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The Great Writings of Fiction Author Christine E. Collier

Christine Collier (my mother) passed away on February 8, 2023, she was 73 years old (5/26/1949 to 2/8/2023). She had a strong mind and she loved to read and write. She wrote adventure and mystery books for kids and adults. She self published 11 short books (10 of which are in Amazon) and also many short stories, anthologies, and articles. One of her greatest loves was getting published in publications like Prairie Times, a publication of Eastern Colorado. Her articles were featured often in Prairie Times and even as recently as January 2023. I’d share those articles but Prairie Times owns the rights. But here is a link to the latest Prairie Times articles.

Her life stories are shared in anthologies by Guideposts, Adams Media, HCI Ultimate Books, Silver Boomer Books, Write Integrity Press, Silver Birch Press, Trisha Faye and Patchwork Path.

I plan to gradually add links to her other publications as I accumulate them.

A List of 11 of Her Books, in no particular order.

1. Christmas At Cliffhanger Inn

Mystery always follows the women of the Writer’s Club but this time with holiday flair!

Bill and Tara Fields are ready to celebrate the first Christmas at their Bed and Breakfast, the Cliffhanger Inn.

2. The Writers Club

Here is a short story mystery collection about four women writers that form The Writers Club. Each writer faces mysterious happenings in her life. Taylors beloved bridal chest, a wedding gift from her husband suddenly has new names carved into it. A baby monitor warns Jenna, while working on assignment, that someone is following her. Jenna is working on an investigative report concerning a famous dating service that has a scandal brewing. Amy finds an old letter in a secret drawer of a writing desk she has refinished. This letter describes a relationship that spells disaster. Lily faces a masked intruder at the bookstore, the Wrens Nest. While footsteps are heard upstairs in The Tomb, the temperature controlled room for old books. Lily will discover on her honeymoon that an inkwell passed down to her from her great grandmother was part of a legend.

3. Solve A Cozy Mystery

Are you into complicated police procedures or detailed forensic evidence? If so, my books NOT for you! However, if you enjoy solving simple, short and cozy-type mysteries, my book might be your cup of tea! Speaking of tea, read Clues in a Teacup.


Three of the thirty-five mysteries in this book happened to people in my family. I share which ones at the end of the book, plus the solution to each mystery.


Romance is clearly in the air in Goosebumps & A Gift Basket, Mystery Lane, Sleepwalking Intern, and Memories in a Guestroom. Do you enjoy easy recipes? Check out Undercover at Innisfree.

In Pink or Blue Secrets a mother-to-be plans on reading the results of her ultrasound test at her baby shower. In Till Theft Do Us Part a bride learns wedding boutiques will stop at nothing! Would you enjoy having your hair done at the new salon Curl Up and Dye? What happens when a lawyer visits the library and sees a ghost? Youll find the answer in Ghost in the Library.


A fun read for a cozy afternoon! How many can you solve?

4. A Heartfelt Christmas

A Heartfelt Christmas In this Christian novella Ben and Jocelyn Hart have inherited his grandmother’s house in Heartfelt, Pennsylvania. The charming Cape Cod on Sugar Maple Cove is filled with antiques. Jocelyn discovers a journal in the attic and learns surprising facts about the home and their neighbors. A young pastor, Simeon Turner, starts a church, By His Grace, in an empty 4H building. He will share wonderful sermons, the joy from his faith, and a fascinating lecture about the Star of Bethlehem. Esmeralda opens a fortune telling shop next door to the church, causing more than a little trouble with her crystal ball! Will a dream be realized when Jocelyn enters a writing contest at the Heartfelt Gazette? The Mail Alert she buys for Ben’s birthday adds humor and a touch of mystery. The couple meets their beloved next door neighbor, Mrs. Bedford. Is she really a guardian angel? When a lovely woman named Claire, welcomes them into the neighborhood, an instant friendship is born. Claire is tired of living and working at her parents’ grocery store, Stop for Milk. She longs to create unique dishes in her pottery shop, Claire’s Collection, and to be with Heath Parker, a local antique dealer. Will Jocelyn be able to bring this couple together? Their mothers’ feud started in high school and continues still.

5. Something Borrowed Something Blue

Amy, a member of the Writer’s Club, is busy helping her daughter, Rachel, plan her wedding. Will it be wedded bliss or more mystery for the Writer’s Club?In the sleepy little town of Foggy Grove the bridal shop, Something Borrowed, Something Blue, is in the home of a wonderful seamstress, Margaret Brown. We learn that years earlier Margaret’s own wedding was halted just as her father was to walk her down the aisle. Why did she never marry the man she loved so much and tenderly nicknamed, her huckleberry friend?We meet Ivory, the young helper Margaret hires to work in her shop. Ivory dreams of becoming a writer but spends much of her time caring for her sister, Jade.What has happened to the bride, Raven Moore? Why did she call off her wedding one week before it was scheduled? Why is her car parked at Foggy Grove Inlet near the Sweetheart Tree and why is her name carved into this tree with a question mark?The Foggy Grove Gazette will raise questions about Raven’s whereabouts and the crow hunters that have come from all over the country. The popular column, Dear Miss Lonely Heart, will share two letters that cause a stir in Foggy Grove, as does a rare second edition of the newspaper!

6. Twelve Months of Mystery

How would you like to read a year’s worth of mystery, one month at a time? This book is filled with stories that both girls and boys will enjoy.Whether it’s a snowboarding trip to Snow Cliff Lodge in January, where a mint coin set is found under the carpet in a loft closet. Or a missing Valentine card mystery in February.In April, Ivan turns an old vaporizer into his Steaminator and accidentally steams open a small envelope, which does not belong to him. In July, Calla will spend a week with her grandmother and wake to a terrible noise in the attic, thunder and lightning. As she slowly climbs the attic stairs, the lights go out! Ahead, two glowing eyes peer back at her! In the August mystery, we wonder what’s behind the fence on Chestnut Drive. Why is it covered in locks? Why are there shadowy lights in the backyard late every night?Blake and Jeff are hiding snowballs in their snow cave in preparation for the Carpenter twins’ visit during an early November blizzard that has caused a Snow Day!What will Jenna do when a miniature copy of the shop where she takes her piano lessons lights up suddenly December? It’s never been wired for electricity! Is there a Christmas mystery brewing?

7. Mystery Is Our Shadow

The Writer’s Club was embarking on another adventure! Little did they know the selling of their co-authored book, Mystery Is Our Shadow, would bring about even more intrigue.A college manuscript is discovered in a well-known magazine. Now to track down the person who plagiarized it.One writer takes a job as a live-in ghostwriter in the eerie, gothic style house, Four Gables. This house has hidden a terrible secret for years.A holiday book signing, a fan letter, and a wonderful writer’s conference will bring happiness. While horrible book reviews and an anonymous warning about agent’s fees and contracts will cause concern.A weekend stay at a writer’s Bed and Breakfast, The Cliffhanger Inn, will be enjoyed by the members of the Writer’s Club. Here they’ll learn trouble has been planted within the very walls of the Inn.

8. Adventure On Apple Orchard Road

The Forrest family buys a run down house on Apple Orchard Road. Eleven-year-old Ethan is disappointed the house is so old.Ethan invites his best friend, Tanner, for a sleepover and Tanner brings along a metal detector. At the break of dawn, Ethan and Tanner make a discovery in the old shed out back that will change their lives. This amazing treasure includes a letter from the past owner of the house. Elizabeth Patterson writes that she and her husband have hidden things in the house for years!Elizabeths old journal is discovered in the attic. What will Ethan do when he reads that Mr. Patterson made his own time capsule? In an old coffee can he placed a 1958 autographed NY Yankees baseball, wrapped in that days newspaper and placed in the floor joists of the attic. Could this baseball still be up there?The shed will become Ethans bike garage. Who or what is making the huge footprints in the dirt by the shed?

Her Anthologies

9. A Holiday Sampler

A multi author book of holdiay stories.

10. Nightlight: A Golden Light Anthology

A Golden Light Anthology spins tall tales of childhood. With faries and wizards, school plays and summer camp, family adventures and learning life lessons, this childrens anthology is perfect for bedtime stories and will take readers to far off places before they slip into dreamland.

