Let's get to know Marilyn
Marilyn Kaye Weimer
Marilyn Kaye Weimer
Watercolor
Artist and Fiction Author
Marilyn
completed a three year Famous Artist Course. She studied commercial art at the
Kansas University and completed her Associate of Arts with a degree in design
at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, CA. in 1987 where she first began
writing.
A
member of the Romance Writers of America for five years, member of San Diego
and Riverside, CA and Arizona RWA organizations and three critique groups
helped her to learn and improve her writing skills. A continued writing effort
of various courses and contests is ongoing.
Marilyn won an honorable mention award
for a watercolor landscape in the Albrecht Kemper Museum of Art in the 2002
membership art show. Her watercolor landscape won first place in the 2010
Federated Garden Clubs of Missouri, Inc. People’s Choice Award held in St.
Louis, MO.
Marilyn
teaches both watercolor and pastel mediums. A recent member of St Joseph
Writer’s Guild and Glass Eye Gallery in St Joseph, MO
Jerry Pruitt loves his tiny home town so much that he is trying to bring it back to life by renovating and reopening some of its businesses. But the disappearance of a young woman and her grandmother and the strange circumstances surrounding the event and his possible part in it begin to consume Jerry and threaten to undermine his dreams for the town, his marriage and even his sanity.
Pick up your copy of the book here.
Snippet Time!
"Something unusual is going on, but what? He stares harder. There. Again. His heart beats faster. His damp feet are colder. The humidity, perspiration and a slight breeze cause a chill. He sees the flash again. This is not my imagination, he tells himself. Those lights are not from the construction site. Oil riggers use continuous spots or motion detectors, not vacillating or movable lights. Goose bumps cover Jerry's arms. Chilled, he knows he should go into the house but he doesn't want to miss the next flash. Again the light splashes against the horizon. The colors change, first blue, to green, then yellow. The lights flash and disappear."
"Something unusual is going on, but what? He stares harder. There. Again. His heart beats faster. His damp feet are colder. The humidity, perspiration and a slight breeze cause a chill. He sees the flash again. This is not my imagination, he tells himself. Those lights are not from the construction site. Oil riggers use continuous spots or motion detectors, not vacillating or movable lights. Goose bumps cover Jerry's arms. Chilled, he knows he should go into the house but he doesn't want to miss the next flash. Again the light splashes against the horizon. The colors change, first blue, to green, then yellow. The lights flash and disappear."
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