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By: Julia Callaway,
on 5/5/2014
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In his study, sociologist David Yamane found an interesting correlation between the type of catechetical sessions used in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults process (which an adult who wants to enter the Catholic Church undergoes) and the socioeconomic standing (SES). He found that the lower the SES of the parish, the more they rely on hierarchical and passive pedagogies such as question and answer and lecturing. The higher the SES, the more diversity in their teachings, with more focus on participatory and engaging pedagogies such as liturgy and prayer and discussion.

Download a jpg or pdf of the infographic.
David Yamane teaches sociology at Wake Forest University. His primary scholarly interest is the sociology of organized religion, particularly Roman Catholicism in the postwar United States. His publications include The Catholic Church in State Politics: Negotiating Prophetic Demands and Political Realities (2005), Real Stories of Christian Initiation: Lessons for and from the RCIA (2006), and Religion in Sociological Perspective (2011). He is author of Becoming Catholic: Finding Rome in the American Religious Landscape.
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By: AlyssaB,
on 4/20/2014
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By David Yamane
For many Catholics in America, waking up in the morning to find no news about the church is a relief. They won’t have to deal with stories about the lingering stench of the priest sexual abuse scandal, the consolidation of parishes and closing of schools, controversy over Catholic hospitals and the loss of Catholic youth, fewer and older nuns and more and younger “nones.”
But what if no news was not the only good news? What if Catholics turned on their TVs and opened their papers on Easter Sunday and heard some real good news instead?

Family watching television 1958. Image credit: CC 2.0 via Flickr.
At Easter Vigil Masses on Saturday night, 19 April, something truly remarkable will take place. Tens of thousands of adults in thousands of parishes across the United States became Catholic. For most of them, this rite of passage is the climax of a months- (and in some cases years-) long process of formation called the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA).
As I have written previously, the implementation of this modernized ancient process of initiation is an excellent example of the contemporary re-invention of rites of passage and a fruitful legacy of the Second Vatican Council. It is a Catholic success story.

Sign reserving pews for the Catechumens. Photo by John Ragai. CC 2.0 via Flickr.
Although based on a single, universal ritual text, the way the RCIA process is implemented differs from parish to parish. We do well to remember a variant on Tip O’Neill’s quip that “all politics is local.” All Catholicism is local. In some parishes we find elaborate and beautiful rituals, rich with fragrant oils and soaring hymns and full body immersion in the waters of baptism. In some parishes, we see minimalistic ceremonies that strain the use of the term ritual.
Regardless of the quality of the celebration, however, through the sacraments of initiation—baptism, confirmation, and Eucharist—individuals become Catholic. When the officiating minister speaks the words and performs the actions of the sacraments—“I baptize you…” and “Be sealed…” and “Receive the Body of Christ”—from the perspective of the church, they have the intended effect. It does not matter if the priest says the words excitedly, sincerely, or in a monotone while yawning under his breath. It does not matter if a team of 20 catechists and thousands of parishioners welcome the new Catholic warmly and profusely, or if a single deacon rushes through a minimalistic ceremony while a few dozen assembled individuals wait impatiently for communion. It does not matter if the symbols of the initiation ceremony are rich or sparse. An individual who receives the sacraments of initiation in a Catholic Church is a Catholic. The individual now can check the “Catholic” box, join a parish, receive communion, get married in the church, and so on.
This fact reminds us that, at the same time that all Catholicism is local, we can also say that no Catholicism is only local. Without the universal church, there would be no RCIA process in local parishes. The Vatican II document Sacrosanctum Concilium (promulgated in 1963) led to the editio typica of the Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum (issued in 1972), which led to the vernacular typical edition of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (published in 1988), which has gradually been implemented in US parishes. Understanding this movement from universal to local is important. I think of this as being like the image on the cover of Pink Floyd’s album, “Dark Side of the Moon.” The album cover shows a beam of white light hitting a triangular prism, which refracts it to create a rainbow of colors. The culture and resources of local parishes do act as prisms, but without the light, you have no rainbow.
With unprecedented opportunities to choose a religion (or no religion) and to choose how to practice that religion (or not practice), the fact that tens of thousands of people still voluntarily chose Catholicism again this year is indeed good news for American Catholics.
