Cara C. Putman's Blog, page 105
September 23, 2013
Does Living My Faith Matter?
Ever wonder if it matters whether you share your faith or not? Maybe you don’t see many actual results? Feeling discouraged. Watch this and be inspired…and challenged. Please let me faith be viral, Lord. All for your glory!
September 20, 2013
Fun Children’s Activity Book: Bumper Wipe Clean
Do you ever wish you had one more activity to entertain your young child?
It could be a long car ride. Or a wait at a restaurant that doesn’t serve French fries as fast as your child would like. Then this is a book that might just be a lifesaver. Small enough to fit in a kid’s small backpack or diaper bag, it’s filled with 72 pages of wipe-off and use all over again content. My five-year-old thoroughly enjoyed working on this book. It kept her entertained on a car trip, and my two-year-old enjoyed it too. It is a colorful book filled with lots of activities. Most are based on Bible stories. It was a fun and engaging activity that helped make the hours in the car pass. The pages wipe clean easily, though the pen didn’t stay wet very long.
Wipe clean and start again! Seventy-two pages of wipe clean fun a
ctivities with a short Bible story at the top of each page and the related activity below.
Help children learn while discovering their favorite Bible stories through mazes, dot to dots, spot the mistake, and many more. The laminated pages can be wiped clean for use again and again and includes a felt-tip pen so children can get started right away.
September 19, 2013
Fired Up: Giving Away the new Mary Connealy novel
This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
Fired Up
(Bethany House March 1, 2013)
by
Mary ConnealyFired Up is a classic Mary Connealy cowboy romantic romp. Yet like many of her novels, it has strains of suspense that add to the tension and keep the pages flying. The book starts with action and the pace continues as we watch Dare and Glynna carve out new lives for themselves. A very enjoyable read…with all the humor I’ve come to love in a Mary Connealy novel!
Be sure to read to the bottom to enter to win a copy of the book I’m giving away.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Rollicking Wild West Adventure and Romance from Bestselling Author Mary Connealy
Dare Riker is a doctor who saves lives, but someone seems determined to end his. It may have something to do with the traitors he dealt with during the Civil War, or it might be related to the recent incident with Flint Greer and the ranch. Whoever the culprit is, he or she seems really fired up, and Dare can’t let his guard down for a moment, which is a challenge, since right now he’s trying to win the heart of the recently widowed Glynna.
Glynna Greer came west as a mail-order bride and ended up in a bad situation. Now her husband, Flint, is dead, and she’s determined to care for her son and daughter on her own. She wants to believe Dare Riker is as decent as he seems, but she’s terrified to lock herself into another marriage. She plans to support her small family by opening a diner–never mind that cooking is not her greatest talent. The men in Broken Wheel, Texas, are so desperate for home cooking that they seem willing to overlook dried-out beef and blackened biscuits.
Glynna can’t help but notice that danger follows Dare wherever he goes. There’s the avalanche. And then the fire. But things really get out of hand when someone plunges a knife from Glynna’s diner into Dare’s back. Are Flint’s cronies still plotting revenge? Is Glynna’s son engaged in a misguided attempt to protect his mother? Is a shadowy outsider still enraged over past injustices? And can Dare survive long enough to convince Glynna to take another chance on love?
If you would like to read the first chapter of Fired Up, go HERE.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Mary Connealy writes romantic comedy with cowboys. She is a Christy Award Finalist, a Carol Award Finalist and an IRCC Award finalist.
The Lassoed in Texas Series, Petticoat Ranch, Calico Canyon and Gingham Mountain. Petticoat Ranch was a Carol Award Finalist. Calico Canyon was a Christy Award Finalist and a Carol Award Finalist. These three books are now contained in one large volume called Lassoed in Texas Trilogy.
The Montana Marriages Series, Montana Rose, The Husband Tree and Wildflower Bride. Montana Rose was a Carol Award Finalist.
Cowboy Christmas—the 2010 Carol Award for Best Long Historical Romance, and an Inspirational Readers Choice Contest Finalist.
The Sophie’s Daughters series. Doctor in Petticoats, Wrangler in Petticoats, Sharpshooter in Petticoats.
She is also the author of; Black Hills Blessing a 3-in-1 collection of sweet contemporary romances, Nosy in Nebraska, a 3-in-1 collection of cozy romantic mysteries and she’s one of the three authors contributing to Alaska Brides with her Carol Award Winning historical romance Golden Days.
September 18, 2013
ACFW Redux in Photos
In the following photos you’ll find a visual synopsis of my time at ACFW. It was AMAZING and there’s so much I can’t go into here, but it’s a start

A highlight was spending a couple meals with the amazing and humble Frank Peretti. Roll call: who’s read and been changed by his books?

Had the honor of praying with Beth Vogt for a dear friend. Love this woman’s heart.

With the AMAZING Robin Jones Gunn. She pointed all of our hearts to Jesus in her keynotes. I want to shine with Jesus like she does.

With my adorable friend Ashley Clark — she was on crutches the whole time! That’s dedication. Look for her books someday…

With sweet friend Casey Herringshaw

Fun lunch with writer buds: Susan Meissner, Jim Rubart, Jenny B Jones, Dan Walsh, Randy Ingermanson, Linda Attaway, Ronie Kendig, Nicole O’Dell and moi.

With my amazing editor Julie Gwinn at the gala after she won Editor of the Year. The ladies in purple!
Born of Persuasion: new Regency novel
This week, the
Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
is introducing
Born of Persuasion
Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. (September 1, 2013)
by
Jessica DottaBorn of Persuasion has the dark tone of a Bronte sister novel. I was quickly swept into Julia Elliston’s world and wondered how the dark hopelessness of her situtation could be redeemed. This book is a sweeping Regency historical that will take you back to a time we like to forget. The hopelessness of a woman’s situation stands in stark contrast to the hope God can bring to situations. A great read for those who love Regency novels.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Born in the wrong century–except for the fact that she really likes epidurals and washing machines–Jessica Dotta writes British Historicals with the humor like an Austen, yet the drama of a Bronte.
She resides lives in the greater Nashville area—where she imagines her small Southern town into the foggy streets of 19th century London. She oversees her daughter to school, which they pretend is an English boarding school, and then she goes home to write and work on PR. Jessica has tried to cast her dachshund as their butler–but the dog insists it’s a Time Lord and their home a Tardis. Miss Marple, her cat, says its no mystery to her as to why the dog won’t cooperate. When asked about it, Jessica sighs and says that you can’t win them all, and at least her dog has picked something British to emulate.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The year is 1838, and seventeen-year-old Julia Elliston’s position has never been more fragile. Orphaned and unmarried in a time when women are legal property of their fathers, husbands, and guardians, she finds herself at the mercy of an anonymous guardian who plans to establish her as a servant in far-off Scotland.
With two months to devise a better plan, Julia’s first choice to marry her childhood sweetheart is denied. But when a titled dowager offers to introduce Julia into society, a realm of possibilities opens. However, treachery and deception are as much a part of Victorian society as titles and decorum, and Julia quickly discovers her present is deeply entangled with her mother’s mysterious past. Before she knows what’s happening, Julia finds herself a pawn in a deadly game between two of the country’s most powerful men. With no laws to protect her, she must unravel the secrets on her own. But sometimes truth is elusive and knowledge is deadly.
If you would like to read the first chapter of Born of Persuasion, go HERE.
September 15, 2013
Dangerous Passage: ripped from the headlines romantic suspense
Dangerous Passage is a romantic suspense that could be ripped from some of the saddest headlines. Human trafficking serves as the story hook — a story that I would love to ignore but know is all too real. 27 million people around the world are trapped in some form of slavery…a tragedy we can’t ignore and the author brings into a fresh spotlight. Read to the end for a giveaway of this book!
Avery North is a homicide detective raising a daughter on her own. When one of the victims is a young Vietnamese girl not much older than her daughter, the case becomes even more personal. She is also a woman torn between a demanding career, mothering, family, and wondering whether she should pursue a relationship with Jackson Bryant. The plot is fully layered as Avery wrestles with challenges in each area of her life. She’s confronted with whether she’s willing to release her control and move forward or remain trapped where she is — not necessarily a bad place, but is she willing to risk more and accept more people tugging at her?
The story has a lot happening…almost too much…but that’s how life goes these days. Avery’s faith questions are real, her imperfections welcome, and her committed search for the killer admirable. I really enjoyed this novel and look forward to the author’s next!
I enjoyed this book so much, I’ve got a copy to giveaway.
September 8, 2013
Why I love Christian Publishing
As you read this, I’m preparing for the ACFW national conference and board meetings. In honor of it here’s a post I wrote last year that is still very true and appropriate!
Eric and me at the 2010 ACFW Gala
This is truly one of the highlights of my year. And Tuesday I was reminded why I can’t imagine missing ACFW.
I have a proposal I’m beefing up for ACFW. It’s already good, but I really want to push it to great. The problem? I was absolutely stymied. Eric and I had talked around it. He’s a great researcher and reads enough to really be an asset in brainstorming, yet I couldn’t quite get traction.
So I texted a couple writing friends. Jenny Jones had already spent a lot of time on the proposal, but volunteered to help with brainstorming. Then Tricia Goyer said, sure she’d help me brainstorm. And at conference Colleen Coble and I will squeeze in a few minutes to brainstorm even more layers. Here’s why that’s so cool!
1) All of us are competitors in different ways. So wouldn’t common sense say don’t help each other?
2) Tricia and I write the same time period. Not only that, we both have ideas surrounding the same general topic. Still she helped me, and I’d help her in an instant. Then after 40 minutes on the phone brainstorming my book, she emailed with more ideas.
3) Colleen actually called me over the weekend with an idea she got for me while researching a story she’s going to write. This isn’t the first time she’s done that.
This is truly reflective of my experience in Christian fiction. We rejoice with each other. We help each other. We truly feel like a family. These three ladies are only three examples I could hold up of the close friendships and the way we truly root for each other. Last year, I think I was more excited than Jenny (she was stunned) when she won two incredibly well-deserved Carol awards at the ACFW Gala. Colleen is a huge part of why I write. And Tricia mentored me from a distance by letting me look over her shoulder as she wrote four or five books. That’s priceless.
And that’s why I love Christian publishing!
(P.S. That book we worked on? It’s the one I’m writing right now — will release in February 2014. More details after I sign the contract!)
Finding the Beauty in the Moment
Life is more than a little hectic right now. And yes, I love it that way…most of the time. I’m much more efficient when I’m running six directions, but it’s not always best for finding those moments to pause.
Sunday, our pastor talked about PLANs. Most of us have one. I live on them. But I’ll confess it’s very easy to get so focused on the plan I lose sight of people. God. Me. Thursday night I was driving back from a friend’s house. They live out in the country and I had to pause twice to snap photos. Fortunately, it’s a very low-traffic country rode.
God has painted amazing sunsets (and even a sunrise I saw) over the last week. But Thursday night it was gorgeous…if only my phone could have captured all the grandeur. The colors were rich, vivid, ever changing. And I was reminded that I serve a God who delights to create. That He does it extravagently…even with the sunsets that disappear in a moment.
Literally 30 feet down the road, I pulled over again. This time I’m sure the neighbors were wondering what was wrong with that crazy minivan driver. I’d spotted a stretch of wildflowers. I’m a sucker for a beautiful flower…especially one that has been placed in an area, it is so easy to drive by and never notice.
How often do I get so focused on my plans that I blow by the people God has placed in my life. Do I slow down to listen, truly listen to their hearts? To the hurts? The joys? The trials? The celebrations?
Do I see the beauty if my little girl’s face as her father bows before her and calls her princess? Do I notice the joy on my 2 year olds face as he talks (too much like a 7 year old) about what he did with a friend? Do I stop to listen to the servant heart of my 9 year old? To celebrate the growing womanhood of my almost teenager (23 days. Just ask…she’ll tell you!)
I’m asking God to give me eyes that in the midst of the hurry and doing, I see the beauty of the moments He has planted me in and the beauty of those He’s planted around me.
September 5, 2013
Trapped: New suspense from Irene Hannon
I’m a fan of Irene Hannon’s romantic suspense. Her characters are usually interesting and engaging, the plot lines full of twists. This one is no exception. The second in the Private Justice series, Trapped involves a sister’s desperate search for her runaway sibling.
Laura Griffith turns to the Phoenix Detective Agency when she’s concerned the police can’t help her. James Devlin agrees to help her search, but knows the odds aren’t great. Add in a snow storm, a homeless shelter, and a bad guy who’s this side of creepy, and it’s a great combination for romantic suspense.
Irene Hannon’s suspense is not nail-biting intense, but it’s got a great blend of romance. The perfect read for days when you need more than boy meets girl, boy falls for girl.
September 3, 2013
Rest? Honest Observations