11. Mothers Of Angels Living and Loving After The Death of a Child

We’re members of a club that none of us asked to join. The membership dues are steep – they require the loss of a child. And unfortunately, there’s just too many of us in this organization. Ask any of us and we’d tell you that we’d give anything in our power to take our child back and resign, gladly forfeiting our membership. Alas, being powerless to have this greatest wish granted, we do what’s second best. We keep living, we keep loving – despite our pain and sorrow. Some days are bleak and filled with tears, and on other days we put one foot in front of the other on our journey towards finding a new normal. Along the way we find some joy, tinged with sadness, as we revel in any chance to share our story and keep our child’s memory alive. In Mothers of Angels, over twenty mothers, a father, aunts, and grandmothers rallied together to tell the tale of children gone too soon. Some were miscarriages or early births, and the child never drew a breath or walked this earth. Others were young and the carefree days of bicycle riding, skateboarding, and just being a kid were their final days, never getting the chance to find out about getting old. Others were grown. Their driver’s licenses said they were adults, but they were still our children. Being a child doesn’t come with an expiration date. They’re still our babies and we still grieve losing them to death. In our grief and despair, we’ve also learned to lend a welcoming embrace to others as they enter our ranks. We share, we offer shoulders in consolation, and share our resources as we step forward and help others learn to live and love again. Come join us as we share our children with you, honoring their memories in whatever way we can. And if you’re a member of this growing group too, we hope you find some words of solace amidst the pages.

Other Anthologies

Eight Lessons From My Mother

Recently (2/8/2023) my mother passed away at home in her bed surrounded by us. Her name was Christine E. Collier.

As a tribute to her on this blog I want to share eight things that I have learned from her over the years. She taught mostly by example and in her nature.

  1. How Powerful Real Motherly Love Is. Looking back now it seems trivial but this moment sticks in my memory for the past 33 years and I want to share. When I was in my teens. We were in her kitchen and I was making myself some food, and I was probably irritated that I had to do something for myself (eyeroll). And I said some harsh disrespectful things to her (probably) about there not being food or something. I deserved a stern scolding and perhaps maybe worse. But instead I got gentleness, meekness and kindness. She did not return to me anger or harsh words. She returned to me kindness and she extended mercy. Almost immediately with my 15 year old mind I remember thinking to myself, “now that is love… she must really love me.” That is one way my mom destroyed my selfishness and arrogance as a young man. And that motherly love was not only present for her three children. In many ways she mothered her siblings, her neices and nephews, and her sons and daughters in law and her grandchildren.
  2. How to make a home. In a sense mom herself embodied a home. But she also created a very pleasant space at home with her presence and with the home itself where we often wanted to visit. It was relaxing there with her, and we knew she always would be there with open arms.
  3. How to Be Content: She was content with her life, her home and her possessions. And as a result she stayed home and enjoyed what she had and didn’t complain or cause money problems. In a day when so many avoid home in exchange for more money, a higher standard of living, and for meaningless busyness, she stayed home in contentment. Striving to make it a place where people wanted to be.
  4. The Importance of Honoring Your Parents: I remember when I realized the command to honor your parents was for adult children also. I had read that verse in scripture (Eph 6:2-3) and put it onto children but I think it is intended as much for adult children as it is for little ones. The relationship changes but the honor and the love and the investment of time should not go away. I remember secretly being very excited to bring her my new girlfriend to meet her and dad (who I soon would marry). I remember enjoying bringing our kids up there to just spend time with her and dad. I enjoyed bringing her good news because she would be so happy for me and others. She loved watching good things happen to others. She would build up the self-esteem of our kids just naturally.
  5. The relaxing power of humor. Mom was a bringer of joy, she was funny, she didnt take herself to seriously and she had a way of causing humility in me and in others. She liked to joke around and share her humor with others. She would laugh at the worst of jokes, and the best of jokes.
  6. The Importance of Meekness: There were times when she would talk to me and help me see I was being arrogant without even saying the words. I knew what she meant and often I realized I perhaps needed to change my thinking. There were times I could out-debate her about certain things but after the conversation (and sometimes during) I knew she was right and soon realizing she was defintely right. Not becuase she argued well or put it to words well but because she was just right and I was wrong and her peaceful demeanor tore down my insistence on being right.
  7. How Wonderful Writing Is: She loved to write and share her adventerous mind and stories with anyone. Many publishers of her articles learned that also and enjoyed publishing her articles repeatedly.
  8. The Importance of Hearing the Gospel: mom made sure that her family heard the gospel of salvation, despite not attending church. She would play evangelistic preaching on the television and radio and would make sure that we heard it. She did this when I was very young and up to her last days. She loved Dr. David Jeremiah most recently. She was not controlling or legalistic about her faith but she made sure that she shared and was not silent.

