Pages & Paws

Writing, Reading, and Rural Life With a Border Collie


Leave a comment

How ‘Adorning the Dark’ Ignites the Creative Process

Adorning the Dark: Thoughts on Community, Calling, and the Mystery of Making

Adorning the Dark: Thoughts on Community, Calling, and the Mystery of Making (B&H Publishing, 2019)

By Andrew Peterson

Ever read a book and started jumping up and down with:

 “Yes! YES! He gets it! I get what he gets! Someone has finally put into words what I’ve felt about the creative process for years! Zippity doo-dah, zippity-aye!”

Andrew Peterson’s Adorning the Dark is one of those books.

Continue reading


Leave a comment

The Munificent Seven: 7 Great WWII Reads You May Not Have Heard Of

Welcome to another edition of Fine Wine Fridays!

FWF brings you The Best in rich, full-bodied reads. I can personally recommend each title because I’ve actually read All Of Them.

This week Pages & Paws is featuring outstanding reads set during World War II. If you love to read gripping, engaging stories about people and events set within compelling historical settings, these seven titles are among the best. Both fiction and non-fiction are included. How many have you read?

My Family for the War

1. My Family for the War, by Anne Voorhoeve

Escaping Nazi Germany on the kindertransport changes one girl’s life forever

Ten-year-old Franziska Mangold is torn from her family in Berlin and taken out of Nazi territory aboard the kindertransport. The train secretly takes nearly 10,000 children to safety in England. Taken in by strangers who become like family, Frances (as she is now known) courageously pieces together a new life for herself because she doesn’t know when or if she’ll see her true family again. Frances struggles with questions of identity, family, and love ,against the backdrop of war-torn London.

Originally published in Germany, Anne Voorhoeve’s award-winning novel is filled with humor, danger, and romance. A captivating, compelling read.

2 & 3. The Hiding Place: The Triumphant True Story of Corrie ten Boom and A Prisoner and Yet…, by Corrie ten Boom

Corrie ten Boom and her family became leaders in the Dutch Underground, hiding Jewish people in their home in a specially built room and aiding their escape from the Nazis. For their help, all but Corrie found death in a concentration camp. The Hiding Place is their story.

A Prisoner and Yet… When the Nazis overran Holland Corrie ten Boom, her father and sister, chose to risk death by making their quiet, respectable home a haven for refugees. Finally the Gestapo came and during the months in a concentration camp that followed, Corrie ten Boom shared suffering and torture, watched her father and sister die. Yet she survived, mind intact, soul still free.

Where did this gentle, undemanding woman find the courage to resist… to suffer… and to endure? This book contains the answer. It reveals a belief in Jesus Christ that carried an innocent woman through some of the worst agonies man can devise.

A Prisoner and Yet

The Hiding Place is one of the most gripping, inspiring stories I’ve ever read. In fact, I’ve re-read it and its “companion volume,” A Prisoner and Yet, numerous times. Both titles get five stars!

The Wartime Sisters

4. The Wartime Sisters, by Lynda Cohen Loigman

Insightful, poignant and powerfully subtle, this novel is a deep dive into the unique sisterhood of unrelated women. Set during WWII.

Read my full review here.

Hansi: The Girl Who Loved the Swastika

5. Hansi: The Girl Who Loved the Swastika, by Maria Anne Hirschmann

“Don’t ever forget Jesus!” This tearful admonition of her foster mother followed the teen-aged orphan girl as she began her trip to Prague.

Maria (“Hansi”) was the envy of all in her little Czechoslovakian village. She won a scholarship to the Nazi school in the capital and would be able to serve the Fuhrer.
Thus Maria began a long journey into blind devotion to Hitler and the atheism of the Nazi system. The path led to a storybook romance…cruel disillusionment at Hitler’s suicide…a traumatic awakening to the swastika’s scourge across Europe and upon the Jews…a breathtaking escape from Communists… and a reemergence into the love and lordship of her mother’s Jesus.

Image result for All Ships Follow Me Book cover

6. All Ships Follow Me: A Family Memoir of War Across Three Continents, by Mieke Eerkens

An engrossing, epic saga of one family’s experiences on both sides of WWII. All Ships Follow Me questions our common narrative of the conflict and our stark notions of victim and perpetrator, while tracing the lasting effects of war through several generations.

Read my full review here.

The Tattooist of Auschwitz

7. The Tattooist of Auschwitz, by Heather Morris

 

A shatteringly beautiful love story set amid the tragedy and horror of a Nazi death camp. This riveting, remarkable story of hope and courage is based on interviews were conducted with Holocaust survivor and Auschwitz-Birkenau tattooist Ludwig (Lale) Sokolov—an unforgettable love story in the midst of atrocity.

Wait. Did I say “seven”? Okay. I fibbed.

Here are four more compelling stories that take place during world wars. Three are from WWI.

Image result for War Horse Book cover

8. War Horse, by Michael Morpurgo

It’s 1914. Joey, a sturdy farm horse, is sold to the army and thrust into the midst of World War I on the Western Front. When Joey is dragged away, his heart aches for Albert, the farmer’s son he’s forced to leave behind. In the army the beautiful red-bay horse is trained to charge the enemy, drag heavy artillery, and carry wounded soldiers not much older than Albert off the battlefields.

Amongst the clamoring of guns, and while plodding through the cold mud, Joey wonders if the war will ever end. If it does, will he ever see Albert again?

Heart-rending and riveting. I read it cover-to-cover in one sitting.

Image result for A Medal for Leroy Book cover

9. A Medal for Leroy, by Michael Morpurgo

A moving, memorable story of family, identity, and history.

When Michael’s aunt passes away, she leaves a letter that changes everything. It starts with Michael’s grandfather Leroy, a black officer in World War I who charged into a battle zone not once but three times to save wounded men. His fellow soldiers insisted he deserved special commendations for his bravery. But because of the racial barriers, he would go unacknowledged. Now it’s up to Michael to change that.

Inspired by the true story of Walter Tull, the first black officer in the British army.

An Eagle in the Snow

10. An Eagle in the Snow, by Michael Morpurgo

Inspired by the true story of the man who might’ve stopped WWII. The Mother Lode of “What ifs?”

 

 

 

 

Read my full review here.

Image result for Making Bombs for Hitler Book cover

11. Making Bombs for Hitler, by Maria Forchuk Skrypuch

Lida thought she was safe. Her neighbors wearing the yellow star were all taken away. But Lida isn’t Jewish. She’ll be fine, right?

But Lida’s parents are ripped away from her and she’s separated from her beloved sister, Larissa. The Nazis take Lida to a brutal work camp, where she and other Ukrainian children are forced into backbreaking labor. Starving and terrified, Lida bonds with her fellow prisoners. But none of them know if they’ll live to see tomorrow.

When Lida and her friends are assigned to make bombs for the German army, Lida cannot stand the thought of helping the enemy. Then she has an idea. What if she sabotaged the bombs… and the Nazis? Can she do so without getting caught? Will Lida ever see her sister again?

I read this start to finish in one sitting. Couldn’t put it down!

 

What would you add?


Leave a comment

‘For Whom the Book Tolls’ Rings Bells!

For Whom the Book Tolls: An Antique Bookshop Mystery

For Whom the Book Tolls: An Antique Bookshop Mystery (Crooked Lane Books, August 2020)

By Laura Gail Black

It’s not looking good for young Jenna Quinn. Newly arrived at a small North Carolina town at the invitation of her Uncle Paul, Jenna finds her uncle dead in his antique bookstore. Jenna’s the prime suspect. It looks even worse when the police find out she’s just beaten an embezzlement/murder rap and is the primary beneficiary of her uncle’s will. Uncle Paul not only named her the new owner of Baxter Books Emporium, he also left Jenna a lot of dough.

Continue reading


Leave a comment

10 Reasons Why You Should Get ‘A Higher Calling’

Image result for A Higher Calling Pursuing Love Book cover

A Higher Calling: Pursuing Love, Faith, and Mount Everest for a Greater Purpose (Waterbrook, June 2020)

By Captain Harold Earls and Rachel Earls

A Higher Calling is the compelling true story of one couple’s courage and commitment, devotion and faith in the face of high adventure, unexpected adversity, and spine-tingling danger.

