New York, Day 3

LOL about Mary Kay's comment. Yes, though I'd been to New York many times before, I'd never really played "tourist" before. So I had a ball.





Anything on stage that brings tears is worth seeing. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.


Can hardly believe you haven't been a NYC tourist before. Fascinating place. I lived and worked there for a number of years (quite a few years back!). Midwestern family thought I was nuts. It's a city where you can find someone doing whatever interests you (movies, singing, exercising,...) and any time of the night or day. Loved walking thru Central Park to guitar teacher's studio, riding the Staten Island Ferry to watch the sunrise. BTW-How much is it now? Was a nickel in my day, if you can imagine! Strange life then--worked as a private secretary on Park Avenue by day, and went to political demonstrations on weekends. Seems a lifetime ago. Thanks for jogging my memory. And the tip about WAR HORSE.
Blessings,
Mary Kay


Glad you had a good time. Even authors need a break now and then. *smile* I love NYC...but only to visit and never to live. If it's not on your list for December and you haven't done so yet, visit the UN. Fascinating place. (My son set off the metal detectors there with his braces...great security! LOL)
Loved NYC ... lived for a couple of years in Tudor City across from the UN and later in Greenwich Village on Bank Street, where the only windows showed people's feet as they walked by! Walking is the best way to get around, and my favorite place to escape on a Sunday afternoon was The Cloisters. Clyde
Sounds like such fun! Glad to know you've been having a good time and that you're not sick.




WOW !!
What a lovely, memorable way to propose. It was done with so much love and enthusiasm. Nice to know that love still reigns. God Bless them both.
That was neat, but I wonder if they still got to watch the movie? =)
Romance lives. That was pure delight!!! Clyde
Ellen DeGeneres' staff showed her this video, so she had them on the show, and then gave them, among other things, an all expense paid honeymoon in Montego Bay, Jamaica.
Seriously cool.
This is epic! No one has ever done this before, only Matt got this idea. He's a legend!


Well, if this can happen, you'd think I could get my dog to stop trying to kill the cat!
We're too highly evolved ... for what it's worth. Clyde


She is AWESOME!! (And brave too to go on a show like that.)
FANTASTIC! Oh, to be able to move like that. Clyde
Inspiring!!!!! New goal: be on Simon's X Factor before age 50 if the show stays around that long. ;-)




awww. i am more of a cat person and dogs trigger my allergies more. we just lost one dog (the one who won the prize for your dress up contest a couple of years ago) and have one dog. have two cats and tried to add another one once but one cat is VERY territorial!! would like more cats but not while this one reigns.
I had seen the episode of Regis when we first got our mastiff. Shadrach is a smaller mastiff though, only weighing 190. He's very sociable, but he loves to run up to and bark at the neighborhood kids. Until they know, it scares the fire out of them. But he's very gentle with them ... as long as you don't get close to the wagging tail. That thing hurts!
Awwwwwwwwwww ... I want them ALL! Love the picture of the paw and the hand. Reminds me of Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel mural. Clyde


t an easy thing to move a mastiff that doesn't want to move. Then Hercules' owner stepped in and hefted the big boy up on the scale.
How sweet! Dogs are the best and I'm SO glad to see you're a dog person. That makes me like you even more! As soon as I'm finished typing this, I'm going to go hug my "Kira" - a sweet husky/dingo mix.
I just finished reading "The Awakening" - such an encouraging gripping story. I'm looking forward to reading a lot more of your work!
Just had to crow about seeing you and your handsome hubby and handsome Justus live on that show! I remember it well!
BJ
l can't believe l missed your appearance on Regis and Kelly! l love that show ... and would have loved seeing that segment. l wonder how your "baby" and my "baby" would do together? Jenni is an 8 pound Yorkie and does not think she is a dog, am sure you know what l mean. She loves watching TV and barks at all the dogs and birds too ... we also have a cockatiel, Peepers! She just lost her buddy, Smokey, a 12-year old long haired cat ... after a long battle of health adventures. She still looks for her each and every day. lt ls just too sad! l hope to see the clip and your "baby" .... yours in Christ, Dianne
I'm sure you miss him terribly, Angie. Our daugther had two great Danes we all love dearly. Just took a pic of my husband with Chupa on his lap - well, sort of. Chupa backs up to you and sits down with his front paws still on the floor. You can see a pic on my husband's fb page - just search for Spence Laycock. :)Marcia


