Thank you for visiting my author page!

Here you will find information about everything I have in publication and what I'm working on now. My genres include Young Adult Paranormal Fiction, Adult Paranormal Fiction and Romance.

Because I can't resist, I will also try to frequently blog a favorite quote from one of the many, many books I've read. Some days they'll be funny, others, hopefully, thought provoking.

Below are links to the first chapters of each of my books in publication.

Enjoy!


July 26, 2011

Literary Quote of the Day

"Can you imagine a stretch of grassy land bubbling like water in a pot?  For that is really the best description of what was happening.  In all directions it was swelling into humps.  They were of very different sizes, some no bigger than molehills, some as big as wheelbarrows, two the size of cottages.  And the humps moved and swelled till they burst, and the crumbled earth poured out of them, and from each hump there came out an animal.  The moles came out just as you might see a mole come out in England.  the dogs came out, barking the moment their heads were free, and struggling as you've seen them do when they are getting through a narrow hole in a hedge.  The stags were the queerest to watch, for of course the antlers came up a long time before the rest of them, so at first Digory thought they were trees.  The frogs, who all came up near the river, went straight into it with a plop-plop and a loud croaking.  The panthers, leopards and things of that sort, sat down at once to wash the loose earth off their hind quarters and then stood up against the trees to sharpen their front claws.  Showers of birds came out of the trees. Butterflies fluttered.  Bees got to work on the flowers as if they hadn't a second to lose.  But the greatest moment of all was when the biggest hump broke like a small earthquake and out came the sloping back, the large, wise head, and the four baggy-trousered legs of an elephant.  And now you could hardly hear the song of the Lion; there was so much cawing, cooing, crowing, braying, neighing, baying, barking, lowing, bleating, and trumpeting."


~ C. S. Lewis, The Magician's Nephew

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