Category Archives: Books

Can Football Fans Help Joe Journeyman?

If you are a football fan, you will love to hunt for Joe Journeyman!

Joe Journeyman Volume 1 tells the story of “NFL legend” Joe Journeyman, “the only player to play for all 32 NFL teams.

Featuring hand-drawn, original artwork, Joe Journeyman takes you on a search adventure as Joe and his friends travel from one NFL team to the next. Readers are challenged to find more than 500 things – including characters, historical and city references, and tons of wild and wacky things – as they explore each NFL team’s two-page spread.

Of course, being the diehard Green Bay Packers fans we are, we loved following Joe on his journey through Titletown.

Joe Journeyman Volume 1 takes you to the homes of the New England Patriots, Baltimore Ravens, Green Bay Packers, Washington Redskins, Detroit Lions, Minnesota Vikings, Houston Texans, Cincinnati Bengals, Chicago Bears, New York Jets, Indianapolis Colts, Buffalo Bills, Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, and Pittsburgh Steelers. 

Not only is this book fun to look through with the kids, adults enjoy it too. There is so much to hunt for and the pictures are just amazing! I’m already looking into getting a copy of the Green Bay Packers spread to display in our rec room when it is done.

If you are a fan of football or are looking for a gift for someone who is, pick up a copy of Joe Journeyman: Volume One today!

 

Sharing the Bread by Pat Zietlow Miller

Even though it is October, I am one of those people who starts to get eager about the holidays the minute October 1st hits. I love fall and everything that comes with it, even books for the kids to enjoy together.

Now, I know Thanksgiving is over a month away but I wanted to share this book with you in time for you to pick it up before the holiday because Sharing The Bread (ages 4-8) is the perfect read-aloud book to celebrate the Thanksgiving tradition.

In this beautiful ode to Thanksgiving, set at the turn of the century, a large family works together to make their special meal. Mama prepares the turkey; Daddy tends the fire; Sister kneads the bread dough; and Brother bastes the bird as it roasts. Everyone—from Grandma and Grandpa to the littlest baby—has a special job to do.

I haven’t shared this book with the kids yet as I want to wait until we get closer to Thanksgiving but I have read through it myself and think it is a great book. From beautiful illustrations to a great story, I know this is a book that my kids will truly enjoy when we do read it.

If you are looking for a book to share with your children this Thanksgiving, definitely give Sharing The Bread a try.

Connecting with The Power of the Heart

*This is a sponsored post for SheSpeaks on behalf of Power of the Heart and Atria Books. I received compensation to write this post, and any opinions expressed are my own, and reflect my actual experience.*

Over the last year, I’ve been doing my best to learn to love myself again.  Loving myself and put me before everyone else is not something that is easy for me to do. As a mom of 5, I always put the needs of my children before my own which has caused me to lose myself over the last few years.

I’ve never considered myself a spiritual person and I have to admit, I’ve had a negative way of thinking most of my adult life.  I have been doing my best to do away with the negativity but it has not been an easy task for me.

 

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Bubble bath and a book. Great way to spend a quiet Sunday night before bed! #poweroftheheart @shespeaksup #loveyourself #partnered #megalomommy

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After spending the last week and a half reading The Power of the Heart by Baptist De Pape, and 18 additional spiritual guides, I have started to get past the negative and find the positive in everything and am doing what I can to create the life that I want. To a lot of people, this might all sound like a load of B.S. but it is amazing how truly inspirational the words of other can be.

 

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Wise words from the amazing Maya Angelou. #poweroftheheart #loveyourself #megalomommy #partnered

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Throughout this book you will find the words from people like Maya Angelou, Deepak Chopra, Jane Goodall and more.

There are different exercises you can complete to help you on your journey as well. If you are the journal keeping type, these exercises will work great for you. I’m not really one to journal but I did for a few of the exercises and it has helped me to better understand who I am and what it is I really want.

If anything, this book has taught me that I really need to get to know myself again and not be afraid of who that person is.

Are you a believer of positive thinking?

One Breath Away by Heather Gudenkauf {Review}

Last February I wrote a review for a book by Heather Gudenkauf that hooked me in and left me wanting more. Well, she has done it again! I recently finished Heather’s newest book, One Breath Away and once again, I was sucked right in.

On a bitter March day, as a sudden snowstorm envelops the small town of Broken Branch, Iowa, an unknown man with a gun enters the town’s only school and takes a classroom of children hostage. As awareness of the situation spreads, the panicked community is ready to do anything to protect their children, but can only watch and wait.

As a teacher with a long career behind her, Evelyn Oliver is ready to enjoy retirement with her loving husband. But now, faced with a crazy man armed with a gun, terrorizing her classroom, she’d rather die than fail to protect any of her students. But why is he doing this? Evelyn’s been scouring her mind but doesn’t recognize the intruder. Maybe one of the students is the key?

Holly Thwaite left Broken Branch and her family behind without a word eighteen years ago, vowing never to return. But after a debilitating accident leaves her recovering in a hospital in Arizona, she’s forced to send her children to her hometown to be looked after by their grandfather, the man she never wanted them to meet. Will Thwaite never understood why his estranged daughter, Holly, ran away all those years ago. But now that her children are in his care, he refuses to fail his daughter again. One way or another, Will is going to get his grandkids, P.J. and Augie, out of that school safely even if he has to go in and get them himself. What Will doesn’t know is that thirteen-year-old Augie is just as determined to rescue her little brother from the killer and help her classmates, even if it means putting herself in the crosshairs of the gunman.

Police officer Meg Barrett wants to know who the intruder is and why he’s doing this. Whoever it is, there’s no excuse for this. Meg should know. She’s had plenty of hardships herself. But with innocent lives at stake, Meg is prepared to risk her own life to save these hostages, although it means disobeying orders and taking on the gunman face-to-face.

As the standoff progresses and the snowstorm rages outside, anxiety and frustration start to build to dangerous levels. But everyone knows how precarious the situation is. One wrong move, even a breath, could have the most devastating of consequences.

This book had me constantly thinking what if this was my life? What if these were my kids?

I loved the way the book flipped from character to character allowing them to share what they were experiencing and feeling at each given moment through the book. I found relate to the characters and the small town life.

I also found this book extremely difficult to put down until I got to the end which once again, left me wanting more.

Disclaimer:  I received an advance copy of this book in exchange for my complete and honest review.

The Minefields by Steven C. Eisner {Review & Blog Tour}

“Here’s your Coke,” she said at last, spilling some of it as she handed it to me. I sighed. Harry seemed not to notice. I bent the straw and slipped it into the cup and watched him drink. I excused myself to go to the bathroom, making it very clear to him that I would be right back.

NAVIGATING THE MIND FIELDS OF FAMILY, LOVE AND ADVERTISING

 The 21st-century business novel has arrived. “I’ve often wondered why there aren’t more strong works of fiction dealing with the business world,” mused New York Times reviewer Bryan Burrough in a recent column he wrote for, Off the Shelf.   Steven C. Eisner heeds Burrough’s call as he shares the champagne victories and bitter-grape defeats of life in advertising, based in part on his own experiences, in his new novel THEMINEFIELDS (When Words Count Press, March 13, 2012).

Situated smack between the cigarette-and-martini days of Mad Men and the nihilism of House of Lies, Eisner paints a classic roman a clef in stinging detail.  Protagonist Sam Spiegel is the Golden Boy with the New York business world at his feet when he is called home to Philadelphia just as he has begun to make his mark. His father, Holocaust survivor Harry Spiegel, is ailing and it’s with reservations that Sam takes on the challenge to grow his father’s firm, Spiegel Communications, into national prominence. The complex themes of the father-and-son relationship, like those found in the works of Chaim Potok and Mario Puzo, are brought vividly to life as Sam and Harry battle over the future of the family legacy.

Following Harry’s death, Sam and his wife and partner, Amy, are determined to create a firm as profitable as it is admired. They agree to hire a financial pit bull as their chief executive officer and an award-winning creative director who had trained under Sam’s own mentor. Before long, Sam realizes that this team of high-priced talent has their own agenda.

Sam’s swift ascent and eventual fall mirrors the events of the author’s life when his homegrown agency, Eisner Communications, fell into serious trouble just weeks after being named the most creative mid-sized advertising agency in America. “The field is precarious by nature – one day you’re up in the clouds and the next the same account can cause you to crash,” says Eisner.

Eisner reveals an insider’s knowledge of the world of advertising in the 1980s and ‘90s, including the Art of the Sell and the Baby Boomer philosophy of play now, pay later that foreshadowed our current economic woes. Sam must reach into his core and connect to his father’s wisdom on survival as he learns that some of his most bitter enemies lie within his own business – and family. Candid, colorful and tinged with humor, this is the business fiction readers have been waiting for.

Overall, I found this book to be quite enjoyable. I have never watched the TV show Mad Men but now knowing that this book was influenced by that show, I may need to check it out.  It was an easy book to get into that grabbed my attention and was a quick read.

Be sure to click on the book cover above to participate in the book tour and find an excerpt every day!

Disclosure:  I received an advanced copy of this book at no cost to me in exchange for my complete and honest review  All thoughts and opinions are my own.