Tedi Tuttle Wixom completed her B.A. In English at Brigham Young University (BYU) 35 years after her getting an associate degree at Ricks College in commercial Art & design. She began telling her own stories to her children when she realized New York publishers dictated most of the stories our children read & most of them lacked memorable art, content, & creativity. As a mother of nine, she's still raising children, dogs, cats, and college graduates. She has many children's books to publish and enjoys composing music, gardening, theatre going, and hanging out with her husband of 30 years. Author Tedi Tuttle Wixom wrote this story with two things in mind: social prejudice, the upper class verses lower class, and physical handicaps. One of her six healthy sons was born with a familial heart disease, and he received a new heart in Loma Linda California when he was nine months old (His true account can be found in eBook format or softbound as “A Whisper of Springtime: Jason’s Heart Transplant Miracle”). Because of the many prejudices and snide remarks that she got from her son’s classmates, neighbors, and family members, she wanted to show that being unique is good and accepting a person for their physical limitations is okay. Being true to principles of love and self-esteem and championing the unique person at home, Wixom explores family relationships and remembering to never give up even when others believe that being different is “scary, socially unacceptable, fuels fear, and causes many awkward social situations.” It’s okay to be different and to embrace that part of any person, or snake like Danny. He changed the course of his community and snake history.