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Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert: Cathryn Grant’s SHALLOW WATER is our eBook of the Day at just $1.99, and Here’s a Free Sample!

Here’s the set-up for Cathryn Grant’s Shallow Water, just $1.99 on Kindle:

In the second novella in this psychological suspense series, Madison finds a dead body in the Shallow Water of Half Moon Bay. The most likely culprit has a rock-solid alibi, and Madison isn’t sure whether the legendary ghost that haunts The Distillery restaurant is helping or hindering her quest to understand why a young woman drowned. When Madison agrees to meet a good-looking bartender on the beach, ghosts and corpses take a back seat.

Both the living and the dead like to reveal their secrets to Madison Keith. As the administrative assistant in the basement office of a suburban church, she gets plenty of opportunity to hear from both.

Visit Amazon’s Cathryn Grant Page

Cathryn Grant’s short fiction has appeared in Alfred Hitchcock and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazines. Her short story, “I Was Young Once”received an honorable mention from Joyce Carol Oates in the 2007 Zoetrope All-story Short Fiction contest.

Reviewers have said they “stayed up late finishing” her first novel, THE DEMISE OF THE SOCCER MOMS. Her second novel, BURIED BY DEBT, will be released in November 2011. She is also the author of the Madison Keith Psychological Suspense Novella series – murder, ghosts, and soul mates – FATAL CUT (#1), SHALLOW WATER (#2 Sept 2011).

One reader said this about her Suburban Noir fiction: “She makes the mundane menacing.”

Visit her online at CathrynGrant.com or email her at cathryn.m.grant[at]gmail.com

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of SHALLOW WATER by Cathryn Grant::



Today’s Kindle Daily Deal – Thursday, Nov. 17 – Two Great Reads for Women at Just 99 Cents Each! Save 89% on Karen Carbo’s The Gospel According to Coco Chanel, plus … Join Karen Foster and her BFFs on an unforgettable road trip through Europe after her husband leaves her because she’s “no fun” in Keeley Bates’ HOSTEL TAKEOVER (Today’s Sponsor)

But first, a word from today’s sponsor….

by Keeley Bates
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Karen Foster has lived a quiet suburban life until the day her husband leaves her because she’s “no fun.” On a whim, Karen and her two best friends, Mixie and Polly, decide to break out of their McMansion comfort zones and backpack their way through Europe like carefree college students. Mixie feels invisible to her workaholic husband and Polly feels unappreciated by her longstanding boyfriend, who refuses to consider marriage in the wake of a nasty divorce. After fifty years, Karen finally reveals herself, not just to her friends, but also to her long-suffering self. She slowly sheds her uptight demeanor and need for control and allows herself to live.

 

And now, for today only, the Kindle Daily Deal!


The Gospel According to Coco ChanelKindle Daily Deal: The Gospel According to Coco Chanel

Delving into the long, extraordinary life of renowned French fashion designer Coco Chanel, Karen Karbo has written a new kind of book, exploring Chanel’s philosophy on a range of universal themes–from style to passion, from money and success to femininity and living life on your own terms.

Yesterday’s Price: $8.63
Today’s Discount: $6.64
Kindle Daily Deal Price: $0.99 (89% off)

Kindle Nation Daily Digest – Brief Tips, Freebies and Bargain Updates – Nov. 16, 2011

Kindle Nation Daily Digest

November 16, 2011
Today’s Briefs:
Kindle Fire
  • Heads Up! 4 Days Left! You Have Until Sunday to Enter for Week #6 of Our Brand New KINDLE FIRE Giveaway Sweepstakes, Sponsored by Marie Astor, author of ON THE RIM OF LOVE http://bit.ly/sHysTz
  • Kailin Gow’s new 5-star release SHATTERED is our Kindle Nation eBook of the Day, and Here’s a Playlist and a Free Sample! http://bit.ly/tcm9lB   
  • Today’s Kindle Daily Deal – Wednesday, Nov. 16 – Save 68% on Laurie Faria Stolarz’ Deadly Little Secret, plus … 4.5 Stars and Now Just 99 Cents on Kindle: Kindle Nation Fave Mainak Dhar’s LINE OF CONTROL – A Thriller on the Coming War in Asia, with Bonus Content (Today’s Sponsor) http://bit.ly/uUuyfo
  • Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: “If you loved the idea of Dan Brown’s bestsellers, but weren’t so crazy about all the arty esoterica, Terrence O’Brien’s The Templar Concordat could hit your sweet spot.” – 11 out of 12 Rave Reviews, Just $2.99 on Kindle! http://bit.ly/vSgF2U     
  • Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: Gary Jonas’ 5-Star ONE-WAY TICKET TO MIDNIGHT is just 99 cents for a limited time on Kindle! http://bit.ly/sF7qIr
  • How to Put Kindle Nation Daily and Our Daily Free Book Alerts “Front and Center” on Your New Kindle Fire! http://bit.ly/rPUr8i
  • Our Thriller of the Week sponsor, Erik Hanberg, offers this generous free excerpt from his book, The Saints Go Dying: http://bit.ly/trK6Ca
  • Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: For Only 99 Cents You Get TWO Books, plus a Chance to Win a Brand New Kindle FIRE! http://bit.ly/v6bNPp     
  • Our Romance of the Week sponsor, Lacy Camey, shares this free excerpt from her novel, The Last Page: http://kindlenationdaily.com/2011/11/enjoy-this-free-excerpt-from-lacy-cameys-the-last-page-our-romance-of-the-week-sponsor/
  • Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: Have you ever wondered what “Castaway” would have been like if Tom Hanks’ Wilson had been a woman? 4.9 Stars on 23 Straight Rave Reviews for Tracey Garvis-Graves’ ON THE ISLAND – Just $2.99 on Kindle! http://bit.ly/toohtB   

 

Hope you’ve found at least one item of value here, and we’ll check in again tomorrow. Thanks, as always, for being part of Kindle Nation.
Sincerely,
Steve Windwalker

Heads Up! 4 Days Left! You Have Until Sunday to Enter for Week #6 of Our Brand New KINDLE FIRE Giveaway Sweepstakes, Sponsored by Marie Astor, author of ON THE RIM OF LOVE

We are well into week #6 of our wild and crazy plan to give away a brand new Kindle Fire every week through the rest of this year and well into
next, and we are already well over halfway toward surpassing last week’s record of 2,727 entries.

