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Lighthouse: First Novel in the St. Simons Trilogy by Price, Eugenia(May 29, 2012) Paperback

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About the author

Eugenia Price

176 books208 followers
Eugenia Price was born in Charleston, WV, June 22, 1916, to Walter (a dentist) and Anna Price. At the age of ten, she decided she wanted to be a writer and entered a poem in her school's literary magazine. She was raised as a member of the Methodist Church, but had left the church behind by the time she graduated from high school, at the age of 15, in 1932. She decided to leave writing behind to follow in her father's footsteps and pursue a career in dentistry. She attended Ohio University for three years, declaring herself an atheist during this time. In 1935, she became a student at Northwestern Dental School, the only woman admitted that year. She studied dentistry for two years, but writing continued to draw her. In 1939, she was hired to work on the NBC radio serial In Care of Aggie Horn. She continued as one of the writers for the show until 1942. She left NBC, going to work for the Proctor and Gamble show Joyce Jordan, M.D. from 1944-1946. In 1945 she founded her own television and radio production company, Eugenia Price Productions, developing other serials for Proctor and Gamble.

In 1949 Eugenia Price underwent a profound life change, giving up her college atheism to embrace Christianity. She considered a career change, but accepted a position with WGN Radio as writer, producer, and director for Unshackled, another radio serial. The popularity of the show led her to a lecturing career throughout the United States and Canada for several years.

Price began yet another career in the early 1950s when she was approached by one of the owners of Zondervan publishing. The 1953 publication of Discoveries Made from Living My New Life, a chronicle of her newfound faith and the experiences that led her to it, launched Eugenia Price into a new career as an inspirational writer. Other inspirational books followed, addresses issues of importance to women and children and other self-help concerns and urging readers away from advances in psychology and analysis and toward a life based on Biblical tenants. Many of her inspirational books are still in print, a testimony to the comfort and empathy many readers found in her works.

Eugenia Price gained a much wider audience though when she began publishing historical romances set in the American South. These novels were praised as "compelling sagas that blend personal stories of love and tragedy. . . with the dramatic events of a region's history." Her first historical romance, The Beloved Invader, was inspired her visit to Saint Simons Island, Georgia and based on one of the island's nineteenth-century inhabitants. The Beloved Invader was published in 1965 and followed by two other romances, New Moon Rising (1969) and Lighthouse (1971), to form the St. Simons Trilogy.

Her historical romances made Price a frequent member of the best-seller lists and brought her millions of readers. Although she continued to write and to publish inspirational works, it was her romances that brought her the greatest attention.

Eugenia Price died May 28, 1996, in Brunswick, Georgia of congestive heart failure and is buried in the Christ Church cemetery, Frederica, GA. Many of her books remain in print and have translated into 17 languages, charming readers of all ages and nationalities. Her manuscripts are housed at Boston University.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
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962 reviews136 followers
August 10, 2024
Eugenia Price is an author that i read many years ago and I decided to listen to this one to revisit the lovely historical saga that takes place on St. Simons Island on the Georgia coast. The story starts off in Massachusetts after the Revolutionary War when James Gould, a young man hurt by betrayal, heads south for a new start and with a lifelong hope to build a lighthouse. I could envision the lovely beaches and coastal marshes of the area. I listened to the story by Tessa Richards, and it was an enjoyable story of the hardships, struggles, and triumphs of the time period.
33 reviews1 follower
September 27, 2023
You will not want to stop reading her collections after this first one!
I have been to St. Simons Island and have seen the places she writes about, seen the graves of the people/families she writes about - I want to go back to the island again!
7 reviews
July 23, 2023
Obviously written in gentler times. Really a lovely story of times we don't hear much about--1780 thru 1824. Touches on the War of 1812 which I knew very little about.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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