Naida Webster's Books
Presenting the books of Naida Joy Webster
Naida Joy Webster is a former Middle School teacher. She taught 23 years at Baker Middle School in Tacoma, Washington. She also taught in Anaheim, California and in Goldendale, Washington where she grew up and began her teaching career. Naida was married to a long haul trucker, now deceased. The many hours spent alone while her husband was on the road were spent writing Writing kept her sane and she has many manuscripts that have yet to see the light of day. Naida has three daughters, numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren. All of Naida's books are available on Amazon.
MISSING ANNA is partially based on real events and circumstances surrounding the birth of my twin daughters in January 1969, one of which reportedly died in infancy. Names, places and other events are a figment of my imagination and are totally ficticious. As a writer, I created a fictional story surrounding some of those weird events, which includes some wishful thinking as well. It gave my daughter and me closure and peace when no answers were available. As a little girl, the surviving twin often talked to her missing sister as though she lived, even though she knew Anna was in Heaven. That twin bond seemed unbreakable, and became the inspiration for this novel.
After a terrifying accident that costs her her memory, Ruth Arnold creates her own identity and builds a new life for herself. Repeated attempts by authorities to identify her fail. Months even years goes by for the young woman without a past. Then suddenly a private detective shows up with a story that the man she is currently dating is really her fiancee from the past. She is confronted with an identity and people from a past she doesn’t remember in a summer of torment and confusion.
Cady Ryan didn’t like what was happening at her high school. Several students had lost their lives in what authorities called tragic accidents. Cady decides to do something about what she believes are deliberate attempts to get rid of students that are not performing well or behaving badly. Cady proceeds to prove her theory nearly becoming a victim of the persona she labeled The Phantom of Kenton High.