Never Fear!

I remember watching a cartoon when I was a child called “Mighty Mouse.” Just about every day, they sang the song that had as its basic theme to never fear because Mighty Mouse was on his way. Well, in these days of American cities being destroyed, abortion becoming more acceptable, LGBTQ+ agenda being pushed on us and the general mayhem that Covid-19 has brought, we need a hero. Who will it be? 🤔

God is not just sitting around watching all of this happen. He is speaking to our hearts: Help is on the way. Just wait and watch and believe. Jesus, the Lion of Judah, is our hero who will free us from this declining world. I hope that we are all prepared for His coming. I’m not saying He will come back today, or tomorrow, or even next week or next month. He will come when the Father says, “Go!” And we have to already be prepared. The Lion of Judah has been prepared since the beginning of the earth as we know it. Now, we wait for our hero and listen to the words of our loving Father that tell us to have hope and to never fear.

Blessings, my friends, for a day filled with hope and expectation!

Contest Winner

Using the app Random, a winner was chosen this morning for the awesome giveaway of an autographed copy of this book. And the winner is….

Jackie Shepherd

Congratulations, Jackie. Please message me your mailing address.

Many thanks to author Laura Griffin for providing the prize for this giveaway!

This fantastic book is available today, so go to your favorite bookseller, online or in person, and get your copy now!

Review of THE DAZZLING TRUTH by Helen Cullen

For me, this was a book that was difficult at times to stay focused on and to read for long periods of time. That is not to say that it was not a good book. It was a thought-provoking novel that made me think each day of what I had read and ponder its significance to the story and any insights into my own life. The story begins in the present and then goes back almost four decades to the past. Maeve and Murtagh met in Ireland when she was doing an internship in acting and he was a pottery student. The inevitable romance, marriage and motherhood follow, with a great deal of description of the setting and the characters. The author’s ability to help me to visualize the setting of the small island off the Irish coast where the Moone family settled and to empathize with the very deep feelings or each character was a definite strong point of the novel. The tragedy that falls on the family forces them to confront the dark days of the past and to decide to march forward into an unknown future. With themes of depression and the challenges of creating a family together, this novel seemed to wander aimlessly into the past, just as the family members did in their desperate search for a resolution to their hidden past. The story was extremely emotional, with waves of emotion coming from the pages at unexpected times. I cannot say that it was a lovely story because at times the truth was ugly, but the author treated all of the topics with sensitivity and an empathy that made me ponder the whole thing long after I turned the last page. Fans of contemporary fiction will enjoy this book but will want to take time to savor its message.
Disclaimer
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher via Netgalley. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255, “Guides Concerning the Use of Testimonials and Endorsements in Advertising.”

Because of the mature subject matter included in the novel, I would rate this book a hard PG-13.
Author Bio:
HELEN CULLEN wrote her debut novel, The Lost Letters of William Woolf, while completing the Guardian/UEA novel writing program. She holds an MA in Theatre Studies from University College Dublin and is currently studying further at Brunel. Prior to writing full-time, Helen worked in journalism, broadcasting and most recently as a creative events and engagement specialist. Helen is Irish and currently lives in London.
Social Links:Author Website
Twitter: @WordsofHelen
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Facebook: @WordsofHelen
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Excerpt:

Inis Óg: 2005

Murtagh had woken that morning, once again, to an empty bed; the sheets were cool and unruffled on Maeve’s side. He had expected to find her sitting at the kitchen table, wrapped in her hound’s-tooth shawl, pale and thin in the darkness before dawn, a tangle of blue-black hair swept across her high forehead like a crow’s wet wing, her long, matted curls secured in a knot at the nape of her neck with one of her red pencils. He had anticipated how she would start when he appeared in the doorway. How he would ignore, as he always did, the few moments it would take for her dove-grey eyes to turn their focus outward. For the ghosts to leave her in his presence. The kettle would hiss and spit on the stove as he stood behind her wicker chair and rubbed warmth back into her arms, his voice jolly as he gently scolded her for lack of sleep and feigned nonchalance as to its cause.

But Maeve wasn’t sitting at the kitchen table.

Nor was she meditating on the stone step of the back door drinking milk straight from the glass bottle it was delivered in.

She wasn’t dozing on the living-room sofa, the television on but silent, an empty crystal tumbler tucked inside the pocket of her peacock-blue silk dressing gown, the one on which she had painstakingly embroidered a murmuration of starlings in the finest silver thread.

