Richard Daybell

Richard Daybell

About

I have been a writer/editor for most of my adult life, working at various times for a public library, a multinational corporation, a university, and state government. My wife Linda and I also spent seven years as owners/chefs of Churchill House Inn, a nine-room country inn in central Vermont.

 My short stories and short humor have appeared in regional, national and international commercial publications including American Way and Hemispheres, the inflight magazines for American Airlines and United Airlines, The New York Times, Buffalo Spree, Salt Lake City Magazine, and Tampa Tribune Fiction Quarterly as well as such literary magazines as Rosebud and Dandelion. 

 Linda and I are now living in Lincoln, Vermont, in the Green Mountains where summers are about as long as my attention span.  That’s why I write about the Caribbean.

Vital Temptations: A Heart's Betrayal

Vital Temptations: A Heart's Betrayal

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Description

<p>Dr. Bethany McNeal is living her dream as a pediatric resident in one of the most sought-after medical centers in Seattle. Beautiful and intelligent, she’s missing only one thing—love, which she put on hold to focus on her career after ending a tumultuous relationship. Everything changes when she meets Dr. Brent Anderson, a charming and handsome fellow resident. Despite her reservations, Bethany falls for Brent—hard. When she learns Brent is married several months into their relationship, she immediately breaks it off. After graduating residency and going their separate ways, Bethany tries to move on with another man—real estate broker and personal trainer Charles Blakely. But just when things get serious with Charles, she realizes she’s still in love with Brent, and she finds herself caught between the two men, facing a series of difficult decisions and harrowing events that will change her life forever. Will she be able to recover from the vital temptations that turned her perfect life upside down?</p>

Story Behind The Book

Reviews

I loved everything about Richard Daybell's Calypso--its Caribbean vibe, its linguistic rhythms, its gently swaying booze hounds, expats, and pirate wannnabes, all with wobbly teeter-totters where most people keep a conscience and a sense of ethics. Calypso is jammed with what the world needs more of--characters. But most especially, I liked the comeuppance-with-a-wink that Daybell dishes out in every tale. Hilarious! <br />Think P.G. Wodehouse, swimming in jerk sauce...   --Paul Brigadier