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Elaine Ambrose

Bestselling Author, Ventriloquist, & Humorist

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#memoir

“Your Journey is Your Story” Writing Workshop in April

January 30, 2019 By Elaine Ambrose

Are you ready to explore and write about your journey? Cl.ick on this link for registration details:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/your-journey-is-your-story-writing-workshop-with-elaine-ambrose-tickets-55620139334

Facilitated by bestselling author Elaine Ambrose, this workshop is designed for intermediate writers who want to expand their work in the areas of non-fiction, personal essay, and memoir. Using creative techniques, musical prompts, and targeted anecdotes, Ambrose will guide participants through a review of their own experiences to enhance their ability to “Write what you know.” The workshop includes the empowering experience of reading aloud to a group. Registration is limited to 20 people.

Saturday’s events will be in the Board Room at The Club at Spurwing in Meridian, Idaho. http://www.theclubatspurwing.com/the-club-house

The $150 fee covers Friday’s reception, Saturday’s workshops, all materials, refreshments, and lunch.

Writers at the 2017 workshop at Spurwing.

Elaine Ambrose is an award-winning, bestselling author of 10 books. Four of her recent books won six national writing awards, and her memoir Frozen Dinners ranked #23 out of 60,000 memoirs available on Amazon. Ambrose presents writing workshops at conferences across the country, including the prestigious Erma Bombeck Writers’ Workshop. Read about her books, blogs, and events at ElaineAmbrose.com.

Guest speaker AK Turner will present her fail-proof formula for how to establish a writing routine. She is the New York Times bestselling author of the Vagabonding with Kids series (Brown Books) as well as This Little Piggy Went to the Liquor Store, Mommy Had a Little Flask, and Hair of the Corn Dog (Fever Streak Press). Her works have received a starred review from Publishers Weekly, IPPY Awards in Humor and Travel, a Foreword Indies Award, an Independent Press Distinguished Favorite, and listing in BookLife’s Top 5 Indie Books of 2014. http://vagabondingwithkids.com/

Agenda

Friday, April 5, 7:00 – 9:00 pm – Private reception at the home of Elaine Ambrose at Spurwing. Details provided upon paid registration.

Saturday, April 6, 9:00 am – 2:00 pm

9:00 am – Board Room at Spurwing Country Club

Coffee, Tea, and Introductions

Writing Workshop: The Delicious Art of Word Stew

Writing Workshop: Your Journey is Your Story

Writing Workshop: Music as Muse

Writing Workshop: Fail-Proof Formula to Establish a Writing Routine – presented by AK Turner

Assignments

Lunch – Meals will be ordered from the Spurwing Menu.

Workshop: Reading and Speaking

Participants Read Their Work

2:00 pm – Assignments and Adjourn

Participants can remain on site until 4:00 pm to write and socialize.

Bring samples of your writing, paper, pen, and/or computer for writing and reading assignments.

No refunds after April 1.

Elaine Ambrose
Spurwing Golf Course
AK Turner

Filed Under: blog, books, events Tagged With: #amwriting, #Elaine Ambrose, #memoir, Meridian Idaho, Spurwing Golf Course, The Club at Spurwing, writers workshop

“Frozen Dinners” Described as Poetic, Heartbreaking, and Tense

December 27, 2018 By Elaine Ambrose

Ambrose Trucking, 1952

Foreword Reviews published a recent national review of the memoir Frozen Dinners – a Memoir of a Fractured Family and provided new insight into the book.

“Illustrative prose brings the anecdotes to life, describing the Idaho landscape and muddy potato farms with poetic imagery.”

“…a heartbreaking memoir.”

“Elaine Ambrose’s tense memoir, Frozen Dinners … paints a complex portrait of a twentieth-century western family.”

The memoir is receiving 5-Star Reviews from online sites including Amazon Reviews and Goodreads. Here is one 5-Star Review:

Elaine Ambrose is a skilled humorist, but also a trained journalist, an essayist and experienced poet. I was eager to see how she would bring her voice to the complicated story of her family. The book is full of vivid descriptions of Idaho’s natural beauty, small-town family life, and the way that agriculture defines culture in towns and cities across our great nation.

The book has the precision of Elaine’s journalistic background mixed with the prose of a poet. It’s beautiful, but I think some readers may miss the artistry of this juxtaposition. If you allow yourself to fall into the story, you will be cheering on the Ambrose family, and shaking your head (or fist) as the story unfolds. Never one to back away from the difficult, Elaine lays bare the emotional and physical pain of her childhood as the only daughter of a wildly successful (and very frugal) businessman and his loving wife. The emotional chill of the home is matched by Elaine’s brisk prose, which relaxes into lush descriptions when Elaine-as-a-girl is alone and in nature while her brothers spend time with their father. Little Elaine grows up, and the story of the family’s fracture when the children become adults unfolds from there.

Read this for a glimpse into Idaho’s beautiful landscape, into lives well-lived, one family’s rise through smarts and grit and sweat and determination. Read it because it’s a great American story.”

The book is available in paperback and eBook format. Order from local bookstores or online.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: #memoir, amazon, dysfunctional family, Foreword Reviews, Frozen Dinners, Goodreads, Idaho, trucking, tv dinners

Forget the Elf! Find Myself on Your Shelf!

November 30, 2018 By Elaine Ambrose

‘Tis the season to give lasting gifts, so stock the stockings with award-winning books from Idaho bestselling author Elaine Ambrose. Save a few for yourself! Shop local and order books from local bookstores. If they can’t secure books, find them online.

The new memoir, Frozen Dinners – A Memoir of a Fractured Family, debuted in November and has received 5-star reviews. It’s available from local bookstores, online, and from the author in hardcover and eBook formats.

 

 

Four other books by Ambrose have won professional praise and six national writing awards in the past four years.

 

   

Midlife Happy Hour – Our Reward for Surviving Careers, Kids, and Chaos

  • Finalist for INDIES Book of the Year Award for Humor
  • Independent Press Award – Distinguished Favorite – Humor
  • Independent Press Award – Winner – Midlife
  • 5-Star Review from Foreword Reviews

 


Midlife Cabernet – Life, Love, and Laughter After Fifty

  • “Laugh-out-Loud Funny”- Publishers Weekly
  • “Erma Bombeck” – Foreword Reviews
  • Silver Medal for Humor from the Independent Publisher Book Awards (IPPY)

 

Gators & Taters – A Week of Bedtime Stories

  • 2018 “Distinguished Favorite” for Children’s Literature from the Independent Press Awards
  • One of 50 Children’s Books Selected for Bowker’s National Recommended Reading List

 

The Magic Potato – La Papa Mágica 

  • 2018 Silver Medal Winner from the Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards for Children’s Literature
  • Adopted by the Idaho State Board of Education for the statewide curriculum.

 

For those in the Boise area, Ambrose is available to autograph and personalize her books. She prefers to meet at The Club at Spurwing with books and can include a holiday hot toddy.

But wait! There are more books and anthologies to view for your reading pleasure. For additional information about the author’s books, blogs, and events, see her website at www.ElaineAmbrose.com.

     

 

 

       

Filed Under: blog, books Tagged With: #amwriting, #humor, #memoir, #midlife, #Moonbeam Children's Book Award, Independent Press Awards, INDIES Book of the Year

Celebrate “Frozen Dinners” with Warm Food, Cool Jazz, and Sizzling Friends

November 7, 2018 By Elaine Ambrose

Please join the celebration on November 8 at the premiere party for Frozen Dinners – A Memoir of a Fractured Family.

Register Here.

Bestselling author Elaine Ambrose departs from her award-winning humor to describe her childhood in the village of Wendell, Idaho. Her father, an intense entrepreneur, created a trucking company in 1952 to haul frozen food throughout the Northwest. His businesses grew into a multi-million-dollar empire. After his untimely death, his survivors imploded in a maelstrom of brutal courtroom drama, heartbreak, and dementia. The $20 million-dollar estate is all gone, and Elaine’s parents and younger brother have died. In this new memoir, Ambrose chronicles her 50-year-search for warmth beyond the family legacy of frozen dinners.

Guest options include autographed books, glasses of Telaya wine, delicious “Grazing Table” food provided by Wild Plum Catering, custom cedar bookmarks, live music, free prizes, and a short reading. Additional books by the author will be available for purchase for holiday and Christmas gifting.

Popular singer and songwriter Dan Costello will provide a musical feast of sass and sound.

Ambrose Trucking, 1952

Frozen Dinners is published by Brown Books Publishing Group of Dallas, Texas. For information about Elaine’s books, blogs, and events, see ElaineAmbrose.com.

Full of luscious details, clear-eyed compassion, and enduring joy, Ambrose’s memoir gives us an insider’s view of one family’s rocky pursuit of the American Dream. Even when she is relating personal stories of conflict, loss, and grief, Ambrose does so with a survivor’s voice made strong by experience, stubbornness, humor, and love.

— Kim Barnes, Author of the Pulitzer Prize Finalist Memoir: In the Wilderness: Coming of Age in Unknown Country

This tell-all memoir will resonate with anyone who has endured family 
dysfunction and will defrost the hearts of readers everywhere.
—Joely Fisher, actress, singer, and author of Growing Up Fisher

Elaine will read and sign books at Rediscovered Books on Thursday, November 29 in downtown Boise. Elaine is available locally for sales, signings, and holiday cheer.

Filed Under: books, events, Uncategorized Tagged With: #dysfunction, #memoir, #wine, entrepreneur, Humor, Idaho, Telaya Winery, trucking, tv dinners

Papergirl Poet: The Town Crier

October 10, 2018 By Elaine Ambrose

On my daily paper route, I rode a similar bike with bags for newspapers.

 

At age twelve, I had a newspaper route and rode my one-speed bicycle every day to deliver The Twin Falls Times-News to seventy customers around the village of Wendell, Idaho. The Old Folks Manor was on my route. I remember dashing in with the papers and seeing the elderly people sleeping in their chairs. The ones who were awake begged me to stay and talk.

“Hey, Missy,” said a man everyone called Shorty. “Why don’t you stop and chat. Did I tell you about the farm I had?”

“I can’t stop today, Shorty. I need to finish my route. Some day you can tell me about it.”

“Are you coming tomorrow?” asked a toothless woman with wispy patches of hair on her head. “Can you bring me some milk?”

I stopped and placed the newspaper in her lap. “Sorry, June, I can’t carry milk on my bike.”

I always hurried out the door and continued my route. I returned, forty years later, when my mother lived there for a few months. The sights, sounds, and smells remained the same.

I often think about my newspaper route with ambivalent feelings. The experience taught me a productive work ethic and reinforced my social skills; however, I struggled with weather issues, fierce dogs, and constraints on my time that prevented other activities. I remain afraid of dogs after being chased and bitten countless times. In my upcoming memoir, Frozen Dinners, I include several original poems. For an assignment in a college creative writing class, I wrote a poem about being a newspaper girl. It’s titled “1964 Town Crier.”

1964 Town Crier

Ragged, rhythmic clouds of breath escape  from my mouth

as I push my burdened bicycle over  the patches of frozen snow.

Frost fills my nostrils and hardens  wayward hair

poking beneath my knit hat like spikes of rigid spider legs.

The only sounds on this dark  moonless morning

come from the rustle of my frozen pant legs

and my boots squeaking and crunching through  the crusty layers.

I know every house on my paper route,  so I keep my head down

in a futile attempt to ignore the bitter winds  that slice through my coat.

Take a newspaper from the bag, slap it into  a roll, stick it into the can, keep going.

I’m 12 years old, and I’m outside in the brutal 

Idaho winter at 5:30 am to deliver 70 newspapers. 

Every day. By myself.

My fingers hurt. Snot freezes on my lip. 

A dog growls but doesn’t leave its shelter. Crunch. Breathe.

My bag becomes lighter as  a sliver of daylight emerges through the dark.

I arrive home, and my father sits to read the newspaper

while my mother hands me hot cocoa with marshmallows

happily bobbing and melting on top.

My aching hands circle the mug, and I lean over

so the steam can warm my face.

Silent tears roll down red cheeks.

I am the Messenger. I am the Town Crier.

 

The premiere party for Frozen Dinners – A Memoir of a Fractured Family is Thursday, November 8 at Telaya Winery. Guests can receive autographed copies, custom cedar bookmarks, prizes, and TV dinner food.

Filed Under: blog Tagged With: #memoir, fear of dogs, Frozen Dinners, newspaper route, Twin Falls Times-News

“I received my last spanking when I was thirteen years old.”

October 7, 2018 By Elaine Ambrose

 

My memoir Frozen Dinners will be released next month and is available for pre-order. Here are some excerpts from the book.

I received my last spanking when I was thirteen years old. I had said something sarcastic to my father, so he dragged me into my bedroom and spanked me a few times on my rear. The rage and humiliation caused me to start a five-year-calendar to mark off the months until I was eighteen. Being hit by my father distorted my concept of a healthy relationship. A few years after I left home, the man I was with hit me hard enough to split my lip and knock me to the ground. My father was only thirty minutes away, but I didn’t call him because I didn’t want him to know.

Ambrose Trucking, 1952

I envisioned my childhood while eating frozen dinners on disposable aluminum trays that provided exact portions of mixed vegetables, a meat concoction, manufactured potatoes, and bland apple crisp or a meek cherry cobbler. I saw my father, the stern, successful workaholic who built a trucking empire hauling frozen food and TV dinners throughout the Northwest. My mother dutifully heated and handed the aluminum trays to her children, and we ate in silence. As a stubborn girl, I defied the orderly presentation and pushed the wrinkled peas into the potatoes and plopped the dessert onto the meat. It all tasted the same, anyway. As we consumed our meal, I wondered how it would be to live in a place of warmth, peace, and laughter. I longed for a hearty homemade meal shared with a happy family, so I made it my mission to have that scenario.

My mother believed the biblical scripture that there was a time for everything, but she never anticipated going to court at age seventy-seven because of a lawsuit with her firstborn child. Her shoulders sagged as we approached the door, and I moved my arm around her. She seemed fragile and frightened, and I feared she would float away. The courthouse smelled of old wood and wax. We noted the schedule of trials, and Mom cringed when she read the notice: Plaintiff, Leona Ambrose. Defendant, Tom Ambrose, Sand Springs Ranch. The lawyer for the plaintiff was Richard C. Boardman from Perkins Coie in Boise. I was listed as the counter-defendant because my brother sued me in response to my mother’s suit against him

 

Here, on the hill near the potato field, I rejoiced in the splendor of my existence. That’s when I felt it. A calm sensation poured over me, stirred my very soul, and quietly released through unrestricted tears flowing down my cheeks. Through my blurred vision, I knew that this warm feeling was the peace I had read about in my grandmother’s Bible. And it was a peace that passed all understanding.

I finally understand why my mother, even in dementia, was so desperate to find her quilt. The patchwork pieces of our past are reminders of the frayed, personal fabric of our lives, but they also offer comforting, familiar proof of the happiness that occurred and the enduring strength necessary to hold it all together.

 

The Premiere Party for Frozen Dinners – A Memoir of a Fractured Family will be Thursday, November 8 at Telaya Winery in Garden City, Idaho. Other books will be available for holiday and Christmas gifts. Laughter will outweigh any sadness.

Filed Under: blog, books, events Tagged With: #memoir, Frozen Dinners, Idaho, Telaya Winery, trucking, tv dinners

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