Past visitors to our website may have noticed some updates to the layout. The most prominent change is the removal of the header menu, which has been replaced by a floating icon on the right side of the screen. Access to housekeeping items is now provided through the fixed footer menu. Furthermore, the Sitemap has been visually altered to improve readability. We hope these modifications enhance the site’s visibility on all devices, particularly smartphones. The Disclosure of Material Connection panel has been removed from the bottom of the book pages. Below the Pricing Table, you can click on the § link for complete details. This information has also been added […]
Continue readingCover update
The Man Who Would Cheat At Cards has received an update to the cover. This reflects the book being the first in the Roger Harper Series. Future purchases will reflect this change.
Continue readingDog Walking
Neither snow nor rain, heat or cold,
will stop my dog from being bold.
Each day a walk he does require.
Even though I may desire
to stay at home and rest my limbs …
Continue readingFrom narrating short stories to eighty-thousand-word novels
I have three daughters. As children, I used to tell them bedtime stories, which I made up as I went along. They included tales about fairies, dragons, or things that go bump in the night…
Continue readingRoger Harper • Book Four
At the end of book three, we learn that Julia Harper has inherited property near Port Douglas, British Columbia. At the pleading of her son, Oliver, and his cousin, Spencer, she and her husband agree to visit the property before the start of the school term.
Continue readingShort Stories
Available as eBook and Paperback (coffee table edition). Both contain 33 colored illustrations.
Continue readingTime To Go Back
Fifty-five years ago, I boarded a train that would take me away from home. Backpack slung over my shoulder, suitcase trundling behind, I was off to university. Now it was time to return.
Taking a window seat, I watched the countryside slip by. Quickly becoming a blur, it reminded me of the speed reading technique I had adopted while scanning academic articles on theoretical physics. One came to mind where the author professed time travel to be possible. I showed him. My eloquent math equations put such nonsense to rest …
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