Introducing our top notable titles for the 2021 Shelf Unbound Competition for Best Independently Published Book.
Send the Word
By James Hockenberry
Send the Word, the second book in Hockenberry’s World War I Intrigue Series, follows our heroes into the Great War culminating with the Meuse/Argonne offensive, the largest battle in U.S. Army history. Now in Military Intelligence, Martin and Keller struggle to secure victory. But at what cost?
At home, clandestine operator Shannon Tunney faces a new set of killers. The book depicts the horrors of war and its emotional cost, as when post-traumatic-stress was known as “shell-shock.” On the Western Front, Martin & Keller do not know who is more treacherous: the German army or supposed friends. During the American advance, a cunning assassin emerges to threaten General Pershing. In the final days of the war, Martin & Keller battle through the formidable German defenses in the Meuse-Argonne. Taking it will be ghastly. For Martin, pledged to keep his warrior friend Keller alive, the story becomes a personal struggle of sacrifice, loss of faith, and despair. In New York, Shannon wonders if she is a wife or widow. She uncovers a conspiracy to help Germany win the war but gets trapped between scheming rivals, opportunistic adventurers, and righteous patriots.
Through it all, each will face betrayal, bewildering obstacles, and certain death.
Reflections of an Anxious African American Dad
By Eric L. Heard
Reflections of an Anxious African American Dad by Eric Heard is a heartfelt, vulnerable, and uplifting memoir.
The purpose of this book is an awkward discussion of Eric Heard’s life to his son. He talks about his life in a candid way that tries to explain his anxiety as an African American dad. It is an open and honest account of his life through the life of a child that has been through a lot in his life. It is a reflection on his life that has been shaped by his childhood experiences.
The Travels of Ibn Thomas
By James Hutson-Wiley
The adventures of a man torn between religious and political loyalties, and embroiled in international conflict and intrigue, The Travels of Ibn Thomas, the second book in the series that began with The Sugar Merchant, is a gripping story of one man’s life and a fascinating glimpse into the tumultuous twelfth century’s commercial and scientific revolution when the three Abrahamic faiths meet in both cooperation and deadly conflict. Thoma, son of Thomas Woodward, born in Egypt but raised in England, embarks on a dangerous and eventful journey that takes him to the famous Salernitan medical school to train as a physician. His first assignment takes him to Sicily, where he saves the life of a royal prince, deals with an epidemic, and becomes the court physician. But dark forces are at play, and Thoma’s life is turned upside-down; barely escaping from Sicily, he is captured and enslaved by pirates, befriends an assassin, gains and loses a fortune in gold, and finds himself plunged into political and religious turmoil of the early twelfth century Holy Land.
Desert Fire, Mountain Rain
By Amy Schisler
Andi Nelson’s dream was to go to the Naval Academy and serve her country. As an intelligence commander with SEAL Team Three, her life is what she always imagined until a lapse in intelligence leads to the death of her team and the man she loves. Plagued with survivor’s guilt, Andi returns to her hometown in the Arkansas Ozarks only to discover that Buffalo Springs is as depressed and broken as she is.
Wade Montgomery, a mover and shaker in New York City’s world of finance, has closed his heart to the possibility of love. When he returns to Buffalo Springs to care for his ailing mother, Wade accepts the position of mayor and the task of helping the town to die gracefully. Succumbing to the pitfalls of pride, he closes his eyes to the illegal dealings within the town’s government, plunging the town and Wade into a pit of lies and deceit that may destroy them both.
Will restoring the town provide the purpose Andi needs to continue living? Will Andi’s determination to save the town open Wade’s eyes and his heart?
Journey to New Salem
By Mark Rosendorf
A year has passed since The Witches of Vegas saved the city from the evil Wiccan vampire, Valeria.
