"He told her they were Faeries. The only reason she believed him was because he showed her his wings. Then she found out her brother had known about his kind. And the little part of her heart left unbroken, shattered." An artistic skater with a very firm grip on reality, seventeen-year old Leslie Lucas is shaken to her core when her brother is murdered right in front of her eyes. Sent to her Irish family in the hopes of helping her cope, Leslie wants nothing to do with the sleepy village or the cousin that awaits her there, and flees the moment she has a chance. Unknowingly, she flees...
"He told her they were Faeries. The only reason she believed him was because he showed her his wings. Then she found out her brother had known abou...
John McNally, author of After the Workshop, says of Best Road Yet, "Ryan Stone understands the yearnings of people down on their luck, those longings and desires that his characters keep to themselves or tell few people, and he captures their struggles and hopes in prose that's as incandescent as a floodlight on a dark night. These are compelling and compassionate and heartbreaking stories. I urge you to stop what you're doing and read them." And Mary Troy, author of Beauties, says, "Ryan Stone gives us a fast-paced tour of the hearts and minds of men who do not belong in their own lives, and...
John McNally, author of After the Workshop, says of Best Road Yet, "Ryan Stone understands the yearnings of people down on their luck, those longings ...