Author: destiny-allison

  • HOMAGE to the SUFFRAGE CENTENNIAL – Women’s Rights, Voting Rights, Suffrage, the 19th Amendment

    HOMAGE to the SUFFRAGE CENTENNIAL – Women’s Rights, Voting Rights, Suffrage, the 19th Amendment

     

    Suffragists parade down Fifth Avenue, 1917.
    Advocates march in October 1917, displaying placards containing the signatures of more than one million New York women demanding the vote. The New York Times Photo Archives.

    On August 18, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States of America Constitution was ratified and signed into law on the 26th that same month.

    We are celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment’s adoption into the U.S. Constitution: the amendment that guarantees citizens the right to vote regardless of their gender, and the victory of the American Suffrage Movement. It took more than seventy years of protesting, picketing, and struggles for women to gain the civil right to vote in US elections. And many more decades passed before other disenfranchised groups  were systematically denied the right to vote.

    The Nineteenth Amendment was the capstone of that fight, but it took over seventy years to achieve it.

    And still, the vote was not granted to Black women and men. That right came about much later than most people realize, June 6, 1965, when President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, which outlawed the discriminatory voting practices that some Southern states adopted after the Civil War.

    During this election season, we call all Chanticleerians to Vote Your Conscious and to not let anything get in your way!

    Women’s suffrage was not just a long fight, but one taken on by many pivotal figures. But the story of the suffrage movement is best told by remembering many of its impactful suffragists, such as Alice Stone Blackwell, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Matilda Joslyn Gage, Ida B. Wells, Mary Church Terrel, and Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin.

    Suffragists were physically attacked by mobs of angry men and boys while police looked the other way. They’d been roughly arrested; been held in fetid, cold, vermin-infested cells; been shackled to the wall; and endured abuse and even torture in jail. When they went on hunger strikes, they were force-fed, tubes rammed up their noses. The Christian Science Monitor. 

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton, c. 1880

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the women who first crystallized the Suffrage Movement, having helped organize the Seneca Falls Convention. Her unique background was pivotal in formulating the first demand for women’s suffrage in 1848.

    As the movement grew and drew public attention, Stanton proved herself to be a skilled orator and writer, working closely with Susan B. Anthony throughout the years; Stanton actually wrote some of the speeches that Anthony delivered, and– along with Anthony– was one of the founders of the National Woman Suffrage Association. Stanton wrote for a more equitable future in more than voting; in addition to the question of suffrage, she championed a broader view of women’s freedoms, supporting labor rights, property rights, and the right to divorce. She saw that women should have the chance to lead their own lives, taking part in all aspects of society equally to men.

    Movements don’t just happen, they come alive when a group of people decides to take action against injustice, and even small beginnings can lead to sweeping change.

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton came from a privileged background and used her position and means to propel her views. Her father was a prominent attorney, Congressman, and a judge. He also was a slave owner. Elizabeth was exposed to the study of law and the government mechanisms that govern by her father. She was particularly against how religion was used to justify the oppression of women. She penned The Woman’s Bible to tackle misogynistic traditions rooted in religious dogma after being sent to a seminary at the age of sixteen.

    She became an adamant abolitionist to end the practice of slavery in the United States in 1839 at the age of 24. Many historians believe that the Abolitionist Movement to End Slavery experiences and lessons were essential to pave the way for the Women’s Suffrage Movement.

    Stanton wasn’t the only suffragist who saw the reality of sexist injustice throughout her society, and one of her contemporaries joined her in drawing attention to these wrongs. Matilda Joslyn Gage was considered a radical in her time, having fought against traditionalist views as Stanton had. Matilda was on the revising and editing committee for Elizabeth’s  highly controversial The Woman’s Bible. 

    Matilda Electa Joslyn
    March 24, 1826

    This right to vote was a battle, fought and won 100 years ago by women we will never know, but by what they have written, what others have written about them, and what they have done for all of us.

    Alice Stone Blackwell

    One of the women who played a significant role in uniting these two groups was Alice Stone Blackwell. She was in a position to do so because of her connection to the AWSA: her mother was Lucy Stone. Along with Alice’s father, Henry Browne Blackwell, they were some of the primary organizers of the group. As Alice Stone Blackwell grew up, she worked with her parents on their paper, the Woman’s Journal, and eventually ran the paper. Once the AWSA and NWSA had merged, Blackwell served as the NAWSA’s recording secretary.

    While the centennial celebrates the federal adoption of women’s suffrage, we shouldn’t forget the smaller victories and works that punctuated the movement’s length, those who spoke out against injustice in many forms, while seeking the vote. One such woman was Ida B. Wells, who played an active role in the suffrage movement of Chicago. The city had given partial suffrage to women. Wells, along with a fellow suffragist Belle Squire, started the Alpha Suffrage Club to advance women’s suffrage further and educate women on civic involvement.

    Wells & Squire marching in 1913

    The club especially supported African American candidates for the city’s elections, working to break down multiple unjust barriers in politics. Wells participated in one of the NAWSA’s best-remembered marches, set in Washington D.C. the day before the inauguration of President Woodrow Wilson. At the beginning of the rally, she was told to walk at the back, but she refused. Ida B. Wells marched with her sister suffragists from Illinois at the front. The power of social change comes from unified work between many people, and Wells refused the idea that she, as a suffragist, could be divided from anyone else.

    Along with women like Wells and Ruffin, Mary Church Terrel was an advocate for racial equality. She was entwined with gender equality, which shows throughout her work with the NAWSA, where she frequently met with Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She insisted that the movement fight for the rights of black women alongside those of white women, and spoke highly of the suffragists who fought for everyone oppressed by the political and social systems of the time. She spoke at NAWSA meetings, delivered speeches, and called for the suffragists to remember all of the women whose vote they worked so hard to gain.

    Ida B. Wells

    Let’s not allow their work to be forgotten – and let us never give up our full Rights as U.S. Citizens to carry out this all-too-important privilege.

    Despite the NAWSA’s issues with racism, some black women did act within that organization, such as Mary Church Terrel, who was an advocate for racial equality entwined with gender equality, which shows throughout her work with the NAWSA, where she frequently met with Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Mary insisted that the movement fight for the rights of black women alongside those of white women, and spoke highly of the suffragists who fought for everyone oppressed by the political and social systems of the time. She spoke at NAWSA meetings, delivered speeches, and called for the suffragists to remember all of the women whose vote they worked so hard to gain.

    Mary Church Terrel September 23, 1863

    Women’s suffrage had a complex relationship with black civil rights in large part thanks to the period of history in which the suffrage movement began: the Seneca Falls Convention took place in 1848, seventeen years prior to the abolition of slavery. This meant that the women’s rights movement was progressing and focusing at the same time that black people across were achieving freedom and directing themselves in a country that, while changing dramatically, still marginalized them.

    Harriet Tubman’s work is an example of how black women fought on both fronts; she’s a figure best remembered for her work as a liberator, freeing slaves prior to and during the civil war, but she took part in the suffrage movement as well. During the time of the NAWSA, she traveled to meetings and demonstrations to give speeches, telling of her experiences fighting for freedom and facing down oppressive and dangerous power structures during the time of slavery, and how important the struggle for freedom is. She bridged her advocacy for equality into the fight for the vote, and during this time, Ruffin’s The Woman’s Era wrote a profile on Tubman, as the country’s attention was once again drawn to her fight.

    Harriet Tubman after the Civil War

    All of these histories show that the suffrage movement’s victory– the adoption of the nineteenth amendment– was the result of disparate people, dedicated and idealistic people coming together and fighting hard for their rights. They gave time, energy, and passion to a movement that would, eventually, provide them with the right to participate in the democracy of their country. The fact that the suffrage movement stayed strong for 70 years united its two significant organizations, tackled legislation at both the national and local levels, is a testament to the people who refused to give up, and whose worked– together– to win the fight.

