After many years, my book is finally for sale. I know, I know, everyone has been clamoring for it- here is is. Don't break the doors down trying to get it.... oh, wait. It's an e-book at an e-store- oh well.
The Dragonfly Convention is
five interwoven stories: Two sister, a Korean refugee, an American soldier, and
the Korean war.
Lauren MacKenzie is back in her home town of Pacific
Grove, California. The occasion is the death of her mother, Soon Wan
MacKenzie. The house and all its
contents have been left to herself and her sister, Jennifer Stowe.
Both sisters are at critical
junctures in their lives.
Lauren is a woman who’s job has
always been her life; a shy,
contemplative, diffident woman, she is a teacher who has just received a pink
slip from the near bankrupt San
Francisco school district. Losing her job is a major crisis for her.
Her younger sister Jennifer, on
the other hand, is the golden girl; she
has always been the social, popular, outgoing sister. Jennifer is a free-lance writer and
illustrator living in Southern California . She is between projects and currently
enmeshed in a painful separation from her husband of seven years; she is beginning to contemplate a divorce. As a woman who has always felt the necessity
of having a man in her life to feel complete, losing her husband amounts to a
turning point for her.
Both sisters feel that the
settling of the estate is a good opportunity to take some time out and
reevaluate their lives.
The house is a Victorian along
the ocean in Pacific Grove . It is quite familiar to the women, who grew
up there. The house is full of painful
memories and emotions of a turbulent, tumultuous childhood. Memories of their mother, a pianist, and an
alcoholic, and her vicious verbal and sometime physical attacks. Memories of their much older father, an
artist, who died years before their mother.
Memories of the ferocity of the violent fights between their
parents. They wonder, as they always
have, how two such disparate individuals came together and why they remained
together for so many years.
While going through the
contents of the house, Lauren finds a box of letters, and newspaper clippings,
as well as a journal written in Korean.
The journal is the diary of her mother’s life immigrating from North Korea to South Korea in
1950, and gives a glimpse of her life as a refugee in war-torn Korea . The letters, from their father to their
mother, begin in 1952, and continue until the couple actually marries in
1954. Together, the letters, newspaper
clippings and journal and trace a turbulent period of history that Lauren and
Jennifer know very little about, and reveal a relationship that becomes a
bittersweet romance of two people from two divergent cultures and generations.
In recreating their parents’
relationship, Lauren and Jennifer gain greater insight into their past and
their parent’s lives. The sister’s begin
to understand and forgive their mother for her shortcomings. Lauren discovers that in accepting and making
peace with her past she is able to move ahead with her life. Jennifer realizes that leaving her husband is
not the end of her life, but could be a new beginning, if she can find the
strength within her.
The Dragonfly Convention is available at http://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=the+dragonfly+convention
I can be found at http://allysonwonders.tumblr.com