Monday, December 24, 2012

Support Plant the Seed and Children's Literacy

I have known J.T. Barber for a while now, and first and foremost, I can say that she is one helluva writer. With her new endeavor as creator of Plant the Seed, she is sure to become one helluva philanthropist, too. Any initiative that supports literacy, especially children's literacy, deserves to be heard about . . . and deserves some support. When J.T. told me about PTS, I knew I wanted to share information about the movement with all of you with the hope that you all will learn about the movement and support it in whatever way you can!



What is the mission of Plant the Seed?
Plant The Seed is a grassroots movement advocating children’s literacy, education, and involvement in the arts.


How did this initiative come to be?
During the summer of 2012, J.T. Barber (Author of Reflections of a Whisper), had the opportunity to chair a Book Drive campaign to benefit Philadelphia Public School children. After delivering over 2000 books to the children of Philadelphia, she decided that it should not be a one-time affair. J.T. believes that more can be done in the effort of supporting school age children in failing school districts, so she created Plant The Seed.


When does Plant the Seed begin? Is it an ongoing initiative?
We started planning for Plant The Seed in September 2012. Our Winter Fundraiser is set for December 15, 2012 until March 31, 2013.

Plant The Seed is intended to be an ongoing movement. We are starting with a fundraiser each winter, supporting under-funded children non-profits. And a book drive each summer, benefiting our under-funded public schools and their students.

Our intent is to build this initiative and officially form it as a 501 (c) 4 organization in the future.



Where can people learn more about Plant the Seed?
Currently, Plant The Seed information can be found on J.T. Barber's Website. Additional information blasts can be found on Facebook and Twitter.


What can people do to participate and support Plant the Seed?
This winter, people can participate/support by either purchasing books from the book sale, making a monetary donation, or going with us as we visit a Murals of the Mind workshop (future date to be scheduled after the holiday break).

Our 2013 Donation Recipient is Murals of the Mind [Website]. They intend to use the funds donated for their yearly anthology project, publishing the work of the students in the program.

This summer, people can participate by donating children's reading books for our book drive, making a financial donation, or volunteering to help count, catalog, and deliver books to local schools.

We are still planning for other opportunities throughout the year.


Are you still looking for sponsors? If so, how can people contact you for additional information?
Plant The Seed will always be open to sponsors. We believe that this is how we will continue to propel this movement forward. We currently have a humble group of individuals and small businesses that have vowed their support. But there is always room at the table for more.

Anyone interested in sponsorship, can contact us at jtbarberonline@gmail.com.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Check Out TO BEGIN AGAIN by Christine Pauls

[Buy To Begin Again for Nook or Kindle. Both are only $1.99!]


In Birmingham, Alabama, fifteen-year-old Celeste Stanton’s life revolves around the strict religious upbringing of her aunt Ruby Stanton who has raised her since birth after her mother’s death. Her world consists of church and more church. But when the pastor’s son, Jordon Jackson, confesses his love for her, they become more than just friends, and her first sexual encounter changes her life forever when her daughter Shelby is born. Becoming a mother at 17 would bring challenges not once but twice. When Claudia is born eighteen months later, Celeste is forced to grow up faster than she can blink, but where there’s a will, there’s a way, and she manages to survive with the support of her family and best friend Joy. She experiences heartbreak, love and tragedy and learns that life is a constant; it never stays the same. To Begin Again is the story of life's lessons; it's a story of the sheer will to persevere in spite of what obstacles may be in your way. It's a story of learning that what we have been taught, no matter how much we felt we were being lectured and hovered over, was for our good, and it was all because of love. Celeste will find out all of those lessons and more.

Excerpt


It was a hot Sunday morning, and Ruby was in the kitchen preparing dinner. The sound of gospel music echoed throughout as she sang along and the aroma of fried chicken engulfed the entire house.

Celeste tossed from side to side, inhaling the scent, pulling the covers over her head thinking she should just stay there and take whatever punishment her aunt inflicted upon her, but she heard her name, this time louder than before.

