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Echoes: A Modern Fairytale

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Karissa Day had her future all planned when her family moved to Shawon, Colorado, right before her junior year in high school. A freak car accident shattered her dreams. Now confined to a wheelchair, Karissa returns to school lonely, bitter, and afraid. Then, unexpectedly, she is assigned to do a research paper with a mysterious boy named Neeve. Although he is also physically and emotionally damaged, he introduces her to a world of magic, which could be the salvation of them both.

297 pages, Kindle Edition

Published August 7, 2016

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About the author

Connie A. Walker

7 books2 followers
Connie A. Walker’s interest in fantasy developed before she started grade school. Her sister, June, who was five years older, practiced her reading skills by reading to Connie. June introduced her to The Wizard of Oz, Peter Pan, The Arabian Nights, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and hundreds of fairy tales. Connie fell asleep every night with visions of elves and ogres, sorcerers and enchanted lands, flitting through her mind.

When her sister started junior high school, the reading sessions dwindled to a few times a week. Suddenly Connie had difficulty sleeping. She began having nightmares. She dreaded going to bed.

One night, when Connie was very tired and having difficulty falling asleep, she pretended that June was reading her favorite story to her. She drifted off to sleep and had pleasant dreams. After that, when she went to bed, she reviewed other tales she had heard, often embellishing the action and adding characters.

Within a short while, she was making up stories of her own. That was when she decided to become a writer.

When Connie was seven years old, she won an annual writing contest sponsored by her elementary school. Students in first, second and third grades were eligible to enter. She was the first first-grader ever to win. Her story, “Stop, Look, and Listen,” was about a dog who acted as a crossing guard.

Throughout elementary and high school, Connie made her homework assignments enjoyable by being creative. When doing research papers, she presented the facts within a fictional frame story or a play. Essays were often written as satires, ending with unexpected twists. Connie considered everything she wrote as a prelude to a career as an author.

While getting her Bachelor of Arts degree in theatre at Brigham Young University, she had four original plays produced: a one act comedy and a two act drama (both of which were contest winners), plus two musicals. Later, she had two other one act comedies produced. After graduation, she worked as a technical writer, a graphic artist, and a public relations specialist. In the evenings, she wrote short stories, plays, poetry, and outlined ideas for fantasy novels. She filled a filing cabinet with unpublished manuscripts. A single mother of two, Connie often found her writing time shunted aside by such things as chicken pox, science projects, strep throat, baseball games, stomach flu, and school activities—all those things associated with parenting.

In the meantime, she had to make a living.

As her children entered the teenage years, financial demands increased, and Connie felt the need to develop a career that provided a predictable and adequate income. She attended the University of Utah and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in psychology and a Master’s degree in social work. She has been employed as a foster care caseworker, a psychotherapist, and a clinical programs manager.

Now retired, she has finally found enough uninterrupted time to pursue her goal of becoming a professional writer. Her children’s book, Timmy and the K’nick K’nocker Ring, is a fantasy about a young boy who is transported to a world where his special talents are considered magic. It took first place in a local writer’s contest, Children’s Literature category, and was the grand prize winner as well.

The Spire of Kylet, a young adult fantasy, is the first book in The Wolkarean Inscription Trilogy. Katrine is a fifteen year old girl who thinks she has her life all planned out. But, after performing an act of heroisn, she is adopted into a tribe of wizards and receives their powers. Suddenly, she is thrust on a path toward a new destiny whether she likes it or not. The second and third books in the trilogy, The Eyes of Landor and Triumph at Serpent’s Head, will be available in 2011.

Connie is currently working on a second Wolkarean trilogy.

Her books are available through SimplieIndie.com.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Richard Christensen.
Author 1 book7 followers
April 28, 2021
I have been reading a lot of Young Adult books this year. I was attracted to this one when I read the description about it being a modern fairy tale. I grew up with a thick book of Hans Christian Anderson tales that I just loved. Although, it is not in the classic vein, it is very, very enjoyable.

Karissa, the main character, moves to rural Colorado from Chicago, where she is in a major car accident with a girl she barely knows. The book starts with Karissa, several months later, wheelchair bound, angry, bitter, ostracized and suffering from a debilitating case of survivor's guilt because the driver of the car was beautiful, popular, well-loved, oh... and she died.

Echoes tells her story of eventually finding and making friends, falling in love and a discovering a portal to another world.

It is a great read with strong characters, a great story and a few unexpected twists and turns all told in a writing style that seems very comfortable in the Young Adult genre.
Profile Image for Ferren.
38 reviews
August 10, 2020
Super cute story, meant for a YA audience. Loved the twist in the middle. The ending had me wishing there was more and I'm excited to read the second book in the set!
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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