Immortal Danger by Cynthia Eden (Giveaway)

Immortal Danger, In life, Maya Black was one tough cop. In death…well, once bitten, twice the bitch. Creatures of the night-be afraid. www.cynthiaeden.comThe BookEnter Today!Share Image

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Author Guest Post - Barry Eva

Buy the Book
Xlibris
ISBN-10: 1436371767

Today A Bookworm Reads is a stop on the virtual blog tour of Across the Pond by Storyheart aka Barry Eva, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.

About the Author:

Born in Barnet, Hertfordshire, Barry, also known as “Storyheart”, left his beloved England in 2000, moving to the USA to be with the woman he'd met and fallen in love with on the Internet.

Better known for his short romance stories on the net and in his book “Stories from the Heart”.Barry is popular for narrating his stories on local TV or as a guest on other media stations,where his whit, oratory, and old-fashioned English charm make him a popular interviewee. At present, Barry is living in Connecticut, with his wife and two children.

You can visit Storyheart’s website at http://www.across-t-pond.com.

About the Book:

Finding himself packed off to friends in the USA, fifteen-year-old English born Fred Squire is not happy. Then he meets Brittany.

Struggling with his feelings for Brit and the language, Fred is further confused when he meets Brit's flirtatious friend, Angel.

Escaping from a confrontation with Steve Harris, the neighborhood bully, Brit tells Fred her dark secret about Harris, and Fred's world is turned upside down.

Life continues to throw Fred a curveball when he catches a baseball worth a small fortune. Further run-ins with Harris, a crazy family BBQ, and a chase through a mall all add to Fred's American adventure.

"Brit and her Brit", know that their young love will be followed by heartache when Fred has to return to England. But not before some final twists in the tale.

With believable characters, exciting events, humor, first love, education and a little sport thrown in for good measure. Across the Pond is read and enjoyed by people of all ages from the young to the young at heart.

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Guest Post
When is English, not English? … When it’s American by Barry Eva

Playwright George Bernard Shaw claimed that " England and America are two countries divided by a common language."

In England what is called crisps, in the US they are chips. What English call chips, Americans call fries. So how come what English call Fish and Chips in America is not fish with a pack of Pringles?

In my young adult fiction book “Across the Pond” the hero Fred Squire runs into more than his fair share of problems. Not only is he sent to friends in America but has to complete a boring English project about the language differences between the two countries as well.

Differences ranging from parts of a car through locations to various types of food soon have Fred scratching his head is disbelief. Quite common sayings in the English language have a total different meaning in the US and visor versa.

Add to that a young romance, a local bully, and a baseball worth a small fortune make Fred’s adventures “across the pond” and roller coaster adventure.

Though written for a young adult market, it is being enjoyed by all ages.

Check out Across the Pond by Storyheart at Amazon and see what other people say about the book.

Thank you for that wonderful post, Barry! Please don't hesitate to leave comments for the author and his promising book.


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Review - Made to Be Broken by Kelley Armstrong

Made to be Broken
(Nadia Stafford, Book 2)
Spectra
ISBN-10: 0553588389

About the Book

The author of the acclaimed Women of the Otherworld series returns with her latest novel featuring an exciting heroine with a lethal hidden talent. This time she’s hot on the trail of a young woman no one else cares about—and a killer who’s bound to strike again.

Nadia Stafford isn’t your typical nature lodge owner. An ex-cop with a legal code all her own, she’s known only as “Dee” to her current employer: a New York crime family that pays her handsomely to bump off traitors. But when Nadia discovers that a troubled teenage employee and her baby have vanished in the Canadian woods, the memory of a past loss comes back with a vengeance and her old instincts go into overdrive.

With her enigmatic mentor, Jack, covering her back, Nadia unearths sinister clues that point to an increasingly darker and deadlier mystery. Now, with her obsession over the case deepening, the only way Nadia can right the wrongs of the present is to face her own painful ghosts—and either bury them for good, or die trying. Because in her book everyone deserves a chance. And everyone deserves justice.

My Thoughts

I liked this book much better than the first one. It's more interesting as the reader gets to see Nadia pushed to some new limits and face tougher challenges than before. Both in her personal life and diverse professional lives, she is up against people, circumstances and situations that compel her to make some tough choices. In her personal life, readers are kept tantalized by her growing feelings toward a colleague and her mentor, both of whom are very different men indeed.

There aren't very clear-cut answers to this story as well and the ending left me confused. I felt it could all been explained a bit more in detail than was provided. It's like Nadia's mentor, Jack, who speaks in terse sentence devoid of names and references. Like that continues to frustrate Nadia, the book's terse ending left me exasperated.

Overall, the book kept my interest going in this series. Not a lot, but enough so I will read the next one if I come across it.


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Book Tour : Ray Comfort


Today I'm pleased to welcome Ray Comfort, author of  You Can Lead an Atheist to Evidence, But You Can't Make Him Think: Answers to Questions from Angry Skeptics.

He's the author of more than 60 books,was a platform speaker at the 2001 27th convention of "American Atheists," and in 2007, he appeared on ABC's Nightline (with actor Kirk Cameron) debating "The Existence of God." He also co-hosts an award-winning television program, and has a daily blog called "Atheist Central."

Synopsis : By way of a lively Q&A format, Ray Comfort’s “You Can Lead an Atheist to Evidence” gives empirical evidence for the existence of God. Not only that, the existence of God can be proven and that anyone can do it!

