Thursday, December 23, 2010

Happy Christmas to all!


THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS

by Clement Clarke Moore

or Henry Livingston, Jr.

'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house

Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse;

The stockings were hung by the chimney with care,

In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there;

The children were nestled all snug in their beds,

While visions of sugar-plums danced in their heads;

And mamma in her 'kerchief, and I in my cap,

Had just settled down for a long winter's nap,

When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,

I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter.

Away to the window I flew like a flash,

Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash.

The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow

Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below,

When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,

But a miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reindeer,

With a little old driver, so lively and quick,

I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.

More rapid than eagles his coursers they came,

And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name;

"Now, Dasher! now, Dancer! now, Prancer and Vixen!

On, Comet! on Cupid! on, Donder and Blitzen!

To the top of the porch! to the top of the wall!

Now dash away! dash away! dash away all!"

As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,

When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky,

So up to the house-top the coursers they flew,

With the sleigh full of toys, and St. Nicholas too.

And then, in a twinkling, I heard on the roof

The prancing and pawing of each little hoof.

As I drew in my head, and was turning around,

Down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.

He was dressed all in fur, from his head to his foot,

And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;

A bundle of toys he had flung on his back,

And he looked like a peddler just opening his pack.

His eyes -- how they twinkled! his dimples how merry!

His cheeks were like roses, his nose like a cherry!

His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow,

And the beard of his chin was as white as the snow;

The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth,

And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath;

He had a broad face and a little round belly,

That shook, when he laughed like a bowlful of jelly.

He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,

And I laughed when I saw him, in spite of myself;

A wink of his eye and a twist of his head,

Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread;

He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,

And filled all the stockings; then turned with a jerk,

And laying his finger aside of his nose,

And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose;

He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,

And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.

But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight,

"Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night."

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

New Review for If My Sandcastle Drowns...Can I Live With You? by Rie Sheridan Rose

"Praise Worthy"
 
"An indepth collection of poetry! Rie has a remarkable talent and she is not afraid to venture with her incredible instrument, the pen. She took a childhood favorite lullaby and interwined it with the truth of reality, "Life is tough...and then you die." She speaks on the challenges of life and still offers hope. If My Sandcastle Drowns...is praise worthy of not giving up, because obstacles will come, but we can endure and live. Rie truly shines in reminding us to keep hope alive" ~ Latiece, Amazon reader, 5 stars

~ Read an excerpt or purchase here

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

New Review for Family Ties by Jamie Hill

“Family Ties started out with a bang and kept me on my toes throughout the entire book. Ms. Hill did an outstanding job with the plotline, and I was literally biting my nails the entire time I was reading. I couldn’t put this fast paced, action packed book down. I HAD to find out what happened next. It was addicting. Ms. Hill has a gift of hooking the reader and not letting go until the very last word. And even then, there was a description of Family Secrets (the first book in the series). It’s now on my HAVE TO BUY list. So let me just leave you with this one suggestion. You really want to go out and buy this book. It’s a 114 page book that is filled with every emotion you can think of. You won’t want to miss this one. Ms. Hill is an author to watch.” ~ Val, You Gotta Read Reviews, 5 Stars 

Read an excerpt from Family Ties here

Monday, December 20, 2010

New Review for First Degree Innocence by Ginger Simpson

Suzie at Romance Junkies gives First Degree Innocence 4.5 Blue Ribbons and says, "Ginger Simpson has written a highly suspenseful book.  From the first page you are thrown into the chaos of Carrie Lang’s life.  How she gets past all of the obstacles she encounters in prison is very realistic; you will question whether you are reading fiction or real life.  FIRST DEGREE INNOCENCE will deliver a thrill ride of high intense suspense; this is one title you definitely do not want to miss!"

~ Read an excerpt or purchase here

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Two new great reviews for Chill Waters by Joan Hall Hovey


"Chill Waters Very Chilling"

I love when I discover new thriller/mystery authors. I have just finished Joan Hall Hovey's Chill Waters and it is a superb suspense novel. She grabs you from the opening pages and the suspense does not let up until the chilling conclusion. Move over Mary Higgins Clark. Hall Hovey writes a taut psychological thriller without explosions or car chases, but this is truly well written suspense. I plan to check out her other novels, Nowhere to Hide and Listen to the Shadows. Joan, you have a new fan. ~  James A. Anderson, Author, 5.0 out of 5 stars



 "An intense read!"

