Michael lee west biography of martin
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Michael A Appreciate Jr.
Lunning Interment Chapel
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Gone with a Handsomer Man
“Gone with a Handsomer Man is fun, funny, and fabulous!”Janet Evanovich
Take one out-of-work pastry chef . . .
Teeny Templeton believes that her life is finally on track. She’s getting married, she’s baking her own wedding cake, and she’s leaving her troubled past behind. And then? She finds her fiancé playing naked badminton with a couple of gorgeous, skanky chicks.
Add a whole lot of trouble . . .
Needless to say, the wedding is off. Adding insult to injury, her fiancé slaps a restraining order on her. When he’s found dead a few days later, all fingers point to Teeny.
And stir like crazy!
Her only hope is through an old boyfriend-turned-lawyer, the guy who broke her heart a decade ago. But dredging up the past brings more than skeletons out of the closet, and Teeny doesn’t know who she can trust. With evidence mounting and the heat turning up, Teeny must also figure out where to live, how to support herself, how to clear her name, and how to protect her heart.
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BOOK REVIEW : Difficult Women Live by Nurturing Their Own Worlds : CRAZY LADIES<i> by Michael Lee West</i> Long Street Press, Marietta, Ga.$ pages.
Statistics show that when a man’s wife dies, quite soon he often dies too. But when a woman’s husband dies, she re-upholsters the couch, throws out his golf clubs and goes on a cruise.
Does this mean women are more hard-hearted? Maybe. Or maybe it means that women, besides being “nurturing,” carry on a lifestyle that is, in itself, nurturing.
Irving Wallace, of all people, noticed it long ago in his first novel, “The Sins of Philip Flemming.” When Philip Flemming leaves his wife, she moves through the house, doing the laundry and making the beds. Philip may have left, but she still has the house, and by extension, her own life.
In “Crazy Ladies,” Miss Gussie, only 18, a bride with a brand new baby, struggles with poverty, worry, the Great Depression. The year is The place, a Southern town called Crystal Falls. Miss Gussie knows the ground she lives on utterly; her people have owned this land since the beginning of recorded time.
On Page 3 or 4, a mad rapist-killer comes into her kitchen, but nobody messes with Miss Gussie’s kitchen. She thrusts a knife into the killer’s guts. Charlie, Gussie’s husband, is shock