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Check Out Stephen C and M J Ormsby’s Awesome Blog Interview with Michelle Cohen Corasanti, the Author of The Almond Tree

9 Mar

The Almond Tree, written by Michelle Cohen Corasanti, is a stunning book.  Starting so innocently, it quickly drops you into a scene so horrific, but so real, that you cannot help but read on – a little boy finds a littler sister missing and, worried, runs outside to so if she’s there.  The only problem with that is the field is full of mines.

The worst happens and the family is moved, where he finds sanctuary in The Almond Tree.  This inspirational story centres on a family of Palestinians living in Israel and Gaza and the choices they make to survive.

A gripping, truly heart wrenching and beautifully written novel that I thoroughly enjoyed, so I asked Michelle for an interview.  Please welcome Michelle.

What would be the best piece of advice you would offer a new author?

A book isn’t about writing, it’s about rewriting and you need to have very thick skin. I came across an excellent blog post, http://caitlinkelly.com/tips/tip02.htm , on the importance of rewriting, and the necessity of being a pachyderm when asking for the honest opinions of friends and family during the initial drafting stages. It begins with a quote from the great E.B. white; who is, sadly, no longer with us, and here it is:

“The best writing is rewriting”.

The blog sums up White’s theories on the subject very succinctly, and I feel that it really is a must-read for all literary neophytes.

Is routine important to you?

I may not have followed his exact routine but whenever I found myself in danger of losing an entire day to non-literary pursuits, I brought to mind Peter De Vries, who said “I write when I’m inspired, and I see to it that I’m inspired at nine o’clock every morning”

I’d be very greateful to you if you did. Would you like me to publish an interview with you on my Blog. If so, please send me your answers to the same questions that you asked Michelle, and I’ll get the interview online with a link to your blog as well.

What genre would you like to write a book in (that you haven’t yet)?

The way I’m feeling right now, I’d like to be Harper Lee – one and done. But I’m a woman so that could change tomorrow.

Do you listen to music during all processes of writing? Do you listen music you know or new music when writing?

I need absolute silence when I write.

Do you ever have doubts about your own writing? Have you been writing long enough now that you instinctively know that it is good?

It took me seven years to write The Almond Tree. I had never even thought about becoming a writer until I realized that a writer can reach into readers’ hearts and change them forever. I wanted to be a human rights lawyer and help bring about a just peace in the Middle East. Then I realized as a writer I could potentially reach millions of people. I thought I would be able to write my novel in 3 months. I was a lawyer trained in writing after all. Seven years, 21 writing courses and 6 editors later, my novel was finished. I wasn’t going to stop until I found a way to tell a gripping story about what it was like to be Palestinian. I wanted to give the world a little Palestinians boy they could embrace and root for. BY the time I was done, I had no doubts. I read all the best sellers, the classics, the novels that brought about social change. I now know what is instinctively good.

The biggest issue I have dealt with was perspective. I was able to write my book because I had 15 years of perspective to digest and recover from what I experienced. The last part on Gaza, I did have to research and it took me two years because I had lost perspective. I tried to shine a light on everything. I forgot that less is sometimes more and that when you try to tell every horror, it overwhelms the reader. It’s like taking the reader out to the middle of the ocean and pushing him in without a lifejacket and speeding away.  Instinctively I know what is good unless I lose perspective and then I have no clue.

Have you read a romance novel? Do you think you could write one?

I don’t know if you’d consider Fifty Shades romance, but I did read the trilogy. I loved it. First of all I have a thing for broken men. I loved that Christian was gorgeous, brilliant, rich and he loved plain-Jane Anastasia. I loved the way he loved her. I could never write romance.

What sport did you play as a younger person? Were you good at it?

I was a gymnast. I was horrible at it. For one thing, I’m way too tall. To be good you have to have your centre of gravity low to the ground. I have too much body to control in the air. Second, I’m not a risk taker so after ten years I still couldn’t do a back tuck. Third, my father is extremely competitive and would take movies of my gymnastic meets. Afterwards we would have to watch them and he would point out everything I did wrong. You can imagine that didn’t make the sport enjoyable for me.

