Tag Archives: The House in the Old Wood

Still time to win a paperback

18 Dec

The House in the Old Wood coverYou still have a few days to enter a drawing for a free paperback of The House in the Old Wood.

The giveaway is going on over at Goodreads. If you’re not familiar with Goodreads, it’s a great community of people who like to read. If you like to read, you should check it out.

Twelve lucky people will receive a free paperback version of the first book of the series, The Day Magic Died. Already, 375 people have entered, but you still have a better-than-3 percent chance of winning one. Those are pretty good odds, all things considered. If my math is right. And please remember, I am a writer, not a mathematician. See, I just proved it: I knew how to spell mathematician.

Anyway, you can enter through Friday, Dec. 20, and I plan to ship the books out on Dec. 26. Sort of like a late Christmas gift. Enter here.

But keep in mind, if you want a paperback and you don’t win one, you can help feed a family. For every December purchase of a paperback or Kindle edition of The House in the Old Wood, Karia’s Path or The Hall of the Prophetess, $1 will go to Rice & Beans Foundation to feed needy families in Nicaragua, where a dollar buys enough rice and beans for a day.

Ten families fed, thanks to you

17 Dec
Thanks!

Thank you!

You are already feeding ten families for a week!

That’s the amount of rice and beans that Rice & Beans Foundation will be able to purchase because you’ve chosen to enjoy the journey this month. In December, $1 from each purchase of any book in my series, The Day Magic Died, is going to feed needy people in Nicaragua. Each dollar provides enough to feed a family for a day.

Think about that for a moment. Already you’ve provided the equivalent of enough rice and beans to feed ten families, not for a day, but for a week each.

We’re past the middle of the month, so I think we’re on track to perhaps feed 15 families for a week by the time we’re done. This is great. Thank you for working together to help others.

But do you think maybe we can push together to feed 20 families?

Would you invite your friends to enjoy the journey and feed a family? Will you encourage them to buy a book this month? Or will you buy a book for them as a gift?

Each purchase in December feeds a family for a day. Please share the journey, and feed lots of families!

How many families can we feed?

9 Dec

I hope you’re enjoying the journey, because we’re already feeding families.

Thanks to all of you who have helped by purchasing books this month. Every book sold is generating $1 so Rice & Beans Foundation can buy rice and beans for needy families in Nicaragua.

And your response has me wondering (in a good way) … how many families can we feed?

Lots – if we help our friends take the journey too.

In fact, that’s the key.

See, I can’t imagine many people buying more than a couple of books this month, for themselves or as gifts. That’s great, but it could be just a start.

You have friends. And if you’re enjoying the journey, you’ll want to take your friends along. I’d like to think that Karia’s world is so compelling that you’ll want to share it with your friends.

Think of it this way:

Want to feed a family for a week? You can, if you and six of your friends each buy a book.

And maybe if enough of us do this, we can feed 100 families for a week.

Want to feed a family for a month? You can, if you and nine of your friends each buy a set of the books.

And maybe if enough of us do this, we could feed 100 families for a month.

There’s a limit to how much each one of us can do. But, if we take the journey together, there are no limits. With a little work, and a little encouragement to your friends, together we can make a huge difference in the lives of needy people in Nicaragua.

So share the journey, and feed lots of families!

Enjoy the journey, and feed a family

2 Dec

What can I give you for Christmas that’s better than a free book?

An opportunity to make a difference.

In December, when you journey into Karia’s world and her quest by purchasing one of my books, you’ll be feeding a family.

Here’s how it works:

For each book in the series The Day Magic Died that is sold in December, I will give $1 to Rice & Beans Foundation of Phoenix, Arizona.

Rice & Beans Foundation will use the money to buy – what else? – rice and beans for needy families in Nicaragua, where $1 will provide enough food for a family for a day.

Why rice and beans?

Well, besides being a nutritious, filling meal, and a staple in Latin America, it’s also a staple for Karia and her family. Remember this from the first book, The House in the Old Wood?

Oh, and there in the back she found jiki, tiny red beans, and kariki, the larger dark red beans her dad liked. …

She remembered all the times he would push back from the table when times were tough and they were eating their tenth or eleventh or even twentieth meal in a row of boiled hinarka and kariki. He’d smile and say, “Failean, if all I have for the rest of my life is hinarka and kariki and you and Karia, I’ll be a happy man.”

And her mom would always reply, “Well, Reva, one day Karia is going to have a family of her own, and you’re going to eat up all the hinarka and kariki, so I hope you’ll be OK with just me!”

She laughed out loud at the memory of them smiling and kissing, then drawing her into their embrace. She wished it was all so simple again.

I think that to Karia, rice and beans – or hinarka and kariki, if you prefer – sort of means family. And the whole concept of making a difference is a big deal to the entire series. That’s why Karia chose to fight back, instead of just giving in to magic. What a great fit.

So this month, buy a book and feed a family:

Another freebie?! Yep

23 Nov

The House in the Old Wood coverDid you miss out on the free ebook? Or do you prefer a paperback? Then this offer is for you.

Pop on over to Goodreads and enter for a chance to receive one of 12 paperbacks of The House in the Old Wood.

If you haven’t joined Goodreads yet, and you like books, you ought to at least give it a try. It’s a great community of readers.