Historical Romance
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Professor Nathaniel Wesley’s hands trembled as he opened the letter from his wife, Kathryn—twenty-seven years after her death the night their ship sank.
Defying her parents’ disapproval, Nathaniel and Kathryn had married in secret, wed by the ship’s captain. They shared a single night together before tragedy struck. As icy waters claimed the Titanic, Nathaniel guided Kathryn into a lifeboat, then took command of another vessel packed with women and children. He never saw her again. After collapsing from exhaustion, he awoke aboard the Carpathia—rescued, but alone.
For months, he searched, eventually surrendering to the unbearable truth: Kathryn was gone.
But now—decades later—a letter postmarked from Halifax revealed what he had never dared hope. Kathryn had survived, rescued by a Canadian fishing trawler and carried to Nova Scotia, into a life far removed from the one they had planned.
Always in My Heart tells a poignant story of love lost and found—and the enduring hope that some bonds can never be broken.
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Lady Jane Noble suffered no dealings with commoners. Raised in the rigid hierarchy of 1830s England, she saw them as little more than background noise to her privileged life. So when William, a lowly stable boy, dared speak to her without invitation, she was scandalized—and furious.
But when William rescued her from a brazen kidnapping attempt, everything changed. Suddenly, thanks to her wealthy father's gratitude, the man she had scorned became her unlikely protector. Sent north for her safety, Jane traveled under William’s watchful eye, far from society, and even farther from the only life she had ever known.
Inspired by a family romance, Lady Jane blends wit, danger, and delightful surprises into a captivating historical love story readers won’t soon forget.
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When Rose Montgomery met with her wealthy uncle, childhood friend Edwin Haverston, and respected headmaster Angus Cunningham to discuss building a new school, long-buried hostilities resurfaced. The Cunningham and Montgomery clans had feuded for nearly two centuries, and though the feud had ended decades ago, Angus had not forgotten. Enraged, he vowed revenge and stormed out.
Six months later, the school burned to the ground, and Rose vanished. Abducted and sent to America as an indentured servant, Rose was soon purchased in Philadelphia by a widowed Quaker in need of a woman to help raise his two young children. In the unfamiliar world of the colonies, she found herself torn between bitterness and belonging, survival and purpose.
Two years later, Edwin found her and offered a chance to return to England as his wife. Faced with the choice between a life of comfort in high society or the quiet, hard-won existence she'd carved out in the New World, Rose had to decide where, and with whom, she truly belonged.
Set against the clash of cultures between the polished elegance of 1719 England and the raw promise of colonial America, Liberty Rose tells a story of love, resilience, and the fight for one woman’s freedom.
Nonfiction
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Echoes of the Criminal Mind offers writers an inside look at the psychology of real-life offenders—distilled into ten key traits that drive criminal thinking. Drawing from decades of firsthand experience teaching in prisons and conducting extensive research on criminal behavior, Merle Davenport equips storytellers with a research-based framework for building multidimensional villains.
Whether you're writing thrillers, mysteries, or character-driven dramas, this guide helps you move past the usual tropes and dig deeper into what truly motivates your antagonist. Because unforgettable villains don’t just challenge your hero—they challenge your readers, too.