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One night, an intruder wakes Jenny as he searches for the deed to a mine he believes belongs to him. Jenny and her housekeeper, Rachel, start a thorough search of the attic at Brambles, her family home, for any clue as to whether a mine exists. Strangely, a wing commander named James Williams arrives unexpectedly with a large cheque, stating the amount is her father's share for the sale of the mine they jointly owned.Jenny has no knowledge of a mine nor of James Williams. Oddly, James is unaware that Jenny's father has died. During a continued search for evidence of the mine, Jenny discovers what appears to be a secret life led by her father. Having come across an intriguing photograph, she sets off with Piers, her best friend and solicitor, to try to learn about the existence of any mine and the significance the photo has to her family. Thus begins a sequence of terrible events in A Tale of Murder and Mystery.Born in Gravesend, Kent, during World War II, Valerie Baxter, age 75, now resides in a small village in rural Suffolk with her husband of 56 years. This is her third novel.
Semi-autobiographical, Valerie Baxter writes of a religious woman who marries an atheist in the action-packed romance novel My Precious Sunbeam.Alice was born during World War II in Gravesend, Kent, England, where she is raised, nurtured, and deeply loved by her maternal grandparents. Brought up in the Salvation Army faith, her dream is to become an officer with her own corps and to do missionary work overseas.After a broken relationship with Carl, who Alice hoped to marry and work side by side as officers, she moves to London and becomes a commissioned officer. There she unexpectedly meets Carl again and they marry. Eventually the couple journey to the Sudan as missionaries. But Carl leaves Alice when he falls for another woman, even though Alice is pregnant with their first child.Alice’s faith has been sorely tested, turning her away from religion. It takes a reunion with James, a young doctor who worked with her at the medical mission in Sudan to bring Christianity back into her life. Although James is an atheist, his love for Alice draws him into missionary work, this time in Zambia, where the now married couple live.A retired physician’s assistant, Valerie Baxter was born in 1942 in Gravesend, Kent, where the Mayflower docked on its way to the Americas whilst carrying the Pilgrim Fathers. Gravesend is situated on the River Thames and the Indian Princess Pocahontas is buried there. The author was inspired to write this story because of her admiration of the work carried out by the Salvation Army and by missionaries everywhere. Her first book was titled Sigmund.Publisher’s website: http://sbprabooks.com/ValerieBaxter
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