***

O wind-drifted Branch, lift your head to the sun,

For the sap of new life in your veins hath begun,

And a little young bud of the tenderest green

Mine eyes through the snow and the sorrow have seen!

O little green bud, break and blow into flower,

Break and blow through the welcome of sunshine and shower;

'Twas a long night and dreary you hid there forlorn,

But now the cold hills wear the radiance of morn!

– Ethna Carbery

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bertrice Small is the best-selling author of The Kadin, Love Wild and Fair, Adora, Skye O'Malley, Unconquered, and Beloved. She lives in the oldest English settlement in the state of New York, a small village on the eastern end of Long Island. She is called "Sunny" by her friends, and "Lust's Leading Lady" by her fans; but her son insists that to him, she's just plain "Mom."

Mrs. Small works at an antique desk in a light-filled pink, green, and white studio overlooking her old-fashioned rose and flower garden. It is furnished in what she describes as a mixture of office modern and Turkish harem. Mrs. Small's only companions as she writes creating her handsome rogues, dashing renegades, and beautiful vixens are her typewriter, Rebecca, and Checquers, a black and white kitten with big pink ears, who has recently joined the family and is trying very hard to fill the large niche left by the departure of Ditto, who died after 15V2 happy years. As Ditto so often said:

Man can live without pandas, gorillas, or frogs;

He can live without chickens and live without hogs.

He can live without sparrows and live without bats,

But civilized man cannot live without CATS.

– Hiram and Other Cats, by Lawrence Dwight Smith, Grosset and Dunlap, Inc., New York, 1941

A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR

When Skye O'Malley was published in October of 1980 the overwhelming response to its heroine was nothing short of incredible. No one was more surprised than I was, for although I had created Skye, I had never expected her to assume such larger-than-life proportions. The one question asked of me over and over again was: "Will there be a sequel?" Quite honestly, at the time I did not think so. Four husbands, five living children, and all those passionate adventures seemed quite a feat for a sixteenth-century Irish lady who wasn't even thirty when the novel ended.

What I had not reckoned on was that although I was through with Skye, Skye was most assuredly not through with me! My characters do have a way of taking me over. I hope you have enjoyed this sequel to Skye O'Malley, and I am pleased to tell you that a third book in this series, the story of Skye and Adam's beloved daughter, Velvet, will be coming out eventually. Do write to me at P.O. Box 765, Southold, NY 11971, and tell me if you have enjoyed All The Sweet Tomorrows. As busy as I am, I always find time to answer my mail. I'll be waiting to hear from you.

Bertrice Small

  • 1
  • 108
  • 109
  • 110
  • 111
  • 112