Musing Mondays (Feb. 28)

Musing Mondays is a bookish meme hosted by MizB on Should be reading.
This week’s musing asks…
Which do you prefer: Adult -or- Young Adult books? Or, both? Why?

I'm a 50/50 on this question. Why? Well, simply because I don't particularly care for smut books but I've never been a YA book fan either. However, I have to admit that I've found a couple of books in both genres 
 that I dove into that I didn't realize were what they were until after I already was well engrossed in them.  I'll even admit I was enamored by the whole Twilight story.  I have enjoyed some YA books that were just good old fashion stories of  youth trials and tribulations. 


I do not like the traditional adult romance book. I admit it. I know I'm a female and we have certain things we're suppose to like: shopping, flowers, pink ruffles, romance books, etc. I didn't get some essential gene that makes me a complete member of the girly club. Yes, my mother weeps often because of this. Anyway, I can't stand the simple romance book for pure purpose have having smut scenes. Don't get me wrong when in context hot romance scenes are a ok with me. I only have a couple of series that I like that contain this genre. I can't say that I've ever made it through an entire chapter of a traditional romance book. However, YA books can tend to be a little to simple for me. Maybe that's my age growing on me or maybe it's my lack of girliness. 


 I'm more of the thriller, spy novel, or murder mystery anyway. I prefer to read about things that twist my mind not my loins. So yes young adult tends to be kinder to this aspect of my  mind. However, there are a few adult books that adhere to a non-over-the-top sexual content. Maybe that's why I prefer thrillers to sizzlers.  


PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT with either the link to your own Musing Mondays post, or share your answer in a comment here (if you don’t have a blog). Thanks! :D

Faithful Friends (Feb. 26)

This is another great meme from Should Be Reading  I've been reading her posts the last couple of weeks just as an observer but I thought I'd jump in on this one. I don't know why but it felt like I should. 
This week’s Faithful Friends post asks…
Do you attend church? Why, or why not?
I have a friend who doesn't go to church because it's full of hypocrites. I agree. All churches are full of hypocrites. So are most work places. Most homes even. I have to admit that that was my response for a long time. That and the fact that you can have church under a tree just as well as in a building. I wasn't raised in church but I was raised by a woman who was and who made sure I knew who was who and what was what. We attended a local church sometimes on Easter and even went a few times afterwards but it always waned. When I was a teenager I went to church one Sunday with a friend. I fell in love with the service. Let me stress that it was the service I fell in love with not the people. I continued to attend without my family. I attended until I moved to Kentucky. I missed my church and even the people for a long time. I still do until this day. My parents got in church and were very pushy for years about me getting in. I resisted. I'll be honest a small part of me recognized it was because I was angry that they didn't go with me when I was younger. I went to church off and on. To wrap up a long story. A couple of years ago my mom and dad found a church they loved. They invited me but I refused. I was too busy. The kids went and they too fell in love with it. I finally went on Easter. I'll be honest. The feeling I got scared the crap out of me and I wouldn't go back. Things were really weird for me for a few months after me. I can't explain it but it was weird. I finally went back for my parents anniversary. Not to go in great detail but I've been going ever since. I will say that I don't really like many of the people in the church. Other's are right. They are hypocrites. They're a few that I really like. Overall, this question makes me realize that I don't go to church for anyone but for me. I love Sunday school more than anything. I love hearing the word and feeling the spirit within myself. Church is something that is personal for me. My kids sit with their friends. I don't fuss about it because again, it's something personal for me and I figure it is for them as well. I don't make any of them go but they go on their own. Church is a building. Service is something individually important in my opinion. I go because it's like a refuel for me. Church is a personal thing. If you go great. If you don't that's fine too. I am not religious but I have a relationship with Jesus. Any relationship is personal and what you do with it is your personal business. I can't tell a person what their relationship is and they can't tell me. I never push Church but I encourage people to search for that relationship.

PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT with either the link to your own Faithful Friends post, or share your (brief) answer in a comment here (if you don’t have a blog). Please rememberthat we aren’t judging others’ answers here… we are only sharing our own viewpoints for the sake of knowing how others live out their faith. Thanks! :D

Happy Birthday to me!

