Jean Harkin
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in Louisville, KY, The United States
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July 2012
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https://www.goodreads.com/jeanatwritersmill
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An isolated research island between Tasmania and Antarctica challenges the endurance of love and strength of the survival instinct for the remaining family of four who, after 8 years are awaiting a rescue ship as the island sinks into the ocean. And t ...more |
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Fever Beach: A Novel
by Carl Hiaasen (Goodreads Author)
24 copies
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| Two women writers a couple generations apart are connected by coincidences and much more! This novel is a time/slip mystery romance novel. Olivia (pen name Via Belle), seen in the 1940s, has a resume of over 30 popular novels, all romances with happy ...more | |
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Jean
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Elaine's review
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Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses:
"I just finished reading Gathering Moss and it was a lovely surprise. Not what I was expecting. I was expecting lots of pieces of science detailed and separate. What I got was one whole. A story, woven together with moss. I love this book and I love m"
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| After reading this book of natural science and personal reflections, I will never again have moss removed from my roof, instead will welcome a natural roof.* This book inspired me to kneel on my lawn or sidewalk to observe the tiny and delicate detai ...more | |
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Walking to the End of the World: A Thousand Miles on the Camino De Santiago
by Beth Jusino (Goodreads Author) |
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On second reading, I enjoyed the journey all over again-- the treats and troubles, moments and memories. And I again loved Beth's eloquent description of her Camino Moment with St. James at the near-end of the journey. Following in Beth Jusino's foots ...more |
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| Stranger than fiction indeed! A true account by a neuroscientist-- a specialist in studying the brain-- who suffered a bout of insanity when her own brain began to fail due to metastatic melanoma tumors flourishing in various lobes. Incredibly, due t ...more | |
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“(From first-time movie-producer, age 98): You're never too old to start something new and succeed with it.”
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“An editor is a person who knows more about writing than writers do but who has escaped the terrible desire to write.”
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“Novels tell us the most truth about life: what it is, how we live it, what it might be for, how we enjoy and value it, and how we lose it.”
― The Sense of an Ending
― The Sense of an Ending
“Coincidences to get characters into trouble are great; coincidences to get them out of it are cheating.”
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Five Minute Bible Story Series
— 18 members
— last activity Mar 16, 2015 09:09AM
Cape Arago have just started releasing my five-minute Bible stories as a series of ebooks. They're even offering Genesis People free on kindle until D ...more
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Hi Friends and Followers-- I am happy now to announce the publication and release of my debut novel, "Promise Full of Thorns" published by Brown Posey Press, an imprint of Sunbury Press. It is available now at Sunbury Press and Amazon.com. Soon it will be available through bookstores, distributed by Ingram. "Promise Full of Thorns" is also available on Kindle and other e-books.
Hi Friends and Followers-- I'm happy to announce the publication of my book of short stories, "Night in Alcatraz: And Other Uncanny Tales." It is now available on Amazon at an affordable price. Here's the link: https://www.amazon.com/Night-Alcatraz...I'm happy to answer questions about my book anytime. And I'll send a free copy to the first Friend (in USA) who requests one.
Hi to My Friends: You are all invited to see my new author page and blog. Just click on my picture and my page will appear on your screen. I'll try to keep my blog up to date every week. Feel free to leave comments anytime. And thanks Sheila and Judy for your comments already!
I often find links between books I read, sometimes matching up the most unlikely of books. This time I found something in common between Peter Matthiesen's "In Paradise," and Alexander McCall Smith's "The Revolving Door of Life." Such unlikely companions: "In Paradise" is a somber, psychological book about a reunion of people from diverse backgrounds reuniting at Auschwitz in 1996. "The Revolving Door of Life" is a light, often hilarious read about residents in an Edinburgh neighborhood.What could they possibly have in common? In both novels, characters experienced a mystical, unexplainable, unexpected experience. In "In Paradise," it happened with a spontaneous linking of hands and a 'dance' at the prison camp. In "The Revolving Door. . .", Angus Lordie is at a dinner party and looks out the window onto the sunset-lit skyline of Edinburgh and suddenly feels at one with humanity. His wife Domenica's explanation illuminates both experiences: ". . . a vision of agape, that pure disinterested love of one's fellow man that so many of us would love to find, but never do."
See my review of "Deadly Gold" by Ken Baysinger. Ken will present the program at Writers' Mill meeting, June 19. I recommend the book if you enjoy a good detective mystery.
What was Colum McCann thinking of when he titled his latest book "Thirteen Ways of Looking"?! That title is just 3 words short of Jane Smiley's "13 Ways of Looking at the Novel"! I wonder what McCann was looking at. He surely didn't look up previous book titles before he labeled his!
I have just finished reading a book that was reviewed in the newspaper a week or so ago. The title "So Far, So Good" by Ralph Salisbury wasn't among the 12 or so books of this title that Goodreads came up with. Goodreads couldn't find it, but Google did-- also Amazon did. The book won the 2012 River Teeth Prize for Literary Nonfiction and was therefore published by University of Nebraska Press. This book struck my fancy because the author is a shirttail relative who grew up in Iowa-- familiar territory to me. I figured I'd learn some things about that part of the family I hadn't known before, and I was not disappointed. I found out a lot! Turns out this family is part Cherokee/Shawnee Indian, and that heritage comes through loud and clear, more so than the Irish. I would rate the book 3 1/2 stars, even if the author weren't a relative. The author is a poet, so the narrative style was punched throughout with poetic flourishes as it hopped and danced around from childhood to WWII experiences, from near-death experiences to family life and his literary history and career as a university educator (most recently at U of Oregon).















































Feb 16, 2021 10:09PM · flag
Feb 17, 2021 04:37PM · flag