Through Rose Coloured Glasses By Ruth Salway

Vintage Text For Stylish Teens

'A very cleverly written book which will set your imagination on fire'. J.Budd.

'Wow - it's spot on! you will want to tell your friends'. D.Lawrenson.

'Delightful and enchanting could be real local people with great character and determination'. J.Fry.

'An emotional journey! On one page I laughed out loud, turned another and found myself crying'. Bernadette Cromby.

  • Home
  • Don't chase an illusion
  • Slideshow

Slideshow



Click Here
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

.

.
Through Rose-Coloured Glasses has been likened to 'Good Night Mister Tom' meets "Cold Comfort Farm'. It has nostalgic charm and a moral message warning against avaricious gain. Think of it as a contemporary Enid Blyton adventure story; rest assured, no mention of Fanny, Dick or mildly alcoholic aromatic beer.

This is a feel-good adventure that promises to honour every heart-felt dream. The unforgettable rural characters demonstrate the importance of friendship and good wholesome family values when a strange inventor comes to their village with a secret formula to grow dreams. Trust and loyalty is soon exchanged for hope of promised prosperity and emotional fulfillment. Not everyone warms to the strange inventor. His harsh demands continue to test the group’s confidence and the will power it takes to succeed. The sceptics do their homework to discredit the inventor, but the chance of good fortune is a force too powerful to compete with. Eddie and Jemima want to mend their parents’ marriage and live happily ever after, near to their Grandma. They will do anything to fulfill their dream. If the Dream Seller is a charlatan will the community have to forsake their dreams or have they now discovered the fundamental rule to attain a desired result?

Overpowering the inventor’s influence requires help from another source. Jemima is in grave danger and refuses to forfeit her dream. An elderly resident desperately tries to make contact with a group of nomadic gypsies; no amount of influence can ever outsmart a true Romany. The story constantly changes direction and has an unexpected ending.

.

.

Ruth Salway

Ruth Salway

Translate

Buy Now

Buy Now

Click on poster to read Amazon reviews

Click on poster to read Amazon reviews
Available from Amazon & Top Retailers Worldwide

border="0"

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Multi-level appeal! Review by D.F.Taylor

Ruth Salway's book works on a number of levels. It's a great fairytale for both children and adults. It gently reinforces some good strong social morals. Perhaps most intriguingly for the adult reader, it's an allegorical tale of caution to anyone who has ever been lured by the promises of easy money.
It's not too hard to look beneath the fairytale charm to see the "jam tomorrow" world of multi-level marketing exposed. In this charming world, as in real life, it turns out that there are no magic potions and remedies for finding ones financial success.
The villains are well drawn, and their schemes are as credible as they are pernicious.
I recommend this book to those looking for a good strong story for children, and an insight into the equally fairytale world of multi-level marketing.
I look forward to this authors next book with interest.
Click to get cool Animations for your MySpace profile
My photo
Ruth
View my complete profile

Blog Archive

Watermark theme. Powered by Blogger.