I remember seeing a video of Nadia Comaneci’s perfect 10s performance at the Montreal Olympics. Prior to that performance, such a score had been deemed impossible, which is why that year’s Olympics scoreboard manufacturer had been instructed to make a 3, rather than a 4, digit display. 10.00 was simply not on the cards; Yet she scored it anyway, and the board showed 1.00.  In order to win in the team event, Romania needed only an 8.00 from Comaneci. To this day I still wonder if they would have ended up in second place if my father had been one of the judges.

When you are coming up with an idea, do you look at the market for trends? Or do you write for you?

I come up with my own ideas, but I look at the market to see how others have expressed similar ideas and what works.  I wrote The Almond Tree with the hopes that it could do for the Palestinians what Uncle Tom’s Cabin did for the slaves. So I didn’t write The Almond Tree for me. I wrote it as a means to bring about peace and justice. I wanted to reach as many people as possible so I hit on a lot of universal themes. I kept my language simple so I could reach down and the subject matter complex enough to reach up.

Where do your ideas come from? Do you have a standard formula for plots or do stories come to you as a whole construct?

My ideas come from reality. Most of my book is based on real events  I fictionalized. A lot has come from the news or things I witnessed with my own eyes and then fictionalized. When I started to write The Almond Tree, I already had the seed for the story. Throughout all the rewrites, the story evolved and took on a life of its own.

When you start a new story, do you have a title for it? Does that trigger the story?

I’ve only written one story, The Almond Tree. The title came because through it all, The Almond Tree was there. It provided shelter, income  and food when there was none. It sustained the family.

Are movies of books ruining the book?

I don’t think that movies are ruining books. I think sometimes the movies aren’t as good as the book.

Do you see ebooks threatening traditional publishing?

I think ebooks are the wave of the future. I think they will ultimately threaten traditional publishing.

Do you prefer to read established authors or debut authors? How do you choose which ones to read?

I read whoever writes a great book.  I choose a book based on subject matter and reviews.

Can I get an autographed book? (lol)

Of course

Do you have a group of people that you show a new story to? How much impact can they have on the whole story?

I had six editors. In addition, my mother-in-law read every version of my novel. She has a keen ability to hone in on all my grammatical mistakes and any other shortcoming my story might have. My husband read almost every version.  During the 21 courses, all the students in my classes read the relevant parts. I listen to all feedback. I was trying to write the best novel possible. If someone saw something I missed, I wouldn’t hesitate to change it.

Do you set yourself a word limit for each book?

The Almond Tree was my only book. I wrote until I told the story I wanted to tell.

Do you have a target each day?

When I was writing, my target was to do as much as I could every day. I devoted every free moment I had for seven years to writing my book.

Do you write constantly or have breaks between books?

When I wrote The Almond Tree, I wrote constantly. Since I finished, I haven’t had time to write because I have been so busy promoting it.

Do you have characters running around your head? Do they dictate events and their histories to you?

I have fictionalized a lot of characters from reality and they are always in my head. Since I wrote a novel about historical fiction, the events happened, I just brought statistics to life.

What is your biggest (self-imposed) time waster?

I don’t think I had many. Maybe working out even though I needed that to stay mentally clear.

Do you remember the first time you saw your book in a shop?

Yes. It was at my local Barnes and Noble.

Do you read other people’s writing?

All the time. I have six books that I have to review.

Would you read mine?

I would love to read your book.

You can find lots of information about Michelle and The Almond Tree here: http://thealmondtreeproject.com/

More AMAZING erotic literature from Saskia Walker

8 Mar

he Taskill Witches series is coming soon: THE HARLOT, THE LIBERTINE and THE JEZEBEL, will be published on the HQN line. Now available for advance order!

THE LIBERTINE is an erotic historical romance – book two in the Taskill Witches series. HQN Books, March 2013.

Available in print in stores in the US and online in both print and digital download from all online retailers including:

Amazon.com

Amazon.UK

Barnes and Noble

Booktopia

Harlequin Australia

Also available in

audio book

COVER COPYHis powers could save her from ruin, or guide her swiftly to it..

Lennox Taskill is a dissolute rogue, a powerful witch who some say even trades his enchantments for profit when it pleases him. His only loyalty is to his coven, his disdain for humanity sealed by the searing memory of his mother burning at the stake. So when the wife of a wealthy landlord comes seeking his help, the beguiling Chloris Keavey unwittingly presents Lennox with his greatest opportunity for distraction…and retribution.