I am so very excited and honored to have won - definately made my day a happy one!
Congrats to all the other winners...and thank you for this great contest :)
CONGRATULATIONS to all the winners. Enjoy!
And thanks, Angie, for fun slide shows. Wishing you wild success with INSINCERITY.
Blessings,
Mary Kay
Angie!!!!!! Grace Mullaney is my oldest daughter and she is pictured with her sister Katie. Their photo: I think they took the pictures with Katie's Macbook Pro and then put it into a style like the booth you sit in and have your picture taken whether you are ready or not. The girls met you in a library in Florida when we lived down there(2006). They were teens and took a road trip with Daddy to go meet you. (Florida is not a small state) The two of them are now in college.
I had no idea that Grace had even entered the contest! What a blessed Mummy I am, that my kids do indeed love one another. My heart overflows with gratitude.
Thanks for making my day!
Catherine
Catherine, I remember meeting your daughters and hubby! I was so impressed--and humbled--that they would have driven so far just to come to the library.
I love, love that Grace was one of the winners. Very cool.
You are blessed indeed!
Angie


I am happy, happy (considering that I've been on a cooking/baking kick lately) to welcome my friend Rachel Hauck who will tell us about her new book, Dining with Joy.
And now, heeeeeeeere's Rachel!
Thanks for having me today!
I’m no genius in the kitchen, but my heroine, Joy Ballard, finds herself doing a job she can’t do for all the right reasons. She’s a cooking show host who can’t cook!
When I started this book, that premise got a good laugh from those who heard it. Then, I’d ask, “But what’s that story about?”
The person would shrug. “I don’t know.”
“Yeah, me neither.”
I had to ask a lot of questions about what a woman hosts a cooking show when she can’t so much as fry eggs. I didn’t want an insincere, lying heroine. She’s not a manipulator or conniver.
Joy simply found herself filling a job she was asked to do – by her father. She was great in front of the camera. Just not behind the stove.
Not long ago, I stood on stage at church with my worship team praying before the service started. Head back, eyes close, I said in my heart, “Lord, help us. You have to help me. I’m so weak in leading worship. I cannot do it without You.”
While I’m a decent singer, and I can lead the people to worship Jesus, I’m not a musician. I’m not one who can skillfully bring the band and the worship sound together. And until I found myself with a “starting over” band, I never realized how gaping this weakness was for me.
Again, I went to the Lord. “Why can’t You find a good worship leader for church? Why can’t you help me be a more successful writer? I see people who are good at what they do, succeeding.”
This is what He said to me. “… most people won’t give me their weaknesses.”
I was stopped cold. I understood that a lot of times God invites us on a journey to participate with Him in some aspect of our lives or others, but because we are not good at that thing, or because we are weak with fear or shame or whatever, we say no.
It’s in our weaknesses His strength is manifest. God is not looking for mighty men and women, He’s looking for weak men and women in which HE can show His might.
Don’t misunderstand, God loves excellence, skill and devotion. While leading worship practices, I have to be excellent as I can be to bring the team and songs together.
I’ll never have a recording or national ministry as a worship leader, but for our little church in Florida, I’m God’s girl. For now.
That, in some ways, is Joy’s journey. She said yes to her father’s desire.
Can we say “Yes?” to our Father’s desire for us? Offer Him all of our strengths AND weaknesses? He’s more than willing to overcome.
In my story, Joy’s secret is revealed and takes a pretty good tumble, but love is waiting to catch her. In the form of cowboy chef and hero, Luke Redmond.
Sigh… Love wins.
One of the things Joy discovers along the way is her father’s banana bread recipe. It’s delish!
Here it is:
Charles Ballard’s Banana Bread
From Connie Spangler
1 3/4 cups flour
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1t. baking soda
1/2t. salt
1/2t. cinnamon
2 eggs
3 mashed ripe bananas
1/2 cup oil (I use canola)
1/4 cup plus 1 T. buttermilk
1t. vanilla
1/2 cup choc. chips
1/2 cup p.butter chips
In a large bowl stir together flour, sugars, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon. In another bowl, combine eggs, bananas, oil, buttermilk and vanilla. Add to flour mixture, stirring just until moistened. Fold in chips. Pour into a greased 9-in. x 3-in. loaf pan. Bake at 325 for 1 hour and 20 minutes or until it tests done. Cool on a rack 10 minutes before removing from pan.
Tips for baking banana bread:
DON'T over mix the batter, just until moistened. Banana bread is always best if after its cooled to wrap up and serve the next day.
ENJOY!
Rachel lives in central Florida with her husband and writes books from the second floor of what she calls her “turret tower.” A gift from the Lord. Besides “Dining with Joy,” Rachel has written fourteen other novels. Also out is “Softly and Tenderly” which Rachel wrote with country artist, Sara Evans.
Visit her web site at www.rachelhauck.com
~~Angie
P.S. Tomorrow we announce the winners of the SHARE IT WITH A SISTER contest, so be SURE to stop by!