Excerpt

To be an atheist is to play Russian roulette with all barrels loaded.

An atheist can’t win. Of course, he feels and acts like a big player, until the trigger is pulled.

The issue isn’t the existence of God. If the atheist is wrong and there is a Creator, then he was wrong. He gambled and he lost. No big deal. The real gamble is that there’s no hell. That’s what makes the player sweat just a little. “What if?” is the deep and nagging doubt. He believes it’s worth the excitement of the game. Yet atheism isn’t a mind game; it is intellectual suicide.

We know that there are six bullets that aim right into the brain of humanity:

1. Creation. Could you believe that the book you are holding came into being without an author? There was nothing. No paper, no ink. No cardboard. No editor. No author. There was nothing, and then a Big Bang changed everything. Time (the magic ingredient) produced a book with a cover, binding, coherent words, page numbers, and chapters, all in perfect order. Such thoughts are truly insane. You cannot have order without intelligence creating order. And there cannot be an ordered creation without an intelligent Creator.

2. The God-given conscience. All sane people have a conscience. It comes with the package. It is an inbuilt judge in the courtroom of the mind. It makes moral judgments, even when its voice is not wanted, and its voice only addresses that which is moral. It doesn’t speak when my tie doesn’t match my shirt. But it does speak when I steal a tie from a store. Why is that? Where did the conscience come from? Why do all civilizations have the knowledge that it’s wrong to lie, kill, steal, etc.? Our social surroundings may shape the conscience, but they don’t create it. It is the inner light that God has given to every one of us, and it leaves us without excuse for our sin.

3. The unchanging testimony of Holy Scripture. Do what they will to the testimony of Scripture—paint it as an ancient and archaic book, say it is full of mistakes, that it has been changed down through the ages, that it says that the earth is flat—but it remains the unchanging Word of the Living God. It is His Book, and it is a lamp to our feet and a light to our path. Refuse its wisdom, and you walk in darkness at your own peril.

4. The true and faithful testimony of the genuine Christian. These are not people who believe in God. Rather, they are sinners who have come to know Him. The Christian is called to testify as a witness to the truth. As in a court of law, the judge doesn’t want poetic or flowery speech. He simply wants to hear what the witness has seen and heard. It is then up to the jury to believe or not believe his testimony. The atheist chooses not to believe the testimony of the Christian, and in doing so, accuses him of bearing false witness. But why would a Christian lie? Why would he want to be found a liar, when the Book in which he sincerely believes warns that all liars will be cast into the lake of fire?

5. The witness of Jesus Christ. The True and Faithful Witness, before Whom every knee shall bow. The challenge to any atheist is to read the testimony of Scripture. Any honest skeptic will have no choice but to come to the conclusion that “never a man spoke like this Man.” He claimed to be God in human form. He claimed to have the power to raise all of humanity at the resurrection of the dead, with His lone voice. He claimed to be pre-existent, and that He came down to this earth to do the will of God. To make such claims, He could only have been a simpleton (that doesn’t match His matchless words), a liar (that doesn’t match His impeccable moral teaching), insane (then billions down through the ages have followed the teachings of a madman), or He was who He said He was.

6. The Spirit of Almighty God watches every thought and every deed and will bring every work into judgment, including every secret thing, whether it is good or evil. No one will get away with a thing. No murderer will go unpunished. No rapist will get away with rape. Perfect justice will be done. But the justice of Almighty God is so thorough He will see to it that thieves, liars, fornicators, blasphemers, adulterers, and all who have transgressed the moral Law (the Ten Commandments) will get equity—that which is due to them. 

Death is the trigger that will send eternal justice like a speeding bullet into the heart of the sinner. It will end the game of life in a heartbeat, and no second chance will come. So, if you are an atheist, let me reason with you. You cannot win. Think about your life. Think about eternity, while you still have time.

Ray Comfort Article

Why did you write "You Can Lead an Atheist to Evidence But You Can't Make Him Think?" – released February 5th .

I’m a Christian. I love God, and I also love atheists. I had dinner with 40 of them (at their request) early in 2008 and thoroughly enjoyed the experience. I was also flown clear across the country by American Atheists, Inc.,  to be a platform speaker at their 2001 Annual Convention. I enjoyed that also. I have a blog called “Atheist Central” and it daily attracts a mass of atheists. I’m honored that they frequent my blog. But it riles me when militant atheists go out of their way to try and stop Bibles being given out in schools. It upsets me when atheists sue Rick Warren because he’s been asked to pray at the presidential inauguration. It makes me mad when they protest the presence of a nativity scene. It seems that their agenda isn’t to promote atheism (which is their God-given right), but it’s to undermine the rights of those who live in a country that gives us the freedom worship the God who gave us life and liberty.

I believe that there are many atheists and potential atheists who are fence-sitters. They think that having a belief in God is a blind faith, when it’s not. There is a massive amount of credible evidence that proves that God exists. There’s creation. You can’t have a creation without a Creator. It is scientifically impossible. That should be enough for us, but there is much more. However, this will only been seen as evidence by those who have the ability to think. That’s why the book is called You Can Lead a Atheist to Evidence But You Can’t Make Him Think.  And if God does exist, it leaves us without a fence to sit upon. I want to pull the plug on the rising tide of atheism. That’s why we have created a website called www.PullThePlugOnAtheism.com

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Review - The I LOVE YOU Book byTodd Parr

Buy the Book
Ages 4-8, 32 pages, Little, Brown Young Readers

About the Book
I love you when you give me kisses.
I love you when you need hugs...


