What We Are Reading Now!




Professional Women Making Moves - Marie Antionette



Marie Antionette, author of the book, A Girl Named Job was interviewed by Tinisha Nicole Johnson, an author/writer/poet. Marie’s book is an autobiography of her life.

Marie’s life was far from normal. In fact, she lived a very hard life. This isn’t just any story, but a story of true trials and tribulations. I’ve read her book and let me tell you, if you want a fantastic read to add to your collection, then this is one those kind of books

Check out her interesting interview by clicking here: Marie's Interview
You can also check out her book trailer, based off the book.



Professional Women Making Moves

The Professional Women Making Moves blog is about Black women who are doing something unique and out of the ordinary with their lives. Interviews will be taking until the release date of my non-fiction book, Lessons Learned: Loving Yourself As A Black Woman.

Check out LaToya S. Watkins interview and please provide comments. She is the author of the book In Love with Losers. If you haven't gotten your copy of her book, please so.

If you consider yourself a Professional Black Woman and would like to be interviewed and involved in this project please contact me at my website: www.TinishaNicoleJohnson.com


Click here to view LaToya's interview:
LATOYA S. WATKINS



Carleen Brice on BAN Radio, June 20

Join Black Authors Network host Ella Curry and author Carleen Brice on BAN Radio, June 20 for lively discussion about her new book Children of the Waters.

Black Authors Network Talk Show
Saturday Night, June 20, 2009 at 8-10pm EST
Live Chat: www.blogtalkradio.com/Black-Author-Network
Fans call into at: (646) 200-0402
Gifts given out to live callers and registered BTR chatters.




Book Discussion and Live Reading from Children of the Waters by Carleen Brice

The author of the #1 Denver Post bestseller and Essence Book Club Pick Orange Mint and Honey explores the connection between love and race, and what it really means to be a family. Children of the Waters (ISBN: 978-0345499073) is a story about two long lost half-sisters, one white and one black, who find each other possibly with the help of their grandmother’s ghost.


Book Introduction

Trish Taylor’s white ancestry never got in the way of her love for her black ex-husband, or their mixed race son, Will. But when Trish’s marriage ends, she returns to her family’s Denver, Colorado home to find a sense of identity and connect to her past.

What she finds there shocks her to the very core: her mother and newborn sister were not killed in a car crash as she was told. In fact, her baby sister, Billie Cousins, is now a grown woman; her grandparents had put her up for adoption, unwilling to raise the child of a black man. Billie, who had no idea she was adopted, wants nothing to do with Trish until a tragedy in Billie’s own family forces her to lean on her surprisingly supportive and sympathetic sister.

Together they unravel age-old layers of secrets and resentments and navigate a path toward love, healing, and true reconciliation.



What are some of the topics addressed in Children of the Waters?
--- Paths toward love, healing, and true reconciliation
--- Feeling secure in your own identity
--- Surviving a messy divorce
--- Raising teenage sons
--- Generational racism
--- Handling of Lupus
--- Hidden secrets and adoption
--- Embracing a bi-racial heritage
--- The importance of sisterhood

"In Children of the Waters, Carleen Brice highlights the effects of America's complicated relationship with race and identity on three generations of two families in a clear and insightful depiction of what it means to be American at the dawn of the twenty-first century. Brice knows how far we have come and how far there is left to go, and in Children of the Waters she deflty lays it all out for the reader to see." - Matthew Aaron Goodman, author of Hold Love Strong


More about Carleen
Carleen Brice’s debut novel, Orange Mint and Honey (One World/Ballantine), was an Essence “Recommended Read” and a Target “Bookmarked Breakout Book.” For this book, she won the 2009 First Novelist Award from the Black Caucus of the American Library Association and the 2008 Break Out Author Award at the African American Literary Awards Show. Her second novel, Children of the Waters (One World/Ballantine), a book about race, love and family, is available now where ever books are sold. If you don't see it at your local retailer, please go to the representive and request it. You can read an excerpt at her website http://www.carleenbrice.com/.

She also edited and contributed to the anthology Age Ain’t Nothing but a Number: Black Women Explore Midlife, which was published in the U.S. (Beacon Press) and the U.K. (Souvenir Press). She is author of Lead Me Home: An African American’s Guide Through the Grief Journey (Avon/HarperCollins). Her book Walk Tall: Affirmations for People of Color, an Essence bestseller, was in print with traditional publishers for 10 years and sold 100,000 copies. It is currently available through iUniverse and Louis Gossett Jr.'s Eracism Foundation. Carleen and her husband live in Colorado.

