Archive for December, 2008

Snow Day!

Dec 31st 2008
Posted by Susan

I love Christmas traditions.

Like, our clam chowder soup on Christmas eve, and the family cookie decorating contest and cutting the tree down from the backyard. I think traditions benchmark our holiday season, and help us share favorite events. One of our longest standing traditions is the Christmas Week Puzzle. It started out small – maybe thirty pieces, and grew to last years 500 piece puzzle. I thought that was sufficient when I was up until midnight trying to piece it together (you see, Santa has to put in the final piece). However, my teenagers, who live in a “bigger is better” mentality decided that this year, it needed to be 2000 pieces.

I negotiated for the entire month of December to work on it, and they agreed, happily pouring out a waterfall of tiny pieces onto a piece of plywood that topped our coffee table (leaving barely inches of leg space). It took an hour just to turn the pieces over. I stared at the scattering of pieces (it’s a coka-cola puzzle with a Christmas theme) and they blurred in my head. No. Way.

How on earth were we going to find time to do this gargantuan project? With seven performances of the community play, a full plate of social events, basketball games, band concerts…we’d barely be home in an evening to work on it. Not only that, but when we were home, we had Christmas letters to write and cookies to bake, and packages to wrap. No time to sit, no time to puzzle….

The puzzle only seemed to epitomize our hurried, jumbled lives. Yes, we chipped away at it, but by the time our extended family arrived from out of town, we’d only managed to complete half the frame.

We were well on our way to puzzle failure. But more than that, the Christmas season, even our traditions had taken over our lives. It’s my son’s last Christmas season at home (well, as a college student he’d BETTER come home for Christmas) and I had high standards. I wanted it to be the best, the most memorable. The victory Christmas.

Our relatives blew in and our house became a mess of shoes and coats and baby toys and discarded socks, and candy wrappers and orange peels (I live with teenagers. They have a hard time finding the garbage can). I cooked and cleaned and cooked and cleaned and…the puzzle was the last thing on my mind.

Until…Monday. We woke up to a winter storm warning, and miracle of miracles, school in the Great White North was called off. Snow Day! By noon, we could barely see past the front yard. The wind shook the house, the relatives hunkered down for an extended stay and suddenly, well, with all our Christmas celebrating behind us, we had no where to go, no agenda items to check off, no cookies to bake, no packages to wrap. And, it was simply warmer to stay in our pajamas. So, there we were, a houseful of jammie dwellers, sipping hot cocoa, never-minding the stack of dishes, staying warm, listening to Christmas music…doing the puzzle.

Eight puzzlers a-puzzling. (Sorry, I couldn’t help it!)

Yep, we finished. During the day of puzzling, we – four teenagers, four adults and one very helpful toddler — told stories and laughed, and ate too much chocolate, and thanked the Lord for a delicious blizzard that slowed us to a stop and allowed us to enjoy the celebration of family and faith, and make memory.

Luke 5 tells a short story about Jesus and Simon Peter. Peter and the gang have been fishing all night, and caught nothing. Jesus gets in the boat, and after he’s preached for a bit, tells him to go deeper and let down their nets. I love Peter’s response…I can almost hear him humoring Jesus, “Uh, well, see we DID that. All night. But for YOU, Jesus, we’ll do it.”

Of course, they get a catch beyond their wildest dreams, so much so, all the fishermen on the lake are blessed. The key wasn’t a hot fishing spot. It was Peter’s faith. His willingness to take Jesus at His word.

Sometimes I feel like Peter. Fishin’ all night. Catching nothing…and Jesus quietly says, let down your net. Aka, “stop striving so hard and trust me.”

Traditions are great. But I’m thinking that Christmas could be accomplished without a gobbler, or a Christmas cookie, or even a puzzle.

But maybe not, perhaps a Snow Day.

I pray this season that you have a Snow Day – some time in your pajamas, with a cup of hot cocoa, and family. Try a puzzle! (I recommend the 500 piece variety). Thank you for the gift you’ve given me of being such faithful, encouraging readers. I have some great stories for you in 2009 – one of them is, well, a Christmas story! I can’t wait to share it with you!

Thank you for making this year so bright. Merry Christmas!

In our Savior’s love,

Susan May Warren

P.S. For a peak at our Christmas you can view it here or go to my website!

Fun Interview with Rel from Relz Reviewz

Dec 22nd 2008
Posted by Susan

Rel is simply fabulous. What a "think outside the box" interview!

Rel  I adore Susie May Warren and each one of her novels holds a special place on my bookshelf! You simply can't go wrong with her books from her Mission: Russia romantic suspense series, her historical Heirs of Anton to the fabulous Noble Legacy Trilogy, Susie's stories will entertain and delight.

Get to know the woman behind the words as Susie shares here at Relz Reviewz:~

If you could have chosen your own name , what would it be?

I really love the name Susie. I’m sort of a Susie, all the way through. I don’t really feel like a Susan. *grin*

Your first pet’s name?

Blackie. The black dog. But the first dog I had on my own was named Petey. Of course, now I have a son named Pete….(don’t tell him he was named after the dog!)

Your best friend’s name in primary (elementary) school?

Stephanie. Love that name, too.

Read the rest here!

The Perfect Match

Dec 8th 2008
Posted by Susan

The Perfect Match is being re-packaged and re-released in January! ThePerfectMatchrepkg (2)

Woot, Woot!

 
Ellie Karlson knows she'd make a stellar fire chief. Now she just has to convince the town of Deep Haven, and especially her crew of chauvinistic firemen, starting with the town pastor, Dan Matthews. But the Pastor Dan isn't the one she has to worry about – especially with an arsonist on the loose. Or maybe he is, because someone is about to get hurt, and Dan isn't about to lose another woman he loves to the line of fire.  
 
