Jan 262012
 

I’m happy to announce that today’s guest author is Joyce DiPastena, author of three medieval romances: Loyalty’s Web, Illuminations of the Heart, and her newest release Dangerous Favor, available now at AMAZON.

I’ve had the pleasure of meeting up with Joyce a number of times over the last few years. She is a sweet, intelligent lady who loves what she does. I have thoroughly enjoyed each of her novels. Not only are they well-written, clean and romantic, but they are well-researched and intriguing, too.

Help us welcome Joyce and leave a comment below!

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From Joyce:

Researching a historical novel can be challenging and time consuming, but it can also be a delightful adventure. It’s not just about getting the clothing right and the buildings right and the furniture right and the meals right. Those are all necessary details to give the reader a vivid picture of where and when your characters live, of course. But the best part of researching isn’t delving into the “required” elements of historical fiction. It’s the little unexpected discoveries you make along the way. They usually occur when you know you’re looking for something, but you’re not quite sure what it is.

Such was the case in my medieval romance, Illuminations of the Heart. My heroine was a medieval illuminator, which means she painted pictures in books with brightly colored paints which “illuminated” or brought light to the pages. Of course, before she could paint, she needed to draw or sketch out the picture. So one day I went hunting for something for her to draw during a scene in my book. Bestiaries were popular during the Middle Ages, so on went my research hat. I discovered that in the Middle Ages, people had a completely different concept of bees than we know to be true today. They thought that bees were led by a king, rather than a queen, and the king was a very benevolent ruler at that. If one of his “subject bees” misbehaved, rather than punish him, the king had only to demonstrate to the truant the error of his ways, and the truant would turn his own sting upon himself in shame. This was intended to be an example to human kings and their subjects, though of course most humans chose to ignore the noble bee-example. I found this a charming little bit of medieval trivia, though, and incorporated it into my story.

In my newly released medieval romance, Dangerous Favor, I needed some plot device that would disrupt the romance between two of my secondary characters, Therri and Violette. Again, I knew I needed something, but I didn’t yet know what. So off on the hunt I went once more. While flipping through the pages of a book in my research library, I came across a section on medieval games. One popular game I discovered was called “hoodman blind”. In this game, the players took a hood and turned it backwards to cover eyes of the person we would call “It” today. The other players stood in a circle while the person in the hood tried to catch and identify one of them. Of course, the goal of the players in the circle was to frustrate the hoodman or hoodwoman from guessing correctly. Suppose the hoodman was Therri and his goal was to find Violette, the woman he loves. And of course, the stakes have been placed appropriately high for his success or failure. Ah, yes, a game of hoodman blind was just what I needed for my story, and furthermore, turned out to be a great deal of fun to write!

In my current WIP (untitled, but based on the character of Acelet from Illuminations
of the Heart), I discovered a delightful medieval argument about which is the more “perfect” number—3 or 4? 3 would seem to have the advantage, given the three members of the Holy Trinity (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) and the three theological virtues (faith, hope, and charity). But there was an argument to be made for 4, as well, with the four points of the cross and the four evangelists (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John). And argue about it my characters do. I can’t even remember what my original research hunt was for when I stumbled across this one, but it was too good to resist sneaking it into the book.

Research is only a drudgery if you limit yourself to the “necessities” of your story. If you keep your mind open to the unexpected along the way, research can be a delight!

Joyce DiPastena moved from Utah to Arizona at the age of two, and grew up to be a dyed-in-the-fur desert rat. She first fell in love with the Middle Ages when she read Thomas B. Costane’s The Conquering Family in high school. She attended the University of Arizona, where she graduated with a degree specializing in medieval history.

Joyce loves to play the piano and sing for her own amusement, and sings in her church choir. Other interests include reading, spending time with her sister, trying out new restaurants, and, unfortunately, buying new clothes. The highlight of her year is attending the Arizona Renaissance Festival, which she has not missed once in its twenty-four years of existence.

Joyce enjoys hearing from her readers and may be contacted at jdipastena@yahoo.com. You can also visit her on her website at www.joyce-dipastena.com, keep up with her latest news on her JDP NEWS blog (http://jdp-news.blogspot.com), or follow along as she researches her novels at Medieval Research with Joyce (http://medievalresearch.blogspot.com).

