A Southern girl embraces the 60s and 70s, only to become mentally ill when the era is over. In the end, she regains her sanity and achieves her dream of becoming a writer. Elizabeth Wells: If I had to say what inspired this story I would say that I have lived an uncommon life, met unforgettable characters, and done things most people wouldnt do. The idea was to get it into a book that recorded much of my own personal history. Since the beginning of man, such inspiration is always necessary to the persons who create stories of their own. William Faulkner said, Listen to the voices. I do.
Published on the occasion of the exhibition Elizabeth Osborne: the color of light, held at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, June 26-September 20, 2009.
Tired of being taking for granted and underappreciated by her family, housewife Deena Munger stuns her family by volunteering to raise a puppy for K-9 Eyes for the Blind and soon discovers that the rambunctious, playful young canine could be the cure to a stale marriage and boring home life. A first novel. Original. 40,000 first printing.
A tale of dedicated friends, set in the History of the '60's; who experience love, celebration, drama and betrayal. Two of these girls become battered women, yet through the dysfunctional experience learn to endure and find they accomplishment.
Appearing for the first time in a trade edition, this novel from the bestselling author of "Range of Motion" is about a middle-age woman who begins an impromptu trek across the country and follows the pull of the moon to find her way home, writing down her thoughts in a leather journal.
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