In his newest picture book, Todd Parr explores the meaning of unconditional love in a heartfelt, playful way. Featuring a heart-shaped die-cut and sparkling silver foil on the cover, this is the perfect way to say, "I love you!" Parents and caregivers are sure to be inspired by Todd's vibrant illustrations and tender sentiments, and will enjoy sharing this very special book with the little ones they love.

Review
This is a really fun book to read with your kid. While my child is younger than the recommended age for this book, we enjoyed browsing this book together. The bold colors and illustrations were especially fascinating to him, while the words and the sentiments behind them had be a bit misty-eyed. It's a book that every parent (particularly Moms) will love reading with their children

More than anything, the book expresses some basic human emotions that apply not just to kids, but to everybody in general. Just take a look at this line in particular - "Most of all, I love you just the way you are". Isn't that just magical?!

I admire the author for capturing with great simplicity and yet expressiveness these admirable emotions.

In Short
Read it!

About the Author
Todd Parr has created more than 30 books for children and the Emmy-nominated animated television show, ToddWorld. He lives in Berkeley, California.

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Author Guest Post - Kim Smith


Today A Bookworm Reads is a stop on the virtual blog tour of Avenging Angel by Author Kim Smith, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.

About the Author:


Kim Smith was born in Memphis Tennessee, the youngest of four children. After a short stint in a Northwest Mississippi junior college, during the era of John Grisham’s rise as a lawyer, she gave up educational pursuits to marry and begin family life.

She has worked in many fields in her life, from fast food waitress to telephone sales. “I always got the seniors on the phone who were lonely and wanted someone to talk to. My boss couldn’t understand why in the world I spent so much time talking to them and not enough time selling. That was when I realized I love people and care deeply about their lives.

After the birth of her two children, she gave up working outside the home for the more important domestic duties of wife and mother. When her kids decided they wanted to pursue theater as an extracurricular activity, she gave up her free time to drive them to rehearsals, training classes, and plays. During those years, she found herself bored with nothing to do to while away the hours stuck in a car. She began thinking of stories to entertain herself and pass the time. Before long she started telling her husband about her stories and he assured her she could write a book if she really wanted to. She put the idea away once she landed a job as a network administrator for a small corporation, and together the Smith’s started their own video production company.

Writing was a dream, hidden but not forgotten, and soon Kim began to talk again of trying her hand at it. She played with words, and wrote several poems, one of which was picked up for an anthology

One day in the early nineties her husband came home with a desktop computer and sat her in front of it. “Now you have no more excuses,” he said, and she realized the truth in his words. Procrastination, now no longer an option, she took off on the pursuit of penning her first book. Though that book, a young adult fantasy, was lost due to unforeseen circumstances, she kept going, writing a historical romance, and another YA.

When she decided to try out her hand at mystery writing, she discovered her true love and niche in the writing journey. She has since had four short stories, and her first mystery novel accepted for publication.

Kim is a member of Sisters in Crime, and EPIC. She still lives in the Mid South region of the United States and is currently working on her second book in the mystery series.

You can visit her website at www.mkimsmith.com.

BOOK SUMMARY:

Shannon Wallace is having a bad hair week.

She’s been ditched by her job, dumped by her boyfriend, and implicated in his murder. When she finds out her very private video collection is missing from the crime scene, it is all out war to find the disks before the cops do. The problem is, the killer has them. And he’s watched them.

Now Shannon’s at the top of his most wanted list.

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Guest Post
The Act of Writing by Kim Smith

"The act of writing bears something in common with the act of love.

The writer, at this most productive moment, just flows.

He gives of that which is uniquely himself, he makes himself naked.
Recording his nakedness in the written word.

Herein lies some of the terror which frequently freezes a writer."

--Sidney M. Jourard

PhotobucketWhen I decided to sit down and write my blog post for today, I considered what I could write about that would be meaningful and helpful. It occurred to me that many writers out there get so focused on the highway leading to publication that they forget to enjoy the scenery along the way.

I have always wanted to go to Ireland and Scotland. I do not know why, maybe it is in my blood. But, after saving for so long to make the trip, I will savor every blessed moment of it once I embark. Why do we not enjoy our writing journey in the same way? Is this not the best part of our day? Is this not the one thing that we can do that makes us unique from our spouses, our neighbors, our friends?

We write because we love it. We write because we must. Our creativity won’t let us sleep at night- it gives us heartburn as we chew the words and throw them out on the page.

But we do not have to be afraid of writing from our heart, even if no one ever reads what we have written. Enjoy your writing, drop kick your muse to the street today and let go! Free yourself from the worries and wonders of whether your characters will ever see themselves between the pages of a book, or even on an e-reader screen, and just let them tell their story.

You may find that writing from your heart, forgetting the other aspects of writing, moves you into a whole new realm of possibilities.

Thank you for that wonderful post, Kim! Wasn't it inspiring, readers? Please don't hesitate to leave comments for the author and her promising book.
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Oscars Book Contest

Buy the Book
439 pages, 855 illustrations, 85 in full-color, Abbeville Press

About the Book
For the film industry, the Academy Awards is the most celebrated and most significant night of the year: everyone longs for the recognition of being nominated to win a little golden statuette. For most of us, however, even a walk down the red carpet is just a dream.  

