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This short novel shares all the personal highs and lows of one B.C. teacher and her husband upon entering into retirement. It is a humorous look at elderly parent care, selling the family home, dealing with disgruntled siblings and estates, and suddenly finding yourselves alone together. It examines all the scary pitfalls of having too much time on your hands after working full-time since forever. Hopefully, everyone will see a little of themselves in this story, as we all must face the universality of life's inevitable phases. Will you laugh at yourself and make the most of it? Or will you…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This short novel shares all the personal highs and lows of one B.C. teacher and her husband upon entering into retirement. It is a humorous look at elderly parent care, selling the family home, dealing with disgruntled siblings and estates, and suddenly finding yourselves alone together. It examines all the scary pitfalls of having too much time on your hands after working full-time since forever. Hopefully, everyone will see a little of themselves in this story, as we all must face the universality of life's inevitable phases. Will you laugh at yourself and make the most of it? Or will you just shrivel up into the fetal position and cry? That is the dilemma we must all face as we approach age sixty.
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Autorenporträt
Naomi P Lane was born in England, but grew up in the suburbs of Vancouver, Canada, where she still resides. She's married to a wonderful man named Chris and they have one very spoiled rescue cat and two very nice adult children who live far away. She was a special education and French Immersion teacher for thirty years. Now, recently retired, she devotes most of her time to writing. She loves to take long nature walks, listen to world music, study languages, read, play guitar, or watch foreign crime shows on Netflix. She may even visit real human beings to share coffee, tea or food occasionally, although these sightings are rare. Her first novel, The Ordinary Life of Nadia Lewis, has just been released by Olympia Publishing of London. She also has a weekly blog called The Friday Blog, which you can follow at naomiplane.com.