By failing to produce an heir, Chloris faces a terrible threat: being turned out by her heartless husband. Now, she vows to get with child, even if it means surrendering her body—and soul—to Lennox’s seductive magic. But with a witch hunt brewing, Lennox and Chloris are soon risking everything for their forbidden nights of ecstasy…and to protect the secret that could cost them their lives

“Walker deftly spins a captivating tale that will have readers holding their collective breath until the last page is turned.” ~ Publisher’s Weekly.

EXCERPT:

Saint Andrews, Scotland, 1715.

Even as she urged her mount through the forest Chloris Keavey questioned her judgment and sanity, for the place she sought was an ominous, gaunt dwelling where those who practiced witchcraft gathered under the protection of their leader. It was a dangerous undertaking, and when she caught sight of the building a shiver ran through her. Stone built and covered in ivy, the house merged into its setting, as wild and foreboding as the forest itself.

“I pray that my quest is not ill fated,” she murmured, steeling herself for what she might encounter. Chloris approached with a mixture of wariness and determination, for it was both a last resort and a terrible risk. The people who gathered there practiced forbidden magic, despite the threat of persecution and death that hung over their kind. Who was most insane—those who defied the law laid down by King James VI of Scotland over a hundred years earlier, or her for willingly seeking them out?

A breeze swept up around her on her approach, stirring the tall trees that surrounded the dwelling. Early spring leaves and blossoms seemed denser at this spot, which meant the trees cast the building in shadows as they swayed in the breeze. Evening was on its way. A candle set in a small window to one side of the heavy wooden door was the only welcoming sign she saw.

Dismounting, she looped her horse’s reins around the branch of a tree then approached the house. Now that she was closer she saw the barns and wooden outhouses beyond, nestled deeper in the trees. It was there that the commerce was undertaken, the cart and carriage construction. The work that proved a respectable mask for the other practices that went on here. Over the door she saw that a word had been carved into the wooden plinth. Somerled. It did not sound like a warning, but neither was she clear on its meaning.

When she rapped on the door a young woman appeared. The woman lifted the candlestick from the window, held it aloft and eyed Chloris with caution. “What or who is it that you are seeking?”

Was she a servant, or was she one of them, Chloris wondered. There was no cap covering the woman’s head and her hair was hanging loose about her shoulders. Her eyes were unusual, being a misty gray color. In all other respects she appeared none other than a normal young woman.

“I have been advised that a…” Witch. Chloris paused. She knew she must avoid saying the word. “…that a knowledgeable one abides here. Someone who might be able to advise me on an intimate matter.”

“What intimate matter might that be?” The young woman looked beyond Chloris, as if checking she was alone.

Chloris had been told she would have to state her cause to gain entry, so she was prepared. It was hard to voice the nature of her problem, however, especially to a strange woman. The sense of discomfort she felt was great, and yet the woman before her scarcely blinked when she said it aloud. “I’ve been told that your leader can influence a woman’s…fertility.”

“Who told you this?”

“Maura Dunbar.”

Mention of her contact by name drew a nod from the woman. She stood back and ushered Chloris into the hallway. “Wait here a moment and I will announce you.”

Chloris stood in silence and then looked back at the door. Evening was already closing in. She would have to be back at Torquil House in time for dinner or her absence would raise suspicion. It was still possible to leave, to disappear into the encroaching evening and return to the safety of her cousin’s home. No. I need to be here. They might be able to help me. The risk was great, but her options were few. Anything, absolutely anything was worth an attempt, and Chloris Keavey, wife of Gavin Meldrum of Edinburgh, was determined to be a brave soul.

Before she had the chance to think on it any longer the young woman returned, nodded, and led her into a parlor. Chloris followed, warily. Once inside she discovered it was far from what she might have expected, being both pleasantly furnished and warm, with the fragrant aroma of a peat fire filling the room.

Apart from the fire there was only one candle, the one that was held by her escort. The young woman nodded beyond the fireplace. “I’ll leave you to your dealings.”

She was gone inside a blink, taking her candle with her.

As the door clicked shut Chloris looked about the room. With only the glowing embers in the grate to see by it took her a few moments for her eyes to adjust. Then she noticed that the parlor was comfortable, with solid wooden chairs arranged around the fire and a well stacked bookshelf at the nearside of the hearth. On the far side she spied a generous stack of peat. The flagstones in front of the fireplace had been well polished and glinted in the firelight.

Almost immediately she knew she was not alone.

There was someone sitting in the gloomy shadows beyond the fireplace. It was the feeling of being watched that alerted her to the presence. Shrouded in darkness as the seat was, she could not discern the person, nor did the person make it easy on her by revealing themselves. Instead they remained hidden, watching her.

Chloris clasped her hands together so that they did not tremble. Never let them know you are afraid, her father had taught her, when she was a bairn. She swallowed, reminding herself that she was not easily frightened. Despite the lurid tales she’d heard told about the nature of witches, the house indicated some level of sophistication. Grandeur, even. Perhaps the old woman would be kindly. Something had kept her and her coven safe for a number of years, after all. Chloris could only guess at what it might be. She had come here with little information other than what she’d overheard the servant girls discussing. When she’d taken Maura aside and asked for the whereabouts of the local coven and its leader, she did so out of desperation. Now that she was here, the stories she’d heard about witches over the years came to mind and made her uneasy. Chloris did not want to be afraid. She’d made the decision to come here and she stood by that.

She coughed aloud and took several paces forward, closing on the fireplace. Peering into the gloom, she tried to discern features of the person sitting in the armchair.

“Good evening,” she said, her voice faltering.

The figure moved in response, long booted legs stretching across the floor toward her.

Chloris peered in disbelief. It was a man. How could this be?

She had expected a mature woman who could aid her with her problem. Either that or at least speak with knowledge about women and the problems of their sex. Instead it was a man who sat before her, languid—yet poised as a nobleman.

She struggled to maintain her composure, but her heart beat erratically. This was so far from what she had expected, and she had thought on it at length. Chloris was practical by nature, and whilst she had her doubts about how much their forbidden craft could achieve, she’d felt sure an older woman would have some sage words about fertility.

“Good evening.” His voice was deep and resonant.

It sent a shiver through her, because she could not see his features clearly. In his hand she saw that he nursed a crystal glass half full with dark wine.

“Please take a seat and speak with me about your concerns.” The man leaned forward in his chair.

Chloris inhaled sharply. The firelight cast his face in stark relief. There was a wild look to him for he had harsh, angular features and dark winged eyebrows that barely shaded the brilliance of his strange blue eyes. The firm outline of his mouth and the rakish look in his eye were evidence of a sensual nature. That left her in no doubt the rumors she’d heard about the carnal nature of those who practiced witchcraft were indeed true. On a woman she might have been able to ignore any blatant signs of their wanton ways, not so this man. She was scarcely able to look away though, despite the fact that she felt the urge to run. “Forgive me, Sire. I have made a mistake in coming here.”

Frowning, he rose from his chair. “Why so?”

Chloris stepped back into the shadows.

His eyelids flickered and he scrutinized her more intensely.

Chloris attempted to lower her gaze, but still found herself compelled to consider his impressive personage. He was built large and wore a skirted coat in dark red, with a fitted waistcoat beneath. The lace at his cuffs was well made but not overly extravagant. His knee breeches emphasized his build, tightly fitted about the thighs as they were, and his woolen stockings and buckled boots also displayed his stature. His clothes were finely made and stylish, but he wore no wig and his dark hair was loose and hung to his shoulders. In sum, he was dangerously attractive.

She mustered a response, forcing her gaze back to his. “On reflection I am not sure you are the right person to help me.”

A knowing smile passed over his handsome mouth. He stepped after her. “If a soul calls to me I am obligated to assist, if it is within my power to do so. In coming here, you have already called to me.”

“No.” The more she backed away the closer he seemed to be, looming over her, bright eyed and determined.

“Why not?” His manner was blatant to the point of rudeness. He swigged from his glass, draining it, and set it down on a nearby table. Devilment shone in his eyes. It was almost as if he was aware of her discomfort and its cause.

“I do not wish to discuss my intimate matters with a man.” A man who was several years younger than her, by the looks of him.

“We are equally able to help you, man or woman. I will treat you no different for being a woman, if you treat me no different for being a man.” Humor danced in his eyes. “We are equal in our humanity, are we not?”

His statement shocked her. It went against the rebellious ways she expected of his sort, and it was certainly nothing she ever expected to hear a man say. In her experience men were all too ready to demean a woman for their own aggrandizement, not elevate her to their own status. Shocking her was, no doubt, his purpose.

He circled her as he continued to speak, eyeing her from her head to toe, his gaze lingering particularly on her double breasted riding jacket as if he was able to discern her figure beneath. “I am aware of the matter that has brought you here. You described your problem to Ailsa, did you not?”

Chloris felt her face heat. Presumably Ailsa was the woman who had opened the door, and she had gone into the parlor to announce the visitor. That meant he was already fully aware of her problem. That and his bold inquisitive stare as he circled her, looking her up and down with total candor, made her situation verge on humiliation. She was desperate for help. Nevertheless she could not discuss matters of her marital bed with a young man, a man who some would say was in league with dark forces.

It was a mistake. She regretted coming and turned away, heading for the door.

He closed on the door quickly, striding over to bar her way.

Chloris drew to a halt. Her breath was trapped in her lungs. Cornered as she was, she defended herself. “Aren’t you afraid that someone will reveal the presence of your coven here, so close to the royal burgh of Saint Andrews?”

It had been an attempt to divert the nature of the exchange on her part, but it only seemed to amuse him. A lazy smile passed over his handsome face. “Coven?” He gestured around the room, where he was her only host. “What coven?”

The man’s manner was infuriating. “I know that people come to you for assistance,” she explained, “for your knowledge of…” Magic.

“The old ways.” He grew serious for a moment and she caught sight of a weary look in his expression. “What we believe in and practice are simply old ways, passed down from mother to child.” His eyes darkened. “It is time for the church and its slaves to cease the persecution of those who differ from them.”

Chloris felt oddly moved by his comments, and her mood leveled. “But I have heard that people like you are still hunted down. Surely you take a risk every time someone comes into your home for help.”

He considered her thoughtfully. “Those who come to us in earnest often have little cause to be angry and oust us. Is that your intention?”

Remembering her own need and its intimate nature, she shook her head in shame. “No, I…”

He cocked his head on one side, as if considering her comment. “You think I should be more cautious than allowing a strange woman into my home?”

Somewhat affronted, she rounded her eyes at him.

He laughed softly then bowed his head. “Perhaps you are right. Perhaps I should be more cautious. It was Maura Dunbar who advised you to come here. I do not recognize you. In what way are you an acquaintance of Maura?”

Chloris immediately regretted her comments, for they had drawn her into a deeper conversation. “She is a servant at the home of a friend of mine.”

More accurately, Maura was the servant of her cousin, Tamhas Keavey, with whom she was visiting. Chloris was unwilling to draw her cousin into it. Tamhas was a prominent landowner and a member of the town council of Saint Andrews. He would be appalled to know she was here with people who he thought should be strung up for their beliefs and practices.

The man studied her then nodded thoughtfully. “Intriguing.” His eyes glittered darkly. “As you are known to Maura I will choose to trust you to stay a while longer in my home.”

Again Chloris’ face heated. She had the feeling he was more than a little amused by their exchange. Before she could respond he moved, quick as lightning, and reached for her hand. His action took her by surprise and she was unable to react before he unfastened her kid glove, tugged it off and touched her bared hand.

“You wear a wedding band, I see.”

“Yes, I—”

He rested her glove over the doorknob.

Chloris stared at it. She knew what it signified. He no longer barred the door. If she picked up the glove she would be on her way.

“Tell me,” he continued, “do you wish to be with child, or to avoid that situation?”

Still he held her hand, keeping her close to him. She should have been affronted by his forthright questioning, and yet he was so strangely compelling that she whispered her response. “I wish to…to be with…” It was his stare, so bold and suggestive, that made her falter. Pulling her faculties together, she braced herself. “I wish to fall pregnant with my husband’s child.”

He considered her at length. All the while he stroked the tender skin on the inside of her wrist with one finger, softly, drawing her to him.

Try as she might, she could not summon the will to pull her hand free.

“Tell me your name.” His voice was so melodic, so seductive.

She swayed.