80 Years of the Oscar: The Official History of the Academy Awards puts readers into those iconic plush seats for the thrill of the Academy Awards, from the first show in 1928, shortly after the introduction of the talking picture, to this year's eightieth anniversary. With hundreds of photographs and an informative text by Hollywood insider Robert Osborne, 80 Years of the Oscar is the official history of the Academy Awards. Organized by year, 80 Years of the Oscar chronicles the ceremonies themselves, as well as the accomplishments, trends, developments, and events that occurred, both within the Academy and for the film industry as a whole.

Osborne comments on each year's most important films and shares the stories behind them. He also transports readers into the awards show, quoting from notable acceptance speeches and celebrity reactions, as well as regaling readers with anecdotes from each year. All award nominees and winners are included, with a special listing of Oscar record-holders. An indispensable and encyclopedic reference for the amateur and expert alike, from the struggling actor to the film critic, this book has been a popular favorite since its first edition was published twenty years ago, just after the sixtieth awards ceremony. The authoritative 80 Years of the Oscar provides a depth of coverage found nowhere else, and it is sure to please movie-goers around the world.

About the Author
Robert Osborne is a columnist and critic for The Hollywood Reporter, one of Hollywood's most important daily newspapers, and primetime host and anchor on the Turner Classic Movies cable television network. He has written a dozen books on the film world, many of them focused on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He is also a frequent host of the Academy's in-person tributes, both in Beverly Hills and New York.

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GIVEAWAY
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Abbeville blog is currently hosting a giveaway contest for this book. Complete contest rules can be found here. Ends Friday, February 27.

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THE SWEET BY AND BY

Buy the Book
William Morrow, On Sale: 2/17/2009, ISBN 13: 9780061579523, $24.95

Born and raised in North Carolina, author Todd Johnson sees the beginnings of his debut novel THE SWEET BY AND BY in journal writings from time spent with his grandmothers. Those formative experiences inspired his moving and poetically written story of five southern women of different ages and from different backgrounds whose lives come together in a journey of courage, hope and humor.

Weaving this tightly knit and compelling novel in alternating chapters, Johnson lets each woman tell her story her own way. In THE SWEET BY AND BY, days pass without incident for Margaret Clayton and Bernice Stokes until they discover each other in a friendship that will take them on the most important journey of their lives. Margaret, droll and whip smart, has a will of iron that never fails her even when her body does, while Bernice, an avid country music fan, is rarely lucid. Irreverent and brazen at every turn, they make a formidable pair at the Eastern North Carolina home where they live, breaking all the rules and ultimately changing the lives of those around them. Lorraine, their churchgoing, God‐questioning nurse, both protects and provokes them under a watchful eye, while her daughter April, bright and ambitious, determinedly makes her way through medical school. Rounding out the group of unlikely and often outrageous friends is Rhonda, the Bud‐swilling beautician who does the ladies’ hair on her day off and whose sassy talk hides a vulnerable heart, one that finally opens to love.

“I’m a Southern writer because that’s the particular music I hear,” explains Johnson. He continues, “One of my first memories of growing up is going to family reunions. To miss a family reunion was unheard of. If you were alive, you were there, fighting August heat and a million flies for a dinner that defied even the most exaggerated idea of abundance. When I think about it, that’s how my ear developed, listening to those voices, overlapping, competing really, in laughter, news, and secrets. It’s that thread, the full spectrum of age, that’s at the heart of this book. To know the story of a life, a lot of times all you have to do is show up and listen.”

Rich with irresistible characters whose uniquely musical voices overflow the pages, THE SWEET BY AND BY is a testament to the truth that the most vibrant lives are not necessarily the most visible ones.

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Author Guest Post - Jerry J Pollock


Today A Bookworm Reads is a stop on the virtual blog tour of Divinely Inspired by Jerry J Pollock, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.

About the Author:

Jerry Pollock is the author of seventy-five scientific publications. His background includes both a B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Pharmacy from the University of Toronto, a Ph.D. in Biophysics from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, and Postdoctoral training in Microbiology at the New York University School of Medicine. Dr. Pollock is currently Professor Emeritus in the Oral Biology and Pathology Department in the School of Dental Medicine at the State University of New York at Stony Brook on Long Island. Jerry’s first writer of the arts book, Divinely Inspired: Spiritual Awakening of a Soul, was a spiritual memoir originally published in 2003. The second edition of Divinely Inspired will be reissued in Paperback on Jan. 1, 2009. His ‘not so fictional’ novel, Messiah Interviews: Belonging to God, due out also on Jan. 1, 2009, is Jerry’s way of giving back to the Creator. Jerry is married to Marcia, his bashert or destined one. They reside in Florida.

About the Book:

Divinely Inspired is one man’s story to lift himself out of the despair of Bipolar Disorder, near suicide, neurotic behavior and scientific cheating to emerge on a path to God and His Ten Commandments. The author’s transformation from a damaged and ravaged soul to merging into God’s Light is seen through unusual miracles of Divine intervention.

