Mark LaFlamme

Mark LaFlamme

About

Mark LaFlamme is a crime reporter and columnist at the Sun Journal in Lewiston, Maine. He is also the author of the novels "The Pink Room," "Vegetation" and "Dirt: An American Campaign," as well as the novelette "Asterisk: Red Sox 2089" and the new short story collection "Box of Lies."

She Does Not Fear the Snow

She Does Not Fear the Snow

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Description

<p><font color="#000000" face="verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><span style="line-height:normal;">An Amazon #1 bestseller with 50+ glowing reviews. </span></font></p><p><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:small;line-height:normal;">Available in Kindle and print.</span></p><p><span style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:small;line-height:normal;">From the very start of her faith autobiography, ‘She Does Not Fear the Snow’, author Bobbie Ann Cole reaches out across the page and endears herself to her reader. You will very quickly feel that you know her, and will be richer for the knowledge. </span></p><div style="color:rgb(0,0,0);font-family:verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:small;line-height:normal;height:auto;"><div>She comes to Israel, seeking meaning and purpose for her life, following breast cancer and the demise of her long-standing marriage. There, God claims her and lays a trail of miracles that lead her from her native England to a new husband of faith in Atlantic Canada. <br />Though she is upfront about her ending, you’ll find yourself longing to learn the next step in her discovery of new love and deeper faith journey. This is one of those books you just can’t put down. Potentially, you’ll be following the twists and turns of her journey into the wee small hours. <br />‘A mysterious rug with a life-changing message, a Ruth-type love story, fascinating interactions with other believers, poetic descriptions of landscapes many native Canadians take for granted—and a message of God’s love and salvation,’ writes critic Margaret Welwood. ‘Bobbie Ann Cole’s story is a little too strange and untidy to be fiction. As a true story, it will leave you satisfied, yet wanting to know more.’ <br />‘Often times, life will take us to the end of our rope, leaving us helpless and at our wit’s end. Yet, even in such dire situations, our God is not helpless. He will bring in plentiful harvest – a harvest of renewal, hope, joy and happiness in our life,’ says Khamneithang Vaiphei. ‘She Does Not Fear the Snow is an incredible testimony that will have a profound impact on you.’ <br />If mystery, romance, women’s faith issues, the Jewish roots of Christianity, Christian living or outreach appeal to you, you will find much to enjoy.</div><div> </div></div>

Story Behind The Book

I've written short stories all of my life. Then somewhere around 2005, an editor told me I needed to grow up. I needed to write novels, like big people. And I did. In fact, i wrote three novels and a novelette over the next four years. It was great fun. But you know what? I missed the shorter literary form, those fast romps instead of long romances. Maybe I have problems with commitment, I don't know. But the shorts in "Box of Lies" were just a blast to write. Amazon reviewer Linda Bulger puts it this way: "LaFlamme is like a graffiti artist sliding around a corner in the dark with his collar turned up – a few bold strokes and he’s moved on. But the territory of your mind has been tagged with his distinctive images.”

Reviews

<div><span style="font-family:Calibri;"><span style="font-family:Arial;"><font size="3"><span style="font-size:15px;"><span style="font-size:13px;"><span style="font-size:medium;"><font size="3"></font></span></span></span></font></span></span><h3 style="font-family:'yui-tmp';font-size:13px;" align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">&quot;Like Dean Koontz, John Saul and Stephen King combined. Yes, LaFlamme is THAT good!&quot; - Betty Dravis, author of '1106 Grand Boulevard'</font></h3> <h3 style="font-family:'yui-tmp';font-size:13px;" align="center"><span style="font-family:Calibri;">***</span></h3> <h3 style="font-family:'yui-tmp';font-size:13px;" align="left"><font face="Arial"><font size="3"><span style="font-size:15px;"><span style="font-size:13px;"><span style="font-size:medium;"><font size="3">&quot;I've read Mark LaFlamme's work before, so I thought I knew what I was in for</font> <font size="3">with his BOX OF LIES. Shivers at the back of my neck, furtive glances over my shoulder, a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach... delicious! But I didn't bargain on the cumulative effect of more than two dozen stories, each with its own chilling atmosphere. LaFlamme is like a graffiti artist sliding around a corner in the dark with his collar turned up, a few bold strokes and he's moved on--but the territory of your mind has been tagged with his distinctive images.<br /><br />&quot;If you're about to say that short stories aren't your thing, put that opinion on hold for a day or two and peek under the cover here. See if you really can resist. Each story opens with a line that yanks you in: &quot;Trevor Garbo liked dead things.&quot; &quot;My name is Rudy Weather and I can read your mind.&quot; &quot;It was two days after the world ended when the old van rumbled up Route 4.&quot; &quot;'Do you ever worry,' Randall Albee asked him, 'That they might come for you?'&quot;<br /><br />&quot;I wouldn't know where to start, telling you about these stories. Read a few here, a few there, put the book down and think about them for a while, go back and read a few more. One thing you know for sure is that, whether you're reading about a band of murdering fourth-graders, a shopkeeper defending his territory after the apocalyse, or a man who made a very poor bargain for eternal life, the characters are so real you can reach out and touch them, if you only dare.<br /><br />&quot;Many of these stories spoke to me of some truth I don't quite dare to believe. For example, if you were moving into a new house as I am this week, what would you think of a story like &quot;Our House,&quot; about a home that nurtures one of its new tenants while abusing the other? And do you hope that we'll adopt a gentle new paradigm when the oil is gone but fear that, instead, as it does in &quot;The Neighborhood,&quot; it will come out of our hides? And perhaps creepiest of all, do you ever think about what could happen--or not happen--because you stopped to pick up a penny (or, perhaps, didn't?)<br /><br />&quot;If you've let your imagination get a little rusty, prepare to be challenged by Box of Lies. Stylish writing, great characters and some wildly skewed concepts; it's a whole lot of entertainment with the mind-bending thrown in for free.&quot; - Linda Bulger, Amazon</font></span></span></span> </font></font></h3> <div style="font-family:'yui-tmp';font-size:13px;" align="center"><font size="3">***</font></div> <h2 style="font-family:'yui-tmp';font-size:13px;" class="review"><font face="Arial" size="3">&quot;Don't start this book if you have to go to work tomorrow. One, you won't be able to put it down. You're going to have to read the whole thing. It's a page turner. #2: Once you finish it you're going to spend hours going over the plots and characters - so don't even try to get your normal sleep. Unless your normal sleep is full of nightmares. LaFlamme's images and characters will pop up over and over, scaring you again and again. &quot;This book will smack you upside the head, squeeze your guts, and make you cough. You might vomit. &quot;LaFlamme drags open a curtain, showing you the scary corners of your mind. He provides just enough science along with the phantasmagoric fantasies to truly scare you crapless. He opens up his heart too, offering up just enough soul to make this an honest read. &quot;Thanks, I think, for another haunted apartment house of horrors.&quot; -- Meredith Kendall, Amazon</font></h2><br /><br /></div>