I used random.org to find our winner. Kristen won the copy of These Girls by Sarah Pekkanen. Also stay tuned because there will be more giveaways soon.
Have you ever wondered how Writer’s Corner came to be? A blogger friend recently asked why did you start your blog? I once said that I would never blog or write. I was in a job search at the time and it was not going anywhere. So I decided that I would work on my writing. I found a nonpaying writing position with chicklitclub.com . I started Writer’s Corner initially to practice what I wrote for that site. The next part of the journey was meeting some great ladies that some of you know well Samantha Janning at Chick Lit Plus , Melissa Amster and Amy Bromberg from ChickLit Central , Laura Kay from A Novel Review , Pia from So Many Books So LittleTime , and last but not least Liz and Lisa fro...
I am glad to be back sharing three wonderful new books and a recipe. This is a blog hop which will run from April 18 th through April 27 th . There is also a grand prize is an ereader of their choice (up to $200 value) with second prize a $25 gift card to the ebook retailer of your choice. You must visit each site in the hop giveaway to qualify for the grand prize, and leave a comment with email to be counted. Grand prize winners will be announced on Bloomin Thyme’s websites. The recipe is once again from Pinterest. This time I decided to take the Impossible Cheese Burger Pie recipe and convert into the Impossible Chicken Cheese Pie. I loved it! Who says you can’t tweak a recipe to your own tastes? J I have one copy of Susan Meissner’s As Bright As Heaven . The second book is The Lemonade year by Amy Willoughby-Burle and has just released. The third book is the paperback release of One Perfect Lie by Lisa Scottoline. (T...
Photo by Rebecca Weiss A couple of years ago, there was a debate in the literary world about “likeable” characters. The question, essentially, boiled down to this: must a character be unpleasant, whether angry or aggressive, selfish, or all gloom-and-doom in order to be taken seriously as a literary character? When the debate arose, the focus was primarily on female characters— if a female protagonist has too many redeemable qualities as a person, does this detract from her substance as a character in a story? This query nagged at me and took on a new shape during my writing Trouble the Water , as I watched my two main protagonists undergo journeys of personal growth that left them both decidedly more pleasant than the people they were when the story began. The question I needed to answer was whether depth and meaning are negated by personal recoveries? My own take, as a reader, is that if I am going to spend hours reading a novel, hanging out with cha...
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