Children of the Waters, Carleen Brice
ISBN: 0345499077
ISBN-13: 9780345499073
Pub. Date: June 23, 2009

Shop for the book at Barnes and Noble

Shop for the book at Amazon.com







Black Professional Women Making Moves


Profressional Women Making Moves
Introducing Sylvia McClain

Welcome to Professional Women Making Moves Blog, where we feature professional Black women from all over making moves in their personal and business world. Tinisha Nicole Johnson is the author of the upcoming book Lessons Learned: Loving Yourself As A Black Woman. The book emphasizes ten life lessons that addresses a Black woman’s most intimate, personal, and professional life.

Tinisha will be interviewing professional women from various backgrounds up to the release date of her book, discussing who they are and the challenges they face, and any advice they have to offer. Learn more about this book and the author at her website: www.TinishaNicoleJohnson.com

Today, Tinisha interviews Sylvia McClain. Please comment and check out what Sylvia has to say.

Tinisha Johnson: Please introduce yourself and tell me who you most credit your success to?

Sylvia McClain: Sylvia McClain is my name and I am a professional Journalist. I write nonfiction through newspapers, magazines, and books. I also teach writing workshops and seminars in continuing education program at libraries, universities, community colleges, conferences and public school systems in the Detroit Metro Area.

I really don’t credit anyone other than myself for my success. I was not encouraged to pursue my profession therefore, I had to push myself against all odds.

Tinisha Johnson: What types of challenges do you face as a Professional Black woman?

Sylvia McClain: As a freelancer, work is the most difficult thing to get. With the economy the way it is now and many freelancers on the scene, one must have clips, clips and more clips of a current nature to acquire more writing jobs. Also, one must be willing to do different types of work such as editing, copywriting, contract writing, Internet sites, etc. Without being able to write in more than one category limits one’s possible source of writing income.

Tinisha Johnson: How important is networking to you?

Sylvia McClain: Networking is the utmost important thing a woman in my profession must do. Without making contacts, introducing you and the type of work you do, a loss in real writing gigs are out the window.

Tinisha Johnson: What does success mean to you?

Sylvia McClain: Success to me is doing what I love to do and that is writing, teaching writing to others, assisting forthcoming writers in their desires.

Tinisha Johnson: How do you balance your professional and personal life?

Sylvia McClain: Time management, it is as simple as that. I always tell people work on a schedule and stick with it. You must also diversify in your life as a writer because where else would you get writing ideas. What I mean is do more than just write, experience life itself. Also treat what you do like any other job with a set schedule.

Tinisha Johnson: What advice do you have for today’s young Black girls?

Sylvia McClain: Go for it. Don’t wait like I did until my forties to pursue your dreams. The earlier one gets started the more time is available to one to make mistakes and have time to correct them.

Tinisha Johnson: Who would you call a writer?

Sylvia McClain: Anyone, who is willing to transfer the ideas and thoughts in their head to paper.

More About Sylvia McClain
Sylvia McClain is a freelance writer who currently writes for the business periodicals published by Equal Opportunity Publications, Inc on engineering and information technology. She wrote on life changes for Strut. She conducts workshops on freelance writing, self-publishing, accepted queries, historical writing and money management as a writer.

She is a former board member of The Detroit Writer’s Guild, responsible for the recording of financial data. Ms. McClain has been on the board of Project Sis (a nonprofit organization for teens at risk) and the city of Detroit’s Cluster Seven of Detroit’s Community Reinvestment Strategy Process. Her other volunteer work has been with WTVS Public TV volunteer staff for fourteen years, a supervisor with Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) for six years, and the Better Business Bureau as an arbitrator during the 1980’s. She was previously employed 22 years with Comerica Incorporated as a Data Base Analyst in the Economics Department.

Ms. McClain is currently pursuing a Master of Arts in Journalism while holding a Bachelor of General Studies: Art History, Communications, and English degree from the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She holds an Associate of Arts degree in Accounting from Wayne County Community College.

Ms. McClain is single and has one child. She lives in Westland.
Please visit her web site at http://www.scribalpress.com/ and her blog http://sylviaspeaks.blogspot.com/.

About Tinisha Nicole Johnson:
Tinisha is the author of the book Lessons Learned: Loving Yourself As A Black Woman. This book emphasizes ten lessons that addresses a Black woman's most intimate, personal and professional life. Learn more about the author and the book at her website: http://www.tinishanicolejohnson.com/

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