Instead, there was an empty space on the bannister where her coat should have been hanging.

Murtagh opened the front door and flinched at a swarm of spitting raindrops. The blistering wind mocked the threadbare cotton of his pyjamas. He bent his head into the onslaught and pushed forward, dragging the heavy scarlet door behind him. The brass knocker clanged against the wood; he flinched, hoping it had not woken the children. Shivering, he picked a route in his slippers around the muddy puddles spreading across the cobblestoned pathway. Leaning over the wrought-iron gate that separated their own familial island from the winding lane of the island proper, he scanned the dark horizon for a glimpse of Maeve in the faraway glow of a streetlamp.

In the distance, the sea and sky had melted into one anthracite mist, each indiscernible from the other. Sheep huddled together for comfort in Peadar Óg’s field, the waterlogged green that bordered the Moones’ land to the right; the plaintive baying of the animals sounded mournful. Murtagh nodded at them.

There was no sight of Maeve.

As he turned back towards the house he noticed Nollaig watching him from her bedroom window. The eldest daughter, she always seemed to witness the moments her parents had believed—hoped—were cloaked in invisibility, and then remained haunted by what she had seen. Ever since she was a toddler, Murtagh had monitored how her understanding grew, filling her up, and knew it would soon flood her eyes, always so questioning, permanently.

He waved at her as he blew back up the pathway. Later, he would feel the acute pain of finally recognising the prescience his daughter seemed to have absorbed from the womb.

‘How long is she gone?’

Nollaig was now standing before the hallway mirror, her face contorted as she vigorously tried to brush her frizzy mouse-brown hair into shape. She scraped it together into a tight ponytail that thrust from the back of her head as if it were a fox’s brush.

‘Ach, you should leave your gorgeous curls be, Noll,’ her father cajoled, ‘instead of fighting them.’

She smiled at him but slammed the mother-of-pearl hairbrush down on the sideboard.

‘I don’t have curls, I have Brillo pads,’ she sighed. ‘Did she say where she was going?’

Murtagh squeezed his daughter’s arm as he continued into the kitchen. ‘I’m sure your mother is just out for a walk. Happy birthday, love. Lá breithla shona duit.’

He placed a small copper saucepan of water on the range to boil and waved the invitation of an egg at his daughter. She nodded begrudgingly and curled into the green-and-gold striped armchair that sat in front of the stove.

‘With your white nightdress, you could almost pass for the Irish flag,’ he joked, and was gratified with her snort of glee.

He watched the clock hand count three minutes in silence. Expected any moment to hear his soaked wife splash through the door. He was poised, ready to run towards her with a towel and hushed reprimands for her careless wandering, but the boiling, cooling, cupping, cracking and spooning of each egg passed uninterrupted. Nollaig yawned, stretching her arms and legs before her in a stiff salute.

‘Why don’t you go back to bed for an hour?’ Murtagh asked. ‘We’ll all have proper breakfast together later.’

She eyed him with suspicion but acquiesced. ‘If Mam’s not back soon,’ she said, sidling away, ‘come and wake me. Promise? We’ll go out and find her. Remind her what day it is, for God’s sake.’

Murtagh nodded, ushered his daughter out of the kitchen and watched her climb the stairs.

Born on Christmas Eve, twenty years before, she was the only one of their children who came into the world via Galway maternity hospital and not into the impatient arms of Máire O’Dulaigh, the midwife of the island. She resented it; how it made her feel less of a true islander. What was more, the specialness of her own day for individual attention, her birth day, was irrevocably lost in the shared excitement of Christmas. In retrospect, it had been a mistake, perhaps, naming her Nollaig, the Irish for Christmas, and further compounding the association. No nickname had ever stuck, however. She wasn’t the sort of child who inspired others to claim her for their own with the intimacy of a given name.

‘Born ancient,’ her little sister, Sive, always said of her, with bored disdain.

And Murtagh sympathised. Nollaig carried the weight of being the eldest with pained perseverance, heavy responsibilities that were self-imposed. Her mother harboured a not always silent resentment of it, and it seemed only natural, if unfair, that Maeve and Sive gravitated more towards each other; the baby of the family shared her mother’s wit and wildness and often expressed the irritation her mother tried to hide at Nollaig’s sense of duty.

Excerpted from The Dazzling Truth by Helen Cullen, Copyright © 2020 by Helen Cullen. 