Since then, the show has hit an all-time high. So has the romance between teen witch Isis Rivera and teenage magician, Zack Galloway. Things couldn’t be any better for them until Isis develops seizures that cause her power to spiral out of control. Fires and earthquakes are just the beginning of the chaos caused by the misfired witchcraft. Unable to find a cure, Isis’ family journeys to New Salem, a fabled village of witches which may or may not even exist.
Meanwhile, Zack ends up face to face with the only being who may have a cure…Valeria. But does he dare pay her price?
You Oughta Know: A Single Mother’s Journey of Hope
By Sue Phillips
There are things in life you oughta know if your heart is going to survive.
Her husband held all the cards-money, fame and power-but a shocking revelation destroys both Megan Fisher’s self-esteem and her marriage, and now she must figure out a way to take back her independence, pick up the pieces of her life, and care for her ten-year-old son.
When a job opens up at a summer camp in Malibu, Megan jumps at the chance to be a counselor. She’ll be able to provide for her son and they’ll both have a safe place to heal. Little does Megan know that they have stepped into a world where even the promise of new love is tainted by accusations that threaten to shatter Megan’s heart and her son’s-once again.
A single mother’s journey of hope, courage and strength.
The Reclaimed Kingdom: The Legend is True. The Fear is Real
By Dana Claire
Under the cruel ministrations of its Queen, the Kingdom of D’Land is in peril. With King Harrison away in foreign lands and neighboring kingdoms unwilling to intervene, there is no one to protect the people from poverty, harsh punishment, and unreasonable rules of law—except for the Band of Brothers. Struggling with the death of her mother and the legendary syphon powers she inherited, seventeen-year-old Dru wants nothing more than to escape her old life. Disguised as a lad, she joins the motley crew of good-hearted ruffians, pilfering from the rich to feed the poor and pay their taxes, and she becomes an integral ally—and friend. When her true nature is discovered, nothing changes among the lads—except for the way her close friend Hawkin begins treating her, protective and attentive, raising uncertainty and confusion within her. But Dru’s new world is overturned when she and the Brothers seize the treasures of a Prince who unknowingly threatens to reveal her identity. Together, Dru and her chosen family must find a way to reclaim her destiny and bring balance to the Kingdom through Dru’s powerful gift. If not, there may be no hope left for anyone and her power lost forever.
Stay
By Jennifer Silverwood
Rona believes love is nothing more than a myth, a tale for little girls. Until the immortal ruler of the seas appears from thin air and she is swept into a dark and dangerous affair. What was formerly myth soon becomes part of the everyday. And Rona believes when Seid tells her they will be together forever. But forever is a long time and after she betrays him, what was supposed to be an eternity in paradise becomes an eternity in hell. Now she is cursed, unable to feel emotions except through the couples she is led to test and save.
Two thousand years is an awfully long time to live alone. And the business of love saving isn’t what it used to be. By the twenty-first century, Rona’s ready to give up. Until the night she is seen by a human. Deep in the underbelly of the city that never sleeps, she recognizes him instantly. He may dress differently and have gained a few new scars, but she would recognize the face of her former lover in any lifetime. Trouble is, he seems to have no memory of her and he and his ex-girlfriend are the ones whose true love she’s meant to save. But when he starts to fall for her, she is forced to learn what it means to be human all over again.
The Long Desert Road
By Alex Sirotkin
Henry, a middle aged science-writer, into his music but still a bit of a nerd, is researching his new book on the most compelling mystery of the universe, when he meets Isabel, a bright attorney with captivating eyes. For Henry, who’s been struggling for years looking for the right woman, it’s love, at first sight.
Isabel’s not so quickly convinced; and she’s well-aware of her own baggage. Her daughter, Lauren, is a stunning, smart, and intuitive twenty-one-year-old girl with issues: among others, her addiction to opiates. Lauren’s been to hell and back, taking her mom with her most of the way. She’s got one last chance before Isabel cuts her off for good.
