A reluctant city girl, pining for wide open spaces
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
REVIEW OF "A NEW PROMISE"

Just wanted to share the latest review of my upcoming release, "A New Promise."  If you aren't familiar with Delia Latham, she is a wonderful author of Christian romantic fiction....www.Delialatham.com.
Delia was kind enough to review "A New Promise", and has this to say about the book:
When Scott Parnell made the promise to his wife, Rachel - a victim of Huntington's disease - he had every intention of keeping it. But now she lies in a nearby medical facility, hooked up to the life support machinery she specifically instructed against. Scott can't bring himself to release her to the natural death she wanted.

Their children struggle with the pain of losing their mother. She's not alive, but not quite dead either. In addition, they face the terrifying possibility of falling prey to the same cruel disease that took her from them. Seventeen-year-old Tyler's fear and rebellion plummet him into a dangerous flirtation with drugs and alcohol. Tawnya, a socially outcast 12-year-old, secretly embraces bulimic behavior.

And the family's already precarious life is about to change yet again.

Rachel's younger sister is a successful career woman who shook the dust of Shuksan, Washington off her stylish shoes years ago. A staunch Christian, she responds obediently to the gentle God-tugs on her heart in regard to her sister's children, and determines to help her niece and nephew through the overwhelming tragedy of their mother's condition, even if it means returning to her hometown and facing a whole passel of unwelcome memories. Her brother-in-law is a grown man, she surmises - he can help himself if he wishes. As far as she can see, he certainly doesn't seem inclined to be there for Tyler and Tawnya.

But God has special plans for both Scott and Celeste...

A New Promise is a heartwarming, soul-stirring novel that takes the emotional bull by the horns and rides it fearlessly into the devastation wrought on the Parnell family by Huntington's disease.

Julie Eller handles a highly controversial subject - the right to die - with grace, finesse, and utter believability. That Ms. Eller was able to weave a beautiful romance into an intricate storyline filled with difficult circumstances says much about her writing skills. Turning all of the devastation into a triumph of spiritual rebirth, rekindled hope, and the promise of new love and new life ... that makes Ms. Eller a truly gifted storyteller with an obviously spiritual mindset and a direct link to the very real God who directs the rocky paths of her characters.

Absolutely unforgettable!
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Monday, August 13, 2007
SUMMERTIME

Ah, sweet summer-time.  August, especially.  Lots of memories from those days on the farm.  For us, August was all about dealing with the garden, with some time carved out for morning and evening horseback rides; just too bloomin' hot during the day.

August was about canning and preserving vegetables, and going to the orchards to pick cherries.  We'd leave at 0-dark-thirty (about 4 AM), arrive at the orchard about 6 AM, ascend ladders and pick like it was going out of style, battling wasps, and sneaking the occasional lush, juicy cherry before it could land in the bucket.  Ahh, bliss.  Nothing like fresh fruit, is there?

The orchard was just a bit north of Davenport, Washington, across the Columbia River, outside of a little town called Hunters.  This was just a tiny little town, and in those days (1970s), there was still a hitching rail in front of the little grocery store.  I thought this was the coolest thing, and envisioned the outlying farmers, and hunters, showing up on horseback to pick up a few provisions before loading their saddlebags and departing. 

I do confess to still wondering who was responsible for any horse biscuits left out front?  I suppose we have to assume that the owners of the animals dealt with this issue.  One can hope so, anyway! 

After we'd accummulated the required amount of fruit for that year's canning and freezing, we'd load up and cross back across the river, turn into the campground and have lunch at one of the warped, weathered picnic tables, mindful of splinters waiting to snag clothing.  The river flowed close at hand, and the scent of the pine trees was intoxicating to us dry-landers.  We were just far enough from the trees to really appreciate them; our farm was sagebrush and scabrock, and the only trees were those planted in the yard, and those growing along the creek bed. 

Back home by 4 PM or so, we'd start the canning process, finally falling into bed in a state of exhaustion at midnight or so. 

Then, the corn.....pulling thick ears from the rustling stalks, husking until it felt like we'd be doing it for the rest of our natural lives, then the blanching, then cooling the ears outside in metal tubs of cold water filled with the garden hose.....I loved this part of it; it was kinda-sorta like going swimming, and I remember how good it felt to immerse my arms in that cool water. 

Pulling the stalks, throwing them in the pickup, then driving out to the cow pasture and emptying them onto the ground.  The cows would come running as if they knew they were about to receive a special treat.  Plenty of milling around, kicking up dust, head-butting each other out of the way....an object lesson in poor manners, in my young mind. 

