Spotlight: Rabbit Moon by Jan D. Payne

Publication date: September 17th 2024
Genres: Adult, Mystery, Thriller

They say you can’t go back home, but Marin Sinclair, end-of-life doula, doesn’t expect her life to be in danger when she answers a mysterious plea for help from a long-ago friend and returns to Dinetah, the Navajo Nation. Her past there holds memories she is reluctant to confront, but what about her life then would make someone want to kill her?

Navajo Nation Police Sergeant Justin Blue Eyes shares a connection with Marin from the past, and he has a few questions of his own when Marin disappears―such as why the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has agents investigating the abandoned uranium mines on the reservation and how Marin is connected.

Marin needs to survive to find any answers, and to do so she is forced to run, going off the grid on her own in the Lukachukai mountains with unknown killers close behind.

Excerpt

The Bilagaana woman's eyes were wide and staring, and even if she wasn't a ghost-witch Haastiin Sani thought maybe she was crazy. Only someone crazy would have been out here alone in the dark and the rain. Crazy people must be treated with care, and the same for ghost-witches. It didn't help to make them angry.

He looked at the woman, considering. 

She was trembling now, as if cold, but witches and crazy people both were known to be clever. The sooner he saw her off the better, and he jerked his chin toward the direction of his camp and motioned the woman to follow. He would show her every hospitality and then gently nudge her on her way.

She looked somewhat better when he gave her a cup of hot coffee and offered the frybread his daughter had left for him, inviting her with a nod to take it, and tears came into her eyes as her lips and chin began to tremble. 

Very much like a normal person, but it could be a ruse to cause him to relax his vigilance so she could blow corpse dust over him. He busied himself with the fire and wished fervently to be rid of this evil.

Marin knew she made this man very uncomfortable, and she thought she even knew why, considering where and how he had found her, but she didn't know how to relieve his fears without making things worse.

"Thank you," Marin murmured to the old man. "Ahéhee'," she repeated. 

She studied the man on the other side of the fire. His face was seamed and wrinkled, his frame was tall and spare beneath the loose shirt of red cotton tied with a woven sash. His gray hair was worn long, and there was a turquoise bead woven into a strand of hair near one temple. 

A hogan was built higher up the slope, a blanket hanging across the eastern door, and an empty sheep pen was tucked into a rocky cliff a short way from it. A handsome bay horse wearing a rope halter stood nearby, sheltering under overhanging boards propped between a few corral poles and the cliff. 

She looked around for the sheep she knew must be somewhere close by, and the dogs, but they weren't in sight. She didn’t see any sort of vehicle either, or any other person besides the old man, watching her surreptitiously.

The old man cleared his throat suddenly, and she flinched, startled, but instead of speaking, the old man rose to his feet and walked toward the corral. 

She stood as well, thinking he meant for her to follow, but he gave no sign, and she paused. 

Passing Marin without word or look, he ducked under the hogan’s blanket door, emerging a moment later with an ancient-looking saddle, a bridle, and a thick saddle blanket woven in red and black yarns.

Silently, he began to saddle the horse, smoothing the blanket across the horse's back and throwing the saddle over, pulling the cinch tight. He put the bridle on last, settling the bit into the horse's mouth before reaching to adjust the braided ear straps. Without looking at her, he walked back, thrust the reins towards Marin, and spoke for the first time.

"You go now," he said, and pursed his lips, pushing his chin toward the east.

Marin opened her mouth to object to taking his horse and slowly closed it again. The old man was giving her a way to get down the mountain, and she had no wish to bring trouble to him if Tolliver managed to follow her here. 

She took the reins.

Haastiin Sanii grunted and stepped away toward the fire, and Marin tied her jacket to the saddle, surprised when he returned and pushed the remainder of the frybread into her hands. 

"Over there," he said, pointing again with his chin, "is a good way down.”

She waited for any more words the man might offer, for he seemed to be listening and thinking carefully, but he said nothing. He slapped the horse on the rump and stepped away.

"You go now," he repeated.

Marin mounted, then turned in the saddle. "I'll leave the horse at a trading post below," she said.

Haastiin Sanii shrugged, relieved, as he watched her ride away. She was someone in a lot of trouble or someone bringing a lot of trouble, but he had done the best he could. 

