Debut Novel Out Now

I never saw Mama swim. She would stand in the water knee-deep while we swam around her like little guppies. Mama never fully immersed herself, never submerged herself into anything deep. She tried not to make waves but simply let the incredible sensations float over her. She seemed afraid of some dark emotions lurking at the bottom and how they could rise to the top. A few currents carried Mama off course in life, and change was hard for her. Comfort for her meant living in a bubble that nothing could penetrate, but eventually, all bubbles pop.

loved this book! What a great storyteller Debby Hall is! Her language is so down to earth. What a great first novel, hoping for lots more from such a wonderful writer!

- Amazon Review

OMG, what a great read. Thoroughly enjoyed reading this book❤️❤️❤️

- Amazon Review

AboUT DEBBY HALL

Debby Hall was born a storyteller. She calls herself bi-cultural as she was raised by a father from New York City and a mother from the Deep South of Virginia. Her passion for writing stems back to childhood when she believed she could invent her own narratives by writing the stories she wanted her life to be. She captures and conveys conflicts, strife, secrets, prejudices, love, and resilience that ebb and flows through everyday life. She always believed that everyone has a story to be told. Leaving New York at a young age to embark on her journey with her husband, a Naval aviator, and having the opportunity to travel and see the world. Being able to raise her two daughters while introducing them to different cultures and soaking up stories from various situa-tions. Her multi-layered story provokes us to understand we are who we are because of and despite other people and cir-cumstances. Debby lives in Florida with her husband. When she's not writing, she is painting, boating, and spending time in the water, which she is drawn to. Debby is also accredited with writing a screenplay called Pie Car, which can be seen on Amazon Prime, and is working on her next novel," Westpac Widow." This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living, or dead, businesses, compa-nies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.