(Our WEEK #6 GRAND PRIZE winner, Amy Pippin Mire of Wolfforth, Texas, was randomly selected from all the entries to win a KINDLE FIRE tablet. We connected with Amy by email and telephone to confirm her identity and shipping address, her Fire was ordered Monday morning, and Amazon has confirmed for us that there will be a brand new Kindle Fire arriving at her office tomorrow, November 17.)

What about yours?

Maybe yours will be awarded in next Monday, but you know how this works, right? You can’t win it if you don’t enter.

After a couple of weeks of suspense sponsors, we have returned for the Week #6 Sweepstakes to the world of love and limmerance with a highly rated contemporary romance novel by popular novelist Marie Astor, ON THE RIM OF LOVE.

(And just in case you are wondering, Marie has already paid the full cost of that new Kindle Fire that could very well have your name on it. Every penny. What’s that? If you have a good understanding of how karma works in these matters and you want us to repeat that link so you can make sure you have downloaded a copy of ON THE RIM OF LOVE before the Week #6 drawing, thanks. But let’s be clear that while the cosmos works by its own rules, we of course have no way of knowing what you download from the Kindle Store.)

The Week #6 Sweepstakes runs until shortly after noon on Sunday November 20, and entry details can be found at the end of this post.

But first … a word from this week’s sponsor.

On the Rim of Love:

by Marie Astor
by Marie Astor
4.8 stars – 9 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Twenty-two-year-old Maggie Robin has been dating the irresistibly good-looking Jeffrey Preston for a year. But when Jeffrey proposes marriage to her a week after her college graduation, Maggie finds herself wondering if she wants to spend the rest of her life married to a workaholic TV show producer.

Her doubts culminate when during a ski trip to British Columbia she meets Taylor Denton, a handsome, free-spirited big mountain skier.

Maggie’s attraction to Taylor is undeniable, but she is engaged to marry Jeffrey. Will Maggie have the courage to follow her heart?

Also by Marie Astor:

About the author:

Marie Astor is a die-hard romantic who wholeheartedly believes in true love, which is why she writes in the contemporary romance genre. Marie is the author of contemporary romance novels, On the Rim of Love, Lucky Charm, and a short story collection, A Chance Encounter and Other Stories. In addition to being a writer, Marie is an avid hiker, an excellent swimmer, a good skier, and a capable badminton player. Currently, Marie is working on her next novel.

If you would like to learn more about Marie’s writing, please stop by her website: www.marieastor.com to sign up for book release updates and events or visit her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/marieastorwrites.

So … is that it?

Of course not!

Here are the details on the Kindle Nation Week #6 KINDLE FIRE Giveaway Sweepstakes:

There’s no purchase required, but we do need you to go to our Kindle Nation Facebook page and “Like” us. Give the page a few seconds to load, because for some
reason it takes a little longer. 

Then just scroll down and follow the prompts to enter the sweepstakes, and you’re done! (Of course, if you want to really improve your chances of winning by multiplying your good fortune by your good karma, we hope you’ll take a page from recent grand prize winner Steve Wisener’s book and pick up each of our sponsors’ titles. But like we say, there’s no purchase necessary.)

It’s that simple.

Good luck. And happy reading!

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert: For Only 99 Cents You Get TWO Books, plus a Chance to Win a Brand New Kindle Fire

(Ed. Note: It’s been a while since we checked in with thriller novelist extraordinaire Richard Bard, and it’s great to see that things are still looking very, very good. The citizens of Kindle Nation have played a major role in helping vault Richard’s novel BRAINRUSH into certifiable Top 40 status in the Kindle Store … along with the fact that Brainrush is a flat out terrific read, as witnesses by its 4.8-star rating based on 162 out of 171 rave reviews. We know that Richard is putting the finishing touches on the Brainrush sequel which is due out in December, and otherwise he hasn’t looked back … except to give back, in the form of the very generous offer currently on his website, which we’ll let him describe below. -S.W.)

 

(PS: I’m not usually a big fan of book trailers, but I promise you, this is the best booktrailer of the year. Please tap this link to watch it. –S.W.)

  

Richard Bard's AWESOME Book Trailer

 

Now, here’s Richard–

 

 

 

Thanks for participating in the “Feel the Rush” promotion. It’s designed to be a win-win for both of us—for only 99 cents you get TWO books plus a chance to win a brand new Kindle Fire, and I get an opportunity to find another fan for BRAINRUSH (the #1 Top-Rated Mystery & Thriller and the #1 Bestselling Action/Adventure on Amazon as of November 1st!)

It’s as simple as 1—2—3

1. Buy BRAINRUSH—BOOK ONE  for the temporarily-reduced price of 99 cents.

       CLICK TO BUY:      KINDLE      NOOK      OTHER FORMATS

 2. Within 48-hours of your transaction, email a proof-of-purchase in the form of a screen-shot of your order confirmation (or simply forward the order-confirmation email you receive) to: Promo@RichardBard.com

3. Receive an email certificate good for a free copy of BRAINRUSH—BOOK TWO (coming in December), plus confirmation of your entry into a drawing for a free Kindle Fire.  (No purchase necessary to enter the drawing.  See details below.)

WAIT, is that right? You only pay 99 cents and you get the Amazon #1 Top-Rated Mystery & Thriller and the #1  Bestselling Action/Adventure, plus the highly-anticipated sequel this December, PLUS a chance to win the amazing new Kindle Fire???

Yes! That’s it! No tricks… No gimmicks… No obligation. Do I hope that you’ll become a BRAINRUSH fan? Sure! Am I keeping my fingers crossed that you’ll let me know how you feel about it by leaving a review on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or your favorite site? Of course! But that’s entirely up to you. (By the way, this promotion won’t last forever, so if you’d like to tell a friend about it, click the “Share” link at the bottom of this page.)

Here are the details:

1. Amazon Kindle users: BOOK TWO will be gifted to you directly through Amazon within four weeks of the release date.

2. Nook and other eReaders: BOOK TWO will be gifted through Smashwords.com in the format of your choice within four weeks of the release date.

3. The winner of the Kindle Fire will be announced on the release date for BOOK TWO, but not later than December 18th, just in time for the holidays. ;-)

4. No purchase necessary for the drawing. If you’d like to enter the drawing for the Kindle Fire, simply “Like” the BRAINRUSH Facebook page (Click HERE), then send an email with the words “I Feel the Rush” in the subject line to: Promo@RichardBard.com.  Be sure to include your full name in the email.  Your address is not required. We will then add you to our private mailing list (which will never be given to anyone!) so we can let you know about future books and promotions.  You can opt out an any time after the Kindle Fire winner is announced.

