You may already be aware I make greeting cards as a hobby.
You may also know I make and donate cards to some community groups. One of those groups is Combat Cards Victoria, which is similar in nature to Operation Write Home (OWH).
Community members make cards that are then sent to our military personnel overseas, which are then used by individual military members to send back to their families. It's a very small way of saying thank you to our troops, and helps them keep in touch with those who mean a lot to them.
I make a variety of cards to send, but particularly birthday: kids, female, and male. I have recently begun making "Miss You" cards, which are very popular, and much sought after.
I recently bought a new embossing folder from Stampin' Up! which fits perfectly for this line of cards. (It's a brand-new folder, and totally gorgeous!)
This was an extremely quick and easy card to make, but I believe, very effective. (The individual heart was cut from a strip of discarded hearts.)
I will be making a variety of these cards to send, because I know how much they will mean to the recipients.
In addition to the above solid colour card, I tried the 'shaving cream' technique for the first time ever, and made the following card using the results. (If you would like to learn more about this technique, go here.)
Thanks for looking!
Til next time,
Links:
My website: www.cheryl-wright.com
Blog: www.cheryl-wright.com/blog
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cherylwrightauthor
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Missing You by Cheryl Wright
Sunday, February 8, 2015
New Releases From Tricia McGill, Ronald Ady Crouch and Books We Love
A Dream For Lani
Beneath Southern Skies, Book 2
By Tricia McGill
Previously published as A Lonely Heart
Beneath Southern Skies, Book 2
By Tricia McGill
Cosseted
all her life, Lani Moore inherits a fortune, but yearns for a loving
family. The chance to grab that arrives when two youngsters talk her
into taking a flat in their house. Their father, Ryan, is enchanted by
the air of intriguing melancholy about his new tenant. Will Lani’s
lonely heart find the love she wants above all else?
Previously published as A Lonely Heart
“I believe this is the best book I have ever read! I probably think
something similar when I finish a book, but I have never before printed
the words. Ms. Tricia McGill keeps enticing us into the story with her
wit and charming manner of writing. Of course, there is love and there
is disaster. The love ebbs and flows and the “near hits and misses” just
tug at the heartstrings. The ending may be predictable (after all, who
wants a bad ending) but the journey is unforgettable! I urge you to read
this winner!” ~ Brenda Talley, TRS
“Tricia McGill’s lonely heiress is so real that when she is being
deliberately willful I just wanted to reach down through the pages and
smack some sense into her. But, I kept reading faster and faster because
after all, in spite of Ryan’s calloused moods, Lani is the heroine, and
things just have to come out happily-ever-after for her.” ~ JoEllen
Conger CTR, 5 Cups
The Weatherman
By Ronald Ady Crouch
When adults tell young men, There is always someone bigger than you, Sam Stephens is the guy at the end of the line. He is a fiercely proud member of the First Nations, serving as a soldier on the front line in the Canadian military, stationed in Afghanistan. Because of his courage and bravery, his close friends call him Warrior. An improvised explosive device is detonated by the Taliban as his convoy is returning to base. His best friend is killed. Sam does not believe in turning the other cheek. His actions save the platoon. Privately he is thought of as Einstein in Rambo's body.
By Ronald Ady Crouch
When adults tell young men, There is always someone bigger than you, Sam Stephens is the guy at the end of the line. He is a fiercely proud member of the First Nations, serving as a soldier on the front line in the Canadian military, stationed in Afghanistan. Because of his courage and bravery, his close friends call him Warrior. An improvised explosive device is detonated by the Taliban as his convoy is returning to base. His best friend is killed. Sam does not believe in turning the other cheek. His actions save the platoon. Privately he is thought of as Einstein in Rambo's body.
Sam joins the Toronto Police. At the Police Academy he is a
force to be reckoned with. When an instructor begins to sexually harass
a beautiful female student, Sam becomes personally involved. On his
first tour of duty with Toronto, he becomes the Subject Officer in an
investigation by the Special Investigations Unit. He remains one step
ahead of them.
