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   A multifaceted motivational speaker, storyteller, and educator, with a passion for inspiring others.  Bringing a unique blend of warmth, wisdom, and wit to every speaking engagement, workshop and book. My goal is to empoer you to reach new heights, both personally and professionally. Join me on a journey of self-discovery and growth. Together we’ll unlock the doors to success, one story at a time.

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 Latest Amazon Reviews

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US Review

Distance Too Far: A Young cover

Distance Too Far: A Young Girl’s Spiritual Journey

by Mary Pryor

Xlibris

book review by Michelle Jacobs

“When you’re young, you think you are invincible and can do anything.”

This moving story of a woman’s life in all its fullness and complexity begins when Beth is a pregnant teenager desperate to marry the man she loves despite her mother’s alarm and resolute refusal to grant permission. Beth’s decision to follow her own desires lead her on a path filled with trials and tribulations at the mercy of an abusive husband. But with determination, perseverance, and hard work, she finds opportunities to improve her life at critical junctures. She relies on education and hard work to lift herself out of poverty and limited life choices. At one point, her son calls her “Mom of Perpetual Learning,” which speaks to her belief in education. With each degree she completes, she increases her earning potential and becomes empowered in her professional life as well as her personal one.

Told with detail and nuance, Pryor captures the heart and mind of a woman finding her way through struggle and heartbreak. Friends and family swirl around her story, some who offer support and some who take advantage of her. Her triumph through each stage of her life is inspiring and uplifting for anyone who has felt let down by the world and thrust onto an impossible path paved with bad choices and bad luck. The hopefulness of Beth’s achievements offers a light in the dark to women everywhere. This view into a woman’s life elevates the value of telling everyday stories of struggle and determination. Pryor provides deep insight into a woman’s worries, reasons, choices, and hopes through the story of Beth. With this feat, she adds to the voices of mothers, sisters, and daughters everywhere with tales of their own to tell that exhibit a fervent belief in the value of a shared life.

Pacific Book Review

Pacific Book Review

Title: Distance Too Far: A Young Girl’s Spiritual Journey

Author: Mary Pryor

Publisher: XlibrisUS

ISBN: 198458054X

Genre: Fiction, Religious

Pages: 172

Reviewed by: Leah Shepherd Pacific

The novel starts out with sixteen-year old Beth giving birth to her son on Easter morning in 1966. Raised by her deeply religious mother and grandmother, Beth quickly learns to be a good mom. The story follows Beth through several abusive relationships, financial struggles, health problems, and caregiving for her son and mother. She also accomplishes many career and educational victories. Her mother is a constant support and loving presence, the “lynchpin of the family.” Unfortunately, the men in Beth’s life are usually absent, emotionally distant, and/or opposed to her getting more education.Through it all, her religious faith deepens as she relies more on God. For Beth, prayer brings comfort and peace. The author sprinkles in a few Bible passages and original poems throughout the book without being heavy-handed. Beth and her family are African American, and the story reflects the perspectives and experiences of her culture. However, race is rarely mentioned explicitly. One of the few times that the author directly addresses racial inequality is when Beth experiences discrimination at work. Except for a brief stint in Detroit, the book mostly takes place in a town called Allenville, but the author doesn’t mention what state it’s in. More descriptive details about the place would have helped to make the book even better.

It’s not a historical novel, so there’s not a lot of historical detail, except for a scene showing the characters responding to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. Beth’s journey is a story about powerful family bonds and surviving one challenge after another with the help of loved ones and God. Beth emerges as a strong, hard-working woman who weathers many difficulties with a calm and controlled demeanor, seeking to avoid extra drama and conflict. The author uses the first-person voice, and Beth describes her experiences in a matter-of-fact, unpretentious tone without much sentimentality. “One important element I’ve learned through the years is that when life happens, you find out who your friends are and who cares,” Beth says. “That realization caused me to think about the survivors in our midst, known and unknown like soldiers. We, women, survive and proceed through great adversity, sometimes with and sometimes without support.” The novel is well-written and interesting. The characters are believable and down-to-earth. I’d recommend this book to all readers who like family-based, realistic fiction. Beth’s growth over the course of many decades is well-detailed and encouraging to see.

Latest Amazon Reviews

Lisis Alvarez
Lisis Alvarez
I smiled, I laughed and I cried. Great read!
Read More
Didn't want to put the book down! This book speaks so much to the journey in all our lives. Waiting on a part 2!
Drew Taylor
Drew Taylor
This book is the calm in the storm of 2020
Read More
“Distance Too Far” is Ms. Pryor’s first foray into the literary world of narrative fiction for (YA) young adult readers and she definitely hits the mark with this title. While her style has a note of pedantry which seems to indicate to me that this work is actually a memoir in disguise, it conducts the reader back through time, and fuels the work with a nostalgia for a time long past. But it is also a time that tempered and tested our heroine Beth, and she has never succumbed to being less-than-extraordinary. As a type of memorial to her mother, [Take note of the dedications page] “Distance Too Far” operates above the cloud line and is exemplary at being both inspirational and entertaining while never becoming a cloying morality play while taking the reader along on Beth’s journey. Overt flourishes of couplet poetry gush between perfectly controlled narrative, directed at times by the sparse but informative dialog that takes place between the characters. There is a scholarly wisdom behind this strategy as the work takes on a curious rhythm that transcends either approach which could have made for banal characters, and limited rising tension as the tale progressed. “Distance Too Far” is both a labor or love and a work of art. It can also be viewed as the author’s vehicle through which we may better absorb the journey of struggle, survival and ultimately the achievements, that are lightly filtered through Beth, the protagonist as we read. Beth, the plucky young teen is introduced as a woman-child of tender years. Yet because of her moxy and curiosity whe quickly cuts the apron strings which would have moored her to a familial history of being family and religion centric, without regard of her individual personhood, desires, and zeal for thwarting such smothering authority. “Distance Too Far” is a slow burn of emotion that comes from this author's oeuvre, nearly perfected and even though Ms. Pryor seems to have focused upon her narrative time and place loosely, it works to make the tale (set in the early 1960’s somewhere America) more of a literary canvas for her to paint her feelings using Beth as the colors. This is brilliant because good art should be timeless and this narrative, though set in the American era known for racial progressiveness, is a quiet tale of personal choice and singular revolt against familial conformity, and ultra-religious normative expectations. It uses the history of the decades as a backdrop that Beth traverses as she becomes more educated, skilled, and gains her own sense of agency to further her goals along the way. “Distance Too Far” reaches critical mass with the poem “Set Aside”. It is Simple yet complex in the way it, and others within the book, evoke a resonating pathos and sublime nuance concerning Beth’s arch of history contained in the linear narrative. Buying a book tells an author that their time was well spent, more than simply extolling their talent. Be there for this book because it is brought to you by a mature, female, African American author, educator, and business owner -- who, if you read closely -- is here for you. So, confess, heal, and be there for someone. This work will move you, and like all great works of art, readers will return to it again, and again.

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