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Guest Post
Bipolar Disorder : A Personal Story

Like in Alcoholics Anonymous, I sometimes wanted to shout to the world, “I am a Bipolar.” Why? Because I was desperate for help when I first contracted Bipolar Disease, but help was not forthcoming. Oh yes, there were the electroshock treatments that in 1991 made me a blithering idiot or in 1995 temporarily lifted my agitated clinical depression for one whole week before submerging me again in drudgery. During this week of freedom, I was so elated that my misery had lifted that I stupidly gave up my long term disability and returned to my professorial duties at Stony Brook University on Long Island, New York. When the misery returned, all of a sudden I was gone from the university for a period that lasted five years. I had to reapply and get reapproved for my long term disability. The paperwork should have taken me at most a couple of hours. Instead like my original application, it took me three weeks. That’s how hard it was for me to do anything. It would be three years later before the shame of this illness allowed me to once more face my university colleagues through attending my friend Bill’s retirement party.

From 1991 through 1995, I was hospitalized four to five times, each time for several weeks in three different hospitals. I hated it each time. I couldn’t wear my hairpiece and when that door locked me in the psychiatric ward, I knew I was trapped in a world I detested. Oftentimes, I would plan my escape in that I would bolt out the door with visitors after visiting hours, but I never found the courage to do so. Had I tried and failed, I envisioned being placed in a straightjacket like in the movies. I had sunk pretty low from being an intelligent scientist who now accepted his lot that this is the way his lost life would be from here on in. In March of 1995, I planned my suicide. I had spoken to a patient in one of my hospital visits who described her suicide attempt with an overdose of pills. She sighed when she told me that her experience was not a good one but I wasn’t listening. I had been a pill taker all my life, so I believed I finally had found a way out of a world that was telling me that there was no way out. Only through Divine Providence of God coming to my wife Marcia am I alive today.

I took drugs for the voices I heard in my head and for the psychosis that accompanied my mania. The side effects of the drugs were involuntary twitching of the lips, brain fog, and tremors to the point that I could not sign my name. The antidepressant drugs that I tried never worked and only months of the passage of time brought me out of my episodes of severe clinical depression. My only respite was the two hours of sleep that I got from sheer exhaustion each night. I’ve never figured out why sleep was able to provide that relief but in retrospect, the doctors should have heavily sedated me with the most powerful sleeping pills. After all, isn’t that what they do, administer drugs? The three different psychiatrists that I had during this time period never really talked to me, never got at what I was feeling. Their role was to provide their patients with pharmaceuticals regardless of drug side effects.

When all else failed, I resorted to suicide by swallowing 200 aspirin and codeine pills that my mother had brought me from Toronto. At the time, my wife Marcia and my youngest daughter Erin were shopping forty-five minutes away from our home. They had no idea about what I had planned. I opened the two bottles of pills and took one or two pills at first, followed by four then six then eight. I was a pro at taking pills and the two hundred pills disappeared into my stomach in just fifteen or twenty minutes. I went to lie down and finally after months of finding it impossible to find a place for myself, I felt at peace. It was too late to reverse the process and I was waiting to see that light that people who have survived near death experiences talk about. Oops, I realized that I hadn’t written a suicide note to Marcia and the family. Nor had I recorded the date for posterity. I was certain, however, that I was going to die.

Meanwhile a miraculous intervention was occurring at the diner 45 minutes away by car. Erin and Marcia had just ordered lunch when Marcia said to Erin, “We have to go. Something’s wrong with dad.” When they showed up back at the house and woke me up, I blurted out what I had done. Marcia immediately called 911 and the Nesconset Fire Department responded within minutes. I initially refused to be taken to the emergency room, but Marcia pleaded with them and me. The sadness and desperation on her face changed my mind and all of a sudden I was being lifted off our king-size bed onto a stretcher. With sirens blasting, I found myself in surreal state. There were no beds at the emergency room, only an uncomfortable short stretcher in an air conditioned room with glaring overhead fluorescent lights. I was freezing and had to pee. An unkind nurse provided a metal urinal and I missed and urine was all over the sheet covering the stretcher. The nurse was less than compassionate. I felt humiliated and embarrassed, and within minutes someone placed a catheter into my penis. The catheter was painful and never should have been inserted.

The worse was yet to come as doctors and nurses stood over me while they pumped my stomach. They kept inserting this stinking tube through my nose. I was wishing it was over and finally for what seemed like forever, it was over, as everyone left. After more time had elapsed, of which I have no account, I remember finally being transferred to a bed that actually accommodated my 6 foot 2 inch height. That was the last thing I remembered as I was in and out and mostly out sleeping for the next 48 to 72 hours. The caring doctor on duty had told Marcia that they didn’t know whether I was going to make it. I had fallen down a bottomless pit and finally hit bottom. I was embarrassed and ashamed but didn’t know how I would continue to face this agitated clinical depression. Days later, I made a second feeble try at suicide with sixteen pills, still considered an overdose, and had my stomach pumped again. Marcia was fed up and dumped me without a kiss goodbye on the steps of the admissions office of the South Oaks Psychiatric Hospital. I dreaded returning and felt that this was the end of the line and the end of my freedom. This is where I would remain for the end of my days. I had hallucinated and seen my hairdressers with orange and purple hair and seen evil in paintings and people. I had delusions of grandeur thinking I was the Messiah. In my 1991 episode, I played chess with Saddam Hussein as we strategized during the first Gulf War. Ironically, I didn’t play chess. I even called the White House to speak to Barbara Bush to give her my advice for ending the war. I had experienced psychosis at the height of my mania and I had crashed to severe depression to the ultimate bottom, suicide.