"Celeste, you hear me calling you, girl, get up out that bed right now!"

"Okay!" Celeste yelled back.

She couldn't understand why she had to get up so early; church didn't start until eleven, and it was only six-thirty in the morning.

"She makes me sick," Celeste said under her breath. At fifteen she'd had quite enough of church all the time. They went twice on Sundays, Tuesday, and Wednesday for bible study and again on Friday night. She wondered just how many times you had to go to church to get to heaven.

Celeste threw the covers off her body and stretched. The sun was shining brightly through her open bedroom window, and her fan blew the warm air of the summer heat. She looked around her room; it was her favorite place, adorned with purple bedding and accessories to match; she kept her room neat and organized. The walls were painted a vanilla cream, and posters of her favorite singing group, The Jackson Five were taped on her wall. It made living with her aunt's strict upbringing and religious ways a lot more bearable. The room was her escape; she would stay in there for hours writing and listening to music, anything to get away from that woman's constant nagging and preaching, sending her straight to hell every chance she got.

Celeste's thoughts wandered to the pastor's son. At least I get to see Jordon. Plus it's Youth Day, and that's good enough reason to get up and make sure I look my best. Jordon played the piano for the Youth Choir. His caramel skin, hazel eyes, and curly brown hair were just what the doctor ordered. All the girls wanted to be his, including Celeste.

She sat up in bed and drifted off into a daydream. Suddenly she felt a sting on the back of her head.

"Ouch!" she yelled. There was her aunt Ruby standing there looking down on her with her hands on her hips. She stood 4' 10" and weighed well over 200 pounds; her skin was a deep dark brown and she'd always pull her shoulder length salt and pepper hair back, pin it up and tie a scarf around her head. Those brown eyes were like daggers when she was mad, and this morning, she was mad at Celeste.

"Didn't I tell you to get yourself up out that bed and get ready for church? Plus I got things for you to do in that kitchen!" She yelled.

Without a word, Celeste raced to the bathroom to get herself ready for a long excruciating day.

[Buy To Begin Again for Nook or Kindle. Both are only $1.99!]

Friday, December 07, 2012

Author Triche Christmon Shares Sweet Treat from Poetry Collection

Greetings, I am Triche Christmon, former publicist of Carmen Bryan (It's No Secret: From Nas to Jay-Z, from Seduction to Scandal--a Hip-Hop Helen of Troy Tells All) and the author of Chocolate Notes, and I'm excited to share Chocolate Notes with you!


Who is Triche Christmon you ask? I'm an Oakland native. I'm a witty, creative, spiritual, sensual, loving, poetic, and generous woman with a dynamic personality that loves to love. I am a quintessential bohemian! I am a seeker and student of truth and knowledge, encouraging people I meet to support the "Love Movement." The Love Movement is helping people get back to that good old fashion love...you know that Al Green "Let's Stay Together" Love...that sitting on a porch 60 years later, I'm still in love with you love! This is my story, and I want to share with you my experience through the journey of love and the different stages of a relationship that make up the chapters of Chocolate Notes. Enjoy!

Learn more about Triche and Chocolate Notes at her Website and on Twitter and Facebook.


[You can buy Chocolate Notes from Triche's Website or from Amazon!]

Chocolate Notes is a collection of poems that was created to flow like a relationship. In the beginning, there’s attraction which leads to courting, and then the joy of falling in love. From there, it’s the pleasures of sex, and then ... the dreadful breakup.



A Taste of Chocolate Notes


YOU

You are so special
You are cognizant of my needs
You fill me up with you
You tantalize my senses
You energize me
You make being in love
So exciting and new
Every day with you is brand new
I crave you
When you are not there
To hold me tight
So I hold on tight
When I’m by your side
Cause you are my everything
So special, so precious
I’m lucky to have found
Someone like you
I thank my heavenly father
For allowing you
To come into my life
What a joy
To be with you!

