Name Calling
On Easter Sunday Father Ben Thomas’ sermon at Saint Gregory’s Episcopal Church further enriched the Gospel passage (John 20) that pulls me deeper into it each time I read or hear it.
On Easter Sunday Father Ben Thomas’ sermon at Saint Gregory’s Episcopal Church further enriched the Gospel passage (John 20) that pulls me deeper into it each time I read or hear it.
The National League of American Pen Women and Women’s National Book Association team up for a FREE Zoom event: Hosted byWNBA South Florida chapter and the National League of American Pen Women Learn how novelists and a publisher explore the role of setting,research, and other topics that help develop plot lines.There will be a Q …
Pen Women and Women’s National Book Assoc team up Read More »
On April 14, 2021 I’ll be taking part in a Women’s National Book Association panel to explore what goes on “Behind the Scenes of the Novel.” I’ll be appearing with three remarkable women: Carol White, playwright, photographer, workshop facilitator and author of five novels (a true Renaissance woman!); Penelope Love, publisher and author of the …
Any woman, any person, who has felt estranged from her body or soul…any woman who has found herself entangled in ill-suited behaviors or relationships…any woman who wants to feel free and alive in the world…will be inspired and encouraged by Penelope Love’s Wake Up in Love. From her early days as a brilliant but abused …
My newest novel, Stars in Their Infancy, will be released mid-2021 by Penmore Press. Stay tuned!
I will be a featured presenter at the joint session of the South Florida Women’s National Book Association and the National League of American Pen Women. The event will be hosted on Zoom at 6:30 pm, April 24, 2021, at the Delray Beach Public Library. Details to follow.
I will be reading from my work at the Woman’s National Book Association—South Florida Chapter—open mic night on Wednesday night, March 17, from 6:30 to 8:00 pm.
Those who live in the Allegheny Mountains may take the landscape for granted. Marleen Pasch says, “Don’t.”
Pasch, celebrating her second published novel “At the End of the Storm,” lived in Hollidaysburg in the early 1980s: fostering a career in corporate communications, building friendships, dancing to disco hits and “trying to golf” (as she said).
Good morning, fellow travelers. I hope you’re safe and well.Update: my newest novel, At the End of the Storm, is currently number 5 and climbing on Kindle’s bestsellers list in its category. I’d like your help in boosting it to number 1. Thank you to all who have already purchased, read and reviewed!If you haven’t yet …
Welcome readers, friends on a journey. I hope you’re enjoying At the End of the Storm. If you want to know a little about me—before or after reading Storm—here’s a good place to start. A Day in the Life of a Stay-at-Home Writer Five a.m. walk. (Yes, five!) Moonlit meditation. “Be still and know that …