    It’s been a century since women won the right to vote, and more than 170 years since the American suffrage movement started in earnest. This movement has a lot it can teach us: the value of working together, across the country, to bring about change; the importance of remembering that there is always more than one fight for progress and rights, that we should listen to the voices of everybody who’s been pushed down and denied their rights and opportunities; and, of course, that even in the face of a power structure that calls rebellion and the fight for equal freedoms’ radical’, that fight is a good one, and worth taking on.

    At the Seneca Falls Convention, the call for women’s suffrage rang out in America, whereas before it had been considered a fringe idea, or even impossible. The fight was long, but after seventy-two years, the suffragists made what was ‘radical’ a reality.

    So, in the spirit that the right to vote is something that all people deserve, and should never have been restricted to any one group over another, let’s celebrate the centennial of a victory that brought America one step closer to the ideals of equality, freedom, and the rights of all. The power of the vote has shaped America’s history. We must all understand the importance of voting, and today we recognize those who fought for our rights. We are thankful for those brave suffragettes, for it is their struggle that has given us the right to participate in our democracy regardless of gender.

    It required three generations of fearless activists over a span of more than seven decades working in more than 900 state, local, and national campaigns to finally win the vote for American women. And that active verb – win – is important: Women were not given the vote; they were not granted the vote. As one commentator so aptly describes it: “They took it.” Christian Science Monitor

    Links to articles and sources are listed at the end of this blog post.

    We want to thank Scott Taylor, our newest member of the Chanticleer Team, for his research for the blog post in this collaborative effort of honoring and remembering the women who struggled and worked for ratifying the 19th Amendment on August 18, 1920.


    We thought you might enjoy viewing some of our very favorite books about Suffrage and Strong Women we admire: 

    Love of Finished Years by Gregory Erich Phillips

    Love of Finished Years is one of Kiffer’s favorite novels as it tackles workers rights, women’s suffrage, the looming shadow of World War One, the plight of immigrants, and the horrors of wars from the trenches. Phillips reminds us that love, light, and perseverance can help us find a way to overcome almost any obstacle. Love of Finished Years won the Chanticleer Overall  Grand Prize for Best Book while it was still in manuscript form. 

    From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream by Dr. Janice S. Ellis

    This pivotal work serves as an historical record which serves as a historical record amid one of the most tumultuous yet empowering eras in American history. Complete with a discussion guide in the Appendix, the book can serve as a text for a college course or a community book club exploring themes of race and gender.

     Janice’s overarching message is to stay true to oneself and continue to follow your heart, no matter how unpopular or uncomfortable your choices. From Liberty to Magnolia was awarded the Journey Book Awards Grand Prize. 

     

    Madame Presidentess by Nicole Evelina

    A story based on the mysterious, mystical Victoria Woodhull, a free-thinking woman well ahead of her time with a rags to riches story. Woodhull was the first woman to run for president of the United States, at a time when, with the full support of the law, most American men did not even regard their mothers, wives and daughters as citizens. She was also the first woman to own a brokerage firm on Wall Street. Nicole Evelina brings Victoria Woodhull vividly to life in this award winning novel. 

    Chanticleer Non-fiction Award-winning Books — just click on the link to read our reviews.

    The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves by Destiny Allison

     

    Wounded Warrior, Wounded Wife: Not Just Surviving, but Thriving by Barbara McNally

     

    Inside: One Woman’s Journey Through the Inside Passage by Susan Marie Conrad

     

    Fishing With Hyenas  by Teresa Matthews


    Links to Sources and Resources:

    A Timeline of Voting Rights Actshttps://www.businessinsider.com/when-women-got-the-right-to-vote-american-voting-rights-timeline-2018-10#1965-congress-passes-the-historic-voting-rights-act-removing-discriminatory-barriers-that-kept-many-people-of-color-from-voting-12

    Sources: US Department of Justice Brennan Center for Justice, Business Insider

    19th Amendment: The six-week ‘brawl’ that won women the vote https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2020/0803/19th-Amendment-The-six-week-brawl-that-won-women-the-vote

    Why Celebrate the Centennial of the 19th Amendment?

