SNEAK PEEK | The Making of Isaac Hunt
Linda Leigh Hargrove’s latest title, Loving Cee Cee Johnson, will be released this month. Written Voices will post an interview will Linda in the next few weeks. Check out this excerpt from her first book release, The Making of Isaac Hunt.
Prologue
On an ordinary afternoon in late October I discovered the truth about me. Like fire, that single truth stirred a hunger and created a hurt, but in the end it opened the door to a wholeness beyond my wildest dreams. All in all, I don’t regret embracing that truth. I only regret the time I wasted in running from the freedom that came with it.
I was planning to drive to Richmond that Sunday afternoon a few hours ahead of my parents. I told them I wanted to visit old school friends before our Sunday visit to the rest home where granddaddy stayed.
SNEAK PEEK | How Strong Women Pray
How Strong Women Pray
by Bonnie St. John
(excerpts)
From the Introduction:
People ask me how I got the idea for How Strong Women Pray. Actually, I was praying.
I was sitting on my living room floor in New York City praying one morning several years ago, as was my routine at the time. I had come to a point in my life where I looked forward to these moments I shared with God at the start of every day. Not because anything was particularly wrong. So often, prayer is relegated to moments of dire need. No, praying for me had become a source of well-being, joy, and faith. As I prayed, I would feel physically strengthened – from good to better than good. I remember appreciating how much I had drawn from prayer over the years. Feeling uplifted in the good times and, in bad times, finding the courage to move forward. I knew that learning how to pray was one of the most important things I had ever done.
SNEAK PEEK | Watercolored Pearls
Watercolored Pearls By Stacy Hawkins Adams will be released October 2007.
(An Excerpt)
Today the tears stopped.
The way her mother looked at her this morning told Tawana if she didn’t pull herself together, she’d soon find herself admitted to a local hospital.
SNEAK PEEK | Alek
Alek: From Sudanese Refugee to International Supermodel
By Alek Wek
Since the day she was scouted by a modeling agent while shopping at a London street fair when she was just nineteen, Alek Wek’s life has been nothing short of a fantasy. When she’s not the featured model in print campaigns for hip companies, or gracing the cover of Elle, she is working the runways of Paris, New York, and Milan to model for the world’s leading designers, including Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel. But nothing in her early years prepared her for the life of a model.
Born in Wau, in the southern Sudan, Alek knew only a few years of peace with her family before they were caught up in a ruthless civil war that pitted outlaw militias, the Muslim-dominated government, and southern rebels against each other in a brutal conflict that killed nearly two million people. Here is her daring story of fleeing the war on foot and her escape to London, where her rise from young model to supermodel was all the more notable because of Alek’s non-European looks.
A probe into the Sudanese conflict and an inside look into the life of a most unique supermodel, Alek is a book that will inspire as well as inform.
SNEAK PEEK | Obama: From Promise to Power
Obama: From Promise to Power
By David Mendell
David Mendell has covered Obama since the beginning of his campaign for the Senate and as a result enjoys far�reaching access to the new Senator��both his professional and personal life. He uses this access to paint a very intimate portrait of Obama and his life pre and post Senate, including Obama’s new status as a sex symbol now that going into a crowd to shake hands with constituents carries the added concern of being groped by women, and the toll this has had on his marriage. Mendell also describes the dirty tactics sanctioned by Obama��who has steeped his image and reputation on the ideals of clean politics and good government �� to win his Senate seat by employing David Axelrod, a Chicago�based political consultant (consultant to the John Edwards’s campaign) with what the author describes as “an appetite for the Big Kill.”
Mendell also positions Barack Obama as in fact the Savior of a fumbling Democratic party, who is potentially orchestrating a career in Senate to guarantee him at the very least a vice presidential nod, if not a nod for the top job in 2008. The dream ticket would be Hilary Clinton�Barack Obama given his reception at the Democratic National Convention in 2004. Because he enjoys popularity among Whites (particularly suburban White women) and Blacks, it might not be such a far�fetched idea.