On a trip to the red light district, he and his new coach
officer learn that one of the hookers has been badly beaten by four men,
but will not complain to the police. She too is First Nations. Sam
begins his own investigation. When he discovers that the same men are
responsible for the violent rape of a veteran police officer's
daughter, Sam formulates a plan to deal with them himself.
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Romance and Chocolate
Valentine's Day is right around the corner and with
it comes the time to celebrate romance. Although it's unknown where the exact
origin of where the first Valentine festivity began, it's still a favorite
holiday for many people. Especially for those who look forward to the gifts
from a loved one. Say...a beautiful bouquet of flowers and large delicious box
of chocolates.
Chocolates....yum.
When you bite into that scrumptious melt in the mouth chocolate do you
ever think about where it came from? Probably not, but before Nestles, Hershey,
See's and all those that followed you can thank the Olmecs from the Mexico
area. They were the first who discovered the cacao bean to be a delicious
treat.
The Mayans came later. Mayans loved chocolate so much they wrote
about the cacao on their stone tablets referred to as "the food of the
gods".
The Aztecs, 1420-1520 used cacao as currency. It is
written they fed chocolate to their human sacrifices before killing them. A
last treat. Not exactly romantic.
Then when Conquistador Cortez was served a cacao
drink by Aztec Montezuma in 1519, he loved it so much he took it home to Europe
and the love of chocolate quickly spread through Europe.
What have you planned for your special Valentine
Day? Since it falls during the week it might not be as easy as if it fell on a
Saturday of Sunday, but you can still make it special. You can always do the
old standby breakfast in bed. If it's
only a muffin and a glass of juice or a cup of coffee it can still be a nice
surprise. Or a nice dinner for two even if you stop on the way home and pick up
something.
If you have time and want to bake something special
there's always a red velvet cake, or cherry pie. Perhaps cookies cut in the
shape of hearts, or chocolate brownies. We bet your mouth is now watering for a yummy piece
of chocolate, or maybe a chocolate covered strawberry. Now, that's a good idea,
a chocolate covered strawberry. With a glass of bubbly champagne. That's always
special. Scatter rose pedals across the bed. We might be getting a little
carried away. How about just a nice card for your honey and some pretty
flowers. Works for us. But we still want the chocolate.
Here's an easy recipe for a chocolate dessert.
Yummy
Devil’s Food Toffee Trifle Recipe
Ingredients
Duncan Hines Devil's Food Cake Mix
1 cup Kahlua (coffee-flavored, rum-based
liqueur)
1-2 bags of small Heath candy bars (or 8 large Heath
bars)
2 family size whipped topping
Instructions
Bake Devil's Food cake in a 9 x 13 inch
pan the day before you plan to serve the trifle.
After cake has cooled, cut it into
squares about 1½ to 2 inches square.
Leaving cake (sliced up) in the pan,
pour Kahlua all over the top of the cake, getting the liqueur down in-between
the slices.
Cover with plastic wrap and put in
refrigerator overnight.
Next day, 2-4 hours before serving time,
assemble trifle in a large bowl or trifle dish as follows.
Layer of cake (one third of cake)
Layer of whipped topping
Layer of Heath bar
Repeat above layers twice more but only put a light
sprinkling of Heath Bar on the top when completing the last layer.
We shortened this recipe a bit but you can see all the directions along with pictures at: http://betweennapsontheporch.net/yummy-devils-food-toffee-trifle-
Whatever you do we hope you have a wonderful day filled with romance and of course chocolate.
Tia Dani
Visit us at http://bookswelove.net/authors/tia-dani/
Tia Dani
Visit us at http://bookswelove.net/authors/tia-dani/
Friday, February 6, 2015
Publisher Unleashed! In Hawaii!