Several months later when I had recovered from my suicide attempt and agitated depression, I found myself at a mental illness support group. The meeting was attended by parents of children who had the illness and I qualified because in August of 1994 and June of 1995, my twin sons, Sean and Seth had their first bouts respectively of Bipolar Disorder. I always felt that I was destined to have the illness at age 50 so I could understand what they were and are still going through. I was the first to have Bipolar Disorder in the family. My father suffered from depression but never experienced mania. My psychiatrist felt that the mania probably came from my mother who he suggested was hypomanic. Identical twin studies have shown that Bipolar Disorder, or Manic Depression as the illness used to be called, is genetic in about half the cases. That means that half the time only one identical twin has the illness. Where both twins are sick, you sometimes see one with Bipolar Disorder and the second with Schizoaffective Disorder or Schizophrenia. The “schizo” attachment signifies an additional thought disorder that can accompany the same mania and psychosis as seen in Bipolar Disorder. Bipolar as its name implies is different than the “schizo” disorders in that it is a mood disorder with swings from the high of mania to the low of depression. All types of mental illness are chemical imbalances in the brain and are not the fault of the unfortunate and often surprised recipient who is diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder.

No one knows the cause of Bipolar Disorder and after doing regressive therapy back to my mothers womb, I am not at all convinced that a genetic explanation in families such as mine is the cause for transmission to descendants like my sons. There is so much bioelectric activity occurring in the womb, especially in the birth canal prior to birth, that may change the neurotransmitters’ and hormones’ amounts and actions to set the stage later for the onset of the disease. Often the disease is not diagnosed for years because it seems that inability to do homework or focus in school can be explained by other problems such as attention deficit disorder or attention deficit hyperactive disorder. The textbooks talk about Bipolar Disorder being diagnosed in children as early as age 8 but my wife Marcia was a special education disorder and she noted the mood swings of the mania and depression of Bipolar Disorder or Manic Depression in some of her 4 year olds. Most individuals are diagnosed in their teens or twenties like my sons. There are a smaller group who come down with the disease at about age 40. Rarely does one see anyone like myself at age 50. A young doctor, a pediatrician, in his late forties once stopped by my office at the university just to meet me and know that there was someone else like him who had the illness at such an older age in life. He too was the first in his family and had to give up his medical practice. I hope that I gave him hope. I was out of the university for five years on a long term disability and had just returned to Stony Brook to once again take up my professorial duties when this fine young man stopped by.

It’s a shame that mental illness still has the stigma attached to it although with more celebrities talking about the diseases, we are seeing more awareness and understanding from the public. I often think that the mentally ill are part of a group forgotten by society. Young people in particular think that you can just will yourself back to health. You cannot. You won’t go into remission from a particular episode of Bipolar Disorder until the chemical imbalance is restored in your brain to some fashion we might call normalcy. After years of taking drugs, that state of normalcy may not be the same as your brain was before you ever acquired the disease. Bipolar Disorder is like a tree stump. It stumps your life. Some people never work again and those that do are hampered. Rare ones like myself are blessed to return to a higher level of occupation. The illness is often the cause of job loss, marital tension and divorce, and addiction to mind altering drugs and alcohol. All the Bipolars I met in the hospital for some reason that I cannot comprehend smoked. Traditional Bipolar is diagnosed by mania followed by depression, but the disease takes on different forms with specific medical terminology. The latter is important but what’s more important is to realize that Bipolar Disorder is different for everyone and each individual episode can be different with common patterns. My illness is different from my twin sons, Seth and Sean and theirs is different from each other. How would genetics explain their differences unless influenced also by environment?

There are a lot of misconceptions out there, but when people get past their fears and ignorance, they will sometimes ask me what is the difference between hypomania and mania. From my perspective, mania is a more extreme form of brain activity. In hypomania, you may still be able to reach the individual and get him help before he has a full blown episode. In mania, the person hears your voice but he or she is really not listening to you. You can’t reach a person in their manic state unless they finally calm down with the assistance of drugs of they somehow realize themselves, like I did, that it’s time to seek help or you will lose your mind. People also sheepishly ask me what my suicide attempt was like. Bloody awful and demeaning I answer. I remember at that support group the social worker asking for someone to begin. Immediately, a woman sitting beside me jumped at the chance and said something I had never heard before. “Bipolar Disorder is a terminal illness.” No psychiatrist had ever expressed these words and they seemed to be floating in the air as I tried to grasp onto them and internalize them in my brain. The woman, whose husband was sitting solemnly beside her, was somber as she spoke lovingly about her son who blew his brains out with a gun. Thank God I took pills or that could have been me. The woman told of her son’s countless cries for help that went unanswered. When the coordinator of the group asked me to speak next, I wanted this woman to understand that I understood, so I described my suicide attempt. This story has always struck a sad chord in me and makes me grateful that I am still here. It brings up such mixed emotions in me.

There is still much to understand about Bipolar Disorder and lest people think I am anti-drug, I am not. In the old days without mood stabilizers such as lithium and the neuroleptics (anti-psychotics), they threw you into the loony bin and you never came out. It’s still a crapshoot in the case of the antidepressants. However, if you find the right one you will kiss the earth and thank God every day. You can have clinical depression without Bipolar Disorder and it is similar. In my case, the depression was mixed with an unyielding agitation of the mania part of my illness. I was given nothing for the Akithisia as the doctors refer to it and I could sit still for just a few seconds. It was horrific and that’s when I decided to finally end it all. Thank God for God coming to Marcia. I would never have known that I would have ever come up had I not survived. I hope that my story gives hope to people who are struggling today that every descent is part of an ascent to follow.

