Hello, friends and readers of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir":
A unique gift idea for the people in your life who are serving others:
1. Purchase a copy of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir" - AND -
2. Contact me (carol@caroldmarsh.com) to get a coupon for this DISCOUNTED COURSE that SUPPORTS AND NURTURES people serving others. I’ll send you a coupon that you will give to the gift recipient along with the gift book.
Give a gift of support, nurture and growth! Learn more HERE.
Other gift ideas FOR SUPPORTIVE COURSES to go along with the book:
Contact me (carol@caroldmarsh.com) if you have questions or need more information.
May you have a peaceful and joyful season - Carol
Hello, friends and readers of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir" -
Here’s another 5-Star review. This one is from Ryan Lanz at Book Review Directory, and you can link to the original review HERE.
Hello, friends and readers of NOWHERE ELSE I WANT TO BE: A MEMOIR:
This is a short message to tell you about my first podcast inerview.
Janna Marlies Maron, editor of the literary journal Under the Gum Tree, interviewed me about my book a month ago, and produced the interview for her podcast, More to the Story. In it, we talk about my memoir, life and work at Miriam’s House, writing while grieving, and lots more.
She entitled it "Structure is a B*tch, and Processing Grief through Writing Nonfiction."
It’s about 15 minutes long, and you can listen to it HERE.
I hope you’re all well! --Carol
Dear friends and readers of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir":
Good news!
"Nowhere Else I Want to Be" has won the Nonfiction GRAND PRIZE in the Authors Talk About It 2017 Book Contest.
This is the third award won by the book, which has also been awarded the FINALIST in 2017 Indie Excellence Book Awards (Memoir) and a FINALIST in 2017 Next Generation Indie Book Awards (Autobiography and Memoir).
The book has also received 5-Star reviews from Authors Talk About It and Readers Favorites.
And here’s a LINK to an article about the book and me in the September issue of A&U MAGAZINE.
On November 16, I’ll be featured in a podcast interview on Janna Marlies Maron’s More to the Story.
Finally, please bear with me as I drop a broad hint: THE HOLIDAYS APPROACH! "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir" makes an inspiring gift:
Best wishes, Carol D. Marsh
Hey! LISTEN!
The audiobook of Sunshine is Forever is available via Audible, narrated by Kirby Heyborne!
ALSO, please review the book on Amazon with a STAR RATING and A SHORT REVIEW.
Both at this LINK: https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=sunshine+is+forever
Thanks so much!!!
Kyle T. Cowan
Happy Halloween!
Another month has come and gone, and it’s time for another reader update. The Walls are Closing In is still voyaging through the production process. The entire first round of rewrites is wrapped up and has been submitted to my editor.
Portions of my precious story were difficult to part with, and some rewrites flowed easier than others. But, out of the ashes of my murdered darling came a stronger, more piercing novel that I am incredibly happy with and eager to share with all of you.
Matt has already marked up Act 1 (of 3) for round 2 of the developmental edit, and I have completed those changes as well. I am now waiting for him to return Acts 2 and 3 with notes. It will likely be about two weeks before he gets those back to me. So, in the meantime, I am going to dive into National Novel Writing Month.
Every November, authors around the globe strive to write 50,000 words of the first draft of a novel within the month of November, and I have jumped on board.
Someone stop me, please.
The rewrites of The Walls are Closing In will take priority whenever it is in my hands, but when the manuscript is with Matt, I am going to strive to meet the quota (1,667 words per day).
During this time, I’ll likely resemble the undead roaming the streets this all hallows’ eve, and will accept all offers of free caffeine and chocolate.
Until next time,
Jacqui
Hello, readers and friends of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir" -
I’m happy to announce two five-star reviews just in from Readers’ Favorite. One is below in its entirety with a link, the other is just linked. You’ll see when you click on the links that it’s easy to share to facebook, twitter, and other social platforms, so, please, share away! Word of mouth is awesome.
Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir by Carol D Marsh is an inspiring memoir that redefines the sense of humanity in a world where human values are quickly replaced by an egoistic culture. In this spellbinding memoir, the founder of Miriam’s House — a residence for Washington, DC’s homeless women with AIDS — shares her journey through the first ten years of her project. The reader is immediately transported into another side of Washington, a grim reality of suffering and pain that is ignored by those who hold the power to make the changes that could affect millions of lives. This is a story of one woman’s courage to step out of her world to confront the difficult reality of suffering and pain in others, a journey that is filled with powerful challenges.
Carol D Marsh takes the reader with her through this story, confronting racism at its deepest core, struggling to create spaces where homeless women can experience hospitality and reconnect with their humanity. Readers will meet people like Kimberly, a woman who suffers from alcohol addiction, and Alyssa who longs for a mother’s touch, having been abandoned by her own mother. It’s a story that shows readers how, in the midst of the worst form of suffering, there is a light shining; that in the prostitute, there is a child of purity, and that in the distant, intolerant person, there could be someone wounded, yearning for love.
Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir is a story of love and compassion, a memoir that brilliantly articulates values that our society needs to be a better place. I enjoyed how Marsh’s sense of humanity comes across in her narrative. I was stunned by her courage and her selfless spirit, reaching out to embrace the destitute in very difficult and trying circumstances, most often putting her own life in danger. This book - just like the work of Jean Vanier, the founder of L’Arche - will change the way we look at others, especially those less fortunate than us. It brought tears to my eyes and awoke deep sentiments of compassion and a love I haven’t felt before.
(Reviewed by Divine Zape) Read original post HERE
Read second interview HERE
Thanks as always for your support of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be: A Memoir".
Carol
Hello, readers and friends of "Nowhere Else I Want to Be":
Happy Fall, everyone! I thought you’d like to know that the September issue of A&U Magazine has a lovely article about Miriam’s House, my book and me - "A Calling and More" - by Tammy Banks.
Read the first few paragraphs below, then click on the link to read the rest of the article.
******
For Carol Marsh, starting Miriam’s House was something that she felt called upon to do. “It felt like coming home,” she recalls, “and I think that is the hallmark of a calling.”
Marsh founded the Washington, D.C., residence for homeless women with HIV/AIDS in 1996. But in many ways, she had been moving toward this kind of work since her teen years, when she’d read Catherine Marshall’s Christy. The 1967 bestselling novel about a young school teacher doing her damnedest to bring education to children in Appalachia had fired Marsh’s imagination: She’d seen herself as being “a benevolent helper of others” and making sense of all “the cruelty and inequity” in the world. There’d been comfort in “dreaming of a life of service in which I would make things perfect for some small village or group of children. For that they would, of course, love and appreciate me.”
But the path to our true callings is seldom a straight one. We take wrong turns, get waylaid, or lose sight of where we’re headed. “I lost that vision for a while,” Marsh admits. “I moved to Washington, D. C., at thirty-five, and that’s when I reconnected with a passion that had been mine as a teenager.”
She threw herself into the work of bringing her vision of Miriam’s House to life. “We didn’t want to create a cookie-cutter program that forced women to comply or leave,” Marsh writes in her memoir Nowhere Else I Want to Be (Inkshares 2016), “so we opted for an open-to-the-possibilities, organic kind of growth that, while it achieved its goal of allowing residents to help shape this new program, also left us in chaos much of the time.” She started out “with a few rules about sobriety and violence and being able to live cooperatively in community” but soon realized that she needed to go beyond that.
For the disease was, she saw, only part of the story that each woman brought with her. The other part of the story—call it the back story or the subtext—was even more disturbing. (At Goucher College, she was, Marsh explains, encouraged to dig deeper and go “underneath the stories.”) Juanita, for instance, had begun shooting up at fourteen in an attempt to escape from a reality that included savage beatings by her own mother. Alyssa had been pimped out by a drug-addicted mother when she was twelve; despite that, she still loved and kept reaching out to the parent who never came to see her during her time at Miriam’s House.
READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE
******
Have a great day!
Carol
PEOPLE OF DENVER. Come see me Saturday! I am doing a signing at Tattered Cover! INFO HERE: https://www.facebook.com/events/1540639139320569/
And please rate the book on AMAZON, GOODREADS, and BARNES AND NOBLE. We need to get to 100 ratings on each platform.
Thank you!
Kyle T. Cowan
Dear Sweethearts,
I hope that you all are doing well! I wanted to send you a very short, but really exciting update: this past week How to Get Run Over by a Truck was in the Top 20 best selling non-fiction books on Amazon last week! We made it to #17 - which is nothing short of incredible! Especially almost a year after the book was first published!!!
Thank you for believing that this book would be successful, even when no one in the publishing world did. You have put this book into the hands (and ears!) of so many people!!! You are an amazing, generous and kind person. Words can’t express how grateful I am for your support then, and now!
Heart,
Katie