By Gail Roughton
Jude Pittman and I have a multi-faceted relationship. She’s my publisher, my writing partner, my friend. Our lives have the most fascinating mixture of similarities and differences. The foremost difference is she’s West-Coast Canadian and I’m Deep-South American. The foremost similarities are two-fold. We’re both writers, and we’re both paralegals with extensive legal backgrounds who’ve spent more years in law offices than either of us care to admit. Unlike many cyberspace friends, we’ve actually met. That’s because Jude masterminded a wonderful ten-day vacation to Hawaii (specifically Maui—she’d been offered the use of a friend’s condo for two weeks) last April that included me and her daughter Roxanne, who’s also a Books We Love editor. Roxanne’s also my editor because she refuses to let anybody else edit me. I'm not sure if that's because she loves my books or because she's scared of what I might come up with unsupervised. I protested that no, I couldn’t come. And Jude refused to let me not go. That’s not awkward phrasing. That’s the literal truth. She refused to let me not go. It wasn’t just a vacation, it was a writer’s retreat. An opportunity to brainstorm on our then in-process project, Sisters of Prophecy – Ursula. Then my husband chimed in. “You might not ever get the chance again!” So I went. Jude’s a steam rollin' jauggernaut, an immutable force of nature. Don’t believe me? I can prove it.
Jude Pittman and I have a multi-faceted relationship. She’s my publisher, my writing partner, my friend. Our lives have the most fascinating mixture of similarities and differences. The foremost difference is she’s West-Coast Canadian and I’m Deep-South American. The foremost similarities are two-fold. We’re both writers, and we’re both paralegals with extensive legal backgrounds who’ve spent more years in law offices than either of us care to admit. Unlike many cyberspace friends, we’ve actually met. That’s because Jude masterminded a wonderful ten-day vacation to Hawaii (specifically Maui—she’d been offered the use of a friend’s condo for two weeks) last April that included me and her daughter Roxanne, who’s also a Books We Love editor. Roxanne’s also my editor because she refuses to let anybody else edit me. I'm not sure if that's because she loves my books or because she's scared of what I might come up with unsupervised. I protested that no, I couldn’t come. And Jude refused to let me not go. That’s not awkward phrasing. That’s the literal truth. She refused to let me not go. It wasn’t just a vacation, it was a writer’s retreat. An opportunity to brainstorm on our then in-process project, Sisters of Prophecy – Ursula. Then my husband chimed in. “You might not ever get the chance again!” So I went. Jude’s a steam rollin' jauggernaut, an immutable force of nature. Don’t believe me? I can prove it.



Through all this, our original mini-van driver enjoyed himself
hugely. It was very obvious. He
loved it. The tour company called back and said there’d been a mix-up due
to the on-line booking. (Though I have a
private suspicion the fact that neither the deluxe van nor the Greyhound size
were quite full as things were and the Greyhound would be completely full if
the tours were consolidated, thus obviating the need to run the smaller bus at
all, might have had more to do with it.) But to their credit, they rectified
the situation quickly. The big bus
pulled off without us, and our charming driver of the mini-van pulled off with
the nine people he'd picked up. Thus we enjoyed our own tour in the deluxe van.
With Captain's seats. Jude sat down beside me and said "And
that's why Books We Love has survived when so many other small presses
haven't."

Oh, and as to how much actual writing we got done--well, let's just say we brainstormed a lot. Jude and I can be found at http://bookswelove.net/authors/gail-roughton/ and http://bookswelove.net/authors/jude-pittman/
Labels:
books we love,
Gail Roughton,
Jude Pittman,
Sisters of Prophecy - Ursula,
The Road to Hana,
travel
Thursday, February 5, 2015
That's Egregious! by Jamie Hill
In preparing my blog post about reviews, I was looking for a word that meant something was both good and bad at the same time. (I still haven't put my finger on the word, so if you know what I'm trying to say, hit me up in the comments!) I stumbled upon egregious, which is such a fun word I had to look it up.
Egregious
an egregious mistake; an egregious liar.
Synonyms: gross, outrageous, notorious, shocking.
Egregious is also good for 11 points in Scrabble and 14 points in Words With Friends, bahaha
It's not really what I was after, though. Some reviews are certainly egregious. Some are just plain stinkers. Some are so wonderful they can leave an author floating on air for days.
When I first started writing, reviews were much harder to come by. There were a handful of review sites and they generally had a lengthy waiting list of books to be reviewed. At that time, the e-publishing world was just breaking loose and suddenly there were more books than any site could handle.
Individuals with a love of reading and the ability to use Blogger discovered they could become reviewers, too, and many of my best reviews have come from these smaller sites and/or individuals. Many of them had a code, if a book was a stinker they'd just let it go and not post a really bad review. I appreciate them for doing that, because the bottom line is reviews are subjective. Purely subjective.
