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"Make straight in the wilderness a highway for our God." Isaiah 40:3 |
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IN THE NEWS Jeanette Windle has spoken at writers conferences, international ministry, events, women’s retreats, and taught seminars on a wide variety of topics in more than a dozen countries on three continents in both English and Spanish. An expert on Latin America and current events around the globe, she has been interviewed for radio, TV, and print media in both North and Latin America. Jeanette has 14 books in print and has written for numerous magazines and newspapers. Check out some of Jeanette’s past interviews and reviews.
INTERVIEWS:
ChristianBooks.com Fiction Blog calls Freedom's Stand 'Influential', 'Powerful'.
Tricia Goyer of Living Inspired chats with Jeanette about life, missions, and her 'ripped from the headlines' novels.
The Borrowed Book interviews Jeanette on Freedom's Stand and the persecuted church.
C.J. Darlington of TitleTrakk interviews Jeanette on life, writing, and Afghanistan.
Radio Host Linda Goldfarb interviews Jeanette on Veiled Freedom and Afghanistan.
Blogtalk radio show, Information in a Nutshell, interviews Jeanette about writing and investigative techniques.
From Australia, Relz Reviewz asks:
Christian Women Online's Laurel Wreath chats with Jeanette over Tyndale release Betrayed. READ INTERVIEWS OF OTHER TITLES
VEILED FREEDOM Windle—author of the political/suspense thriller CrossFire—taps into current events with her newest novel, set in Afghanistan. Relief worker Amy Mallory had dreamed of working in Kabul for years, yet her first impressions of the dusty, tradition-bound city aren't great. Steve Wilson, leader of the personal security detail for Afghanistan's minister of the interior, carries memories of his last time in the war-torn country. And Jamil, the Afghan whom Amy hires as her interpreter, is haunted by his past. The trio's lives entwine as they struggle to live and work in Kabul, Amy through New Hope—offering protection to women released from prison—and Steve through protecting Khalid Sayef, a leader who promises reform. Windle's writing sings when she compares the teachings of Isa Masih (Jesus Christ) with those of Muhammad, but occasionally clunks with overuse of acronyms and convoluted sentences. Yet readers will be enthralled with this penetrating look at Afghanistan and its many mysteries revealed through the lives of flawed men and women. Windle is a top-notch storyteller. Publishers Weekly, 4/20/09
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