About Me
Author of Pennies From Across the Veil and the Time Pilgrims series.
Award-winning author, Dennis Higgins is a distant relative of Davy Crockett, king of the wild frontier. He has traveled the world over, collecting story ideas. As a native of Chicago, Illinois, Dennis Higgins has a passion for things that are gone but not forgotten, a romance with the past. For him, time-travel is the answer. If not for real, then in the pages of his books.
He now lives in the Chicago suburbs with his lovely wife, and their Lhasa Poo dog, Dom Perignon.
Among his influences are Richard Matheson, Jack Finny, Dean Koontz, Joan Wester Anderson, Peter S. Beagle, and Audrey Niffenegger.
Author of Pennies From Across the Veil, Parallel Roads (Lost on Route 66), the Time Pilgrim series: (Katya and Cyrus, Almost Yesterday, and Tomorrow's Borrowed Trouble), Steampunk Alice, The Old Scrapbook, The Writer’s Apprentice, Christmas Returns to Pottersville, Confessions of an Internet Scammer, Goes to Eleven, The Automated Wife, The Adventures of Black Lace, and The Vacant Lot
Award-winning author, Dennis Higgins is a distant relative of Davy Crockett, king of the wild frontier. He has traveled the world over, collecting story ideas. As a native of Chicago, Illinois, Dennis Higgins has a passion for things that are gone but not forgotten, a romance with the past. For him, time-travel is the answer. If not for real, then in the pages of his books.
He now lives in the Chicago suburbs with his lovely wife, and their Lhasa Poo dog, Dom Perignon.
Among his influences are Richard Matheson, Jack Finny, Dean Koontz, Joan Wester Anderson, Peter S. Beagle, and Audrey Niffenegger.
Author of Pennies From Across the Veil, Parallel Roads (Lost on Route 66), the Time Pilgrim series: (Katya and Cyrus, Almost Yesterday, and Tomorrow's Borrowed Trouble), Steampunk Alice, The Old Scrapbook, The Writer’s Apprentice, Christmas Returns to Pottersville, Confessions of an Internet Scammer, Goes to Eleven, The Automated Wife, The Adventures of Black Lace, and The Vacant Lot
Quote:
"I once courted a Victorian lass in old Chicago. We had to part, it just wasn't our time."