TO ME!!!
It's my Birthday day today. I'm 39 years young. I absolutely LOVE my birthday. Truthfully, I love all birthdays. I've never dreaded a birthday. It's a true blessing for every year I am blessed with. I have a wonderful family, a good job (which is a special gift these days), and even though I had two emergency partial root canals this week, I'm basically in good health. I've never understood why people get so down about getting older. Yes, over the past year I've thought about the youth that I've been losing over the years. I came to the conclusion though that even though I'm now called ma'am more than miss, I haven't lost anything in life. I've gained so much knowledge and if anything was lost it's the sheer ignorance of youth that I've lost. I can now enjoy things with a truly open heart and appreciation for the joy of the matter. I don't care what those around me think if I want to ride the Merry-go-round at the fair, or if I close my eyes to pray before a meal in public, or if I want to wear tennis shoes instead of dress shoes to work, or if I want to take my shoes off and walk through the grass barefoot in park. None of the trivial things that seemed to be the end of the world in my youth matter any more. So to me, each year I may gain a year on to my life but I also gain knowledge and self acceptance more and more with each passing year. I may be softer in the middle. I may wear clothes for comfort more. I may even embarrass my kids more and more. But I have found that I love myself more and more with each additional candle put on my cake. So Happy Birthday to me because I love the person I have grown into and look forward to more growth as the years come. 

Category: 2 comments

Booking Through Thursday

Another meme I like to read and decided to join in on (even if it's late in the day...like almost tomorrow) I following it on Should Be Reading I'm not really sure where it originates from but here we go.

All other things being equal–do you prefer used books? Or new books? (The physical speciman, that is, not the title.) Does your preference differentiate between a standard kind of used book, and a pristine, leather-bound copy?


I love old books. Leather bound books of any kind draw me to them. I love the feel the smell. The history contained in the book itself...not the words so much but what the book itself has gone through. As far as reading a book for the book's content I don't really care. I love old books for their aesthetic feel. When it comes down to it though as long as I can read the words, I'll take it new or old. If I love the book and want to keep it for future reading I love hardback books for the sturdiness. All in all though it doesn't matter to me as long as I can see the words and feel the pages.  


Now if you want to, leave me a link to your answer.

Category: 1 comments

Paper or e-ink

One of my first memories of books was a couple of LP records my grandfather sent me in when we were stationed in Spain.. They were recordings of Snow White and a tour of It's a Small World in Disney and the Haunted Mansion. The records covers contained read along books. I remember listening to the stories and pretending to read the words at the bottom of the pages. I loved those stories. I also remember how pro-book my mom was growing up Books were to be respected. Honored even. I remember her telling me books could take you to any place you want to go and they were an escape from the real world when you needed to get away from the here and now. When I got in school I didn't get a really good start at reading. My first grade teacher was expecting her first child and she wasn't really concerned with teaching us how to read. I did learn how to copy letters off the board and color between the lines. But as far as learning to read, it didn't happen. Thanks to that I hated reading all through school. It wasn't until I was a young adult that I started liking to read again.Now I wish I could just sit and read all day long. Life is funny like that, isn't it? 

Now here it is the night before my 39th Birthday and I'm going to read until I fall asleep. The biggest difference now is that most of my books come on my Kindle in digital form. I love my Kindle. It makes carrying over a hundred books at one time super easy.  I love that I can have a book at the push of a button. Yet I still love the feel, smell, and look of physical book. My biggest problem now is to decide what to get in paperback, hardback, or in e-format. Most of my quick reads are in e-format because I don't have to have them delivered and they don't stack up all over the place. Once in a while I stumble across a book at the book store that just feels good to hold. The story is good. The author is someone I like. Or I just need my physical book fix. It's funny that with all my techie vices I still revert to the good old fashion pulp...a book...in physical form. By the way, the Dollar General Store has some of the best books for under $3. I've found several really good books that I hadn't ever hear of before. 

So do I think ereaders will ever erase physical books? No, no way. I love my Kindle. First I had it as an app on my iPhone and now I have the real thing. I love that I have it and wouldn't trade it for anything. But I will always browse the paperback and hard back sections. I'll always have a book on my bookshelf. I'll always have a home for the pages that let me escape. How about you? What do you prefer and if you had to choose just one format what would it be and why? For me, paper always wins out. Call me old fashion. I just love getting lost in those pages. Like my mom said. I can always escape into their pages. Thank God for that. 

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WWW Wednesday 2/23/11

WWW Wednesday is a bookish meme hosted by Should Be Reading 
To play along, just answer the following three (3) questions…
* What are you currently reading?
* What did you recently finish reading?
* What do you think you’ll read next?
What are you currently reading? 
Shutter Island by Dennis LehaneShutter Island by Dennis Lehane 
This was a freebie on Amazon.com for my Kindle and it has been a great read so far. The edge of your seat kind of read. I haven't read something like this in a long time.

