Looking Through Windows

by Kristin Carter Rowe


Formats

Softcover
$18.68
Hardcover
$28.03
E-Book
$6.95
Softcover
$18.68

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 29/02/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 190
ISBN : 9781469173788
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 190
ISBN : 9781469173795
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 190
ISBN : 9781469173801

About the Book

Looking Through Windows is the fi ctional story of three neighbors who, for very different reasons, are lonely and lost but ultimately rediscover themselves when their lives become mysteriously entangled in a web of deceit, suspicion, and paranormal events. Charlotte Webb is a fatigued and spiritless woman, loving of her young son but disconnected from her workaholic husband. Though discontent, Charlotte fi nds solace in the mysteries of her neighbors, the view from her windows serving as the buoy without which she would drown from depression. Her preoccupation with spying enmeshes her into the dangerous world of her recently widowed neighbor, Isabella, a beautiful woman suspected of killing her husband, a respected oncologist. Charlotte also becomes obsessed with the curious life of her other neighbor, Michael, a dour man with a fascinating wife who tends to show up at the oddest times and in the most curious of ways. Though it is a mystery, Looking Through Windows is primarily a story of the windows we all look through—windows of opportunity, regret, and even salvation.


About the Author

Kristin Carter Rowe is a mother and practicing attorney. Her first novel - The Most Undeniable Things (Xlibris 2000) – is a story of the undeniable possibility of life after death. In MADDY "NO CHANCE," Ms. Rowe again explores psychic phenomenon and spiritual communication, this time in the context of a supernatural thriller. With this second book, Ms. Rowe hopes that others find comfort not only in the possibility of an afterlife, but in the knowledge that even a brutal death can bring about a peaceful forever. Life does indeed go on after a tragedy, for the living and the "dead."