CCMMagazine.com Forums on Faith Community Network
  Forum Tools
Music Folder

Forums |  Register |  Login |  My Profile |  Inbox |  Address Book |  My Subscription |  My Forums 

Photo Gallery |  Member List |  Search |  Calendars |  FAQ |  TOS |  Disclaimer |  Ticket List |  Log Out | 
  Sponsor

RE: Teton Rambler

 
View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
Users viewing this topic: none
  Printable Version
All Forums >> [General] >> Blog Towne >> RE: Teton Rambler
Jump to post #:
Page: <<   < prev  4 5 6 [7] 8   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 12:12:01 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
I've edited my initial Contest post as follows:


quote:

Except for the above, anything else goes as far as the subject matter (although it just occurred to me because I have some friends with some really wacky senses of humor . . . no children's books neither).
EDITED: Fairy tales and fables that teach "life lessons" are acceptable and will be allowed as entries.


_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 151
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 12:22:43 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
GOAL FOR TODAY




Since today is Sunday, how about we shoot for 12 more?
And, let's say the cutoff time for today's goal is 7:00pm (EST)

That would take us to 51 entries.




_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 152
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 12:54:24 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
I don't know about y'all, but this has really been a lot of fun for me.



I have also found it very interesting to not only see the types of books that y'all are individually submitting, but to also read the various commentaries about the books' subject matters and y'all's opinions on why you think I should read such books. It gives me little glimpses into each of y'all.

BTW, if ya wanna read the commentaries, you can do so over in that ramblin' thread, beginning HERE.




Some people have told me that they're having a hard time coming up with specific titles to submit.

To help y'all along in that process, here's a very non-inclusive list of different types of books:
- Biography
- Autobiography / Memoirs
- History
- Comedy
- Romance
- Drama
- Spiritual
- Inspirational
- Allegories
- Fairy tales and/or fables
- Personal Opinions (by the author)
- Mystery
- Philosophy
- Fantasy
- Books adapted from theatrical plays

etc., etc., etc.


As long as it's not something that I've originally asked not to be submitted, go for it!

.

< Message edited by WhiteRoseBlessings -- 4/6/2008 1:28:54 PM >


_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 153
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 2:59:10 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


40. The Eyes of the Dragon, by Stephen King
"A kingdom is in turmoil as the old king dies and his successor must do battle for the throne."
submitted by armydude

41. Levi's Will, by W. Dale Cramer
submitted by abbreviated

42. Bad Ground by W. Dale Cramer
submitted by abbreviated

43. Summer of Light, by W. Dale Cramer
submitted by abbreviated

44. Sutter's Cross, by W. Dale Cramer
submitted by abbreviated




Thanks again, James!
Thanks, Jackie!



OK y'all . . . 7 more to go to meet today's goal!
Who's next?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 154
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 4:28:30 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


45. How the Irish Saved Civilization, by Thomas Cahill
"In this entertaining and compelling narrative, Thomas Cahill tells the story of how Europe evolved from the classical age of Rome to the medieval era. Without Ireland, the transition could not have taken place." - Barnes & Noble
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

46. Exodus, by Leon Uris
"The creation of the nation of Israel after WWII"
submitted by CouerdeLeon

47. Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte
"19 Century disastrous romance"
submitted by CouerdeLeon

48. Get Out Of That Pit, by Beth Moore
teaching from Beth Moore to women; "deliverance from pit-dwelling"
submitted by singLOUD

NOTE: Mark (singLOUD) is an exceptionally-creative friend.
In giving me his reasons why I should read this book, he listed 3 of them; one of which I just absolutely have to share with y'all.

quote:

Third, If you pick my suggestion, I will send you a copy ABSOLUTELY FREE! This is a bribe, er.. I mean benefit, that as yet, no one else has thought to offer. Plus, if you do not like it, I will refund you every penny you paid for it!! Can't beat a money-back offer like that!!


Now, honesty compels me . . . I am NOT above being bribed persuaded.




Thanks again, Lioness!
Thanks, Mark!


OK; y'all - 3 more entries for today and we've met yet another goal!