Black: The Birth of Evil (The Circle Trilogy, Book 1)Black by Ted Dekkar
 This one I'm listening to on audio as I drive back and forth to work. With close to 30 miles one way four days a week it really helps make the time pass. 

What did you recently finish reading? 
I've had my face in textbooks and neglected my leisure reading so I can't even remember my last good read. 
What do you think you'll read next? 
This Side of the Grave (Night Huntress, Book 5)This Side of the Grave by Jeaniene Frost
I've been waiting a year for this one to come out. I found another thing that I love about my Kindle and that is the wonderful instant download feature. I bought this book on pre-purchase several months ago. When I turned my Kindle on this morning...BAM! it was there. Sqeeeeee! Ha! ha! I'm trying to enjoy Shutter Island but anxiously awaiting getting to dive into the next Cat & Bones adventure. This is my brain crack. It's not anything but pure girl fantasy for me. 
And that's it for this Wednesday. Now your turn. PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT with either the link to your own WWW Wednesdays post, or share your answers in a comment here (if you don’t have a blog). Thanks!

WWW Wednesday 2/23/11

WWW Wednesday is a bookish meme hosted by Should Be Reading 
To play along, just answer the following three (3) questions…
* What are you currently reading?
* What did you recently finish reading?
* What do you think you’ll read next?
What are you currently reading? 
Shutter Island by Dennis LehaneShutter Island by Dennis Lehane 
This was a freebie on Amazon.com for my Kindle and it has been a great read so far. The edge of your seat kind of read. I haven't read something like this in a long time. 


What did you recently finish reading? 
I've had my face in textbooks and neglected my leisure reading so I can't even remember my last good read. 
What do you think you'll read next? 
This Side of the Grave (Night Huntress, Book 5)This Side of the Grave by Jeaniene Frost
I've been waiting a year for this one to come out. I found another thing that I love about my Kindle and that is the wonderful instant download feature. I bought this book on pre-purchase several months ago. When I turned my Kindle on this morning...BAM! it was there. Sqeeeeee! Ha! ha! I'm trying to enjoy Shutter Island but anxiously awaiting getting to dive into the next Cat & Bones adventure. This is my brain crack. It's not anything but pure girl fantasy for me. 
And that's it for this Wednesday. Now your turn. PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT with either the link to your own WWW Wednesdays post, or share your answers in a comment here (if you don’t have a blog). Thanks!

Teaser Tuesday 2/22/11

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:
  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

Shutter Island


"A little? She used the exact same words Cawley used in some cases. When we asked what the topic was about in group, she paused and then she said 'anger management?' Like she wasn't sure. Like she was taking a quiz and she'd spent last night cramming."~Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane

This was a freebie book on Kindle but it's been a great read so far. I can't put my finger on what's going to happen. I didn't see the movie but those who have tell me if the book is anything like the movie, I'm in for a huge surprise at the end. I love books like this. 


Now it your turn. PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT with either the link to your own Teaser Tuesdays post, or share your two ‘teasers’ in a comment here (if you don’t have a blog). Thanks:D


Blue by Catherine Russell

The following is a short story I wrote for my creative writing class. I thought since I was brave enough to read it out loud in class, face to face with my classmates and survived the experience that I would share it on here. It was written based on a prompt that was given in class. I hope you can suffer through long enough to give me some feed back. It's a short story so I do know there's questions left hanging but you can only cover so much in a short story. I feel that I covered what I needed to for the characters for this point in time. Ok so enough of my babble. Here's the story:

Blue by Cat

Matt walked into the house filling the doorway with his massive body. Hands on his hips, he began to survey the room. He’d come to help get the apartment cleared. It was lined with boxes, a few stacks of newspapers, some packing tape and the sweet smell of mulberries. Kara always smelled like mulberries. I suppose it made sense for the room to smell that way too.
As he stood there, I thought of the future they had planned. They were to be married next fall; he and my sister. She’d even picked out her theme.  Monkeys.  Little blue monkeys. That was part of her charm. It had all been cut short one morning when Kara went on her daily jog.
I turned from the shelf of velveteen rabbits I was wrapping and looked at him. It was the first time since the funeral that I’d really looked at him. His tear stained face was soft and raw. It was such a contradiction against his stark chiseled features. The dark circles encasing his eyes sunk in joining the hollows of his cheeks; forming vast valleys from sleep deprivation.  He hadn’t been sleeping much, if any at all.
His eyes met mine and I could see the tears swelling behind his lids; the pain paling him. He swallowed hard, trying to clear his throat. He made a brief attempt to speak but the words failed him. I smiled a meek conciliatory smile just to let him know he didn’t have to speak. I knew how hard this was and to be standing in the doorway of the woman he loved, looking at her identical twin, had to be even more painful.  
He drew his lips in, trying to conceal the quiver forming, and nodded in silent agreement not to speak. I continued gently wrapping the multitude of Kara’s velveteen rabbits. I never understood them but she loved them since we were children.
Out of the corner of my eye, I could see Matt step all the way into the room shutting the door behind him. His eyes closed and he inhaled deeply. I knew what he was doing. I did the same thing when I walked in. I missed her so and he too was craving her near him. There hadn’t been a day since they met that they didn’t speak to each other.
Matt began to move around the room. Looking at her DVD collection stacked on the floor ready to be boxed up. He passed them by just as he did the CDs and cassette tapes she insisted on keeping. He continued walking until he came to the shelf holding all the picture frames she had amassed. There were pictures of nearly every moment of her life on that shelf.  He stood frozen in place scanning the images in front of him. He broke his statuesque pose to reach for a simple frame.
I peeked. I tried to give him his space but I peeked. The frame contained the two of them several Decembers ago. It was at one of the many 5K races they ran together. Kara, donning one of those fur lined hats with a couple of silver sleigh bells hanging from the long braided ties on each side.  Her red face pushed up against Matt’s; both with their usual fun-loving smiles. Matt was holding up a blue barrel of monkeys and Kara’s gloved fingers joined his, wrapping around the plastic container.  
I broke the silence before I even realized it. “She ran her best times when she ran with you.”
Matt, bringing himself back from the moment in the picture, nodded. Choking back a crackling in his deep voice he managed to speak, “Yeah, that’s because she pushed me hard. Plus she was so competitive. ”   A small grin tried to work its way to the surface but he stifled it.
“You were good with each other that way.” I said. My eyes met his and I could feel the pain in them. He turned away with a rigid military grace. He released the picture and it gentle fell into my hand in one smooth movement.
“She was a good runner. She was a great motivator.” As the last word left his lips the smile won out and grew. His eyes began to drift away somewhere to the past.  I looked down at the picture in my hand. My sister was the strong one; the athlete; and yes, Matt was right – she was the motivator. 
“What’s the deal with the monkeys?” I asked. I’m not sure why I asked. It just seemed to pop out. Matt turned and looked curiously at me. I lifted the picture in my hand toward him and tapped my finger on the barrel of monkeys between them.
He closed the space between us and took the frame gently from my hand. The smile returned on his face.  “That was the race for Alzheimer’s I think. You know Kara…always looking for a way to cure the ills of the world.”
Matt was still running through his memory. “We were making good time but man, was it cold. It was almost 18 degrees and the road was a slushy mess.” He released a deep laugh. “Kara would run in a monsoon if she thought it would help someone.” He seemed to get lost deeper in the memory. “Even though it was freezing out, she just had to stop at the second check point to get this pretty little wrapped present. They gave them out to the runners. I guess as a thank you for freezing yourself to death for a good cause.” A full chuckle rolled out from deep inside him. The smile almost glowed. “It was the barrel of monkeys.” He tapped his finger on the picture frame and handed it to me as he walked to the window. 
“We finished eighth and tenth.” He cocked his head toward me with a crocked smile. “She kicked my ass on that one even with picking up the monkeys.”  
He was back in the room with me now so I didn’t feel as bad speaking. “So what happened to the monkeys?”
“She kept one...called it our ‘love monkey’ and gave the rest of the barrel to a little kid waiting with his mother for the Christmas parade to start.”  Smiling, he took the frame from my hand and set it back in its place on the shelf.  “Let’s get her things packed up before the truck gets here.”
“Are you sure you’re up to this? I mean…I can manage….”  He cut me off before I could finish my sentence.
“No, I want to do this.”  He scanned the pictures “I need to do this.” He looked back at me and gave me a painful smile.
I returned the smile. “O.k., let’s get started.”
We worked for a couple of hours packing up the remnants of my sister’s existence on earth.  Mostly we worked in silence. Occasionally, we’d talk about the weather coming. A few times we shared some funny story of Kara. A laugh here. A choked back tear there. A lot of love everywhere.
Eventually, I stumbled across a worn out cigar box. I remembered it from our Grandfather. Kara kept her love notes in it when we were teenagers. We stopped, looked at one another then at the box, and sat on the edge of the coffee table. With the box on my lap, I cautiously opened the lid.
Inside the box were a few odds and ends - mementos of her life. There was a button from our trip to the World’s Fair, a bottle cap from her first beer, the obituary from our parents’ funeral, faded pages of letters, a pressed flower, and there, tucked in the corner peaking from under it all was the crooked arm of a little blue monkey.
Matt’s oversized fingers gently plucked it from its hiding place and laid it gingerly on the palm of his hand as if it were made of rice paper. His eyes glistened. The tears welled up, fighting to be released.  His body trembled, then shook and he dropped his head. The tears finally came. His large hand engulfed the small plastic toy as he pulled it to his chest. He sat for what seemed like an eternity and yet not long enough to mourn our loss.  No words could help either of us. I sat there beside him with my own silent tears. I’m not sure how long we were there immobilized. I’m not even sure I knew when we broke free of our paralysis. The rest of the day we were both distractedly performing our task of packing my sister away.
As the last of her things were boxed, I held tightly to one small velveteen rabbit figurine. I’m not sure why but I had to take it with me.  “I’m keeping this one.” I announced.  I knew it wouldn’t replace her or keep her with me truly but I knew it was a part of her and right then I needed a part of her.
Matt smiled. “That’s a good choice. “ His husky voice was like butter.
“What…”, a lump formed in my throat cutting my words off.  “What about you?” I finally choked out.
“What about me? “ He looked at me puzzlingly.
“Don’t you want something of her?” I asked
He looked around the room. A small but content smile formed on his face. “I’ve got her right here.” He patted his shirt pocket directly over his heart then picked up the box.  It was then that I saw the outline of the bl ue crooked arm. A smile grew on my face and warmed my heart.  I guess it made sense that he kept a monkey to keep Kara alive in his heart. 

