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Fighting against the images, she could not see their faces, nor could she determine the time, the place, or what was responsible for the event. "Who are those people?" she thought. Where are they going? What was to become of them?" she asked herself. "How can I, a young girl, convince them of what is coming and what must be done?" All this she pondered and was filled with anxiety. Cassandra Wright is a young girl living in Maine at the turn of the twentieth century. She has dreams of a pending disaster-a mystery that needs to be solved. Her visions transport her through family history from the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Fighting against the images, she could not see their faces, nor could she determine the time, the place, or what was responsible for the event. "Who are those people?" she thought. Where are they going? What was to become of them?" she asked herself. "How can I, a young girl, convince them of what is coming and what must be done?" All this she pondered and was filled with anxiety. Cassandra Wright is a young girl living in Maine at the turn of the twentieth century. She has dreams of a pending disaster-a mystery that needs to be solved. Her visions transport her through family history from the American Revolution, her Irish ancestors and their journey to America, the war between the states, life in Maine, and visions far into her future. Her story is about love-love of family, love of heritage, love of Maine and its people. There is a mystery to be solved, and Cassie must find the answers.
Autorenporträt
Jean Marie Ivey was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1938. She moved with her family to Hyde Park, New York, in 1964, then Shepherdstown, West Virginia, for six short months and finally moved to Maine in 1966 to live and raise her family in and near Acadia National Park. The Road to Bluebeard's Castle is the story ending in 1978 of the first forty years of her life. In the early eighties, she began a new life, a thirty-three-year career at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine. During that time, she also pursued a part-time career in photography, freelance writing, and illustrating, coauthoring the book Maine Paradise with Russell D. Butcher published by Viking Press in 1972. In 1993, she cowrote and co-illustrated Facts and Fancy: Acadia National Park, Mount Desert Island; and in 2018, Jean Marie, along with her daughter Donna Marie Lee, published a new and revised edition of Facts and Fancy that contains many fine points pertaining to the history and essence of Mount Desert Island in Acadia. Although she loves to write, paint, sing, and garden, her greatest love is her family: seven children, fourteen grandchildren, and three great-grandsons. In 2016, she published her first novel Cassie's Dream that grew out of that love. The novel was an enthralling voyage through time as explored through the dreams and visions of the main character, Cassandra Wright. Her next novel The Vine and the Cross is a story of romance and mysticism. Jean Marie's life has been full of music, art, mysticism, influence of ancestry, history, and a deep and abiding love of Maine.