In the Shadow of the White Rose

Fiction & Literature, Religious, Historical
Cover of the book In the Shadow of the White Rose by Wanda Luttrell, Wanda Luttrell
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Wanda Luttrell ISBN: 9781301459643
Publisher: Wanda Luttrell Publication: February 28, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Wanda Luttrell
ISBN: 9781301459643
Publisher: Wanda Luttrell
Publication: February 28, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

“I am losing my mind!” Amanda Farris whispered. But not even insanity could explain how she had dreamed, or imagined, three children playing in the creek whose names she later discovered on a gravestone in a nearby country churchyard. Stranger still, they were the children of the people who had once owned the land she and her husband, Tom, had bought and on which they were building a house. Or perhaps rebuilding would be a better term for it, since Amanda insisted the plans for her new house exactly follow the image of a weathered gray house she had seen the day she discovered this remote site on Deserter’s Creek. The county clerk insisted that the house she had envisioned had burned to the ground over fifty years ago, but Amanda knew she had seen it, and it had beckoned to her, the homeless orphan, as no house ever had.
Amanda came to believe the former owner of the house was showing her scenes from the past, all the way back to the time of the Civil War. Was the spirit of Lucretia Adams also trying to possess Amanda’s body? What ungodly deed of revenge did she want Amanda to complete for her? And how could Amanda defeat this restless spirit that should have found peace one hundred years ago?

What lay in the shadow of the white rose? A dream house or a house of horrors?

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

“I am losing my mind!” Amanda Farris whispered. But not even insanity could explain how she had dreamed, or imagined, three children playing in the creek whose names she later discovered on a gravestone in a nearby country churchyard. Stranger still, they were the children of the people who had once owned the land she and her husband, Tom, had bought and on which they were building a house. Or perhaps rebuilding would be a better term for it, since Amanda insisted the plans for her new house exactly follow the image of a weathered gray house she had seen the day she discovered this remote site on Deserter’s Creek. The county clerk insisted that the house she had envisioned had burned to the ground over fifty years ago, but Amanda knew she had seen it, and it had beckoned to her, the homeless orphan, as no house ever had.
Amanda came to believe the former owner of the house was showing her scenes from the past, all the way back to the time of the Civil War. Was the spirit of Lucretia Adams also trying to possess Amanda’s body? What ungodly deed of revenge did she want Amanda to complete for her? And how could Amanda defeat this restless spirit that should have found peace one hundred years ago?

What lay in the shadow of the white rose? A dream house or a house of horrors?

More books from Historical

Cover of the book Marching With Caesar-Antony and Cleopatra: Part II-Cleopatra by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book The Boy Who Said No by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book La Saga dei 3 Kim by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Winston S. Churchill: Young Statesman, 1901–1914 by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Le pavillon rouge by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book The Long Song by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Out of the Dust by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Der Löwe erwacht by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book The Colour of power by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Pagan by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Miss Dimple Picks a Peck of Trouble by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Old Country Life by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Le heros du fossoyeur by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book A Peaceful Life by Wanda Luttrell
Cover of the book Justice, Please! by Wanda Luttrell
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy