![]() ![]() I am also thrilled to be moving into contemporary fiction in the near future. My subsequent novels, Across the Winding River and The School for German Brides largely delve into the personal nature of war and the people who are forever changed by it. ![]() Ruby remains one of my favorite heroines. Girls on the Line, the story of the intrepid women who served as phone operators in World War One was another story I was thrilled to bring to the page. Daughters of the Night Sky was a complete departure from my earlier works, but the stories of the long-forgotten female pilots on the Russian front in World War Two deserved to be told. Since Promised, and its little sister Duty to the Crown, I’ve moved forward in time. More importantly, I knew that after thirty-three years of life, seven years of marriage, and two children, I finally had the life experience to tell it. I felt (and feel) it was a story the world needed to hear. I dabbled in the world of the short story for a long time, until I finally sat down one fateful February day and decided that my beloved short story, “Days of Plenty” deserved to become a novel. From even my earliest years, I loved jotting down stories and really, really bad poetry. ![]()
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