Archive for the ‘Author News’ Category

Author Grace Fabian Appearance with Bible Answer Man

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Ambassador International congratulates author Grace Fabian, who is set to appear as a featured guest on the nationally broadcast program Bible Answer Man with Hank Hanegraaff. Fabian will discuss her new book, Outrageous Grace. Fabian also will be having a signing event with Wycliffe Bible Translators in Orlando, FL.

Author Laken Lovely Fulfilled Promise

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Charlie Lovely’s big sister, Ambassador author Laken Lovely, fulfilled an important promise to him on what would have been his 17th birthday, October 30, 2009. Charlie’s inspirational journey as a teen living with cancer, which he asked his big sister to share with the world, is titled Through Charlie’s Eyes and was released at Waldenbooks in Jasper, Alabama. Charlie’s family and friends released balloons in honor of his special day to close the event. The manager of Waldenbooks commented that Charlie’s book launch was the largest they had ever seen at their store. Laken only hopes to continue the success and share Charlie’s story with everyone while supporting his foundation, LiveLovely. For a limited time use coupon code TCE25 to save 25% on your purchase of this new title in the Ambassador International online book store

Author Mimi Keener Signing Event at Barnes&Noble

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On the heels of a multi-city Iowa book launch tour, Ambassador author Mimi Keener signed copies of her new book, The Best of Friends, at two Greenville events this past weekend. The first event was held Friday night at the Barnes and Noble on Woodruff Road. Mimi sold dozens of copies of her book, a children’s book about growing up on an Iowa farm. At the second event Mimi joined other Greenville-based authors on Saturday for a book signing at the Barnes and Noble store on Haywood Road in Greenville. For more information about Mimi Keener and her book The Best of Friends visit www.MimiKeenerBooks.com.

 

Author Laken Lovely shares Through Charlies Eyes Story

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On October 30 Charlie Lovely turned 16. On October 31 he was diagnosed with cancer. Over the following months Charlie chronicled his battle to live both on video and in a journal. Keeping a promise she made to her little brother, Laken Lovely turned his journals into a memoir, telling the world his story, an account told Through Charlies Eyes. The book hits store shelves on October 30, the day Charlie would have turned 17. It is available for pre-order now for $11.99.

Author Mimi Keener Scheduled Events

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Turns out there is an upside to the recession. It pushed new author Mimi Keener to finally make her 30-year-old dream of publishing a book a reality. When she was laid off she decided that she would start a new career as a children’s book author. This week she’s on a six-city tour of Iowa, promoting The Best of Friends, the book that chronicles her life growing up on a farm. You can read more about Mimi’s story in this article published in the Des Moines Register. Mimi has also done interviews with a variety of Iowa radio stations including KXEL and KFMG. Follow Mimi’s tour on her website and pick up a copy of her book on ours!

Ambassador International title The Brontes gets Reviewed by The Official Journal of the Bronte Society

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Ambassador International title The Brontes: Veins Running Fire was recently reviewed in The Official Journal of the Bronte Society. Below is a portion of this review, completed by UK Editor Bob Duckett:

 

The Brontes: Veins Running Fire is a story well told. It is lucid, clearly structured, factually accurate, set well in the context of its time, and provides good psychological insights.

The author’s motive is clearly stated and is pursued with vigour. Bingham reports that he was ‘stung into writing’ by ‘Toby Stephens, who brilliantly played Rochester in the [2006] BBC production, [who] stated that “where modern readers sometimes dislike Jane’s moralizing digressions as the novel’s narrator, this new adaption has relieved her of that.” I was aghas’. Bingham believes Jane Eyre ‘to be one of the most powerful pieces of literature ever written in defense of the sanctity of marriage. It is moralizing at its greatest and most creative level’ (p.15) Anne Bronte’s chapter, ‘The Cottage’, in Agnes Grey is also a fine moral piece of writing. Additionally, Nelly Dean in Wuthering Heights is a strong moralizing influence. On this stance the author is to be commended, not so much that one may (or may not) agree with his viewpoint, but that it was the viewpoint of the Brontes themselves. The Brontes had a strong evangelical Christian upbringing and the author clearly situates them in this context. At times the puritan evangelical background seems overdone, with digressions into the loves of like-minded Christian thinkers such as Charles Simeon and substantial quotations from the likes of Matthew Arnold and Robert Browning. Up to a point, this framing is a strength; it gives the reader the wider cultural context, the context with which the Brontes themselves were familiar and which informed their thinking.

Patrick’s early years in Ireland are well done with good background into the Society of United Irishmen, Betsy Gray (Ulster’s own ‘Joan of Arc’) and the rebels such as Patrick’s own brother, William Brunty. The character and civilizing influence of Thomas Tighe (‘the father of Irish evangelism’) is well contrasted with the general lawlessness of the early eighteenth century. Wesley was friend of Tighe, and there was a spiritual awakening with Lutheranism and Pietism which influenced the young Patrick. These Wesleyan and evangelical connections were strengthened with Patrick’s exposure to the influences of Henry Martin, Charles Simeon, William Wilberforce and the Clapham Sect. We are usefully reminded of the foundation of the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Church Missionary Society, both of which Patrick championed when he moved to the West Riding. We are also reminded, or possibly learn for the first time, that Patrick was offered a post in Matinique but he preferred to evangelize in the needy northern English cities.

Detailed attention is paid to Patrick’s poems and his prose writing – works often glossed over. They demonstrate Patrick’s idealism, his social conscience, and awareness of political events. The Cottage in the Wood is suggested as a seedbed of ideals for the later novels of Patrick’s daughters, with the anti Catholic sentiment in The Maid of Killarney having an influence Charlotte. The Haworth background is well drawn: Grimshaw, Whitfield, Wesley, the Countess of Huntingdon, and the controversy over Patrick’s appointment to the Haworth curcay. Bingham is good on using recent research to describe Haworth as an industrial and cultivated place – not the Gaskell caricature. He has a good understanding of local topography.

The early careers of Charlotte and Anne are well descried, with particular attention to their spiritual crises. ‘Patrick was right at the heart of the reforming evangelical movement’ and the theological niceties between father and daughters are well described. Bingham is sensitive on interpersonal relationships; in particular on the relationship between Patrick and Charlotte where, unlike some recent writers, he suggested Patrick encouraged Charlotte to ‘live a little’ in the early 1850s. Charlotte’s and Patrick’s position on social issues and their views on contempory intellectual debates are charted. Patrick’s work as an active social campaigner is frequently quoted while in 1854 both are found campaigning for Crimean War relief. The Christian message for the twenty-first century is spelled out in the novels: Jane Eyre’[…] is a novel which explores in detail the very nature of Christianity itself, particularly Christian morality’ (p.121) and Villette has a lot more morality in it than I ever suspected!

I enjoyed the read and found the evangelical standpoint refreshing and thought-provoking. ‘[T]he unimaginable fortitude that surfaces in a family facing sorrow upon sorrow, tragedy upon tragedy, is hugely inspiring’ (p.17) Indeed, this is a story well told. I recommend this book and congratulate the author on his initiative.

Author Ruth Ellinger Released a New Book Trailer

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Ambassador International author Ruth Carmichael Ellinger released a new book trailer of her highly successful novels, The Wild Rose of Lancaster and The Wild Rose of Promise. Ruth’s third book, Sword of the Wild Rose, is expected to be released in early 2010.

Don’t miss out on the latest Ambassador International news!

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