Her Sister
by Karen
Rose Smith
Clare's
little sister, Lynnie, was abducted twenty-seven years ago. Now the retired detective who has never been
able to let go of the cold case has a lead.
Lynnie could be alive!
Clare's
neighbor, Joe, an occasional friend until now, gives her support and...wants
more than friendship.
Clare's
mom, Amanda, thrown together again with her ex-husband into a crisis discovers
forgotten love beneath the regrets.
Clare's
sixteen year old daughter, Shara, decides to run from her problems instead of
facing them.
A
devoted sister, a turmoiled mom and a rebellious daughter find their way back
to each other in this contemporary ebook about three generations who discover
love can knit their family back together again.
EXCERPT
Where is
Lynnie? Where did she go?
In her mind,
five-year-old Clare Thaddeus called to her little sister—Come back,
Lynnie. Please come back.
The huge policeman
crouched down in front of Clare's mother at the sofa and said in a deep, slow
voice, "Mrs. Thaddeus, I know you're terribly upset. But I need details. We've got an hour before daylight. If your daughter wandered outside—"
Clare's
father, who'd been talking to another man in blue, glanced at her, and Clare
huddled down deeper into the big green armchair. Her dad didn't come to her but rather went to
her mom, sank down beside her and wrapped his arm around her. Then he spoke to the officer. "Our daughter, Lynnie, is three. She would never go outside into the dark on
her own."
"Tell us
again where you were last night," the policeman demanded in a not-so-nice
voice.
"I
worked late, preparing a brief."
"Until
five a.m.?"
"Yes,
until five a.m. As I told you, I always
check the girls' rooms before turning in.
Lynnie wasn't in her bed. I woke
my wife. We looked through the whole
house and then we called you."
Clare had
been sleeping in her brand new room.
They'd moved in here—she studied her hand and counted her fingers—five
days ago. Boxes were still stacked down
here and upstairs. The house was
okay. There were more rooms for her and
Lynnie to play hide and seek. But she
didn't like being alone in her own room at night. She'd liked it better when she and Lynnie had
slept in the same room. She was supposed
to watch her sister. She was always
supposed to look out for Lynnie. That's
what big sisters did.
Amazon BUY
link: http://www.amazon.com/Her-Sister-Search-Love-ebook/dp/B00BFFJ79Y/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1367965316&sr=1-1&keywords=Her+sister
Karen Rose Smith, Author |
Award-winning
author Karen Rose Smith was born in Pennsylvania. Although she was an only
child, she remembers the bonds of an extended family. Since her father came
from a family of ten and her mother, a family of seven, there were always
aunts, uncles and cousins visiting on weekends. Family is a strong theme in her
books and she suspects her childhood memories are the reason.
In college,
Karen began writing poetry and also met her husband to be. They both began
married life as teachers, but when their son was born, Karen decided to try her
hand at a home-decorating business. She
returned to teaching for a while but changes in her life led her to writing
romance fiction. Now she writes romances and mysteries full time. She has sold
82 novels since 1991.
Presently,
she is hard at work on a three-book series for Harlequin Special Edition as
well as a three-book mystery series for Kensington.
Married to
her college sweetheart since 1971, believing in the power of love and
commitment, she envisions herself writing relationship novels, both romance and
mystery, for a long time to come!
Twitter: https://twitter.com/karenrosesmith
Newsletter: http://karenrosesmith-ezine.blogspot.com/
Thanks for stopping by!
16 comments:
Caroline--Thanks so much for hosting me on A Writer's Life. It's a pleasure to be here. I hope to chat with readers today about HER SISTER and anything else that they are interested in! I'd like to start out with a question for your blog readers. What time of the year do you read most? Is it a pastime for vacations or for when you are at home?
KRS
I think I read the most in the summer since I have time off to devote to a good book but there is also something to be said about curling up on a cold winter night with a good book
fencingromein at hotmail dot com
Sounds like a great story, I can't wait to read it.
Kit3247(at)aol(dot)com
HER SISTER sounds like a fascinating book and I am eager to read it. Thanks for visiting today.
As for reading, I read all the time, but more between writing my own books. Sometimes I take a few days break and read one book after another to get my reading fix, then get back to work.
I listen to lots of audiobooks. I have fibromyalgia which affects my eyes and I find in audiobooks a way to rest them yet still do research or just relax. Especially when I have insomnia! :)
Caroline--I use reading or listening to a book as a reward for writing! That helps me finish my page quota for the day.
Ingeborg or Kit--I hope you enjoy it.
Shannon--I probably read the most in January--after the holiday when winter is setting in.
What an extremely traumatic thing to lose your sister! I hope it turns out to have a HEA!
andralynn7 AT gmail DOT com
Thank you for hosting
What a wrenching excerpt. Poor Clare and her parents. I'm intrigued to find out what happened to Lynnie.
I'm a librarian and I read all year round. I read a lot of non-fiction, but in the summer, I do add on a lot more fiction--often light, fluffy, "beach read" stuff.
catherinelee100 at gmail dot com
Andra--I can't gve away the ending! On the other hand, I try to satisfy my readers. :)
Another great subject brought up by Catherine. Do your reading tastes change from season to season? Do you like to read a Christmas story at Christmas or will you pick one up anytime of the year?
Thank you, this sounds like a really good read and something I would buy.
Sounds like a great read -- suspense, mystery, romance. And, I can read Christmas books any time of the year.
Thanks to everyone who stopped in today.
Karen:
This sounds like a heart wrenching story. What sparked the idea for this story? Do you have sisters? Just curious where authors get their ideas. As for reading, I read everyday but I'd say I read less in spring because I spend some time outside in the garden.
rubypjohnson(at)gmail(dot)com
Thanks for the excerpt. This sounds like a really good story...and a tearjerker.
kareninnc at gmail dot com
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