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You won't find wilderness places on a road map; however you can recognize them after you've lived through a few of them during your own life's travel. With a dash of hindsight and a bag of developed faith, you will be more able to see your growth and development as you move from one place to another. This book is a series of three layouts, one story at a time, details of different life problems I searched answers for. The suspect subjects are the typical, health, finances, depression, rejection, responsibility, expectations, and the list goes on.

Produktbeschreibung
You won't find wilderness places on a road map; however you can recognize them after you've lived through a few of them during your own life's travel. With a dash of hindsight and a bag of developed faith, you will be more able to see your growth and development as you move from one place to another. This book is a series of three layouts, one story at a time, details of different life problems I searched answers for. The suspect subjects are the typical, health, finances, depression, rejection, responsibility, expectations, and the list goes on.
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Autorenporträt
Marche Hilton Singleton is an African American activist, published author, of prose and poetry, and a public speaker. She fell in love with words early in life and attempted to turn them into something that matter. Her writings focus on the daily bread of life. That covers many aspects of the human existence and condition. An upbringing in a Jim Crow South of the fifties molded her reality, but the love of a close knit Black community helped to give way to happy endings. She was raised by her mother's oldest sister whose father was Irish and had the joy of her grandmother's love. Her skin shined with the hue of the blue/black that's found among the Sudanese people of Africa. Her father was a rare item in her life and she would learn later that his father had arrived in the US by way of Trinidad. Life lessons taught her that no matter how much of a hodgepodge of blood ran in her veins, she would be her grandmother's child, live life and report it accordingly. Religion played an important role in her childhood, but as she aged it would lean more towards God and less towards the many interpretations of the written word delivered by the church. As an eternal optimist, she delivers her many stories with honesty and concludes her sentences with a dash of hope that leaves the reader willing to start the next story.