Revolution. One of purpose, of meaning in the midst of the ordinary, and of belonging to the God who is unchanging throughout all of time.
Blog Stops
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, March 20
Texas Book-aholic, March 21
Locks, Hooks and Books, March 22
Life on Chickadee Lane, March 23
Pause for Tales, March 23
Simple Harvest Reads, March 24 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, March 25
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, March 26
Sylvan Musings, March 27
Pens Pages & Pulses, March 27
Books You Can Feel Good About, March 28
Connie’s History Classroom, March 29
For Him And My Family, March 30
Paula’s Pad of Inspiration, March 30
Cover Lover Book Review, March 31
Holly’s Book corner, April 1
Leslie’s Library Escape, April 2
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Megan is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon gift card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/00adcf54179
Thursday, March 27, 2025
The Chosen - The Last Supper - episode 1
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
Spectrum lies
#dumpspectrum
We opted for the phone buyout and have been fighting for about three months to actually get the buyout money!
Our patience is at an end with this. T-Mobile does not show the phone numbers, just the IMEI number on the close out bills. Spectrum will not recognize them.
WHAT A JOKE!
#spectrumlies #spectrumdoesntcare #spectrumbuyoutisajoke
#tmobiledoesntcare #dumptmobile
@spectrum @tmobile