Chill Waters defines the word "thriller" in the best sense of the word. After a heart-breaking split from her cheating husband, Rachael hopes to find some spiritual peace and come to terms with this change in her life by moving back to her deceased grandmother's home in Jenny's Cove where she spent a happy childhood. But she soon realizes it was not to be, as someone evil lurks out there intent on murdering her. She doesn't know who or why, but it terrifies her deep to her core.

She soon meets a nice man whom she develops feelings for, but even he cannot keep her safe from the sadistical killer with a plot for revenge. As we read along, the tension builds and builds until we are so involved in rooting for our heroine, we find ourselves holding our breaths as the plot unravels- and we can hardly take it a moment longer!  ~ Lila L. Pinord, 4.0 out of 5 stars


~ Find Chill Waters here

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Hot excerpt: Genesee by Juliet Waldron


Ebook Price: $4.99 USD. 86870 words. Fiction by Juliet Waldron and published by BWLPP  on November 7, 2010

Born to a runaway teen and Iroquois Warrior, Genesee struggles to find her place, her loyalties eternally torn between two warring peoples. When the American Revolution sets the Mohawk Valley ablaze, will a young soldier’s love prove strong enough to save her?



Excerpt:

Dedicated

To those American great-grandmothers
who have hidden their secret behind Christian Names



The Mohawk River, September, 1761

With a final powerful stroke, a young man in buckskin pushed his laden canoe through the shallows and onto the gray gravel shore. He was dressed as an Iroquois warrior, but he could never pass for one.

His fair skin was sunburned, his hair gathered into a yellow braid which trailed down his back. A full dirty beard, equally yellow, obscured his square face.

In other parts of the country he might have been a Scot or Irishman, the kind that had practiced rustling and revenge on the borders of the Old World and now did the same in the New. Here, however, far down the Mohawk, it was more likely that this was a Dutchman who'd been out to trade.

His canoe did carry furs, but that was not all it carried. There was a big raw-boned woman too, and she had been paddling almost as strongly as the man.

Now she expertly lifted her paddle, dripping silver, and shipped it beside the furs. She was brown skinned, as dirty as he from travel, in a buckskin dress and trousers. Her dark hair lay in two oily braids over her broad shoulders.

There was a crunch as the man got out and muscled the canoe higher onto the gravel. At the same time, a thin wail sounded. The woman bent and picked up a once handsome – now travel-worn – blue papoose sack.

"How is she?" the man asked.

"Ungry und vet, Mynheer Hendrik." 

The woman splashed up to a spot beneath a willow, one that trailed long fingers in the water. A cry of anticipation arose as Anna put the papoose sack, decorated with a starburst design of porcupine quills, on the ground.

Her strong hands brought out a squirming, naked baby and laid her on the grass, a brown-skinned, black-haired girl. Methodically she began to clean out the sack, pulling out handfuls of wet moss and rabbit fur.

Ordinarily Anna would have first put the baby to her breast. The danger of allowing her to cry would have been too great in the wilderness. Here, however, through the trees, a group of cabins could be seen.
Even now, out of the cornfields, three people in rough country dress appeared, a woman and two men. The woman had a hoe; the men held long rifles.

Hendrik went out to meet them. "Hello, Vanderlyn," he said. "Hello, MacLeish, and you, too, Peggy," he added, inclining his fair head to the barefoot, weather-beaten woman.

"Hendrik van Cortlandt!" she exclaimed.

"Yes, it's me, home at last."

"Who have you got there with you, Hendrik?"

"That is Anna. There isn't a trail through Indian country she doesn't know. She guided me back."

The three stared beyond Hendrik to the woman nursing the naked baby, their eyes brimming with an equal mix of pity and revulsion. Why had Hendrik brought home this big, homely half-breed?

"Hendrik van Cortlandt," barefoot Peggy declared, "your Trudy's had a son."