    Britannica https://www.britannica.com/biography/Elizabeth-Cady-Stanton

    History.com

    https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/abolitionist-movement

    https://www.history.com/topics/womens-history/elizabeth-cady-stanton

    https://www.history.com/topics/womens-history/the-fight-for-womens-suffrage?li_source=LI&li_medium=m2m-rcw-history

    Brooklyn Museum – Alice Stone Blackwell: https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/heritage_floor/alice_stone_blackwell

    Americans Who Tell the Truth – Elizabeth Cady Stanton   

    https://www.americanswhotellthetruth.org/portraits/elizabeth-cady-stanton

    https://socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/woman-suffrage/gage-matilda-joslyn/

    NPS – Ida B. Wells

    https://www.nps.gov/people/idabwells.htm

    Blackpast – Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin

    https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/ruffin-josephine-st-pierre-1842-1924/

    Wikipedia – Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephine_St._Pierre_Ruffin

    National Womens’ History Museum – Mary Church Terrell

    https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/mary-church-terrell

    Blackpast.org – Mary Church Terrell

    https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/terrell-mary-church-1863-1954/

    Harriet Tubman Historical Society – Harriet Tubman

    http://www.harriet-tubman.org/women-rights-suffrage/

    National Parks Foundation – Harriet Tubman

    https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/blog/beacon-resilience-and-love-harriet-tubman

    Alice Stone Blackwell, between 1880 and 1900
  • SPOTLIGHT on I&I AWARDS for NON-FICTION, HOW-TO, INSIGHT, INSTRUCTION, and more!

    SPOTLIGHT on I&I AWARDS for NON-FICTION, HOW-TO, INSIGHT, INSTRUCTION, and more!

     

    Are you gifted in the art of puzzle making? Do you have the ability to flip houses for profit? Are you a fervent advocate for renewable energy and want to share your knowledge with the world?

    Do you have a unique and interesting way of doing something? If so, and you choose to write an instructional manual, a travel guide, or shed some light on a subject, we would like to say, “Welcome!”

    We need your input, your advice, your manuals and manuscripts for the CIBA 2019 Instruction and Insight Awards.

    The deadline is fast approaching, so don’t delay, enter your work and let us judge it against the other entries to sus out the best!

     

     

    The categories are:

    • The Arts: Music, Photography, Performing Arts, Fine Arts,
    • Cookbooks, Home and Garden
    • Motivational: Career, Business, Sports, Self-help
    • Arts and Crafts How-To
    • Nature and Environment
    • Travel Guides
    • Science
    • Pets and the Animal World
    • Health, Diet, and Fitness
    • Writing Guides
    • Pop Culture and Social Issues

     

    If you have a published book or manuscript of Instruction & Insight, enter it before December 31, 2019! Who knows, you may bring home a First in Category – or even the Grand Prize Award!

    But you have to enter in order to win. Don’t delay, follow this link and enter today. 

    Cassandra Overby entered and won the I & I Grand Prize in the CIBAs for her Travel Guide, Explore Europe on Foot

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Here are the titles and authors who won First in Category in the 2018 I&I Awards: 

    • The Suburban Micro-Farm: Modern Solutions for Busy People by Amy Stross
    • God Answers Science by Gary W. Driver
    • Retire Securely: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist by Julie Jason
    • Physician: How Science Transformed the Art of Medicine by Rajeev Kurapati
    • Do You Have a Catharsis Handy? Five-Minute Writing Tips by Kathleen Kaska
    • Klee wyck Journal by Lou McKee          

    The CIBA 2017 GRAND PRIZE I & I Award Winner: 

    Kari Rhyan for Standby for Broadcast

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Here are the titles and authors who won First in Category in the 2017 I&I Awards: 


    The I&I Awards were new in 2017. Before that, the instruction and Insight books were included in the Journey Awards for NonFiction. Here are some of those books that made the grade – and are true I&I Winners!