Published by Graydon House Books

Contest Until August 25th

Just another reminder that you can still comment on one of my posts about HIDDEN by Laura Griffin and be entered to win an autographed copy. I will choose the winner randomly on August 25th, release day for the book. It’s the first book in a new series by Laura and I read it and loved it!

I gave this book a five-star review because it captured my mind totally.

Two more days to enter! Comment on my blog and throw your name into the hat!

Review of HIDDEN by Laura Griffin and a Contest!!

With a well-written plot with all kinds of clues and red herrings, as a mystery buff, I loved the flow of the story and how absolutely captivating it was. I love all of Laura Griffin’s books and this one was not an exception. The main characters were Jacob Merritt, the lead detective hot on the trail of a hit man, and Bailey Rhoads, a dogged and determined reporter who ignores danger in order to follow the story. The romantic interest between the two of them added to the story and gave me insight into the dilemma faced by a police detective who falls for a reporter. I enjoyed following the clues along with Jacob and Bailey and finding out more about their weaknesses and strengths. I was intrigued by the introduction of the dark and mysterious John Colt and hope to see more of him in future installments of the series. I highly recommend this gripping and fast-paced read to all fans of romantic suspense. I, personally, am really looking forward to more books in the series and I’m very excited that this is the introductory book for future books!
Disclaimer
Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the author. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255, “Guides Concerning the Use of Testimonials and Endorsements in Advertising.”

Definitely a five-star read and a rating of PG because of content. Fascinating new series!
Photo from Laura’s website at lauragriffin.com

Laura Griffin is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than twenty-five books and novellas. Her books have been translated into fourteen languages. Laura is a two-time RITA® Award winner (for Scorched and Whisper of Warning) as well as the recipient of the Daphne du Maurier Award (for Untraceable). Her book Desperate Girls was named one of the Best Books of 2018 by Publishers Weekly. Laura lives in Austin, Texas, where she is working on her next novel. (From lauragriffin.com

Releasing on August 25th. Purchase Links:

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Contest Alert! Laura Griffin will autograph a copy of this new book and send it to the winner. You are entered by commenting on this review. So, enter today! You can enter everyday until release day. I will randomly choose a winner on August 25th and Laura will send out the book. Enter today to win this fantastic romantic suspense. I loved it and I think that you will, too!

“Right now counts forever.” -R.C. Sproul

I almost missed it, and if it had not been for the article by Dr. Dennison, I would have just overlooked the current assault on the minds of our nation’s children. I used to watch a show called “The Wonderful World of Disney” every Sunday night. We only had one television, so we all watched the cartoons, movies and even some dramas as a family. There was not one single objectionable thing about the show, so it was truly “family fare.” Today’s Disney is “Katie, bar the door” kind of programming, especially with its latest show with witches and an openly bi-sexual lead. Say what? Yes, you read that correctly. The show that used to be wholesome now has its own channel that is promoting witchcraft and the LGBTQ+ agenda. For some insight into why that is so awful, I give you the article by Dr. Denison.

Dr. Denison’s Forum August 20, 2020

I am sad to report that two of my children are liberal, so their children will be allowed to watch these shows. After all, the younger ones already are enraptured by the Muppets, gay stars and all. Like Dr. Denison, I’m appalled that such a small percentage of our population can have such a long-lasting and sin-filled effect on our society. Just as I was horrified to learn that Hallmark, also a family-friendly channel supposedly, had a gay wedding last weekend in one of its movies, I cannot express with words how my mind is boggled by these changes in society.

It seems as if this acceptance of sin happened overnight, but like that one bite of the apple in the Garden of Eden, the sin has been an insidious liar and it will take over the minds of our children and grandchildren if we allow it to do so. You may think that there is nothing wrong with homosexuality. But the Holy Bible says otherwise, and it is the firm foundation on which I base my beliefs. Now, to me, it is not just sin; it is a sneaky, slithering snake that is trying to get our children to accept the sin as an acceptable alternative lifestyle. I’m calling it what it is and I hope that you will, too. Sin against God!

May the Lord help us to stand firm against the the onslaught of the enemy. He is truly walking about as a raging lion and the ones he is trying to devour now are our innocent children. “Right now counts forever.” Think about it. Do you want this behavior normalized for our children for all times? Do you realize what that means? Think about it and pray about what you can do to make a difference today.

Be blessed to be a blessing!