Saturday, April 21, 2012



The Italian Pearl & The Irish Peasant




This is a story taken from the lineage of the O'Malley family in "The Secrets of Nine Irish Sons".

Around 300 B.C., a handsome Roman general, nephew of the reigning Caesar, is sent off to battle pirates and bring home treasure for the glory of Rome. Along the way, he comes across an extremely unusual Irish ship crewed by both male and female pirates, a bad omen as far as his crew is concerned . . . and an unlikely source of any kind of treasure. Nonetheless, the general is instantly smitten by the ship’s beautiful captain and orders his reluctant crew to pursue the strange vessel. Despite disaster, his quest continues until the general is taken prisoner by an unfriendly King. When the King turns him over to an ugly peasant woman, our hero continues to pine for his lost love. Both prisoner and caretaker live in fantasy worlds where they yearn for what they cannot have until a shocking discovery changes everything for both of them.   ©Laura Joyce Moriarty


The Death of Reiley Freeze

Reiley Freeze was an extremely heroic, kind, and popular character with readers in the Trilogy, The Secrets of Nine Irish Sons. His instant charisma was evident with everyone he knew. He was fascinating, and yet, he never met very many people---he was always on the move.


Even more unlikely, the men who disliked him out of jealousy, principally because he was so admired by women, couldn’t see the truth. They saw his charm, but yet, he held no pretense or swagger. The reason women longed for him was because of his way---his way with words---his way with a smile---his way with a helping hand, and most importantly, his way with his goodness.  ©Laura Joyce Moriarty




Brigid's Dilemma
After Rosemary O’Connor finds her abusive husband sneaking into her young daughter’s bedroom, she spends the next few years physically fighting him off to protect her beautiful Brigid. In the end, Rosemary saves her from her father, but is unable to shield Brigid from a ravaging stranger, a man nearly twice her age, who uses the young girl’s desperate desire for love to seduce her.
Once she learns her daughter is pregnant, as if tempting fate, Rosemary suffers a final altercation. She sends Brigid away while secretly condemning her husband to prison.
Rosemary’s scheme was to save Brigid from a pitiless society that oppressed unwed mothers during the early days of the 1900s. But she frightens her in the process.
As a result, vestiges of her fear and caution keeps her desire for a husband perpetually fettered---and then each time she is ready to fall in love, fate intervenes.   ©Laura Joyce Moriarty





The Mission of Alexis Dering

Alexis Dering was born to a wealthy, but brutally sinister British family in Devonshire, England. Yet, he remained kind, curious, and despite his baneful opinion of himself..
The shy boy meets an unlikely friend, a young Irishman who feels destined to become a missionary in a foreign land as soon as he can finish his education and become an ordained priest. Alexis loves his friend but continually resists to be seduced into his chosen life as a priest. Instead, he relentlessly tempt Fitz into a safe, mutually beneficial life of privilege and comfort. Their unexplainable intransigence  strange effect has a lasting effect on each of them with remarkably prophetic outcomes.  ©Laura Joyce Moriarty



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