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Bookworm Lisa~: Blog Tour ~ Review of "Mattie" by M. Ann Rohrer
Bookworm Lisa~: Blog Tour ~ Review of "Mattie" by M. Ann Rohrer : Mattie by M. Ann Rohrer My rating: 4 of 5 stars Source: Netga...
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Reaching Across The Isle
Reaching across the isle goes both ways. Some how it is expected that only our more conservative congresspeople compromise and do the reaching. When the Democrats dig in and hold their ground it's heralded by the media as political sagacity. Let the Republican side of the isle take the same action, and it's called stonewalling, divisive, do nothing.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
MATTIE
Can it be? My first book, MATTIE, is going to print January 9, release date, March 12, 2013 I'm afraid I'll wake from this wonderful dream. It's well worth the humiliation of asking authors for endorsements, scheduling book signings, attending book signings. Ugh! I do enjoy working with the wonderful folks at Cedar Fort who are making it all possible. Taking one small bite at a time of the elephant makes the overwhelming project achievable. The cover is a first draft. The little girl holding a solitary flower encapsulates all that is Mattie, just a bit lost, just a bit lonely.
MATTIE
MATTIE
Born in Colonia Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, nine-year-old Mattie’s faith in God is shattered when her father dies. At age eighteen, moving to Bisbee, Arizona to live with her sister and husband, Mattie falls in love with a handsome banker from Texas. Tragedy strikes plunging her into an abyss of dark despair. At her lowest ebb, Mattie discovers that though she may have left God, He never left her.
Alonzo Skousen, Mattie’s childhood sweetheart, a tall, good-natured red head, wants to collect on her old promise to marry him. Enos Wood, the handsome, dark eyed, gun-packing nemesis of her youth, leaves no doubt that he too has designs on her heart. Mattie learns that trusting God is not without its trials and can lead to grief, especially when the Mexico Revolution threatens her fragile faith and wedded bliss.
Friday, August 24, 2012
GET REAL

What?
She doesn't eat?
Bathe?
Apply makeup?
Okay, maybe she needs just a swipe
of mascara on her long curly lashes that touch her flawless, porcelain skin when
she blinks and only a splash of lip gloss on her full, pouty lips. Maybe she
has a wash and wear hairdo (a myth, by the way). And what female doesn't try on three different outfits agonizing over the five C's of fashion; circumstance, current, color, chassis,( c-word for butt), and complain. Oh, yes, and accessories.
Not to mention that ten minutes into her routine, even a beautiful woman
requires more than a momentary tinkle on the commode.
Thirty minutes, you say? Unless she’s headed for the gym,
garden, or she just doesn’t care,
I DON'T THINK SO.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
BLESSED CHAOS
Six Children, spouses, and thirteen grandchildren; each room
beyond capacity, the overflow sleeping in a truck camper; menus , daily runs to
the grocery store, irregular mealtimes, and constant snacks; disposable cups
assigned and labeled; ice water served from a thermos on the deck to offer
relief for the overworked refrigerator that can’t keep up; constant hum of
washer and drier; late nights, early mornings; swimming, volley ball, a day on
the river; perpetual towels and swim suits draping the deck; smudged gliding
doors, muddy handprints on the white banister, daily vacuuming.
As my friend, Neva Scott says, “Blessed
Chaos.”
And I miss it.
Looking forward to next year.
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Midnight Taco Truck Run
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River Day |
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Baseball Night |
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Family Dance
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One of many swim days |
Sunday, June 17, 2012
HOW DID I GET HERE?
Firmly in the present, life goes on as if it has always been today--the gray, the wrinkles, married with children—who are good parents in their own right, adding twelve to our number with a promise of more. The past fades into obscurity.
Until the next surreal moment when I hover in yesteryear and
wonder how I got here.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY
Early in our marriage, I told my husband I was not his
mother, he was off the hook for Mother’s Day.
Stupid me.
Children don’t do Mother’s Day without parental support, not
even simple things much less breakfast in bed.
No big loss. I don’t even like
eating in bed. It’s messy, and
uncomfortable, and doesn’t allow for seconds. Thanks to school and cub scouts, I received my
first macaroni necklace and a Mother’s Day card decorated with stick figures,
one of which represented me.
IN MY
DREAMS!
My six children got older and remembrances got more
sophisticated—meal prep and clean up, impressive art, flowers, grain mill,
landscaping, interior decorating, and letters of adoration obviously written
about someone else’s mom. Or maybe it
was a wish list.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
MY EARLY MORNING FLIGHT
Barely out of pajamas, eyes
still puffy from lack of sleep, second day hair, cosmetics hurriedly applied. Long
lines at check in counters. Longer lines at security. Like cattle prodded through chutes, we advance
forward, but in silence, smiles buried under stress of hurry up in a long line
of wait. Finally, my turn with the security agent. Produce ID again, shoes off, jacket off, 3
oz liquids exposed in quart-size zip lock, laptop rides alone outside its
protective sleeve. Did I remember everything?
The beeper sounds. No! Cell phone in my pocket. Blast! Back to the
conveyor belt. Deposit phone into tub—not the one with the laptop. Laptop rides
alone, remember. Choose another tub. I
have four. I pick the tub with the
shoes. Back to security booth. Place feet to match painted prints on floor,
arms over my head, hold my breath, not unlike being at the doctor’s office for
my annual pap and mammogram. (Does the x-ray show my red face)? Step through
the booth. No beep. Repack; computer in its sleeve, phone in pocket, reload
shoulder bag, slip on shoes, grab jacket, grab pillow, stack tubs. It’s a race.
While not actually run over by the fellow who follows, he who hesitates hazards
deep sighs and furrowed brows for holding up the dance. Find my gate. Relax. Look
at the schedule. Two hours to departure.
Hurry up and wait.
The departure gate changes twice, but I’m not informed.
The first time, I over hear the attendant telling another passenger. The second time, a half hour before
departure, I sit alone at the gate B93. Something is wrong. I check the Departure board. The gate has been
changed to B52. Heart pounding in my temples, I sprint, twenty five pounds on
one shoulder, ten pounds on the other, a death grip on my pillow. With ten minutes to spare, I’m second to the
last passenger to board. I find my seat.
We don’t leave for another fifteen minutes.
Hurry up and wait.
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