When she did not respond he inclined his head. “Your given name will suffice.”

“Chloris,” she whispered.

“Chloris.” He repeated it as if exploring the word that drew her attention, learning it inside and out. “Chloris.” He said it even slower, rolling the word around his mouth as if tasting it—as if tasting her.

Her legs went weak under her.

He reached his free hand out.

She flinched, thinking he was about to touch her face.

He paused, then pulled a spring blossom from her hair. Chloris realized it must have been trapped in the loose tendrils that had escaped her lace cap during her hasty ride. What surprised her most of all was his actions. First he examined the small bud as if it were of great importance, then he slipped it into his pocket. “You have no child.”

“No. I am barren.”

“I doubt that.” His comment was glibly stated.

She pulled her hand free of his and snatched her glove from the place he had rested it. “You seem to revel in being forthright to the point of rudeness, Sire.” Moreover, his words only made the pain worsen. It also made her doubt his skills. “What would you know of my life? Eight years I have been married and now my husband is ready to disown me.”

Regret swamped her immediately. She’d blurted it out and now she was embarrassed by her confession. Only she and Gavin knew about her shame over this private matter. A man such as Gavin Meldrum, with a sizeable fortune and numerous commercial interests, wanted a son. She had proven to be a failure in his eyes. Nevertheless her pride made this difficult for her. She rarely spoke of it, even to her closest friends, although she suspected many friends and acquaintances in Edinburgh whispered about her sorry state of affairs, and some of her friends had suggested ways in which she might fall pregnant, many of them quite immoral and totally unacceptable to her.

Tugging on her glove, she made ready to leave.

“Why do you attempt to turn away now? Now, when you have finally summoned the will to come here?”

It unnerved her that he knew that it had been a dilemma for her. Of course he did. In all likelihood, she surmised, it was a dilemma for anyone who came here. They practiced witchcraft, after all.

“The hardest part is over,” he added.

She met his gaze, determined not to be cowed by him, no matter how striking his presence. “Maura said she saw an older woman when she came here last week. I thought it would be the same for me.”

“Ah, so it really is because I am a man that you reject my potential assistance in this matter.”

She opened her mouth to ask why else, and then thought better of it. Everything she said only seemed to mire her deeper in this awkward discussion.

“I was not here last week.” A shadow passed through his eyes. “I am often away on…family concerns.” There was a mysterious, secretive edge to his expression and it made her wonder about the nature of his family concerns. “But I returned less than an hour ago and I was here for your visit. That is because fate has deemed it so.”

Chloris stared at him. Fate. Could it be true?

Moreover, how could it be that she was so strangely intrigued by the man, when she balked at the idea of discussing her intimate matters with him? He was no more than twenty five years of age in her estimation, and yet he was so strangely age-old, even though he was also rebellious in his ways. She was about to turn thirty years, and she was afraid to be alone with him. It was his air of questionable morals. He was unruly, a wolf in sheep’s clothing. He was also overly frank while he referenced her malady without stricture or concern.

“You are skittish and wary, Mistress Chloris. I understand why. However it is a shame because I sense you truly believe I have the power to help you.” Once again he spoke bluntly, but this time it was somewhat more serious and sympathetic.

She nodded. “Yes, I did believe that you might be able to help me. I know little of your ways,” she added cautiously, aware that many would think her insane walking into the house such as this, “however, as a child I had a nursemaid who had some skills as a healer. She used to take me for walks along the shore and in the meadows, and she would tell me about the plants and herbs and what ailments they could be used for. She was very fond of me, and I of her.”

The man’s curiosity seemed baited. “Tell me something of her ways.”

Chloris thought back to those times. “She wore scarlet ribbons around her wrists. She told me it was to ward off rheumatism.”

“She believed?”

“Yes, she said it eased the pain. Others said that the ribbons were a sign of her…” her voice dropped to a whisper. “…her bond with the devil.”

When she grew quiet he nodded. “You were not afraid of her though, and that is what has made you brave enough to come here.”

“My need is what made me brave enough. There is no other path available to me.” She lifted her chin. She was not used to sharing such intimate details about herself. “However, it is because of my Eithne, my nursemaid, that I believed it might be worthwhile coming.”

He studied her carefully. “Tell me, what became of your nursemaid?”

It was not she expected him to ask, for it was the part of the story she would rather not have shared. His gaze held hers though, refusing to let her ignore the question, demanding the truth. It was obvious that if she denied him any knowledge that he asked for, he would refuse to help her. She took a deep breath. “A dreadful illness took most of my family, the cough. Some say she protected me from it because she favored me. Others said she was unwilling to help the rest of my family by healing them.” She paused. “Eithne was turned out by my guardian.”

Eithne had been turned out by her cousin, Tamhas Keavey, with whom she now visited, but that was not the point. At the time she’d been a child and Tamhas’s ward. He’d been a man in his early twenties and the only one willing to take her in when her parents perished.

The man stared at her, assessing her. “You did not believe she was responsible?”

“No, I didn’t. The ability to cure the illness was beyond Eithne. But she knew things and she whispered for me in her prayers, using words that I didn’t understand.” Seeing the interest in his eyes she went on. “She told me I would be protected from the cough.”

It was so much more than a cough, but she knew they called it that in order to force its darkness back, to stand up to it. Chloris stemmed the other painful memories. Memories of the way her cousin and guardian had called Eithne a slave to the devil while he cast her out. Chloris had been plagued with doubts, respecting him as she did, but she had never been able to believe it.

Drawn back to the moment, she lifted her head. When she met the man’s stare she had the eerie suspicion he knew what she was thinking. “I was always happy when she held my hand.”

“She was a woman who respected the old ways.” He spoke softly.

Chloris felt comforted. Had he moved closer? His knees were pressed against her full skirts, but she had not been aware of him moving. “What do you mean when you say that, old ways?”

“Some call us pagans, heathen, because we believe in the power inherent in the natural world and we seek it in our rituals. Many Christians have benefited, and they will not speak out against us. However, they cannot defend us because they would be in danger of being called out themselves.” He shrugged. “We are forced to live a secretive existence.”

His tone had turned embittered, and Chloris felt he had shared something that was fundamental to his character. There was a brooding, almost angry look at the back of his eyes.

In a blink, it was gone.

He smiled, briefly. “Enough of that. We understand each other a little more now.” He inclined his head. “There are rituals that we undertake to increase both virility and fertility.” His gaze raked over her. “If you are willing I will perform the rituals myself, in order to help you.”

He was so close she felt the heat of his body, yet the whispered nature of their conversation suited her more than the blatant words he had delivered before. “What would these rituals entail?”

“I would need to lay my hands upon you.”

She knew by his expression that he meant more than holding her ungloved hand. Could she allow this compelling young man that liberty?

She needed to know more. “Why do you need to do that?”

“To evoke the essence of spring and direct it inside you.”

His whispered words affected her oddly. She felt suddenly hot, her limbs heavy. His eyes burned more brightly. Was it the reflection of the glowing embers in the hearth?

“By drawing on the essence of something from the natural world we harness the gift of birth and rebirth.” He lifted his hand and opened his palm to her. It gleamed, as if he held sunlight right there in his palm.

Gasping aloud, she saw what he intended—to demonstrate. A moment later he spoke again, but his words made no sense. He repeated the phrase several times beneath his breath. Chloris could not look away, so intense was his gaze.

Heat swelled in the pit of her belly. Glancing down, she saw that he now held his palm open in front of her skirts. It was directly above the spot where she burned, and when his hand moved and he whispered those strange words, so the heat roiled and gathered within her. Her thighs shuddered, her core tingling.

It was so carnal a sensation and so utterly unexpected that she swayed and her head dropped back.

Then he blew across the bare skin of her exposed neck. A gentle breath it was, and yet it felt like the wind through the trees to Chloris. Heavily scented, as if carrying blossoms like the one he had plucked from her hair.

Beneath her corset her chest felt constricted. Panic rushed in on her. Recoiling, she whispered. “No. No, I cannot—”

“Hush.”

He stepped away, breaking the connection. When he looked back his eyes were normal once again. “Take your leave. Think on what has been said and done here.”

There was no doubt she would think on it, at length, if only she could get away and gather her faculties. She could scarcely function due to the wild throbbing in her loins.

Fumbling for the door handle, she could do no more than mumble her thanks to him in response, rendered speechless as she was by his demonstration of magical power.

