For going on three decades, I have been ghostwriting for a clientele without borders. I have clients in many different countries all over the world. The one thing they all have in common is that my clients speak English, though for the majority, English is their second or third language, so ESL clients are always welcome. When I was working for the American Embassy as a counselor and the U.N. as an in-house writer while based in Rome for years, I came into daily contact with multicultural nationalities and loved the experience; it changed my entire perspective about life. Italy was a country without walls and I was grateful for the experience.
I live and work from Orcas Island of Washington State. My international clients and I manage to establish a good rapport via phone, email, and now available visual internet meeting room connections. I ghostwrite formatted manuscripts for book publication consideration – primarily Non-Fiction, such as Autobiography, Biography, and Memoir. I also write books for clients that focus on their various fields of expertise, such as space travel, science & technology, advances in medicine, climate change & the environment, global perspectives on a changing world, education abroad, spirituality, advances in the animal kingdom, corruption in a particular country and what needs to be changed. This usually involves a client’s devotion to a mission involving any of the above-mentioned fields.
I believe every individual, no matter what nationality or country of origin has a mission, even if they are unaware of it. We are all unique in that way and that we seek a purpose for living. So, if you feel a commitment to a mission or cause and you want to leave a legacy, you have found the right Ghostwriter to help you express yourself to the world.
Why hire me as your ghostwriter as opposed to another ghost writer? The following story addresses this question.
"A blind boy sat on the steps of a building with a hat by his feet. He held up a sign which said: 'I am blind, please help.'
There were only a few coins in the hat. A woman was passing by. She took a few coins from her purse and dropped them into the hat. She then took the sign, turned it around, and wrote some words. She put the sign back so that everyone who walked by would see the new words.
Soon the hat began to fill up. A lot more people were giving money to the blind boy. That afternoon the woman who had changed the sign came to see how things were. The boy recognized her footsteps and asked, 'Were you the one who changed my sign this morning? What did you write?'
The woman said, 'I only wrote the truth. I said what you said but in a different way.' I wrote 'Today is a beautiful day but I cannot see it.'”