Loiacono Literary Agency welcomes Jeanne Charters
and her novel Shanty Gold!
Shanty
Gold, a story strength and perseverance.
In
1849’s famine-ravaged Ireland, thirteen-year-old Mary Boland is found lying mostly
dead on the side of the road to Cork Harbor, Queenstown, Ireland. She just
buried her mother and baby sister after they both died of starvation. Now she
is headed for Boston to find her father— no matter what.
Raped
and beaten by the motley crew of The
Pilgrim’s Dandy, she is rescued by a fifteen-year-old Negro slave who had
been used in like manner for some time and had vowed to throw himself to the
sharks that very night. Together they survive the harrowing two and a half month
trip, helping others as well. Their friendship is the key to the new world for
both of them, carrying them through hardships and trials, and eventually to
happiness.
A grand tale that is truer than we would like, yet
spurs us to endeavor what people consider the impossible.
After years of working in radio sales and raising
four daughters, Charters became VP of marketing for Viacom TV, then branched-off
and opened her own advertising agency, Charters Marketing, with her husband,
Matt. “He's the business brain, I'm the creative one.”
The writing bug had bitten a long time ago, but its effects
stayed hidden until it was time.
“People sometimes wonder where a character comes
from. “When did you think up Mary Boland anyway?” I don't know about all
authors, but for me, Mary Boland was a magical name I heard through my
childhood from my mother and aunts. She was my great-great-grandmother. There
were no pictures of her and no records of her accomplishments, but she came to
me in dreams…a young girl with curly red hair, riding her horse along the Irish
seacoast.
“Tell my story,” she whispered.
In her first iteration, she was the start of a novel
called Daughters of Famine, Mary was the first in four generations of
women. Writing class instructors and published authors alike told me, “Each of
these women deserves her own book.” They were right. So, I started over and
told Mary's story in Shanty Gold. The next woman's story is half written and will be called Lace
Curtain.” www.jeannecharters.com www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com
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