What face is this? By Cat

What face is this?
Etched upon a faded page
A photo of a small child it seems
Mesmerized by an image unseen
Wide eyes searching
Pursed lips, titled head,  
Longing eyes, wrinkled forehead
Expressing curiosity
Or perhaps desire.
Desire for what lies behind the camera’s eye.
A Mother? A  Father? A treat perhaps?
The secret remains trapped in time
Etched upon a faded page.

Happy Kindle...Birthday to me!

After months, years, a life time even, I have finally arrived in my polymath world of technology, book nerd, and frugalness. Yes, my Kindle finally arrived this week. Yay me! It’s a birthday present to me from me. Here’s the really cool part. I’m frugal aka cheap. I have to be but don’t we all this day and time? I’ve wanted one of these for a very long time but could not justify the price for something so frivolous. However, being the web surfer I am (more accurately, being the Amazon freebie page surfer that I am) I discovered that Amazon has a trade-in program. You can trade in used textbooks and even some leisure books for set prices. I dug through my stack of old textbooks and started to put them into the search bar and the first one listed for $60. SIXTY BUCKS?!?!??!?! Long story short, after a few weeks of going through books that were collecting dust on my shelf for quite some time, I traded in enough books to buy my Kindle. Again, happy Birthday to me! I’ve had a ball with it and my favorite feature has been the dictionary application that allows you to look up words as you read. I think the public school system could really use something like this. Now I no longer have to struggle to read on my iPhone with my Kindle app. I love the e-ink and the feel of the device in my hand. I’m a long standing lover of paper books. The feel. The smell. The legacy books have. The Kindle’s e-ink technology makes it so easy to forget you are holding a digital device. I actually became so engrossed in a book that I began to turn the page only to discover there was no “page” to turn. I’m very happy with my Kindle and it was well worth the wait. Now to read through the 160 books I’ve downloaded via the Kindle freebie pages.

Jill Hicks Lawson Videos

Today I wanted to share with you Jill Hicks Lawson's video testimony that inspired the book Hide and Watch. The book is great and these videos really inspire. I hope you enjoy them as much as I have. 

Don't forget to enter to win your very own copy. For more details look here: HIDE AND WATCH Contest

Interview with Jill Hicks Lawson

Hide and WatchYesterday I reviewed Hide and Watch by Jill Hicks Lawson. I have the great privilege of knowing Jill and she granted me the honor of interviewing her. This book is a great testimony of Jill’s journey with her mother and the book has been a journey in and of itself. She shares a little with us about that.

