Alaska Berry Fairies ~ Lizzie Scarlet
Author: Teresa Ascone
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
July 20, 2010
If you enjoyed The Berry Fairies of Alaska, you will love the second book in the series: Alaska Berry Fairies ~ Lizzie Scarlet.
Book Two is available at Pandemonium Bookstores, The Alaska Berry Fairy Boutique in Artic Rose Gallery, and Firefly Arts, 419 L Street!
Remember the Ice and Other Paradigm Shifts
Author: Bob Nicoll
Article contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
February 19, 2010
Looking for clarity, inspiration and motivation? How about some practical tools to achieve your dreams? If so, Bob Nicoll is your man, and Remember the Ice and Other Paradigm Shifts is your how-to manual.
Teresa Ascone, author of The Berry Fairies of Alaska and Alaska Berry Fairies ~ Lizzie Scarlet, will be signing books, top of the lift, at the Roundhouse Museum at Alyeska, noon - 4 PM Saturday August 21. Come by, meet Teresa and get your copy of her books!
The Panther Chronicles
Part 1 – The Black Stone
By Michael Kircher
Contributed to Make a Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
June 30, 2010
Thoughts on Gretchen Diemer’s new book of poems, Between Fire and Water, Ice and Sky
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
December 12, 2008
From the cover illustration suggesting ghostly tree branches against a stormy sky to the somber and thoughtful poems inside, Gretchen Diemer’s new book of poetry, Between Fire and Water, Ice and Sky, is an impressive work of art.
Animal Voices, Animal Guides
Dawn Baumann Brunke
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
December 20, 2009
Animal Voices, Animal Guides: Discover Your Deeper Self through Communication with Animals is a fascinating book by Dawn Baumann Brunke that explores the intriguing sphere of human/animal exchange. It beckons us to take a glimpse into the amazing world that hovers just beyond our consciousness.
The Fraternity: Alaskan and Russian Roulette by C. David Gleason
Contributed by Teresa Ascone
March 18, 2009
Trust Me: A Blueprint for Revolution
Author: C. David Gleason
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
April 25, 2010
C. David Gleason’s latest novel, Trust Me: A Blueprint for Revolution, takes up where his previous book, The Fraternity: Alaskan and Russian Roulette, leaves off, spiced with the added twist of his glimpse into America’s economic and political future. Gleason plows into the highest circles of world power as he creates the complicated minefield that is tomorrow’s field of play.
Journey to a Dream
Author Mary T. Lovel
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
January 19, 2010
Before ATVs, snow machines or cell phones were common conveniences to ease the hardships of homesteading, the Lovel family—Clyde, his wife Mary and their four children—embarked upon the biggest challenge of their lives. Mary Lovel tells their incredible story in Journey to a Dream.
My Life in Alaska So Far by June A. Robinette
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
June 15, 2009
June Robinette’s autobiography, packed with adventure, tragedy, hardship and humor, is told in a direct narrative style that holds our attention right to the book’s end.
Why Alaska? Life on the Last Frontier
A Collaboration by C. David Gleason and DeAnn M. Gleason
Contributed to Make A Scene by Teresa Ascone
A Knight Well Spent
Author: Jackie ivie
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
March 24, 2010
Finding Alaska - The Life and Art of Shannon Cartwright by Shannon Cartwright
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
November 15, 2009
Pythagoras Eagle & the Music of the Spheres by Anne Carse Nolting
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
May 20, 2009
To Serve and Protect by Wayne L. Vance
Contributed to Make A Scene Magazine by Teresa Ascone
May 21, 2010
U-Tapao by Wayne L. Vance
Contributed by Teresa Ascone
U-Tapao, Wayne Vance’s gripping account of life in a 1960s Thailand combat zone, paints a vivid picture of a group of young men who find themselves in harm’s way, confronting the cruel capriciousness of war. This military crew — part college fraternity, part gang of mischief-makers — works on the flight line loading huge weapons onto the B52s that bombed Vietnam: a job fraught with peril, spontaneous acts of courage and sudden sacrifice.
I'm thrilled to receive this blurb from my old friend and mentor, Ann Chandonnet: