http://deberryandgrant.com
http://twomindsfull.blogspot.com Come on by.
WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU
"I really thought I had a handle on life -- then it broke off."
Opinionated, straight-talking, and witty, Tee is a fly forty-something. Divorced since her daughter, Amber, was young, Tee has been "handling her...
more »
http://deberryandgrant.com
http://twomindsfull.blogspot.com Come on by.
WHAT DOESN'T KILL YOU
"I really thought I had a handle on life -- then it broke off."
Opinionated, straight-talking, and witty, Tee is a fly forty-something. Divorced since her daughter, Amber, was young, Tee has been "handling her business," supporting herself after her would-be songwriter husband took off for L.A., and she's done all right. Organized, responsible, hardworking, and loyal, Tee went from being the first employee of a start-up purveyor of organic lotions to the right hand of the president of what became a major player in the home and personal fragrance market.
But then everything changes. First, she's outplaced from her longtime job and doesn't tell anyone. For the first time in twenty-five years, Tee doesn't know who she is or what she's going to do every day. Deep in denial, she continues to live her life as if nothing has changed. After a series of financial mistakes, miscalculations, and missteps compound her already shaky situation, she's soon teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. That's when Tee decides that it's time for her to wake up and face reality.
Beyond "making money," Tee never really decided what she wanted to do with her life. Then she just stopped thinking about it and invested her hopes in someone else's dream. Now it's her chance to invest in herself. Can she step out on faith to follow her own dream?
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With five novels to their credit, Virginia DeBerry and Donna Grant, best friends for 25 years, have turned a friendship into the most successful and enduring writing collaboration in African American fiction.
In 1997 TRYIN' TO SLEEP IN THE BED YOU MADE, was a critical success, an Essence Bestseller and won the Merit Award for Fiction from the Black Caucus of the American Library Association, as well as the 1998 Book of the Year Award from the Blackboard Bestseller List/African American Booksellers Conference-Book Expo America. More than that, it hit an emotional nerve with tens of thousands of readers from all over the world who continue to write to Virginia and Donna nine years after the book's publication.
FAR FROM THE TREE became a New York Times Bestseller and an Essence Bestseller.
BETTER THAN I KNOW MYSELF received two Open Book Awards, and was included on the Best African American Fiction lists of both Borders and WaldenBooks.
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