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Donna Everhart

    Donna Everhart crafts narratives centered on family hardship and tumultuous eras in the American South's past. Her prose delves into the intricacies of human relationships and the resilience of the spirit against adversity. Readers are drawn to the emotional depth and compelling characters that transport them to another time and place. Her distinctive style captures the complexities of the human psyche with vivid portrayals of the Southern setting.

    Donna Everhart
    The Saints of Swallow Hill
    The Moonshiner's Daughter
    The Road to Bittersweet
    When the Jessamine Grows
    • The Road to Bittersweet

      • 336 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      4.0(2263)Add rating

      In the 1940s Carolinas, a young woman's journey unfolds against a backdrop of harsh landscapes and even harsher emotional challenges. As she navigates feelings of jealousy and betrayal, the bonds of her family are tested, pushing her from innocence towards wisdom. The story explores the complexities of familial relationships and the impact of personal struggles on unity, highlighting how internal conflicts can be as destructive as external hardships.

      The Road to Bittersweet
    • Set in North Carolina in 1960 and brimming with authenticity and grit, The Moonshiner's Daughter evokes the singular life of sixteen-year-old Jessie Sasser, a young woman determined to escape her family's past ... Generations of Sassers have made moonshine in the Brushy Mountains of Wilkes County, North Carolina. Their history is recorded in a leather-bound journal that belongs to Jessie Sasser's daddy, but Jessie wants no part of it. As far as she's concerned, moonshine caused her mother's death a dozen years ago. Her father refuses to speak about her mama, or about the day she died. But Jessie has a gnawing hunger for the truth--one that compels her to seek comfort in food. Yet all her self-destructive behavior seems to do is feed what her school's gruff but compassionate nurse describes as the monster inside Jessie. Resenting her father's insistence that moonshining runs in her veins, Jessie makes a plan to destroy the stills, using their neighbors as scapegoats. Instead, her scheme escalates an old rivalry and reveals long-held grudges. As she endeavors to right wrongs old and new, Jessie's loyalties will bring her to unexpected revelations about her family, her strengths--and a legacy that may provide her with the answers she has been longing for

      The Moonshiner's Daughter
    • The Saints of Swallow Hill

      • 384 pages
      • 14 hours of reading
      3.9(13217)Add rating

      In Georgia's Swallow Hill turpentine camp in 1932, Rae Lynn Cobb, disguised as a man, hides out from those who would wrongly accuse her for murdering her husband and struggles to survive harsh, brutal conditions with the help of two individuals with their own tragic pasts

      The Saints of Swallow Hill