Wednesday, December 05, 2012

The Passion for Writing Series: Author Holley Trent


Holley Trent is a Carolina girl gone West. Raised in rural coastal North Carolina, she has Southern sensibilities but her adventurous spirit drove her to Colorado for new experiences.

Holley writes romances with real-life humor and rural fantasy romances set in her home state.

She’s a member of RWA and Colorado Romance Writers. She honed her critical reading skills at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's English department, but learned to tell a story from her big sister whose fantastic fibs during childhood left Holley agape and agog.


You can learn more about Holley at/on:
[Her Website] [Blog] [Facebook] [Twitter]



The Passion for Writing - From Holley's Pen

Where does your passion for writing come from?
My drive is fueled mostly by an overactive imagination and a lack of a better outlet to get all those ideas swimming around in my head out and analyzed. When I don’t write as part of my daily routine, I ruminate a lot. I stress a lot. I think too much. I get anxious. Writing fiction is how I make sense of all those bits and pieces my muses (and my demons) pile on me. I’m much happier for it.

If your passion for writing was a color, what color would it be and why?
I suppose it’d be gray. Gray is one of those colors in nature you don’t pay a lot of attention to. Sometimes gray indicates an absence of life or even stagnancy. Other times it means camouflage. If you look closely at gray, though, you see that sometimes gray is blue and brown and red and yellow all speckled together. That’s how my stories are. Sometimes they seem to be one thing on the surface, but if you read carefully, you see how rich even a simple story can be (at least, I HOPE).

How do you keep the passion burning in your relationship with storytelling?
Sometimes I step back from my scheduled writing and throw in a story that came to me out of nowhere. I try to write books in a certain order so my releases at each publisher are staggered and there’s not a big gap between sequential titles in a series. That means sometimes I have to start a new novel every month. Ever now and then, inspiration smacks me. I might be driving to a meeting, pushing a cart in the grocery store, or chopping vegetables for dinner, and something will gnaw at me, find a way in, and morph into a bigger concept.

That’s where my most recent project idea came from. I was on the highway, staring at the mountains on the Front Range (I live in Colorado), and my mind drifted to a recent road trip where we ended up traveling on an unpaved Wyoming county road for about forty minutes. I got to see a bit of the country I wouldn’t have otherwise, and it gave me a setting to play with. The characters hopped on for the ride next.

So, that piece jumped my queue and I’m working with it ahead of some projects I really wanted to get out first, but sometimes I’ve got to break my own rules and keep my muses happy.



[Buy your copy of My Nora today from one of the following locations: Amazon, iTunes, and All Romance eBooks!]


When painter Manora Fredrickson left Baltimore for a fixer-upper located in her ancestral Tyner, North Carolina, she figured she’d be getting away from the distractions of the city: the noise, the crime, the event invitations…her ex-husband. Happy to be a recluse at age twenty-eight, all Nora wants to do is paint, lick her wounds, and maybe sneak across the county line for some of Hattie’s artery-clogging fried chicken.

Enter Matthew Vogel. His little piece of Tyner abuts Nora’s and from the moment the consummate bachelor stops by her barn to find her dancing around like a Jersey City showgirl, he decides the spunky firecracker is the woman for him. Nora doesn’t agree, but she can’t get the brawny fisherman off her mind or her doorstep.

As much as Nora is attracted to her charming neighbor, she thinks Matt deserves better than a curmudgeonly hermit. Her last marriage fell apart because of her commitment to her art. Matt wants to convince her it won’t happen again—not with him.



Excerpt from My Nora

She held up her index finger once again and said “Wait, let me guess.”

She paced around the broken tractor parts and empty steel oil drums, wringing her hands behind her back. “Well, you’re not dressed well enough to be a Jehovah’s Witness, and besides they normally do their proselytizing in pairs.”

Matt looked down at his typical autumn Saturday attire of a long-sleeved ringer tee, jeans, and much-abused brown harness boots. It wasn’t fancy, but it was typical Matt.

She continued, “You’re obviously not the mailman.” She poked her head outside the barn door just to verify her hunch. “Unless you can strap bags of mail and parcels onto that motorcycle. I’m expecting a package, by the way.”

He shook his head “No.”

“Okay.” She resumed her pacing. “You’re obviously not the guy I’ve been waiting on for two weeks to install my satellite dish so I can have Internet, huh?”

Matt shook his head once more, his hair settling into his eyes in the process. He flicked it away with annoyance. At the moment, the ends reached mid-neck. He knew his grandmother would have a fit if she ever saw it. He never had enough motivation for a haircut.

“You don’t look like you need directions.”

“Nope.”

“Ah. Well, then you must be here to ask if you can hunt on my land.” She gave him what was obviously a disingenuous, practiced smile and propped her hoe against a rack containing various garden tools that were well past their prime.

Now it was Matt’s turn to raise an eyebrow. “Well, yeah.”

She sighed. “Well, you’re not the first.” She picked up a black yard waste bag and started tossing rusted bits of scrap metal and old yellowed newspapers into it. When it was half full of detritus she added, “And so you won’t be first I tell ‘no’.”

“No?” Matt asked with disbelief, taking a few automatic steps in her direction. “Why not? I’ve been hunting in those woods since I was old enough to hold a rifle.”

She put her hands on her hips and scowled at him. If she was trying to look ugly, she was failing miserably in Matt’s opinion. “Mr. —”

“Vogel. Matt Vogel.”

“Mr. Vogel. I put that sign up at the road not because I’m being picky about who hunts here or because I want to keep all those goddamned deer for myself.”

Matt cringed.

“I live in that house up there.” She pointed to the very obvious two-story farmhouse in the near distance for emphasis. “I moved here from a really shitty neighborhood in Baltimore where I had my front windows shot out not once, but twice. I wasn’t even who they were aiming at.” She stopped pointing and got up so close to Matt that their toes were nearly touching through their shoes. Matt sucked in some air. She smelled like hard work and something fruitier he couldn’t identify. She had a scent he wanted to roll around in. “I don’t want anyone on my property with a gun.”

Matt looked down into her piercing gaze and ground his teeth to fight off the smirk that was his longtime nervous tic. It wouldn’t do for her to think he was off his rocker during their first encounter. He didn’t even know her name and she’d lived on that property for several weeks.

“Mr. Vogel, did you hear anything I just said?”

Matt nodded slowly. “Yep. I heard you. No guns.”

“Good. I’m glad we understand each other.”

Oh, he understood her. “So, crossbows are okay? I’m not such a great shot with bow and arrow but my little sister has crackerjack aim.”

She just blinked those big brown eyes at him.

“Okay, so that’s ‘no,’ I’m guessin’.” He let a broad smile soften his face, hoping it’d put her at ease.

The very corners of her luscious lips twitched. That smile always worked on the ladies, but she was fighting hard. She squinted at him and crossed her arms over her chest. “You guess right.”
“Okay, Miss … well, you have me at the disadvantage here. I don’t even know your name.”

“Fredrickson.”

He waited for her to offer her first name, but when she just stood there glaring up at him with her lips pressed tightly together, he gave up on it. “Miss Fredrickson —”

“Ms.”

Matt looked down at her ring finger and found it empty. “Okay. Ms. Fredrickson, our parcel of land abuts yours on the back border. We can try to stay on our side of the property line, but sometimes when you’re stalking a buck you lose track of where are. If you could just give us permission to hunt over here, we’ll try not to abuse it.”

“You’d better do more than just try to stay off my property, Mr. Vogel,” she hissed, eyes going to narrow slits and voice dropping about half an octave.

Matt thought the woman seemed extremely uptight and that he could probably fix that little problem for her with a couple of hours and a soft bed. Hell, he could probably do without the bed. It’d been a long time. He was a big guy. They could probably do it standing with no sweat off his back. He thought she looked like a screamer and chuckled at the thought.

