Is there only one true love, one soul mate, for everyone? Can you love someone and not be with them? Julie Foster faces those questions as she settles into her new position as Sergeant of the Orchard Park Police Department. Her choices: A.D.A Roger Dunman and mechanic Gene Palmer. And just to make the task a bit more complicated there is Special Agent Mike Young and ex-boyfriend Jack Manner.

All this romantic whirlwind spins around the pressure of a determined, yet confused woman, trying to close down an international smuggling ring and topple a crime family who has unlimited resources and political power. And as always there are family and friends who have plenty of advice to help make a choice.

Put yourself in Julie’s shoes; which choice would you make?

All living things have the capacity to love which can transcend time and be rekindled after many years. Two college first-year students began a love that seemed so right for them. But outside forces, their respective families, tore them apart. The couple went on to find new love with other partners but they had a strong lover’s bond.

For over fifty years there had been no contact until changes in life brought them the opportunity to reconnect. But would it be too late? Have Essjay and Melissa changed too much, their lives now the result of their homelife and the challenges and pressures of everyday living?

Co-written with humor and heart, this story is based upon real-life, but the names have been changed to avoid lawsuits.

In the newest reality TV show to be pitched to the networks, six people are interviewed and chosen as a “love jury”, deciding whether an engaged couple should marry.

Contestants finding favor with the jury could win enough money for a very nice wedding package. On the other hand, engaged couples would be discouraged from marrying before seeking counseling. “The Love Jury” takes the world of questioning love and marriage out of the realm of dreams and fantasy and puts it on trial.

Peter Farmer is one of the jurists chosen to sit on the panel to help interview engaged contestants before a verdict is given. He had decided early on that marriage was only for the brave. That is until he met Sarah and Elise, sisters, with a background murky enough to warn him to stay away. However, his experience on “The Love Jury’ just might change his mind.

Would you watch a ‘reality show’ where ‘real people’ decided the marriage goal for other ‘real people’? Would you continue to watch after you found out that someone was murdered, and another was forced to flee for their life?