Who's next?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 155
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 5:15:55 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


49. Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand
"Integrity, truth, self-sufficiency"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

50. This Present Darkness, by Frank Peretti
"Religion & Spirituality; deals with spiritual warfare the naturnal and the supernatural"
submitted by humbleinspirit



Thanks again, Lioness & Mike!


OK y'all . . . we need just 1 more entry for today.

JUST ONE MORE.


_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 156
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 6:01:09 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


51. Rhett Butler's People, by Donald McCaig
based on "Gone With the Wind"
submitted by kath

52. Rich Mullins: An Arrow Pointing Toward Heaven, by James Bryan Smith
"If you love his music, you'll love reading this."
submitted by kimberlysfrog

53. Tornado in a Junkyard: The Relentless Myth of Darwinism, by James Perloff
"Refuting Darwinism"
submitted by belovedhandmaiden

54. Blessed Child, by Ted Dekker & Bill Bright
submitted by belovedhandmaiden



Thank you Kath and Brenda!
Thanks again, Kimberly!



Who else?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 157
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 6:03:32 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Y'all Did It Again!!!



With an hour to spare and 3 entries over today's goal!

Yay for y'all!





_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 158
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/6/2008 6:06:45 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
I'm taking the rest of the evening off, but will update any new entries tomorrow morning.


Keep those titles coming!

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 159
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/7/2008 7:16:40 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Day 3




55. Crossing to Safety, by Wallace Stegner
"Two couples meet and become lifelong friends"
submitted by crankius

56. Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury
"A futuristic story where books are burned, children are shuffled off, and humanity is lost in the face of technology"
submitted by crankius

57. Cold Mountain, by Charles Frazier
Civil War novel
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

58. How Green Was My Valley, by Richard Llewellyn
Novel of a Welsh mining family
submitted by CoeurdeLeon



NOTE: #59 & #60 were submitted "simply because you need some seriously weird nautical/Newfoundland books in the mix"


59. The Shipping News, by Annie Proulx
"A man with not much to make him memorable returns to his ancestral home in Newfoundland and grows to become quite an interesting character"
submitted by crankius

60. The Bird Artist, by Howard Norman
"Bird artist murders lighthouse keeper, announces it in first paragraph, and then tells the tale"
submitted by crankius



61. Catch Me If You Can, by Stan Redding & Frank W. Abagnale
"Frank Abagnale was one of the most notorious con men, forgers, and escape artists in history. He impersonated a pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and an FBI agent (among others). And the amazing thing is... It's all true!"
submitted by armydude

62. Timeless Passion, by Constance O'Day Flannery
"This is absolutely the best book I have ever read... its about time travel and romance and might be considered a "fluff" book by some, but it is really wonderful"
submitted by belovedhandmaiden

63. Time and Again, by Jack Finney
"The best book on time travel I've ever read, and I've read plenty."
submitted by kath

64. FUP, by Jim Dodge
"Wonderfully drawn characters, with Fup being my favorite animal character ever"
submitted by Kerrlaw1

65. The Shell Seekers, by Rosamund Pilcher
"A great book about a family"
submitted by kath

66. Safely Home, by Randy Alcorn
"Two college friends meet twenty years later in China and find just how differently their lives have been lived"
submitted by monamie

67. Jesus Freaks, Volume I, compiled by DC Talk
"Collection of short biographies of those who have given their lives for the gospel---the ultimate Jesus Freaks"
submitted by monamie

68. Jesus Freaks, Volume II, compiled by DC Talk
"Collection of short biographies of those who have given their lives for the gospel---the ultimate Jesus Freaks"
submitted by monamie




Thanks, Kerr & Mona!
Thanks again, Crankius, Lioness, James, Brenda, Kath,


Who's Next?








edited: I initially neglected to add titles 62-68.

< Message edited by WhiteRoseBlessings -- 4/7/2008 8:05:32 AM >


_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 160
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/7/2008 7:29:19 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
BTW . . . Rhett Butler's People (Book #51; submitted by kath) has the honor of being the FIRST entry in which the book hasn't yet been read by the poster who submitted it.

I like that! Braving the unknown!