Cat:
What inspired you to put your testimony into book form?
Jill: This story simply began as my personal Christian testimony of God’s love, hope and faithfulness in my life. Through the writing of this book, I wanted to encourage others to find hope through the love of Jesus Christ by sharing my personal story of how God worked in my life after I lost my mother an organ recipient after our kidney transplant in August 2001.
Cat: Originally, you had done this on video. What was the process to take your testimony from video to book form?

Jill: I began documenting Mom’s medical information before the transplant surgery, mainly to keep the info current for her dialysis clinic visits with her doctors and nurses. When the local newspaper wanted to interview us for an article in November 2001 after the transplant surgery, I prepared this information prior to the interview to document the medical details and timeline of our story for the newspaper article. When I wrote my testimony in 2007, I elaborated on this information to share more details about the events of our journey, expanded on it with more history about me and my family, and eventually, it grew into the book project in 2009.


As far as research for the book, I wanted to know more about my mother as a young woman, so I interviewed some of her friends who had known her the longest, asking questions about Mom and what they remembered about her that stood out in their minds. I spent many enjoyable afternoons talking to these women, taping our conversations as I made notes to the questions I had prepared prior to my visit. It was really interesting to learn more about the young girl who became the strong woman who I knew only as my mother, and the end result of these interviews was that I felt more love and respect for this woman than I ever had. I knew after hearing these stories that I had to share this extraordinary woman and our story with the world.


After several additions and revisions, I completed the book in late October 2009. In November, I discovered CrossBooks Publishing, a division of Lifeway Christian Resources, contacted them about publishing the book, and submitted my manuscript to them in early December. All books submitted to CrossBooks go through a very detailed theological review, and I was very pleased when I was notified that my book had been accepted for publication. I was assigned my own publishing consultant, who communicated with me throughout every stage of the production process. Regarding the cover of the book, I shared with the design team my thoughts of how the message of peace is so much a part of this story, and that I kept envisioning a white dove and white clouds on the cover. The design team created this cover from this idea and what you see on the cover of the book is exactly the vision that I had. My book Hide and Watch was officially published in January 2010.

Cat: What has been your biggest obstacle to overcome during this whole process?

Jill: The biggest obstacle that I’ve had to overcome was letting go of being an unpublished author. I couldn’t help but have doubt as to whether anyone would be interested in reading a story written by an unpublished author from a small rural community in Kentucky that no one had ever heard of.

Cat: What was the hardest part of writing Hide and Watch?
Jill: Writing this book was a very emotional experience for me on so many levels. While I was writing, the experience of going back and recounting painful periods of my life was very emotionally draining, yet very therapeutic and healing. I cannot count the days that I wrote through waves of anguish and tears, constantly having to calm myself and try to focus on the words I wanted to share. If you can imagine hearing an old classic song from your past, the song immediately takes you back to where you were when you first heard it, and the emotions you felt at that time suddenly becomes very real and palpable once again. I experienced this on a daily basis…


Despite the pain I had to go through as I recounted these memories, it was also very healing  to take this look back and see that I had been able to overcome that pain and anguish in my life, even though at the time, I didn’t think my immediate pain could get any worse. It was as if I was reassuring my old self of that old adage I’d heard all of my life—what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. I am just so grateful to God for carrying me as I put these emotions into words. There were many days that God simply took over when the pain became too great—He intervened when I thought I couldn’t write another word. When He took over, the words flowed so fast that I honestly couldn’t keep up. I would type so fast that I wasn’t always “reading” the words that would be streaming across the page. It was only later that I would feel the need to take a break that I would go back and read what I had written. I am a person who writes and corresponds regularly through e-mail, so I have certain phrases or ways that I put words together that are common to me. I can honestly say that while writing this book, I would go back and read what I had written and find words and phrases that I had never used before in my life. It was truly a very amazing experience to see words that I didn’t recognize as my own, and know where they had come from.


Besides being very deeply emotional for me personally, this process of reliving this story of loss and grief was also very emotional for my family. This was a shared experience--I wrote this story on behalf of my mother, my father, my brothers and my sister, as well as my husband. It was crucial to me that the story I shared was accurate by all of our recollections, so I had to depend on them to fill in many gaps in the story, which meant that they had to be willing to share with me what they remembered. I know that it wasn’t always easy for them to share these painful details. We all grieve in our own way and in our own time, and I deeply appreciate their courage and strength. I could not have shared this story without their support and contribution.

Cat: In the book you tell about the mysterious lines on the VHS tapes. Do you think that was a sign that this testimony was supposed to be in book form? What do you make of those lines?
Jill: Yes, that was quite a mystery—and I still have no idea what to make of its occurrence and why we couldn’t see it when we viewed, either before or after it was returned to us. Initially, Steve and I did take this as a sign that we were supposed to complete this VHS to video process ourselves and not involve anyone else. Once we obtained the machine to do this, everything did seem to just fall into place perfectly.
At almost 30 minutes, the video testimony only touches on the story itself. I knew that there was so much more that I wanted to share, along with what happened with the making of the video, so making the decision to write the book was an easy one.
Cat: Do you now or did you before consider yourself a writer?
Jill: I have been interested in reading and literature from an early age and can honestly say that I always had creative aspirations to be a writer. As a young girl, I read constantly—I always had a book with me. I also loved to write poetry and entered several of my poems in local 4-H poetry contests. I can remember handwriting my poems, then enlisting the help of others who graciously typed my poems for me. My passion for writing continued to grow with the support and encouragement of my high school English teachers. In the 11th grade, I entered the Avon-Flare Young Adult Novel Competition with my first manuscript entitled “A Whisper from Eternity”. I didn’t win the writing competition, but found that the experience of writing my first manuscript only fueled my passion for writing that much more. Unfortunately, it was many years before I was able to tap into that creative side again, as I made life and career decisions that took me away from writing.

When I returned to college for the second time in 1997, I chose to minor in Literature for no other reason that pleasure. I majored in Paralegal Studies, and made the personal decision to choose this minor area of study, rather than follow my college advisor’s advice to minor in Political Science or Pre-Law. My reason being that I had no plans to go on to law school, as my paralegal classmates were considering. I knew that I was a writer and to be able to study the classic writers of literature was an opportunity that I determined I was not going to pass up. I knew I had made the right decision when I received encouragement from several of my English professors to continue my writing endeavors.

Cat: You’ve had an interesting career life. What has been your favorite job?

Jill: There are aspects of each career path I’ve chosen that I’ve enjoyed, but for the most part, working with grieving families has been the most gratifying work that I’ve been blessed to be a part of thus far in my life. Serving in this capacity was not so much “work” as being in a position of providing comfort and compassion to another person in need. After losing my own mother, I found that I developed a deeper level of compassion and understanding for others. When I shared of my own loss with each family, I wanted them to know that I personally understood the depth of their loss and that they could trust that their personal wishes concerning their loved one would be carried out. To be in a position to be able to provide comfort to a grieving family is very gratifying, and for this reason, my work as a funeral director will always stand out in my mind as a blessing.

Cat: What advice would you give to someone going through personal struggles either medical or spiritual?
Jill: I would encourage that person to seek strength from God through personal prayer. God will meet you right where you are—He is always there, waiting for you to come to Him with your personal prayer requests, no matter how small or large.

Cat:  Other than your book of course, do you have any books that you would recommend to others?
Jill: My interests are varied, but a few books that I consider high on my list of personal favorites are: Possession by A.S. Byatt, The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, along with Angel Time by Anne Rice.

Cat: What books have influenced you in your life?
Jill: I love to read books written by Kentucky authors, such as, Bobbie Ann Mason and Harriette Simpson Arnow, to name a few. These writers are like kindred spirits and it is their influence that encourages me to continue to write. Having said this, I will share that there is one very special book that found its way into my hands at just the right time, and had I not read this book when I did, it is possible that my book may not have made it to publication. The book is called My Glimpse of Eternity by Betty Malz. (Jill shares the details of why this particular book influenced her the way that it did later in this interview.)
Cat: What are you currently reading?
Jill: I just finished reading the Kindle version of Heaven Is For Real by Todd Burpo. This story is told through the eyes of the father of a five year old boy, who shares details of his near death experience and his personal glimpse of Heaven. I am also reading Waking the Dead by John Eldredge, a very empowering and encouraging book about finding and embracing the life that Christ has promised us

Cat: Do you have plans to write more?
Jill: I have been asked this question quite often lately, and the answer is a definite yes. Most have asked when I will continue the Hide and Watch story, but my response is that I am waiting right along with them! While I was writing the book, it just seemed that God allowed work/home circumstances in my life to work out to allow me to have that time I needed to write. I understand that writers always find time to write, but for me, inspiration and motivation has to play a big part in my writing. The next book will either be the Hide and Watch sequel or another book that God leads me to write.
Cat: What has been the worst thing for you since the book came out?
Jill: Honestly, at this point in time, I cannot think of anything negative that has occurred since the book has been published. The whole experience has been extremely positive.
Cat: What has been the best thing for you since the book came out?