Do We Need Revivals or A Purified Gospel?

I’ve been thinking about this for a while now. Recently I’ve been hearing many Christians (and others) praying and talking about Christian revival. And I must admit the need for revival is self-evident and I understand why people are praying for it.

But I think it a fools errand to try to drum up some fervant church gatherings with zeal and with powerful religious effort, drum up a crowd with great bands and much hand waving and then call it “REVIVAL!”

The Gospels that are being proclaimed are producing the churches and the meetings that we see today. Some gospels that are commonly preached today produce almost Christians who exclusively sit in pews. Pew-sitting is 99% of their Christian life and the highlight of it altogether. The Pew-sitters (introverts) or Pew-entertainers (the extroverts). To intensify and double down on that type of Christian gatherings ought not every be called revival.

I don’t say that to be critical. I simply want to point everyone to their own particular gospel. It’s the gospel that we have, the particular gospel that we hear, embrace, and teach ithers which is producing what we see, (or do not see) in our Chrisitan gatherings.

Are your Chrisitan gatherings cold, indifferent?, are they crowds of idle Christians, staring at the back of each others heads, unable and unwilling to share anything spiritual themselves? Other than regurgitating what they just heard in the sermon, whether its biblical or not. Unable and unwilling to speak out the light and life of Jesus Christ themselves?

If Paul or Peter or Jesus Christ were here today in body, would they not re-evangelize us with the same gospel that they had and shared in the first century? I think there is a good chance they would and I think there is a good chance many Christians would seek them out for this exact thing. Most Chrisitians of today I think would instinctively say to them “Give us what you have because we don’t yet have it, it’s true, that after 20, 30, even 50 years of hearing Sunday sermons I still don’t have what you can give me in a few dozen hours of teaching.”

Their gospel contained within itself the spiritual food necessary to make disciples in a few short months of preaching and teaching. And it created the spiritual building blocks to make communities of Christians who shared their lives together, who endured horrible persecutions. Communities which naturally sprung up wherever it was allowed to be embraced.

Historically revivals which have a lasting effects on nations are precluded by preaching, preaching that is embraced by a large number of people who respond to it.

Never forget that it is gospels which produce revivals. Not emotionalism, exaggeration about miracles, zeal, nor passionate music. We can scheule and annual revival but the ones that make lasting impacts on society emerge from the gospels that are shared.

I’ve been present in special meetings (called revivals). The presence and love of the Holy Spirit is felt and easily noticed by almost all who are present. I think this happens in meetings like this not becuase we were calling it revival but becuase we were just worshiping the Lord as should be done in any and every Christian meeting. We should not have to call it revival, it should be the norm. Something is wrong with our norm because our norm is not in submission to the Spirit of God so we have special, different meetings just to escape the trap we’ve put ourselves in, the trap being meetings not led by the Holy Spirit this usually being because of insistence on tradition.

What we hope decades and even centuries of revivals to do to transform the church.

The Gospel of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ preached everywhere I believe could do in just a few months to the church and then as a result do great damage to the world system.

Centuries of cycles of revivals and backsliding and revivals and back sliding or let us today each examine our fruit, then may we dig deeper and examine our gospel. Acknowledge its weakness and incompleteness and seek to perfect and purifiy the gospel we’ve embraced.

Below is a teaching from T. Austin Sparks called ‘God’s Way of Recovery’ which goes with this line of thinking about revivals.

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