Good Ground
Genre: Historical Romance
Synopsis
Jim’s faith
in God is tested by the death of his cherished wife and child. His
life becomes barren, and he loses hope and the ability to
continue.
But God plants in his heart the seeds of a new
beginning and the will to go on through an orphan child. Jim nurtures
this child with the same devotion that he invests in his land. The
result is a son of whom any father would be proud. Jim’s gift
continues through Ellis.
Ellis in turn cares passionately for
his own farm, his friends, and eventually another lost soul. When he
finds Clairey in the midst of a blizzard, he rescues her from her
desperate life, and she grows into a capable a strong woman under his
care. Jim’s legacy comes full circle.
All things grow in
love. . .
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Ground is FREE on Amazon from 9/2 –
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A True Love Story
A True Love Story
What constitutes a true love story? In
the beginning you meet someone, have an attraction or a common
purpose and the relationship grows. While many of us experience that
chemical reaction of seeing someone that you are drawn to because of
physical appearance, you general move past that into meatier
substance when you “fall in love”.
I think of my parents who have been
married now for forty-four years. Would my mom say that she thought
my dad was dang fine? Sure. My grandparents who spent a life time
together had their beginnings in a horseshoe game. My grandmother
swore that when she saw the back of my grandpa’s head she knew that
was the man she would marry. My own marriage of sixteen years began
with a double take when I saw my husband for the first time walk by
and I thought, wow he is really good looking.
But then I think of the rest of the
story, and I realize that these relationships may be steeped in
infatuation but they moved on to bigger and better things. I do not
profess to be an expert on love, but I will share with you what I
believe love is.
My grandma and grandpa lived in rural
Tennessee. Grandma Ruby was the only child of Frank Amonette. Frank
was a professed bachelor for a good portion of his life and when he
finally settled down and married my great- grandmother he was growing
older. When my great-grandma Mary died of breast cancer, his fear
then was of being alone. He asked my Grandma Ruby to promise him that
she would never marry. She would not agree to it, because even as a
young woman she knew
that it was a promise she couldn’t keep.
Her father did not approve of my
grandpa Douglas, for various reasons (I’m sure some of them good
reasons). While my Grandpa Douglas was a good man he was human, had
his weaknesses and made his mistakes. But she loved him anyway.
Because my great-grandfather Frank would not give his blessing, they
decided to elope. At one point, on their journey to exchange vows,
grandpa Douglas carried my grandma Ruby through a stream so that she
wouldn’t get wet. Doesn’t get much more romantic than that does
it?
But here’s the ever after part. They
went on to have children, six of them. At one point my grandma Ruby
experienced a very traumatic and difficult miscarriage. The two of
them struggled to make ends meet on their tobacco farm while raising
their family. The work was hard, the days were long. One of their
sons as an adult was involved in an accident and consequentially
became a quadriplegic. My grandparents lovingly took care of him
until they died. They had many ups and downs throughout their
fifty-nine years together.
Similarly, my parents met, fell in love, and were married. Went on to have eight children! During that time my father worked hard to support his family. My mother worked hard to keep the house in order and provide meals for her family and make things stretch as far as they might. They worked together to raise us children and to do the best they could with what they were given. They lost their first grandson shortly after he was born, a constant heartache, even now after nineteen years, for our family. They had another grandson diagnosed with autism. I have seen firsthand their struggles and the lengths they would go to in order to take care of their own.
Book
Trailer & Author Interview
“By day, a school librarian. By
night, a wife and mother. But in those quiet moments that are only
mine, I write…”
Born and raised on
the flatlands of Central Indiana, Tracy moved to the highlands of
Utah at the age of nineteen. She quickly discovered that her brand
new, top-of-the-line hiking boots were a waste of good money
because she was never quite able to acclimate to the altitude in
the Rockies. Tracy claims to suffer from a type of
disorientation she attributes to altitude sickness to this day. It
seems to be a permanent affliction. Her husband Benjamin
cohabitates in a home with Tracy and the four beautiful but
precocious children they lovingly created together. Although to
others, their home may seem alarmingly chaotic, it is an
insanity of their own making.
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