David Marshall Hunt, PhD. My life of international adventures began when I served in the Air Force in the War in Viet Nam from 1964-65. Then came 40 years of business consulting, research, and teaching at universities around the world. I have experienced life in many cultures and learned about legends and myths, stories and events in exotic and sometimes dangerous places. It is my pleasure to share and discuss these exciting and fascinating tales in novel form with people from all nations and cultures.
When asked, why do I write fiction? Since retiring from academic life, I often reply that I enjoy writing in a somewhat whimsical way about events I have experienced and people I have met and found to be mysterious and adventuresome. I particularly enjoy developing stories and mysteries around legends of the past. In my novel, The Star Stone, The Chair, & The Dog, Professor Josiah Craft travels into the past and discovers the mysterious Island of Busse. This island was plotted on maps of the North Atlantic for hundreds of years. However, since the late19th century it is as though the island vanished. Professor Craft goes through several life changes in this novel and continues to adjust to dangers and challenges in "The Pilgrimage".
How can a scholar who has been taught the logic of Descartes ever believe in time travel?
Constance A. Hunt, author and mother. In lieu of a biography for Connie, her sons Gerald and David offer a Forward & Tribute at the start of a novel entitled, "Four Wheels: A 1950s teenage saga". After Connie's passing, we are keeping a promise to publish her story. David's name appears as first author, but this is her novel. We resisted the urge to alter mom's manuscript out of respect. While times have changed, so have values and vocabulary. Readers will appreciate that her story was written in and about an earlier time. The story has a message about relationships that is timeless. HAPPY MOTHERS DAY!