Meet the Author
Eric Albright lives on the east coast of the United States with his spouse, two children, and two orange tabbies. He has been an educator for most of his professional life, with a gap of nearly a decade that he spent as a stay-at-home parent. Eric enjoys acting as a mentor to younger humans in his community and bringing people together to celebrate life. Beyond his attempts to help others find understanding and joy, he seeks his own through various forms of artistic expression, reading books on spirituality and psychology, and traveling with friends and family to new cultural and environmental landscapes to interact with the Earth and its many wonders.
Details
Format: Paperback, Hardcover
Pages: 33
ISBN PB: 978-1-962416-89-4
ISBN HC: 978-1-962416-88-7
Release date: 4/1/2025
Endorsements
“How do any of us truly know who we are until we begin the search? In A String’s Tale, a single thread finds its rhythm, and what a song it sings! This beautifully crafted journey will pull you in, beat by beat, page by page. It’s motivating, inspiring, and deeply heartwarming. A discovery of life’s lessons that leaves an impact long after the final page.” -Carla Blake, author of Learning Through Poetry: The Bible Vol.1.
Meet the illustrator
Katherine Jordan comes from a family of women who have all dabbled in some form of traditional crafting. Growing up in a military setting and moving around every few years served to broaden her horizons, exposing her to more cultures and mediums of art than most. Thus, her dabbling expanded into ceramics, weaving, textiles, book print and press, photography, drawing and painting, and later on digital media. By far, drawing on the computer is her favorite, and she’s finally able to live out one of her lifelong dreams of illustrating children’s books. She hopes that one of those books will eventually be her own to share with her kids someday. Katherine currently resides in Clarksville, Tennessee, along with a recently adopted cat to call her own – Winston – who is both excellent company and a terrible distraction, regularly hopping up on his human mom’s desk and walking across her tablet while she’s trying to work.