During those five years of long term disability, I was blessed with spiritual experiences of an incredible nature that led me to write my spiritual memoir, Divinely Inspired: Spiritual Awakening of a Soul followed by my ‘not so fictional’ novel, Messiah Interviews: Belonging to God. You will find the Bipolar experiences written about in Divinely Inspired. The psychiatrists speak about 25 % or so of Bipolars going into remission. I have not had an episode in thirteen years. I would like to believe that it’s because I have strengthened myself spiritually for the last ten years. Usually a person who doesn’t get enough sleep will trip into mania. I survive on very little sleep. These days I work hard on getting the messages of my books out to the general public. I write for the Creator but I also write for the forgotten members of our society, the mentally ill. While I was still a Professor at Stony Brook, I ran an ad in the university paper and offered my help to anyone with Bipolar Disorder. I do so now, so please contact me if you need help. You can email me at either jerrypollock@bellsouth.net or thirdtemple@bellsouth.net Please also visit my website to learn more about me, my books, and my spiritual mission. You can enter my website and Blog through www.shechinahthirdtemple.org.

Thank you for listening.

Jerry Pollock, Ph.D.

Thank you for that wonderful post, Jerry! Readers, please don't hesitate to leave your thoughts/comments for the author and his promising book.



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Author Mary Burton’s Buns

We all know Author Mary Burton for her romantic suspense novels DEAD RINGER and I’M WATCHING YOU and, of courses, for her novella in the New York Times best selling SILVER BELLS.  To mark that publication, she shared a new recipe, Silver Bells Tea Cakes via book and food/baking blogs.  Now, she’s sharing her favorite St. Valentine’s Day breakfast treat, Valentine’s Day Sweet Buns. (Admit it - you thought something else entirely, didn't you?!)

“I love to have these for my sweetie on Valentine’s Day,” she says, but once again keeps us in suspense.  She hasn’t told us yet whether or not she serves them in bed.

Here's the recipe :

Buns
3 ¼ cups of flour
¾ teaspoon of salt
1/3 cup of sugar
4 egg yolks
1 teaspoon of vanilla
¾ cup of water
1/4 cup of low fat sour cream
¼ cup of melted butter
1 package of dry yeast

Filling
¾ cups of brown sugar
2 teaspoons of cinnamon
½ cup chopped walnuts (optional)

Glaze
1 cup of powdered sugar
2-3 tablespoons of milk

Place all the ingredients in the dough maker (yeast goes in the yeast dispenser). Once the dough is ready, place on a floured surface and roll out into a large rectangle—about ¼ an inch thick. Sprinkle brown sugar, cinnamon and nuts on the dough. Roll the dough in a long spiral and then slice into individual portions. Place dough on a large greased pan. Give the rolls plenty of room to rise and spread. (If you’re prepping for tomorrow’s breakfast, cover with plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator. In the morning a couple of hours before serving the buns, place pans of uncooked rolls in a warm place and let them rise.) When they’ve risen to twice their original size, bake at 350 degrees for 18-20 minutes. While they are warm, pour glaze over top and serve.
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The Help by Kathryn Stockett

Buy the Book

The Help, by Kathryn Stockett, is not your average debut novel. Entertaining and moving in equal parts, The Help is poised to become a favorite for readers and book clubs this season.

Following three extraordinary women through the sixties South, and chronicling their determination to start a movement of their own that forever changes a town, The Help is a riveting tale about the way women—mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends—view one another. A deeply moving novel filled with poignancy, humor, and hope, The Help is a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don’t

Listen to Kathryn Stockett discuss The Help, and discover the story behind the novel in this week’s Penguin Podcast.

http://us.penguingroup.com/static/pages/podcast/index.html
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Twilight Giveaway

At www.LoveImpossible.com — Vampires are heating up the air!
They're giving away some steamy-hot prizes that include :

1. Twilight Saga DVD preordered and shipped to your home. OR
2. Choice of any Vampire Romance book on our website shipped to your home. OR
3. Twilight Bella Inspired Swarovski Crystal CLEAR Heart Pewter Wolf Apple Clasp Bracelet courtesy of Jeweled Ambrosia
bella-heart-braceletbella-heart-bracelet21

Interested? Head on THERE immediately! 
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TOR Preview Chapters

Currently TOR publishing has made available Preview Chapters of the following books :


Enjoy!
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Review - The Moose with Loose Poops

The Moose with Loose Poops (Dr. Hippo)  ~ Charlotte Cowan

Genre: Children's Nonfiction
ISBN: 978-0-9753516-5-9
Pages: 32
Publisher: The Hippocratic Press

Four-year-old Miles develops a tummy ache while on a family picnic in Maine. His planned camping trip with Papa (complete with canoeing and fishing) is postponed when throwing up (oops!) and diarrhea (loose poops) develop. Mama, Papa and Lucy Moose take excellent care of Miles at home. Of course, they are helped by their kindly pediatrician, Dr. Hippo, who advises that fluid is the best medicine for Miles. Will Miles recover in time to go camping with Papa under a special, star-filled sky?

