Series Description:
Nit Roast & Other Stories” is a first person, diary-style comedy serial about the adventures of an Irish mom.
Trish McTaggart's family life is a mess. Her diary holds her worries - an animal-obsessed daughter, a teen son drinking, an absent-minded husband, and a local parent who's out to get her. Building her new sewing business will be the easy part this year. This is a sequel to "Hamster Stew & Other Stories", also available on Channillo.com
Category/Genre(s): Humor, Journal EntriesAuthor Bio For Grace Tierney:
Grace Tierney (www.gracetierney.com) is a columnist, author, part-time librarian, and blogger writing in rural Ireland. She is the Ireland North East organiser for National Novel Writing Month (www.NaNoWriMo.org) and enjoys the challenge of writing a comedy or historic fiction novel each November.
She’s been blogging about unusual words at http://wordfoolery.wordpress.com since 2009. Her word history book “How to Get Your Name in the Dictionary” takes a light-hearted look at the lives of those soldiers, inventors, style icons, and villains who gave their names to the English language as eponyms. Grace tweets @Wordfoolery.
Series Description:
Nit Roast & Other Stories” is a first person, diary-style comedy serial about the adventures of an Irish mom.
Trish McTaggart's family life is a mess. Her diary holds her worries - an animal-obsessed daughter, a teen son drinking, an absent-minded husband, and a local parent who's out to get her. Building her new sewing business will be the easy part this year. This is a sequel to "Hamster Stew & Other Stories", also available on Channillo.com
Category/Genre(s): Humor, Journal EntriesAuthor Bio For Grace Tierney:
Grace Tierney (www.gracetierney.com) is a columnist, author, part-time librarian, and blogger writing in rural Ireland. She is the Ireland North East organiser for National Novel Writing Month (www.NaNoWriMo.org) and enjoys the challenge of writing a comedy or historic fiction novel each November.
She’s been blogging about unusual words at http://wordfoolery.wordpress.com since 2009. Her word history book “How to Get Your Name in the Dictionary” takes a light-hearted look at the lives of those soldiers, inventors, style icons, and villains who gave their names to the English language as eponyms. Grace tweets @Wordfoolery.