Continuing to clean up the garden through the weeks that followed; digging carrots and spuds and placing them in boxes of dirt in the cellar for winter storage.

Bringing in the last of the cantaloupe, dropping a big scoop of vanilla ice cream into the cavity, and knowing that this was the last time for the summer....

Taking that last skinny-dip in the creek, soaking up the afternoon heat and filled with varying degrees of anticipation and dread of the upcoming school year.

August.  Days of sweet memories, and days of sweet peaches, cherries and raspberries, and perfect, fragrant tomatoes ripe on the vine.  Days made all the more special knowing that they are fleeting and that autumn, and soon winter, will be upon us.

I'd dearly love to have a couple of tomatoes off the vine this summer, but I'm not holding my breath.  We've had cool temperatures and lots of rain this year, and the tomatoes are about the size of crab-apples and as green as gourds.  Maybe if we have a couple of weeks of good sunshine, they'll surprise me.  I hope so.

One thing for sure--we won't be pawning them off on the neighbors this year!

"As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night wiill never cease."  Gen. 8:22

 

 


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Friday, August 10, 2007
WE HAVE A WINNER!

I've drawn the winning name out of my hubby's Washington State University Cougars hat, and the winner of the advance copy of "A New Promise" is Southerngal, Alyssa Rutledge.  Congratulations, Alyssa! 

Thanks to everyone who entered the drawing.  I wish I could send copies to each and every one of you!

If you'd like your very own copy of "A New Promise", you can order it directly from the publisher through my website, www.Julieeller.com, or through Barnes & Nobles.  I'm not up on Amazon or Christianbook.com yet for some reason.  If you're itching to receive it quickly, ordering it through the publisher and my website will put it in your hands within a week or two; through B&N you'll have to wait until after the 9/11 release.  There's a cost difference of a few dollars involved. 

If you do order the book, I hope you'll enjoy it thoroughly and that it will uplift, encourage and entertain you, and that you will be reminded that regardless of how big our life issues may be, God is still bigger.

Many blessings to all!

Julie

 


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Thursday, August 9, 2007
ONLY ONE DAY UNTIL THE DRAWING!

Tomorrow, Friday, 8/10, I'll be drawing a name from the entries who've signed up to win a free copy of my upcoming release, "A New Promise."  If you haven't had a chance to stop by, please visit my previous blog entry and check it out.

If you're interested in reading a few reviews, I'm "up" on Barnes & Nobles.com this week.  Just enter Julie Eller into the Search bar and click on the book cover.  They don't have the actual image of the book up yet, but it will take you to the review/order page. 

If a book written for Christian women, which is set in rural Washington State, appeals to you, please come by and leave a comment on the original blog.

Many blessings!

Julie

Julie Eller

Author Of Inspirational Fiction

"A New Promise"--9/11/07!

www.Julieeller.com

"Encouraged in heart, united in love."  Col. 2:2

 

 


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Thursday, August 2, 2007
DRAWING FOR FREE COPY OF "A NEW PROMISE" !

My first book, "A New Promise", will release on 9/11.  I've decided to hold a drawing for a free copy of the book on Homesteadblogger.  Leave a comment to be entered into the drawing, which will be held on Friday, 8/10/07.

"A New Promise" is Christian fiction, written for women, and is the story of a family whose lives are in tumult as a result of a mother afflicted with end-stage Huntington's disease.  As his adolescent children deal with serious adjustment issues, their father wonders why the God they loved and trusted has seemingly abandoned his family.

You can visit my "real" website, www.Julieeller.com, to learn more about me and to watch a short book trailer. 

Also, this week I'm being featured in an author interview at:  http://writesthoughts.blogspot.com/   Stop by and check it out.

Thanks for entering the drawing, and may the Lord bless you richly.

Julie

 


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Wednesday, June 20, 2007
THE HOME PLACE

THE HOME PLACE

 In the southeast corner of Lincoln County lies a small kingdom; a 600-acre parcel of land that encapsulates the heart of a young girl.  The princess of this domicile, she knows these hills and valleys intimately, each trail worn into the dusty earth by the hooves of countless generations of cattle over many years.