~ ~ ~ ~ ~


If you want to enter a title but you're not sure whether it's already been submitted it, you can either PM me or ask me in that ramblin' chat thread. I have the list in a Word document, so I'll be able to easily search for any previously-submitted title. It may take me a couple / few hours to reply, but I definitely will.


~ ~ ~ ~ ~


I'll be updating the blog later today; probably early afternoon (eastern time zone).



~ ~ ~ ~ ~


Y'all are doing a FANTASTIC job! Keep those entries coming!

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 161
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/7/2008 3:11:19 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
No updates so far today.


Are y'all all booked-out?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 162
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/7/2008 3:34:24 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Some fun stats:


Friday night when I started the contest, my blog showed 27,160 hits. As of now, while I'm writing this paricular post, the hits are at 28,210. That's a total of 1,050 hits on this blog since the beginning of this contest.

Wow y'all!


68 book titles have been submitted by 22 posters.

7 have been men; 15 have been women.



Phosadaud has submitted the most entries so far: 10

CouerdeLeon and Kimberlysfrog are tied in 2nd with the most submitted entries: 9, each.




Just thought y'all might like to know.

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 163
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/8/2008 1:19:51 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


69. The Professor and The Madman: A Tale of Murder, Madness and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary, by Simon Winchester
"This is amazing and true. How the Oxford English Dictionary was made is fascinating in itself but how an insane man helped is utterly absorbing"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon


Very intriguing, Lioness; thanks!


Who's Next?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 164
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/8/2008 2:12:54 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


70. Ordeal by Hunger, by George R. Stewart
"I have a fascination for the story of the Donner Party, not because of the cannibalism, but because of the horrendous suffering they endured and the incredible strength of their spirit and courage. These people's story amazes and humbles me."
submitted by CoeurdeLeon



All right y'all . . . with the above post, Lioness is now in the lead of the most entries submitted; EVEN ahead of Phosy.

Kristin . . . are you going to stand for that?








OK, who's next?

What kind of books do YOU like to read?
Submit them as entries so we can get to know you through your titles.

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 165
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/8/2008 11:34:44 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


71. East of Eden, by John Steinbeck
"Novel of two families in California's Salinas Valley"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

72. Adam Bede, by George Eliot
"19th century English novel - Adam Bede is one of my favorite characters. He's a good, moral man who takes it on himself to keep the things and people around him together, regardless of the cost to himself"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon



Please Note:
Books #73-79 will not be part of the drawing, as they are inter-related and dependent upon their successor(s).

However, there's certainly no harm in listing them here for anyone who is interested.



“Dee Henderson, one of the absolute best fiction writers to be found, Christian or secular.”

73. Danger in the Shadows, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

74. The Negotiator, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

75. The Guardian, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

76. The Truth Seeker, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

77. The Protector, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

78. The Healer, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog

79. The Rescuer, by Dee Henderson
submitted by kimberlysfrog




80. The Sojourner, by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
"The story of a second generation Irish/American farm family in New England"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

81. A Farewell to Arms, by Ernest Hemingway
"Set in Italy during WWII - Everyone should read Hemingway and this is the one I cut my teeth on because a friend recommended it to me. It's haunting and stays with you afterward."
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

82. Finding Alice, by Melody Carlson
"I didn't like the ending - a little to neat and tidy for the subject, but it is a good look at schizophrenia and hopefully evokes us all to be compassionate to the mentally ill and less dismissive."
submitted by phosadaud

83. A Place Called Trinity, by Delia Parr
"Follows a midwife in 1833 in Pennsylvania through personal struggles and trials"
submitted by phosadaud

84. The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini
"Story on a young boy living in his home of Afghanistan from the time of the monarchy, to the Russian invasion to America and back to Afghanistan again after the Taliban gains control."
submitted by phosadaud

85. God's Smuggler, by Brother Andrew
"The story of Brother Andrew who smuggled Bibles behind the Iron Curtain in the 50's"
submitted by phosadaud

86. Yank, by Ted Ellsworth
"The memoirs of Ted Ellworth, former Rep. in Iowa. If you love WWII stuff, this is a must-read"
submitted by phosadaud

87. The Practice Effect, by David Brin
"Just a fun sci-fi book with some interesting and unique concepts."
submitted by phosadaud





Thanks again, Lioness, Kimberly & Kristin

Whew!