He looked down at his sash and fingered the gun he had found beside the spring, then looked down the trail at the woman on his grandson's horse. He wondered if she knew a flashflood was coming and if she knew enough to stay out of the canyon.

He shrugged again, figured a ghost-witch would know and a crazy person wouldn't care.

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About the Author

Drawing from her years in the Southwest and the Navajo Nation, Jan Payne writes on themes of courage, regret, hope, and restoration in a world of created kinships. Through her characters’ lives and shared dangers—Marin Sinclair, end-of-life doula; Sergeant Justin Blue Eyes of the Navajo Nation Police; Cullen MacPherson, agent for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission; Garret Washburn, teenaged ward of Marin’s, and Lewis George, Raven spirit-guide-cum-trickster—she takes readers on a journey through the complex interactions of cultural backgrounds and personal histories, highlighting the way kinships forged in crisis have the power to reshape our lives.

Jan Payne lived on the Dineh (Navajo) reservation in Sanostee, on the New Mexico side of the Lukachukai mountain range, where she spent summers climbing mesas, taking camping trips on horseback, exploring ghost towns in the mountains of Colorado, or working with her dad breaking and training horses in Sanostee. Her two most memorable summer jobs were at a Durango, Colorado dude ranch working with pack mule trains and a brief stint as a camp cook at a uranium mining site.

Connect:

https://jandpayne.com/

https://www.facebook.com/JanDPayneAuthor

https://www.instagram.com/jandpayne.author/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5691421.Jan_D_Payne

Spotlight: A Hush at Midnight by Marlene M. Bell

Publication date: October 1st 2024
Genres: Adult, Mystery

Former Celebrity Chef Laura Harris used to be famous for her show-stopping pastries and mouth-watering desserts. Now, she’s attracting a different kind of attention.

Laura’s been accused of murder.

But how could this petite pastry chef brutally smother small-town matriarch Hattie Stenburg to death? And what could be her motive? Hattie was beloved in her little Texas community – a wise humanitarian who Laura considered a confidant and mentor.

Perhaps it has something to do with a last-minute change to Hattie’s will – bestowing the Stenburg fortune and its history-steeped estate to Laura, instead of Hattie’s surviving relatives. Or maybe it has something to do with the sinister secrets Laura uncovers as she desperately tries to clear her name – secrets that could rock the foundations of this close-knit community.

Only one thing seems clear: The real murderer remains one step ahead of both Laura and local law enforcement, leaving a trail of taunts warning Laura to leave Texas or face deadly consequences. She’s in the way – and that means it could already be too late.

An amateur sleuth sets out to solve a small-town murder in A Hush at Midnight, a mystery by Marlene M Bell, author of the “couldn’t put it down” Annalisse Series.

Excerpt

“Sorry, there’s no dessert tonight. My beautiful cake landed in a heap on the floor.” Laura had grudgingly held off that announcement for as long as possible. “I had to entice the dog away from it. She wanted to lick the tile clean in the worst way.” She chuckled at her dad.

Connie stopped chewing and laid her fork down. She gawked at the remaining slice of beef on her plate, lifting it gingerly with her knife as if scanning the main course for debris. “Please tell me the meat didn’t hit the floor as well.” Connie soured her lips.

“I beg your pardon? If it had, I wouldn’t have served it.” Laura’s face burned from Connie’s crass remark.

Her dad swiped his mouth with the napkin and set it gently beside his plate. “Laura’s skilled at meal preparation. Highly trained, in fact. An excellent dinner, honey. Thank you.” He pushed his chair out, scraping the legs along the floor, and smacked his belly. “Won’t hurt the old man to miss a dessert once in a while.” He grinned at Laura to break off some of the icicles hanging from Connie’s side of the table.

As if on cue, Connie also set her napkin aside. “You’re the only man I know who can eat sweets every day and not gain a pound. Your father is amazing, isn’t he? I don’t know how he does it.”

“It must be Duska’s fried pies. They’re like an elixir that keeps him young.” Laura’s crooked smile at their private joke earned a nod from her dad.

Her statement had the opposite reaction on Connie, who’d swallowed down the wrong pipe and grabbed her water glass to quiet the coughing fit ravaging her throat.

“Are you okay?” he asked as she drained her glass.

Laura poured more lemon water into her guest’s glass, doing her level best to hide the amusement about to burst forth. Karma can be a nasty thing to those insulting the cook.

Connie crinkled her nose as if she’d smelled a skunk on her plate. “Hardly what I’d call an elixir, unless you like clogged arteries, heart failure, and an early trip to the grave.”

Laura sat in stunned disbelief, but only for a second. “Handcrafted pastry and desserts turn a humdrum meal into a masterpiece. They’re not a death sentence, Miss Holloway.”

Her dad turned away and stared at the wall. His thoughts were his own, but Laura had a good idea where his mind had gone: to his late wife, and their most recent loss with Hattie.

Connie’s insensitive comments, while they were still grieving, had fallen out of her mouth too easily. A touchy-feely palm over her father’s hand bothered Laura to no end. Did she not hear about Hattie? It was possible her dad hadn’t mentioned her death.

“Have you missed the fliers about the Novak Bakery?” Connie asked Laura. “They’re everywhere.”

“I’ve been out of town and too preoccupied to read propaganda. I wouldn’t put too much stock in random gossip, Connie. People post reckless garbage these days.” The fliers in question had to be those Duska had seen and removed.

“Propaganda, you say? Hardly what I’d call it.” Tiny wrinkles plagued Connie’s upper lip. “Everyone I know is afraid to go in that Amazon woman’s shop. How tall is she, anyway?”

Her sneering was uncomfortable for Laura to look at, so she studied her plate instead. “Duska’s pies and kolaches are excellent and Coldspell’s lucky to have her. Who thinks she’s too tall?” Laura sat up straighter in her chair with her head held high.

“Her food is sending people to the emergency room. Food poisoning, I hear. And you shouldn’t eat there either, Zane, if you care about your health.”

Laura’s composure began to slip the longer they all sat together, and she had to listen to small-minded notions from someone who hadn’t even been inside the bakery, to her knowledge. Drawing an uneasy breath, Laura willed her mouth to stay shut—which was a huge ask around an insensitive woman who took pleasure in hurling insults at others. Laura could forgive a harsh word from most strangers, but she’d reached her limit with her dad’s opinionated ladyfriend.

“Yikes,” Laura whispered in her dad’s direction as their eyes made contact.

Connie stood up and bussed her utensils and glass to the sink, clattering the silverware.

Her dad outwardly cringed, closing one eye against the noise. “Can we help you with the dishes, honey?” he asked, embarrassment tinging his somber face. A signal that dinner had come to an end and he planned to leave—taking the mouthpiece with him.

“I’ve got it, Dad. Enjoy the rest of your… uh… evening.”

“Thanks again for asking us over, Laura. It’s nice to finally see the beautiful woman you’ve become.” Connie wiped her fingertips along the white dishtowel hanging from the oven door handle, streaking it with sherry gravy. She leaned toward Laura’s ear and whispered, “You might want to get out the china next time, dear.”

An underhanded insult.

Laura balled a hand into a fist and clamped her teeth together.

“I’ll wait for you in the car, Zanie.” Connie touched her dad’s shoulder familiarly and sped outdoors.

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About the Author

Mystery at a killing pace

Marlene M. Bell has never met a sheep she didn’t like. As a personal touch, her fans often find these wooly creatures visiting her international romantic suspense, thriller, and cozy mystery books as characters or subject matter. 

Marlene’s multi-award-winning Annalisse series boasts numerous Best Mystery honors for all installments including the newest IP Best Regional Australia/New Zealand, and Global Gold Award for the fourth cozy mystery from down under. 

Her children's picture book, Mia and Nattie: One Great Team! written for the younger crowd, is based on true events from the Bell’s Texas sheep ranch. The simple text and illustrations are a touching tribute of belonging and unconditional love between a little girl and her lamb. Mia and Nattie is suitable reading for ages 3 - 7 years and beyond, a Mom's Choice Gold Award winner, and Eric Hoffer Award Grand Prize Short List winner. 

Connect:

https://www.marlenembell.com/

https://www.instagram.com/marlenemysteries/

https://www.facebook.com/marlenembell

https://x.com/ewephoric

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/17642396.Marlene_M_Bell

Spotlight: The Accidental Sisterhood by Julie Edelman

Jules Malone has sworn off love after two failed relationships: one with an abusive fiancé she calls her white knight-mare, and the other with a nice-but-boring ex with whom she co-parents their son, Max. But then one fateful Christmas Eve, Jules meets Sean, a twinkly-eyed charmer with a captivating smile and an unexpected invitation. Despite Jules’s efforts to stay guarded, she finds herself irresistibly drawn to him.

As their relationship deepens, so does Sean’s unpredictable behavior. He misses Jules’s calls, changes plans abruptly, and hangs up quickly when she enters the room. One night after returning home from a charity meeting, she finds Sean missing and blood everywhere. Panicked, she’s about to call 911 when she hears a phone ringing on her patio. It is Sean’s. By the time she gets to it, the caller has hung up. Multiple texts follow—as does Jules’s journey of shocking discoveries. The first? That she is one of four women sharing full lives with Sean.

But it is the devastating secret these women uncover together that leads to a resolution none of them could ever have imagined… and to the power of sisterhood.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

Julie Edelman is the bestselling author of the how-to book, The Accidental Housewife: How to Overcome Housekeeping Hysteria One Task at a Time. She is a well-known lifestyle expert and has appeared on The Today Show, The View, Rachael Ray, Fox & Friends, The Doctors, ABC Audio Networks and iHeart Radio. She lives in Florida, close to her son, who is her heart and testament to a blessed life lived fully.

Julie speaks publicly with heart, humor, and in high heels about the value of sisterhood and not letting life’s detours define nor stop us from achieving our dreams. The Accidental Sisterhood is her debut novel, and a testimony to embracing a life detour with hope and determination following her triumph over breast cancer.

Spotlight: Oldest Mom On The Playground by Judy Haveson

Essays & Collections, Parenting Humor, Women's Non-fiction

Date Published: 09-24-2024

Judy Haveson always believed she would one day “have it all.” Then she turned forty and wondered if she had waited too long. After countless failed first dates and fewer second ones, she finally found love, got married, and became a mother at forty-three.

Oldest Mom on the Playground is a collection of relatable, heartwarming, and humorous essays. Written in her signature conversational style and with a touch of sarcasm, Judy takes readers on her journey of getting pregnant after forty (and delivering the baby during a full moon), raising a child in New York City (including the time she lost him in a grocery store and found him standing on Broadway), leaving the career she spent decades building to volunteer as a preschool class rep, to becoming a card-carrying member of the sandwich generation.

Judy offers no parenting advice, only personal reflection. And she takes nothing in her life for granted. Her message to other midlife mamas is this: trust your gut, let your life experience guide you, and pray no one ever mistakes you for the grandmother.

Excerpt

Hollywood paints childbirth as a glamorous event. The minute the baby comes out of the mother, it is placed on her chest for the first time, allowing the bonding to commence. Then, the baby is quickly whisked away to be cleaned up. The mother returns to her room, where a glam squad awaits to make her Instagram-worthy and ready to pose for a full spread in People magazine.

At least this is how I assumed it worked for new mothers like J.Lo. Soon after giving birth to twins, she appeared on the cover of People, posing like she hadn’t broken a sweat throughout the whole birthing process and instantly began sleeping through the night. Why did she look so beautiful when I looked like a monster? And I only had one kid, not two.

Then there’s the royal family. I never understood why Lady Di and, later, Princess Catherine were practically shoved outside the hospital hours after delivering their children to meet with their loyal subjects. And they looked so beautiful.

I could barely walk after my son arrived, much less stand upright in regular shoes. These ladies are like superheroes, holding their new-borns while wearing heels and tiaras, waving to a gawking crowd eager to catch a glimpse of royalty. 

None of this happened for me.

My reward for more than twenty hours of labor and an unplanned C-section was swollen ankles and bags under my eyes that looked like I packed them for an extended vacation. I learned that the swelling I experienced, known as edema, happens to some women after a C-section. Swelling can occur in the face, ankles, hands, and feet.

“Look at my ankles! I’m the Elephant Man,” I cried to Adam. “The only shoes I can wear are my Uggs, which are too tight.”

I called my doctor to see if he could help me.

“I’m swollen all over! Please tell me there’s a water pill I can take to eliminate swelling,” I cried to my doctor.

“You just need to get plenty of rest and stay off your feet,” he instructed.

The doctor had forgotten about the baby he had delivered a few days before and that staying off my feet and getting rest wasn’t on my new mom’s agenda. I couldn’t help but think my forty-something body had failed me and might have bounced back quicker had I been younger. I couldn’t remember any of my friends suffering in this same way, so I assumed my advanced age was the culprit. Of course, I had no scientific research to confirm this assumption. I only had my gut, which was also swollen.

.   .   .

Maternity leave is a coveted time for new mothers to heal from childbirth, bond with their new babies, catch up on TV shows and movies, and get much-needed rest. Depending on the company you work for, time off for maternity leave can vary.

According to babycenter.com, the average time off for working women in the United States is ten weeks. Since the Family & Medical Leave Act was enacted, most women take off at least three months, some an entire year. This leave can be either paid or unpaid, or a com-bination of both. 

The maternity leave policy for my company, which was small and family-owned, gave me two weeks plus any sick/personal/vacation days I hadn’t used during the year. The official start of my leave began during the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. Because I hadn’t used all my time off before Jack’s birth, I stretched my leave to six weeks, returning to work in mid-January. 

Once I brought Jack home, our new nanny, Christina, came to the apartment daily to get us into a routine and allow me time to sleep and heal. At least that became the goal. She’d arrive at 8:30 a.m. to feed, change, and play with Jack. We’d spend the mornings putting Jack in all the clothes he’d received from family and friends, turning him into a baby model. He looked cuter and cuter in each outfit. I also photographed and videotaped his every move.

“He’s ready to be the next face of Baby Gap!” I told Christina. “Maybe I can retire.”

Christina also organized and cleaned Jack’s room and did his laundry. After she put him down for his afternoon nap, she went home.

“I may get very used to you,” I jokingly told Christina. 

So this is how J.Lo did it, times two.

While most of my maternity leave was spent bonding with Jack and planning his future supermodeling career, my mind never strayed far from client work. Toward the end of my six-week sabbatical, I spent more and more time on the phone and answering work emails.

“Judy, you need to rest and regain your strength, not be on email. You’ll be back at work soon enough,” Christina told me.

She was right, but I needed to pay attention to my clients and the office. The last thing I wanted was to return to a mound of work. The six weeks flew by, and looking back, I realized I should have listened to Christina. For the first time, I wondered what my life would look like if I were only a mom.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Judy Haveson is the award-winning author of Laugh Cry Rewind—A Memoir. She is known for her sarcastic humor and enjoys sharing stories about her life experiences and observations. Her fascination with storytelling comes from her decades-long career in public relations. Judy once had a boss tell her that there are two types of people: those who know and those who want to know. That boss fired her, but his words became a valuable lesson to always aim to be the one who knows. Judy lives in Hampton Bays, NY, with her husband, Adam, son, Jack, and adorable Yorkie, Toby.

Connect:

Website: https://judyhaveson.com

Facebook: https://facebook.com/judyhavesonauthor

Twitter: https://x.com/judyhaveson

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/22629705.Judy_Haveson

Instagram: https://instagram.com/judyhaveson

Spotlight: Dear Riley Rose by Caroline Rose

Memoir

I’d like to tell you a story. It’s a fairy tale of sorts…

At the age of twenty-seven, Caroline Rose was finishing her first year of medical school and in the best shape of her life when she was shockingly diagnosed with a highly aggressive, incurable, stage IV cancer.

At the age of one, Riley, a Great Dane/Labrador mix, was rescued from inhumane abuse. An Internet search of rescue dogs during Caroline’s first remission led her to a picture a large broken dog with empty eyes that resembled her own. One impulsive decision later, Riley became a Rose.

This is the story of two lost souls coming together as one and their journey together through family, love, loss, pain, and hope.

Dear Riley Rose radiates the humor of Riley’s antics during even the toughest of times and illustrates the courage it takes for every being to rise up and choose life in the face of adversity.

Love heals us. Hope carries us. But is that enough for us to believe in a happy ending?

Excerpt

Dear Riley Rose, 

I’d like to tell you a story.

It’s a love story—a fairy tale of sorts.

It’s the story of us—Caroline and Riley, Riley and Caroline—and our journey toward finding each other.

It’s a story of healing, love, and acceptance. 

I’m going to tell you our story because it’s something special, something magical, something big. 

You were there, by my side. 

You were there for the ride. 

It’s not that you need to know; it’s that I need to tell it. 

And I need to tell it from my perspective. 

So that’s what I’m going to do so that you can feel the hope of it all, the hope of us. 

You and I together were bigger than our struggles. 

And our story is one worth honoring.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Hardcover | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Caroline Rose, a nationally recognized author, public speaker, and motivational storyteller, delivers compelling stories from her three separate battles with her highly aggressive, incurable stage IV cancer. After being diagnosed when she was 27 years old and undergoing two different bone marrow transplants, it was ultimately a groundbreaking clinical trial and the donation of her older brother’s marrow that saved her life. Caroline understands the universal struggles of trying to live life to the fullest, even in the face of fear and uncertainty, and is passionate about helping people recognize the beauty of life, even in the darkest moments.

Caroline’s compelling story has been featured by organizations such as MD Anderson Cancer Center, Livestrong, City of Hope National Medical Center, and Health Magazine. The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society chose Caroline to be a candidate for their Woman of the Year campaign, and the National Cancer Survivors Day committee highlighted Caroline and her story as a featured speaker for this year’s speaker selection. Caroline is a frequent podcast guest on top rated podcast and travels the country, speaking to approximately 10,000 to 15,000 people annually. In 2018, Caroline was honored to be chosen as the speaker for the City of Hope Music, Film, and Entertainment Industry Spirit of Life Awards in Santa Monica, California.

Today, Caroline is embracing her thirteenth year of living cancer-free. She lives in San Antonio, Texas, and enjoys life as a wife and a mom to her two teenage children and two four-legged fur babies. Caroline is an avid dog lover and a deep believer in the healing power of animals. She is very excited about her soon-to-be-released memoir, Dear Riley Rose, the story of a woman and her dog…and how they saved each other.

In her free time, Caroline volunteers for organizations such as her local dog rescue, the MD Anderson Patient Advisory Board, the Be the Match Foundation, the National Charity League, and the Battle of Flowers Organization, and she fills several parent volunteer positions at her children’s school. Caroline also spends time in Austin and is involved with the Health Alliance for Austin Musicians and the local Austin-based medical device company, Wenzel Spine, which was founded by her life-saving brother, Chad Neely.

Caroline’s strong message of hope, even in the face of profound struggle, resonates universally, especially today. The world is craving hope, and Caroline is happy to be the one to provide it.

Connect:

Website: www.DearRileyRose.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/caroline.neely.rose

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dearrileyrose/

Spotlight: A Heart's Journey to Forgiveness by Terese Luikens

Publisher: Redemption Press

Publication Date: November 3, 2022

Pages: 282

Genre: Memoir

For Terese Luikens, a picture-perfect childhood it was not. Frequent cross country moves, an emotionally absent mother and an alcoholic father who ends his life by suicide when Terese is just thirteen years old. 

The sixth of seven children, Terese grew up in an unstable and chaotic household--invisible to her mom yet cherished by her father. 

This heartfelt memoir documents the chain reaction of a tumultuous family history. From her stormy childhood to the far-reaching effects of her father’s suicide, Terese shares her inspiring journey to escape the shame of her past, find healing and live, learn to trust, and discover faith in a real and personal God.  

Book Excerpt

In my mind, these warm childhood memories include only my dad, never my mom. One photo from that era, snapped by an older sibling using Mom’s Instamatic camera, seems to capture our family dynamic. We are in the living room of the house that had the front-porch swing. I might be around four years old. My hair is cut short, pixie style, and I am wearing a long-sleeved, cotton-ribbed bathrobe. Dad, kneeling, wears a suit coat and a bowler hat. His hands are clasped behind my back and mine are hooked around his neck. Smiling, cheek-to-cheek, we face the camera.

Dad and I are in the center of the photo while Mom is in the lower left hand corner. She is sitting in a chair, and wears a plaid skirt and a turtleneck sweater. Her passive face is turned toward the camera.

That snapshot captures my life: Dad at the center and Mom on the perimeter.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Terese Luikens has been married for forty-four years to the same man, although she is on her third wedding ring, having lost one and worn out another. She lives in Sandpoint, Idaho, enjoys being mother to three grown sons and grandmother to her much-loved grandchildren. She is the author of A Heart’s Journey to Forgiveness, a Memoir of her inspiring journey of emotional healing from her father’s suicide. She facilitates retreats and workshops focusing on forgiveness, and publishes her own blog, Why Bother? 

You can visit her website at www.tereseluikens.com