Cover of Carpenter's Mermaid

Carpenter's Mermaid

by Unknown Author

5.0
(1 ratings)
2001New Concepts PubISBN 9781586084691

About this book

The last thing adventurer Dart Carpenter expected when he deliberately stranded himself on a Pacific islan was to find a naked "mermaid" washed up on the beach. The woman who called herself "Copper" couldn't recall how she fell overboard, but her dreams were filled with terror. After the two of them returned to civilization, she was confronted by the past. A shocking revelation shatters the idyllic love affair she had shared with Dart in their tropical paradise. When they meet again, the secret that Copper has kept from Dart for two years is in danger of exposure. But a more deadly danger forces her to beg for his help. Can she overcome Dart's angry suspicion and save the child she loves from the violent aftermath of an act so monstrous that her mind refuses to remember it?

Publication Details

Publisher
New Concepts Pub
Published
2001
ISBN
9781586084691

About Unknown Author

Daphne Clair de Jong decided to be a writer when she was eight years old and won her first literary prize for a school essay. Her first short story was published when she was sixteen and she's been writing and publishing ever since. Nowadays she earns her living from writing, something her well-meaning teachers and guidance counsellors warned her she would never achieve in New Zealand. Her short stories have appeared in many magazines and anthologies, and a collection of them was presented in Crossing the Bar, published by David Ling, where they garnered wide praise. In 1976, Daphne's first full-length romantic novel was published by Mills & Boon as Return to Love. Since then she has produced a steady output of romance set in New Zealand, occasionally Australia or on imaginary Pacific islands. As Laurey Bright she also writes for Silhouette Books. Her romances often appear on American stores' romance best-seller lists and she has been a Rita contest finalist, as well as winning and being placed in several other romance writing contests. Her other writing includes non-fiction, poetry and long historical fiction, She also is an active defender of the ideology of Feminists for Life, and she has written articles about it. Since then she has won other literary prizes both in her native New Zealand and other countries. These include the prestigious Katherine Mansfield Short Story Award, with Dying Light, a story about Alzheimer's Disease, which was filmed by Robyn Murphy Productions and shown at film festivals in several countries. (Starring Sara McLeod, Sam's wife in Lord of the Rings). Daphne is often asked to tutor courses in creative writing, and with Robyn Donald she teachs romance writing weekend courses in her home in the "winterless north" of in New Zealand. Daphne lives with her Netherlands-born husband in a farmlet, grazing livestock, growing their own fruit and vegetables and making their large home available to other writers as a centre for writers

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