"What?" Hendrik's strong jaw dropped foolishly.

"Christ, man," exclaimed MacLeish with a chuckle, "didn't you know her belly was full when you left?"

Looking dazed, Hendrik dropped to his haunches, Indian fashion.

" Guess he didn't," Peggy answered for him. "Well, Sir, this five months past you've had a bonny son."

"By The Almighty!" Hendrik cried. "Trudy?"

"Right as rain," said his informant. "She stayed with us 'til he came. Named him Schuyler after her Dad."

"We and the Douws watched your farm," added her husband. "Paulus and I ran some squatters off this spring."

"It seems I've got plenty to thank you for," Hendrik replied. In spite of the tan, he suddenly looked shades paler.

"Well, 'tis right good to see you," MacLeish repeated. "Beginnin' to think you wasn't comin' back."

"I was beginnin' to think so m'self."

"Tell you what," the hitherto silent Vanderlyn spoke into the ensuing pause, "I'll ride down Oriskany and tell your Misses you're on your way."

"Good idea," Hendrik replied. "I don't want to pop up like the devil and scare her to fits."

Copyright (C) 2010 Juliet Waldron



Friday, December 17, 2010

Interview with author Juliet Waldron

“Not all who wander are lost.” Juliet Waldron earned a B. A. in English, but has worked at jobs ranging from artist’s model to brokerage. Twenty years ago, after raising her children, she dropped out of 9-5 and began to researching her way into The Past. Three of the resulting thirteen historical novels are now published. Mozart’s Wife won the 1st Independent e-Book Award. Genesee won the 2003 Epic Award for Best Historical. She enjoys putting what she has learned about people, places, and relationships into her stories.



BWLPP: How long have you been writing and in what genres? 

JW: I’ve been writing for most of my life, but basically gave up my life in order to pursue the “writer’s dream” during the ‘80’s. I’ve always loved historical fiction. One of the first stories I remember writing was about a cave man trying to traverse a glacier. The idea probably came from a childhood spent enduring rip-roaring Upstate New York winters.  

BWLPP: Where you do get your inspiration?
 
JW: I’m a great believer in The Muse. She flies in the window, and I write.  I read mostly non-fiction, especially history and archaeology. These two enormous fields are brim full of inspiration.  There’s a joke about things “stranger than life.” In my experience, there’s almost nothing stranger than “the real story.”

BWLPP: Tell us about your book(s).
 
JW: Constanze Mozart married the world’s first superstar. Mozart’s Wife is her eye view of the trials of living with genius. I wanted to tell the truth about this marriage, and I did mountains of historical research in order to assure myself I’d gotten the story right.

Genesee grew from years of research on the Iroquois and from love of the landscape and lore of my childhood in the Mohawk Valley. Genesee is a girl of mixed blood who is an uneasy outsider in both worlds. 

Independent Heart was the result of investigating the reality of the Rip Van Winkle world of Washington Irving.  A lively Dutch culture did exist in the Hudson Valley in Revolutionary War days, and I found my independent heroine and her double-agent lover there.

BWLPP: What about your next book?  Will it be part of a series or a stand alone?  Can you give us a taste to whet our appetites?

JW: I want to tell another upstate story, but this one will be set in the 1980’s. I’m not sure exactly how it’s going to play out. Maybe it’s a romantic suspense, or maybe it’s just a gruesome ghost story. 

BWLPP: Why did you choose to publish electronically?
 
JW: I think it’s where the world of books is headed. In fact, really, it isn’t different from print publishing, except in terms of the media. We offer stories—words on page. 

At last, it seems, the technical problem of creating an affordable and easy to handle device seems to be solved.  The Sony Reader and the Kindle have plenty of content and they are both approaching a price that people don’t balk at paying.

BWLPP: What are your hobbies and interests?
 