Co-authored by Harold and Rachel Earls, Higher is equal parts biography/memoir, love story, epic adventure, travelogue, and faith-journey. It’s a delightful, uplifting read about two people who sacrifice much to achieve a common goal: summiting personal and actual “Mount Everests.”

Continue reading


2 Comments

5-ish Top Books of 2020

Amazon

Wild Land, by Rebecca Hodge. Crooked Lane Books, 2020.

You know how moms are? Always wanting to get the last word? Well. Today it’s my turn.

Kimber here to tell you about one of the best books mom and I have read all year. (Hint: Juni and Tye!)

Continue reading


7 Comments

Is This Blogging Thing Going to Work?

Image result for blogging

Flickr

Are you a newbie blogger struggling to find your voice? Have you been blogging for awhile and are discouraged? Wondering if it’s worth the effort?

Have you asked yourself:

  • Am I wasting my time?
  • Does anybody care?
  • Is anyone listening?
  • How come I don’t have more readers?
  • Do I have what it takes to be a “successful blogger”? (Whatever that means.)
  • Is this going to work?

These questions aren’t about education level or computer skills. Prior knowledge or experience or anything like that.

Nope. If someone’s asking if they have what it takes to be a “successful blogger,” what they’re really asking is:

Continue reading


Leave a comment

6 Books to Read if You Loved ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’

Welcome to another edition of Fine Wine Fridays, where we feature rich, full-bodied read-alikes. Today we’re focusing on books like The Chronicles of Narnia.

Did you love disappearing into a wood robe and entering into a magical land with Lucy, Edmond, Peter and Susan Pevensie? How about Aslan, Jadis, Eustace and the heroic Reepicheep?

If you enjoy top-flight stories brimming with enchantment, intrigue, and allegorical undertones like C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia, here are six more titles with similar themes and styles. All offer strong stories. Epic battles between good and evil. Fantastic creatures. Heroes and villains. Friendships won and lost. And wonderfully magic reads. In no particular order:

Image result for Green Ted Dekker Book Cover

1. Green, by Ted Dekker

As foretold by ancient prophets, an apocalypse destroyed Earth during the twenty-first century. But two thousand years later Elyon set upon the earth a new Adam. This time, however, he gave humanity an advantage. What was once unseen became seen. It was good and it was called…”Green.” But the evil Teeleh bided his time in a Black Forest. Then, when least expected, a twenty-four year old named Thomas Hunter fell asleep in our world and woke up in that future Black Forest. A gateway was opened for Teeleh to ravage the land, and… Oh, wait. You’re on your own for the rest.

Image result for The Magic Bicycle Series Book Cover
  1. 2. The Magic Bicycle Series, by John Bibee

“Once there was a magic bicycle that found a boy,” begins this tale of adventure and suspense. When John Kramer comes across an old, rusty Spirit Flyer bicycle, he finds it far from ordinary. First, the bike helps him save a neighbor’s barn from burning. Then it brings him into conflict with the boys in the Cobra Club, a representative of Goliath Toys and other forces that not only want John’s bike, but want it destroyed. While John learns about the Magic in the bicycle, every reader will be delighted as they join him for this fantastic ride.

This was one of our boys’ favorite read-alouds when they were young. Excellent!

Image result for out of the silent planet lewis
  1. 3. Out of the Silent Planet, by C.S. Lewis

A Cambridge academic is abducted and taken on a spaceship to the red planet of Malacandra, which he knows as Mars. Dr. Ransom’s captors are plotting to plunder the planet’s treasures and plan to offer Ransom as a sacrifice to the creatures who live there…

The first book in Lewis’s classic science fiction trilogy.

4. The Shack, by Wm. Paul Young

I absolutely loved this book. One of the most compelling/absorbing works of fiction/allegory I’ve ever read.