OK, Who Else?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 166
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/9/2008 10:55:30 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


88. Invasion, by Robin Cook
"A medical thriller about a literal invasion of earth, but not from aliens that come in with guns blazing. This invasion is from a microorganism that takes over one body at a time."
submitted by armydude



Thanks, again, James!




OK, who else?

Any lurkers who haven't submitted yet but want to do so?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 167
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/9/2008 11:00:18 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
One Day Remaining!


Contest will close in 24 hours (plus 1) . . . tomorrow, NOON (EST)





In addition to whose book will be the winning entry, I am also pretty interested to see who will come out as the poster who submitted the most entries.

So far, CoeurdeLeon and phosadaud are neck-in-neck in this regard; both having submitted a whopping total of 16 titles each!

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 168
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/9/2008 11:03:47 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
FINAL GOAL



I like round numbers.

I've decided that I'd like to meet or surpass 100 entries for this contest.


C'mon y'all! Bring me those titles!


Rah Rah Sis Boom Bah . . . and all that other happy stuff


_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 169
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/9/2008 6:45:37 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Remember . . . only 12 more entries till we reach 100!

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 170
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/10/2008 10:24:06 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Updated Entries


89. The Nine Tailors, by Dorothy Sayers
"Wry mystery spiced with quotations of verse and observations about English society" - Barnes & Nobel
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

90. The Remains of the Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro
"The incongruity of the author's name coupled with his complete mastery of the British mind and personality is fun for one thing. This is the story of a "perfect" English butler and his backward look at his service and his doubts about that service. Poignant."
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

91. Blink, by Ted Dekker
submitted by abbreviated

92. Blessed Child, by Ted Dekker
submitted by abbreviated

93. A Man Called Blessed, by Ted Dekker
submitted by abbreviated

94. Iliad, by Homer
"The last year of the war at Troy"
submitted by CoeurdeLeon

95. The Moonstone, by Wilkie Collins
"Gothic detective story"
submitted by CouerdeLeon

96. Life of Pi, by Yann Martel
"It's about a boy, a tiger and the vast Pacific Ocean"
submitted by garsyt’s husband

97. Turning Stones: My Days and Nights with Children at Risk, by Marc Parent
This is a non-fiction choice that is all about the life of a new emergency social worker in New York City, and the children and sometimes horrible situtations they have had to endure.
submitted by garsyt

98. Night, by Elie Wiesel
"All about a boy who grew up during the holocost and spent years in Auschwitz. It's a first hand account and not to be missed. It gives an entirely different look at prison camp life than ANYTHING else out there!"
submitted by garsyt

99. Stones from the River, byUrsula Hegi
"All about small town life in a most trying time and how they triumph and live in humanity and truth!" - from the book's back cover
submitted by garsyt

100. Bee Season, by Mya Goldberg
"Family life with an very bright child that gets all her fathers attention, an absent mother and a brother that is facing his own giants"
submitted by garsyt

101. The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak
"A story narrated by Death - and here's a quote that wraps it up - It's just a small story really, about, among other things: a girl, some words, an accordionist, some fanatical Germans, a Jewish fist fighter, and quite a lot of thievery. . ."
submitted by garsyt

102. Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton
Dinosaur genetic experimentation
submitted by GirlChild (CouerdeLeon's daughter)

103. The Testament, by John Grisham
"It is a story about a will, a family, and a lawyer in need of redemption and finds it in a very strange way. IMHO, this is Grisham's best book by far"
submitted by sjd2008

104. Mistaken Identity, by Don and Susie Van Ryn & Newell, Colleen, and Whitney Cerak
"Meet Laura Van Ryn and Whitney Cerak: one buried under the wrong name, one in a coma and being cared for by the wrong family.
This shocking case of mistaken identity stunned the country and made national news."
submitted by awed

105. The Last Lecture, by Randy Pausch and Jeffrey Zaslow
"Professors are asked to consider their demise and to ruminate on what matters most to them. And while they speak, audiences can't help but mull the same question: What wisdom would we impart to the world if we knew it was our last chance? If we had to vanish tomorrow, what would we want as our legacy?"
submitted by awed

106.The Lady of Milkweed Manor, by Julie Klassen
"It takes place in Regency England, and it's about a Vicar's daughter who ends up in a home for unwed mothers because she's pregnant"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

107. Hansi, the Girl Who Loved the Swastika, by Maria Anne Hirschmann
(some later editions changed “loved” to “left)”
"a young girl in Nazi Germany who joined the Hitler Youth, and how she eventually became a Christian"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

108. Glastonbury, by Donna Flether Crow
"Learn about the Christian history of Glastonbury, England, through fictionalized history. This was an interesting look into the Christian history of England"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

109. Abomination, by Colleen Coble
"Pitting good against evil with a serial killer determined to track down the woman he failed to kill"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

110. Hearts of Fire, produced by The Voice of the Martyrs
"Stories of eight women in the underground church and their great faith, all true"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

111. Knowing God, J.I. Packer
"If you want to know more about God or deepen your knowledge of Him, this is the book to read"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

112. Serving as Senders, by Neal Pirolo
"This is THE book to read about how you can be part of the world missions movement without going out into the field"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

113. A Skeleton in God’s Closet, by Paul L. Maier
"What if it was proven that the resurrection of Christ was a hoax? This is the dilemma facing the hero of this book"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

114. Jungle Pilot, by Russell T. Hitt
"This is the story of Nate Saint, one of the 5 missionaries (Jim Elliot was another) martyred in Ecuador by the Auca indians"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

115. The Circle Trilogy, by Ted Dekker
"This trilogy is intense and fantastic, an awesome view into the great romance of God and believers, sin, death, resurrection, redemption"
submitted by kimberlysfrog

116. The Divine Romance, by Gene Edwards
"Truly the greatest love story ever told"
submitted by kimberlysfrog


117. The Sacred Romance, by John Eldridge and Brent Curtis
"I thought of this book because it parallels much of the idea of romance in Ted Dekker's Circle trilogy, and it's just a good book"
submitted by kimberlysfrog


Thanks Garsy, GirldChild and sjd2008!
Thanks again, Lioness, Jackie, Sharon & Kimberly



Whew! That was a LOT of entries!

Who's Next?

_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 171
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/10/2008 12:07:04 PM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
Ok, y'all, the contest is now closed.


The winner will be announced tomorrow morning.




Thank you to everyone who participated!




_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 172
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/11/2008 6:58:36 AM   
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
And the Winner is:









Entry # 62, submitted by BelovedHandMaiden


62. Timeless Passion, by Constance O'Day Flannery
ISBN: 10:0821736833
ISBN: 13:978-0821736838

This is what Brenda said about this book, over in that ramblin' chat thread . . . The comment about "Time and Again" made me think of this book (by the way, Time and Again is at Amazon). This is absolutely the best book I have ever read... its about time travel and romance and might be considered a "fluff" book by some, but it is really wonderful.




Congratulations, Brenda!



I'll be purchasing the book sometime within the next few days.






This contest has been a lot of fun for me! I hope it has been enjoyable for y'all as well.
Thank you to EVERYONE who participated!!!
I was really amazed at the interest that this contest generated, and stunned at the amount of entries.

Yay, y'all!




Later on today, I'll be letting y'all know just WHO it was that drew the winning number!
A very special person, indeed!



_____________________________

Cleaning Toy Figurines
Post #: 173
RE: Teton Rambler - 4/11/2008 4:01:38 PM  1 votes
WhiteRoseBlessings


Posts: 26322
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: Here, but subject to change . . . stay tuned!
Status: offline
So . . . just who was this VERY SPECIAL PERSON who drew the winning number for the contest?

Well, I'll tell y'all.



But first . . . I must tell you that VERY SPECIAL PERSON gives some of the absolute best hugs and kisses.



Getting back to the focus of this post . . . the sequence of events is that sometime last week I made plans with some wonderful friends to have them come over for dinner.

Then, unrelated to that, last Friday, while browsing through the book & magazine aisle at the grocery store, I came up with the book contest.

Sometime over last weekend, I suddenly realized the most perfect choice of who to draw the winning number.

None other than one of my anticipated dinner guests.




So . . . last night I had the pleasure of sp