The best way to tell you about me is to share the synopsis from my book.
Visit me at: www.mzmarieantionette.com
View My Book Trailer Its WONDERFUL! & sign my Guest Book
How do you think you would you feel if as a child you were told that you were put up for adoption? Yet the only reason why you remained with natural family is...
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The best way to tell you about me is to share the synopsis from my book.
Visit me at: www.mzmarieantionette.com
View My Book Trailer Its WONDERFUL! & sign my Guest Book
How do you think you would you feel if as a child you were told that you were put up for adoption? Yet the only reason why you remained with natural family is because the adopting parents didn’t show. How would you feel if you were told your father didn’t want to claim you, said you weren’t his and for the first six months of your life you lived with extended family member away from your birth mother? What effects do you think you would have suffered if any, if as a child you were introduced to a variety of your mother’s male associates who had nothing but ill intentions for the both of you and robbed you of your innocence? If the lead role in your home and your life was your grandmother yet you yearned for male affection. Do you believe you would have fell trap to peer-pressure and the indulgence of sex and drugs at an early age, before you were a teen? If you were of one ethnic group and your friends were of another? How would you have dealt with the daily ridicule, name calling and fist-fights inflicted upon you by your own kind because of it? How would you have dealt with the many transitions teens have to endure, the violation of your right to say NO, a user for a step-parent and step-sisters who seemingly took your place and pushed you out the door? What if your nana moved and you couldn’t tag along? How about if after that, you resorted to dealing drugs and spending nights out with different associates (male), just to avoid the drama at home. Then fell victim to the hands of an abusive lover who you fell deeply in love with. Would you endure the physical and emotional abuse or would you go? How about if this person took care of you, provided for you and gave you a child? Then betrayed you, accused you and deserted you and your son? Would you recover or would you go down hill? What if someone came along and saved you, lifted up your spirits, restored your smile and your glow. Would you trust them, would you love them unconditionally? What if they ended up causing you emotional stress as well, cheated on you, used you and then cost you your lively-hood? Left you carrying child and no support? How do you think a series of events would affect you in the long run? A Girl Named Job addresses all of these issues, and provides wise insight on how to deal and cope. The rundown of this biography is simple. Circumstances don’t control you, you control your circumstances. After having suffered countless losses, heartbreaks and the betrayal of loved ones. The author clearly illustrates how faith or lack of can play a huge role in one’s survival or demise. Unemployment, DNA test and repeat charges of felony offenses were only stepping stones in this young woman’s path and she used them accordingly to pull herself and her children up to a better quality of life. There are plenty of situations and plagues that hinder us all from growing and improving our way of life and A Girl Named Job addresses quite a few. Adversity can be one’s greatest ally if you are smart enough to use it for that purpose. A Girl Named Job is proof that trouble don’t last always and unconditional love and acceptance starts with the one in the mirror!
“If I had the opportunity to do it all again, I don’t believe I’d change one thing. I am a better person because of what I have endured and “We call those who endured blest!...”
Contact me at:
www.mzmarieantionette.com
www.myspace.com/mzmarieantionette
Mollyohwrg@yahoo.com
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