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Looking Out The Window: Clare Revell Talks About Down To Sleep, Book One In Her Say A Prayer Whodunit Crime Series. Gives Away An Arc.

A Warm Welcome to Clare Revell To enter to win the arc of Down to Sleep leave a comment and an email address below. Clare shares a yummy recipe and one of her favorite Bible verses. To Nourish Our Sweet Tooth Fruit Cake   6 ounces butter 6 ounces sugar 8 ounces self-raising flour 2 eggs 4 tablespoons milk Cream butter and sugar. Beat in the eggs. Fold in the flour and milk. Pour into a lined tin Bake Gas 6/200C for 10 minutes, then Gas 3/160C for 1½ hours. Use dried fruit of your choice. This was originally Nanna’s fruit cake recipe. She passed it onto Mum, who gave it to me and now my daughters make it as well. We’d go visit Nanna and Grandad on a Saturday afternoon and she’d always be baking. Probably to avoid the TV sport in the other room :-) Yum! To Soothe Our Souls Bible Verse – 1 Peter 5:7 Cast all your cares upon Him, for He careth for you. Thank you, Clare. Let's talk about your writing. Where do you

Looking Out the Window: The American Christian Fiction Writers June New Releases

More in-depth descriptions of these books can be found on the ACFW Fiction Finder website . Contemporary Romance: Forever Home by Amy Grochowski -- A Canadian Amish farmer proposes a convenient marriage to a Lancaster Amish businesswoman so they can join a new community welcoming married couples only. They are both surprised when a Prince Edward Island foster child finds her way to them in need of a home. Yet what will happen when the English world and the Amish world collide? (Romance from Ambassador International) Start With Me by Kara Isaac -- A professional woman and her old flame, who doesn’t remember her, are forced to work together when the companies they work for merge. (Romance, Independently Published) A Father's Promise by Mindy Obenhaus -- Is he ready for fatherhood? He doesn’t think he deserves a family… But now he has a daughter. Stunned to discover he has a child, Wes Bishop isn’t sure he’s father material. But his adorable daughter need

Looking Out The Window: Linda Weaver Clarke Talks About Her Amelia Moore Mysteries. Gives Away An E-Book

A Warm Welcome to Linda Weaver Clarke Linda will give away an e-Book of the first collection. To enter to win leave an email address and a comment below. Hi Linda, tell us a little about each volume in your series. Thank you, Gail. First of all, the volumes in the series are available only as e-Books. However, each book can be ordered separately in paperback. Great. I can't wait to hear about them.   A Cozy Mystery Series In this mystery series, Amelia Moore is the founder of the Moore Detective Agency and specializes in missing persons. Her cases have taken her to some very interesting places and put her in some dangerous situations. With the help of Rick Bonito, her business is flourishing. This series is available as seven individual novels or as three volumes. In Amelia Moore Mysteries, Volume 1 , they travel to exotic places such as Bali Island in Indonesia, Ireland where she gets to kiss the Blarney Stone, and Mexico where she experienc

Memorial Day Tribute

Remembering Those Who Made The Ultimate Sacrifice

Looking Out The Window: Emily Conrad Talks About Her Book, Justice. Gives Away An E-Book

A Warm Welcome to Emily Conrad Emily will give away an e-Book of Justice to a U.S. resident. Hi Emily, first, tell us a little about yourself. Hi! I’m Emily Conrad, and I write Christian romances. My husband and I own two rescue dogs—an elderly pit bull mix who is snoring peacefully as I type, and an energetic coonhound who’s keeping an eye on me in hopes of going for a walk. Lots of writers were avid readers as children. How about you? If so, what did you read? I was! Charlotte’s Web was a favorite. I also read pretty much any book for my age range that featured horses—the Misty of Chincoteague series and The Saddle Club books , among others. Why do you write? That’s an interesting question, because, for me, the answer has changed over the last five or six years. I write to explore what I believe and for the entertainment of stories. It’s always both of these, but depending on the manuscript, I find one “why” plays a bigger role than the other. At the time