Title: They Almost Always Come Home
Author: Cynthia Ruchti
Author: Cynthia Ruchti
Genre: Contemporary Christian fiction
How to enter: Leave a comment on THIS post right here! If you're a subscriber or a follower, leave a second comment for a second entry.
How to enter: Leave a comment on THIS post right here! If you're a subscriber or a follower, leave a second comment for a second entry.
Entry deadline: June 25, 2010
Restrictions: Open internationally!
That's right, enter right here for this giveaway. This is my review copy, so it has been gently read.
If you leave a comment before June 18th, you will also be eligible for the Blog Tour Giveaway, which includes:
- North Pak 20 inch cinch sack (lime)
- Day Runner journal
- Canoe Brand wild rice
- Canada's brand blueberry jam
- Coleman 60-piece mini first aid kit
- Wood canoe/paddle shelf ornament
- Six original photography notecards from video trailer
- "Hope" hanging ornament
- Mini Coleman "lantern" prayer reminder
Publisher: Abingdon Press
Release Date: May 2010
Physical Description: 300-page paperback
List Price: $13.99
ISBN: 978-1426702389
Synopsis:
1. How would you describe your book?
The author does a great job transitioning between the adventure of the story and the thoughts/reactions of the main character, and there is a good mix of the two.
What I Didn't Like: This is a book that left me feeling a little sad and downcast throughout the reading. While the ending is sweet, I still felt sad that the characters had to go through all they did, and that the scars of their experiences would always remain. This adds to the realism of the story, but oh how I wish life could be easier! :)
Thanks to Kathy Carlton Willis Communications for the review copy of this book.
Release Date: May 2010
Physical Description: 300-page paperback
List Price: $13.99
ISBN: 978-1426702389
Synopsis:
(Wausau, WI) – At the foundation of each relationship resides the need to know love can survive even when feelings fade. In Cynthia Ruchti’s debut novel, They Almost Always Come Home, readers feel the desperation of this foundational yearning in a marriage clearly pulling loose from its moorings. Compounded by other issues—an unrewarding career and mismatched dreams—it’s enough to drive a man into the arms of the Canadian wilderness. When Greg Holden doesn’t return home from a wilderness canoe trip, his wife Libby wrestles with survivor guilt, a new layer of grief, and the belief that she was supposed to know how to fix her marriage. She planned to leave him—but how can she leave a man who’s no longer there? He was supposed to go fishing, not missing.
Libby has to find him before she can discover how their marriage ends. She plunges into the wilderness on an adventurous and risky manhunt, unsure what she will do if she finds him…or if she doesn’t. She expects to meet hardship, discomfort, and danger in the wilderness. She doesn’t expect to face the stark reality of her spiritual longing and a faint, but steady pulse that promises hope for reviving her marriage. If Greg’s still alive.
They Almost Always Come Home provides a glimpse into common, however uncomfortable, marital conflicts. Cynthia weaves a page-turning story, suspense building scene by scene. Her characters mirror ordinary people, living real-to-life situations, allowing readers to relate and sort through a myriad of emotions and life decisions. If fiction can contain adventure, riveting self-awareness, and romance all between the same covers, this is the book!About the Author:
Cynthia Ruchti writes stories of “hope that glows in the dark.” She writes and produces The Heartbeat of the Home, a syndicated drama/devotional radio broadcast, and is editor for the ministry’s Backyard Friends magazine. She also serves as current president of American Christian Fiction Writers. Cynthia married her childhood sweetheart, who tells his own tales of wilderness adventures.The Interview:
1. How would you describe your book?
The tagline for the book is “She’d leave her husband…if she could find him.”2. How were you different as a writer and as a person when you finished writing They Almost Always Come Home?
When Libby’s husband Greg doesn’t return from a two-week canoe trip to the Canadian wilderness, the authorities write off his disappearance as an unhappy husband’s escape from an oatmeal marriage and mind-numbing career. Their marriage might have survived if their daughter Lacey hadn’t died and if Greg hadn’t been responsible. Libby enlists the aid of her wilderness-savvy father-in-law and her faith-walking best friend to help her search for clues to her husband’s disappearance. What the trio discovers in the wilderness search upends Libby’s assumptions about her husband and rearranges her faith.
It’s my prayer that this fictional adventure story and emotional journey will reveal its own hope-laden clues for those struggling to survive or longing to exit what they believe are uninspiring marriages. How can a woman survive a season or a lifetime when she finds it difficult to like the man she loves?
