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Amy Fillion

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Amy Fillion is the author of both adult and children's fiction. She is raising three energetic boys in New Hampshire with her husband, attempting not to become too annoyed with her three unruly rescue cats, and immensely enjoying cuddles from her rescue dog. She worked in the field of early intervention after graduating from the University of New Hampshire with a degree in psychology. She then left that job to stay home with her growing children.

She loves discussing books with friends, the smell of coffee brewing, reading outdoors in the warmer months, and elephants.

She also loves to hear from readers. You can find her at www.amyfillion.com.
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Amy Fillion My advice for aspiring writers is to simply go for it! Open a blank page on your laptop (or whatever device you'd like to use), and write. If you need…moreMy advice for aspiring writers is to simply go for it! Open a blank page on your laptop (or whatever device you'd like to use), and write. If you need inspiration or guidance, there are so many wonderful resources around you that you can utilize. Try a writers' workshop or even a local Facebook group. Clear your calendar. As a mother of three children with a part-time job, I fully understand how quickly time passes by and how difficult it can be at times to sit down and write, but if this is your passion, you need to follow it. Touch your story each and every day. Some days you may only have the time to think about a certain scene. Other days you may have hours where you're able to sit in front of your screen and type away (those days are fantastic!), but I do recommend you touch your story every day. That's where your inspiration will come from. It's where your words will flow, and you'll see your passion become reality.(less)
Amy Fillion The idea for the book I'm currently writing came to me when I was researching another topic similar to the one I'm writing about. I had never heard of…moreThe idea for the book I'm currently writing came to me when I was researching another topic similar to the one I'm writing about. I had never heard of this particular disease (I'm not divulging its name as its mystery is paramount to the story itself and what is happening to the woman diagnosed). I asked myself how I would feel if this were something I was struggling with in my life and the answer was simply that I, as the patient, wouldn't fully know—it's the loved ones that are most affected with this particular diagnosis; so it is through the eyes of the loved ones that I write my story.(less)
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Penelope by Amy Fillion
Penelope: A Novel
by Amy Fillion (Goodreads Author)
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It's here! I am so pleased to share Penelope with you. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. ...more
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“Sometimes”
Amy Fillion, This Funny Life

“Boxwood, a man of indeterminate age with a scraggly mass of brown hair and a paper-thin mustache, had been hired on part-time, and it was he who oversaw the boys in their outdoor chores. Marvin was handed an axe and followed a few of the other boys to an adjacent area where several tree stumps had been strategically placed, along with a bounty of uncut wood. Marvin got to work. He hacked at a portion of a downed tree, and once he had a manageable piece, he heaved it into his arms and dropped it onto one of the stumps. He hoisted the heavy axe over his shoulder and, with as much force as he could muster, brought it down upon the chunky piece of trunk. The wood split in two, a few shards spraying outward and falling to the ground. Marvin repositioned one half of the newly cut trunk, heaved the axe over his shoulder, and brought it down forcefully on the wood. It split again. By the time Mr. Boxwood announced that the boys were through for the evening, Marvin was sweating profusely, and his arms ached. He returned the axe to the storage shed and walked toward the main entrance of the orphanage along with the other boys who had been required to split wood. The grounds were otherwise unoccupied, the other children having already headed to their dormitories to retire for the evening. Marvin was walking toward the stairwell when he passed a bathroom and spotted movement through the open door. When he instinctively turned his head to look within, he saw Eva on all fours, scrubbing the floor with a small-handled brush, a metal bucket of sudsy water at her side. Marvin searched the hallway and, not spotting any authority figures, whispered, “Eva. Hey, Eva.” When she looked up at the sound of his voice, Marvin noticed her eyes were tinged with red. “What are you doing?” “What does it look like I’m doing?” She seemed about to cry, but her jaw was clenched in anger. “Why do you have to do it?” Eva sat back on her heels, rested the brush on her lap, and ran her free hand up into her hair, where she angrily grasped the large bow. “This damn thing!” she exclaimed, and Marvin’s eyes widened at the curse. “I didn’t want to wear it. It’s babyish. My parents never made me wear something like this. Not at my age, anyway. Maybe when I was a baby and I didn’t know any better or didn’t care, but not now. And Sister What’s Her Name said I had to wear one because it made me look presentable—that was her word: presentable. Because apparently, I don’t look presentable without a big ol’ stupid, ugly, white baby bow in my hair. I got so mad, I yanked it out and threw it on the ground, but then she looked at me. Just looked at me. She didn’t say anything, just stared. And then my heart got all jumpy because nobody had ever looked at me that way before.” Eva wiped a tear from under her eye. “She picked it up, so slow I didn’t know if she had trouble with her legs or something, right? She picked it up, and then she held it in her hand and looked down at it, and then… then… Marvin, she slapped me so hard on the cheek, I couldn’t believe it. I just couldn’t believe it. Nobody’s ever slapped me before!” Another tear dribbled from Eva’s eye, and Marvin was compelled forward. His knees hit the cold, hard floor, and he reached”
Amy Fillion, This Funny Life

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