Into the heart of her kingdom she rides on her fine Quarterhorse mare, seeking both peace and adventure, rarely failing to capture each.  Rolling hills embrace a green, verdant meadow through which Crab Creek flows, providing sustenance to land and creature alike.  A trail winds upward to the summit of a sagebrush-covered hill, picking its way through the scab rock that litters the earth’s surface as if pebbles flung by a giant hand in a fit of pique.

 Nestled into a corner of the property lies an abandoned homestead, the remaining corral and cattle chute broken and decrepit with the disrepair of decades.  Who were these people who had settled so many years ago in this lonely spot, and what became of them?  When and why did they move on?  The landscape and climate tell a portion of the story; arid in summer and bitterly cold with driving, swirling snow in winter, only the hardy survived while eeking out a living in this place.  Silence rings loudly through the air, broken by the whirr of crickets and occasional cry of a hawk, circling high above.  Its inhabitants gone these many years, the homestead silently whispers, providing sole testament to the very fact of its occupants’ existence, and the dreams they left behind.

Six hundred acres, a fine spread of land on which the better part of a day could be spent riding horseback, traveling one end to the other.  Life abounds, wild game and domestic cattle grazing under the warmth of the sun.  Burrowing creatures scurry industriously, collecting food and enjoying that same sun, unmindful of the hazard that their subterranean lodgings present the unsuspecting and fragile legs of a saddle horse. 

 There!  A band of six whitetail deer raise their heads as one, stand frozen in an instant of indecision, then as if by unspoken agreement, wheel and ascend the hillside in a graceful arc of motion.  The barbed wire fence poses no deterrent to their flight; they soar as winged creatures might, as effortlessly as thistledown in the wind.  Except for the fading sound of hoofbeats, this rare and beautiful sight may have existed only in the imagination of the girl and her mount. 

 There are several impressive basalt formations scattered through these untamed hills, massive bodies of rock growing from the earth and jutting proudly toward the sky.  In her mind’s eye, the girl can see a tribe of Indians sitting erect and proudly on their ponies, headdresses of bright feathers adorning their dark braids.  She sees them turn in formation, riding single-file in bareback confidence, making their way to the creek to water their horses before setting out once more to attend to whatever tasks await them.

Making her way across the valley, bypassing the masonry bridge and fording the creek on horseback, the girl watches in amusement as the frogs and turtles sunning themselves on rocks at the water’s edge hurriedly relinquish their strongholds, disappearing into the water with tiny splashes.  Water skippers skim the surface and an occasional crayfish emerges from the water to flounder about in the mud. There had been hot summer afternoons spent sloshing in the slow-flowing water, jeans and cowboy boots shucked off and left absently atop the creek bank as she reveled in the guilty pleasure of skinny-dipping. And, oh, how quickly she’d scaled that creek bank and struggled into the uncooperative garments, wet-skinned and frantic as the pickup truck carrying her uncle and cousin unexpectedly bounced across the meadow one sultry afternoon. 

 Eying the hills on the opposite side of the valley, she urges the mare through the waist-high alfalfa grass, patiently allowing the mare to snatch a mouthful of grass here and there.  Reaching the hills, she rides to a small copse of trees; chokecherry trees bearing small red berries.  There were necklaces at home, made from the bounty of these berries, strung together with needle and thread and dried, presented to her mother and grandmother as gifts.  Years later, she would find the quaint little necklace in her mother’s jewelry collection and be humbled at the love shown in that small gesture. 

 Yes, there was a time that a person could ride for an entire day, unimpeded by fence or other human encumbrance, could ride amid the herd of cattle, enjoying the antics of small white-faced calves as they cavorted under the watchful eyes of their mothers.  And after a day in the saddle, could look down from the hills to the great white house nestled behind a small fresh-water pond.  There were two large red barns, a chicken-house in the same red paint and trimmed in white, and pens with outbuildings that had housed hogs in earlier years.  There were rabbits living in the row of hutches against the chicken-house wall; friendly, cuddly rabbits with wiggly noses, velvet-soft ears, white fur and brilliant pink eyes. 

The house itself is a three-story legend bespeaking the elegance and craftsmanship of an earlier time.  Built in 1927, the story of the construction of this beautiful home became known for miles around and people from fair distances would come in their buggies to witness for themselves the progress of the builders.  With an old-world eye to detail and a master craftsman’s pride, the house is a quiet sanctuary of elegance, while never losing the very essence of a home.  Hand-carved moldings adorn the walls and high, arched ceilings rise gracefully above walls of large windows hung with heavy damask draperies and fine lace curtains.  Boasting seven bedrooms and two kitchens, with a full basement, the house had been built to accommodate a large family, and had served its purpose well.  The girl lived in this beautiful old home with her mother and grandmother, and never failed to note the wide eyes and awe-filled manner in  which friends seeing her home for the first time responded upon entering its doors. But it was just home, after all, and something that one not only takes for granted, but expects to  forever remain a safe harbor.

Adorning the yard, almost as if jewels surrounding a larger stone, were a profusion of flowers in the summer months, coaxed forth by the skilled hand of a mother, and fringing the borders of the lawn in a riot of color.  There was a large and plentiful garden each summer, providing everything from potatoes, carrots and cantaloupe to lush raspberries hanging on laden vines. 

 Just above and beyond the garden was the pond, a perfect circle of fresh spring water with a population of fish who lived under the dock and refused the hook each time the girl cast her line.  But Grandma had the touch; oh, yes.  Sitting patiently upon her three-legged fishing stool, kerchief draping the coronet of braids crowning her silver head, Grandma could coax the elusive fish from their lair.  And did, time and again, until age and infirmity took their toll on her unsteady legs and ended those lazy afternoons of fishing forever. 

 Across the yard is an old country school house, standing silently on its rock foundation.  Built in 1923, the school house had serviced the children of the great white house, and others, until the 1950s when the local school district had come into existence and offered busing to their outlying students.  One could walk through this old building, stand where rows of desks had once filled the rooms, and draw with ancient, crumbling chalk on the blackboards still hanging on discolored walls.  The teachers, intrepid young ladies willing to leave the comforts of family and home, had the challenging task of stimulating active minds from kindergarten through high school, all in close quarters and with limited curriculum and supplies.  These ladies had boarded with the family in the great house, ate their meals at the table with their students and were a close extension of the family itself; a comfort for these young women removed from their own families for months on end.

 The days of childhood pass, one slipping into the next, until calendars are filled and discarded, one after another.  But the land lies unchanged; it is the one constant in the life of a tomboy who has matured into a young lady.  The horses have changed over the years as well, but the trails and routes they carry their mistress over are the same.  Perhaps the outings have become less frequent and for shorter amounts of time, for life as a teenager is demanding and stressful.  And when the demands become too consuming, escape awaits in the form of a saddle thrown onto the back of a palomino mare, or perhaps a bay gelding this time.  And the release found in these outings is a gift she bestows upon herself, always believing she’ll have this opportunity. 

 How life’s path leads from our doorway to unexplored horizons; and not just for young ladies, but for their mothers and, finally, for grandmothers, too.  A grandmother passes away after a long and productive life.  A mother remarries after years of widowhood, and moves with her new husband to a neighboring farm, and the young princess has found her own prince, and is preparing her own castle in the city, miles away. The land lies in wait, livestock and horses sold, house devoid of possessions and  garden lying fallow this spring. There are family members who live in the great house for some time, finally returning to their own home, as they eventually must.  Then, the solution is found; a cousin and her husband and family will take over the home place, will run their own cattle and live in the great house so that it will not deteriorate, as empty houses do. 

 But there are new farming practices these days, and many changes are in the wind; rotational grazing, requiring fence lines to separate grazing areas and maintain the herd in a designated area.  Like seams running down a patchwork quilt, the open spaces of the heretofore untamed hills are whittled down into sections, secured with barbed wire and large metal gates.  Changes are afoot in the meadow, as well. A marshy area where one could always enjoy the serene beauty of mallard ducks and Canada geese is backfilled, tilled under and planted; another natural wetland habitat lost forever. 

 And in the great house, changes are taking place as well.  A wall is removed here, a bathroom added there, and the house takes on the personality of its owners.  Once a showplace of quiet elegance and style, its glory has been reduced to a quiet acceptance of the downstairs “living” area filled with clutter and the occasional dust bunny.  If a house could speak, it would wonder aloud at the indignities visited upon its hapless being, and remember with longing the days, years, even decades, when its potential was appreciated and realized.  The garden lies empty and the beautiful grounds have died a lingering death; the once beautiful landscaping has eroded with neglect and dandelions grace the scrub grass where the lush green of a lovingly tended yard once thrived. 

 The barns still stand side by side, old boards crying for paint.  The outbuildings are gone, as is the chicken house, although the rabbit hutches stand forlorn, broken down and rotting as the years move along.  The school house still stands sentinel, a relic from a simpler time; now serving as a storage building, filled to the eaves with junk and vermin.  

