Deborah Danner
Coming Soon!
Seasons of Becoming Series
Where The Land Ends (Prequel)
The Embers of August
The Storms of November
The Quiet of January
The Flowers of April
The Trees of July
Where The Land Ends
A haunting psychological mystery set in a place defined by thresholds: land and sea, memory and silence, truth and what has been carefully withheld. As storms roll in and old histories stir, what was once believed to be settled begins to fracture.
Pages don’t simply turn in this story — they scatter. Secrets move on the wind. And the line between what was lost and what was protected becomes dangerously thin.
Embers of August
In The Embers of August, Rose returns to her coastal hometown expecting quiet — space to breathe, to think, to recover from the fractures in her own life. Instead, she walks into questions no one wants answered.
Book One in The Seasons of Becoming Series
There are summers that warm you.
And there are summers that mark you forever……….
The Storms of November
A Season of Reckoning
Book Two in The Seasons of Becoming
The sea remembers.
In The Storms of November, the cliffs stand darker. The wind cuts sharper. And the questions Rose thought were buried begin to rise with the tide.
After the fire of August, the town tries to settle. People return to routine. Doors reopen. Conversations soften.
But November does not allow forgetting.
The Quiet of January
A Season of Stillness
Book Three in The Seasons of Becoming
Winter does not arrive loudly.
It settles.
After fire and storm, January brings something far more unsettling — stillness.
In The Quiet of January, the world outside lies buried beneath snow. The sea has grown distant. The cliffs are silent. And inside a warm room lit by firelight, reflection becomes unavoidable.
This is not a season of chaos.
It is a season of reckoning with what remains.
The Flowers of April
A Season of Discovery
Book Four in The Seasons of Becoming
Spring does not arrive all at once.
It begins quietly — beneath the surface.
After fire, storm, and stillness, April brings something unexpected: renewal. Not loud. Not dramatic. But steady.
In The Flowers of April, the landscape softens. Rain falls over wildflower fields. The air shifts. What once felt buried begins to rise — not in destruction, but in discovery.
And discovery is rarely comfortable.
The Trees of July
A Season of Renewal
Book Five in The Seasons of Becoming
By July, everything is in full bloom.
The fires have burned.
The storms have passed.
The silence has spoken.
The rain has softened the ground.
Now, beneath a canopy of green, renewal begins.
In The Trees of July, sunlight filters through tall summer branches, casting light across wildflowers and open spaces once overshadowed by uncertainty. What once felt fractured now carries the possibility of restoration.
But renewal is not the same as forgetting.