Happy reading!,

Richard Bard

 

For upcoming offers and information, please “Like” the BRAINRUSH Facebook page here: BRAINRUSH on Facebook

Note:  To qualify for this promotion you must send in your proof-of-purchase within 2 days of your purchase of BRAINRUSH.  When you send it in, please allow up to 48 hours for processing of your certificate. This promotion is subject to change without notice. But don’t worry—if you submit your proof of purchase or entry while this page is still ‘live’ on the richardbard.com website, you will definitely receive your free gift certificate and/or prize entry notification!

(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy This Free Excerpt From Lacy Camey’s The Last Page, Our Romance of the Week Sponsor!

Lacy Camey’s The Last Page:

Here’s the set-up:

Norah Johnson is at a crossroads and is in desperate need to heal after a highly publicized breakup from her major league baseball player boyfriend. To escape, she moves to her summer home at the beach with her sister and best friend where she journals, attends therapy and works on her pending clothing line. When a gorgeous stranger finds her lost journal, he seeks to find the author and make her fall in love with him. But is Norah ready to love again? Book 1 in the romantic comedy trilogy of living, loving, and laughing again; a Norah Johnson story.

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:


PROLOGUE
My hands shook as I took a deep breath and exhaled. I studied myself in the elaborate, gold mirror hanging on the ivory Mediterranean stone. On any other night, I would have contemplated the stone, estimated the amount of square feet, and judged how nice it might look in the boutique that I was eagerly waiting to open. Or, how amazing the mirror, perhaps full-length, would look in the beautiful, totally chic dressing rooms I envisioned for my future customers.

 

But my mind was preoccupied.

 

I looked hot. My brown, silky hair hung in nice, loose waves past my shoulders. My jaw-dropping, black strapless dress-my design-with ruffled detailing at the chest and gathered seams over my tanned skin, and Christian Louboutin heels-I’ll own up to it-made me look like a ten. I’m not a conceited person; I’m just letting you know, I put every effort into ensuring that I looked my absolute best, like any woman would out there trying to win Miss U.S.A. or The Bachelor.

 

This was a life-changing, pivotal moment. Since I was dealing with a man, the man I loved, the man I wanted to win back, I had to lay all my cards on the table, and I had a royal flush!

 

Did I mention the dress was formfitting? More like the painted-on kind, yet it was chiffon. No one had a dress like mine. I could hear Jennifer Aniston calling me in the future, wanting the dress for her next movie premiere.

 

But this time, no matter how good I managed to look even in my own prize-winning design that had landed my current career lead, the biggest lead of my life, I couldn’t calm my nerves even by reminding myself of this amazing accomplishment, one that I definitely did not take lightly.

 

My nausea made me feel like I was about to perform or give a speech in front of the whole world. I felt like I would vomit any minute! Gross, but that’s my nerves for you. On cue, my mouth started watering, and I knew what that meant-the inevitable would soon follow.

 

But I couldn’t throw up! Not here. Not now. I took a deep breath and blew out. Closing my eyes, trying to pull it together, I imagined standing on the beaches of… somewhere, Tahiti maybe, although I’d never been there.

 

I needed to be confident. I am confident.

 

I needed to pull it together. I can pull it together.

 

“Pull it together, Norah. Pull it together,” I told myself. Thank goodness, no one else was in the ladies’ room to witness that.

 

Even with all the energy I could muster, and despite my self-affirming pep talk, I still felt wobbly. I leaned forward against the cold granite. It felt warm against my cool, sweaty palms.

 

I could do this. I had to do this.

 

As if a bell from Pavlov’s experiment had rung, I snapped back to reality and looked down into my black Prada clutch in search of my lipstick.

 

Shimmery? Or sultry red? If I wore shimmery, I’d look relaxed, tanned, and glamorous. If I wore sultry, I’d…

 

With the thought of sultry, my soul filled with indignant anger at the thought of his sultry seducer, and the fact that she was in the other room. It was all her fault. She was the reason it had ended, the reason I was here in the bathroom in freezing February.

 

Shimmery.

 

I’ll wear shimmery, I decided.

 

If this were a movie, you would hear the Ting Ting’s playing, Shut Up and Let Me Go, as I exited, confident, with the footsteps of a determined lioness on a mission. Except, I was thinking, ‘Please don’t let me go. Just shut up and listen and let her go.’

 

I rehearsed my lines.

 

“Truett, it’s me. Hi… I know.”

 

Lame. Of course, it would be me.

 

“Truett, don’t ask me why I’m here. I forgive you. We can be together.”

 

No…

 

I needed to hurry because, standing ten feet in front of me, was… him.

 

His tall, muscular build fit nicely in an Armani suit. I saw the back of his tanned neck. I felt like I might faint.

 

Yes, I saw friends trying to warn him of my approach.

 

Yes, I heard the few rehearsal dinner guests seated at their lavish tables whispering as they took notice of my appearance, along with a few clanks of forks against china plates. The bride, Alicia, was greeting an elderly couple, and luckily God answered my prayers; she didn’t see me. She was as fake as ever. Couldn’t anyone else see through her façade? The fact that she was clearly using Truett’s fame for her instant acting career stardom?

 

But I knew everyone would soon find out. After, of course, she delivered their baby and joined Tracy Anderson Method workouts.

 

I saw Truett’s parents and made eye contact with his father; he looked white as a ghost and dropped his wine glass. The swing band and commotion of the excited guests were graciously loud enough, however; no one heard or thought twice about the breaking of the crystal.

 

Kind of like the way Truett couldn’t care less about the breaking of my heart.

 

But alas, there he was. There was my goal, the back of a man in a black suit. My bullseye.

 

One of his genius friends coughed under his breath, “Johnson at six o’clock.”

 

Another stretched, as he pointed and whispered, “Dude, you won’t believe who’s behind you.”

 

Then, as if in slow motion, he turned around. I had dreamt of this moment, of him seeing me, saying how fabulous I looked, of me sweeping him off his feet. But that wasn’t the reaction I received.

 

He cursed. And cursed loudly.

 

“What are you doing here, Norah?” Before a giant scene could be made, he grabbed me by the arm. Of course, not in a gentlemanly gesture, but more like a reproach of a mother grabbing her seven-year-old by the ear for back talking-and led me to the side of the white tent. Away from the heaters. Away from the few guests who had begun to take notice of Truett’s sudden change in demeanor.

 

His groomsmen, thank God, had some common sense and tried to block us from the nosy audience. But honestly, I really didn’t care who else saw me there. They all knew the story. If they’d experienced what I had, they would be there, too. Maybe.

 

“Are you trying to sabotage my rehearsal dinner? I’m getting married tomorrow.” He crossed his arms and let out an irritable, “Geez, you have some nerve.”

 

Then he began to pace, unable to stand still. He always did that when he didn’t want to think about the problem at hand.

 

I reached out to stop him and, as my hand touched his arm, he flinched. He closed his eyes and sighed annoyingly. “Well, what do you want, Norah?”

 

What do I want? I want you! I want us together again.

 

But standing there, staring into his cold, hardened eyes, I felt like an alien had abducted the man who used to love me, an alien from the used-to-be planet of Pluto, because it was the coldest one. His heart was clearly frozen, iced over. Feeling nothing. Looking at me as if I were the antichrist or something.

 

He was so different from the Truett I knew. He loved me. He was enamored with me. In the four years we dated, he never acted as if I annoyed him. He was clearly under a witch’s spell.

 

Everything in me wanted to rip him to shreds and claw his eyes out. The fire in my chest felt like heartburn, as if I was about to have an anxiety attack. But practice and rehearsing paid off. So my rehearsed speech, which my best friend in the world, Chloe, who was waiting in the car for me had heard me say over and over, went to good use.

Be calm, collected, my subconscious reminded me.

 

I will appear calm and collected. He will remember what he loved about me, that I had class, and I was always collected. I would appear as if nothing fazed me. It was me, not her, who would be the perfect, overly-exposed wife of a mega-athlete superstar.

 

And on that note, I was ready to say it. I lifted my chin with perfection.

“Truett, I forgive you,” I said ever so tenderly, yet matter-of-factly.

“What?” he asked, irritated. “You forgive me?” He laughed an utterly horrific, patronizing laugh. As I stood there, my insides screamed for me to stay composed.

I felt as if I was in a presidential debate and the ugliest jab had been thrown, yet I remained unfazed. So I continued with my mission.

 

“Look, please don’t marry her. You’ll make the biggest mistake of your life.”

 

He put up his hands in protest. I could tell I was running out of time, so I quickly got to the most important part.

 

“I forgive you. We can work on us. We can make us work. You don’t have to marry her just because she’s pregnant.”

 

Now this was the part where the beautiful music was supposed to start playing, like in the movies. Perhaps Coldplay’s Fix You, where his eyes were supposed to fill with tears, and he would open his arms and embrace and kiss me, telling me I was right. That he was glad I came. That he had been praying to God all day for a sign because of his own apprehensions, showing he was supposed to be with me.

 

Then we would leave together as the entire wedding party and guests watched in aghast bewilderment.

 

If only life were like the movies. Let me be the screenwriter.

 

Before I could even get to the good part and tell him, “Listen, she’s using you. Don’t you know anything about her? Don’t you know this, don’t you know that?”

 

He bluntly said, “No, Norah.” He said it sharply like someone would say if they were a prime candidate for anger management counseling. “You made the mistake by walking out on me when I needed you most to go to Milan.”

 

“But I didn’t walk-”

 

He didn’t want to hear it. It was too late.

 

“Get her out of here,” he said to Lewis, the Yankee’s second basemen. He turned back to me. “Get out of here, because if you don’t leave-”

 

Suddenly, that little piece of me that lurked deep inside in that little corner crevice of my heart, that piece that so wanted to give him a piece of my mind, suddenly came unfolded.

 

“If I don’t leave, then what?” Okay, my plan of remaining calm and cool went out the window. Suddenly, everyone in the room, as if they were all a part of a rehearsed, synchronized swimming team, placed their forks and drinks down and looked my way. I felt as if I were in the Twilight Zone. And for crying out loud, the band even stopped playing!

 

You could have heard a cricket.

 

My question sat in the thick, quiet air waiting to be answered. Angrily, he turned and walked away. He snapped his fingers, and the band began to play again. People whispered. Picture phones snapped. Paparazzi hiding in the bushes flashed their hot bulbs at me.

 

And with that, I was escorted from the premises. As I walked away, my heart pounded with adrenaline. The man I loved with my whole heart, the man I was supposed to marry, the man I was supposed to build a fairy-tale life with-we were supposed to be the next Posh and David Beckham!-had left me for another woman, a pregnant woman.

 

I was left to pick up the broken pieces of my seemingly never-ending broken heart, as the rest of the country had the lovely privilege of reliving my awful breakdown on TMZ, E!, US Weekly, and every other media outlet. And I felt like I had nowhere to hide.
Chapter One
Then, I woke up.

 

But it wasn’t all a dream. I awakened with my head pounding and spinning. Where was I? It all felt blurred. As I continued to lie there in the comfort of my Tempur-Pedic cloud, I knew I was either in Dubai again, or in my bedroom. My familiar alarm clock, which read 9:30 a.m. in red letters, reminded me I was home.

 

I was home.

 

I sat up slowly. I could smell the sizzling bacon I guessed my mother was making. Suddenly, I didn’t feel very well. I quickly ran to my bathroom and threw up. I wallowed my way to the sink and, as I splashed my face with cool water, Chloe entered and sat down on the toilet. Good thing she didn’t know I had just thrown up.

 

In her perfectly trained nurse-like way, she asked, “Are you okay? You don’t look so good. Pepto? Sprite helps. So does ginger beer. Pregnant women drink that a lot. Of course, the non-alcoholic kind. But it’s not like that matters or anything, because you’re not pregnant. So…” I watched her come to the sudden realization of saying the extremely sensitive word, pregnant. As in, Truett was marrying a pregnant woman!

 

“Oh, sorry. Oops.” She bit her nails, obviously wishing she could retract her words.

For a second, I felt like saying something in regards to the pregnant women drinking beer, but I just didn’t have the energy. Not only did I feel like I had been hit by a train, with my entire body aching, I felt like one must feel after competing in a triathlon-unable to move.

 

My mouth was parched. I opened my mouth to speak the first words of the morning, but she beat me to it.

 

“Your mom is bringing you a tray. We heard you get up.”

 

I slowly turned, leaning against the counter. Am I really awake? Did this really happen?

 

“It was like an elephant was stomping across the room.” As soon as she said the words, like a woman in a crazed daze, I walked back to my bed and fell facedown on the bed like a ton of bricks, sinking into the duvet.

 

Then, I spoke my first words of the day, or rather, screamed them in pure agony.

