The Green Dress (True Colors)
Description
Fiction Based on Strange, But True, History
True, riveting stories of American criminal activity are explored through a unique stories of historical romantic suspense. Collect them all and be inspired by the hope that always finds its way even in the darkest of times.
When Harriet Peters came to Boston in 1882, the Robinson family took her in like one of their own, and Harriet became closer to Lizzie Robinson than her own siblings. Now, four years later, Lizzie is deathly sick, failing quickly just like several others in her family have done over the past few years. How can so many in one family die from the same mysterious illness? Harriet doesn’t have answers, but she is determined to help the family, bringing in a new-to-the-neighborhood doctor, Michael Wheaton.
As Harriet and Michael close in on the answer, putting their own lives at risk, can the cause be found before anyone else dies?
Praise for The Green Dress (True Colors)
“A haunting story fraught with danger and intrigue, The Green Dress will leave you with a bittersweet remembrance of the characters long after you read the last page."
–Michelle Griep, Christy award-winning author of Once Upon a Dickens Christmas
“I’m always up for a true crime read, and Liz Tolsma’s latest foray into the seedier days of life ... had me turning the pages as fast as possible. It’s difficult to believe such villainous stories grace our history books, and Tolsma does a wonderful job in bringing them to fictional form.”
–Jaime Jo Wright, author of Echoes among the Stones and Christy-Award winning, The House on Foster Hill
“Suspense rooted in the impossible and wrapped in love. Chilling without being gruesome, The Green Dress will keep you up long past your bedtime, and you might lose a few fingernails along the way. Recommended for anyone looking for an excuse to stay up into the wee hours and shiver at the slightest shifting shadow.”
–Chautona Havig, author of the Amazon bestselling Aggie’s Inheritance and Past Forward series
". . .Tolsma’s meticulous characterizations and use of period detail make for a pleasant inspirational drama."
— Publishers Weekly