@ Michelle Lyzenga
Rest. This photo taken by my talened friend Michelle Lyzenga invites me to a place of rest. I long to grab my Bible, journal, and a mug of hazelnut coffee and settle in for some time with God interspersed with watching birds and other wildlife.
There are certain places I go for rest. Often it’s a place of escape. Our friends have a cabin we have rented at least four times — the last half hour of the drive, I can feel myself physically relax. That is priceless. And one that leaves me selfishly hoping they’ll never sell.
Sometimes I find rest in a friend. That special someone who knows me. Intimately. This person can call me when I’m just wrong. She loves me when I’m unlovable. She laughs with me, cries with me, loves classic movies with me. Is always there when I need a listening ear. Or just to be together. Those friendships are priceless and a place of safety and rest.
Sometimes that rest is found with my children. In a giggle. A cuddle. The pause to read a book. The break to play a game. The time in a car serving as a taxi yet again. All too soon these moments will end. So when I am aware and intentional, I rest in those moments because too soon they’ll be gone.
But God should always be my rest. I wish He was. I wish I could say honestly that each and every day I throw myself into a period of rest in His presence. I enjoy the Word with my kids. But time alone, just God and me, those are rare…fleeting…missed. Once again it gets added to the list. Another item to mark with a check, cross with a line, move to the next page. I want more. I long for more. I need more.
Where do you find rest?


