Meet the Author: Mary Brunini McArdle


Alice Reflected
Thriller
April 2008
Rain Publishing



Meet the Author
Mary Brunini McArdle

Mary Brunini McArdle was raised in Vicksburg, Mississippi. She has a B.A. with a major in History and a minor in English from the University of Dallas, and graduate courses in History, Military Strategy, and English. Continuing Education (credit and noncredit) consists of Marine Science, Creative Writing, Art, Environmental Science, and Zoology.

McArdle’s work experience has been varied. She has numerous publication credits and awards in Poetry, Fiction, Nonfiction, and Short Plays. For eight years she was Poetry Columnist for an Illinois journal. Publication credits include THE VILLAGER, MISSISSIPPI GARDENS, MISSISSIPPI OUTDOORS, INNISFREE, THE ROSWELL LITERARY REVIEW, MOBIUS, and others. Recently she has been publishing online, in COMBAT MAGAZINE, APHELION, THE TRUTH MAGAZINE, BEWILDERING STORIES, and more.

McArdle also participated in the recording of a CD of contemporary religious music by an Alabama musician. She has been active in church, senior, and combined choirs. McArdle also designs original, handmade doll clothes.

She has taught Military Strategy, History, and Poetry for the U.A.H. Lifetime Learning Program and Writing at the Huntsville and Madison Senior Centers.

This summer she won two prizes (her first) in Southern Expressions, an annual Tennessee art exhibit.

How to Get Out of Your Comfort Zone?

How to Get Out of Your Comfort Zone?
Don’t give yourself any other choice…

By Krissy Brady

I’ve always wanted to be a full-time writer—literally since I was six years old I have pictured a life of manuscripts, publishers, and book tours.
Now that it is actually happening, I am ecstatic, though terrified at the same time. When I was six, I lead a cushioned existence. As I got older, fears and complexes started to set in—self-consciousness, the need to find and establish a status for myself, and of course the dreaded comfort zone that has always been difficult for me to shrug off.
I think the biggest fear of anyone when trying to establish their dream career is the fact that once it becomes your reality, there is no escape. When I was working towards what I currently have, the thought of reaching this ultimate end result would always help to take me away from my current reality, one I wasn’t entirely satisfied with, yet knew I would be eventually.
There is no escape now, but I wouldn’t want it any other way. My problem has become the lack of understanding from those who, while they are close to me, are not able to relate to my endless need for writing industry success. Until they know what it’s like to sacrifice everything for what they want, and the sacrifices that come with keeping it, there will always be a barrier in our conversations.
I have met too many people who settle, and sometimes have a hard time understanding why they choose a comfort zone instead of their ultimate end result. When I left my job to work at home full-time, I was looked at like I was crazy: why would I leave a steady job? A guaranteed income? A defined existence?
I left my steady job, guaranteed income, and defined existence because that’s all it is: an existence. I want an identity. I want to contribute. I don’t want to be told what I can and cannot do. Basically, I don’t want to be stifled, and I want to work hard towards influencing others to do the same. If you don’t give yourself any other choice but to be who you really are, and not who you think you should be, there is no greater satisfaction. The sacrifice is always worth the ultimate end result.

About Krissy BradyKrissy
Brady is a freelance writer residing in Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada. She is the editor-in-chief of Brady Magazine, an online writer's trade directory dedicated to putting writers on the map. She is also a poet, whose book Tidal Wave (Rain Publishing, October 2006).This article is free to publish as long as it is kept completely in tact.

Louis Jannetta


The Spalding's



Roots, Wings and Other Things. A Mother's True Story on Transracial Adoptions.
Donna Gillis Spalding
$15.95
9781897381007
Non-Fiction: Inspirational True Story

Photos above: Donna and Howard Spalding with their children, and grandchildren.

Ground Shifting For Women

Ground Shifting for Women
Report by OIATH
Author Joanna Shawana is a proud part of the battle aagainst violence, and we at Rain Enterprises are proud to publish and respresent her cause!

Action to end violence against women was created by women for women.The story has been a truly inspiring one.

