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Published: Tue, 03/16/21

 
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Becoming Olive W. (The Women of Campbell County Family Saga) by S. Lee Fisher
 


Beautiful, brilliant, wealthy. The world should be Olive’s oyster. Does she want too much?
For young women in the early 1900s, sometimes a string of pearls is the closest they will get to owning the world.
Orphaned as a toddler, Olive, a bright feisty child, struggles to establish her place in a wealthy dysfunctional family. Her sisters are jealous, her brothers are threatened, her father, inept as a parent is dependent on her skills.

Without a mother’s guidance, is it possible for this young woman to break social barriers on her own? Can she become the independent woman scholar for which she has the potential of being?

Set in the early 1900s, follow her path from child to young woman in a time before women had the right to vote.
Journey with this feisty girl on an emotionally intense encounter through her dysfunctional family within a male-dominated world.

Book one of The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga fiction series.

About this series. The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga, dysfunctional family novels are a four-book series about the Westchester, Bailey, and Kepler families, and how history impacts their lives. The amazingly brave female main characters of Campbell county survive two world wars, an economic depression, and the Korean war, molding strong relationships while struggling with minimal resources. Book one, Becoming Olive W. follows Olive from an innocent toddler age five through her morphing into a bitter young woman.

Targeted Age Group:: 16 through adult

What Inspired You to Write Your Book?
I began writing as a means of channeling the pain and grief of her father's passing, In the process, she discovered that she enjoys telling stories.

How Did You Come up With Your Characters?
Growing up in a small rural town in Pennsylvania, everyone knew everyone in the town. I took pieces of different personalities, meshed them together to create my characters. Hopefully you will love, hate, or despise them.