Jill: I am simply overwhelmed by the positive reaction to the book. Honestly, I have been blessed in ways that I never could have ever imagined. To know that this book has blessed others is just humbling to me, as I have heard so many positive responses from readers and how it has blessed and encouraged them. I think that the best reaction is that people are actively sharing the book with others, and allowing the ripple effect to continue.


In October 2010, I held my first book signing at The Wayne County Museum in Monticello, and again in December 2010 in Albany, KY at the Clinton County Public Library. I was very pleased with the turnout for both events and hope to schedule more in the near future.

Cat: What do you hope people will take from the book?
Jill: It is my hope and prayer that readers will be encouraged by this story to trust in God and His unending love and faithfulness for His children, no matter what trial or struggle they are going through. He never fails us, if we trust Him. If they already have a relationship with Him, I hope that their faith is strengthened. If they don’t know God, I hope that they will come to know Him.
Cat: Is there anything you’d like to add to the interview?

Jill: I feel led to share an experience that I had before this book was published…

It was a rainy day in September 2009 when I accompanied my husband Steve to Richmond, KY for a day of job training that he was participating in. After dropping him off at the training facility, I was looking forward to a full day to myself and I chose to spend it reading at the local public library. I am an avid reader, but on this particular occasion, I chose not to bring a book to read. When I stepped in that building, I quietly said a prayer and asked God to lead me to the book that He wanted me to read that day. After scanning the rows and rows of books in the religion section, my eyes seemed to keep falling on one particular book. I would move away, pick up one or two and read the back cover info, but none seemed to peak my interest the way that this book seemed to. I honestly felt drawn to it, so I decided that this must be “the one”. I found a comfortable chair in a secluded corner in the library and dove right in…

A few hours later, I was so deeply entrenched in this story that I had lost all track of time. I felt her pain as the writer suffered, and I felt her joy and enlightenment as God revealed His love in her life. As the rain came down in buckets outside, I found myself being lifted up by her words of comfort and hope, and I knew that I simply could not put this book down until I finished it.

Already feeling so lifted up by this story and praising God for guiding me to it, I finally reached the end where the writer shared about her visit with her mother and father-in law at the farm in rural Kentucky where they had retired. When I read that “they had relocated to the Duvall Valley community just outside of Albany, Kentucky”, I honestly couldn’t contain my shock and disbelief at the words and almost dropped the book out of my hands. This is when I knew without a doubt that God had led me to this specific book, because I currently live in Albany, Kentucky. Too much of a coincidence…I don’t think so!

To make this story even more meaningful, there is a particular reason why I feel God led me to this book, “My Glimpse of Eternity”, by Betty Malz. At the time I read this book, I had been writing this story of my own about God’s working in my life through a personal experience involving my mother’s death.

It is through this story that I share how I donated a kidney to my mother in August 2001, but despite our best hopes, she passed away five months later after an unexpected stroke and heart failure. I went through a very difficult period after losing my mother and organ recipient, but I have since found my life blessed by God in so many ways that I felt led to share our story to encourage others to look to God for strength, hope and courage in their lives.
In the months prior to this day, I had been writing off and on as my pain and emotions would allow, but found myself in a place of doubt as to whether my story could truly make an impact. I wanted so much to bring honor and glory to God through sharing this story in book form, but I was discouraged that it wasn’t going to be a very long book compared to the length of most books. Besides this, the biggest obstacle of all was that I was not a published author. I couldn’t help but have doubt as to whether anyone would be interested in reading a story written by an unpublished author from a small rural community in Kentucky that no one had ever heard of.

That was, until God led me to read this story…

By leading me to this particular book, I felt that God was telling me that my story really was worth sharing. Through this experience, I felt that He was telling me that the length of pages of a book is not what is most important, but that it is the message that is found in those pages. I feel that He was pointing me to look at how many people have been impacted and encouraged by this small book (over 400,000+), and that my book has the same potential to impact lives too. I realized that my role is simply to be the pen and share the story as it happened to me, and that God will take it where He wants it to go.  
                     
 I want to thank Jill for sharing so much of herself and this story with us. It's been a real inspiration to read the book and get to know Jill herself. If you meet her in person you can just feel the love and the true gift of kindess she is. 



The book is currently available online at CrossBooks.com, Lifeway.com, Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com and other major online retailers as well as in Cat's Corner Store on this site.

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