David Yamane teaches sociology at Wake Forest University and is author of Becoming Catholic: Finding Rome in the American Religious Landscape. He is currently exploring the phenomenon of armed citizenship in America as part of what has been called “Gun Culture 2.0″—a new group of individuals (including an increasing number of women) who have entered American gun culture through concealed carry and the shooting sports. He blogs about this at Gun Culture 2.0. Follow him on Twitter @gunculture2pt0.
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By: AlyssaB,
on 4/19/2014
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By David Yamane
“It has often been said that one of the characteristics of the modern world is the disappearance of any meaningful rites of initiation.”
Mircea Eliade made this comment in his 1956 Haskell Lectures on the History of Religions at the University of Chicago (subsequently published as Rites and Symbols of Initiation). The qualifier meaningful in Eliade’s statement is significant, because something so fundamental to human societies (across cultures and over time) as rites of initiation do not simply melt into air, modernity notwithstanding.

Initiation ritual along the Sepik River in Papua New Guinea in 1975. Photo by Franz Luthi. CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.
Contemporary ritual studies luminary, Ronald Grimes, highlights a unique and contradictory aspect of Western industrialized societies when it comes to initiation, one perhaps implied by Eliade. “Initiation goes on all the time,” Grimes writes in his book, Deeply Into the Bone: Re-inventing Rites of Passage. But we lack “explicit or compelling initiation ceremonies.”
The centrifugal forces of modernity have rendered the initiation that does take place in Western industrial societies more diffuse, haphazard, individualized, and even sometimes only imaginary. In the face of this, some communities are attempting to create or re-create rites of passage that are mindful and intentional.
Perhaps not surprisingly, then, less than a decade after Eliade’s lectures, the leaders of the Roman Catholic Church meeting at the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) called for a restoration of the “catechumenate”—the ancient process for ritually initiating adults. As I noted yesterday, this culminated in the publication in 1972 of Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum, subsequently translated into English in 1988 as Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults.
In his work on re-inventing rites of passage, Grimes does not mention the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA), but he could have. In “returning to the sources” in the ancient church for an earlier model of initiation (what French theologians call ressourcement), the creators of the contemporary RCIA engaged in the very process of reinvention that Grimes calls for.
When fully implemented, the RCIA process takes those considering becoming Catholic on a journey through four distinct periods of formation which are demarcated by three ritual transitions.
Period 1: Evangelization and Precatechumenate
The opening stage of the RCIA process is intended to introduce individuals to the Catholic faith and to answer questions about it. Also during this period individuals are paired with sponsors, members of the church who will accompany the individual on their journal toward initiation.
Ritual Transition 1: Rite of Acceptance into the Order of Catechumens
Those who decide to continue in the RCIA process go through this first of three major ritual transitions. During a liturgy individuals are asked to affirm their acceptance of the Gospel of Christ and the assembly is asked to affirm their support of the candidates. The passage to the status of “catechumen” is then ritually enacted by the priest, catechist, or sponsor tracing the sign of the cross on the forehead (and often also the ears, eyes, lips, chest, shoulders, hands, and feet) of the candidate.
Period 2: Catechumenate
This is the main time of formation for those seeking initiation. The purpose of this period is to give catechumens “suitable pastoral formation and guidance, aimed at training them in the Christian life” through catechesis, community, liturgy, and service (RCIA, no. 75). Once catechumens are ready to receive the sacraments of initiation they must publicly declare this and go through a ritual transition to become one of the “elect.”
Ritual Transition 2: Rite of Election
Typically held the first Sunday of Lent and presided over by the bishop, this ritual brings together individuals in the RCIA process from the entire diocese so that for the first time the candidates are able to see and experience the church writ large. In this rite, God “elects” those catechumens who are deemed ready to take part in the sacraments of initiation and who affirm their desire to do so. The candidates’ names are enrolled in the diocesan “Book of the Elect” which is countersigned by the bishop who declares them ready to begin their final period of preparation before initiation.
Period 3: Purification and Enlightenment
This period focuses on spiritual preparation for the rites of initiation and coincides with the 40 days preceding Easter, known as the season of Lent. As part of their spiritual cleansing, the elect undergo three public “scrutinies” which typically involve prayer over the elect and an “exorcism” enacted by a laying on of hands by the presider. The elect are also ritually presented the text of the Nicene Creed and Lord’s Prayer. At the conclusion of this period, the elect undergo the most significant ritual transition: the reception of the sacraments of initiation.
