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Twix Heaven and Earth

Twix Heaven and Earth

by Joann Klusmeyer

About The Book

  • She had been abandoned on the prairie at two months old but there was within her a strength that would allow her to have an effect in a matter concerning the whole world. Like David, of old, who collected materiel to build the temple, Iota gave her children weapons so they could help bring the world together and those weapons were ‘words’. Every part of this book is fiction and not meant to depict any person living or dead. It is set in an actual time period, where these events could have happened and likely did in some form.
    Companion books are:
    Rocky Comfort Ranch
    One Last Bullet
    Highways and Hedges
Details
Publication date March 29,2022
Language English
ISBN (Paperback)
979-8-88622-163-3 (E-BOOK)
Genre Fiction, Contemporary
Specifications
Pages 168
Interior Color Black and White
Book Size 6.000" x 9.000" (229mm x 152mm)

About The Author

Joann was born in the mountains of Arkansas in 1933, in the height of the depression, into the family of a pioneer minister. She was attracted to pencils and paper from the time she learned not to poke pencils in her eyes, and that paper did not taste particularly good.

Having an older sister who aspired to be a school teacher, she became a class of one and was expected to master reading at a very early age. Books became the magic that would transport her into another life, and she read and re-read the few that were available until they were limp scraps. It was about then that more stories began to develop within her own head, along with simple rhyming verses. This book is one of the stories.

Her father’s occupation as a minister, by necessity, put her in church several times a week, where she practically cut her teeth on a church bench, so to speak. There was the small country church that her father built and pastored for years, and later the other churches where he was called, and in that way, she became uniquely positioned to meet a lot of people on a regular basis, and appreciate the hard-working settlers who pioneered the land in America’s midwest.

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