Trasker and Florin’s lives are changing rapidly. There will be many joys in their future as well as great challenges. Trasker must complete the mission that his father was unable to and find the object that will reveal the past and that is essential to their future. Once again, Trasker must summon his courage and to overcome the obstacles set in his path and avoid the dangers that lie hidden. Once again, Florin will be a critical ally in this quest. Will their love be enough to see them through the challenges that lie ahead? Will they be able to accept what is revealed?
Anton is a boy of twelve when World War II turns his life upside down. He discovers his first love and soul mate when he finds Marie in the midst of the Nazi occupation of France. Though his mettle is severely tested as he experiences the tragic loss of everything he loves, he perseveres. From the French Resistance to the liberation of Paris, to the high-fashion industry in America in the 1950s, and to the bucolic valley of Sonoma, California, Anton comes full circle. Through tragedy, loss, love, revenge, and finally, a life fulfilled, The Soap Maker will make you cry, laugh, and eventually, smile.
Migration is book 3 in the Feet of the Nevis trilogy. This is where the story begins and sets the stage for the future of the inhabitants of Orus. If some of the problems faced on Orus sound familiar, they are. I have always believed that a good story is better than a good lecture. That being said, it is my hope that my fiction does not become a reality. Our politicians need to become leaders, not the other way around. We as adults and children need to pay attention to what is happening to our world and be conscious of squandering the resources we have been blessed with. I hope that you find this work entertaining and that the message resonates. Sager is the central character that ties the three books together. If you’ve read Feet of the Nevis and A Son’s Journey, Migration will answer all those lingering questions. Follow Sager and his fellow travelers as they take a journey driven by desperation and hope for a new and better life. Ever since stories have been told and handed down from generation to generation, there have been tales of beings of higher intelligence or otherworldly powers. The Bible talks of the Nephilim, the Greeks and Romans spoke of the Titans, and the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas carved glyphs of otherworldly figures. Perhaps they came from Orus or somewhere similar.
Imagine sometime in the distant past, before modern and organized societies, and several thousand years after the dinosaurs roamed the earth, a time when the earth was still relatively uninhabited other than tribes that roamed the planet across the varied continents. Suddenly, there are advanced colonies scattered across the planet that have the skill and knowledge to build great pyramids, build ships that can sail great distances and navigate based upon the stars, people with knowledge of the cosmos and mathematics. One such colony has sprung up along the coast of what is now known as central California, a village of perhaps two-hundred-plus souls who have come from far away. Among these are a young man and a young woman who have fallen in love but must overcome the embodiment of evil itself. They also must search for the object that will tell of their past and of their origins—an object that is critical to the successful continuation of their future and of the future of generations to come.
Trasker and Florin’s lives are changing rapidly. There will be many joys in their future as well as great challenges. Trasker must complete the mission that his father was unable to and find the object that will reveal the past and that is essential to their future. Once again, Trasker must summon his courage and to overcome the obstacles set in his path and avoid the dangers that lie hidden. Once again, Florin will be a critical ally in this quest. Will their love be enough to see them through the challenges that lie ahead? Will they be able to accept what is revealed?
Imagine sometime in the distant past, before modern and organized societies, and several thousand years after the dinosaurs roamed the earth, a time when the earth was still relatively uninhabited other than tribes that roamed the planet across the varied continents. Suddenly, there are advanced colonies scattered across the planet that have the skill and knowledge to build great pyramids, build ships that can sail great distances and navigate based upon the stars, people with knowledge of the cosmos and mathematics. One such colony has sprung up along the coast of what is now known as central California, a village of perhaps two-hundred-plus souls who have come from far away. Among these are a young man and a young woman who have fallen in love but must overcome the embodiment of evil itself. They also must search for the object that will tell of their past and of their origins—an object that is critical to the successful continuation of their future and of the future of generations to come.
Migration is book 3 in the Feet of the Nevis trilogy. This is where the story begins and sets the stage for the future of the inhabitants of Orus. If some of the problems faced on Orus sound familiar, they are. I have always believed that a good story is better than a good lecture. That being said, it is my hope that my fiction does not become a reality. Our politicians need to become leaders, not the other way around. We as adults and children need to pay attention to what is happening to our world and be conscious of squandering the resources we have been blessed with. I hope that you find this work entertaining and that the message resonates. Sager is the central character that ties the three books together. If you’ve read Feet of the Nevis and A Son’s Journey, Migration will answer all those lingering questions. Follow Sager and his fellow travelers as they take a journey driven by desperation and hope for a new and better life. Ever since stories have been told and handed down from generation to generation, there have been tales of beings of higher intelligence or otherworldly powers. The Bible talks of the Nephilim, the Greeks and Romans spoke of the Titans, and the Aztecs, Mayans, and Incas carved glyphs of otherworldly figures. Perhaps they came from Orus or somewhere similar.
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