cordelia Clark


Biography

Cordelia lives in the united states with her partner and her cat named ginger. she loves hearing from her readers. feel free to read her blog or friend her on facebook or twitter.

Where to find cordelia Clark online


Books

In the Year of the Bog Witch: Notes on a Limbo of Darkness Part 1    by cordelia Clark
Price: Free! 21050 words. Published on July 4, 2011. Fiction.

(2.00 from 1 review)
A psychological thriller/romance/erotica told through the wiccan calendar and psychotherapy case notes.
All of her dying keeps her alive: a tale of erotica    by cordelia Clark
Price: Free! 15310 words. Published on July 3, 2011. Fiction.

(1.00 from 1 review)
Short story written in erotica/romance category as the author was dared to write something steamy.
Creatures of Sensation: A teaser for the novel    by cordelia Clark
Price: Free! 3920 words. Published on July 3, 2011. Fiction.

Light hearted poking fun at Jane Austen's style of writing and the manners of Regency Era England in this ironic period piece Romance. A teaser for the novel.
Victorian Poetry: A Collection of Three Papers    by cordelia Clark
Price: Free! 9260 words. Published on July 1, 2011. .

Literary analysis on Emily Bronte and discussion of sexual deviancy in Christina Rossetti.
Chronicles of Bursts of Light and Shadow: Poems of Bipolar Depression    by cordelia Clark
Price: Free! 6620 words. Published on June 21, 2011. Fiction.

A cumulative work of poetry that chronicles a desent into madness.

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Smashwords book reviews by cordelia Clark

  • Three Karmic Short Stories on July 06, 2011
    star star star star
    had taken his life in a nearby park. I remember being confused. I told them he was in his room. He’d be up in an hour or two, growling about the wrong type of cereal, then he’d disappear again until either a lecture or meeting friends dragged him from the house. Scott Norton. Three Karmic Short Stories (Kindle Locations 25-28). Scott Norton. Three Karmic Short Stories by Scott Norton remind me of my own battles with suicidal ideal and suicidal attempts. It is powerfully written, a book you will want to read more than once. My own struggle with suicide, a struggle that has lasted for 29 years, is not something I offer up lightly for my readers to read about. It’s one of those taboo things we, the survivors, are not supposed to talk about. Scott Norman talks about suicide. In plain language, in the language that suicide happens. Unfortunately my poets, we do not die poetic martyrs for whatever reason we’ve chosen to end our lives. We chose a very ordinary day, an ordinary day to others. Whether or not it seems a poetic day to us. The wind was just right; there was just enough alphaphets in our cereal that we could spell out our motive. Having survived numerous suicide attempts, I know there is nothing poetic about our choice of self martyrdom. So does Scott Norton. Read his book. It will change your life.