"most men won't give me their weaknesses"...
a quote I never want to forget.
Powerful...
deep...
full of hope!
Thank you Angie!
What a powerful message, Rach! Thank you so much for your transparency. Although I prefer banana bread barely out of the oven slathered in butter! And by the way, I'm on a cooking kick lately too.
My first time stopping here, and I really loved it. :) Rachel, thanks for sharing your story with openness and depth. I am going to remember what you said, and be humble enough to bring my weaknesses before the Lord. Thanks, Ladies!



... fortunately, this will be easy for you, since this is exactly what you are already doing. It's what "Expect the Unexpected" is all about. I am amazed when I look at your titles in my bookcase and see the diversity of topics represented therein. Your curiosity has led to some awesome stories. Write on, friend. We, your devoted fans, will gobble up each new tome! Clyde
Awwww, the computer threw in triple comments again. I HATE my new computer.
LOL, Clyde. At last you know it's working!
Hint: I think you can adjust the sensitivity on your mouse. Or keyboard. Or whatever's giving you fits. I have a laptop that tends to double strike individual keys.
Great quote. Worthy challenge. Made possible with recent changes in the publishing industry. Before, you had to convince a publisher to share your dream. No easy task. While many fear a drop in literary quality with ebooks, is it possible that we may be on the threshold of some truly bold and courageous new voices?
Tremendously encouraging thoughts, Angie and Jack. And I'm with Clyde. You are an amazing trailblazer, Angie. Keep it up!
Blessings,
Mary Kay


Congratulations to the both of you! It's a sad commentary on our society to say that you two are rather rare to be married over 30 years. Hope you become more rare than ever!
Happy Anniversary to you both! What a sweet gift--and role model. Way to go, Gary!
Blessings for many more happy years together~ Mary Kay
How wonderful! Celebrate with joy! Ron and I have been married almost 37 years. I pray you both will continue to be blessed!




Another sister book! Fun!
I can't wait to read it! That pig in the reailer was a hoot!






What a testimony of the power of parental love. May God continually bless and preserve this family is my prayer.
Psalms 31:19-20 NKJV Oh, how great is Your goodness, Which You have laid up for those who fear You, Which You have prepared for those who trust in You In the presence of the sons of men! {20} You shall hide them in the secret place of Your presence From the plots of man; You shall keep them secretly in a pavilion From the strife of tongues.
What a beautiful story of parental love and unrelenting determination. Reminds me of Winston Churchill's "Never Give Up!" advice. How very much I admire this wonderful family for having the strength to help this little girl unlock herself. Powerful! Thanks, Angie. Clyde
What a beautiful story of parental love and unrelenting determination. Reminds me of Winston Churchill's "Never Give Up!" advice. How very much I admire this wonderful family for having the strength to help this little girl unlock herself. Powerful! Thanks, Angie. Clyde
Rarely am I moved to tears by "feel good" stories but not this time. The tears have been flowing as I see the incredible love of Carly's parents and the unbelieveable gift Carly has. It's amazing to see how articulate she is. Where did that come from? God, I guess.
And what a breakthrough for those who work with autistic children! They can now understand classic autistic behavior and maybe find new ways to get through to these kids! The potential is endless. The only thing is that I wish Carly and other autistic kids didn't suffer the way they do.
Wow! More prayers than ever are needed!


Loved reading the Q&As.
My sister has just gone on disability with Early Onset Alzheimer's. She's only 57 and thinks she's in early stage, but she's much more advanced than she realizes. So hard to watch. She and I have been the closest and I'm the one who will be responsible for her care. (She never married.)
Thank you for taking the time for Q&A. I learned so much.
Miriam
p.s.-- Happy Mother's Day!