 

“He’s getting married today!” My muffled, scratchy, desperate declaration was the most pitiful thing imaginable. And then my elephant tears poured.

 

“Aw, Nor, I’m so sorry.” She came over and sat down to pat my back. Just then, my mom and dad walked in with a tray holding breakfast, coffee, and orange juice.

 

The embarrassment! Forget the day when your training bra was found, or your first box of tampons. I was crying like a second grader with a tantrum, and I was a grown woman. I did not feel like being on display!

 

My mom sat opposite me and ran her fingers through my hair as I continued sob. Dad set the tray on my nightstand and cleared his throat nervously. He didn’t do well with tears and hated to see any of his girls cry. He muttered under his breath about what a jerk that Truett Mason is.

 

“He is a jerk,” I muttered, as I rolled over and sat up. “He’s a jerk!”

 

“Yes,” Mom agreed. “He’s a horrible person, Norah. But we love you very much, and that man doesn’t deserve your beautiful heart.”

 

I looked around at the pitiful scene, Mom on one side, bestie on the other, Dad in the doorway, and for the first time, I noticed what I was wearing and how I looked-tank top and undies. Oh, no. I jumped out of bed and grabbed the robe draped over the chair next to my bed.

 

“We just wish you would have told us you were going, honey,” Mom said, unfazed by my lack of clothes.

 

I tied my robe and sat in the chair. Too dazed to even form a thought, I laid my head back and closed my eyes.

 

The next few months looked like this:

 

Wake up at, well, one or two.

 

Shuffle in my slippers to the coffee pot and grab a pop tart if my stomach could handle it. If not, I simply ate toast and drank Sprite. I was a ball of nerves.

 

Shuffle my way to couch. Cry. Moan. Watch TV.

 

Mom or Dad, or my sister Maycee try and make conversation with me. Say something about how pretty the day is, and maybe we should go out. Or how fabulous this new shampoo is, and maybe I should give it a try. Yeah, not washing your hair for seven days straight might attract some of those comments.

 

All the while, I looked like Adam Sandler in the movie, Click. I was there, but not really there. But, instead of time flying by in an instant, like it did for Adam, time dragged for me.

 

Chloe had to fly back home, naturally. My ten pieces for my line were due in eight more weeks, and I had nothing to show for it. I was beginning to see the need for great robes, however.

 

Then, my parents stepped in.

 

It all happened like this.

 

I was perfectly miserably-happy watching a Basketball Wives rerun. I think I had seen that particular episode um, maybe three times, after, of course, seeing every episode, every season, as well as every other reality show available on Bravo. As I lay there curled up in my fleece blanket, Dad took a seat in the chair next the couch.

 

“Sweetie, it’s time for a change.”

 

Like a sad dog who never got to go on walks anymore, I glanced his way, again with the Click daze. “Sweetie pie, starting next week, you’re starting therapy.”

 

“Therapy?” I gawked at him.

 

“Yes, I’m tired of seeing my bright, aspiring fashion designer so defeated. We Johnsons don’t let life get us down. Why, when I was in my fourth year residency program competing for that one spot with Dr. Chinagens, I-”

 

I blocked out everything he was saying and averted my eyes to the women lunching and drinking Champagne after a day’s worth of shopping. That was supposed to be my life. And I was supposed to be in the new reality show, Baseball Wives. No, that wasn’t technically a show yet, but I just knew it was the next sport franchise reality show. It had to be! At least, before Hockey Wives, or Soccer Wives. Baseball had to be next. And I was supposed to be the fabulous one with the design line, and chic boutique and…

 

“And that’s why Maycee had the great idea of you two living in the summer home together because, not only is it near Dr. Hood, but…” and his voice became softer and softer in my brain. I was getting good at shutting out the world. But there was only one thing I couldn’t shut out-how I felt.

 

Oh, wow. The women lunching were getting into a fight, and one was pouring an ice bucket over the other woman’s head. I wished I could pour an ice bucket over that scum-sucking, bottom-feeding, tramp of a woman, Alicia.

#
One week later.

 

“Why are you here, Norah? Tell me about yourself,” were his first words to me.

 

There I was. Vulnerable. A mess. Broken!

 

“Tell you why I’m here?…” I said slowly.

 

Let’s see…where do I even begin? Great question. Yes, I knew that was the standard question a therapist asked a new client. Before I could even answer, my memory reverted to that chilly February evening. I closed my eyes and swallowed. Even though it had been three months ago, I felt like it had just happened last night.

 

“Have you ever woken up and found it was all a dream?”

 

He nodded slowly. Yet, in that nod, I just knew he was analyzing everything.

 

“I just woke up from my worst nightmare, except it wasn’t really a dream. And I feel like I’ll never wake up again, per se.”

 

He nodded again, with great understanding.

 

I looked into his warm eyes. He made me feel okay. I could tell him, and he could help me. I desperately needed help. I just wanted it to all go away.

 

“I was on the verge of getting engaged to…”

 

Deep breath.

 

“You’ve heard of him. Truett Mason. Pitcher for the-”

 

“New York Yankees,” he finished.

 

“Yeah.” I exhaled slowly.

 

“Sorry.” He cleared his throat and repositioned himself in his big leather chair. “Kind of a big fan here. Go ahead.”

 

Ugh! Was there anyone in the entire world who was not enamored with the illustrious Yankees or, furthermore, their star pitcher? Didn’t anyone know about his former girlfriend who practically held his entire world together for him? I knew I could keep going with my rabbit trail thoughts, so I stopped and focused.

 

“Listen, I’m serious. I just want to be able to trust you not to go to the media. To not-”

 

“Norah. Patient-doctor agreement. There is no fear of that. You can trust me.” He smiled. “Or you can sue me and make lots of money.” He leaned forward and folded his hands.

 

Not funny. I didn’t know what to say.

 

“Kidding.”

 

Right.

 

“I just…” I took another deep breath. “Want to be me again. I’ve experienced recently, let’s see… betrayal, cheating, pain, sadness, disconnect, loneliness, disappointment, not being myself, feeling stuck in a rut.” I said all of this in one giant breath, as fast as Speedy Gonzales. “Really, I’m a normal, happy, successful woman.” I smiled my charming, plastered smile.

 

Again, that nod. What was it with therapists and nods? I hated silence so I continued, “I’ve been to Milan for an extensive, elite, completely exclusive fashion internship. I’m about to launch my own line because of that internship, well, after I show my financial backer the remaining ten pieces, which are not created as of now, and here I am facing this…” I searched for words to explain it.