    Here are some titles that fit nicely into the I&Is from 2016:

    The Grand Prize Winner for the Journey Awards in 2016 came from the Self-Help Category, Destiny Allison’s The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Here are some titles that fit nicely into the I&Is from 2015:

    The Grand Prize Winner in the 2015 Journeys, from the Enlightenment/Historical category, Grant Harper Reid‘s Rhythm for Sale

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Some of the Category Winners from that year: 


    Our First in Category Winners in 2014 Journey Awards that are definitely I & I Contenders: 

     


    In 2013, Christine Smith won the OVERALL Grand Prize in the Chanticleer International Book Awards for More Faster, Backwards: Rebuilding David  


    All of these outstanding authors entered the I&I Awards – or, the earlier, Journey Awards and were chosen as the best books of the year! 

    The deadline is fast approaching! December 31, 2019, is almost here.  

    The Chanticleer Non-fiction Book Awards First Place Award-Winning
    Authors Awards Package Includes:

    • ALL First In Category Award Winners will be given high visibility during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First in Category award winner will compete for the Non-fiction Book Awards Grand Prize Award for Chanticleer Non-fiction Book Awards’ Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $425 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and online media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter

    And the 1st Place Award winners will automatically be entered into the NON-FICTION GUIDEBOOKS AND HOW-TO BOOKS GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition 2019!

    Don’t delay, follow this link and enter for your chance to win a prestigious CIBA 2019 I & I Awards today!

  • 10 Question Author Interview with DESTINY ALLISON – 2016 Grand Prize Winner for JOURNEY AWARDS

    10 Question Author Interview with DESTINY ALLISON – 2016 Grand Prize Winner for JOURNEY AWARDS

    Destiny Allison writes narrative non-fiction/memoir, and she writes it in a no-holds-barred fashion that captures audiences across the globe. The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage On Ourselves was our pick for Grand Prize in the 2016 Journey Awards.

    Join us in discovering what drives Destiny Allison.

    Chanticleer: Tell us a little about yourself: How did you start writing?

    Allison: I started writing at a very young age. My father was an aspiring writer and I wanted to be like him. I published my first poems when I was nine.

    Chanticleer: Nine-years old? Wow! That is so exciting – Congratulations! When did you realize you that you were an author?

    Allison: The day I released my first book, Shaping Destiny. There’s a big difference between being a writer and being an author. When you become an author, you can change people’s lives.

    Chanti: Well said, Destiny. Thank you for that. What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Allison: I love to hike with my dog and I love to kayak, which is difficult because I live in the desert. Finding water is a constant adventure and a joy. I also own and operate several businesses. I think I was a social entrepreneur before the term was coined.

    Chanti: You’re ahead of your time! How do you come up with your ideas for a story?

    Allison: Most often, they come to me, as long as I’m writing regularly. When I try to force an idea, the writing typically isn’t good.

    Chanti: Speaking of writing regularly, how do you approach your writing day?

    Allison: With anticipation. I’m very disciplined when working on a project and I like to start early in the morning. I have to write at least 500 words every day, but usually, by the time I do, I have the inspiration for a couple of thousand.

    Chanti: What areas of your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Allison: Memoir is my greatest strength. My advice to other memoir authors is simple. Be brutally honest, but don’t feel like you have to provide every detail. Lay bare the bones of your story – know why you’re telling it and what message you hope your readers will take from it – then concentrate on the details that craft that message. Be lush with your imagery, authentic with your dialogue, and borrow from fiction. Your aunt may have been wearing a green hat that day but giving her a red one might flesh out her character and add pop to your story. It’s important to work on your craft. What do you do to grow your author chops? Read, write, repeat.

    Chanti: What do you do in your community to improve/promote literacy?

    Allison: I sponsor readings, support my local library, and help local authors sell their books.

    Chanti: That is so important – Thank you! Give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Allison: While we all love to see our work in bookstores, I’ve found that marketing outside the mainstream is more effective. I sell The Romance Diet in a local boutique and it does really well there because the subject matter is so close the hearts of that store’s customers. Knowing you market matters most when promoting your book.