Ritual Transition 3: Reception of the Sacraments of Initiation
This moment of incorporation—literally becoming part of the body of the church—normatively and most often takes place during the Easter Vigil, what Augustine called “the mother of all holy vigils.” In and through this ritual, individuals receive the sacraments of initiation (baptism, confirmation, and eucharist) and in doing so become Catholic.
Period 4: Mystagogy
This is sometimes called the period of “post-baptismal catechesis” because it seeks to lead the newly initiated more deeply into reflection on the experience of the sacraments and membership in the church. It is a springboard from the RCIA community to the broader church community.
By the turn of the 21st century, more than 80% of American parishes were using some version of this RCIA process to initiate adults. Although it is not yet fully implemented in every parish, the RCIA is the officially recognized liturgical and catechetical process by which adults become Catholic today.
As a reinvented rite of passage, the RCIA process has been very successful at bringing individuals into the Catholic Church in a mindful, intentional, and compelling way. As I noted in my first OUPblog entry, it is also helping to shape the process of ritual initiation in other churches. I will suggest in my third and final entry that the RCIA, therefore, represents a bit of good news amid a lot of bad news for the Roman Catholic Church in the contemporary United States.
David Yamane teaches sociology at Wake Forest University and is author of Becoming Catholic: Finding Rome in the American Religious Landscape. He is currently exploring the phenomenon of armed citizenship in America as part of what has been called “Gun Culture 2.0″—a new group of individuals (including an increasing number of women) who have entered American gun culture through concealed carry and the shooting sports. He blogs about this at Gun Culture 2.0. Follow him on Twitter @gunculture2pt0.
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By: AlyssaB,
on 4/18/2014
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By David Yamane
The American religious landscape is ever changing. The rise of religious nones, the spiritual not religious, thoughtful spirituality, the emerging church, online religion, megachurches, and on and on.
As a sociologist of religion who specializes in Roman Catholicism, it is easy to feel old-fashioned in the face of so much novelty. But in its typically deliberate way, the original megachurch in America continues to make its mark on the religious landscape.

Easter Vigil Baptism, April 11, 2009. Image Credit: Photo by IC MONROVIA RCIA, CC 2.0 via Flickr.
On Saturday night, April 19th, at Easter Vigil Masses in most of the 17,000+ parishes in the United States, tens of thousands of individuals will join the Catholic Church. On average over the past ten years, 67,000 adults annually have been baptized Catholic and 83,000 baptized Christians annually have been “Received into Full Communion” with the Roman Catholic church in the United States.
To put these numbers in perspective, these 1.5 million people becoming Catholic over the past decade in themselves would comprise one of the 20 largest religious bodies in America. Catholic converts collectively are about 11% of all Catholics in the United States today. These 5.85 million individuals would be the fifth largest religious body in America, just ahead of the Church of God in Christ and behind the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (the Mormon Church).
These numbers are impressive, but even more notable is that most adults who become Catholic in America today do so through an elaborate initiation process that is both ancient and modern: the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA).
In the ancient church, adult baptism was preceded by a structured period of instruction (“catechesis”), which could last as long as three years. Individuals undergoing instruction were called “catechumens” (“hearers of the word”) and the period of instruction was called the “catechumenate.” The process also called for a number of pre-baptismal rites associated with purification and exorcism in preparation for initiation.
As the church’s attention shifted to infant baptism, these rich traditions of adult initiation fell by the wayside. By the mid-20th century in the United States, the process of adult initiation was brief, private, and focused on doctrinal instruction. But the church would soon “modernize” the process of adult initiation, not by looking to the future, but by looking to the past.
French theologians call this ressourcement – looking to the ancient church for models of liturgy and practice to be implemented in the contemporary church. In this way, the church uses tradition to renew tradition. This is exemplified by the call to restore the ancient catechumenate for adults in the Second Vatican Council’s 1963 Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (Sacrosanctum Concilium, nos. 64-66).
That call led to the publication in 1972 of a new book of rites for adult initiation, in Latin of course, called Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum (the Latin editio typica or “typical edition”). A provisional English translation of this new “order of initiation” was introduced into the Catholic Church in the United States in 1974 and the final official American English translation of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (the “vernacular typical edition”) was published in 1988. At that time, the National Conference of Catholic Bishops also issued guidelines for and mandated the use of the new process.
Like the ancient model, the modern RCIA takes individuals through distinct periods of formation with public ritual transitions that move individuals from one period to the next. The process can take anywhere from months to years to complete. (Tomorrow, I will discuss in greater detail the nuts and bolts of the process.)
