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Until Jewel Westin met Rett Bardo, she would have considered herself a girl who walked the straight and narrow. Without question, the small-town preacher's daughter adopted the beliefs and morals of her Christian upbringing. But when Jewel violated her conscience and agreed to sing backup for Rett's band at a bar, it changed the trajectory of her future. With honeyed words, Rett lured her further from her family and godly values into a world of stardom shrouded in lies, deceit, and ultimate betrayal. As she rose to fame, the one who had vowed to love, honor, and cherish her became her greatest…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Until Jewel Westin met Rett Bardo, she would have considered herself a girl who walked the straight and narrow. Without question, the small-town preacher's daughter adopted the beliefs and morals of her Christian upbringing. But when Jewel violated her conscience and agreed to sing backup for Rett's band at a bar, it changed the trajectory of her future. With honeyed words, Rett lured her further from her family and godly values into a world of stardom shrouded in lies, deceit, and ultimate betrayal. As she rose to fame, the one who had vowed to love, honor, and cherish her became her greatest enemy. Under dire circumstances, Jewel summoned the courage to go home, only to find she did not run far enough. Disappointed and heartbroken, she ran further, becoming estranged from her family. When tragedy struck the Westin household, Jewel had to risk unveiling the biggest secret of her life to be there for her family. Would this be enough to reset the course of her life?
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Autorenporträt
Susan Sheppard (1955-2021) was a native West Virginian, with deep roots in Appalachia. Sheppard was the winner of a West Virginia Department of Culture & History's poetry fellowship, which is how she won her first computer. She was the first runner-up in the Poets & Writer's Maureen Egen Writer's Exchange for 2019 and traveled as a part of the "Women of Appalachia Spoken Word Series." She was "Black Dutch," meaning that she was descended from the less than 850 Shawnee Indians who remained east of the Mississippi River after the other Shawnee (during the "Trail of Tears" removal) were forced onto reservations out west in the 1830s. Susan, along with others in the Friend family, was a direct descendent of Shawnee Chief Big Thunder through his daughter, Bright Lightning, whose name was anglicized to "Anna Friend."