Live on Amazon

Hello All!

I just received word that my e-book is now live on Amazon.
The Minimalist Cleaning Method

Yet another step made toward future financial security.


Everett Bogue issued a thoughtful post today about the True Purpose of Simplicity. He states that the true purpose is freedom.

He is so totally correct!

That is why I do this. Take away the need to stroke my ego and you get Freedom left at the bottom of the box.

I want freedom from having to worry about bills. Freedom from worrying about things that break down.

Freedom from ever having to worry about where my grocery money is coming from.

Freedom from the big corporate fat cats who demand that I buy and buy.

Freedom to do what I want, when I want--even if that means sitting on my duff in a coffeeshop chatting with the regulars, or hanging out my laundry or trying something new and different just because I can.

Freedom to change my mind and do or be whoever or whatever I want to be.

That is why I do this, aside from my ego!

Do you want freedom? Why or why not? What are you doing to pursue it?

New books - mine and hers



Donna Fletcher Crow, whose website is here, writes historical novels and is embarking on a murder mystery series, starting with A Very Private Grave.
She also runs a blog, Deeds of Darkness, Deeds of Light, and kindly invited me along as a guest blogger to write about my new novel, The Hardest Thing To Do, that will be out in early 2011 published by Crossway. You can see the article I wrote for her blog here.

This is what Amazon has to say about Donna's A Very Private Grave:

Review
"Like a P. D. James novel A Very Private Grave occupies a learned territory. Also a beautifully described corner of England, that of the Northumbrian coast where St. Cuthbert's Christianity retains its powerful presence. Where myth and holiness, wild nature and tourism, art and prayer run in parallel, and capture the imagination still." (Review by Ronald Blythe )

Description of the story
"Felicity Howard, a young American studying for the Anglican priesthood at the College of the Transfiguration in Yorkshire, is devastated when she finds her beloved Fr. Dominic bludgeoned to death and Fr. Antony, her church history lecturer, soaked in his blood. Following the cryptic clues contained in a poem the dead man had pressed upon her minutes before his death, she and Fr. Antony-who is wanted for questioning by the police-flee the monastery to seek more information about Fr. Dominic and end up in the holy island of Lindisfarne, former home of Saint Cuthbert. Their quest leads them into a dark puzzle . . . and considerable danger."

Cor! Exciting!!