In this story for children ages 2-7, The Moose with Loose Poops, author Dr. Charlotte Cowan offers a clear and child-friendly explanation of gastroenteritis. A board-certified pediatrician, she captures the misery of tummy aches, caused first by vomiting and then by diarrhea, and writes to educate, entertain and comfort her small readers—as well as their parents.

Known as the Dr. Hippo Series, this collection of stories includes other books about: an elephant with an earache, a polar bear with a cold, a frog with a fever of 104, and a giraffe with a sore throat. Each adorable animal gets (and gets over) his or her illness with the help of a kindly pediatrician hippopotamus named Dr. Hippocrates.

Each book in the Dr. Hippo Series is 32 pages, hard cover, full color and includes a separate laminated Parent Guide written in question/answer format. The Parent Guide answers common questions like: “How can I keep my child comfortable?” and “When should I call the doctor?”

It's a good book to read, and while my little one is a bit young for this, I know sooner or later I'll get some much needed advice and use our of this nifty little tale. So, try it out!

About the author: Dr. Charlotte Cowan is a board certified pediatrician and author of 5 medical children's stories that entertain, educate, and reassure both parent and child. Covering  fever, colds, earaches, and sore throats, each book  includes a Parent Guide. For information about her latest, The Moose with Loose Poops,  visit: http://www.drhippo.com/.

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More Free books!

There are FREE books on offer from Harlequin! To celebrate their 60th Anniversary, they are offering books that showcase the best in each Harlequin line, from romantic suspense to historicals. Enjoy!
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Google Book Search for Mobile

From CNET: Google is opening a new chapter in its book digitization saga, this time taking on the likes of Amazon.com's Kindle and Sony's eReader.

The search giant on Thursday launched a mobile version of its Google Book Search, giving iPhone and Android users instant access to more than 1.5 million public domain books. The works of authors such as William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, and Charles Dickens were optimized to be read on the small screen, a challenge the Google Book Search team called "daunting" in a blog post announcing the launch.

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More Book Giveaways

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Free Books from Harlequin

From Galley Cat :

As Valentine's Day nears, lovers have a new compendium of romantic literature at their fingertips--Harlequin just released 16 free novels for Stanza, the iPhone and iPod Touch digital book reader.

The giveaway will help the publisher meet its 60th anniversary goal of giving a romance novel to every woman in the country. The 16 titles are a drop in ocean of books for the romance company--they publish 1,200 authors and 120 titles every month.
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The Mighty Queens of Freeville by Amy Dickinson

The Mighty Queens of Freeville
A Mother, a Daughter, and the Town That Raised Them
By Amy Dickinson
Hyperion, February 2009, ISBN13: 9781401322854

Millions of Americans know and love Amy Dickinson from reading her syndicated advice column "Ask Amy" and from hearing her wit and wisdom weekly on National Public Radio. Amy's audience loves her for her honesty, her small-town values, and the fact that her motto is "I make the mistakes so you don't have to." In The Mighty Queens of Freeville, Amy Dickinson shares those mistakes and her remarkable story. This is the tale of Amy and her daughter and the people who helped raise them after Amy found herself a reluctant single parent.

Though divorce runs through her family like an aggressive chromosome, the women in her life taught her what family is about. They helped her to pick up the pieces when her life fell apart and to reassemble them into something new. It is a story of frequent failures and surprising successes, as Amy starts and loses careers, bumbles through blind dates and adult education classes, travels across the country with her daughter and their giant tabby cat, and tries to come to terms with the family's aptitude for "dorkitude."

They have lived in London, D.C., and Chicago, but all roads lead them back to Amy's hometown of Freeville (pop. 458), a tiny village where Amy's family has tilled and cultivated the land, tended chickens and Holsteins, and built houses and backyard sheds for more than 200 years. Most important, though, her family members all still live within a ten-house radius of each other. With kindness and razor-sharp wit, they welcome Amy and her daughter back weekend after weekend, summer after summer, offering a moving testament to the many women who have led small lives of great consequence in a tiny place.

About the Author
Amy Dickinson is the author of the syndicated advice column "Ask Amy," which appears in more than 150 newspapers nationwide. She is the host of a biweekly feature on NPR's "Talk of the Nation" and is a panelist on NPR's quiz show "Wait Wait . . . Don't Tell Me!" She lives in Chicago and Freeville, New York.
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Win with Penguin and Amazon!

Enter your manuscript now for the chance to win a $25,000 publishing contract with Penguin Group (USA)
 
Amazon.com, Inc. and Penguin Group (USA) will be accepting contest manuscripts from now through midnight EST on February 8th for the second annual Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award competition seeking the aims next popular novel. Writers around the world are encouraged to enter now!

How the contest works

Go to www.amazon.com/abna to enter your unpublished, English-language fiction manuscript. Entries will be accepted until February 8, 2009 or until 10,000 entries have been received, whichever comes first. The contest consists of four judging phases by expert reviewers, publishing professionals, and Amazon.com customers. The winner, who will receive a $25,000 publishing contract with Penguin Group (USA), will be announced on May 22, 2009.
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Heroic Book Return

Perhaps because he had other things on his mind at the time, the pilot of US Airways Flight 1549 lost a library book when his plane crashed in the Hudson River earlier this month. Extra TV reported that when he called to report the loss, the Fresno State Library not only waived his lost book fee, but "also dedicated a replacement copy to heroic Captain Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger! It gets better--the book was about ethics!"

[via]
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