Book Sample
Western Pennsylvania, 1905
“Mama, Mama!”
Olive, a curly blonde-haired girl with pale blue eyes, climbed onto the bed and wrapped her arms around her mother’s neck.
Polly Westchester coughed at the touch of her child. She lay motionless, waiting for the pain of her next contraction. Her children circled the iron bed, watching Polly struggle to breathe. Polly’s pale face had assumed a shade of gray. Her eyes reflected the purple and yellow wallpaper deliberately darkened by drawn draperies. Shining on the ceiling, a single dot of light refracted from the daisy-filled crystal vase.
Ben, Olive’s oldest brother, grabbed the child around the waist. “Come, sweetie. Leave Mama be.” After carrying her out of the bedroom, Ben deposited Olive in the corner landing of the back staircase, leading to the kitchen. Olive immediately began a backward descent on her hands and knees.
“Do not play on the steps alone, Olive,” said Ben, gently. “Stay here and wait for me.”
Olive sat on the plank floor, drawing circles with her finger in the sticky, warm, red liquid that covered her legs. A bitter taste filled her mouth as she sucked on her fingers. She gagged.
“Mama,” the tiny voice repeated, sobbing.
Her father, Henderson, rushed in from the barn, pushing her aside on his way up the stairs.
“When did labor start? Why wasn’t I called sooner? Levi, fetch the doctor. Hurry. Ride hard,” Henderson barked at his third son as his calloused hands caressed his wife. “Polly, stay with me. You’ve done this seven times before. Look at me. Stay with me.”
Henderson lowered his head to hear his wife speak. “Where’s Olive?” A tear dropped onto her cheek.
“Don’t worry about the child. You need to save your energy.” Henderson squeezed Polly’s hand. Knowing it would take at least ten minutes for Levi to gallop four miles into Campbellsville and another twenty minutes for the doctor’s buggy to arrive, he asked anyway, “Where’s the damn doctor?”
“Tell the children I love them. Henderson, I love…” As Henderson moved closer to Polly, he stepped in front of the gap in the drapery, blocking the sun’s ray; the room went dark. With an expulsion of air, Polly’s voice stopped.
“No. Don’t. No! You mustn’t leave me!” Henderson buried his head in the pillow. He commanded a muffled, “Everyone, leave the room now. I need to be alone with her.”
The girls clutched each other while the older boys remained straight-faced and stoic. Salty tears dripped down Fred’s face, Polly and Henderson’s youngest boy. Reluctantly, all complied, leaving their father alone with their mother. Engrossed in their grief, no one saw Olive sneak past them and back into the bedroom.
The farmer stroked his wife’s sweat-drenched, curly blonde hair, his fingers catching in the tangles. His face streaked with tears, absorbed in grief as he gently closed her eyelids. They were married twenty-six years. She bore him seven healthy children—Ben, the oldest, was already twenty-five. The thought caused Henderson to bolt upright. The baby. What of the baby?
The quilt under which Polly lay was drenched in blood. Henderson carefully lifted back the bed coverings. He was met with the stench of excrement. The foulness penetrated his nose and mouth. Polly seemed to float in a pool of dark red jelly, polluted with black globules. The expelled fetus lay, lifeless, a mangled blob of flesh and slime, the umbilical cord wrapped around its neck. Henderson grabbed for his mouth, nearly vomiting at the sight. The infant was a boy.
“Papa?”
Henderson, feeling a tug at his trouser, looked down to see two tiny, outstretched hands, pleading for attention. Olive was too small to see the horrors he was subject to. His reddened face twitched at the child. Olive was supposed to be another boy. Instead, the boy lay motionless on the bed.
“Matilda, come get your sister.”
Nineteen-year-old Matilda wiped her nose on her sleeve before jumping at her father’s order. The remaining Westchester siblings waited outside their mother’s bedroom door, hugging, crying, and consoling each other.
“Yes, Father. Come, Olive, we have to leave.” Hurrying into the room, she reached for the child’s hand. Olive slapped at her sister, refusing to go.
“Papa, Mama!” Olive rubbed her eyes. Tears streaked her blood-stained face. She clutched at Henderson’s leg. “Papa, please. Up.” She begged with an urgency not understood by her young mind.
Henderson shook his leg in dismissal. Olive slid across the room in bewilderment. Stopping in the corner, she faded into the shadows and sobbed.
Ben’s wife, Bessie, reentered Polly’s bedroom and picked up Olive, smearing blood over her clean frock. Carrying Olive out into the hallway, she patted the girl’s back. “Now, now, honey. You come stay with Ben and Bessie tonight. Your Papa is busy. You can play with Nellie and Benny.”
Olive, kicking and wiggling, managed to escape from Bessie’s arms. Clomping forward, determined to reach her mother, she cried, “Mama!”
Her lip quivered as she ran toward the bedroom. Twelve-year-old brother Fred’s quick reflex foiled her re-entry. Clutching the child by the pinafore, he managed to divert her attention.
“Come on, Olive.” This time, she accepted Fred’s hand. Looking up into her brother’s face, she listened as he said, “Let’s go pick some wildflowers. Mama needs them.”
Shedding tears of his own, Fred led Olive down the flowing front staircase, across the expansive foyer, through the double doors, onto the porch, and outside to the flower garden.
“Freddy, why does Mama need flowers?” The tiny voice was barely audible.
Fred halted at the garden’s edge. His knees buckled as he fell to the ground. Grabbing Olive around the waist, he held tightly. Fred swallowed to wet his throat, but the words still cracked.
“Mama is now a beautiful angel. We’ll pick flowers for her to give to God as a present when she enters heaven.”


Links to Purchase Print Books
Link to Buy Becoming Olive W. (The Women of Campbell County Family Saga) Print Edition at Amazon

Links to Purchase eBooks
Link To Buy Becoming Olive W. (The Women of Campbell County Family Saga) On Amazon

Links to Author’s Social Media:
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Twitter
Instagram
LinkedIn
Goodreads

Author Bio:
Pharmacy to Fiction.
Writing as a second career. S. Lee Fisher, aka Dr. "P.", clinical pharmacist enjoyed a successful corporate career managing retrospective clinical programs for the PBM side of a Fortune 20 company.

Becoming Olive W is S. Lee Fisher’s second novel and the first book of her new The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga series. Book two in the series, Under the Grapevine, is expected to be published summer of 2021.

Fisher began writing about emotionally charged relationships as a tool to channel her personal grief of losing her father. Happily married to her husband of thirty-six years, she and Ralph live on the gulf coast of Florida.

Author Home Page Link



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A Poor Man’s Supper by Jim Gulledge
 


A Poor Man’s Supper by Jim Gulledge

In the North Carolina mountains two people, destined to love each other, are doomed to be apart.

Vancie Keller is trying to survive on her mother’s failing farm when her life is forever altered by the arrival of two men, Josiah Buckland and Jagger Hill.

One, she will love, the other she will marry. She has a secret neither of them know.

Orphaned as a teen, Josiah Buckland came down from the rugged mountains of North Carolina to try to find work and possibly a home. He didn’t expect to find the love of his life.