JW: I love to look at travel sites, and imagine going, but seem to never really get much of anywhere. I like to write poetry, and I also enjoy puttering around yard and my leggy messy perennial gardens. I’m a dedicated walker, and have begun getting back into yoga. I have grandkids, and as they are at a distance, I try to get in long phone calls. Our house is one-cat-over-the-line-Sweet-Jesus and my husband and I spend a lot of time attending to their feline needs, wants and whims. It seems as if some fur person is always on the wrong side of the door, or needs a lap and heavy petting, or a beauty treatment. There are also behaviour issues. We have a cranky, frail geriatric, but the youngest of our cat family, a fluffy orange girl, who was rescued just last year has been a challenge. She thinks her name is “Stop That!” 

BWLPP: What does the future hold for you?
 
JW: The future is always a big vague question mark. I’ll be happy simply to keep breathing and to go on creating for a few more years. The old hippy saying “Onward, into the fog,” sums it up. 

BWLPP: Where can readers find you?

JW: At Amazon.com along with the rest of the writing world, at


At my Google blog, Possum Tracks

And at Authorsden where I’ve posted a ton of poems as well as writing


BWLPP: Thanks Juliet!





Thursday, December 16, 2010

Now available: Relics by Vijaya Schartz

Ancient Enemy - Book Two

Ebook Price: $4.99 USD. 80090 words. Fiction by Vijaya Schartz and published by Books We Love Publishing Partners  on December 14, 2010

The year is 2023, and an alien invader has infiltrated the human race. In a dangerous future threatened by aliens and infiltrated by hybrids, archeologist Celene Dupres witnesses her father's murder. 

Vowing to avenge him and retrieve his precious alien relics, she finds the perfect ally and protector. But the man she trusts, the man with whom she is falling in love, is the secret agent sent to kill her. Kin, however is more than a killing machine. Despite his love for Celene, can he accomplish his gruesome mission, and save humanity from the threat embedded in her DNA?

"RELICS is an intense thrill ride of a futuristic romance; I highly recommend it." Marlene Breakfield - Paranormal Romance

"...an intriguing romance... all the staples of a good science fiction story." - Romantic Times 

" ...will keep you captivated from beginning to end." - Gina - Love Romances - 5-hearts rating 

"I consider this to be among the best reads of the year!" -  Johnna - Fallen Angel Reviews - Rating: 5 angels

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Congratulations to our Christmas Contest Winners!


Bonnie Rapess won this beautiful holiday basket. 

Nancy Jachcik received her choice of 5 BWLPP ebooks.

Congratulations!

Watch for our New Year's Grand Opening Contest, coming soon.

Happy Holidays to all from BWLPP!

Now available: Aftershock by Lee Killough

Aftershock

Ebook Price: $2.99 USD. 10870 words. Fiction by Lee Killough and published by Books We Love Publishing Partners  on December 13, 2010
 

It would be logical for the culture of a distant planet unconnected to Humans to be...well...alien.  A different social and family structure, different legal system, different religion. But maybe some things aren’t that alien: war, politics...murder.  

A natural disaster like an earthquake would seem to be perfect cover for murder. But the murder is discovered, with the prime suspect a member of a family allied to Emperor Benamea Haneem. Lord Edo Ishda, brother to the Emperor, must discover the truth and see justice done in a situation where every solution threatens to be political dynamite for the Emperor.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Now available: The Wisdomkeeper Collection by John Wisdomkeeper

Ebook Price: $4.99 USD. 25550 words. Non-Fiction by John Wisdomkeeper and published by Books We Love Publishing Partners  on December 13, 2010

I was taken from my mother at birth and adopted by a white family. I didn’t find out until I was in my teens that I was from the north country of British Columbia, descended from the Sekani Nation (which means "mountain people") The Sekani are medicine healers, This collection is dedicated to all the travelers I met as I traveled the pathways of both the dark and the red road.

Monday, December 13, 2010

New Review for Takeout from the Writer's Cafe by Rie Sheridan Rose

"Take out from the Writer's Café" is a collection of whimsical, magical, historic and poignant poems. The pages are filled with characters of fantasy and legend, the ancient and the contemporary, blended artistically with childhood reminiscings and deeply personal revelations. Rose's poetry transcends the mere paper upon which it is printed into fantastic conjurings laid out for the imagination to savor.

