Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Fun Facts--Mother's Day

Amanda and I (Spring 1988)

The modern tradition of Mother's Day was first celebrated in America, in 1908 when Anna Jarvis held a memorial for her mother and then began a campaign to make "Mother's Day' a holiday.

Many celebrations of mothers and motherhood have occurred for thousands of years. Today, Mother's Day is celebrated on various days and in many parts of the world.


Mother's Day through the years and around the World

In the Roman Catholic Church, the holiday is associated with the Virgin Mary.

In Australia, the chrysanthemum (ends in 'mum') is a traditional flower for mothers.

In Belgium, fathers buy croissants and other sweet breads and pastries and bring them to the mother while she is still in bed.

A tradition in Quebec is for men to offer roses or other flowers to the important women in their lives.

In China, the carnation is the most sold flower on Mother's Day.

In 1920s France, the government awarded the Medaille de la Famille to mothers of large families, hoping to encourage population growth.

In Germany, in 1938, the government issued an award called Mutterkreuz (Mother's Cross) with categories that depended on the number of children a mother had. Recipients were compelled to be examined by doctors and social workers according to genetic and racial values considered beneficial. Friends and family were also examined. The mother had to be 'racially and morally fit, German-blooded, genetically healthy, and politically reliable.' Poor housekeeping, smoking, drinking, or even contact with a Jew could disqualify a mother!

Traditionally, mothers have great importance in Indian culture. Special acts are performed to honor them and their contribution to the family.

In Indonesia, surprise parties and competitions (for cooking and kebaya wearing) are held on Mother's Day.


In the Philippines, the mother is called the "light of the household" around which all activities revolve.

The UK celebrates 'Mothering Sunday.' This holiday evolved from the 16th century practice of visiting one's mother church annually, and has mixed together with Mother's Day.

Ancient Greeks and Romans held festivals in honor of the mother goddesses, Rhea




and Cybele.


Mother's Day in the US

Celebrated on the second Sunday in May, Mother's Day is the third most popular card-giving day, and the second most popular gift-giving day. 

Mother's Day accounts for approximately 1/4th of the floral purchases made for holidays.

Pink is the traditional favorite for Mother’s Day flowers. 

Popular plants for Mother's Day

14.6 Billion dollars will be spent on gifts for Mother's Day. 

26,683 jewelry stores will place orders for gifts on Mother's Day. 


Did you know?

Rajo Devi became the oldest woman in recorded history to ever give birth on November 28, 2008 when the 70-year-old delivered a baby girl in India.

Feodor Vassilyev and his first wife, whose name is unknown, holds the record for most children a couple has parented. She gave birth to a total of 69 children. She gave birth to 16 pairs of twins, 7 sets of triplets and 4 sets of quadruplets between 1725 and 1765, in a total of 27 births. 67 of the 69 children born were said to have survived infancy.

Still looking for the perfect gift for Mom?


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Friday, May 3, 2013

Four For Friday--Cinthia Ritchie


Wow! It's Friday! Time just zips by, doesn't it? It's that time again...

Four For Friday is a weekly feature where guest authors choose one of their own characters to complete four sentences. 



Please be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway. You could be the lucky winner of a Kindle copy! 



This week's post is by Cinthia Ritchie from her Adult Fiction novel,








You don’t know me but I’m Carlita Richards. I live in Anchorage, Alaska, with my eight-year-old gifted son, Jay-Jay, and our badly-behaved mutt, Killer Bee. We live in a trailer in Anchorage’s premier trailer park, which means that the lot rent is more expensive than other places and that the owner’s have planted trees, as if to hide the ramshackle mobile homes dotting the landscape.I work as a waitress at Mexico in an Igloo, a popular restaurant that serves darned good food. I’m also a struggling artist and spend nights painting and (I’m blushing), making the erotic dolls I sell to adult Websites to supplement my income.My ex-husband is behind on child support. My sister, Laurel, lives in the expensive area of town and prances around in designer clothes. My best friend, Sandee, is afraid of love and sleeps with too many men.And me? Sometimes the ghost of my Polish grandmother visits. She bakes Polish desserts in my kitchen and tells stories in broken English, and it’s good and warm to have her around. I suppose you could say that I’m lonely, not for companionship, which I have enough of, but for someone to hold my hand and mean it.