Women have changed our communities and ourselves in new and liberating ways.

In just over 30 years, women have made stunning progress against gender inequality that is hundreds of thousands of years old. We have reached miraculous goals in aware­ness and services for women who have experienced violence.

Many of us thought our challenges could be won by now. But there are always new ones to face and new changes to make.

As OAITH reaches 30, feminist shelter advo­cates want to celebrate our gains and move forward in solidarity with each other and we want to protect our progress against increasing erosion of our grassroots vision.

Shifts for Women and Children

The past year brought a number of changes for women and children.
Some of the funding promised by the Ontario government has started to flow to community services that support women. Some systems are now starting to receive basic training on how to better respond to women and children--legal aid, housing, judges and health profession.

There has been some improvement to shel­ter and second stage agency funding. And small changes have been made to improve Ontario Works and the Ontario Disability Support Program.

At the same time, steps by the Ministry of Community and Social Services to cut off access to the special dietary allowance has left many women desperate to find healthy food for their children and themselves.

Neither the provincial nor federal govern­ments have any overall strategies for ending the entrenched poverty and oppression that affects women and children in marginalized communities.

Although child welfare authorities now rec­ognize some of the flaws of the current sys­tem in addressing child exposure to woman abuse, in 2003 fully 24% of women in abusive relationships were charged by child welfare with “failure to protect”.

By now, women know that the long-awaited national day care program, one that would have helped so many women, will likely be scrapped by the new federal government.

Federal and provincial social housing plans, already moving slow, are now up in the air. Fears that social programs may again be at the mercy of the very Ontario politicians
who cut them in 1995 are not unreasonable.

Shifts for Women’s Services
Women’s services--from shelters to rape cri­sis centres to women’s neighbourhood cen­tres have seen many changes over the years, especially at the whim of social policy.
Shelters have seen a number of key shifts: from early gains in core funding to the cuts in 1995, from grassroots organizing to insti­tutional practices, from public disbelief to a measure of community awareness and from exclusion to a growing integrated, feminist anti-racist/anti-oppression understanding of violence against women.

While there have been many positive changes for the women’s anti-violence move­ment, there are emerging new challenges to overcome. Many women’s advocates are now questioning the “gender mainstreaming” of violence against women, shifts to gender neutrality, and focus on psychological models of response. Funding continues to be inade­quate, and government more focussed on service systems than on equality rights.

New energy is rising and new activist voices are calling for a renewed focus beyond our struggles for more and better services, to our goal of preventing and ending violence against all women and their children.

We have not yet won our equality. Until we do, violence against women will go on. ~
SJAC worked with the Board on policy development within OAITH, for example to develop draft policy positions on coordina­tion, funding for VAW work in gender neu­tral agencies and government relations.

OAITH also worked with other equality-seeking groups on joint efforts.
For example, we participated in the Hands Murdered women remembered: Women hold signs with the names of 231 women and children mur­dered in Ontario since 1995, and listen to Linda Ense speak on behalf of the Ontario Native Women’s Association (ONWA). Linda is also Executive Director of the Native Women’s Centre in Hamilton.

Working with Carrol Anne Sceviour from Ontario Federation of Labour, as we have
Action a focus of OAITH social justice work Without social change work, our efforts to end vio­lence against women cannot succeed. OAITH is committed to taking social change action and to encour­aging all OAITH mem­ber shelters to partici­pate locally, provincially and federally on all social policy issues that affect women and children.

This year, despite our small resources, we have broadened our action in this area.
Walking their talk: Members of the OAITH Social Justice and Action Committee hold our new ban-The Lobby Committee ner at the OAITH organized November 28 Walk the Talk rally in front of Queen’s Park Legislature.

The ‘new’ Social Justice and Action Committee (SJAC) will make our role more clear to members, government and the pub­lic at large. We hope that the change will be more inviting for women in the network who want to do social change work but don’t want to be a “lobbyist” as defined in public circles.

Change Work Has Many Faces
This year, social justice and action work cov­ered a lot of ground.
done in the past, OAITH Board and Committee members created a poster marking this year’s International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, Nov. 25th.

