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Book Details
About the Book
How can a young woman, Willow Ames, for whom time
has stood still for two years, understand all that has happened in her
absence? Appearing dramatically in the
chapel at the instance of her husband’s wedding (after a divorce on the grounds
of desertion) she unleashes a powerful and shocking chain of events. She had been a victim of a rare mental
condition, known to psychiatrists as Dissociative Fugue, which is occasioned by
a severe mental shock. Though she now
remembers her earlier life, she knows that two years are missing from her
memory.
In order to fill in those lost years, she must play
the sleuth to follow her own tracks, and those of her now remarried devious
husband, who apparently had compelling reasons to thwart her efforts. He demands she move out of town to
accommodate his new wife. A cousin,
Donna Whitcomb, assists Willow in her search for the lost years. They find she was living in another city,
where she had formed close friends, and a romantic relationship with Lewis
Tyler, a detective.
Tyler is searching for the murderer of a young woman
two years before. Both searches lead to
the same conclusion.
About the Author
Jean Kvavle, nee Wallace, was born in Orpington,
county Kent, England, then a quaint village, now a part of greater London. She
often revisits her native land and her relatives still living there. She now resides in a flowered cottage in the
Pacific Northwest. A lover of nature,
and the botanical world, she delights in gardening, and the growing of unusual
plants, fruits and berries. Her writing
betrays her tastes and her ease with nature.