Jagger Hill has secrets of his own. When he comes to town and starts to rebuild, nobody knows him for who he really is, but people will soon learn. Some things cannot be kept hidden forever…

A powerful, heart-breaking tale of the tremendous consequences of our choices and actions, sprinkled with revelry in the natural world, faith, song and myth.


Targeted Age Group:: 18+
Heat/Violence Level: Heat Level 3 – PG-13

What Inspired You to Write Your Book?
I was attending the funeral of my aunt in South Carolina on a hot July day. While wiping sweat from my brow, a voice in my head said, "This is where the story begins." The book did not start on that particular day, but the compulsion to start did. Words began to appear on the page a few months later while I was on a trip to the North Carolina mountains.

How Did You Come up With Your Characters?
Some of my characters are based on real people from my life, especially my father and paternal grandmother. The main character is named for my grandmother. The villain strangely is based on a former minister. Others are amalgams of people I have known. Some just appeared.


Book Sample
Prologue

A red-tailed hawk rose on the currents of the afternoon thermals, gliding round and around the crown of the weather-beaten pine before resting upon an outstretched branch. From his perch, the bird looked out upon the vista that stretched before his keen eyes. Below him a rustle in the grass turned his attention from the heavens to the earth. A small cottontail emerged from its hiding and nibbled at wildflowers on the edge of the cliff. Before the hawk could muster its instincts to respond, another motion entered the scene just below the rabbit. The head of an Eastern diamondback rattlesnake emerged over the rim of the ravine and flattened out as it wound its way closer to its prey. The rabbit saw nothing and knew nothing until a flash, the sensation of warm fluid oozing into its cranium, and the stiffening of limbs and darkening of senses. The snake coiled in bliss around the twitching final pulsations of the ball of fur and fluids.
Its revelry, however, was short-lived. In another flash, a convulsion of pain interrupted the snake’s pleasures as piercing talons penetrated its flesh and lifted it skyward. Soon, the hawk sat upon his perch once again and tore the eyes from the stilled serpent. Had the bird cared to notice, at that moment a man descended from the peaks above and another wound his way up the rugged escarpment below. The blood lettings of men were about to play out again beneath the watchful eyes of the bird, but hawks are creatures of the air and take no notice of the affairs of men. That he would leave to the one who made them. Slowly, the raptor lifted and again rode the warm afternoon breezes, oblivious to all hungers but its own.


Links to Purchase Print Book version – Click links for book samples, reviews and to purchase
Buy A Poor Man’s Supper Print Edition at Amazon
Buy A Poor Man’s Supper at Barnes and Noble
Buy A Poor Man’s Supper at Books A Million

Links to Purchase eBook version – Click links for book samples, reviews and to purchase
Buy this eBook On Amazon


About the Author
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All information was provided by the author and not edited by us. This is so you get to know the author better.



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The Milkman: Book VI by Greg Buck
 


What would you do if somebody stole the thing you love most on this earth?Jesse and Raven had reached a delightful and celebratory time in their lives. Good friends, healthy children, strong incomes and happily married. Despite losing a beloved canine, they felt they were at the top of the pinnacle. Bodie and Christopher are developing into first-rate children and doing well scholastically.Horror strikes in the most unexpected manner from the most unexpected source, sending the Hardner family reeling in despair. A tortured soul with no regard for life has taken one of their members, trying to right a wrong cast upon him years before. Self-righteous indignation caused him to disregard the truth in his quest.A decision needed to be made, one that could put the whole family at risk. The wrong decision would mean Bodie and Christopher would be orphaned and raised by relatives, forever questioning that decision. With his childhood friend by his side, facing a relentlessly deflating experience with insurmountable odds, a last-ditch effort is made to recover the love of his life.

Targeted Age Group:: 14 and up

What Inspired You to Write Your Book?
Part of a continuing series.

How Did You Come up With Your Characters?
Different attributes from friends of mine with some added drama.


Links to Purchase Print Books
Link to Buy The Milkman: Book VI Print Edition at Amazon

Links to Purchase eBooks
Link To Buy The Milkman: Book VI On Amazon

Links to Author’s Social Media:
Facebook
LinkedIn
Goodreads

Author Bio:
Greg Buck (1966-) was born in Denver, Colorado and has always called Colorado his home. He graduated Metropolitan State University in Denver and has been a software engineer for over 29 years. Currently living in Westminster, Colorado with his wife and 3 dogs. Avid fly fisherman, fly tier and archer. "I believe the best cure for writer's block is a bottle of wine and the best thing about being an author is deciding on the direction a story takes."

Author Home Page Link



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