About Me

Contact e-mail: jo11234@hotmail.com

JoanneConnors-Wade is a native of Massachusetts. She enjoys a challenge and beomes engrossed in extensive research which she believes is the key to credibility within a story whether fiction or non-fiction. Joanne is the mother of three adult children, and the grandmother of four. On November 1, 2007 she moved from her native Massachusetts to Florida where continues to write and promote her books.
UPDATE: December, 2011 she returned to Massachusetts and presently resides in Westfield.

Awards/Certificates Florida Certified Guardian ad Litem, Writer's Digest International Self-Published Book Awards, Member of Cambridge Who's Who Registry
Achievements Graduate of Westfield High School class of 1961, Associate Degree-Education at Westfield State College, Instructor and tutor ESL classes at International Language Institute/Northampton, MA
Guest Speaker: Libraries, Colleges, Rotary/Exchange Clubs, Women's Clubs, Community Organizations
Volunteer work: Public schools, re-hab facilities, Nominee for Tutor of the year/Massachusetts
Author three published books

No Tomorrows - About the book

 Scroll to bottom to view backstories of each victim in this book...

"No Tomorrows" addresses a widespread epidemic.
The Abduction/Murder epidemic does not discriminate. No age, gender, race or religion is immune. The predators are cunning, muniplative and most often non-family members. They function among us in our everyday lives avoiding suspicion. The victims in "No Tomorrows" could have been anyone's
child. Rural towns and villages once believed to be 'safe havens' are hunting grounds and the children are prey to the monsters who hunt for them. The families of the victims in "No Tomorrows" have expressed their desie to keep their lost family member's story in the forefront. These victims should never be forgotten.
The families will never have closure, but they deserve justice. Knowing the killer continues to walk free is a pain few could ever imagine. Families who have never had their loved one's emains disclosed endure a suffering that will never be comforted.

Preview... "He was my best friend. He used to take me everywhere with him. Sometimes we'd go for long trips up in New York somewhere and stay overnight. The twelve-year-old was eager to answer the police investigator's questions. "If we went anywhere and I wandered off, he'd tell me about this kid, Jimmy something that got kidnapped and killed. He told me it took about a month before they found the kid and when they did, he said he was hung and then stabbed because he wasn't dead enough." "Sometimes he would act like a kid, sometimes like an adult. If he had one of his headaches he'd get angry real quick, and then go to his room to lie down." The detectives listened to the details the boy recounted about his 'best friend', the monster they had arrested and who had confessed to killing two children. "Every time he told me the story about Jimmy, he would say, 'better watch out, I won't always be around to protect you' and I'd get so scared I didn't want to leave his side." The boy's mother interjected, "It's startling to be in a position to har your son tell you facts about a dead iid you never knew, some facts that were never in print. The boy's mother interjected, "It's startling to be in a position to hear your son tell you facts about a dead kid you never knew, some facts that were never in print. It's very scary." The boy continued, "Even my mom was happy he was around. He used to teach me all kinds of neat stuff. Some stuff I wasn't supposed to tell anyone, like about the pot he grew in his room, but he showed me how to do it." Seasoned detectives were in disbelief as they listened to each revelation the boy delivered about the killer occupying a cell at the police station. "I think the best day of my life was when he moved into the apartment upstains." The excitement quickly diminished; the young boy's eyes cast downward as he spoke in a barely audible tone, "and the worse day of my life was when I came home from school and found out that my best friend, my very best friend, was a child killer."
Jimmy Bernardo http://www.newsweek.com/1994/01/23/the-trail-of-a-serial-killer.html

and references to many others...


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