Photo: St. Simons is famous for its marshes. 
I can't imagine the "thick skin" required for the editing process. "Here's my baby - tell me how to make it better."
And from the editor's side, to be able to be honest and kind. . .and not intimidated by the Best Selling Author's Name on the front, especially with things like "tightening prose." I can edit grammar and spelling and continuity 'til the cows come home with no problem, but the other would make me a bit nervous. I'm sure some authors are less than stellar to work with too - I would imagine there are some divas out there that don't take suggestion very well.
Have your sisters read the book and what was their response? (Because sisters can be our biggest fans and our worst critics!)
Hi Angie...
I'm learning so much from you. I am curious about keeping the two pov straight; it's what I'm struggling with myself. Could you please give a bit more detail on that process? Thanks!
Crystal
Angie,
Thanks for your honesty and insight into what it's like to be edited. On a similar subject, my critique group has been wondering if there is a good resource for specific steps in peer critique, so we get the best bang for our voluntary buck. Any advice?
Blessings on all your projects, loving the step by step writer's diary format!
Bev
I totally agree about the need to have the "right" editor. And for us unpubs, the right one doesn't have to be a professional. I've found a great (peer) critique partner who understands where I'm going, likes where I'm going, and give me advice on getting there that's pro quality. This guy (Alan Oathout) could make a living at this editing business, if he weren't so busy writing his first novel himself.
Angie, I loved this book. Maybe because I know your sisters and your mother very well. My daughter is now reading it on her Kindle and she can't put it down. Thank you for being such an excellent writer as I've read most of your books and I loved every one of them. I can't wait for the next one. Carolyn

Photo: Yes, St. Simons is a real island off the coast of Georgia. It has a light house and expensive real estate, as you might imagine. 
Sounds like you had to be a bit schizophrenic writing this book LOL
Can't wait to read it.
Since you told us about this one when it was a WIP, you wrote the one about the train trip, and I think I had them a little mixed up initially. Does the train one have a title yet? When will it come out?
Angie, I set aside the book I was reading and started The Fine Art of Insincerity last night. I read half of it in the first sitting and didn't want to put it down. The hubs made me. LOL Boy, is this one a good read!!!
Bless you, Ane--I haven't heard from many readers yet, so this is encouraging. And Linda, I'm going to save your question for Q&A day . . . so I'll have something to talk about! :-)
Angie
Okay, I read some stories a few years ago that all took place at St. Simon's and I loved theml.
Ever since that, I have been intrigued with anything regarding that island. I can't wait.
St Simons Island is a place I really want to visit. After reading Eugenia Price's books I feel like I know everyone buried there!
I love St. Simon's Island! Walking through the cemetery I was amazed that I recognized so many names. It is a great place to visit!
Well, you might want to save this for Q&A day -- how did you handle it when the three sisters talked all at the same time? Especially when they might not agree on how to handle(d) a situation.
Miriam

Researching family was fun--and simply a matter of getting people together. So since my mom and her sisters love St. Simons Island, I rented a beach house for the week (the house in the photo), and invited my mom, my aunt Irene (in the photo), and my cousin Ginger. (And no, the "Ginger" in the book has nothing to do with my Cousin Ginger.) 
I've wanted to visit St. Simon's Island ever since I read Eugenia Price's series of books! That house looks like the perfect getaway!
What a quaint cottage. It sounds like a delightful time, Angie.
When I was a young girl I remember sitting with my grandmother and great aunts talking about their days while sipping coffee. Of course, I had my own cup of coffee (probably more cream than coffee:) and asking them to tell me about what it was like growing up when they were younger. No matter how many times I asked they would share their memories with me. Laughter was shared and slight differences of opinions of exactly what happened filled my ears with delight. They are dear treasures and I am thankful for each one. They are all with Jesus now and I miss them so much.
Thank you, Angie, for this time to reflect. I really want to read your new novel.
Miriam (fb)


Oooh! I was thinking today that it's finally May and I can order this! Can't wait!
Gotta get back in my blog-reading groove and come read these BOM posts!
Mine arrived yesterday and I can't wait to dive into it!!! This story is my favorite kind of book. :o]
...and I just received notification that my copy has been sent. I should get it within the week. I want to read it before you finish the "book of the month" information is completed. :-)


