PAPER ROSES on STONY MOUNTAIN

Paper Roses on Stony Mountain is the third and last book of Lukia’s Family Saga Series.

Where to Buy

The ebook and paperback is available on Amazon!

And Kobo, as well as Apple, and Barnes and Noble, etc. It’s available wherever books are sold.

Like the other two novels in the series, Sunflowers Under Fire and Lilacs in the Dust Bowl, this real-life fiction is based on the life of Lukia Mazurec (Mazurets), a Ukrainian widow and her family who, after surviving WWI in Ukraine and Russia, is challenged further on a farm in Canada during the Great Depression and the early years of WWII.

The Storyteller

The author’s mother, Dolly Klewchuk ( Eudokia Mazurec) was the oral storyteller whose stories laid the foundation for Lukia’s Family Saga series. Her photo was used for the cover of the third book. Though poorly educated, she pressed upon her daughter and grandchildren the value of an education. She encouraged them all to go to university, which they did, even her great grandchildren.

Lukia's Family Saga Series

The Story

Wars, typhus, draught and family losses could not stop Lukia Mazurec. Will her children’s indifference finally break her spirit?

With the Great Depression ending and Hitler’s armies marching across Europe, the young in Canada are called upon to enlist. Though her children are not eligible to serve, Lukia Mazurec can’t count on them to help her manage her farm in Manitoba. Her sons are at odds, their fights getting uglier every day, and her daughter, Dolly, has fallen in love with Peter, an intelligent but poor man uninterested in farming. Lukia’s dream of family unity is crumbling, as one by one her children leave, forcing her to make some hard decisions. Can she rise to the challenge or is this one test too many?

Based on the true story of Diana Stevan’s grandmother, Paper Roses on Stony Mountain is the third book of Lukia’s Family Saga trilogy.

An inspirational family saga, that started with the Award-Winning Sunflowers Under Fire, continues to resonate with readers worldwide.

“Prose as nourishing as cabbage soup and rye bread.”

Darcy Friesen Hossack, author of Mennonites Don’t Dance

“Incident after incident, character after character, I was carried into worlds that opened up in this page-turner of a novel.”

Myrna Kostash, author of All of Baba’s Children

“Gripping, illuminating, and personal, this story is a must-read.”

Martha Conway, author of The Physician’s Daughter

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