About Me

Was I only 5 when I gathered the neighborhood kids together (total of 3) and began directing fairy tales? I had this innate ability to land the lead in Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White while my cohorts were doomed to play sullied stepsisters, spindle-wielding witches and apple-bearing stepmothers. As I packed the fairy tales away for reading Pulitzer Prize plays and best selling literary works, it was my love for images, my affection for words and my adoration for the story that drew me from actress to director to writer. Captured in a world of words and driven to invite the reader on a redemptive journey, I am committed to explore the condition of humanity, assemble the puzzle pieces of plot and find a way to tell my tale.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

ESR 2012

Experiment Station Road now available from Kindle and Nook--or go directly to the distributor, Smashwords.com, set up a free account and load the book to wherever you read electronically!

The Rogue River Valley is meeting spring with its open embrace. The valley beckons me to interview vineyard owners who pioneered the transition from pear orchards to grapes, estate wines and tasting rooms. Research for book two in the Experiment Station Road Series--Benny Thorson Had a Brother. . .

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

The Book Description

 In 1962, twelve year old Ellen Merrill finds herself in the midst of a revelation: the townsfolk of Hayford, Oregon live with two sets of standards--one for the Anglos and one for the Mexicans. "It was the only time I ever heard from God. 'Prejudice demands an age of accountability--how old are you?' It was the weirdest thing. his voice sounded just like Johnny Cash, but his vocab reeked like someone studying way too hard for the SATs." Through the next decade of her life Ellen chases equality, and in spite of her parents and the heritage of a town's racism, she catches glimpses of justice.

Beneath the most successful pear industry in the nation, blight grows and plucks at the lives of the residents in the Rougue River Valley. Ellen's journey to expose the twisted mores of the quiet town links her to the migrant families. Through a spider web of orchard backroads, Ellen discovers a boarded up experiment station, formerly used to provide scientivic research to aid the orchard economy. She spies on the migrants' quarters adjoing the orchards. Befriended by three Mexican grannies, the abuelas,she meets a grandson Juan. Ellen imbeds herself in lies and deception to keep her secret life hidden from an intolerant family and town, while her understanding of humanity expands.

Juan and Ellen connect with union workers for Cesar Chavez, and Ellen arranges a covert meeting at the experiment station, inviting a Chavez spokeswoman to initiate the groundwork for a union. The boldness of Ellen's experimentation with an unfamiliar culture grows and in March of 1966, after Chavez announces his famous 340 mile march from Delano on behalf of the farm worker's union, Ellen and Juan join the marchers. 

Finally, her voice for la causa collides directly with the townsfolk and her commitment to marriage with Juan shakes a bigoted town, bringing felony charges against him that he did not commit and placing Ellen and Juan in a flight for their lives.
Experiment Station Road, a quirky but poignant coming-of-age story invites the reader through a decade of discovery with Ellen Merrill as she slams into community prejudice, advocates with Cesar Chavez and conceals a clandestine but sweet romance. Ellen's revelation is clear, the value of a solo voice lifted in a community of noise shakes up the world and allows the experiment to continue.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Watch for the novel!

Coming in August--the novel, Experiment Station Road, available on Kindle, Nook, I-Pad and most places you read electronically. Share your thoughts about the novel! I want to hear from you!