HAPPY NEW YEAR!
HAPPY NEW YEAR! Just wanted to wish everyone overflowing peace, joy, love, and productivity in the coming year! ❤️🎉🍾📖 Newsletter Signup Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin
HAPPY NEW YEAR! Just wanted to wish everyone overflowing peace, joy, love, and productivity in the coming year! ❤️🎉🍾📖 Newsletter Signup Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin
Turtle Pace Hi there! This is me. I’m the turtle. Don’t ask me where July and August went. It was June and then suddenly I was sending my kids off
Summertime. Ahhhh. I blinked, and June disappeared. It happens every year. It’s like I’m holding my breath through May, ready to exhale, relax, and have time to really focus on writing—preferably
Villains I’m still plugging along, tortoise-style. This scene that has given me fits for a month is finally starting to take shape one little nugget at a time. And it’s
Getting Unstuck Man, it’s a process. Open a door, head down the dark passage, hit a wall, backtrack, open another door, repeat. Eventually, you find the one direction that has
Arrgh. Stuck. Real time writer’s log, April 23, 2021: I’m stuck. 😐 Stalled, really, and I can’t figure out why. So I’m writing a post about it because none of
The god of death is on a hit list.
Thanatos was a plantation owner in antebellum New Orleans when the only weapon with the power to kill a god was stolen from him. One hundred and fifty years later, he’s back to find it before his sister Eris gets her hands on it to take him out. The good news: there are only so many places in that house his crazy mortal ex-wife could have hidden it, right? The bad news: he’ll have to somehow get past the house’s current owner—the crazy mortal ex-wife’s descendent and practically her twin.
A recent tragedy left Anna Ashmore just shy of destitute, but she’s determined to restore her plantation house to its former glory—on no budget and while fending off a local mob boss with a sins-of-the-father vendetta against her. When “General Contractor Zach Smith” shows up, licensed, bonded, and willing to take a job no one else wants, her prayers are answered.
It’s supposed to be a win-win, but between clashing aesthetics and no treasure map, frustrations mount on both sides. As Eris closes in, Zach is forced to create a bond with Anna he never intended to make in order to protect them both. When this divine sibling rivalry escalates into sabotage and a devastating loss, he learns that there’s a fine line between survival and living, and the source of power he thought he needed might not be the one he most wants.
Oak Alley Plantation ~ The inspiration for the setting of The Kairos
Beware the wolf in sheep’s clothing.
Quinn Everly has always known she was adopted as a baby, but after her parents are killed in a car accident, certain facts come to light about her adoption that lead her to seek some answers. Although she finds out that her birth mother is dead, her aunt is anxious to meet her and tell her all about the mother she never knew.
Quinn makes the trip from Boston to small-town Georgia and is welcomed with open arms by her Aunt Dixie. Even her Uncle Dawson appears to accept her and be glad she’s there. But as she learns more and more about her mother, Delilah, she finds more questions than answers, the biggest one being—if she supposedly committed suicide soon after giving her baby girl up for adoption, what happened to her body?
Although Dixie and Dawson—the entire town, really—have been nothing but warm and welcoming, Quinn soon starts to think there’s someone who doesn’t want her there, someone who doesn’t want her to find out the truth about what happened to Delilah.