James H. Johnston
Jim Johnston is a lawyer, writer, and lecturer in Washington D.C. His law practice covers telecommunications, intellectual property, and appellate litigation. Jim has more than eighty newspaper and magazine articles to his credit on topics including law, history, art, terrorism, and books. His work has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Legal Times of Washington, American Lawyer, and the Maryland Historical Society Magazine. He has written two books, The Recollections of Margaret Cabell Brown Loughborough about a woman who worked in Richmond during the Civil War, and From Slave Ship to Harvard, which traces six generations of an extraordinary African American family. A list of his articles and links to copies of many may be found at the Publications button. Jim is on the Speakers Bureau of the Montgomery County Historical Society, the Publications Committee of the District of Columbia Bar, and the board of directors of the Historical Society of the District of Columbia Circuit. He is a frequent lecturer to Washington D.C. audiences.
Books by James H. Johnston:
- From Slave Ship to Harvard ©2012
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Kelly Jones
was born in Twin Falls, a small town in Southern Idaho, the second of six children. I loved being part of a big family, but always appreciated having my own quiet space. At an early age she learned from her mother that if you wanted to escape or learn something new to pick up a book. She graduated from Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, with a degree in English and an art minor. She spent a year in Italy at Gonzaga-in-Florence and developed a love for travel. After graduating she realized a degree in English with an art minor didn't translate into an abundance of employment opportunities and worked at a variety of frustrating jobs. Her husband suggested she quit and put efforts into a novel.
She joined a writers' group at the Log Cabin Literary Center in Boise and got to work. The rest is history ... Link to her http://www.kellyjonesbooks.com/.
Books by Kelly Jones:
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- The Woman Who Heard Color
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