I was sitting in my room infront of my window gazing outside the beautiful raindrops that aspire me to think so much about life....i felt that mediocrity & anonymity are the two safest choice & if i choose to be different i would be gone with the wind....i learnt something that day-DONT BOTHER TRYING TO EXPLAIN YOUR EMOTION...LIVE EVERYTHING AS INTENSELY AS YOU CAN & KEEP WHATEVER YOU FELT AS A GIFT FROM GOD..IF U THINK THAT YOU WONT BE ABLE TO STAND A WORLD IN WHICH LIVING IS MORE…
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Posted on December 29, 2009 at 3:56am — 1 Comment
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i do read more than HP and twilight- they are just my favourite
xx
I'd be honored if you'd check out my work at My website - click here
You can download my ebooks for free there. Happy New Year!
God bless!!
Don
You may not know me or my work but I am the author of six critically acclaimed, award winning novels and I have been nominated twice for the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction. On Jan 9th 2010 my debut novel SUGAR will celebrate it’s 10th anniversary and I hope you will buy a copy or to help commemorate this milestone. And yes, Kindle purchases count!
"Bernice L. McFadden's first novel begins with the brief, poetic description of a crime so startling that the reader is helplessly drawn in, as if a bright red door stood ajar on a bleak and forbidding house. Pearl Taylor's daughter, Jude, has been found murdered and mutilated near a field at the edge of town. "The murder had white man written all over it," writes McFadden. "But no one would say it above a whisper. It was 1940. It was Bigelow, Arkansas. It was a black child. Need any more be said?" In the years that follow, Pearl catches sight of Jude in so many strangers that when Sugar Lacey comes to town and sets up her unwholesome "business" in the house next door, she doesn't know whether to believe what she sees in Sugar's face: a striking similarity to Jude, dead 15 years. In her sedate but supple prose--rising at times to a light, unforced lyricism in the description of landscape or character--the author perfectly renders the closed and protective society of a small Southern town, the superstitions, gossip, and prying."
Peace & Blessings!
Bernice
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