A Peek at my Writer’s Journey

I like to say I inherited my love of baking and gardening from my mother; a love of horses, reading, and writing from my dad—and the wanderlust gene from both. When I traveled to Southold, L.I., with my mother in 1999 to discover our roots, passions collided: my love of faith, family, travel, history, and writing. Little did I know …

Book Signing at Lewis County Historical Museum, Chehalis, WA

Rebecca DeMarino Leave a Comment

Friday, December 2nd 4:30 pm to 7:30 pm Refreshments served! The Lewis County Historical Museum 599 NW Front St. Chehalis, WA 98532 Rebecca DeMarino will be signing copies of The Southold Chronicles, including her latest, To Follow Her Heart, at the 6th annual Evening with the Authors from 4:40pm to 7:30pm, Friday, December 2nd, at the Lewis County Historical Museum. …

Amazon Reviews: What Others Are Saying

Read what others are saying in Amazon reviews about A Place In His Heart, the book that began The Southold Chronicles, now on sale for 99 cents (in ebooks)! As we prepare to celebrate the July release of book #3, To Follow Her Heart, my publisher, Revell, has a special price for a limited time for both books 1&2 in …

The Southold Chronicles: A Cover Reveal

The dream to write a novel about Mary Horton began in Southold, Long Island, 1999. I flew to the east coast with my mother, Helen Horton Worley, to visit the lighthouse named after her eighth great-grandfather, Barnabas. He was a widower when he came from England in the 1600’s, via Massachusetts, to Southold with his two little boys and a …

Chehalis, WA: A BOOK SIGNING TONIGHT! December 4, 2015

Rebecca DeMarino

Authors Rebecca DeMarino – author of To Capture Her Heart and A Place in His Heart – and Julie McDonald-Zander – author of Chapters of Life at the Southwest Washington Fair! – along with other local authors, will be at the Lewis County Historical Museum’s Evening With the Authors in Chehalis, WA, from 4pm to 7pm signing copies of their …

Happy Bday Moby-Dick ~ “Call Me Ishmael”

I could not help but notice that today is the anniversary of the publication of one of my favorite novels, Moby-Dick, by Herman Melville in 1851. Though “Call me Ishmael” became one of the most famous opening lines in literary history, the novel was not a commercial success and it was only after Melville’s death that his literary genius in …