1. My favorite flowers are...

sunflowers, because they grow so large and gaudy, and because they remind me of Gramma, who used to say that they grew them back in Poland. I don’t know if this is true or another one of her stories, but she said that she planted a sunflower each time she baked bread, and that when the wind blew the sunflowers swayed like women dancing. Gramma liked to tell stories. She tells me stories still. She creeps inside our trailer late at night as Jay-Jay sleeps and Killer Bee paces the floor (we probably have the only dog in the world with insomnia), and she heaves herself down on the couch and tells stories in her broken English. And such stories! Of soldiers and death and the War, and of happy things, too, like the day she baked her first chrusciki  and how the Russian woman at the market with the bad eye once slipped her a recipe for biskvitnyi abrikosovyi torta, and I listen to these stories, I nod my head and smile, while in the back of my mind sunflowers bend and sway in the wind.


2. This Mother’s Day...

I plan on hiking up Wolverine Peak with my eight-year-old son, Jay-Jay, our badly behaved dog, Killer Bee, my best friend, Sandee, my neighbor and baby sitter, Stephanie, and my pregnant sister, Laurel.
Laurel will whine about getting mud over her shoes and make such a big deal about how tired she is, and forget the fact that she stays home all day (in my home!) reading trashy magazines and watching TV (my TV!). And Sandee will go on and on about her husband, Joe, and all of his game warden stories of bears and wolves and the moose that got stuck in the kiddie swimming pool last year, and Stephanie will interrupt that she’s, like, so totally obsessed with Tobias Wolff and how she might, like, one day get near enough to touch his bald head, and Killer Bee will chase squirrels and roll in stinky dead animal parts and Jay-Jay, son of my heart, child of the sun, will walk ahead, his small shoulders slightly hunched with the indignity of having to endure such family outings.
But once we reach the steep areas we will all shut up, every one of us, we’ll slow down and put one foot in front of the other, and our breaths will gasp and Laurel will mutter and Sandee will clench her teeth, and Stephanie will pick small spruce cones and fill her pockets and when we become tired, Jay-Jay will tell one of his stupid knock-knock jokes and we will all laugh, we will pause and look around at the mountains and the vast sky and, for one small moment, we will feel blessed.


3. The senior prom? 

No, I can’t go there, it was a complete disaster, my date got drunk and threw up on my dress and so I took it off, just flung it over my head and danced in my slip and bare feet until they threw me out, saying I was indecent, can you imagine that? I got a ride home with a football player who was in AA, the only one of us who hadn’t had a drink all night, and when I walked in the door in just my slip my mother, who was half-sloshed on the couch, propped herself up with one arm and exclaimed, in her slurred and blurry voice, that my, didn’t I look beautiful in my wedding gown?

4. Only one more month until Summer... 

I cannot wait. It has been since a long winter, and during winter I spend too much money, I buy things I don’t need but want nevertheless, because in Alaska the sun disappears for long periods and we have only four hours of daylight and the dark presses down and outside is a cold and barren world and no matter what I do I am never completely warm, so I buy things, and I bake, too, Gramma’s old Polish recipes, and I put on weight and I cry too much.
But summer? Oh, summer in Alaska is a dream, a marvel, the sky never truly darkening, the twilight spreading out so that everything is lavender-tinted, and my son Jay-Jay and I hike with the dog past midnight, we sit on top of a mountain ridge and look down, and the whole world is hushed and quiet and sometimes we see things, too, eagles and moose and once, a wolf ran past, loping in that wild stride that caused my throat to ache for something permanent and fierce. When we got home I baked rosemary bread and we sat out on the porch and ate it, slathered with butter, and it was past two o’clock when I finally went to bed and it was still light and ghostly and I felt so inexplicably happy that I hugged the dog’s smelly neck and wept like a baby.


The following is an excerpt from DOLLS BEHAVING BADLY:


Thursday, Sept. 15


        This is my diary, my pathetic little conversation with myself. No doubt I will burn it halfway through. I’ve never been one to finish anything. Mother used to say this was because I was born during a full moon, but like everything she says, it doesn’t make a lick of sense.
          It isn’t even the beginning of the year. Or even the month. It’s not even my birthday. I’m starting, typical of me, impulsively, in the middle of September. I’m starting with the facts.
I’m thirty-eight years old. I’ve slept with nineteen and a half men.
I live in Alaska, not the wild parts but smack in the middle of Anchorage, with the Walmart and Home Depot squatting over streets littered with moose poop.
I’m divorced. Last month my ex-husband paid child support in ptarmigan carcasses, those tiny bones snapping like fingers when I tried to eat them.
I have one son, age eight and already in fourth grade. He is gifted, his teachers gush, remarking how unusual it is for such a child to come out of such unique (meaning underprivileged, meaning single parent, meaning they don’t think I’m very smart) circumstances.
I work as a waitress in a Mexican restaurant. This is a step up: two years ago I was at Denny’s.
Yesterday, I was so worried about money I stayed home from work and tried to drown myself in the bathtub. I sank my head under the water and held my breath, but my face popped up in less than a minute. I tried a second time, but by then my heart wasn’t really in it so I got out, brushed the dog hair off the sofa and plopped down to watch  Oprah on the cable channel.
What happened next was a miracle, like Gramma used to say. No angels sang, of course, and there was none of that ornery church music. Instead, a very tall woman (who might have been an angel if heaven had high ceilings) waved her arms. There were sweat stains under her sweater, and this impressed me so much that I leaned forward; I knew something important was about to happen.
Most of what she said was New Age mumbo-jumbo, but when she mentioned the diary, I pulled myself up and rewrapped the towel around my waist. I knew she was speaking to me, almost as if this was her purpose in life, to make sure these words got directed my way.
She said you didn’t need a fancy one; it didn’t even need a lock, like those little-girl ones I kept as a teenager. A notebook, she said, would work just fine. Or even a bunch of papers stapled together. The important thing was doing it. Committing yourself to paper every day, regardless of whether anything exciting or thought-provoking actually happens.
“Your thoughts are gold,” the giant woman said. “Hold them up to the light and they shine.”
I was crying by then, sobbing into the dog’s neck. It was like a salvation, like those traveling preachers who used to come to town. Mother would never let us go but I snuck out with Julie, who was a Baptist. Those preachers believed, and while we were there in that tent, we did too.
This is what I’m hoping for, that my words will deliver me something. Not the truth, exactly. But solace.



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Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Forgotten--We Have TWO Winners!!


I know, I know, I'm really late choosing a winner. Please accept my apologies! 



There were 33 entries! I know I said we would give away some SWAG if we hit 50 entries, but Mariah is such a sweetheart that she still wants to give the SWAG away also!  

Thanks Mariah!

And now, what you've all been waiting for....Drum roll, please...

 The first prize: a Kindle copy of 

THE FORGOTTEN by Mariah Deitrick
goes to...


Katie Patton Clark!


AND

The second prize: Awesome SWAG

goes to...

Elizabeth Kellough!


Thank you to everyone who participated--especially those of you who commented!

Didn't win? There will be a giveaway every week. Make sure you stay connected so you will know when to enter.


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Friday, April 26, 2013

Four For Friday--Mariah Deitrick

Four For Friday is a weekly feature where guest authors choose one of their own characters to complete four sentences. 

Please be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway. You could be the lucky winner of a Kindle copy! AND if we get 50 or more entries, Mariah is also offering some SWAG! That's right, TWO prizes. So tell your friends to enter. The more, the merrier!

This week's post is by Mariah Deitrick from her novel, THE FORGOTTEN









You could win this Awesome SWAG!


My name is Addaline Walker. I’m sixteen, a student, I work in the gardens, and I’m a participant in Crawford City’s annual Judgment Day. Not fun! That’s when I’ll find out if all my hard work has paid off and I’m worthy to live in the city. If not, I die. Wish me luck! I’ll need it.


1. The best part about Spring is…
The weather. It’s kind of nice not having to worry about heat stroke or frostbite while working outside.

2. I used to believe in the Easter bunny, but then…
Xander and I ate him. Well, we ate a bunny. I’m not sure if it was an Easter bunny or not, but I don’t know the different species of rabbits. Do they have black fur?

3. Most of the clothes in my closet are…
T-shirts and jeans.

4. My favorite social media site is…
Social media site? Is that the places where people gather for celebrations?
I can’t say I have a favorite. The only place we have in Crawford City for stuff like that is where hundreds of children were sentenced to death. It’s not really a good place for parties and chit chat.

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If you'd like to learn more about Mariah and her books, please visit her on FacebookTwitter, or at her Website.

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

UNEXPECTING--We Have a Winner!!


There were 10 entries for a Kindle copy of UNEXPECTED

 Thank you to everyone who participated. 


And now, what you've all been waiting for....Drum roll, please...


SHEILA DEETH!!


Didn't win? There will be a giveaway every week. Make sure you stay connected so you will know when to enter.