 

“Massive roadblock.” I just want my broken heart to heal! I screamed inside. Just fix me already!

 

Gosh! This was going to be hard to explain! “I wish there was a cord you could plug into my mind and preview it all like a sitcom off of iTunes, and call it a comedy, preferably. I’m at the point where I’m ready for some comedic relief. And then be able to say, ‘And that’s why I’m here!'” I laughed nervously. Is this guy going to talk? Give me advice?

 

But, maybe on another planet where species are more advanced, he would have just read my mind, understood everything, and had the perfect solution for me, and so that therapy would be a one-time visit.

 

“Here’s what you do. Here’s how you can be yourself again. Here’s how to push the delete button from your mind and erase your awful memories.”

But who was I kidding? It’s planet Earth. We’re human. It’s 2011. Time to face reality…

 

And then, finally he spoke.

 

“You know, it’s okay. Just keep talking. You don’t have to tell me everything at once,” he explained.

 

For the next two hours, I tried my absolute best to relay to him everything. Afterward, he gave me gentle instructions to journal every day, take walks, and relax.

I replied, “But I can’t relax, I have this line I’m supposed to produce. My entire career hangs on it.”

 

“I understand,” he said kindly.

 

Uh, he understands what a line involves? Designing, creating, sewing, cutting, stitching, working. Functioning!

 

“The important thing is for you to take the pressure off. From what it sounds like to me, you’ve worked hard all four years in college, worked even harder in this internship, and endured a life-changing crisis. Your heart is broken; now you need to heal. Part of healing is simply resting. Think of this as healing after an open-heart surgery. What does one do? One doesn’t overly exert themselves. So my order for you for the next couple of weeks is journal, walk, relax, do something new, watch your favorite movies, and just relax.”

 

Um, one also doesn’t deserve this awful pain.

 

Just relax? Does he know my personality? Does he know about my career?

As if he could read my thoughts, he added, “Often, our best ideas come to us out of a rested soul.”

 

A rested soul. Not heart, but soul. So I was supposed to heal my heart and let my soul rest? Isn’t my heart my soul? I furrowed my brows in confusion. I’m not a dense person, but couldn’t one just heal without getting all philosophical and multi-dimensional?

 

“We are beings composed of mind, body, and spirit. Each component works in unison to create optimum harmony in one’s health. We need balance in all three,” he continued, as the perfect therapist would say. I wondered how many times he had told his patients that. Considering his gray hair, his robust belly, his classic sweaters, and the pictures of children and what seemed to be grandchildren on his shelves, I guessed he had said it thousands of times.

 

“Yeah, about that. Is there like some sort of special happy pill I can take?” I smiled with all the charm I could muster.

 

He laughed genuinely, then swiveled around in his chair and pointed to the vast collection of diplomas and awards hanging on his wall. “As you can see, I’m a psychologist, not a psychiatrist. Besides that, I tend to lean on more of the holistic side of healing and treatments.”

 

He turned back around. “Trust me. You’re in good hands. You’re in a good place. You being here. You being at the summer home with your sister. You have great support. You’re going to do just fine. More than fine. You’ll see.”

Chapter Two
I had been living in the summer home for two weeks, and it wasn’t too bad. It was actually a progression, as I went from the sliding around in my slippers to flopping around in Tory Burch flip-flops.

 

I had my thrice-weekly sessions with Doctor Hood, and was reminded again to journal constantly and to take walks. But still, no matter how beautiful it looked outside, I found myself feeling lackadaisical about walking and exercising as Dr. Hood had suggested. I just felt like doing nothing, extremely not like me!

 

In college, I had been extremely athletic and always on the go. Of course, I had been extremely a lot of things pre-heart wound, pre-open heart surgery.

 

And I was reminded again to try something new, which was something I hadn’t done yet, but was planning on doing. And lastly, I was told to, oh, to love myself.

 

To love myself.

 

“Of course, I love myself,” I told Doctor Hood in one of my sessions when he had asked if I loved myself. But as I said those words, I knew I was struggling with the thought, “Why did the man I loved, my soul mate, cheat on me with such a skank?” Yes, I guess such thoughts can wreak a little havoc on one’s self esteem, more than one realizes. Yes, I guess Dr. Hood had his PhD for a reason. He could psychoanalyze, but not give me medicine. Oh, well. I did love myself, but I could love myself a lot more, considering the circumstances.

 

Anyway, I had to journal. And journaling, really journaling, required being alone with my thoughts.

 

The last thing I needed was to be alone. Yet I had to be alone to write and “think about my feelings.” Now, this absolutely did not make sense to me. Why think about feelings more than I already had to feel them? But, I desperately wanted to heal and move on, so I was doing everything Dr. Hood had told me to do. Maycee and I had already watched like fifteen movies. I was actually getting my color back from laying out in the sun. But there was an aching feeling in the pit of my stomach about the last pieces of my fashion line that were due in seven short weeks. Our giant sitting room, surrounded on three sides with floor-to-ceiling glass, had been hijacked by every fashion magazine imaginable, as well as my sketches, fabric pieces, the sewing machine, my empty coffee mugs-that is, the coffee mugs Maycee overlooked when she tried to clean. She was such a neat freak, and it drove her crazy that the room was so messy. But she never said anything to me. She already felt too sorry for me-a card I might use a few more times with her.

 

The only problem with such a messy room was trying to keep it off limits to the adorable puppy my insightful parents, who seemed to be always ten steps ahead, had bought for me in an effort to raise my spirits. Did I mention the puppy was a little high-maintenance? Yeah, just a tad. She was beautiful, though, a Teacup Pomeranian, who chewed everything. All of my heels were on lockdown. I put up a giant makeshift safety gate to keep Coco out of the most important room in the house, my creating room. That was after she almost destroyed a dress I was working on. But, the little tear she chewed in it actually worked out for the better, giving the dress a more eclectic character. I decided maybe she liked fashion. So, I spent an entire day-yes, instead of journaling, or walking, or working on my creation, or trying something new-sewing her the most perfect little doggie outfit. No one would look as fabulous as Coco. She wore doggie couture. I guess you could say that was something new. Doggie Couture. Maybe that counts.

 

After I made her first outfit, I decided to make a few more, as well as a luxury dog bed, one covered in silk. It was just so much fun. It was effortless. The hours flew by as I listened to music, harmonizing with the hum of my sewing machine. I had an energy to create, but to create for my dog, not my nine remaining pieces.

 

That wasn’t like me. I normally had things done ahead of time, way ahead of time. I had practically half a year to prepare my line, ever since I had come home from Milan. But considering the circumstances, I was slightly sidetracked. I had a plan, though. I would create two fabulous pieces each week for five weeks, then have the remaining week to modify.

 

It would all work out.

 

Since Maycee was off for the summer from teaching, her days were pretty methodical. Get up, breakfast, lay out in the sun, read, come in, eat, go out and tan, read, run, write on her iPad, check on me, eat, then we would watch a movie while I interjected with sobs, comments about the jerk in the movie, or the horrible cheater. Then I would rant about how all women should just join a union or something against cheaters. I was seriously super close to calling Elin Woods or starting a YouTube Channel-Women Unite against Male Athlete Cheaters. All the while, my wonderful sister never told me to stop feeling or stop saying anything. She would just smile and pat my feet, as we kept watching whatever it was we were watching.

 

Yes, I know. I had a great support system. I was truly thankful.

 

Sister, cute dog, summer home… oh, and my parents came by a few times a week with tons of food, still concerned about the weight I had lost when I literally couldn’t stomach anything besides toast, saltine crackers, and Sprite. But, hey! I was gaining it back.

 

Things got a lot better one morning.

 

There I was, up early, trying to journal since I had kept putting it off with puppy duty, sewing, sketching, and watching movies. It was the day before my next session with Doctor Hood, and I had nothing written in my journal to show him. I was tempted to Google “journal entries to show therapist” because I didn’t want to feel. Finally, I decided to get down to business and write. Live with Regis and Kelly was on the TV, with Nick Lachey as the guest host, since Regis was on vacation. Kelly was asking her energetic questions, the ever-so-perfectly-enunciated-word-questions, like, “So-is-this-your-first-marathon?”

 

“Yeah,” he replied. “It served as great inspiration for my latest album. I-”

 

I need inspiration for my line! I whined inside. My anxiety grew, and I started sketching a dress in my journal.

 

Maycee walked in and poured a bowl of cereal.

 

“Oh, he’s so hot!” she observed, as she leaned against the counter.

 

“Yeah, I miss Jessica and Nick!” I said sadly, as I worked on the sketch of a strapless dress.

 

“Yeah, but I love her with Eric Johnson. He seems like he’s always protecting her in the pictures, and they just seem like more of a match. They seem like companions. Maybe soul mates!” Maycee shrugged and dropped her spoon in her bowl. The clank was loud.

 

“You know, that’s exactly what I need!” Her face was bright, excited.

 

“You need an Eric Johnson?”

 

“No silly. Norah, that’s it. We’re running a marathon. You see-”

 

Uh, oh. I knew what this meant.

 

“No, no, no,” I replied, in uneasy protest that escalated to a stammering absolute,

 

“No! I’m supposed to walk, not run! Dr. Hood said-”

 

“Exactly! Aren’t you ready to take long strides and heal? Running will speed up the process!”

 

Huh?

 

I shook my head. Was she trying to use psychology on me? Because it was working. I was actually considering it.

 

“I’ve got to get my books out to my agent this summer. Running will shake up my brain! I haven’t done something like this in years, not since I went hiking in Costa Rica in college.” Her eyes went to the ceiling. “I miss adventure,” she said, like an old person missing the good old days. With finality, she added, “Let’s do it. You’re doing it.”

I don’t have a choice, I realized. When my sister said I was doing something, it always meant I was going to do it.

 

It was a trend set early in my life. I was four. She was seven. She wanted to play dress up, be in a play, do this, do that; I was always drawn in. I didn’t mind it. I actually liked her initiative. Life with my sister was like an adventure. That was why she was so proud of me when I went to Milan on my internship, because it was such an adventure.

 

I remember sharing my excitement with her when I found out I got in, a spot among the chosen twelve from thousands of other applicants across the world.

 

“Oh. My. Gosh. I’m so inspired to write a novel about this. I’m so coming for research,” she had said. New adventures always inspired her. That was one reason why I thought her being there for the summer with me was almost as beneficial for her as it was for me. She hadn’t pushed out a book in three years. She was a New York Times best-selling author. I knew deep down that what kept her mentally and creatively blocked was that blood-sucking boyfriend of hers, Josh. No, he wasn’t a vampire. He couldn’t hold a candle to Edward Cullen, but he did have the pale part down and could seriously benefit from a nice spray tan. He also wore the solemn, blank stare all the time. I guessed that was compliments of a doctor’s residency program, our father’s residency program. I always speculated that there was something fishy with that, like maybe he was using my sister, but I could never tell her that.

 

“Yes,” She interrupted my train of thought.

 

Oh, she agrees? He is a blood-sucking vampire? He is just using you for his residency spot with dad?

 

“Yes, we’re running. I’m looking it up right now!” She left to get her iPad. Her voice echoed down the hall. As I watched her leave, her blond ponytail bounced back and forth. I admired her silk pajama shorts with fuchsia flowers and realized three things: I love silk; my sister is perfect. Like she needs to run. And three, I seriously hoped it would rain so there would be no running!

 

Or would that last part even alter the plans? My sister would probably want to run in the rain. Even more adventure.

 

Just then, our doorbell rang, and I sighed. Saved by the bell.

 

“Are you expecting anyone?” I yelled, as I stomped to the door. “It better not be another shamefully awful reporter!” I had had quite a few paparazzi try and follow me, but Dad had given them a piece of his mind that they would never forget, a.k.a. including the threat of not only a restraining order, but of “his people” who “knew people” who “knew people” from Jersey who would pay them a nice visit. That got them pretty quiet, fast. After that, I finally felt free from the press. No more paparazzi.

 

But, no. It was not a feared reporter. When I opened the door, there stood Chloe, the best girl in the entire world, besides my sister, of course.

 

Chloe and I were like Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen. We were totally twins in our sorority house at UT Austin. We were the best of friends. No, we didn’t look like twins but I swear, we knew each other’s thoughts.

 

She was dressed in yellow rain boots, cut-off denim shorts, a plaid shirt rolled up over her arms and belly, showcasing her perfectly tanned skin. Her auburn hair with its perfectly placed highlights tumbled down her shoulders.

 

I squealed with delight. “Chloe!” I hugged her. “You’re here! What the heck? And you’re in rain boots! Look at this outfit.” I laughed.

 

“Listen, it seriously is raining a few miles out. Heading this way, it looks like. And I was cold. And well, it’s summer, and I know it’s East Coast here, but hey, a girl just has to wear shorts when she’s worked so hard on this tan and these legs!”

 

“Oh, thank God,” I muttered.

 

“What?”

 

“You said rain is heading this way. Thank God! Maycee wants me to train for a marathon with her. Come in, silly!” I motioned for her to come in.

 

She walked through the marble entryway and checked herself out in the antique mirror that covered an entire wall. “I just love antique, floor-to-ceiling mirrors.” She adjusted her flannel shirt. “Oh, marathon, huh? Guess that means I’ll be training, too,” she said in little girl fearful apprehension as she followed me to the kitchen. “Would you look at this place? Look at the view.”

 

Windows from floor to ceiling in the kitchen, living room, and sitting area were framed with cedar wooden beams, giving the home a French country vibe. The summer home really was a sight to new guests and even old guests, like me. I loved it and appreciated the view daily.

 

“Very inspirational here. I can see why you and Maycee just love being here.”

 

I led her to the kitchen bar, and she sat down and placed her bag next to her.

 

Coco ran in with the excitement of a new guest.

 

“Look how cute this little pup is!” She bent down to pick her up as Coco profusely licked her face. “And look at her precious collar! In calligraphy! And her adorable outfit! You have such style, Norah. Did you make this?”

 

“Of course.” I smiled proudly.

 

She touched the fabric, admiring the feel. “Is this satin?”

 

“Yep.” Her expression said it all. “I know, a bit overboard, but I wanted her to enjoy the soft feel. She’s my baby, after all. Girl, when I have a real child, you know she’s going to be dressed like a princess! Coco is the closest thing I have right now.”

 

“Wow. Well, this is impressive! Coco’s wearing Coco couture,” she said in a baby voice, and kissed Coco on the head. Coco wagged her tail harder.

 

“Thanks.” I smiled like a proud mother. Coco Couture. I liked it. I really felt maternal toward the little puppy, as if my life had suddenly taken on new meaning. I hadn’t taken care of an animal in years, but my heart would instantly warm just at the look of her. She needed me, depended on me, and I was determined to take the best of care of her. She was going to be the best-dressed dog in the world with my fashion designs. Funny, how when you started taking care of something, it did something inside of you.

 


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This book will make you laugh out loud, cry and even, at one stage, be left feeling a little shocked and if I'm honest the ending is incredible on so many different levels and literally made my jaw drop...
A Great Place for a Seizure
by Terry Tracy
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Here's the set-up:
Mischa Dunn's family flees Chile in the wake of the 1973 coup d'etatthat installs a military dictatorship. She settles comfortably in hernewly adopted country, the United States, until one day, an unexplainedseizure in a library signals the beginning of her life with epilepsy. With an engaging balance of humor, insight, and sensitivity Mischa draws the reader into a vivid tale that travels across three continents over 30 years. "A Great Place for a Seizure" is not the only, but it is the first of its kind to be identified as a novelory. novelory [no * ve * lor * y ] noun  (1) A fusion of the terms  "novel"and "short story" to describe a series of linked stories that may stand bythemselves as individual tales and/or come together as a novel, whenread in sequence.  (2) A term, coined by Terry Tracy, to identify aspecies of literature that reflects the 21st century IT-induced mind-set of tight schedules, rapid communication, and the desire to have all things at once.  (3)  a gimmick. 
One Reviewer Notes:
Terry Tracy has written a story of incredible bravery...from escaping terrorism to the workings of the inner mind. For the tortured millions in South America, Mischa seeks peace through the tangled bureaucracy of Washington. For the inner turmoil of the epilepsy that imprisons her, she seeks escape. Mischa's story is a death defying leap into the unknown. Always with her seizures, armed and ready to strike. Hers is a lesson of causes and consequences. There is no self-pity, but rather, honest observation and understanding of those who don't know and will never understand the workings of the human psyche. With courage and conviction, Mischa writes of her brutal journey with wisdom and above all compassion. And finally, the "reward" is self revelation.
Phylis S. Johnson
About the Author
Terry Tracy has worked as a human rights activist, journalist, and U.S. diplomat. Terry has had epilepsy for over twenty-five years and in 2007 she wrote the charter for an association of disabled employees at the U.S. State Department.

Terry Tracy was born in Virginia, but moved around Latin America in her childhood as an army brat. After college Terry worked as a receptionist, then left to work for free in Honduras at an orphanage. She returned to work in a human rights organization in Washington DC, then left for Guatemala to work as a free-lance journalist. By this point, her addiction to wanderlust was evident. In denial, she leapt across the Atlantic to Cambridge, England and earned a Master Terry Tracy has worked as a human rights activist, journalist, and U.S. diplomat. Terry has had epilepsy for over twenty-five years and in 2007 she wrote the charter for an association of disabled employees at the U.S. State Department. Terry Tracy was born in Virginia, but moved around Latin America in her childhood as an army brat. After college Terry worked as a receptionist, then left to work for free in Honduras at an orphanage. She returned to work in a human rights organization in Washington DC, then left for Guatemala to work as a free-lance journalist. By this point, her addiction to wanderlust was evident. In denial, she leapt across the Atlantic to Cambridge, England and earned a Master's degree by studying an impractical, but nevertheless intriguing, subject: 16th century Spanish colonial judicial systems. Upon her return to the US she joined the establishment and worked for the US government. In 2007 she left the State Department to take turns as a stay-at-home parent. Terry is Asian-Irish American and currently resides in London with her German husband and their Asian-Irish-German-American daughter.
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A dark secret. An annoying attraction. In a confined space, shots are fired and sparks fly.Newport Beach Seagulls winger Peter Holiday is having a bad day.One of his lady friends locked him out of his own apartment when she realizes there is nothing more between them than late nights and hot...
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Sometimes, it’s hard for Grace to overcome her anxiety. She tries and tries, but nothing ever seems to help. But one day, when she visits the beach with her family, she finds a cute little surprise in the sand dunes that might change everything…Put your toes in the sand, you will be okay.Let the...
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A Birthday Fairy Tale Holiday Birthday Blues Made MerryChristmas and Hanukkah are over, and New Year’s is right around the corner. With so much on the calendar, no one has time for Reese’s birthday. Mom is busy. Dad is working. Her brother Charlie is no fun. December birthdays are the worst....
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In book 3 of the Benny the Fish Story Series, children follow Benny the Blue Fish and his friends as they sing about their different hobbies. Preview the eBooks and audiobooks in series to find out more about Benny and his friends' adventures....
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