La Femme-Enfant

(The Woman-Child)

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book La Femme-Enfant by Roosevelt Lee Carter, Xlibris US
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Roosevelt Lee Carter ISBN: 9781462841868
Publisher: Xlibris US Publication: December 23, 2008
Imprint: Xlibris US Language: English
Author: Roosevelt Lee Carter
ISBN: 9781462841868
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication: December 23, 2008
Imprint: Xlibris US
Language: English

La Femme-Enfant tells the story of Mamere (Corean Pennyman) and her three sisters, Anna, Mary and Queen from 1900 to 1995 from the dusty roads of rural Cotton Valley, Plain Dealing, Sarepta and Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana to Harrison Pennymans mansion atop Nob Hill in San Francisco and the glitz of Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, California. Mamere (Corean Pennyman) and James Glasgow II were lovers for almost fifty years. He married Diccie Bastille Glasgow when he was eighteen years old. Their marriage ended a land boundary feud that had burned and smouldered between the two families for three generations. Their son, Alexander Glasgow married Jacintha Marguarite Pennyman, Mameres granddaughter, who gave birth to triplets at age fourteen. His mother banished Alexander to Paris. He became a famous painter. Jacintha was secretly locked away in an undisclosed asylum. Diccie Bastille Glasgow sent her chauffeur with a lone crib to Mameres house. Inside the crib was a tiny tot named Harrison Pennyman. She raised the remaining two siblings as her only grandchildren. Their complexion was much lighter than Harrisons was. After thirty-three years, Harrison is finally reunited with his siblings, Deidre and Dalton Glasgow but not before the murder of Andrew Blackwell. He was a co-conspirator in a major art theft ring which was determined to steal the exquisite painting, La Femme-Enfant (The Woman Child) by Alexander Glasgow, his father, during the grand opening of Manslink and McKennas Art Gallery in Beverly Hills.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

La Femme-Enfant tells the story of Mamere (Corean Pennyman) and her three sisters, Anna, Mary and Queen from 1900 to 1995 from the dusty roads of rural Cotton Valley, Plain Dealing, Sarepta and Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana to Harrison Pennymans mansion atop Nob Hill in San Francisco and the glitz of Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, California. Mamere (Corean Pennyman) and James Glasgow II were lovers for almost fifty years. He married Diccie Bastille Glasgow when he was eighteen years old. Their marriage ended a land boundary feud that had burned and smouldered between the two families for three generations. Their son, Alexander Glasgow married Jacintha Marguarite Pennyman, Mameres granddaughter, who gave birth to triplets at age fourteen. His mother banished Alexander to Paris. He became a famous painter. Jacintha was secretly locked away in an undisclosed asylum. Diccie Bastille Glasgow sent her chauffeur with a lone crib to Mameres house. Inside the crib was a tiny tot named Harrison Pennyman. She raised the remaining two siblings as her only grandchildren. Their complexion was much lighter than Harrisons was. After thirty-three years, Harrison is finally reunited with his siblings, Deidre and Dalton Glasgow but not before the murder of Andrew Blackwell. He was a co-conspirator in a major art theft ring which was determined to steal the exquisite painting, La Femme-Enfant (The Woman Child) by Alexander Glasgow, his father, during the grand opening of Manslink and McKennas Art Gallery in Beverly Hills.

More books from Xlibris US

Cover of the book Justifiable Homicide by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Upset 2020 by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Nightmare at Turtle Lake by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Poems of the High-School Girl by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Words to the Wise 3 by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Monastery Prisons by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Stephanie, Stephanie, Let Down Your Hair by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Crossroads by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Chica and the English Teacher by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Antonella the Cobb Island Ant by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Count the Helmets by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book A Dog’S Tale as Told by Lakota by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Word Play by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Beat Estate Tax Forever by Roosevelt Lee Carter
Cover of the book Murder on a Stalled Train by Roosevelt Lee Carter
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy