Julie Eberhart Painter was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. For twenty-six years, she worked with nursing homes as a volunteer coordinator and later as a community ombudsman. She spent eighteen years with Hospice of Volusia/Flagler in Port Orange, Florida and contributed to and edited their two most recent publications.
Julie has three novels in print. Her numerous articles on geriatric concerns were published in the Orlando Sentinel, Seniors Today, the News-Journal of Daytona Beach and The News-Observer, New Smyrna. Her humorous “Confession is Good For the Soul” appeared in The Wittenburg Door.
Julie’s articles on writing were published in The Romance Writers' Report, Novel Notes, The Galley, and Florida Writers’ Magazine.
Penny Olsen and her lawyer must find out who would kill her beloved uncle and murdered the editor of an environmental magazine. Might they be the same people who are after her?
Penny Olsen and her lawyer must find out who would kill her beloved uncle and murdered the editor of an environmental magazine. Might they be the same people who are after her?
Cole and Penny must find who has murdered the hospice psychic before he kills again.
Someone is killing little old ladies in Ellen Lange’s nursing home and since the facility owners don’t seem to care, Ellen sets up a plan to take them down.
No longer “The Little Match Girl,” always on the outside looking in, Catherine gains international respect that crosses the thresholds she’d only dreamed of bridging.
No longer “The Little Match Girl,” always on the outside looking in, Catherine gains international respect that crosses the thresholds she’d only dreamed of bridging.