My three favorite pieces are, `Ode to a Crow,' `The Flying Dutchman,' and `Defiant.' Maintaining a Peter Pan persona with a dash of humor, Rose's witty poems are imbued with a sense of wonder, eternal youth and faith, juxtaposed against an underlying sense of loneliness. An enduring love for the liberation offered by the pen and paper allows her to succinctly transform her timeless fantasies into classic literature time after time. "Take out from the Writer's Café" presents readers with a diverse menu selection. A sumptuously enjoyable read and a marvelous adventure! Order up!" -- Tracy Conway, Amazon Reader


~ Read an excerpt or purchase here

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Hot Excerpt: How Not to Date a Hollywood Star by Betty Jo Schuler

How Not to Date A Hollywood Star

Ebook Price: $4.99 USD. 46930 words. Fiction by Betty Jo Schuler and published by Books We Love Publishing Partners  on November 3, 2010

Melissa Martin would love to meet Hollywood teen star, Chad Robb, but meeting an adorable guy while he’s in a coma is not the preferred way. Dating a conscious guy with tanned flesh, toned muscle and a heart that races when you kiss is highly preferable. Lissa’s movie idol makes this a memorable summer when a boat hits him and his spirit exits his body to find her a boyfriend and a life.

Excerpt:


CHAPTER ONE
I found it absolutely unbelievable and extraordinarily marvelous that my heartthrob was here, in my hometown of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and I might catch a glimpse of him—alive and in person.
If my stars were in alignment and I held my tongue just right, I might even get to stand next to Chad Robb, eighteen-year-old movie star, and introduce myself as Melissa Martin, president of his online fan club, Chadulous.

“Pedal faster, Mandy.” My best friend, Amanda Hyle, and I were biking along Ocean Boulevard headed for the area where he was staying. One of my dad’s friends owns a leasing agency, and he said this was the first time anyone ever rented all four condos in the Van Maur place, a magnificent yellow house on the ocean I’ve always admired. “Someone wanted privacy badly,” he said, adding that it was leased for the week beginning June thirtieth to Joe G. Smith. Sure.

Add a tip from Mom’s gossip columnist friend Chad Robb was playing in a celebrity golf tournament at Myrtle Beach on July Fourth and—Bingo, I knew where he was staying and when. Mandy and I had haunted that area of the beach for the past two days hoping he’d take out the shiny blue sailboat with VM in gold letters sitting there, but we hadn’t caught a glimpse. This morning, the MB forecaster proclaimed today’s weather “perfect for sailing.” And our hopes were high.

“My legs aren’t as long as yours, Melissa Jane Martin.” 

Mandy reminds me of my father, calling me by my full name when I do something she doesn’t like, but we were both panting, and she does have short legs. I’m tall, thin, and leggy while she’s short and a little on the chunky side but the size of her breasts makes up for her thick middle. 

“We’re trying to replace the word fabulous with Chadulous, and it’s working,” I’d tell Chad. “If we like something, we say it’s Chad. No more fab or rad. This new expression is being used in New Zealand, Australia, and maybe even London and Paris. I hoped he’d be as impressed with my devotion and efforts as I was with him and his movies.

His manager sent me Chad’s signed picture with a letter saying he was grateful for our support, but it would have been nicer if the letter were from him and not Joe Gigliotti. And I was disappointed the autograph was a copy and not handwritten, but I do realize my idol is really busy.
Mandy and I turned off on a public access to the beach close to the Van Maur house, locked our bikes to the rack, and tucking our sandals in our backpacks, we hotfooted it over the burning beach to the welcoming wet sand at water’s edge.

She pulled a blanket out of her pack and laid it on a dry spot on the beach. I dug binoculars out of mine and we walked out to where warm saltwater lapped at our toes. I was wearing my sister’s ‘borrowed’ white hip-hugger shorts and my baby blue tee shirt with Chad’s face and the name of our club, Chadulous. I’d straightened my wild mop of brown curls, but knowing the ocean air would turn it into a hopeless wad of kink, I’d fastened it back with a blue Scrunchie. I’d be lucky if I got close to Chad, but I wanted to look my best if I did, and I always say, “If you’re going to dream, dream big.”

