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The ghosts of old miseries are never far behind…
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Dumped by her boyfriend on Christmas Eve, Cassie Baruch thought her pain would end when she aimed her car at an ancient beech tree. But when a gorgeous black-winged angel appears and tells her ‘this ain’t no stinking paranormal romance, kid,’ she realizes death hasn’t solved her problems. Can Jeremiel help her exorcise the ghosts of problems past and find a little closure?
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A poignant tale about teenage and young adult suicide that will appeal to fans of "Thirteen Reasons Why" and the movies "A Christmas Carol" and "It's A Wonderful Life."
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Note: This book is NOT religious fiction.
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At the request of the publisher, this book is sold without DRM.
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Keywords: angel, angels, books about angels, angel fantasy, guardian angel, guardian angels, archangel, archangels, Jeremiel, Archangel Jeremiel, new age, new age spirituality, metaphysical, spiritual, metaphysical and spiritual, metaphysical and spiritual fiction, wounded inner child, life after death, reincarnation, Eastern Orthodox angels, Christian fiction, religious fiction, faith, second chances, mythology, science fiction, time travel, time paradox, award winning books, second chances, dark fantasy, ghost, ghosts, it's a wonderful life, a christmas carol, suicide notes, 13 reasons why, thirteen reasons why, what to read after 13 reasons why, paranormal fiction, women's fiction, psychological fiction, new adult fiction, young adult fiction, young adult books, young adult novels, social issues, teen suicide, suicide, depression, racism, Christmas, Christmas books, Christmas novels, Christmas stories,
Anna Erishkigal is an attorney who writes fantasy fiction under a pen-name so her colleagues don't question whether her legal pleadings are fantasy fiction as well. Much of law, it turns out, -is- fantasy fiction. Lawyers just prefer to call it 'zealously representing your client.'
Seeing the dark underbelly of life makes for some interesting fictional characters. The kind you either want to incarcerate, or run home and write about. In fiction, you can fudge facts without worrying too much about the truth. In legal pleadings, if your client lies to you, you look stupid in front of the judge.
At least in fiction, if a character becomes troublesome, you can always kill them off.