Since it was mandated in 1988, at least two million adults have been initiated into the Catholic Church through the RCIA process. But the Catholic Church does not only make its mark on the American religious landscape numerically. The RCIA has also become an influential model of initiation for other Christian traditions. Among the denominations that have implemented a catechumenal process of initiation are the Episcopal Church USA, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and the Mennonite Church USA. In 1995, the North American Association for the Catechumenate was founded as an ecumenical group to support and promote the catechumenal process of initiation outside the Catholic Church. Denominational partners include the Anglican Church of Canada, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, Presbyterian Church (USA), Reformed Church in America, and the United Methodist Church.
The influence of the RCIA both inside and outside the Catholic Church suggests that it is one of the most fruitful — if one of the least recognized — legacies of the Second Vatican Council.
David Yamane teaches sociology at Wake Forest University and is author of Becoming Catholic: Finding Rome in the American Religious Landscape. He is currently exploring the phenomenon of armed citizenship in America as part of what has been called “Gun Culture 2.0″ — a new group of individuals (including an increasing number of women) who have entered American gun culture through concealed carry and the shooting sports. He blogs about this at Gun Culture 2.0. Follow him on Twitter @gunculture2pt0.
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The post Initiation into America’s original megachurch appeared first on OUPblog.
So . . . anyone interested in winning a copy of INITIATION? (Out Jan. 3rd). :) If so, I'm giving away TWO signed copies!
The rules are easy:
You must be a US resident
You have to comment on THIS post and leave your email address so I can get in touch with you
Your comment topic is: "How are YOU going to celebrate Initiation release day?" :)
You get extra entries if: you reblog about the contest, tell your friends about Initiation (I trust you!), Tweet, Facebook, or do whatever you like to let other people know about it's release. If you leave what you did in your comment, I'll add it as an extra entry.
Two winners will be drawn at random at midnight on Monday. Good luck! I'll email the winners the next day. :)
xoxo
Enjoy the INITIATION trailer! :D Happy holidays and I'm so thankful for all of YOU! xoxo

I haven't been on the computer much recently (I'm super sick, ugh!) but someone on Team Canterwood e-mailed me to say that Initiation (Canterwood #13) was up on Amazon. I don't have the high res-cover yet, but this little one is online. Yay!
I love this cover and the names of the new characters will be revealed over time. When I get the cover in a bigger version, I'll repost it so you all can see the details.
I thought it would be fun for a little Monday pick-me-up! So, how about the reveal of the title for Canterwood Crest #13?!
(In case of any confusion, CHOSEN does not count as #13 because it is a super special.)
The title, brainstormed by the always-fab-and-brilliant Editor K, is . . .
INITIATION
I looove it! We're working on the book now and the title is perfect. There couldn't be a better title to fit the story.
The cover is fabulous and I can't wait to share it with you all!
xoxo
Im going to be really excited! And i cant wait to read it! My email is: [email protected]
If I win a signed copy of Initiation, I'm going to write about winning it in my journal and on my blog. I will also read it too.
My email is: [email protected]
[email protected]
I FaceBooked, Re-Tweeted your Tweet, Tweeted it myself ^_^
I will Facebook about it and (probably) finish it the same day :/
I will order it and wait for it to come. Getting books is like having Christmas all over again. Not only that, I will be writing about it in my journal. I also wrote about the contest in my blog.
my email is: [email protected]
If I win a signed copy is would be amazing because I LOVELOVELOVE your books!I would be sooooooo happy to get that freaking book and I would probably read it all in one day. My email is:
[email protected] :D
I'm so excited I'm going to buy it the day it's out and read all day!! :) And I told a friend about it.
Email: [email protected]
Christmas parties as ever! Today (Dec. 17) I am going t a huge family party (annual, everybody on my dad's side comes--I meet a new cousin every time I go shopping with my G-MA. In a TINY HOUSE,...) christmas party at my house on new years eve (when we all could) on my mom's side, and so many others, with Youth Group, and everything... It is going to be so much fun!!
E-mail: [email protected]
I will post this on my not very popular blog.
When the book comes out I will buy it, read it all in one sitting without stopping, then shove in my friends faces and tell them that they have to read it. I will also tell everyone on my horse games I play that they have to read it. I will also go on my schools morning announcements and tell the whole school to read it and visit canterwoodcrest.com
[email protected]
Question: How do I reblog?
I think I might celebrate by getting together with my friend who got me into Canterwood Crest.
Ack, forgot my e-mail.
[email protected]
I will celebrate my reading it! :)
Oh wait, here's my email! [email protected]
I will read the book as soon as I get it, then try to design my own book based on it but epically fail then probobly check the blog 15 times in 5 minutes waiting for something to appear! my email is: [email protected]
(Emily and Aladdin4ever!@!)HIIIII!!!!! For the release for initiation, (I do this every book) I will order it on my kindle, wake up on January 3rd at 12 A.M. and read the book till I have to go to school. (5:30 A.M.) Then I talk with my friends, and we will have a sleepover talking about the book, and ask for the paper back book for my bday (January 26th) and my bday sleepover will be themed by initiation. I next will reread the book till I can recite the first three chapters. (I can with every book, and bought a signed copy of city secrets on ebay) I REALLY WANT TO WIN! I check this blog daily and her twitter acount including Lauren Tower's blog and twitter. I'm obsessed!!! My email is: [email protected]
This is Emily and Aladdin 4ever!@, I just texted all of my friends abt the release!!!!!! Since I don't have a twitter or facebook
I'll write about it, Facebook it, ride a horse, and get ready for a all-night party thrown for Initiation! ;P
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When a new book comes out, I usually reread all the other books just for fun, then I start reading the book. Once I finish, I carry it with me nearly everywhere and keep rereading it until I've memorized lines of it. I set "Initiation is coming out on Jan 3rd!" as my status =) Email ~ [email protected]
What I would do to celebrate is get my favorite kind of icecream and COFFEE/TEA:)Would lock myself in my room and read the whole book.And freak out that I got a free book from Jessica Burkhart<3<3:):)!!!!My e-mail is [email protected]!!!
When Initiation comes out, I will follow the exact routine I follow for each new CC book. I will first wake up super early and go online to see the store hours for Barnes & Noble. I will tell my dad to "Get in the car we're going to the bookstore!" and get there *as soon* as the store opens. On the drive home, I force myself not to take one look inside and wait until I'm home. I will lock myself in my room. Then I'll either reread the series to catch up or just skim over parts that I want to remember (I spend all of my time in between the CC books coming out rereading and rereading them over and over again!!). After I've done that, I'll (EEK!) start on Intitation and read it in, like, an hour. Then, (surprise surprise) I'll reread it! Once I'm completely satisfied, I usually go downstairs to tell everyone about it over gmail and see which of my horsey friends wants to borrow it first. Then I'll go upstairs, go over my favorite parts, and then go on your blog as I do like every day (read: every hour). Then I'll call up my most-CC-obssessed bff and we'll plan a CC sleepover for that Friday (a CC sleepover usually consists of talking about the book A LOT, reenacting the latest CC book scenes (yes, we did make a gossip blog and pretend to read it for #11), and slathering on waaaaay too much lip gloss. Then, I will not sleep that night because I'll be thinking about the book (its really true!) and wake up in the morning, tired, obsessed with the series all over again, and thinking about my sleepover on Friday night.
If I could get the book early I would be SO EXCITED!!!! I could do this whole routine early and let my friends borrow it sooner! I can't wait until January 3rd anyways and I know that all of these guys deserve the early book! <3 to you all
Sophie
[email protected]
I don't know if when I commented before it worked lol so here we go again! For the day Initiation comes out I am going to read it really fast because I love this series and then I'm going horseback riding! My email- [email protected].
I also told my friends via email and text!
I can hardly wait for my 3 copies of Initiation I give copies to my friends and we read them together.Christmas dinner will be at our house and a few friends and neighbors will come over. The neighbors have been very generous with cookies!!!!and an apple pie!We light a lot of candles and play Christmas music constantly. Happy Holidays to you.
On release day im going to grad the book first chance i can and read all day. my email is [email protected]. i facebooked all my friends to read your books.
I will probably have a reading party with a couple friends that read the book two. or i will go to the book store the second it opens and get the book first. and i am a USA citizen
email: [email protected]
I will run out at midnight buy the book and finish reading it by 6:00 when i hav 2 get ready 4 school:( I'll be rlly tired but watevs, itl be worth it!!!:):):):):) My email is [email protected]!!:)
i can't wait i'll propley beg my to take me to the store to buy the book
[email protected]
Im going to spend Initiation release day by watching every Canterwood Crest video on the Canterwood Crest website,and im going to read CCA all day. Im so excited to read initiation! :) my email is [email protected]
P.s I tweeted the contest on twitter and facebook :)
Are you allowed to enter more than once????