    Chanti: Very smart! What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Allison: The most important thing a reader can do for an author is to leave a review. The next best thing is telling friends about the books they love and giving those books as gifts. Loaning a book is great, but gifting a book is better. Authors need to eat, too.

    Chanti: Destiny Allison is also a sculptor and works in steel. Here is a quote from her blog:

    Steel is exciting to me as a medium because it can have an exceptional softness in the final finish. I achieve a combination of organic forms and geometric shapes through the use of my MIG welder and plasma cutter. I create my colors by applying acid patina and heat to the raw metal, after the form has been completed. The combination of techniques allows me the freedom to explore relationships between emotional and intellectual responses to experience.

    Reminds me of the editing process…Chanticleer

    Thank you, Destiny Allison, for being a part of the Chanticleer Author Interview series! 

    Now, readers, you know what to do:

    • Like & follow Destiny’s Facebook Page
    • Check out her books on her Amazon.com author page
    • Read her book and, you guessed it, write those reviews!

    Here are Destiny’s other book links:

    Pipe Dreams  and Bitter Root 

  • The ROMANCE DIET: BODY IMAGE and the WARS WE WAGE on OURSELVES by Destiny Allison – Memoir, Weight Management, Body Image

    The ROMANCE DIET: BODY IMAGE and the WARS WE WAGE on OURSELVES by Destiny Allison – Memoir, Weight Management, Body Image

    A woman struggling with external self-image finds that inner self-awareness is the true key to permanent, meaningful reshaping, in Destiny Allison’s unusual, memorable true story, The Romance Diet – Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves.

    Happily married and successful, metal sculptor Destiny Allison was forced to give up her chosen profession when an unexpected health disaster—damage to her spine— took its toll. A year later, after fighting with pain and subsequent weight gain, she was further devastated to learn that her cholesterol was dangerously high. Fortunately, she found support from her husband, Steve, a thriving entrepreneur. Having gained a lot of unnecessary pounds himself, and concerned about his wife’s declining health, he agreed to go on a diet with her. At first, it didn’t seem too difficult; the couple would simply order or prepare one meal and split it. They took up dancing at nightclubs, reviving lost youthfulness as the pounds disappeared. The exercise made their bodies more attractive; their sex life regained its energy.

    Gradually, though, the process began to fray. Destiny, now running her own business in cooperation with her spouse, wanted more credit for the work she did but began to notice that clients and colleagues always preferred to do business with the man. Steve, innocently, basked in the attention and took his superior status for granted. His wife began to suspect, was sure, that he was having an affair. As their relationship fractured, it became increasingly difficult, sometimes impossible, to communicate. Destiny felt that she was the one always conceding and sacrificing. Things came to a head when she was molested by a man in one of the bars where the couple liked to show off their sometimes suggestive dancing feats. The incident brought back memories of a rape that happened when she was still in her teens, and Steve’s attempts to console her turned into a shared nightmare.

    Told with utter frankness, The Romance Diet reveals, what Allison describes as “…my personal hell, my deepest shame.” Women will recognize and learn from the many ways that this bold, feminist autobiographer examines her many rationalizations, her self-abnegating strategies for getting along with men, and most importantly, readers will share Destiny’s growing sense of pride and empowerment as she learns that these tactics are not necessary, either in casual social context or in the center of a hard-won, long term, committed relationship.

    Author (Shaping Destiny, Pipe Dreams, Bitter Root) Allison has developed her artistry as a well-practiced wordsmith, but just as importantly, here she demonstrates her ability as an explorer of that perilous country, the mind. She and Steve lost weight, nearly lost their marriage, and were able to recoup the companionship and mutual sense of responsibility that marriage requires without the extra pounds—all in all, a truly remarkable accomplishment.

    In this highly emotive memoir, a couple’s shared commitment to improvement takes longer and hurts more than originally planned, but the result is a new, better and brighter promise—one that can endure in Destiny Allison’s The Romance Diet.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker