Guardian Angel
The genre of this novel is classified under fiction, meaning it is completely made-up. Narrated through the voice of a slightly befuddled and misguided angel, it has no basis in real-world phenomena. The author has permitted the whims of her imagination to take a reckless journey through a series of mishaps and miscommunications that have nothing to do with reality-based events. For example, the bank heist, search for a local missing teenager, and trips to astral planes where souls meet and discuss their next life are entirely made up.
The River Crossing
The River Crossing is a boy-meets-girl romance novel oscillating between late 1800s Ireland and present day. Daisy, a Catholic girl from a farming family of meager means, meets Morgan, a Protestant boy from an educated family with political influences. Their ensuing love story is seen through the present-day perceptions of Chloe, a coming-of-age and clever but somewhat confused woman. The novel embraces elements of fantasy; telepathy and cellular communication are examined. You will meet a ‘talking’ horse!
The Measure of Time
“To see the world in a grain of sand, and heaven in a wild flower” – William Blake
The Measure of Time is a romance novel, but with a twist. It is the story of Violet, a woman who embarks on a journey similar to Dorothy’s of The Wizard of Oz. Unlike young Dorothy, Violet is a menopausal, anxious, and discontented fifty-six-year-old. She is beginning to face the uncomfortable questions of her own mortality, relationships with others, and the validity of the life she has so far led.
The Blue Box
Life is fragile, and when it changes without warning, people are changed as well, sometimes irreparably. When circumstances outside our control reshape our lives, who we are and who we have the capacity to become are put to the test. With clarity and knowledge, a deeper understanding can be born.
This is the story of two women, living in times and circumstances that couldn’t be more dissimilar. How does a woman struggling to stay alive in Nazi-occupied Poland, have anything in common with a ditzy housewife living in modern day affluence—and yet they are intimately connected in pain and loss and blood.