Anyway, Friday night my hubby was having a guys night so I decided to throw my “to do” list out the window and take a little time for myself.I first stopped in at Edible Arrangements to pick up a fruit bouquet for a friend who had been spending the better half of the last month at hospice with a family member who unfortunately passed away yesterday. I’m so glad I listened to that nagging feeling that kept telling me I needed to do something for her, something to bring a little sunshine in the dark.
Finally, I entered into the world of my true weaknesses…Barnes and Noble. I think I literally smiled and took a deep breath as I pull open those large, heavy wooden doors and entered.It’s like the land of adventure for adults.I had no particular book in mind. I just love to browse. I picked up many books.I read the inside covers then put most books back down. Some I made a mental note to pick up at the library and others I don’t think are worth my time. Then, as I always do, I stumbled upon the clearance books.They had an entire table of $2 books.SCORE! I was ecstatic to find three that peaked my interest and that I would purchase.Think Like a Winner, Lost December by one of my favorite authors, Richard Paul Evans and The Christmas Shoes.I had read the Christmas Secret by the same author and loved it. I also remember my mother mentioning this book.I finished The Christmas Shoes, by Donna VanLiere, this morning. I must be honest I cried through the last forty pages. My husband even walked in and said, “Really, a book is making you cry that much?”Well I’m emotional and yes, it’s a sad book!
I encourage you to read The Christmas Shoes. It may change your life and it may not. I hope the author, doesn’t mind, but I’ll leave you with the Afterword (some of this won’t make sense if you haven’t read the book, but you’ll get the point):
“If we’re open to it, God can use even the smallest thing to change our lives…to change us.It might be a laughing child, car brakes that need fixing, a sale on pot roast, a cloudless sky, a trip to the woods to cut down a Christmas tree, a schoolteacher, a Dunhill Billard pipe…or even a pair of shoes. Some people will never believe. They may feel that such things are too trivial, too simple, or too insignificant to forever change a life.But I believe.
And I always will. Blessings, Stephanie
P.S. I would like to send my copy of The Christmas Shoes to someone that wants to read it and will pass it along.If you get this far in the blog and are the first to respond, I’ll send you my copy of The Christmas Shoes.Once you read it, if there are others that want the book, I ask that you send it along to them. Email me at 1makingadifference@gmail.com if you are interested.