Description The Frog's Song depicts the light-hearted journey of three adults, one seven-month-old child, two dogs, and two cats who left home and hearth to sail away to a tropical island to live off the grid.
Purchasing a picturesque cottage on a secluded macadamia nut orchard, surrounded by lush foliage and fragrant flowers, with the glittering Pacific just a stone's throw away, Joyce and her intrepid family settle in to live out their dream.
Hawaiian life, however, is not quite what they expected.
Battling torrential downpours and frequent power outages, giant night toads and inexplicable sinkholes, as well as cane grass that grows to roof-height, the Davis family, in this entertaining family memoir, rediscover life's simple joys in togetherness on a tropical isle.
About the Author In college, Joyce Davis found that she liked writing research papers for her Biology classes.
And although she was not especially eloquent or flowery in her prose, she discovered that writing put her in that No-time zone artists know so well.
And as it is with most gifts, if the purchaser loves the gift, the recipient most likely will as well.
In 2005 she won second place in the Joanna Catherine Scott Novel Excerpt Prize Category that came with a $50 prize.
Well, second place, that's good, but it probably needs work, she thought.
So, she wrote, tore it apart, rewrote, and let it percolate for those many years.
It's in the drawer where many first novels belong.
That novel has served as a back story and has spawned a second that will not remain in the drawer.
The lesson she got from the two novels was that we never know the ramifications of our lives.
Joyce has self-published a couple of books, one about her adventures with horses titled, It's Hard to Stay on a Horse While You're Unconscious, and the other about her mother adopting Korean youngsters, Mother's Letters, and Mine.
Before blogging was popular, Joyce printed a little journal called The Frog's Song and sent it to friends.
When he.