Some of the most popular books have gotten plenty of negative reviews, yet they've gone on to become movies, video games, action figures, etc., and earn the author millions. *sigh*
The past few years has shown a rise in the reader reviews at sites like Amazon. It's nice to allow readers to give their opinions, and I don't think there's an author out there who would criticize a genuinely thoughtful review. It might sting, but it might also bring up something for the author to keep in mind when writing the next book.
Family Secrets came out in 2006 the first time, and both of the main characters smoked. It wasn't as big of a deal ten years ago, but man, oh man, are people on me about that now. Many of the reader reviews mentioned how much they hated that Jack and Crystal both smoked. They were serious about it! (I got a little flack about the sex in the book. Okay, most of that was from my mom, but some from readers too. Yet the smoking seemed to be a much bigger concern.) In book two, my hero Brady started out as a smoker and quit by the end. And book three had no main characters who smoked. Zero. My mama didn't raise no dummy. (But I'm still a bit smuttier than she'd like.)
The negative side of Amazon reviews is that a 'reader' doesn't have to have read the book to post. I got one review on a book that's no longer available giving it one star because it was so short, the reader didn't even read it. *Blink* Excuse me?
Here's a couple of reviews for my novella On The Edge. It has several four and five star reviews like this one:
"Surprisingly full story-line for such a short novella. I enjoyed this sweet romance with a good dose of suspense thrown in."
Then there's a one star review that says:
"Hated it. Don't buy it. Worse published book ever. Don't buy this trash. Also very short......BAD. Big disappointment
I read a lot of books and this was the worst."
Her grammar aside, I believe there's a compliment in there somewhere. Amazon has over a million books published at this very moment. If mine is indeed the 'WORSE PUBLISHED BOOK EVER', I want a plaque somewhere with my name on it.
Seriously, what good does a review like that do? Does it tell you why she didn't like the book (which she probably got free on one of the book's promo days)? Does it say anything about the plot or the characters? Or does it, perhaps, say more about the reviewer, who chooses to hide behind the name 'Amazon Customer'. Original, gal. Creative.
My publisher has started a campaign that whenever she sees a nonsense review like the one above, she marks it as 'unhelpful'. This makes it drop lower in the list of reviews and lowers the reviewers 'helpful' percentage. It's not much, but it's something we can do to say that while opinions are subjective--stupid, unhelpful reviews don't have to be tolerated. An author needs to overlook them and move on. Or blog about them for a little comic relief.
I'm still waiting for my plaque, by the way.
Find Family Secrets, On The Edge, my newest novel, Time To Kill, along with my other titles at Books We Love: http://bookswelove.net/authors/jamie-hill/#
Visit my website: http://www.jamiehill.biz/
Follow me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jamie-Hill/135137799867321
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
‘Tis the season for ticks - those tiny ground-dwelling bugs who hang out in the grass so they can attach themselves to a host, hitchhike...
-
To purchase this award-winning series, click here: https://www.bookswelove.net/kavanagh-j-c/ There's blood moons, there's blue mo...
-
my publisher's website Do you like to collect? Author Paula Chaffee Scardamalia, (D...
-
Find my books here Saving Katy Gray is Book 3 of my When Paths Meet trilogy . All three books are about love and the messiness of family...
-
As the school year rolls to a painstakingly slow close, my heart aches for home. My 8th graders are done (and pretty much have been for ab...
-
https://bwlpublishing.ca/loughead-debra/ My home office is a packrat’s dream. And a neat freak’s nightmare. Not just the physical part of ...
-
Creating Fictional Settings for My Stories. I of...
-
I learn something new every day, and what a joy that is. We have new nextdoor-but-one neighbours who recently moved to our small corner of...
-
COMING IN SEPTEMBER 2025 Yes, Winnie Hatherall has solved the crime in this, my first cosy mystery. However, while hammering my way throu...
-
https://books2read.com/Sleuthing-the-Klondike Canada’s Rainforest I am a Canadian and all my mystery, historical, romance, and young adul...