,
Connie Mae Inglis

Connie Mae Inglis’s Followers (6)

member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
member photo
Tessa
2,093 books | 467 friends

Jane Rozek
191 books | 252 friends

Ava Pen...
170 books | 357 friends

Sheri H...
304 books | 52 friends

Rachel ...
319 books | 111 friends

Marlene...
1,311 books | 228 friends

Miranda...
149 books | 1,002 friends

Ruth Sn...
180 books | 416 friends

More friends…

Connie Mae Inglis

Goodreads Author


Born
Borden, Canada
Website

Genre

Member Since
June 2013

URL


Connie Mae Inglis has a passion to share stories. She has spent much of the last 25 years in Southeast Asia with her husband and children, serving as a literacy specialist, teacher, and editor. This cross-cultural living has fed her curiosity and given her lots of material for telling stories, always with the desire to offer restoration hope. Connie has published poetry, short stories, and devotionals in several magazines and book collections. When she's not writing or editing, she's spending time being a grandma. Now, she and her husband divide their time between Alberta, Canada and Southeast Asia. Rewriting Adam is her first novel. ...more

Connie Mae Inglis hasn't written any blog posts yet.

Average rating: 4.6 · 20 ratings · 10 reviews · 2 distinct works
Rewriting Adam

4.72 avg rating — 18 ratings3 editions
Rate this book
Clear rating
Hope Connections: A Collect...

by
3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings
Rate this book
Clear rating

* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

How Children Succ...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 

Connie’s Recent Updates

Frederick Buechner
“The storyteller's claim, I believe, is that life has meaning—that the things that happen to people happen not just by accident like leaves being blown off a tree by the wind but that there is order and purpose deep down behind them or inside them and that they are leading us not just anywhere but somewhere. The power of stories is that they are telling us that life adds up somehow, that life itself is like a story... it makes us listen to the storyteller with great intensity because in this way all his stories are about us and because it is always possible that he may give us some clue as to what the meaning of our lives is.”
Frederick Buechner, The Magnificent Defeat

No comments have been added yet.