A good fantasy story takes you away. The same could be said about "In
the Garden," where the author wonders what would the world look like if
Adam and Eve would never have consumed the forbidden fruit? From
children to adults, this fantasy is unique and interesting to all. This
story takes its readers on a journey with its central characters
Scarlett and Andrew, who are sucked into a mysterious old book inside
Uncle Bernard's library. They venture onto a life-changing discovery
after being taken to another world, a world much better than we know. A
place where love is mutual amongst all and feelings of envy, hate, and
despair seem to be unknown. A place where animals and human beings live
as one. A place where everyone has not only a spiritual but a physical
connection to the Creator. But there is no happiness known to the ones
outside of the borders of the kingdom. The Marked-ones constantly are in
an attempt to get into the kingdom through a portal similar to the ones
Scarlett and Andrew found. They want to eat the ripened fruit of the
Garden of Eden for immortality likes the beings of the kingdom. Will
Scarlett and Andrew find their way back home? Or will the marked ones
find the portal and invade this peaceful reality? What role does destiny
have in store for these two young kids?