Awakening to a new life is not always a ball of joy. . . .
From silly jokes to sultry secrets, Hawaiian childhood friends, Alamea Kaapa and Pearlie Mae de Gaulle, share nearly everything. Having inherited one million dollars after the disappearance of mysterious Margery Maude, the young ladies split the stash and opt for a faraway adventure. A new life awaits, but the quest to fulfill lifelong dreams of three-m happiness: marriage, motherhood and a magnificient homelife on the mainland may be more than they can bare. Caught in the crossfire of Redvine, an obscure Georgian town heavily populated with lunatics and military mavens, a valuable lesson is learned: some things in life are never meant to be shared. For some it may be millions and for others macabre memories, mistresses and men; yet for Alamea and Pearlie, it all boils down to pearls.
Momme Weight is a satirical story of twisted talebearers. Written in various narrative forms, it reflects upon life's unsavory characters, prompting one to think twice about kinsmen kept and saying, "I do."
Awakening to a new life is not always a ball of joy. . . .
From silly jokes to sultry secrets, Hawaiian childhood friends, Alamea Kaapa and Pearlie Mae de Gaulle, share nearly everything. Having inherited one million dollars after the disappearance of mysterious Margery Maude, the young ladies split the stash and opt for a faraway adventure. A new life awaits, but the quest to fulfill lifelong dreams of three-m happiness: marriage, motherhood and a magnificient homelife on the mainland may be more than they can bare. Caught in the crossfire of Redvine, an obscure Georgian town heavily populated with lunatics and military mavens, a valuable lesson is learned: some things in life are never meant to be shared. For some it may be millions and for others macabre memories, mistresses and men; yet for Alamea and Pearlie, it all boils down to pearls.
Momme Weight is a satirical story of twisted talebearers. Written in various narrative forms, it reflects upon life's unsavory characters, prompting one to think twice about kinsmen kept and saying, "I do."