Sunday, May 24, 2015

#Wisecracks

KID'S BIBLE EXAM

Saturday, May 23, 2015

#Wisecracks


The Pastor & The Parishioner 


A new pastor was visiting the homes of his parishioners. At one house it seemed obvious that someone was at home, but no one responded to his repeated knocks at the door. After a while, he took out a card and wrote "Revelation 3.20" on the back of it and stuck it in the door.

When the offering was processed the following Sunday, he found that his card had been returned. Added to it was this cryptic message, "Genesis 3:10."

Reaching for his Bible to check out the citation, he broke up in gales of laughter.

Revelation 3:20 begins: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock."
Genesis 3:10 reads: "I heard your voice in the garden and I was afraid for I was naked."

Disclaimer: not my original work - I receive and gladly share






Sunday, May 17, 2015

What book have you read today?

Read excerpts - Take Back the Memory


What would you do if you found out that the man you married is not who you thought he was?
What would you do if you suddenly discovered that you have indeed had the one thing you had yearned for all your life without realizing it?

Now, imagine a woman transformed from psychiatrist to patient, and lured into a compelling backward journey through her own life on a psychotherapist's couch. Imagine skeletons from the past pulling her back into the vortex of darkness from which she thought she had escaped. Paige Lyman is a woman conned by fate, and plagued by damning memories she must decipher in order to be free. 

Take Back the Memory is a psychological exposé on love, betrayal, vengeance, and a heart-wrenching secret.

http://www.melange-books.com/authors/augustinesam/takeback.html


Saturday, May 16, 2015

Conversation

Interview with Author – Augustine Sam

BY BOOK GOODIES 
   

What inspires you to write?
Since I started writing at a very young age, I’d say that what inspired me to write was my first literature textbook in school, which coincidentally, was a novel set in the port city where I grew up. It was the story of a one-eyed, shabby, old man, who spent his days at the harbor contriving different kinds of mischief that enthralled the local population. I had seen him at the harbor a few times when I was a kid. So, reading about him in the literature textbook triggered my fascination with storytelling and gave me a whole new insight into how the written word can actually capture reality ...
http://bookgoodies.com/interview-with-author-augustine-sam/