Readers, I've hosted Cynthia when each of her two novels, They Almost Always Come Home, and When Morning Glory Blooms, released, and I read them. They are the kind of stories that you can't put down, so I was pleased to help share this nonfiction title with you.
Welcome, Cynthia. What would you like
for our readers to know about you personally?
I’m an observer. Of everything. That explains my fascination
with details like a tendril on a morning glory and the small twitch when a
child is asked, “Honey, does he hurt you?” I notice subtle changes in
temperature. (I can always tell when the furnace is just about to kick in.)
Heightened powers of observation are useful for an author. The path a raindrop
takes as it wriggles down the surface of a bubbled window might become an
evocative detail in a scene in a novel. The forward curve of the shoulders of a
woman with a shattered heart deepens my empathy, which in turn deepens my
ability to communicate through story in nonfiction. I pray those details also
make me a better listener and, in my faith, a better worshiper, catching the
glorious subtleties of how God reveals Himself through nature and through the
human heart.
Tell us about your
family.
My husband and I have been married for 41 years (we met in
elementary school). We have three children, a daughter and two sons. Five
grandchildren—so far—complete the family. Our home is a 100-year-old house on
ten acres in the heart of Wisconsin ,
near cranberry bogs and cornfields, dairy farms and…and that’s about it.
Have you written
other nonfiction books?
Although Ragged Hope: Surviving the Fallout
of Other People’s Choices is my first full-length non-fiction solo project, I
was one of four authors who wrote devotions for the book His Grace is Sufficient…Decaf if Not (Summerside/Guideposts). I’m
one of the authors who wrote forty devotions each for the 2014 edition of
Guideposts’ annual devotional, Mornings
With Jesus. During the years I wrote and produced “The Heartbeat of the
Home” radio program, the ministry created books that were compilations of past
broadcasts that fit certain themes. Before the broadcast retired in 2012, we
had more than 95 books in print.
Do you have any other
books in the works right now?
In addition to Mornings
With Jesus 2014, I’m also anticipating the release of another full-length
novel in 2014, All My Belongings
(Abingdon Press). Both nonfiction and fiction projects are calling to me.
They’re keep-me-awake-at-night stories waiting to be told.
What kinds of hobbies
and leisure activities do you enjoy?
Give me a good book, a cozy beach chair on a sandy shore by
an ocean or one of the Great Lakes , and an
endless supply of sun tea or hot tea, and I’m happier than I ought to be. I
love to travel. Most of my bucket-list items involve travel. I’m waiting for
that dance-and-shout moment when my hitherto unused passport gets its first
international stamp. As far as hobbies, knitting was once a high priority, but
it has had to slink into the background while I keep up with deadlines and
serve as American Christian Fiction Writer’s Professional Relations Liaison.
Music is an ever-present accompaniment to my life.
Why did you write the
featured book?
Ragged Hope was written to tell the untold stories—to give
voice to those who don’t make the headlines but pay a dear price because of the
choices of those who do. We see them all around us—the husband with an
emotionally distant wife, the grandparents sacrificing their retirement years
to raise their grandchildren because the kids’ parents are in jail or rehab,
the elderly woman devastated by an ethics-challenged financial planner, the
spouse of an alcoholic…
Not only are they bearing consequences not of their own
making, they’re often handed lifelong challenges that wear hope thin. When
hope’s edges grow frayed, what then?
What do you want the
reader to take away from the book?
A fresh appreciation for hope’s tenacity. A renewed
assurance that God not only sees but cares. And a deeper understanding of how
we can reach out in a meaningful way to lessen the fallout for those
suffocating under the ash cloud of someone else’s bad, misguided, thoughtless,
or even criminal choices. The hope God offers may seem to hide temporarily. But
it’s there, waiting to be uncovered. The stories reveal how survivors found a
holding-on place. The reflection questions get us thinking about how well we’re
surviving or about what we can do more effectively to express how much we care
about those around us caught in the fallout.
Where on the Internet
can the readers find you?
Readers can find me at www.cynthiaruchti.com, www.facebook.com/CynthiaRuchtiReaderPage,
or www.twitter.com/cynthiaruchti.
I love interacting with readers and look forward to carrying on the discussion
about the kinds of subjects addressed in Ragged Hope: Surviving the Fallout
of Other People’s Choices.Thank you, Cynthia, for sharing this book with us. I can think of a number of people I know who need to read this.
Cynthia Ruchti is celebrating the release of Ragged Hope: Surviving the Fallout of Other People’s Choices (Abingdon Press) with a $200 Visa Cash Card "Hope" Giveaway and Facebook Party!
One winner will receive:
- A $200 Visa Cash Card
- Ragged Hope by Cynthia Ruchti
So grab your copy of Ragged Hope and join Cynthia on the evening of August 1st for a chance to connect and make some new friends. (If you haven't read the book, don't let that stop you from coming!)
Don't miss a moment of the fun; RSVP today. Hope to see you on the 1st!
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.Ragged Hope - Christianbook.com
Ragged Hope: Surviving the Fallout of Other People's Choices - Amazon.com
Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book on this blog. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)
Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.
The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.
If you’re reading this on Google +, Feedblitz, Facebook, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link.
Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com
I think I need this book, and I bet I'm not alone. Congrats, Cynthia, on the release!
ReplyDeleteCindy, Ohio
Thank you, Cindy. I pray it touches your heart with a new surge of hope.
ReplyDeleteHow about my own heart? My mother's heart? My uncle's heart? We're right in the midst of the fallout and while I'm comforted by the words of wisdom in Ragged Hope, I'm in the midst of it. It's too fresh to feel the full effects of hope in the darkness. Or rather, that hope is the only thing I have left to cling to...that and my heavenly Father's arms...
ReplyDeleteThank you, dear one, for your openness. It's true that hope seems to hide behind a curtain of fallout ash when we're in the midst of it. Praying that despite the pain, you'll sense the whispers of His hope.
ReplyDeleteThanks Cynthia for sharing these stories and bringing hope to many. I was just working on a column about having a relative in prison and was shocked that every person who heard the topic has chimed in that my experience is a shared one. I truly believe that is what your book will do - resonate with the multitudes with ragged hope. Delores Racine, WI
ReplyDeleteThis book swept over me with fresh waves of hope for so many situations that have left fall out in my life! Thanks Cynthia for your special, godly insights.This book is a must read for everyone!
ReplyDeleteJackie, Wisconsin
Here are the comments from a lady who had a hard time trying to comment:
ReplyDeleteBeing a child of divorce, I have lived with the consequences of others my whole life. As an adult and mother, living with the consequences of my teenage children's decisions. Now after 30 years of marriage, I am living with the effects of a husband who has chosen to leave his family! I have to admit, I feel like I have lived a large portion of my life in true Eeyore style, believing that I am the only one who has ever been
Believing that I am the only one left like this. But after reading Ragged Hope by Cynthia Ruchti, I realize there are a myriad of ways we live with the consequences of others' choices and I am not the only one hurting.
I cannot let the rest of my life be ruled and decided on by anyone other that my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, who has promised to never leave me. He gets to choose how the rest of my life plays out. According to scripture, His plan is WAY better anyway!
Cynthia...I couldn't get the blog site to post my comments, so I left it here. Hopefully you can copy and repost it to the blog. Love ya.
Thank you, Delores. Isn't it interesting how many have a close connection to someone in prison? No wonder Jesus included, "I was in prison and you visited me" in His description about how we best express His love to others.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Delores. Isn't it interesting how many have a close connection to someone in prison? No wonder Jesus included, "I was in prison and you visited me" in His description about how we best express His love to others.
ReplyDeleteJackie, I appreciate your comments about Ragged Hope. They mean so much.
ReplyDeleteYes, there is a statement in the book that reminds us that children can survive the fallout of divorce, but not unscathed. So glad, reader, that you are living proof of God's power to redeem difficult situations.
ReplyDeleteYes, there is a statement in the book that reminds us that children can survive the fallout of divorce, but not unscathed. So glad, reader, that you are living proof of God's power to redeem difficult situations.
ReplyDeletewould love to read this book...thanks for the chance lena & Cynthia.
ReplyDeletekarenk...from PA
kmkuka at yahoo dot com
Karen from PA, we're glad you stopped by.
ReplyDeleteI like that you are writing about people who struggle on and take on new struggles because of family and others in their lives who make poor choices. As a nurse, I see lots of this, especially grandparents raising grandchildren. sharon, CA
ReplyDeleteSo true, Sharon. Sad, but true. Thanks for your comment.
ReplyDeleteI think we all live with the consequences of others. I know I do and would love to read Ragged Hope. Thank you Cynthia for writing this book!
ReplyDeleteBeth from Iowa
Would love to win this book also.
ReplyDeleteFaith's Nana
Ruby and Faith's Nana, glad you stopped by. Thanks for taking the time to find out a little more about Ragged Hope.
ReplyDeleteEnter me!!
ReplyDeleteSharon Richmond Bryant
Conway,SC.
sharonruth126@gmail.com
Thanks for your exclamation point enthusiasm, Sharon! Made me smile today.
ReplyDelete