There are family photos taken when I was a baby, which show Mom, Dad and me at a big house overlooking the ocean. Mom says we still own the house-it’s somewhere in Australia or New Zealand or something, and they rent it out. That’s why we never go there.
My best friend Mack and I just started our senior year in high school. If I’d known anything about where that year would take us, I might have bumped the renters out of our beach house in Australia and stayed there for the duration.
The moment Justin Griffin turns eighteen, his life changes completely.
He isn’t human.
His best friend isn’t human.
His parents are definitely not who they say they are.
What’s a guy to do?
A propos de l’auteur
Reinvention/Reincarnation. Those words describe Connie best. She has worked as a janitor, a waitress, a mower of lawns and house cleaner, a clerk, secretary, teacher, bookseller and (finally) an author. The last occupation is the best one, because she sees it as a labor of love and therefore no labor at all.Connie has lived in Oklahoma all her life, with brief forays into other states for visits. She and her husband have been married for more years than she prefers to tell and together they have one son.After earning an MFA in Film Production and Animation from the University of Oklahoma, Connie taught courses in those subjects for a few years before taking a job as a manager for Borders. When she left the company in 2007, she fully intended to find a desk job somewhere. She found the job. And the desk. At home, writing.