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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Behind The Keyboard--Ideas





First comes thought; then organization of that thought, into ideas and plans; then transformation of those plans into reality. The beginning, as you will observe, is in your imagination.~Napoleon Hill  

Ideas can come from anywhere and everywhere. Sometimes they smack you in the head and other times they start as small as an inchworm, niggling at the back of your mind and getting bigger and bigger until there's no more room and it HAS to get out. Eww. You get the idea.




You get ideas from daydreaming. You get ideas from being bored. You get ideas all the time. The only difference between writers and other people is we notice when we're doing it. ~Neil Gaiman 

I usually get my ideas when I'm not looking for one. A pouty model in a magazine ad, an animated couple in the car next to mine while sitting in traffic, or an interesting customer who walks into our repair shop can prompt a character profile. A bit of dialogue or a phrase in a book or movie could become a story line. A photo may conjure a tale all by itself. Even sweeping can spark ideas.




The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function. ~F. Scott Fitzgerald 


Well, I guess I would fail the first-rate-intelligence test. When an idea takes root, I can't concentrate on anything until I get that idea, dialogue, or first sentence in writing. I need to write it down or else it dissipates into the air faster than fog on a sunny day. I have a box full of slips of paper, and notebooks full of partial dialogue and character profiles. 






One can resist the invasion of an army but one cannot resist the invasion of ideas.Victor Hugo 

Once I start writing, don't bother me with work, food or conversation. I don't want to stop until my mind is emptied. Then, until I can see the next scene clearly in my mind, I wash dishes, do laundry, dust, vacuum, and file paperwork in a zombie-like trance with a far-away look in my eyes.





Ideas can be life-changing. Sometimes all you need to open the door is just one more good idea.~Jim Rohn 

And that is why I never let an idea get away. I save all of them. I never know when I might need one.




Where do you get your ideas? What do you do with them?



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Friday, April 19, 2013

Four For Friday--Lori Verni-Fogarsi

Four For Friday is a weekly feature where guest authors choose one of their own characters to complete four sentences. Please be sure to enter the Rafflecopter giveaway. You could be the lucky winner of a Kindle copy!

This week's post is by Lori Verni-Fogarsi from her just-released novel, UNEXPECTING







Hi! My name is Tiny and while my name may sound otherwise, I'm actually a big, giant goofball of a dog. You know, one of those giant, slobbery, brindle dogs like in that 1980s movie with Tom Hanks?




Anyhow, it's been fun being a character in Lori Verni-Fogarsi's novel, "Unexpecting." Alexandra brought me with her after our mom died and she packed up all our things. Shelley and David were kind of surprised when we showed up at the front door and Alexandra announced that we're the daughter and dog that they never knew they had, but they've been really nice to me. Plus, they have this really cute cat named Frick, and even though he's old, he likes to snuggle a lot, just like me. Oh, and he rarely hisses when I slobber on him, which is also a nice bonus!

You can get to know me more in Lori Verni-Fogarsi's new novel, "Unexpecting." 

Denise from A Room To Write asked me some interesting questions, and here are my replies:

Denise: The best part about spring is...

Tiny: Going on more walks! I just love walks, even if people do sometimes mistake me for a pony on a leash. Plus, there are lots of things growing, which I love to pee on, and David takes me to the dog park (even though he doesn't feel so macho when I'm afraid of the other big dogs and prefer to play with the small ones).


Denise: I used to believe in the Easter bunny, but then...

Tiny: I was sniffing around the kitchen on the night before Easter and figured out that there was a BONE in the CABINET! I couldn't believe it! It was right there on the other side of the cabinet door and I couldn't even eat it. But then, they gave me a bone the very next day and said that the Easter bunny brought it... but I could smell that it was the VERY SAME BONE! I don't mind though, I'm just happy I got a bone!


Denise: Most of the clothes in my closet are...

Tiny: Bandanas! Shelley bought them for me in an attempt to keep my slime strings under control, but I still sometimes get slobber on things... especially Shelley's legs for some reason!


Denise: My favorite social media site is...

Tiny: LoriTheAuthor's Facebook page! Because even though she writes novels, she has also written a dog training book and often posts funny and cute pictures of dogs, and interesting articles for dogs to become well-behaved pets. Which is a good thing because then we get more treats! 

____________________________________


Did you know there's a party going on? Lori is having a book release celebration for UNEXPECTING! Stop by her website, enter to win either a Kindle Fire or $100 Amazon cash, and find out how to join in on the fun! 








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