With her meticulous eye for detail and her knack for creating living, breathing characters, Frantz continues to enchant historical fiction readers who long to feel they are a part of the story.
With her meticulous eye for detail and her knack for creating living, breathing characters, Frantz continues to enchant historical fiction readers who long to feel they are a part of the story.
"On the eve of her wedding, Lady Elisabeth Lawsons world is shattered, as surely as the fine glass windows of her colonial Williamsburg home.
Caroline Milburn and her younger sisters live in two cramped rooms, struggling to survive by their skills in lace making and weaving.
The Lacemaker
The name Ballardie first appears in the Dundee Lockit Book in 1587 where a James Ballardie in noted as paying £10 to enter the closed shop of Dundee Burgees.This novel is written against the actual historical events and places of sixteenth ...
In this work of historical fiction based largely on St. Zélie's letters, a compelling portrait of a working mother who always put God first comes to life. St. Zélie is a saint many women can relate to.