This book changed me in a profound way. It forced me to take a more honest look at myself and my reactions to crises so I could write Libby’s character with authenticity. Libby is a composite of many women. I haven’t experienced what she did, but I identify with some of her struggles and longings, as I hope my readers will. I see my friends in her eyes and know that her tears aren’t hers alone. Her shining moments feed my courage. Libby speaks for me and for many others when she discovers that she is stronger than she realized and weaker than she wanted to admit.3. What did you feel the tug on your heart to become a writer?
Writing her story was a journey for the author as much as for the character.
My journey toward a lifetime of writing began by reading books that stirred me, changed me, convinced me that imagination is a gift from an imaginative Creator. As a child, I read when I should have been sleeping…and still do. I couldn’t wait for the BookMobile (library on wheels) to pull up in front of the post office in our small town and open its arms to me. Somewhere between the pages of a book, my heart warmed to the idea that one day I too might tell stories that made readers stay up past their bedtimes.4. What books line your bookshelves?
My bookshelves—don’t ask how many!—hold a wide variety of genres. The collection expands faster than a good yeast dough. I’m a mood reader, grabbing a light comedy one day and a literarily rich work the next. Although I appreciate well-written nonfiction, I gravitate toward an emotionally engaging contemporary women’s fiction story.Somthing Extra From the Author's Heart:
Ten years ago, my husband almost didn’t come home. His canoe adventure with our son Matt soured on Day Two when Bill grew violently ill from what we presume was either pancreatitis or a gall bladder attack. He’s an insulin-dependent diabetic, so any grave illness is a threat. One in the middle of the Canadian wilderness is morgue material.What I Liked: I felt like I could very easily relate to the characters in this story. From the first chapter, where Libby starts planning a funeral in her head because her husband is late - to her later realization that simple words can cause the death of her husband's dreams - the author creates a very realistic cast with very real internal conflicts.
With no satellite phone with which to call for help, Matt took turns caring for his father and watching the shore for other canoeists happening past their hastily constructed campsite. The few other canoes were headed deeper into the remote areas of the park, not on their way out. None had a satellite phone. And none of them were doctors.
As my husband grew sicker, his diabetes went nuclear. He couldn’t eat, yet needed insulin because his liver thought it should help out by dumping vast quantities of sugar into his system. Even in a hospital setting, the situation would have been difficult to control, and the nearest hospital was light years away across vast stretches of water and woodland, through peopleless, roadless wilderness.
Our son stretched a yellow tarp across the rocks on shore and wrote S.O.S. with charcoal from a dead fire. He scratched out countless notes on pieces of notebook paper torn from their trip journal:
Send rescue! My dad is deathly ill.
Read the rest of the story at the KCWC BLOG
The author does a great job transitioning between the adventure of the story and the thoughts/reactions of the main character, and there is a good mix of the two.
What I Didn't Like: This is a book that left me feeling a little sad and downcast throughout the reading. While the ending is sweet, I still felt sad that the characters had to go through all they did, and that the scars of their experiences would always remain. This adds to the realism of the story, but oh how I wish life could be easier! :)
Thanks to Kathy Carlton Willis Communications for the review copy of this book.
65 comments:
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This is so familiar with the BWCA where you can canoe forever if you lose your map. Please enter me.
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Hello! I'd like win this book. Please enter me. Thank you!
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I'd love a chance to win They Almost Always Come Home. Thanks!
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Would like to read this!
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This is a great interview and I want to win this book. I am a avid reader but its hard to keep enough books to read. I go to the local libary but I read so much that it gets very hard to find something to read that I want to read. Thanks for the giveaway and the chance to win it. ybutler@oppcatv.com
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would love to read this mrs.mommyyatgmail
Please include me! thanks
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Sounds like a good read for a lazy summer weekend up camping.
Sounds like a thought provoking book
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sounds perfect
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please enter me in this great contest thanks tevanderpool at msn dot com
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This sounds like a great read.
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This sounds different from the usual books I am into and I would love to read it. vidomich(at)yahoo(dot)com
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Love that there is some Canadian content
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I think this sounds like an interesting read.
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Would love to check this out...thank you.
I love some good Christian Fiction
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Nickolay
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I'd love to read this, thanks for the chance!
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I love to read new books.
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Thank you for the Great giveaway please count me in :)
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