Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Visit the Craftie Ladies of Romance Blog
Drop by http://www.craftieladiesofromance.blogspot. com and read about how I gave God a very good laugh.
Be sure to leave a comment this month if you want to be entered in the drawing for 4 copies of my Love Inspired Historical Romance, Her Patchwork Family.
Merry Christmas! Remember Jesus is the Reason for the Season!
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Lyn Cote's Christmas Miracle
http://loveinspiredauthors.blogspot.com/
Look for this title and read what God did for my family this week. Praise His Holy Name!
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Author Terri Reed & Her Mother-in-Law

My guest today is Terri Reed, another Love Inspired Author. Here's Terri:
"When I think of strong women I think of my mother-in-law. I met her twenty eight years ago. She’s a petite spit fire who raised three kids on her own by working three jobs and doing the best she could to provide for her children. She welcomed me into the family with open arms and taught me how to be strong. Through the years, she’s been the one I turn to when I have questions about kids, health or most anything. She’s lived a hard life, an adventurous life and now an enjoyable life in retirement. She’s the glue that holds her children’s lives together, even though they are adults now. She’s been the best grandmother to her grandchildren and a good friend to me.
As I write this she is undergoing surgery to replace her knee for the second time. The first time was eighteen years ago. Her doctors say she’s strong physically enough at over seventy to come through the procedure well. I’m praying so.
When my mother-in-law found out I wanted to be a writer, she took my husband out and made him buy me a word processor (this was way back before computers) and then when they gave it to me she said, “Now write.”
I started and haven’t looked back. I thank God every day that He brought my husband and my mother-in-law into my life."--Terri
Terri, what a wonderful woman! You have been blessed. Now here's the scoop on Terri's latest Love Inspired Suspense.

NOW YOU SEE THEM, NOW YOU DON’T
When senior citizens start disappearing from a
Boston retirement home at Christmas time, heiress Kristina Worthington is suspicious.
Especially when she fears her beloved grandmother is next. Without
solid evidence, she’s forced to turn to the one police officer who might
listen—her former love, Gabe Burke. Now a seasoned cop, Gabe still
sees her as the rich girl whose family thought he wasn’t good enough.
And though he takes the case, Gabe seems convinced he’s chasing shadows.
Until they start dodging threats, bullets...and their own rekindled feelings.
Terri Reed
http://ladiesofsuspense.blogspot.com/
www.loveinspiredauthors.com
http://craftieladiesofromance.blogspot.com/
Merry Christmas!--Lyn
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Author Homes Tour-Merry Christmas from Lyn Cote
Only weeks ago, autumn blazed outside my window--
Seasons change-winter at the lake...
A special memory of 2009, my son kisses his bride...
Here I am beside our tree (without ornaments yet!)
Merry Christmas from our home to yours! Now go on to Donita K Paul's blog http://dragonbloggin.
PS- Follow this link for a chance to win a basket of books and prizes.
http://www.bookreporter.com/features/holiday_basket_2009/contest.asp
Thursday, December 10, 2009
British Author Veronica Heley Guests Today!

My guest today is Veronica Heley, a British writer of mysteries. I haven't read her books but I am going to --SOON!
Here's Veronica:
"Strong Women…
When the second World War broke out in 1939, we were living in Birmingham, a great manufacturing city in the Midlands of Great Britain. As bombing raids began, my mother took us four girls to lodge with a farmer and his wife in the country, and to go to school with his two children. Fortunately the farmhouse was a large one with two staircases and bedrooms leading off in all directions, but there was no gas or electricity, and the water came down by pipe from a reservoir up the hill.
It was an adventure for us children. For the adults it was something else.
My mother was torn between staying to look after us, and the need to return to Birmingham where my father worked by day in his office, and was an Air Raid Warden by night. My parents slept, when they could, in a damp cellar; the garden was turned over to geese, hens, and vegetables. The strain of the nightly bombing raids was a killer. My father was neither young nor physically very strong. My mother was a strong woman, but the constant anxiety told on her as she shuttled between the two parts of her family.
Back in the country, the house sheltered the farmer and his wife, their two children, an ancient cousin who’d been bombed out of her home, us four girls and our mother, two landgirls – and they were strong women, too – plus the occasional soldier who’d been billeted upon the farmer. Also needing to be fed, but going home at night, were two more men who helped run the farm. There were usually fourteen of us round the table in the dining-room for high tea, though we sat on benches on either side of a long scrubbed wooden table on the flagstoned floor for breakfast. A cooked breakfast, mind!
I wonder now how on earth the farmer’s wife managed, cooking on an open fire with an ancient oven built into the wall beside it, plus a couple of trivets for vegetables and the ever-simmering kettle at the front. There were oil lamps to trim and fill, plus candles at night. There were open fires in the two main rooms downstairs but none upstairs, of course. There were fourteen beds to change, though a woman did come in to help with the washing. On top of all that, the eldest daughter aspired to be one of the first women architects from her university, and succeeded! She was another strong woman.
Now I write about two different heroines, Bea and Ellie, both older women trying to deal with crime today, and I wonder how either of my heroines would have fared in wartime. I can’t quite ‘see’ Ellie Quicke in uniform; perhaps she’d be second-in-command running a canteen or volunteering in a hospital? Bea Abbot is another matter. She’d have been officer material in the armed forces, or perhaps drafted into some secret Ministry of Information work. Perhaps a code-breaking operation?
Ellie would not consider herself a strong woman because she is inclined to underrate herself, though everyone else – except her greedy daughter Diana – thinks she’s a very special person . Bea runs her own domestic agency which does not ‘do’ crime – but occasionally finds itself doing just that. She offers a home to two awkward youngsters, and tries to keep her Member of Parliament son to his marriage vows. Both are Christians and try to act as Christians should. It’s a strength which underlies everything they do. --Veronica Heley
THE ELLIE QUICKE MYSTERIES – Murder in House, Severn House, hb June 09
THE ABBOT AGENCY SERIES – False Pretences, Severn House, hb Dec 09
Veronica, thanks so much for sharing. I think that people were used to working harder with their hands than now. As I said to my children once, "My mother got way more work out of me than I've ever gotten out of both of you!" But that's another story!--Lyn
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
The Final Book Giveaway for 2009, Her Patchwork Family

I hope you all remember that during the month of its release, I give away one copy a week of my latest book. To qualify you must leave a comment and include your email address. (To confound the spammers, write it, using (dot) instead of a period and (at) instead of @.) Or go to my website and click Contact and leave your email address there.
In December, that is Her Patchwork Family which will be released next Tuesday, the 8th. If you want to purchase it, just click its cover to the right. That will take you to my website where you may purchase it.
This is the second in my Gabriel Sisters series for Love Inspired Historical about three Quaker sisters. Each believes she has a mission to help others in the aftermath of the Civil War. Did anyone of you read the first in the series, Her Captain's Heart? This came out last December and told the story of the first sister, Verity.
Personally I think the Gabriel sisters are the liveliest and bravest heroines I've ever written. Nothing gets in their way. Each risks everything even death to carry out her mission from God.
Who is your favorite heroine of mine?
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Interior Designer & Friend Christine Smart Shares Uncommon Good Sense

Hello, my name is Christine Smart. Lyn asked me to share a blog post on surviving the holidays. I must say that having good friends, like Lyn, not only help you get through the Holidays but they help you get through life! Sometimes it’s the prayers and thoughtful words spoken by a friend that bring peace to chaotic times. Lyn knows I’ve had a few!
Here are a few tips that I have learned over the years to help me get through Thanksgiving and Christmas as a peaceful and sane woman.
• Accept where you are at. Let’s face it, not every Christmas is the “Norman Rockwell Christmas” we picture in our heads. Tragedies happen, divorce, deaths, children leaving the nest and all the reminders that go with the loss seem to appear during the holidays. It’s ok to skip some of the “normal” traditions if you aren’t feeling up to it. But, do find a friend to talk to, write in your journal, find a counselor or pastor to help process the feelings. Don’t just stay busy with holiday plans and spending money to avoid dealing with what is going on in your life.
• Remember to take some time each day to just be quiet. Play a relaxing CD in the car while you are out and about. If we don’t take time to pray and listen to God, to fill our minds with uplifting music, we soon find ourselves spinning out of control thinking we are too busy to have a moment of quietness which truly helps to keep our focus on what is most important.
• Stop comparing yourself to others. Envying the neighbor or friend who appears to have it all together is a waste of time and energy. We are all good at putting “masks” on and we really don’t know what is going on behind the “perfectly” decorated house and family.
• Be nice to yourself. Sometimes I have to remove myself from the situation that is stressing me out and talk to myself like I would my best friend. After all if you can’t love yourself how can you love your neighbor as yourself?
• Ask for help! Sometimes as women we think we have to do it all and leave our family out of our plans for the Holidays. Accept the help you get. Your husband may not put away the dishes exactly like you do and that’s ok! Don’t re do it, just let is go and be thankful for the help. There are a lot of great recipes online for help with the big meals at Thanksgiving and Christmas. Check out www.savingdinner.com . The Thanksgiving menu and directions were a huge help to me when suddenly it was my turn to do the turkey and grandma wasn’t there to coach me!
• Sit down as a family and pick 7 things that make it Christmas at your home. Our pastor was doing a series about family and Christmas when my children were in grade school and this tip made a huge difference in my life. Was I ever surprised to learn that our children preferred putting lights up outside our house over making the gingerbread house! I was shocked at the things I had been stressing out about every year that didn’t even matter that much to them. So consult your family and others that are apart of your celebrations and see what they want to do.
Happy Peaceful Holidays!"
Now about Christine and her unique new business venture.
"I started my own business last fall called Designing Moves. I had been working at Ethan Allen and doing very well there with Interior Design Consulting. In early 2008 I started to feel like I would like to volunteer more to help other women and our community after the devastating flood in June. I struggled with God about this for a couple of weeks, it didn’t make sense to me to give up the job I loved and was making decent money at. Needless to say I told God I would see what He had planned for me. Shortly before giving my 2 week notice I had the thought of starting a business to help people move. I had helped my grandparents and in-laws through this process and saw an opportunity to help other families through this overwhelming task.
As I searched on line I discovered there is such a thing as Senior Move Managers and some have been Interior Design Consultants. It was a perfect business for me to start. I’ve been able to keep working with many of my clients with Interior Design Consulting and begin to help people with Move Management. I’ve been able to help clients with unpacking after a move, realizing they moved too much and need to downsize even more, finding the best homes for the items they no longer need, to getting to know the retirement centers in the area, all the way through to estate dispersal. To find a Senior Move Manager in your area go to: www.nasmm.org
Visit Christine Smart at her website. And if you want to learn more about her, drop by her Facebook page.

Christine, wishing you blessings in your new venture and thanks for all that good advice. It helps to get the holidays and what's really important about them straight. And friends like you are rare and wonderful --Lyn









