Monday, 14 July 2008 - 3:42 PM EDT
Name:
"Rosalyn Casson"
Tired of the same old garbage? Enjoy something new in African American fiction!
************************
For
Immediate Release
Contact:
Shawn Street – Public Relations
<mailto:pr@publishamerica.com>pr@publishamerica.com
www.publishamerica.com
PublishAmerica Presents Golden Girls by R.A.C.
Frederick, MD July 9, 2008 -- PublishAmerica is
proud to present Golden Girls by R.A.C.
In the summer of 1973, twenty-year-old Helen
Harvey is desperate to escape the dull,
repetitive life of a farmer’s daughter. She is
pretty, smart, and longs for something more, but
what else is a young, black woman to do but
marry, have children and remain oblivious to the
rest of the world? Helen packs her Kansas bags
and heads west to California. She accepts a
domestic position in the home of the most
prestigious film producer in town. Helen is
devastated after a careless sexual encounter with
a white, married actor leaves her pregnant and
alone. Val Robinson Geller, the elegant, black
wife of Academy Award winner Mike Geller, agrees
to adopt Helen’s child as she is unable to have
one of her own. They are two beautiful,
intelligent black women, trapped in white
Hollywood’s clinging web of lies, dirty secrets and endless deceptions.
R. A. C. was born in Wilmington, Delaware. At one
year old, she relocated to Los Angeles,
California, with her family. She now resides in
the Antelope Valley. She attended Los Angeles
Pierce College and furthered her education at
Phillips Jr. College. Golden Girls is her first novel.
PublishAmerica is the home of 30,000 talented
authors. PublishAmerica is a traditional
publishing company whose primary goal is to
encourage and promote the works of new,
previously undiscovered writers. Like more
mainstream publishers, PublishAmerica pays its
authors advances and royalties, makes its books
available in both the United States and Europe
through all bookstores, and never charges any
fees for its services. PublishAmerica offers a
distinctly personal, supportive alternative to
vanity presses and less accessible publishers.
END