Image result for This Present Darkness Peretti

5. This Present Darkness, by Frank Peretti

Ashton is just a typical small town. But when a skeptical reporter and a pastor begin to compare notes, they suddenly find themselves fighting a hideous plot to subjugate the townspeople―and eventually the entire human race. A riveting thriller, This Present Darkness offers a fascinating glimpse into the unseen world of spiritual warfare.

Image result for Epic by John Eldredge

6. Epic, by John Eldredge

For most of us, life feels like a movie we’ve arrived at 40 minutes late.

Good things happen. But so do tragic things. What does it mean?

We find ourselves in the middle of a story that’s sometimes wonderful. Sometimes awful. Usually a confusing mix of both. And we haven’t a clue how to make sense of it. No wonder we keep losing heart.

We need to know the rest of the story…

Epic isn’t an allegory in the classic. But it’s an excellent take on The Great Story. The full story. And where you fit in it. Insightful and incisive. Beautifully written. Five stars.

 

What would you add to this list?


2 Comments

Share Some Blogging Sunshine!

Kimber here. Sharing some tummy rub-worthy news!

Mom and I have been nominated for our first

Sunshine Blogger Award!

 

Well, it was mostly me. I can’t help it. As a Border Collie mix with loads of love, I’m all about sunshine! And all things brilliant, shiny, and bursting with good cheer! I’m also highly intelligent. Loquacious. Loyal and protective. Faster than a speeding bullet. More powerful than a locomotive. Able to leap tall felines in a single…

Wait. Where was I? Oh yeah. Sunshine Blogger Award. Nominated by Hiker Babe. Who loves to explore The Great Outdoors. Plenty of positive vibes there! Also great info and inspiration about hiking, camping, and treating nature with respect. 

What’s a Sunshine Blogger Award?

The Sunshine Blogger Award is given by bloggers to other bloggers. It honors bloggers who are “creative, positive and inspiring while spreading sunshine to the blogging community.” (Aw, shucks. That’s me all over, dontcha know? Did I mention that I’m also shy, modest and retiring? Thank you, Hiker Babe!)

 

The Sunshine Blogger Award isn’t a self-congratulatory pat-on-the-back paw shake. (Like the neighbor’s cat, if ya know what I mean.) The award means you spread the word about writers you love with your readers! That’s a win-win for everyone. Yesssiree, Lassie! (See bottom of page for details.)

“Sharing some sunshine,” Kimber-style.

The award also comes with some rules, ‘natch.

Sunshine Blogger Award Rules:

 

  • Thank the person who nominated you and provide a link back to their blog so others can find them.
  • Answer the 11 questions asked by the blogger who nominated you.
  • Nominate 11 other bloggers and ask them 11 new questions.
  • Notify the nominees about it by commenting on one of their blog posts.
  • List the rules and display the Sunshine Blogger Award logo on your post and/or your blog site.

 

And now, on with some sunshine!

 

Our answers to Hiker Babe’s Questions:



1.Your favorite book?

Man! That’s like asking a mom which kid she likes best! But if you insist, here’s a “short” answer:

I’ve long maintained that some of the finest writing in all literature is Children’s Literature. Any writer who can grab and keep a child’s attention for an entire story is doing something right. Examples?

  • Misty of Chincoteague and King of the Wind
  • Prairie fires, rampaging grasshoppers, scarlet fever, and Christmas candy in the Little House books.
  • Walter Farley’s Black Stallion series.
  • Aslan and Narnia. Black Beauty. Peter and Wendy.
  • The Velveteen Rabbit.
  • The Little Prince.
  • The Inkheart series by Cornelia Funke.

Perennial favorites? Most anything by John Eldredge. Corrie ten Boom. Elisabeth Elliot. Gary Paulsen and Max Lucado. For uplifting, inspiring stories of hope and grace, Richard Paul Evans is right at the top. Ditto Debbie Macomber and Jan Karon.

I also confess a certain fondness for Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel as well as a curious little monkey befriended by a man in a yellow hat.

2. Describe a recent reading or book-related achievement:

In 2018 I surpassed my Goodreads Reading challenge of reading 365 books in one year. My final total: 383 books. Mostly from the local library.

 

3. Favorite comfort food?

Tiramisu. Raspberry white chocolate cheesecake. Onion rings. Chocolate anything. Cobb salad. Dilled salmon. (Not necessarily in that order.) 



4. Favorite place?

The library! There’s also a sweet little mountain inn in western Washington that the hubs and I adore. 

 

5. A Pet Peeve?

People who keep interrupting me when I’m reading! Or writing!

Like, “Can you not see that my nose is buried in a book? That I’m in deep concentration here, 98 miles beneath the Marianas Trench? That I’ve sailed to the end of the world, jumped off, and hove to in another galaxy? That I’m on the rim edge of another Stroke of Sheer Brilliance that you’ve just possibly derailed forever?!” Puh-leeze!



6. What would your ideal day look like?

Is that a trick question? Cuz it could literally go “16 ways from Sunday.” (Kimber says “Limit it to three.” So here goes.)

Possibility 1: Curled up in my living room recliner with my snuggly blankie, a roaring fire, a steaming mug of hot cocoa and a good book. With Kimber snuggled onto my lap, of course.

Possibility 2: Any day in The Great Outdoors with the hubs and Kimber. Especially at Mount Rainier National Park. Cuz most any day at Mount Rainier is better than the worst day most anywhere else. (Don’t ask how I know that.)

Possibility 3: Any day with Kimber the Magnificent. Listening to Andrea Bocelli or Chris Tomlin tunes and doing most anything to avoid scrubbing the tub.

7. Favorite Quote(s)?

Man! That’s like asking a mom which… oh, never mind. That’s hard to narrow down. But in the running would be:

“All children, except one, grow up.” (If you don’t know this, kindly look it up.)

“We can beat these guys!” Coach Herb Brooks, 1980 U.S. Men’s Hockey Team

“Hand over the chocolate and no one gets hurt” – Yours Truly


8. What do you love most about blogging?

I love connecting with other readers and bibliophiles, fellow bloggers and writers. Ditto sharing ideas and inspiration and supporting each other.



9. Why do you your write/blog?

Writing is part of my personality. Embedded in my DNA. “Writer” is who I am, not just what I do. Basically, I write because I can’t not write. Ever since I was a little kid. 

I also love the challenge of trying to convey sometimes complicated, intricate thoughts, emotions, events and/or experiences with words. It’s a never-ending challenge, both frustrating and joyous – especially when you finally reach that Aha! “light bulb” moment! Know what I mean?

10. Have you published any books? If so, what genre?

Yep. I’ve authored and published over 25 books. I *specialize* in what one wag dubbed “excruciatingly insightful prose.” I’m not quite sure what that is. Can I get back to you on that?

 

11. What book moved you to tears?

Wow. There have been many over the years in this category. Everything from Old Yeller and Where the Red Fern Grows to Marley and Me. (You may detect a slight canine bias here.)

However, a recent re-read that comes to mind is Born Free: A Lioness of Two Worlds, by Joy Adamson.

I first read this remarkable book in 1969. Some 50 years later, this true story of an orphaned lioness and the two humans who loved her enough to set her free remains one of the most powerful, poignant stories I’ve ever read. It includes overcoming overwhelming odds. Triumph. Tragedy. Tenderness. Hope and loss. Also vivid, evocative descriptions of East African flora, fauna, and people. Born Free has it all. (Shoulda bought stock in Kleenex.)

On a similar note, Isak Dinesen’s Out of Africa also qualifies.

Nominations


Kimber here again. Here are Mom’s and my nominations to keep the love flowing. (We’re still working on coming up with 11. But here’s a start):

Jane @ Greenish Bookshelf

Cristian @ The Art of Blogging

Christine @ The Uncorked Librarian

Barbie @ Barbie Holmes

Andy @ Pearls and Pantsuits

Jody @ Jodyleecollins



Eleven questions for these exceptional bloggers to tackle:



1. How long have you been blogging?

2. Why did you start a blog?

3. How has blogging affected your life?

4. Describe your biggest blogging challenge

5. Your favorite book genre?

6. Describe your version of The Perfect Vacation ($ not an obstacle)

7. How do you defeat writer’s block?

8. Are your family and friends aware that you’re a blogger? What do they think?

9. What’s the best writing or blogging advice you ever heard?

10. Describe your blog in 10 words or less

11. Dogs or cats? (Inquiring Kimbers want to know!!)

 

 

By the way. The whole point of the Sunshine Blogger Award isn’t to keep it to yourself. It’s to share it! And spread some blogging love. So, nominate away, friends! 

Whew! Is it dinner time yet? “Askin’ for a friend.” Thanks again for reading. Happy blogging and full sunshine ahead!

 

 


Leave a comment

Social Media: Blogging Boon or Bane?

Image result for blogging

Flickr

 

Most everyone who’s anyone is singing the praises of social media when it comes to growing your blog. The amen corner is full of “absolutely!” and “imperative!” when it comes to using Facebook, Twitter, Linked In and/or Instagram, etc. to jump-start your blogging traffic or increase book sales.

 

But is social media use helping or harming your writing?

 

Answer: It depends. Here are some possible boons and banes.

 

SOCIAL MEDIA BOONS:

  • Speed and convenience. You can publish that great American novel yesterday and trumpet your magnum opus all over the world today via your Facebook page or Twitter account. Or sooner.
  • Ease. Social media applications are generally straight-forward and easy. You don’t have to have an advanced degree in computer science to figure it out and plug in.
  • Accessibility. Unlike paper and pen or hard copy, you can update your social media outlets from virtually anywhere – email, mobile phone, blackberry, etc. You don’t even need to be near a computer.
  • Maximum exposure with minimal effort. Many social media platforms offer an option to link to your other accounts so that posting in one venue generates an automatic message in another.  (If you activate this option, just be sure that what you’re tweeting about will also be of interest and appropriate elsewhere.)
  • Cost. There’s no need to invest in paper, ink, or postage when using social media to promote your expertise or your work. You can open a Twitter or Facebook account for free.

 

SOCIAL MEDIA BANES:

  • Quantity doesn’t necessarily mean quality. Social media is quick, convenient, and cursory. You can cover lots of ground with minimal effort, but social media is the online equivalent of “a mile wide and a quarter inch deep.” Cultivating the kind of relationships needed to successfully market yourself or your work takes a lot more than a one-sentence status update or a 140-character tweet.
  • It can be deceptive. Writing and blogging take time, energy, and effort. You may feel like social media-ing yourself all over the place is boosting your writing/blogging career, but in the final analysis, only one thing can do that: writing.
  • It’s distracting. What’s easier – tossing out a 140-character tweet, or cranking out a full page of prose, correcting spelling and punctuation, sharpening your POV, or creating several pages of meaningful dialogue? The ease and accessibility of social media can seduce you away from the real work of writing.
  • Time spent on social media is time taken away from actual writing. Like the above, if you’re spending half your day Facebooking, linking, or retweeting and devoting twenty minutes a day to revising that troublesome chapter or rounding out that one-dimensional character, you’ve jumped the tracks. You’re a writer, not a tweeter. Prioritize your time accordingly.

 

In Sum

Social media can be a boon and a valuable tool in your marketing arsenal when used properly and advisedly.

It can also be a bane, a glitzy distraction that gobbles up huge quantities of time and creative energy that should go into your writing.

 

Bottom line

The answer to the “help or harm” question depends on you. Balance is the key. Use it wisely.

 

How do you balance your writing/blogging and social media use?

 

 

 

 

Image Credit:  Creative Commons License 2.0


7 Comments

7 Common Blogging Mistakes – Are You Doing This?

New to blogging? Been at it awhile? Trying to figure out why you’re not getting any new readers, likes or comments?

Maybe you’re making some blogging mistakes. We all do it. What separates “the wheat from the chaff,” so to speak, is who identifies and learns from those mistakes and who doesn’t.

So let’s start with 7 common blogging mistakes. Then we’ll discuss how to fix them.

Are you doing any of these?

Continue reading