“Mr. Vogel?” she pressed, looking annoyed now.

“Hmm?”

“Do we have an understanding?”

“Oh. Sure thing,” he said, smiling wider so his dimples showed.

She didn’t look convinced, but unclenched her jaw and unfolded her arms all the same. “I imagine I don’t need to show you the way out, then.”

“No, ma’am. I can find my way to the road plenty by myself.”

“Have at it then.”

“All right,” Matt said in a singsong voice, crossing through the open doors into the late-day sunshine and clasping his large hands behind his back. “Just holler if you fall again and need some help getting up.”

Monday, December 03, 2012

Author Bettye Griffin on Something Real


Today author Bettye Griffin stops by to talk about her latest eBook release, Something Real, joined by her three lead female characters.


First, a little about Bettye: Her first romance was published in 1998. She went on to have a total of 10 contemporary romances and 6 works of women’s fiction traditionally published over the next dozen years. In 2009, while still under contract to a publisher, Bettye started her own publishing outlet, Bunderful Books. She now indie publishes all her work through this outlet. Her latest eBook, Something Real, recently went on sale.



Shon: Hi, Bettye. Can you tell me a little about Something Real?

Bettye: Hi, Shon! Thanks for inviting me to your blog for a chat. Something Real is a sequel to Save The Best For Last, the story centering around the two best friends of the heroine of that book. Like Isn’t She Lovely? before it, Something Real is more of a mainstream romance than a traditional single title romance. Two romances are covered with near-equal amounts of words, only one of which progresses to the HEA (that’s “happily ever after,” for those of you unfamiliar with romance) by the end. Some other things occur that you wouldn’t see in a traditionally published romance, but I can’t go into those without giving away too much of the story. Also, the book has a somewhat unusual structure, spanning a four-year period, which allows for a peek into that happily ever after.

Now, for the interview:

Shon: Bettye has chosen to stay in the background and let her characters take questions instead, so I’m talking with New Yorkers Francesca Perry, “Cesca” to her family and friends; Olivia Oliveira, known as “Livvy” to her oldest friends and just “Liv” to newer ones; and Genevieve Gray, known as Gen, except to her husband Dexter, who calls her Jenny.

The name of the book is Something Real. According to Bettye, all I have to do is ask one question and the three of you will take it from there, so let me ask…Whose story is this?

Cesca and Liv [simultaneously]: Mine!

Gen: I’m not in it a whole lot, but I already got my own story…my story. I didn’t have to share it with anybody, even though my friends were in a couple of scenes. It was called Save The Best For Last. You’ll want to read it, if you haven’t already. Bettye has made it free at her soon-to-come eStore, where you can get it formatted for mobi (Kindle), ePUB (Nook, Sony and others), and PDF (the rest).

Cesca: This is both Livvy’s story and mine, I guess. But my story with Terrence is complete. Livvy’s and Brian’s isn’t.

Liv: That’s all right. I’ll be the star of the next book, and like Gen, I won’t have to share it with anybody…except for the man of my heart, of course. Bettye’s working on it now, and she plans to have it out by the spring. Besides, I’m the reason Bettye wrote this book in the first place. You see, I also showed up in another book of hers called The Heat of Heat. I was only in it for a couple of pages, but readers were intrigued and told Bettye they wanted to know what the deal was with magazine publisher Brian Price and me, so she wrote this story to show readers why our relationship was so strained, as well as what happened afterward. Part I takes place the following spring after Save The Best For Last ends. Part II takes place after The Heat of Heat ends. Bettye said she had a hell of a time structuring this story and keeping the timelines straight…but she did it!

Gen: It’s definitely not your typical romance, which often unfold over the course of a couple of months.

Liv: That Bettye doesn’t do anything typical. Now that she’s indie publishing you never know what she’s going to come up with. She’s really making me work to get to my happy ending. I can’t believe the wrench she put in my plotline.

Gen: Bettye says that relationships don’t line up neatly in a row like so many dominoes, with each character falling in love neatly when it’s their turn. She says that love doesn’t work like an assembly line and is often messy. And I’m not just talking about sex. But speaking of sex, you guys do have a pretty fair amount of that going on. That didn’t happen with Dexter and me in our book. He spent most of the story trying to get me in the sack. [dreamy grin] But oh, what a chase it was! And when it finally did happen, we didn’t even make it to the bed.

Liv: [making a face] Too much information, Gen.

Gen: You must not have read the book.

Bettye: Of course she didn’t read the book. You guys are all characters…remember? You only know what happens in the scenes you’re in.

Liv: Well, there are some twists in Something Real that you just won’t see coming, in both Cesca’s relationship with Terrence and mine with Brian, let me tell you.

Cesca: And let me tell you, Livvy, that Bettye decided to write Something Real about Terrence and me. In Gen’s book (Save The Best For Last), she let readers know that I hate police because of how they mistreated me and my family members. Then she had Gen encounter a sexy police officer named Terrence Gulliver after an escaping thief knocked her down. I’m not privy to Bettye’s reasons for including this scene—Gen has no cause to fear the police, as far as I know—but Bettye decided at that moment to write a book that would pair me with Terrence because she knew there’d be fireworks…and something truly horrifying happened in the interim between the two books that made me hate cops even more. So I was the original inspiration for Something Real, not you. She didn’t think about adding you to the mix until a year later, while she was writing The Heat of Heat and decided to put you in it for a hot minute.

Liv: Oh, you think you’re so smart [glares at Cesca].

Cesca: Do I have to remind you that that’s Terrence and me on the cover? I don’t see you or Brian anywhere, not even in the book summary [smiles triumphantly].

Gen: Can’t we all just get along?

Liv: You guys know I love y’all, even when you get on my last nerve.

Cesca: Yeah, well, that’s about all we know. You’re so secretive about everything else.

Liv: I can’t help it; Bettye wrote me that way. She said girlfriends in books are always confiding in each other, and she wanted me to be different. Besides, you guys wouldn’t understand the way I feel about certain things. Both your parents had money. The only reason I lived on the Upper East Side was because my parents were the supers of the building we lived in. Our apartment was on the first floor, next to the laundry room. We heard washers agitating and dryers tumbling all day and all night.

Gen: Sometimes I wish you’d try confiding in us, Liv. We’ve been friends since we were fifteen years old. When Something Real starts we’re…hey Bettye, how old were we again? [Bettye is heard answering.] Oh, that’s right. Twenty-eight. So we’ve known each other for over a dozen years.

Cesca: We’re well off, or at least our parents were. That doesn’t mean we’re from another planet.

Liv: Nothing personal, but sometimes it’s good to keep things to yourself. I’ll be you have secrets.

Cesca: My life’s an open book.

Gen: [nervously chews her lower lip].

Liv: Gen? You okay?

Gen: [too quickly] Fine.

Liv: Hmm. I’m getting the distinct feeling there’s something you don’t want Cesca and me to know.

Gen: Never mind about me. Something Real is your story, remember?

Cesca: It’s more my story.

Gen: [throws hands up] This is where I came in.

Shon: Something Real is available now for Kindle, for Nook, and on Smashwords.

Cesca: It’s a wonderful story, and it’s about me.

Liv: No, it’s about me.

Gen: Can we just say it’s sexy?

Shon: Thanks, ladies. It’s been…

Cesca, Liv, and Gen [simultaneously]: Real!

Bettye: As in Something Real. It’s now available in all formats, so download yours today! And as for Liv being sure that the concluding story will be exclusively hers…well, I wouldn’t bet the brownstone on it. Things have a way of changing when I’m writing a story, and I’ve decided that Gen, who is keeping a secret from her friends, is going to have a few anxious moments before it’s all over, as well as the roadblocks in store for Liv as she stumbles toward her ultimate happy ending…the final book, Man of Her Heart, is targeted for ePub in February or March of 2013.