Here, in my Blog, I will report and editorialize on current domestic and world affairs and events that I feel have significant impacts relating to feminine equality, politics, foreign affairs, economics, humanitarianism (including flora and fauna), as well as ecological, environmental, and educational issues that seem important or critical to a better future for our country and the world, and why I think so. ~llaw
About Stories
In Stories, I will relate interesting and exciting segments from various chapters in my books or from personal experiences during my life. Those taken from my novels will be motivational tales inspired by a new breed of warrior wonder women, mostly of a wild and wily precocious and promiscuous independent nature coupled with unflinching courage, unwavering confidence and self-regard with a unique sense of values that, in some parallel world to our own, or maybe even in our own, will help to make this world a better place–a utopia of love, equality, openness and freedom where everyone can experience the felicity of life while communing in a united global world. ~llaw
About Books
In Books I will promote and update what is happening with my novels, both fully drafted and in progress, and where they stand in the process of iterative editing and publication. These books include an important fact-based American historical novel, “The Sweetwater Conspiracy”, concerning the 1889 murder of a young female homesteader by a vigilante lynch mob of wealthy Wyoming cattle barons.
Next is a series of six loosely related present-day feministic science fiction/fantasy pre-dystopian novels involving powerful young “demi-goddesses” and their disparate human recruits who take on the Great Patriarchy in wide-ranging efforts to save the world. The novels are collectively called “Sophy’s Way: Parallel Worlds of the Moon” with individual titles.
Also, I am diligently working on a new novel called “The Mormon Girl”, concerning the modern era religious patriarchy and how historical male-driven theological doctrine is socially, economically, and politically self-serving and how their beliefs dominate, diminish, and restrict one young Mormon girl’s struggles to pursue a life of happiness, equality and freedom in today’s anarchic world. ~llaw