Our kitchen roof is coming down today. It’s actually an old lean-to added onto the main house, which was built in 1906, and it’s been sagging. Construction standards have changed. […]

Thanks to Gio and the G-Zone for another opportunity to talk about writing in general and my writing in particular. This being my second radio interview, I cannot claim innocence

  “I was six, he was eight. We met down my Miller’s Creek…” Confessions from a Farmer’s Wife is a coming-of-age story set in the 1920-1940s, based on the biblical

Janice: Welcome to my blog, Caroline. I look forward to our visit today. CAROLINE: I do too, and thank you for having me. Janice: Have you always wanted to be

  The Other Side of The River “I lift up my eyes to the mountains— Where does my help come from? My help comes from the Lord, The Maker of

I discovered these beautiful yellow violas in the crack between the sidewalk and the siding of our house. I didn’t plant them, at least not there. They must have blown

Plato said, “The beginning is the most important part of the work.” Kimberly Yuhl suggests you have eight words to capture your reader’s attention. Rob Weatherhead states in the article,

Wildwood Creek is a cross between a contemporary story—Allie Kirkland finds employment setting up for a historical re-enactment of a mysterious happening, and ends up cast in one of the

Janice: Welcome to my blog, Marsha. Thanks for agreeing to do this blog-interview with me. Marsha: It’s my privilege. Thank you for inviting me. Janice: When I first “met” you

I love reading the Old Testament. Probably because I love history, and the O.T. is the history of Israel with all its glory and disgrace mixed together. But how can

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