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Michaela Foster Marsh

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Last week's position: 6380

first registered 18.06.11

last online 145 days ago

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about me

My writing experience to date has been as a songwriter, to me, the creative process of prose writing is closely linked. As a songwriter I try to tell a story in a few verses, imbue it with meaning and make it both personal and universal. This creative process of lyric writing has always been my passion over and above performing.
Most recently, my songwriting has led me into the world of film and television, in which I have been gaining some success producing theme songs from scripts. This has also given me a deeper insight into pace and character development for my first novel 'The Matoke Tree'
The book is complete. I am thinking about sending it out to publishers and agents and thought this might be good for feedback first.

favourite books

'Anna Karenina' Leo Tolstoy
'Half of a Yellow Sun' Chimananda Ngozi Adichie
'Small Island' Andrea Levy
'A Thousand Spendid Suns' Khaled Hosseini
'Red Dust Road' Jackie Kay
most of Deepak Chopra's books
'The Road less Travelled' M. Scott Peck

my websites

http://www.michaelaonline.com    

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Self-publish with CreateSpace

my books

The Matoke Tree

Michaela Foster Marsh

A fictional saga of passion and grief stretching from Uganda to Scotland. Covering themes such as love, war and ethnic cleansing, religion, adoption, and race.


Dembe, a fugitive of Idi Amin’s purges, cannot forget her father’s congregation cremated in the ashes of his church or the discovery of his empty shoes, the day after the soldiers came. Only the hope that she can rescue five orphans propels a perilous escape to Kenya. It is a wrench to flee her village, and not only because it is her home. It is where Dembe’s former Scottish lover, Phil, sends her news of their son, Alfie, born to them during her student days in Glasgow. The Uganda of her youth was no place for an illegitimate child, and neither was her lover’s marriage; Dembe left him in care of the state, with only the hope of an adoption. Phil, a Church of Scotland minister, unable to acknowledge the affair or forsake his son, manipulates his naïve wife Maggie to adopt the orphan boy into their own family. But as the fly-wheel of Uganda’s civil war ejects those without a firm grip on the reins of power, Dembe finds herself on Phil’s doorstep and uneasily begins life with her lover, her child and her unwitting rival. They have never been closer or further from the truth - for now.

 

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latest

Jack Cerro wrote 51 days ago

I am Jack's failure to follow his own 6th and 8th commandment. 1: ....

ClaireLyman wrote 54 days ago

Thank you! With your help, Inevitable has made it into the top five a....

scottkenny wrote 61 days ago

Hi Michaela, still remember a lovely night in Edinburgh. I was liste....

KirkH wrote 86 days ago

Hi, This goes out to everyone on my friends list on Authonomy. As....

verabeko wrote 92 days ago

Hi, I am Vera! please how are you! hope you are fine and in perfect ....

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my comments

latest

I wrote 263 days ago

I have to be honest and say I haven't read all of this but so want to after reading the first 4 chapters. I have backed the book as I believe it is a rare gem!! I wish you all the best with the editors desk and getting published. I have no doubt you'll make it!! I will read on when I can - wish ther... view book

I wrote 308 days ago

hey John, just wanted to stop by on say glad to see you are still up there - you deserve it and all the best!!! view book

I wrote 308 days ago

hey Katie, Thanks so much for this lovely feedback - made my day. yes i agree with 'spoke to her father in thought' thank you for that. cheers and please do keep in touch and if you have any other comments I'd appreciate them! Will put your book on my watchlist. Thanks again, M view book

I wrote 336 days ago

Here's to 'lighting a candle in the darkest corner of human consciousness.' I do think this is a fascinating book and well written! view book

I wrote 338 days ago

Hi Julius, Thank you for your comments! It is good to know that you feel I have been to Uganda and lived it! It makes me feel glad that I did so mcuh research! Still I am sure there will be things that only someone living there would know and I am sure there will be some mistakes. As you know I ha... view book

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