Because of the 6 weeks of Hurricane Hell we lived through in late summer 2004 when we lived in Jacksonville, FL, I donate 20% of all royalties received from the sale of Beneath the Morvan Moon (e-book and trade paperback) and Cellfish Ways to the American Red Cross's Disaster Relief Fund. Watching the Red Cross in action, an organization run primarily on donations and staffed mainly with volunteers...humbling. Thank heaven for these angels on earth!

When Gretchen Lauterbach’s grandmother gives her a map marked with two Xs, it leads not to buried treasure, but to secrets buried Beneath the Morvan Moon.


ISBN 1 413711782
$21.95 from Amazon.com  Barnes & Noble Books-a-Million
$18.95 directly from the publisher, PublishAmerica


Available in these Ebook formats from Writers Exchange E-Publishing:
PDF, PDB (Palm), RTF, HTML, LIT (Microsoft Reader), PRC (Unencrypted Mobipocket)
 

(The ebook version is basically the same as the print version, except the secrets harbored by the Lauterbach family are just a tad darker...)
$3.95 (download)
$9.95 +postage ( CD)


A cell phone argument with her ex sparks an ill-fated encounter between Brenda Lamm and a stranger --one determined to teach her more than just proper phone etiquette. Brenda would be wise to learn her lesson and change her Cellfish Ways...before it proves the death of her.

#2 Best Selling Dollar Download 2004
Finalist and Special H.M. 2003 New Century Writers Award

ISBN 1-59080-339-6
$1 PDF download from Echelon Press
OR
Not comfortable downloading an ebook?
Email me (using the contact button at left) to request a print version.
Your cost? Still just $1! (plus postage)


In Beneath the Morvan Moon, Zachary Tate deals in unusual antiquities, ones that possess certain powers. It’s actually a cloak made of wolf skin that brings him to the tiny village of Brevard in the Burgundy region of France, but while there he stumbles across an odd clock. He’s sure it was made by Hohbert Wilmod, a German horologist rumored to have fashioned a timepiece that signals the coming of Death. “The Clockmaker” is the story of how Hohbert Wilmod made the clock…and why.

49 cents from Amazon.com


R.I.P.

Unfortunately Twisted Shift, the publisher who published The Hammerhead, went out of business in mid-2007. But I liked the cover and wanted to keep it on my site.


Beachgoers are being mysteriously attacked, sand dollars are suddenly in plentiful supply, and there’s a shark with a debt to repay. Sadie’s strolls at the beach have never been this eventuful!


2nd Place in the 2005 LRH Memorial Fiction Contest