The OFL generously paid for printing of 10,000 copies of the poster.

Posters were distrib­uted at the October AGM and throughout Ontario unions, as well as through requests. It is now available on our website at www.oaith.ca.

Off! campaign to press the Province to end the clawback of the federal Child Tax Benefit Supplement (CTBS) for children on social assistance programs. Many shelters in the OAITH network took part by ordering cam­paign postcards and endorsing this ongoing campaign online.

Walk the Talk
November also saw us joining with sister provincial anti-violence networks to plan a meeting of women’s activists to discuss and evaluate the Domestic Violence Action Plan and public policy directions on violence against women.
We hope this year, Premier McGuinty will honour his pre-election promise to stop the clawback of support from the poorest chil­dren in Ontario.

OAITH also supported and promoted the Walk,Wheel, Ride for Dignity organized to rally at Queen’s Park for a raise in OW and ODSP rates.We are a member of Campaign 2000 and have been active in bringing women’s issues of poverty and violence to
the campaign.

OAITH was anThe meeting took place on the first day of the Finding Common Ground provincial con­ference and over 60 women from rape crisis centres, shelters, francophone and communi­ty based women’s groups attended.

Organizers included OAITH, the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres, Action ontarienne contre la violence faite aux femmes and the Ontario Women’s Justice Network (METRAC).
endorsing member of the No Religious Arbitration Coalition and supported the work of the coalition to end the legal effect of religious arbitration decisions.

November WWPM
Woman Abuse Prevention Month was busy, as usual.Women issued a press release from the gathering urging the Province to support organizing efforts of women’s policy net-works with funding and recognition.

The meeting was titled Walk the Talk in soli­darity with an OAITH-organized rally at Queen’s Park of the same name, designed to remember 23 1 Ontario women and children murdered since 1995 and to have advocate voices “open” the conference.'

We are so impressed with and grateful for the crowd that came to the rally from OAITH shelters, students, labour representatives, provin­cial women’s coalitions, and the community at large, despite teeming rain.

Brief reports of both the activist meeting and the rally are on the OAITH website, along with the press release issued by the activist group.
provided for the lucky participants chosen to attend, the Minister’s treatment of women pleading for healthy food for their children had to be the lowest point. One violence survivor who was present at the conference later characterized the Minister’s response as “losing common ground”.~
OAITH contributes to public policy and training efforts

Joanna Shawana author of "Voice of An Eagle" stands behind these beliefs everyday!

Tales you will fall in Love With


Tales that Children and Adults Will Both Love

“Madison’s Special Dolly and Timmy and the Storm teach children about love, giving, and letting go in touching tales by author Jeffrey Yosick.”

Columbus (OH)- In his two releases Madison’s Special Dolly and Timmy and the Storm, author Jeffrey Yosick teaches children valuable lessons about life and giving while creating stories adults will love reading to their kids. During these troubled times of war, and lost ideals both these books are welcome additions to the host of children’s classics.

War is hard enough for any child to understand. It’s much harder to comprehend when it hits your intimate home setting. For many children, it’s a scary bigger then life concept that they can’t completely grasp. Kids just know that it’s bad, that their parent could get hurt or killed. In Timmy and the Storm, Timmy’s mother uses a tale of three bunnies to help Timmy understand what his father has to do in a time of war.

“When I wrote Timmy and the Storm my number one goal was to find a way to help the children of soldiers heading off to Iraq,” Yosick explains. “I actually wrote the story in 2004 after I received word that my brother would be deployed himself. I was able to take the emotions that were bottled up from my loss, and pour it out into the story that became Timmy and the Storm. Although this book was geared to children of military parents, it is a story that would help any parent explain to their children why soldiers have to go to war.”

Yosick’s inspiration for writing children’s books comes from his own three kids. Although he’s always been an avid writer and poet and been very passionate about the written word, it was having his children that truly made him see the way his words could be just as valuable to his readers as they are to him.

Madison’s Special Dolly is a result of that inspiration and filled with love and the spirit giving as we approach the holiday season. A little girl who saves all of her chore money for a special new doll finally gets to purchase it. On the journey home, something unexpected happens to make this little girl’s dolly truly a special one. Inspired by Yosick’s own daughter’s homemade gift to him and the joy she received from just giving it to him, Madison’s Special Dolly is a book kids and adults both will find heartwarming.

“My goal for this book is to show children and adults the valuable lesson of giving,” Yosick says. “I want the readers to walk away inspired by the actions of a little girl named Madison. It is my hope that people will see how love and giving can go beyond what our imaginations allow us to believe, and that the same joy that a person feels when they receive can also be felt through the selfless act of giving.”

Yosick’s third children's book was released in April of 2007 from Rain Publishing Inc. titled Running the Race which explains the very serious issue of breast cancer and breast cancer research to better help children understand this issue.


Additional information and media inquiries should be sent to info at rainbooks dot com; ask for your copies of Jeff Yosick’s prose at a bookstore near you or visit http://www.rainbooks.com/

Michael "Cy" Cywink


Image copyright protected by Michael Cywink-reproduced with permission.
Cywink – “Cy”
Artist/Author/Curator
Miizhen at hotmail dot com


Michael “Cy” Cywink is a band member to the Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve on Manitoulin Island. Which has been designated as a Cultural Capital in Canada, 1 of 5. He is also an alumnus to the Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Cy is an Independent Curator, previously he was the curator for the Ojibwe Cultural Foundation, M'Chigeeng, Manitoulin Island. And a First Nations cultural consultant with Walt Disney Imagineering, Glendale, California.


" I am originally out of a small village, one of the main stopping places for the Anishinabe while on their migrations long before contact, this place is now called Whitefish Falls and my father Nick Cywink Sr. was born there into the Cywink/Biidassige Bear Clan. He was a veteran of World War 2. A real warrior on two wheels, "One of the best snipers doing 40 mph", he'd say. He was sixteen when he enlisted into the Canadian Army. He began his journey into the spirit world in 1990. I am of Shigwadja/Neganigwane through my mother Eva Neganigwane (Pheasant). She came from the nation's capital of South Bay. Her father, my Mishomis introduced me to the world as Mii Zhen. He held me in his hand and looked at my mother and said, " This is Mii Zhen, He Is Good For You". My mother is still with us.

Writing for me doesn't come as smoothly as coloring. There generates within me a different kind of energy which comes through word art. The Adventures of Crazy Turtle came out over a period of 20 or so years. And what an adventure it is. Crazy Turtle is the basis of my Creation Story. There is no end to a Creation Story, so there is no end to the Adventures of Crazy Turtle.

The concept of having a Turtle as the main character goes back to the times when everything around you is coming down, closing in. So just as a Turtle protects themselves, we hide inside our shells, in this case, we hide inside our thoughts and feelings, and we build invisible walls around us to hide and protect our being, our true feelings. But Crazy Turtle goes beyond that, Crazy Turtle brings out a truth in us that we need no longer hide, we need no longer go away and try to run from our inner being. That in-turn everything remains the same and it is our inner awareness and perception on life that evolves around our time while here with Mother Earth.

Each of us as human beings, have our own time here on this earth walk and, within our growing, as an individual we must adhere to the responsibilities of tradition and value, just as our Elders are the caretakers of cultural knowledge. It is truth when said that we are spirit beings living in the psychical gift of Creation, we are not human beings falling to our knees looking for a Spirit.

This is a story for Children of All Ages, It is meant to help one understand the spirit being inside their "shell." Have you lost the child in you?"

In this workshop I will be discussing "The Makings of Crazy Turtle, how the adventure came to be, and showing accompanying illustrations. Books can be ordered directly through http://www.rainbooks.com/




Dangerous Days


Dave Stevenson and Andy Halmay- Co-authors of "Dangerous Days" greeting guests and signing copies of their novel at "The Harlem" in Toronto--Dave Stevenson, actor and stuntman and Andy Halmay award winning playwright make a great team when it comes to "The Biz" and now this new adventure-their prose "Dangerous Days" is another winner!