A Christmas to Remember

Have you ever wished you could experience the joy and anticipation of Christmas on a daily basis? Consider this book a portal that can transport you away from the realities of life to a world where it is always Christmas. These stories of an ordinary family will have you laughing out loud and shedding a few tears. As the true meaning of Christmas is explored, as well as the idiosyncrasies of family holiday traditions, you will discover that there are always lessons to be learned and reasons to celebrate.

Book Cover: Food for Thought

Food For Thought

From the innocence of Cookie Monster to the intelligence of Aristotle, this collection of over 1,900 quotes will tickle your funny bone and expand your wisdom. Enjoy the delicious “mind candy” in these pages, which will make you laugh, touch your heart, challenge your thinking, make you wonder, and provide you with food for thought.

Too Much Heaven

Shortly after becoming a doctor, Chad Wagner injures his spinal cord in a plane crash that kills his parents. Unable to accept the fact that he will be confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life, Chad spends the next ten years researching a way to regenerate the damaged cells in his spinal cord. Through his research Chad discovers a way to not only control people’s health, but also their memories, and their very lives. He constantly battles with the moral decisions associated with his discovery. Should he use the treatment he created to heal himself? Should he save other people from pain and suffering but at what cost? Was he playing God? All of these questions must be answered when he is faced with the decision of whether to save the lives of two of his closet friends or keep his new treatment a secret and allow them to die a natural death.

Cancer Changes Everything

Whether you have been diagnosed with cancer or are the loved one of a cancer patient, you quickly realize that cancer changes everything. From your body, to your relationships, to your finances, to your spirituality, nothing will ever be the same.

Although the author experienced the cancer journeys of her father, brother, and sister, it wasn’t until her own diagnosis that she realized not only was God traveling with her on her cancer journey, but the entire community at the school at which she taught. Little did she know when the “travelers” reached their destinations, no one would ever be the same because cancer changes everything . . . if you let it.