Escaping a troubled marriage, Annie Cameron brings her autistic son Charlie and mother-in-law to Mico Island. With the friendship of Winston Mann and his wife, their new home becomes a sanctuary. Until the dreams start. Years ago the Manns' son mysteriously drowned. Winston thinks the woman who once lived in Annie's house caused his death. Except she's been dead for two hundred years. Charlie and his mentally fragile grandmother sense a malevolent presence in the house. But they don't know how to fight back as Annie slowly becomes possessed. Now Annie has discovered the door to the widow's walk and the house's dangerous past. A storm is brewing. Someone waits to finish what was started long ago. And Annie will keep a promise she never made.
One of Boston’s elite has been murdered.
In the spirit of The Notebook and The Time Traveler’s Wife comes Robert Barclay’s haunting and romantic novel of passion, destiny, loss and an eternal love that will bring two people together across time.
Over the next twelve months, Marian struggled with the tragedy's endless ripple effects, from the minute and deeply personal—she wonders who will play Star Wars with her son, Aidan, and carry him on his shoulders; to the collective: she ...
This is a story of courage, character and the emergence of those who endured.
In this memoir, Jennifer Burman recounts in raw and honest detail how her seemingly picture-perfect life was turned upside down when her husband was convicted and sentenced to prison for 16 years for white collar crime--and how she strives ...
JANEY SINCLAIR's ability to teleport has always been a mystery.
A Widow's Walk is a result of Ronda Chervin's quest for spiritual answers to the struggles of widowhood. It draws on the lives of more than 40 widow-saints and encourages...
When Paul Jenkins, the police chief of Boar's Bluff, New Hampshire, investigates the murders of three men, "he risks even more in a dangerous game of seduction as the killer tries to find out how much he really knows."--Cover.
Left homeless and near-destitute in her 50s, Annie Dodds pursued an old dream of self-reliance and moved off-grid to a cabin with no heat, electricity, running water, kitchen, or bathroom.
Using the stories of women saints who suffered the loss of a husband, she encourages and affirms women in their new state in life while leading them on the journey to healing and interior joy.