Judy Lennington è un'autrice che ha perseguito la sua passione per la narrazione dopo il pensionamento, continuando una tradizione familiare. La sua scrittura approfondisce le complessità dell'esperienza umana, esplorando le sfumature delle relazioni e le vite interiori dei suoi personaggi. Lo stile narrativo della Lennington è caratterizzato dalla sua capacità di affrontare temi intricati e presentarli in modo coinvolgente. È dedita a condividere le sue storie e ad arricchire il panorama letterario.
Lewis Manning and Paul Dickey were two security officers who worked the afternoon shift at Clarkson Memorial hospital. What began as a boring afternoon soon turned into chaos as veterans of WWII began flooding the hospitals all over America. As a strange storm rages over the hospital, even stranger events begin to unfold within the walls of the hospital.
Equine Empire is the fourth of a four-book series about Carly Brooker, a thoroughbred horse breeder, and his dysfunctional family. Like "Snow," "Daffodils," and "Bluegrass Dynasty," the story of Carly's insecurities and inadequate abilities to cope with everyday life on a thoroughbred horse farm in Kentucky, continues to bring Carly Brooker full circle to where he was always meant to be.
Jack Gideon's life changed after his mother died. He and his father now live with his grandparents in a small house built from the wood of a raft his great-grandparents floated down the Ohio River on and settled where the river bends. There are several homes in this community known as Wellsville, Ohio. Jack is the only eight-year-old living here. He is bullied by the older boys and teased by the girls. Then, one day, an Irish immigrant family settles in Wellsville and Jack befriends an older boy who changes his life forever.
Debbi stared at the newspaper article written about her accident which took place in Monte Alto, Pennsylvania. They were calling her the lady with angels riding in her back seat. Her recovery was truly amazing. It didn't mention her new abilities since waking from her coma. How is it she can move objects with her mind and heal people by touching them? Was all of this related to the strange lights in the sky the night of her accident, and who were the four strangers who showed up at the accident to pray for her after they pronounced her dead and placed her in a body bag? She felt a strong urge to keep all of this a secret for the doctors were already urging her to admit herself into a facility so they could study her progress. This novel, although fiction, is based on true facts surrounding an automobile accident that took place in Monte Alto, Pennsylvania in September of 1995.
Pauline had been meeting Prince Albert daily at the stone pavilion. He had pledged his heart and soul to her. He began meeting her less frequently of late, and now he stopped coming altogether. Pauline saw the lady in the caravan. She was Princess Amelia and she was Prince Albert's new bride. Five months after discovering she was pregnant with Albert's child, Princess Amelia paid her a visit. She informed Pauline that she too was pregnant and would not tolerate a bastard child laying claim to the throne. Pauline found herself running from her home to protect her son that would be the first born of the royal blood line.
Shannon was becoming a good liar. Brad insisted she take her medication, but she hid the pills under her tongue to avoid an argument. She was beginning to have flash backs of her past. She wanted to know who she was, and what happened to her that resulted in her being found floating on a rubber raft at sea, beaten nearly to death with a broken arm and no memory of who she was or what had happened to her. And just who are these two strangers who both claim they were her former partners who worked for the government; each of them insisting that the other is a Russian spy.
Drew hated living in the city. He was happy when they made him postmaster in a small rural area in Ohio. At first, he was concerned about raising his children in the area after finding six pictures of missing children in a drawer at the Post Office. It was comforting when he learned that the pictures dated as far back as 1950 and he assumed there was no danger to his own children at the present time. He loved the old farm house they were renting. However, he was concerned for the safety of the homeless family, and their children, who moved into the old brick house across the creek. It was not a safe environment for the children he saw playing inside the abandoned house.