It's been a long time since we had a book-of-the-month, but we're back in business! Over the next week, we'll be walking through the idea, the writing, the research, etc., so I hope you enjoy it!
--Angie
The Fine Art of Insincerity
Three Southern sisters with nine marriages between them — and more looming on the horizon – travel to St. Simons Island to empty their late grandmother’s house. Ginger, the eldest, wonders if she’s the only one who hasn’t inherited what their family calls “the Grandma Gene”— the tendency to enjoy the casualness of courtship more than the intimacy of marriage. Could it be that her sisters are fated to serially marry, just like their seven-times wed grandmother, Lillian Irene Harper Winslow Goldstein Carey James Bobrinski Gordon George? It takes a “girls only” weekend, closing up Grandma’s memory-filled beach cottage for the last time, for the sisters to unpack their family baggage, examine their relationship DNA, and discover the true legacy their much-marrying grandmother left behind.
The Fine Art of Insincerity is a stunning masterpiece. I was pulled into the lives of Ginger, Pennyroyal and Rosemary--sisters touched by tragedy, coping in their own ways. So real, so powerful. Pull out the tissues! This one will make you cry, laugh, and smile. I recommend it highly. --Traci DePree, author of The Lake Emily series
“Only Angela Hunt could write a relationship novel that’s a page-turner! As one of three sisters, I can promise you this: Ginger, Penny, and Rose Lawrence ring very true indeed. Their flaws and strengths make them different, yet their shared experiences and tender feelings make them family. From one crisis to the next, the Lawrence sisters are pulled apart, then knit back together, taking me right along with them. I worried about Ginger one moment, then Penny, and always Rose—a sure sign of a good novel, engaging both mind and heart. Come spend the weekend in coastal Georgia with three women who clean house in more ways than one!”
Liz Curtis Higgs, best-selling author of Here Burns My Candle
THE FINE ART OF INSINCERITY
ANGELA HUNT
Prologue
Ginger
“You can’t tell your sisters,” my grandmother once told me, “what I’m about to tell you.”
I listened, eyes big, heart open wide.
“Of all my grandchildren—” her hands spread as if to encompass a crowd infinitely larger than myself and my two siblings—“you’re my favorite.”
Then her arms enfolded me and I breathed in the scents of Shalimar and talcum powder as my face pressed the crepey softness of her cheek.
My grandmother married seven times, but not until I hit age ten or eleven did I realize that her accomplishment wasn’t necessarily praiseworthy. When Grandmother’s last husband died on her eighty-third birthday, she mentioned the possibility of marrying again, but I put my foot down and told her no more weddings. I suspect my edict suited her fine, because Grandmom always liked flirting better than marrying.
Later, one of the nurses at the home mentioned that my grandmother exhibited a charming personality quirk—“Perpetual Childhood Disorder,” she called it. PCD, all too common among elderly patients with dementia.
But Grandmother didn’t have dementia, and she had exhibited symptoms of PCD all her life. Though I didn’t know how to describe it in my younger years, I used to consider it a really fine quality.
During the summers when Daddy shipped me and my sisters off to Grandmom’s house, she used to wait until Rose and Penny were absorbed in their games, then she would call me into the blue bedroom upstairs. Sometimes she’d let me sort through the glass beaded “earbobs” in her jewelry box. Sometimes she’d sing to me. Sometimes she’d pull her lace-trimmed hanky from her pocketbook, fold it in half twice, and tell me the story of the well-dressed woman who sat on a bench and fell over backward. Then she’d flip her folded hankie and gleefully lift the woman’s skirt and petticoat, exposing two beribboned legs.
No matter how large her audience, the woman knew how to entertain.
I perched on the edge of the big iron bed and listened to her songs and stories, her earbobs clipped to the tender lobes of my ears, enduring the painful pinch because Grandmother said a woman had to suffer before she could be beautiful. Before I pulled off the torturous earbobs and left the room, she would draw me close and swear that out of all the girls in the world, I was the one she loved most.
Not until years later did I learn that she drew my sisters aside in the same way. I suppose she wanted to make sure we motherless girls knew we were treasured. But in those moments, I always felt truly special.
And for far too long, I believed her.
© 2012 by Angela Hunt, used by permission. Do not reprint without permission. For more information, visit www.angelahuntbooks.com
To order: www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1439182035/booksbyangelae0d



In no particular order, Angela Hunt is a novelist, teacher, nana, mother, wife, mastiff owner, reader, musician, student, aspiring theologian, and bubble gum connoisseur. The things that enter her life sooner or later find their way into her books, hence "a life in pages."



Nice to see the city through your eyes, Angie. Good to see the progress at the WTC site. And hear of one place where prices have gone down--the SI ferry. What a surprise.
Hoping you and Terri continue having a ball!
Blessings,
Mary Kay
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