In the mists of memory, a young girl surveys her kingdom.  As dawn breaks over the hills, she takes stock of her kingdom, more precious now than ever before, and her heart is awash with nostalgia. There is a quiet sorrow in the knowledge that the innocence of her childhood kingdom is gone forever, lost in the sands of time and lamented by few.

I turn my eyes toward the sky in search of the mourning dove, whose plaintive cry echoes my own. 

This article appeared in the September 2002 issue of Grit Magazine.

 

 

 

 


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Saturday, June 16, 2007
THE RELUCTANT CITY GIRL SPEAKS

Hi, everybody.  I'm new to this site, so bear with me while I get my feet under me and figure out how it works around here.  While I'm struggling with my innate disinclination to all things technical, I'll just introduce myself and thank Susan for telling me about Homesteadblogger.com.  Now, officially, I don't qualify as a "homesteader", farmer''s wife, or anything close, but do good intentions count?  And memories from 18 years spent growing up on a real-live cattle ranch in Eastern Washington? 

I guess I'd better specify that when I mentioned good intentions and being a farmer's wife, it wasn't in the context of finding a husband who farmed, or to in any way shake loose the one I have; he's a keeper, and is also a "farm kid" who wants to get back to the dry side of the State of Washington. 

Just think of us, hum the tune to 'California Dreamin' and trade out "California" for "Eastern Washington", and we'll be in business!

Let's see, a good memory.....there are soooo many......OK, how's this?

I was a "horsey" kid through-and-through, from the time of my first Shetland-Welsh pony, Black Beauty, on my eighth birthday, through several horses that followed until I met my husband and took the first steps that would lead me to a more urban lifestyle.  Beauty was an amazing little mare, and was my very best friend for several years, until it came time to let her go to a family with young children who could actually ride, and love, a pony that I'd outgrown.  That was a very difficult decision, but I'll never forget the joy and excitement those three little kids displayed upon coming to pick up their new pony; they were literally jumping with joy. Witnessing their immediate love for my friend made it easier to let her go. 

The summer of 1972 was extremely hot, and the Northwest was experiencing drought conditions.  We farmed on Crab Creek, which was counted upon as the cattle's water source year-around.  These, of course, were the days when farmers could range cattle in creek areas, before the Department Of Reclamation began tightening restrictions on water use.  Nowadays, Crab Creek is protected, and the days of seeing cattle ranging anywhere near free-flowing creeks is a thing of the past.  Progress, and for good purposes, but still marking an end to accepted farming practices.....

I'm not getting very far with my story, am I?  Now, I was almost 12 that summer, and knew no fear.  In this extremely dry summer, we'd begun to notice rattlesnakes approaching right up to the house; my mom (widowed for about a year and a half at this point and an amazing woman) blasted the one lurking to the side of the porch steps with the hastily-retrieved .22.  Several evenings later, I'd taken Beauty out for a ride in the meadow.  As dusk fell, we returned to the barn, and I cleaned and stored the tack.  Upon returning from the tack room, I noticed that Beauty was standing inside the barn, which was unusual for her; she'd have typically beat feet back to the pasture as soon as I'd released her, but not this night.  As I approached, I saw a dark shape in the corner of the barn.  One of my cats had been expecting kittens, and I assumed that it was she, with her new babies.  I'd only taken two steps toward my "kitty" when Beauty moved swiftly, blocked my body with her own and pushed me back several steps.  It was only at this point that the "kitty" began uncoiling itself, and with a warning rattle, announced its presence.  I'll never forget my shock in realizing that had it not been for my faithful friend, I would have stuck my hand right into a rattler's personal business and possibly paid for my carelessness with my life.  Had I turned on the light in the barn?  No. 

Had I brushed down my pony before releasing her, after removing saddle and blanket?  No. 

Shame on me. 

But she knew the snake was there, and rather than leaving the stuffy barn for the cool freshness of the approaching night, she stood her ground and protected her "girl."  Her valor, and love, are gifts I could never repay, and I knew without reservation that the children who inherited this valiant little lady would be equally loved.  She had the build of a princess and the heart of a Percheron, and was my first love.

And the snake?  Well, my mom had occasion to shoot two rattlers in the space of three days, if memory serves. 

As were many others, we were very glad to see the autumn storm clouds build over the horizon, and rejoiced in every rain drop that fell. 

Thanks for sharing my memory.

Blessings.

Julie

 

 

 

 

 


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