In 1948 a murder/suicide rocks a small west Texas town, devastating a prominent family, changing their lives forever. At the center of the tragedy is Opal Evans, the widow. Over fifty years later, ter
Josephine was a murderer, drug abuser, alcoholic, promiscuous teenager, and mentally ill, but she was a mother. She was charged with the responsibility of a child and before that child, six others. Th
A moving account of patients and families dealing with the effects of sickle cell disease, a genetic disorder that mainly effects people of African descent.
In this work for general readers, Phyllis Brodsky, a former nurse and university educator, and Allen Brodsky (Georgetown U.) use a conversational writing style and a sense of humor to overview causes,