Blog Tour: Guest Post and Giveaway with Author Pesi Dinnerstein

LOOKING FOR GOD IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES
by Pesi Dinnerstein

As anyone who has read my book — or even seen the title — would suspect, I love parables about lost keys; and the following is one of my favorites:

A policeman sees a man frantically searching for something beneath a street light and stops to see what’s going on. The distraught man explains that he has just lost his only set of keys. The policeman takes pity on him and offers to help. After a thorough but fruitless search, the policeman finally asks the man if he can remember exactly where he was standing when he dropped his keys. Without hesitation, the man points to the parking lot across the street.

“But if you lost your keys on that side of the street,” the bewildered policeman

asks, “why are you looking for them on this side?”

“Well, why not?” the man replies, “The light is so much better here.”

And that pretty well sums up my spiritual journey.

I’ve spent most of my life searching for God where the light was brightest—only to discover that He seems to prefer meeting in the dark.

My vision of a spiritual experience has generally tended toward the beautiful and serene: a meditative walk by the ocean, a quiet evening with an inspiring book, a communal gathering of fellow seekers. But sometimes it takes a bit more discomfort to create a real opening. And although I prefer the gentle approach, I can see that sweetness and light don’t always get you there.

In fact, one of my most profound breakthroughs occurred during a near-violent, middle-of-the-night encounter with piles of dirty laundry that had followed me halfway across the world. (See Chapter Eight of A Cluttered Life.) This was all the more ironic because I was certain that my clutter represented the single greatest obstacle on my spiritual path—and, here, it turned out to be the catalyst for a major shift in my relationship with God.

Apparently, it doesn’t take a life-and-death crisis or a weighty challenge to bring about transformation. If anything, those extreme situations often produce a level of spiritual contact that’s nearly impossible to sustain when things returns to normal. More often, it’s those humbling slices of everyday life—the moments when we feel overwhelmed, confused, vulnerable, unable to cope—that create real and lasting change.

In my case, an unsettling confrontation with my clutter was all I needed to push me past my own limits. Once we reach that breaking point and recognize that we’re no longer in control, the door to spiritual possibility flies open. After all, if we’re not running the show anymore, Someone higher and wiser hopefully is. And that’s the light I’m looking for.

***

About the Book:

A Cluttered Life:  Searching for God, Serenity, and My Missing Keys
by Pesi Dinnerstein
Publication Date: August 2011
Publisher: Seal Press
ISBN: 978-1580053105
311 pages

A Cluttered Life tells the story of Pesi Dinnerstein’s touching, quirky, and often comic search for order and simplicity amid an onslaught of relentless interruptions.  When a chance encounter with an old acquaintance opens her eyes to the extent to which disorder has crept into every corner of her existence, she begins a quest to free herself of the excess baggage she carries with her and finds—to her great surprise—that the answers she has spent a lifetime searching for lie within her own piles of clutter.

Dinnerstein’s battle with chaos takes her on an odyssey of self-discovery that leads from the mess spilling out of her closets and the backseat of her car to the more subtle forms of disorder in her everyday life and, finally, to the most hidden expressions deep within herself.  In the end—with the help of devoted friends, a twelve-step recovery program, and a bit of Kabbalistic wisdom—her struggle with the things of this world is transformed from a distraction along the way into its own journey of healing and personal growth.  At turns insightful, unsettling, and wildly funny, A Cluttered Life describes how one woman found her true self—and spiritual clarity—while trying to make sense of her muddled world.

Purchase the book from Amazon (I will receive a small commission if you click through my link and make any purchase at Amazon. I do appreciate your support.)

***

About the Author:

Pesi Dinnerstein (a.k.a. Paulette Plonchak) has written selections for the best-selling series Small Miracles, by Yitta Halberstam and Judith Leventhal, and has contributed to several textbooks and an anthology of short stories.

Dinnerstein recently retired as a full-time faculty member of the City University of New York, where she taught language skills for close to thirty years. She has been an aspiring author and self-acknowledged clutterer for many years, and has spent the better part of her life trying to get organized and out from under. Despite heroic efforts, she has not yet succeeded; but she continues to push onward, and hopes that her journey will inspire others to keep trying as well.   

For more information visit www.aclutteredlife.com and www.sealpress.com.

***

Giveaway:

The giveaway has ended. The winner is: Louis U! Congratulations!

***

Blog Tour: The Shadow of Your Smile by Susan May Warren

Welcome to the blog tour for Susan May Warren’s The Shadow of Your Smile!

Sometimes love requires a little forgetting … Come back to Deep Haven and find out what’s been happening in your favorite quaint hamlet. If you’re new to the Deep Haven series – this is the perfect book to start with – each book in the series is a stand alone story.

Note: I am not finished with the book yet, so stop back next week for my full review.

About the book: 


A beautiful blanket of snow may cover the quaint town of Deep Haven each winter, but it can’t quite hide the wreckage of Noelle and Eli Hueston’s marriage.

After twenty-five years, they’re contemplating divorce . . . just as soon as their youngest son graduates from high school. But then an accident erases part of Noelle’s memory. Though her other injuries are minor, she doesn’t remember Eli, their children, or the tragedy that has ripped their family apart. What’s more, Noelle is shocked that her life has turned out nothing like she dreamed it would. As she tries to regain her memory and slowly steps into her role as a wife and mother, Eli helps her readjust to daily life with sometimes-hilarious, sometimes-heartwarming results. But can she fall in love again with a man she can’t remember?

Will their secrets destroy them . . . or has erasing the past given them a chance for a future? Read the story behind the story here: http://www.susanmaywarren.com/books/the-shadow-of-your-smile.

***

About Susan:

Susan May Warren is an award-winning, best-selling author of over twenty-five novels, many of which have won the Inspirational Readers Choice Award, the ACFW Book of the Year award, the Rita Award, and have been Christy finalists. After serving as a missionary for eight years in Russia, Susan returned home to a small town on Minnesota’s beautiful Lake Superior shore where she, her four children, and her husband are active in their local church.

Susan’s larger than life characters and layered plots have won her acclaim with readers and reviewers alike. A seasoned women’s events and retreats speaker, she’s a popular writing teacher at conferences around the nation and the author of the beginning writer’s workbook: From the Inside-Out: discover, create and publish the novel in you!. She is also the founder ofwww.MyBookTherapy.com, a story-crafting service that helps authors discover their voice.

Susan makes her home in northern Minnesota, where she is busy cheering on her two sons in football, and her daughter in local theater productions (and desperately missing her college-age son!)

A full listing of her titles, reviews and awards can be found at: www.susanmaywarren.com.

***

Find the Full Blog tour Schedule Here: http://litfusegroup.com/blogtours/text/13448479

***

Susan is celebrating the release of The Shadow of Your Smile by giving away a prize pack worth over $200 from 1/9-1/28.

One grand prize winner will receive:

  • A $200 Visa Gift Card (Use that to rekindle a little romance, treat yourself to a spa day, snap up those shoes you’ve been eyeing, or purchase a few great books!)
  • The entire set of Deep Haven Books 

The winner will be announced on 1/30/12 on Susan’s blog, Scribbles! Just click one of the icons below to enter and tell your friends about Susan’s giveaway on FACEBOOK or TWITTER and increase your chances of winning.

Enter via E-mail Enter via FacebookEnter via Twitter

 

***

Blog Tour: Guest Post with Karen Wojcik Berner, author of Whisper to a Scream

Revisiting the Classics
By Karen Wojcik Berner

Thank you so much, Jennifer, for inviting me to guest blog. I am excited to be here.

Are you longing to revisit the Classics you read back in school? Or, maybe you never read them, opting instead for Cliff’s Notes and regret your most unfortunate decision?  Do you ever wish you could take the time to appreciate them through the eyes of an adult?

That is the impetus behind the Classics Book Club, which brings together the characters in my series, The Bibliophiles. They all yearn for literature with a capital “L.” The first meeting takes place in my debut novel, A Whisper to a Scream (The Bibliophiles: Book One).

Each of the series’ six novels will include two book club selections, which will be discussed by the characters and thematically linked to the various stories.

If you would like to read along with The Bibliophiles, I have a page on my website (www.karenberner.com) detailing what they are studying. Also included are food and beverage suggestions, because, after all, that is a big part of book club meetings as well, right?

Here are ten novels I studied in school that are on my to-read list again. See if they match any of yours.

  • Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. James Joyce changed the writing style as Stephen Dedalus ages, something I am not sure I noticed when I was younger.
  • The Great Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s commentary on Jazz Age society still resonates in the twenty-first century, perhaps a little too well.
  • To the Lighthouse. Virginia Woolf is a writing god. Period.
  • Pride and Prejudice. Just as one can never gaze at a beautiful painting for too long, one can never revisit a masterpiece too often.
  • Moby Dick. Our discussions on Moby Dick during my junior year of high school solidified my wanting to study literature in college. The symbolism! The epic tale! I was a detective searching for clues Herman Melville left, little morsels of cognizance to tantalize his readers.
  • Jane Eyre. Many people love Emily’s Wuthering Heights, but I prefer Charlotte Brontë’s tale of more subtle attraction.
  • The Picture of Dorian Gray. Oscar Wilde conceived a great concept with this story, one I would like to read again now that I am in my forties, to see how my interpretation has changed.
  • Middlemarch. I am always up for a “study in provincial life,” as the subtitle reads.
  • Sense and Sensibility. Yes, I snuck in another Jane Austen novel, but, what can I say? I am an unabashed Janeite.
  • The Scarlet Letter. This is a powerful tale. On a side note, I always thought Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale would make a great couples Halloween costume.

How about you? What are some of the novels you would like to revisit?

***

About the Book - Whisper to a Scream

Annie Jacobs has dreamed of the day she would become a mother since the first time she held her Baby Tenderlove doll. Unfortunately, biology has not cooperated with her plan, and she finds herself dealing with a diagnosis of unexplained infertility instead of picking out baby names.

Across town, stay-at-home mom Sarah Anderson is just trying to make it through the grocery store without her toddler hurling a box of rice at a fellow shopper. She is exhausted from managing the house, a first grader and a toddler, all without any help from her work-obsessed, absentee husband.

A Whisper to a Scream is the story of two women on opposite ends of the child-bearing spectrum who come to realize the grass is not necessarily greener on the other side of the fence. A vivid portrayal  of contemporary marriage and its problems, the novel speaks to a longing in all of us, a yearning that might start as a vague notion, but eventually grows into an unbearable, vociferous cry.

Just Thought You Should Know:

A Whisper to a Scream is Book One of a series called The Bibliophiles. The second book in the series will be released in February 2012. Stay tuned!

***

About the Author

Karen Wojcik Berner lives a provincial life tucked away with her family in the Chicago suburbs. If it was good enough for Jane Austen, right? However, dear Miss Austen had the good fortune of being born amid the glorious English countryside, something Karen unabashedly covets, so much so that she majored in English and communications at Dominican University.

Like the magnificent Miss Austen, Karen could not help but write about the Society that surrounds her.

A booklover since she could hold one in her chubby little toddler hands, Karen wanted to announce to the world just how much she loves the written word. She considered getting a bibliophile tattoo but instead decided to write about the lives of the members of a suburban Classics Book Club. The series is called, of course, The Bibliophiles.”) When she isn’t reading, writing, or spending her time wishing she was Jane Austen, Karen spends her time can be found sipping tea or wine, whichever is more appropriate that day, and watching Tim Burton movies or “Chopped,” her favorite foodie TV show.

***

Just Started: The Shadow of Your Smile by Susan May Warren

The Shadow of Your Smile
by Susan May Warren
Pub Date: December 16, 2011
Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers

Synopsis:

Sometimes love requires a little forgetting.

A beautiful blanket of snow may cover the town of Deep Haven each winter, but it can’t quite hide the wreckage of Noelle and Eli Hueston’s marriage. After twenty-five years, they’re on the brink of divorce when an accident erases part of Noelle’s memory. Though her other injuries are minor, she doesn’t remember Eli, their children, or the tragedy that has ripped them apart.

What’s more, Noelle is shocked that her life turned out nothing like she dreamed it would. What happened to her ambitions? Could she really be married to this grizzly man?

As she steps back into her role as wife and mother, Eli attempts to help with both humorous and heartwarming results. But can she fall in love again with a man she can’t remember? Will the secrets she discovers destroy them . . . or has erasing the past given them a chance for the future?

***

I am just starting this book as I will be participating in a blog tour through Litfuse Publicity Group later this month.  My initial thoughts are very positive.  I love the cover and the writing style of the author.  The story has grasped my attention immediately.  I can’t wait to see how it plays out!  Stay tuned for my full review!

***

Review & Kindle Touch Giveaway: Remembering You by Tricia Goyer

Remembering You
by Tricia Goyer
Publication Date:  November 2011
Publisher:  Guideposts
Purchase this book - Amazon

Source:  I received a free copy of this book for my participation in a blog tour through Litfuse Publicity Group.
View the full Blog Tour Schedule HERE.

About the book:

Television producer Ava Ellington cannot refuse her grandfather’s last wish – that she accompany him to Europe on a tour of World War II battle sites.  Ava has little interest in historical battles, but this may be her last chance to break down the barriers that have grown up between them, and she sets off, camera in hand, ready to record and report on their journey.  She and Grandpa Jack are greeted in Paris by Paul, her grandpa’s best friend, and his grandson Dennis.  The Dennis who just happens to be Ava’s first love.

History comes alive as the group travels across Europe – from the romantic sights of Paris to the bleak battlefields of Belgium to the Austrian labor camp these men liberated so many years before – and Ava sees a side of her grandfather she’s never known before.  As he shares his memories of those bitter days on the battlefield, she begins to understand how his experiences in the war made him the man he is today.

Throughout the journey, Ava and Dennis are drawn together in ways neither of them expected.  Can their memories of the past lead to a bright new future?

Read an excerpt, watch a video and find out more here. http://www.triciagoyer.com/contemporaryfiction.html#RememberingYou

My Thoughts:

I love novels centered around World War II and although this is a contemporary work of fiction, it is based on two grandfathers recalling their stories from the front lines of the war against Hitler’s regime and the ultimate liberation of the Jewish people from one of the many concentration camps, specifically Mauthausen in Austria.  In their 80′s, Grandpa Jack and his best friend and WWII buddy, Gran Paul, are fantastic characters, brimming with life.  You can feel their emotional turmoil as they recount their numerous stories as the foursome make their way across Europe, from Paris to Belgium, through Germany into Austria.  The angst lying under the surface as they watch their friends dying; their joy and horror at opening the gate to the Mauthausen concentration camp rings very true to life and I was very caught up in their tales.  The side stories with Jack as he comes to terms with some of the things he had to do during battle were heartbreaking and I felt truly sorry for the young man that he was, having to experience what he did.

Although I loved the historical aspects of this novel, the rest of it fell flat for me.  I did not care for the main character, Ava.  She was not a likable character at all.  I kept wanting to like her, but she kept doing silly and stupid things that made me dislike her even more.  Eventually I just got tired of her.  I never connected with her as a character or really knew what she was about.  All she seemed to care about was her job and getting the next camera shot.  It was agonizingly frustrating considering how much I enjoyed the other parts of this book.  Her relationship with her grandfather, Grandpa Jack, seemed strained at best and I never really felt a connection between them, which is unfortunate.

Dennis and Ava’s relationship is pretty awkward.  It isn’t until 230+ pages in that we learn the whole story of their past and why things are so weird between them.  They are on a roller coaster of emotions with each other and it is frustrating trying to figure out what the issues are between them when neither of them will talk about anything!

Finally, considering this book is Christian Fiction and published by Guideposts, I was a little surprised that there wasn’t some conclusion to Ava’s spiritual development at the end of the novel.  Prayer and God were touched on throughout the book (but not overly so), but I was expecting some kind of wrap-up to the journey I went though for 300 pages, or at least some type of “it’s in the works” statement.  But, it seemed to solely focus on the relationship between her and Dennis and making sure all of those loose ends were tied up.  It left me wanting more.

Overall, an okay read, especially for those who love the historical aspects of World War II. There’s a fantastic author’s note at the end regarding her interviews of veterans and some of her research.

About Tricia:

Tricia Goyer is the author of thirty books including Songbird Under a German MoonThe Swiss Courier, and the mommy memoir, Blue Like Play Dough. She won Historical Novel of the Year in 2005 and 2006 from ACFW, and was honored with the Writer of the Year award from Mt. Hermon Writer’s Conference in 2003. Tricia’s book Life Interrupted was a finalist for the Gold Medallion in 2005. In addition to her novels, Tricia writes non-fiction books and magazine articles for publications like MomSense and Thriving Family. Tricia is a regular speaker at conventions and conferences, and has been a workshop presenter at the MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers) International Conventions. On Tricia’s weekly radio show, Living Inspired, she shares stories of inspiration and encouragement. She and her family make their home in Little Rock, Arkansas where they are part of the ministry of FamilyLife.

For more about Tricia and her other books visit www.triciagoyer.com

Win a Kindle Touch for YOU and a Friend from Tricia Goyer!

Tricia Goyer is celebrating the release of her novel, Remembering You, with a KINDLE Touch Giveaway for you … and for the friend of your choice. Then on 11/29 she’ll be wrapping up the release of Remembering You with a Book Chat Party!

During the first half of the party Tricia will be chatting, sharing a sneak peek of her next book, and giving away a ton of great stuff. Then she’ll head over to her website for a Live Chat! Readers will be able to chat with Tricia via video or text.

Don’t miss your chance to win a Kindle Touch for yourself … and to “remember” a friend this holiday with a Kindle Touch for them!

Read what the reviewers are saying here.

One grand prize winner will receive:

  • A Brand New Kindle Touch and a Kindle Touch for a Friend (winner’s choice!)
  • A copy of Remembering You by Tricia Goyer for each

Enter today by clicking one of the icons below. But hurry, the giveaway ends at noon on November 29th. Winner will be announced at Remembering You Facebook Party on 11/29. Tricia will be hosting an author chat (on Facebook and Live from her website) and giving away copies of her other WWII books and gift certificates to Starbucks and Amazon.com. So grab your copy of Remembering You and join Tricia on the evening of the 29th for an author chat, a trivia contest (How much do you know about WWII?) and lots of giveaways.

Enter via E-mail Enter via FacebookEnter via Twitter

Don’t miss a moment of the fun. RSVP today and tell your friends via FACEBOOK or TWITTER and increase your chances of winning. Hope to see you on the 29th!!

Disclosure: Crazy-for-Books is NOT giving away a Kindle Touch. I am merely providing this information as part of the blog tour for Tricia Goyer. Please read and review the Kindle Touch giveaway information above to find out how to enter. Thank you.