 

I need a hero!

Dec 4th 2008
Posted by Susan
Help me create the next hero in the PJ Sugar book!

 
This is for book three (I know, I know. You're thinking…book three? I haven't even seen book one yet!) and I want your input! Here is his biographical sketch…
 

Who is Max Smith?
 
That's the big question in PJ Sugar's latest adventure when this too-handsome for his own good man asks our intrepid PI to help him recover his lost-to-amnesia identity.  So, help me help PJ – What does Max look like?  He's a former special forces soldier, and he burned his hands in a house fire trying to save the woman he loves. He is deeply compassionate, and his last act before losing his memory was to intervene during a house invasion.  He grew up on a farm in Minnesota, and right now he works as a carpenter.  
 

So, as you can see I know who he is, what he does…but how does he LOOK?
 
Help me choose my next hero by choosing from… 
 
A. Jeffery Dean Morgan
 
B. pat demsey
 
C. Gerard Butler
 
 
D.dominic purcell 
 
E. JO
 
F. JC

 
 
I know. Tough choice! *G*

 

Head on over to my contest page and let me know which "look" you pick! This contest will run through December 31st. The winner will be announced in the January 09 newsletter!

 
Also sign up to receive updates on the PJ series at Sugar's website:  

 

 
Poke around and get the low-down on PJ (a.k.a NBT – Nothing But Trouble), read her case file, and take a peek at the first chapter. Oh, keep checking back…the new cover has been approved and will be revealed soon!

 

And…I'll sweeten the pot! Sign up to get updates about PJ and Nothing But Trouble here and I'll enter your name to win the Susan May Warren book of your choice, $20 Amazon gift card (just in time for the holidays), and a copy of Nothing But Trouble when it releases! Winner announced January 1st 2009.

The Face by Angela Hunt

Dec 2nd 2008
Posted by Susan

The-face-web The Face Angela Hunt. Mira, $6.99 (384p) ISBN 978-0-7783-2727-1

Born to parents who died shortly after her birth, twenty-year-old A hunt genius Sarah Sims has been hidden all her life in a secure CIA facility. Yet her days of anonymity are limited because her aunt has discovered her existence and is determined to lead Sarah out of exile. But before she can leave the only world she’s ever known, Sarah needs what most people take for granted . . . a functioning face and the skills to use it. Will she remain in her secluded fortress or summon the courage to follow her heart?

Compelling characterization is the driving force behind this enthralling story of hope . . .  Hunt (The Elevator) fuels the completely engrossing story with dual present-tense narration by the two women. Readers are drawn into their lives, sharing their joy and fear as they approach a fulfilling and surprising climax. A touch of suspense adds to the powerful themes of second chances and new beginnings. (Nov.)  –Publishers Weekly

Publisher's Weekly Interview with Angela Hunt about THE FACE:

–Sarah Sims, the main character is a victim of Treacher-Collins syndrome, a rare disease that causes severe facial defects.  Sarah literally has no discernible face. Her disease is a vehicle for plot development.  Did you have any personal connection with this disease or specific reasons for highlighting it in your novel?

Last year I watched a special on the Dicovery Channel about a real little girl born with Treacher-Collins. She's still preschool age, but I was so touched by her plight and all she has had to go through to have a functioning face. A novelist naturally asks, "What if?" and so I found myself wondering what might happen if someone like this young girl had the same condition . . . and the story bloomed in my head.  I'm also fascinated by the power of beauty, so the story gave me an opportunity to juxtapose the two conditions–beauty and facelessness.

–Like your last novel, The Elevator, The Face is also written in alternating perspectives and in the present tense.  Most novels use third person or an omniscient narrator, and this choice is definitely unconventional.  How do you feel that adds to the story and/or the reader’s enjoyment of the book?
 
I like present tense because it adds an immediacy to the story–plus, unlike a past tense narrator who obviously survived to tell the tale, you're never quite sure if the present tense narrator is going to make it through.  I struggled a long time with the question of protagonist–was it Sarah's story or Renee's?  And then I realized the story belongs to both of them.

–The title, The Face, represents more than just what the main character lacks. Faces are revealed and discovered through the course of the story.  Why the significance on faces?

Studies have shown that not only do our facial expressions reveal our emotions, but our emotions can be ignited by our facial expressions.  In order to be fully human, Sarah not only had to learn how to communicate through a face, but to feel the emotions her face could convey. On a deeper level, her new face represents an emotional and spiritual rebirth. Because she receives a new face, she receives a new future and a new life.

–Because she has been isolated on an island all her life, and her contact with people has been extremely limited, Sarah has turned to old movies for her understanding of situations and emotions of the real world.  Her idea of reality is based on things she has seen on the screen.  Why movies and not books, or music?  

I like movies, old or new. I knew Sarah would want to know about the world outside her cloistered life, and movies were the most direct way for her to visualize things she could never see. By watching films, Sarah thinks she knows the world. She doesn't realize that movies are only an imitation of life.

–There is a fair amount of research that went into this novel, from CIA protocol to extreme medical procedures, all of which seem a bit fantastic but are ultimately true. How important is it to blend fact into your fiction and what does that do for the overall quality of the story? Is research fun for you? 

I cut my teeth writing nonfiction and I suffer from rabid curiosity so yes, research is fun for me.  Why make something up if it really exists?  So I do as much research as I can and travel whenever possible. I spent a week in the Amazon jungle to research one novel, and I visited the Spanish coast for The Face. When I saw an old monastery on an island off the coast of Spain, I knew I'd found the location for Sarah's fortress.

–What comes first for you, building the characters or building the story?

I work with four elements to build a story:  plot concept, character, setting, and theme.  The plot concept usually shows up first, then the other pieces either fall into line . . . .  or I give them a shove.