 

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Mar 092010
 
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR lists if they like your teasers!
Shanda’s Teaser:

“David had to smile. Silas was going bald- or, as he like to put it, his hairline was creeping over the top of his head looking for his ears. The lower two-thirds of his face was a deep brown, but just above his eyes, where the hat brim came, his skin was white as a sheet of paper.”
The Undaunted by Gerald N. Lund, page 430





Sheila’s Teaser:
“But I was wearing my jammies, a college sweatshirt and rain boots, and I remembered enough about the real world to know it was poor form for adults to approach children they didn’t know and ask them how old they were, particularly when the adult in question was dressed like a homeless person.”

Gravity Vs. The Girl By Riley Noehren, page 12




Hillary’s Teaser:
“The smile widened on the words, regaining a cockiness familiar from her days in Venice. But Siri was listening too hard to his voice to care. She tried to place it with that of the robber’s, but failed. Her assailant’s bravado had been muffled by the unmarked helmet he had worn. Still, this gentleman’s manner seemed very odd.”

Illuminations of the Heart by Joyce DiPastena, page 65
Where’s YOUR teaser? :)

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Jan 052010
 

Sheila, Hillary and I have decided to participate in Teaser Tuesdays and we’re pretty excited about it! If you’d like to participate as well, visit Should Be Reading for more information. And don’t forget to either link directly to your Teaser Tuesdays post in the comments or, if you don’t have a blog, add your teaser to the comments below so we can be teased by what your reading, too! See our Tuesday Teasers below:

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR lists if they like your teasers!

Shanda’s Teaser:

“He stopped as the quiet air without the door splintered with a thundering curse. The next instant, the door banged open and Triston stood on the threshold, a reddish glow in his eyes and his nostrils flaring like some primitive beast preparing for the kill.”

Illuminations of the Heart by Joyce DiPastena, page 175

Sheila’s Teaser:

Reflecting a prism on the wall before him was a diamond tip. How this detail had escaped him thus far was a mystery. As he examined the diamond tip he marveled at the size of the protruding, rounded gem.”

Alvor by Laura Bingham, page 97


Hillary’s Teaser:

“Phillip absently held the receiver in his hand for a long time after Jim Perrett disconnected, and he stared at the far wall. The conversation with the Utah rancher had disturbed him, leaving him with more questions than answers.”

Dead Wrong by Clair Poulson

Don’t forget to share your Tuesday Teasers in the comments below!

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9 Days until Christmas!



(Shanda here: Sorry about the late post- computer issues kept me from posting it before now. It was bound to happen at least once – that’s what Murphy’s Law says, right?)

Joyce DiPastena is the author of two novels, Loyalty’s Web and Illuminations of the Heart, and a short story, An Epiphany Gift for Robin, that was just published in a Christmas short story anthology called Stolen Christmas and Other Stories of the Season.

Joyce’s books can be purchased at the following places:

Loyalty’s Web: www.amazon.com and Deseret Book stores.

Illuminations of the Heart: www.amazon.com, Deseret Book stores, Barnes & Noble (online & in Arizona locations), and Borders.

Stolen Christmas and Other Stories of the Season: www.amazon.com, www.createspace.com, and www.smashwords.com (for e-book versions).

Learn more about Joyce on her website: www.joyce-dipastena.com and her blog: JDP NEWS.

LDSWBR: What favorite holiday traditions do you and your family participate in every year? Will you be starting any new traditions this year?

JOYCE: My sister and I created a fun new Christmas tradition after both our parents passed away in 2000 and 2002. My sister and I are both single, and we always spent the holidays with my parents, so this was our first Christmas with just the two of us. We had previously gone to a “High Tea” (with cocoa instead of tea) at a cute little shop in Gilbert that sadly isn’t there anymore. It was one of those years when Christmas fell on a Sunday, so we only had early morning Sacrament Meeting to attend. We were both feeling sad and missing our parents, and I remember as we were driving to Church, my sister said, “When we get home, we should make up our own High Tea.” I said, “We can’t call it a High Tea on Sunday!” She replied, “Okay, we can call it a High Cocoa instead.” We both started giggling, and I said, “No, we should call it a High Kokolorum!” “Hy Kokolorum” was a character in very long poem (called “A Balad of China”) that I memorized and recited in the 5th grade and still remember parts of to this day. So when we got home from Church, we had our first “High Kokolorum.”

Now every year on Christmas (we have our “big” holiday meal on Christmas Eve), we pull out a pretty three tiered tray. We make miniature sandwiches for the bottom tier, scones with Devonshire cream for the second layer, and a variety of miniature cookies and candies on the top (and smallest) tier. And we pull out some of our mother’s fine china tea cups that she’d collected through the years, heat up pots of chocolate, and voila! A High Kokolorum. And while we eat, my sister pulls out our old World Book Childcraft volume of poems and has me recite as much of “A Ballad of China” as I can remember, then prompts me through the passages I’ve grown a little hazy on until I finish off with a flourish of triumph, “Darling Dilliki Dolliki Dinahm, Niece (I learn) to the Empress of China, Fair (I swear) as the morning of May, And she is my Queen from this very day!”

I must say, I highly recommend High Kokolorums. They are a very fun tradition!

LDSWBR: Joyce, what books are on your Christmas wish list?

JOYCE: Let’s see, I have a list on one of my Goodreads bookshelves. Let me hop over there and see what I’ve listed…

Okay, I’m back! A few of the titles on my wish list are The Host by Stephenie Meyer (no, I still haven’t read it yet!); Your Money or Your Life by Neil Cavuto (my favorite Fox News anchor…yes, even over Glenn Beck…sorry Glenn Beck fans!); The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Emmuska Orczy (Hmm, I’m glad my mother didn’t name me Emmuska!); and Haunt’s Haven by Joan Sowards.

LDSWBR: What books have you purchased/will you purchase as gifts for loved ones this Christmas?

JOYCE: I’m giving a fried of mine who’s a big dog lover the YA novel, Dogsbody, by Diana Wynne Jones because I think it will help her better understand what her dogs are thinking. My sister has asked for a series of books called: G is for the Grand Canyon: an Arizona Alphabet; M is for Mayflower: a Massachusetts Alphabet; and K is for Keystone: A Pennsylvania Alphabet because these are all states that we’ve visited together (well, Arizona being both our original “home”) and she thinks they would make nice momentos. And I’m sending another friend a book on her wish list called, More Stories Behind the Best-Loved Songs of Christmas. Come to think of it, maybe I’ll add that book to my own wish list, too! And my brother will be receiving a copy of the new Christmas short story anthology, Stolen Christmas and Other Stories of the Season, which includes my short medieval Christmas story, “An Epiphany Gift for Robin.”

LDSWBR: Thank you for sharing with us, Joyce! We wish you and your sister a Happy Christmas!

Do you have a favorite “flavor” of hot chocolate? If so, what is the brand name and flavor? Or do you make your own hot chocolate from scratch? (I love Stephen’s Chocolate Mint Truffle mixed with Belgian Dark Chocolate- mmmm!)

Don’t forget to nominate your favorite 2009 books by LDS authors for Whitney Awards by December 31! Can’t remember what you read? Visit the LDS Publisher blog for a list of books published by LDS authors in 2009.



***Countdown to Christmas Contest***


LDSWBR will hold a drawing on Christmas Day for a $25 eGift Card from Deseret Book, as well as a variety of books being offered by some of the LDS authors that will be featured on the blog. Simply post a thoughtful comment on the Countdown to Christmas author posts to enter. Here are the rules:

  • LDSWBR reserves the right to decide what determines a “thoughtful” comment.
  • Only one comment per person per “Countdown to Christmas” author post will be entered into the drawing. This allows the potential for 24 entries per person at the end of the contest. Feel free to comment more than once per post if you’d like, but only one comment will be accepted as an entry.
  • Contest ends at 12:00 Midnight MST on December 24, 2009. Drawing winners will have until 12:00 Midnight MST on December 31, 2009 to claim their prize. After that time, another name will be drawn to receive the prize.
  • Book prizes can only be shipped within the contiguous United States.

Books that have been generously donated by the author for drawing prizes:

  • Loyalty’s Web by Joyce DiPastena
  • Hidden Branch by G.G. Vandagriff
  • Altared Plans by Rebecca Talley
  • A Modest Proposal by Michele Ashman Bell (includes a bonus copy of Michele’s Christmas booklet, A Candle in the Window)
  • Her Good Name by Josi Kilpack
  • MISSING by Ronda Gibb Hinrichsen
  • Famous Family Nights by Anne Bradshaw
  • Love Letters of Joseph and Emma (autographed copy) by Angela Eschler
  • Family Home Evening Adventures by Rebecca Irvine
  • Counting the Cost by Liz Adair
  • Shudder by Jennie Hansen
  • Mormon Mishaps & Mischief by D. N. Giles & C. L. Beck
  • Dawn’s Early Light by Laurie (L.C.) Lewis
  • The Fairy Thorn (brand new release!) by Dorothy Keddington
  • Torn Apart (signed copy) by Diony George
  • Pursued: A Maggie McKenzie Mystery by Lynn Gardner

Thank you so much!

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Sep 232009
 

We have a winner of the latest contest. The winner of a copy of Illuminations of the Heart written by Joyce DiPastena is…Shirley Bahlmann. Congratulations Shirley and thanks for entering the contest.You will be receiving a copy of this great Historical Romance novel. I know that you will enjoy it! I will get your address and get your book sent out to you! Thanks for everyone who left a comment on both blogs and participated in the contest. There will be another contest coming soon for another chance to win a book.

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“Clothilde.” He spoke her name on a breath like a prayer. Then he lowered his head and kissed her.

What a perfect scene! It truly belongs in a romance novel. The only problem is, the women being kissed is not Clothilde, her name is Siriol De Calendri. Triston, the hero in the novel, is still full of guilt because of the death of his late wife, Clothilde. Siri greatly resembles Triston’s late wife, but is very different from her in personality and spirit. This is where the Historical novel begins. Can Siri win Triston’s heart and help him heal from the past? Will Triston be able to keep Siri safe from the many enemies that threaten he and Siri’s future together? You will need to read Illuminations of the Heart to have these questions answered.

I enjoy reading Joyce DiPastena’s books. They are known for being “clean” romances. Now days, the idea of a clean romance is a very rare thing. This is not to say that you won’t be swept away in the growing romance between Triston and Siri and the heat felt between them. They are clearly attracted to each other and their shared kisses made me yearn for a “Triston” in my life. You can safely read this book, as well as your teenage daughter, and know that no sex will be spattered throughout the pages.

As for historical fiction lovers, this book will greatly appeal to you. Joyce does incredible research into this time period. I always feel like I learn new things when I read one of Joyce’s books. She has a “Glossary of Medieval Terms” at the back of the book. For example, do you know what “Crenellated” means? What does “Fealty” mean? Do you know what a “Hauberk” is? I found this Glossary very helpful as I read the book.

This sweet romance from Joyce is 425 pages long. It is well worth your time to read it. Hide away in a room, pull out the chocolate or popcorn, get comfortable and escape to the medieval times. I enjoyed getting lost in the romance and suspense that is interwoven in Illuminations of the Heart.

If you would like to win your own copy of this new novel here are a few ways to enter:

-Look up one of the meanings to one of the medieval words I mentioned in this blog post. Tell me the definition to the word/s and that will count as one entry.
-Post a comment telling me what is your favorite kind of Romance novel. What era appeals to you the most. This will be another entry for you.
-The third thing you can do, is to become a follower of one of my blogs, here at LDS Women’s Book Review or “Why Not Because I Said So” and it will count as two entries.

One winner will be chosen from entries posted at both blogs. So start posting to win your own copy of this wonderful romance. You have one week to enter the contest. It will end next Monday night, Sept. 21st and the winner will be announced the next day.

Learn more about Joyce, her writing and research at:

http://walnutspringspress.blogspot.com/
http://www.joyce-dipastena.com/
http://jdp-news.blogspot.com/

http://medievalresearch.blogspot.com/
http://medievalvignettes.blogspot.com/

You can purchase Illuminations of the Heart at Amazon.com and DeseretBook.com

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