Send An Angel
by
Book Details
About the Book
In SEND AN ANGEL, Juliana, once a singing star, faces two demons: alcohol and her mother's critical voice. On Christmas Eve, her mother uses Juliana's alcoholism to keep her from her daughter. Steve Major is raising his three children by himself. He directs the musical reviews for a dinner club, but nothing works right since Susan's death, nearly two years ago. He's afraid to love again. Something happens though when he rescues her from an icy gutter on Christmas Eve and takes her to his office in a nightclub.
Juliana's daughter and Steve's younger two ask for an angel. The angel pushes Juliana down into an icy slush-filled gutter to get them together. Steve discovers a vulnerable woman who is more than the street person he thought. She discovers a man who knows how to love and be supportive of a woman. With behind the scene encouragement from Alexandre/Alexandra, the angel, Juliana tackles her sobriety. Before she can manage that, she must learn to shut off her mother's voice and listen to another. First it's Steve's and the minister's voices, then she learns to trust her own voice.
The next Christmas, when Steve's show is in trouble, Juliana realizes not only that she can sing again and does not need to drink, but that on stage she is "home." Steve has written the title song, which she sings; he has recovered. She will always be an alcoholic, the angel tells her in the end, but "the pain you have gone through gives your music a depth and compassion you never had before." All four children know they've found an angel; her's is sure it's Steve; his children know it's Juliana.
A romantic theme carries through SEND AN ANGEL, but I believe Juliana's growth and how Steve learns to risk love again move it above the romance genre into the realm of women's mainstream fiction. It is written to show how Juliana, with the support of Steve and her daughter, learns to address her real problems and conquer them. The anticipated readers are women mid 20's to early 40's; I believe the pace will also appeal to men that age.
About the Author
Since he can remember he's been making up stories. As the oldest grandchild he told stories to the younger kids at family get-togethers at the old farm in Michigan where he was born and grew up. He has been an avid reader from about the fifth grade when he discovered the school library. He enjoys most genres, but he tends to write most in the areas where he has worked for a living. His undergraduate work was in physical chemistry, but his graduate work was in psychology. During the years he has worked for a living, he spent ten years as a county social worker. In that capacity he worked with people with all kinds of problems, some of which they brought on themselves and some of which they were saddled with from having loved the wrong person. The next twenty years were in probation. There he worked with essentially the same people–the ones who hadn't dealt with their problems before they got crosswise of the law. In that arena also, he spent as much time counseling the wives, husbands (occasionally), and children and parents (often) of those who had messed up. In too many cases the reason was substance abuse/dependency. So he wrote about people who have that problem, love the person who has that problem, or was victimized by those with an addiction. His characters are those people because all of us are romantics, whether or not we believe it, he has to put a romance into his stories. Send An Angel is a summary of many of the people he met in his life. Vital statistics: He was born May 25. He has a son and daughter, Larry, 35 and Lacey, 28. His wife is a program analyst who works in their (Contra Costa) county government and for the state of California. They live in a house he designed. He is 5' 8" and weighs about 165 pounds.