I really want to win and people have come up with better ideas then me lol
I will totally celebrate with my little sis. I got her reading the series about six months ago and she read three books in one day. We will reread a lot of the books that are already out. I'll also post the date on my horse calendar so that I will never forget!
My e-mail is [email protected]
Emily said... Yay! I will re-read all the Canterwood crest books! And I will dance around the house and sing o.O Oh!I also told a friend about it and blogged ;)
My e-mail is: [email protected]
Jessica~ I am having like the whole grade over to my house and I am ordering shirts that say "Initiation is AWESOME! (So is Jessica Burkhart!) " Also because I LOVELINESS x ENFITIY Canterwood Crest! I also REALLY want to win because my birthday is 5 days after it realeses! So, PLEASE PICK ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I LOVE YOU!!!! You can email me at [email protected]
Jessica~ I am having like the whole grade over to my house and I am ordering shirts that say "Initiation is AWESOME! (So is Jessica Burkhart!) " Also because I LOVELINESS x ENFITIY Canterwood Crest! I also REALLY want to win because my birthday is 5 days after it realeses! So, PLEASE PICK ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I LOVE YOU!!!! You can email me at [email protected]
Email- [email protected]
I will be celebrating the Initiation release by prepping for my b-day party (Jan. 13) and by BEGGING my mom to get up and drive me Barnes & Noble so I can get one of the first copies!!!!! I have Facebooked, Re-tweeted, and have told 15 of my friends.
For the release of Initian.....
I will force my mom to take as soon and as early as she can on January 3rd to buy it.
I will not look from the book all day because i will be enthrawled by reading it!
Then, read it again and get made fun of by friends for being such a book worm over a horse book (they just dont understand)
I have told a lot of my friends about the book (the ones who like them) and told some people at my barn (I dont have a facebook, twitter or blog so if that counts, thats what i did lol :)
my email:[email protected]
I'm going to get it and maybe a new bookmark to celebrate the awezomeness of it, then i'll sit down with some cocoa maybe and read it straight through so i can bring it to my friend on sunday so she can read it :D. My email is: [email protected]
I am going to READ IT!! Drop everything and READ IT!!! I've already told many people about this series.... I think some of them are already hooked, lol.
http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=326990127330283&id=100000578943251
~facebook post~
email: [email protected]
Hi Jessica!
What I'm doing to celebrate the release of Initiation is...
. I'm having all my friends over!
.We're eating ice cream and talking about the series!
.We are going to all have a race to see who can finish it the fastest!
. I am getting them all Lipsmackers!
(specifically, Lipsmackers Liquid Lipsmackers in Watermelon!)
I told, like, everyone I know! (except the boys-:)-)
I looooove your books!
You can reach me at: [email protected]
I'm going to curl up in front of our fireplace with two of my rider besties and we're going to read INITIATION together... all three of us are Team Canterwood all the way! So excited!!!
[email protected]
Lets see here... I'm going to scream, read, scream, read, screa, read, adn did i mention SCREAM?!?!? Probably stay up all night *even though it's a school night* just to finish! My email is [email protected]
[email protected]
Im going to right a really silyl song for it :) And jump up and down :DDDD I tweeted about it too!Blogging about it also :D
P.S. I re-tweeted your warning about the contest ending at midnight on Monday. Have a great Christmas and a Happy New Year!!!!! :)
Im going to jump up and down, make some tea and Tell all my friends!!! :D I blogged and tweeted!
http://randomjessi.blogspot.com/
https://twitter.com/#!/JLoveRandom
:)
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<33333
First, I'll probably scavenge my piggy bank for any remaining cash, then head over to the brick-and- mortar Barnes & Noble. Next, securing my place in the long line, I will buy Initiation. After reading it in one sitting, then re-reading it to make sure I didn't miss anything, I'll get on my computer and buy the Kindle version! After all the heavy but exciting drama and lip gloss, I will crash, dreaming up a wonderful world of Canterwood Crest.
My email is...
[email protected]
Thanks, Jessica!! Fingers crossed!
-Katia
email: [email protected]
I'm going to head to the barn and hang out with Atticus, the horse we ride. I'll probably end up reading aloud to him while drinking hot cocoa. :) I have told three of my friends about all CCA books and about Initiation!
hi i love the series my email is [email protected]
woops sorry didnt think it posted the first time since it was on my ipod and it died right before.