My big dream was to talk to him. My fantasy was to have him kiss me. My ultimate fantasy was for us to fall in love. Imagine being a Hollywood star’s main squeeze.

Copyright (C) 2010 Betty Jo Schuler

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Hot Excerpt: No Rain, No Rainbows by Betty Jo Schuler

No Rain, No Rainbows

Ebook Price: $2.99 USD. 26030 words. Fiction by Betty Jo Schuler and published by Books We Love Publishing Partners  on November 30, 2010

Laugh, love, and cry with these girls in their teens. Slip into their lives and experience the ups and downs. If the sun smiles upon a rain shower, a rainbow appears. Without challenges, there would be no triumphs. Without rain, there would be no rainbows. These girls meet challenges with determination and triumph.
 
 
Excerpt:

DEAR DIARY

July 19

Dear Diary,
Happy Birthday, Deirdre. We’re sorry to tell you this, honey, but your mother and I aren’t compatible.
My dad moved out today. He and Mom have been quiet the past few days, and I learned it was because they’re separating but didn’t want to tell me until after my birthday. It’s 3 days past so I guess they thought it was time. You’d think they’d have discovered their differences before now. I mean, they’ve been married eighteen years. I’m sixteen. And now, they’re not happy? Maybe it’s just a phase they’re going through. I hope.

***
August 22
School started this week and I’m so busy, I don’t miss Dad quite as much, but it’s not the same without him. I’m embarrassed to talk to my friends about my parents. So I haven’t told anyone. I keep hoping...if I pretend everything is okay, maybe it will be.

***
October 23
Dear Diary,
Divorce sucks. My mom and dad’s divorce is final today. It’s not like dad has been around much since they filed, or even before since he travels a lot. But this big old house seems emptier now.

He picked up his last cardboard box of stuff yesterday, and there’s dust on the wide wooden windowsill where it sat for months. Mom wouldn’t go near it. I don’t think she wanted to smell his shaving lotion. A half-empty bottle was in there, along with some other things that look useless. Mom said he left them here for spite, whatever she means by that.

He said he’ll come to see me just as often, maybe more. Mom says he’s trying to buy my affection because every time he comes, he brings me something. He doesn’t need to buy it. I love him. I think he’s bringing gifts because he feels guilty. He was the one who wanted out of the marriage, but of course, no one’s told me why. You’d think I was a child instead of a sixteen-year-old who’s smart enough to make the honor roll and popular enough to date the captain of the football team. Yes, I’m smiling about that.

***
December 15
Josh, the football captain, is history. He was too stuck on himself. That’s what Mom always said about Dad and I never knew what she meant. Now, I know. Josh likes talking about his problems and triumphs and doesn’t care to hear mine. It doesn’t matter about him. I was never crazy about football anyway. But I still miss my father. He and Josh are nothing alike that I can see.

My mother had a date the other night and he was a real creep. Suit and tie, narrow glasses and--he wore his hair in a comb-over. Color me embarrassed! She’s lost her mind! Mom’s pretty cool and could do better, but he works in the same office and took her to hear the symphony. She’s into highbrow stuff. Dad never was. 

Now that they’re divorced, mom works full time, so I don’t see her much.

My mother predicts my father will be first to marry again (even though he came after the cardboard box I learned was full of souvenirs from their dating days). I hope neither of them marries before I go to college. Is two years between spouses too much to ask? I think not.

***
January 1
Dear Diary,
New year, new day, same old life. Christmas was a disaster. I had to visit both families: Mom’s with her and Dad’s with him. At each gathering, everyone acted as if my other parent had died.

Dad gave me a stuffed ape four feet tall. I have to agree with Mom that it looks hideous sitting in my feminine bedroom. I’d rather have had a handheld ebook reader, so I could read in bed at night when I have trouble sleeping. I sure dropped enough hints but he didn’t get them. (He used to call me “monkey” when I was little, so I think he meant the gift to be sentimental.)

Mom gave me nothing but clothes and while she’s right, I’m not a kid, I’d have liked some fun stuff. It’s a good thing this is a two-year diary because neither of them remembered to get me a new one.

Copyright (C) 2010 Betty Jo Schuler


~ Read a longer excerpt or purchase here