3 posts tagged “sankofa”
Somewhat Saved -5 star book review
by Pat G’Orge-Walker (Author)

From Publishers Weekly
In the latest loving church spoof from G’Orge-Walker (Sister Betty! God’s Calling You, Again!), Sister Betty and her fellow evangelists get shipped off to Las Vegas to attend the evangelical Mothers Conference.
After Betty and her two nemeses, Mother Sasha Pray Onn and Mother Bea Blister (about whom the Reverend Bling thinks to himself Doggone Alzheimer’s gonna make those two old crones destroy my place of business), arrive with much hullabaloo, Bea spots someone she recognizes but can’t place.
The narrative then shifts to Zipporah, a beautiful homeless woman, and G’Orge-Walker expertly balances touching emotion with the ladies’ antics as Zipporah gets a job that eventually leads her to the ladies and learns some things about herself in the process. Bickering, gambling and comeuppance are all on the agenda as the crew, far from the Pelzer, S.C., parish whence they came, negotiate Sin City. (A
pr.)
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Book Description-Purchase Your Copy Today
In her latest, most soulful and side-splitting send-up of church life yet, Pat G’Orge-Walker’s hilarious cast of parishioners battle their worst vices, the funny and serious sides of aging, and each other… Mother Sasha Pray Onn and Mother Bea Blister live on the edge–of Christianity, that is, and they’re about to knock Sister Betty off her sanctified perch. As the senior citizen matrons of the Ain’t Nobody Saved but Us-All Others Goin’ to Hell church, their devotion to the Lord must compete with their secret passions for gambling and grudges against each other.
But their long-held animosity is about to be complicated when the new pastor, the Reverend Leotis Tom, wants to reorganize the Mothers Board in time for the upcoming Las Vegas Conference and asks a reluctant Sister Betty to run for President.After a scuffle at a secret Bingo game at the No Hope Now-Mercy Nevah church, the bumbling Reverend Bling Moe Bling pacifies Mothers Blister and Pray Onn by giving them two tickets to Las Vegas where the annual Mothers Board Conference will be held. In Vegas, Mother Blister befriends a destitute young woman named Zipporah who does something no one has ever been able to: touch Mother Blister’s heart. But in trying to help her, Mother Blister finds out Zipporah’s past might be at complete odds with Mother Blister’s present.
As the chaos and comedy get out of hand, so do the questions about who is who, who did what to whom, and where and when. Just as surprising are the answers, which show that despite everyone’s best–or worst–intentions, from cradle to grave, it’s God who is ultimately in charge.
SLS Intimate Conversations Showcase
Recently Ella Curry, CEO of EDC Creations (www.edc-creations.com) and founder of the Sankofa Literary Society (www.sankofaliterarysociety.org) had the opportunity to talk with the author of the book Mismatched, Laura Major.
Laura, for those of us who aren’t familiar with your background, please tell us how you came to write novels and what you went through to get published.
For as long as I can remember I’ve been attempting to express myself creatively through the written word. It initially started with trying to write songs at the age of six. Then I wrote an autobiographical anthology in the second grade while living in New Jersey. It was a school project where my second grade teacher selected a topic for the class to write about each week of the school year. She edited each page and we illustrated them for the finished product. By the end of the year, each student had their own personal autobiographical anthology.
It included simple subjects like who I admired most, what my family did on vacation, what my favorite experience was and what I wanted to be when I grew up. I still have that completed anthology sitting on my bookshelf to this day.
I finished elementary school in Arizona, I also became the class historian in junior high. That required me to save pictures and news clippings detailing the events of the year for the student body. This was also in book form. Then, I began preparing for college during my high school years. While in high school, I was a part of the yearbook staff for over two years. It was during high school that I knew English would be my major in college.
I got accepted to Arizona State, the University of Arizona and Northern Arizona University. I chose to stay close to home and attended Arizona State, where I took lots of women’s studies classes in addition to my English coursework.
While I didn’t participate in any writing endeavors on campus, I did attain a freelance catalog copywriting position for three short months. I graduated from ASU and landed a financial proofreading position at a well-established financial printer.
After working there for two years, I lost direction and ended up in the finance and investing industry. I was laid off in 2001 and found myself in online higher education, an industry where I still work to support myself while I nurture my writing career.
It was a faithful Sunday afternoon in February 2005, where I chose to attend a local chocolate affaire and I came across a table of romance writers. With the exception of Frances Pascal’s Sweet Valley High collection, I was not a romance novel fan. I hadn’t tried to write a novel up to this point because I was not sure what story I could tell.
Anyway, when I saw these women sitting behind the book signing table, they seemed like ordinary women. I was in awe, but I also thought that maybe this scenario was not out of reach for me. I began talking to two of the women, Judi McCoy and Jennifer Ashley, and they invited me to a Romance Writers of America (RWA) chapter meeting that was taking place the following week.
I attended and felt at home instantly. I attended another chapter’s meeting two weeks later and it was during that meeting that the idea for my first novel, Mismatched, came to me. I realized that while I was not a reader of romance novels, everyday life in some way dealt with love. We are seeking it, giving it, trying to sustain it or in some ways trying to avoid it in our lives. Even in the absence of it, love touches us in some way.
I became a member of both RWA’s local chapters and immersed myself in the industry and made many friends with both published and aspiring authors. I even organized our participation in the next year’s chocolate affaire for my fellow romance writer groups. I volunteered heavily to the detriment of my writing, so I had to step back and focus on my goal.
With lots of self-doubt and the lack of support for interracial themes in my area, it took me over a year to write the novel. I could have finished it a lot quicker but doubt caused me to take long breaks from writing. I also did some minor freelancing during this time which I think built some confidence but also distracted from the book I needed to write. After the book was written, I edited it twice and then solicited the help of a few avid book readers to get some feedback. I didn’t really use critique partners because of the subject matter and the difficulty in finding people who understood what I was trying to convey.
During this time I joined MySpace and began connecting with a lot of other authors and publishers. One in particular, Dyanne Davis, pointed me in the direction of a multicultural/interracial romance reader and writer network on MSN. I joined and for the second time in my writing career I felt I had found a home.
Shortly after joining that group, I started querying my book to two agents and two eBook publishers who accepted electronic submissions. I was in the middle of remodeling my house, so my plan was to query the traditional publishing houses via the US mail system once I got my house back in order. In October of 2007, I received two rejections from the agents and one rejection with a request to see other work from one of the two e-publishers. On December 10th, 2007, I received a response from the last e-publisher I had contacted. To my surprise it was a contract offer from Amira Press.
While Amira Press is a small e-press, I thought this was an excellent opportunity to get my work out there and get my career the attention only a small press can provide. In addition to liking Amira’s cover art, I also liked their multicultural philosophy and the possibility of writing other types of multicultural novels.
After two edits, the eBook version of my novel Mismatched was released on February 15th, 2008. Shortly there after, I was notified by my publisher that my book would be released in paperback sometime in May.
I really like your title. Do you pick your titles first, and then write the stories? Please explain.
Thanks. The title came about as I was finishing the book. Originally, the working title was Tessa Makes her Own Match. I felt this seemed wordy and not entirely accurate so it later evolved to Mismatched.
What makes this novel different from others in its genre?
While this novel is classified as an interracial romance, I feel that it is truly multicultural. Often romance novels do not reflect real life in that a traditional romance may only have Caucasian characters and an African American romance may only have African American characters. I wanted a book that reflected real life where people of different races and ethnic backgrounds interact with one another and also fall in love. So in my book, there are Caucasian characters, African American characters, older characters as well as gay characters.
Is any of this story autobiographical? Were any scenes from the book inspired from what you know, or it is through your imagination?
I would say the book is inspired by events in my own life as well as being mostly inspired by my imagination, however it is not autobiographical. I have dated briefly on the Internet, I have been involved in interracial relationships in the past, I did live in New Jersey at one time, and I was in the finance industry, but those are the only similarities.
How are you marketing and promoting your new title, Mismatched?
In addition, to marketing on MySpace, and the various writers Yahoo groups and MSN groups to which I belong, I am also attending two writer’s conferences where I will be contributing to the goodie bags with promotional material about my book. My book will also be featured in a Romantic Times ad this summer. I am also seeking reviews and I am researchig how to query movie producers as I think this book would make a great date movie.
Please share some resources you recommend for new authors writing their first book.
I recommend joining a writers group like RWA or some other groups more aligned with your genre of choice. This is beneficial for the networking opportunities as well as support and industry information.
I also recommend subscribing to as many writer magazines as you can stand. I subscribe to The Writer, Writer’s Digest and Romantic Times.
Take online writer’s classes, some are very affordable and provide a wealth of information. Also read in your genre to see what is selling and to learn how to improve different areas of your own writing.
Ella D. Curry, President/CEO of EDC Creations
EDC @MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/edc1creations
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**FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE**
Editors, for review copies or interview requests, contact:
H a r o b e d H o u s eTM
“Edifying the World Thru Words” TM
Post Office Box 9105
Columbus, Georgia 31908
Contact: Marshall Pitts @ 706-329-5530
Email: Innisfree54@yahoo.com
Unmasking the Shadowy World of Grief
Author Shares an Intimate Account of the Seven Stages of Grieving
COLUMBUS, GA. – There are certain universal truths that we all face in this world—rejoicing at the birth of a child, witnessing a child’s baptism or even giving a daughter away in marriage. But there are other truths that we face as well and have in common—tragedy, death, and grief.
Tragedy, death, and grief happened to Deborah Slappey Pitts and her family when her husband, age 43, died of a rare disease known as primary amyloidosis, changing their lives forever. In her second book, Pitts tells her intimate story of pain and sorrow in Shadow Living…Paintings of Grief, the enthralling sequel to I Feel Okay, Pitts’ debut bestseller. Pitts captures the attention of grievers around the world as she describes her grief in heart-breaking detail—personalizing it as a disturbing entity that robbed their lives forever.
Filled with intense emotion and incredible remorse, Pitts takes the reader through her personal experiences of grief and sorrow by identifying and examining seven stages of the grieving process—shock, denial, anger, bargaining, fear, depression, and acknowledgement.
Stages of the Grieving Process
Pitts describes shock as an unadulterated numbness with absolute abandonment of emotions, while living in a shadowy world of despair with endless clouds of sadness. She describes Denial as a refusal to acknowledge the reality of a traumatic experience or death of a loved one; rather, choosing to live within the realms of a faux reality for protection and survival. Pitts describes Anger as extreme annoyance as the griever’s emotions can sometimes become fueled with anger toward their loved ones for leaving them and toward others as well.
The fourth stage is Bargaining and Pitts describes how the griever tries to bargain with God to spare their loved one; even to the extent that the griever is willing to take their place in death. According to Pitts, Fear can be a debilitating stage and the magnitude of fear depends upon the griever, but the most common fear is the inability to function without their loved one. Depression is the most debilitating of all the grieving stages and can leave the griever with total despair, hopelessness and powerlessness with immobilized sadness. Finally, Acknowledgment brings the griever to accepting the reality of living in the present without their loved one, describes Pitts. It’s the new norm of one’s existence. It’s acknowledging the physical death and embracing a new life without their loved one.
Shadow Living…Paintings of Grief was recently honored as the 2007 YOUnity Guild Book of the Year and a National Best Books Awards Finalist. Pitts is the author of Booking Matters national best-seller and best autobiography, I Feel Okay—a heart-wrenching account of love, loss, and inspiration. Pitts travels the United States as an inspirational speaker educating others about the devastating effects of the amyloidosis diseases and the physiological and psychological effects of grief.
Shadow Living…Paintings of Grief (ISBN: 978-0978789701), Harobed HouseTM 2007; I Feel Okay (ISBN: 978-1420806090), AuthorHOUSE, 2005. Available at all booksellers and www.dslappeypitts.com.
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