Mercifully, the door clicked open.

“Mistress Chloris?”

With her breath captured in her chest, she forced herself to meet his eyes. “Yes?”

“You asked if I could trust you. My instinct told me yes, and once I had touched you…I knew without doubt that I could trust you. That’s why I took off your glove.”

That was why. Her palm tingled in response to his comment, and at the very same moment she knew that he was informing her of something much deeper than the issue of trust between them. What was it—that he could connect with her intimately that way, perhaps read her thoughts and gain the measure of her, by running his fingertips over her skin?

When she responded, she could hear the tremble in her own voice. “I see.”

“A great deal can be learned and achieved through touch,” he continued, and his voice was low and heavy with suggestion, “and through laying my hands on you, I could ensure that all your desires could be fulfilled.”

Desires? Flustered, she tried to muster an appropriate response.

One corner of his mouth lifted. “You know where to find me.”

(C) Harlequin Enterprises

March 2013

8 Mar

Democracy, eh?

Tony Seed's Weblog

27 Palestinian journalists detained in the last two years by Zionist “democracy”

Palestinian journalists icon(23 February 2013) – The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today backed the call by its affiliate in Palestine, the Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate (PJS), which organised a protest in Ramallah to demand the release of their colleagues held by Israel.

The PJS organised the sit-in protest outside the Ofer detention center in east of Ramallah  while an Israeli court held a hearing in the case of detained Palestinian journalist Amir Abu Arafah and cartoonist Muhammad Sabanah.

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In Memoriam: Brian Johnston (April 1932-March 2013)

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

IFJ condemns shooting of photojournalist in Ramallah

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

Tony Seed's Weblog

Palestinian journalists icon[Press Release, 5 March 2013] – A PALESTINIAN PHOTOJOURNALIST was shot and severely injured by an Israeli soldier near the Ofer prison in Ramallah last Friday evening, according to the Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate (PJS), affiliated to the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ).

The IFJ has today condemned the shooting, calling for an investigation to identify and punish the shooter.

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Palestine: Spoiling it for everyone

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

Religious Atrocities

The UN has been forced to cancel its annual marathon in the Gaza Strip after the ruling Islamist movement Hamas insisted that women be banned from the race.

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Palestinian children in the Jordan Valley

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

Palestinian Diary

Palestinian children in the Jordan Valley

These brothers are two of eleven children who sleep, alongside their father and his two wives, all together in one bedroom. We met them on a road trip around the West Bank.

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Palestinians could face ‘consequences’: Baird

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

Israel’s segregated busses for Palestinians

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

kiays khalil

Israel has launched new bus lines connecting the Palestinian West Bank to Israel. The Israel government’s plans for the new bus lines were announced in November 2012. This was due to complaints from Israel settlers saying they didn’t feel safe sitting next to Palestinians.

At least 30,000 Palestinians travel to Israel to work due to the economical strangle Israel has on Palestine’s economy. The majority of workers who work across the border a builders Israel has very tight restriction on building in the Palestinian territories unless you are Israeli. The also have tight restrictions on materials allowed into Palestine so building work is rare.  Palestinians working in Israel are seen as cheap labor and have to go against their morals to earn a living.

In the past settlers have complained to the police about Palestinians on the same bus as them. This has resulted in many Palestinian workers being removed…

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Self-Determination in the 20th Century – Is it still sexy? (Tufts Uloop 3/3/2013)

6 Mar

Isreal’s mistreatment of the Palestinians . How has Israel got away with it for so long? Well, the people of the world have the truth hidden from them by a very biased media. Check this out and learn the truth, then spread it widely http://preview.tinyurl.com/ctxd8pg

Hani Azzam

To view original article, click here

“To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen universal peace” (Article I of the UN Charter).

In the world current international system of nation-states, the ideal that a national group can operate as an sdindependent component in this framework seems fitting. As the UN charter reads, the right for people to determine their own political and societal structure should “strengthen universal peace.” While that conclusion is certainly up for debate, we cannot deny its central role in forming the geopolitical globe that we see today.

Around the world, stateless national groups still envision self-determination movements as the vehicle for independence and increased international influence. Strong sovereign sentiments pervade politics in both the East and the West, from the Quebecois, Scottish, and Catalans, to Palestinians…

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