Part love story, part travel adventure, the novel follows the intersection of the lives of these three unforgettable characters. But this is not the story you think it is. Full of unexpected twists and turns, the plot explores timeless questions of our place in the universe, taking the reader on an engrossing journey of self-discovery.
Anchored: A Journalist’s Search for Truth
By Mort Crim
From the journalist who served as a major inspiration for Will Ferrell’s performance in the movie Anchorman, Mort Crim’s Anchored takes readers behind the camera to show what life was like when the local anchorman was as revered as the professional athlete, and just as overpaid. Growing up as the son of an evangelical minister in a conservative church, Crim initially followed his father’s path into ministry. But the more he delved into the Bible, the more his faith was shaken. Crim left the ministry for a career in journalism, determined to pursue truth. By the age of 30, he had made it to New York to work as a national correspondent for ABC, where he anchored the network’s top-rated morning radio show and covered America’s newly developing manned space program. When Neil Armstrong took that first step on the moon, it was Crim’s voice that described the historic event for millions around the world. At the urging of Walter Cronkite, Crim moved from network radio into the heady world of television news. At KYW in Philadelphia, Mort Crim was paired with the late Jessica Savitch, and their anchor team spawned the idea for Will Ferrell’s Anchorman movies. Crim’s journey will resonate with anyone who has felt compelled to seek the truth.
The Abduction of Joshua Bloom
By Michael L. Thal
JOSHUA BLOOM is abducted by an alien race of beings. LELA, their captain says, “We are from a planet eleven light years from your sun. We’re probing neighboring star systems for intelligent life. Our computer selected and transported you.” ANITA, the youngest crew- member and second in command, is a mute and communicates telepathically. From the two aliens, Joshua learns about the matriarchal Oceanian society facing an impending nova of their sun. The Oceanians want to come to Earth in peace, but Joshua doubts Earth would accept alien interlopers.
After visiting other worlds, the Explorer lands on Oceania. During the course of his visit, Joshua discovers that Anita’s people escaped a holocaust inflicted by an evil alien race, the Palash. They fled in a space ark migrating to Oceania, but a horrible accident killed most men in space, so a matriarchy was established. Heir to that matriarchy, Anita assumes governmental leadership and prepares her people for their second exodus. Joshua returns to Earth. The crew finds Earth at a precipice—world unification or world war. MOSHE, Joshua’s twin brother, is the one man positioned to bring the world to peace. Moshe has aged thirty years and is preparing for a worldwide strike for peace. After his successful strike, Moshe has the political clout to demand world governments to meet at his orbital space station for unification talks.
Omina-Uvorix: The Legend
By Guy Jones
Where did this troubadour come from? Sil D’Arblay was a timelord and no one knew his age, or his origins.
We have records of him fighting in the Circus Maximus in Rome, then being William the Conqueror’s right-hand man.
He conjures up entities and entertains with his magical verse which he transmutes into haunting melodies, along with his trusted mandolin; also known to be the advisor of King Edward II. These are but a few of his incarnations, to name them all would make tomes.
Then there is Suzanne Zanzibar who is central to an entrepreneurial world of haute couture, decadence and creativity set in the 1980s in London. What is their connection?!
So many centuries pass yet to the timelord time has no function or value: he walks out of England in 1309 to the 1980s with ease and aplomb. Is Omina Uvorix paradise lost, found or regained?
Eight Pointed Cross: A Novel of the Knights of Malta
By Marthese Fenech
The violent clash between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St John on the island fortress Malta serves as the backdrop to Eight Pointed Cross. Young siblings Domenicus and Katrina Montesa live under constant threat of raids by the Ottoman Turks, the staunchest enemies of the Christian knights. All the while, hundreds of leagues away in Istanbul, Demir’s dream of becoming an imperial horseman in the Sultan’s cavalry is his only salvation against relentless torment by his cruel brother.
The Turkish invasion of Malta and the island’s bloody defence will forever change the lives of the three protagonists, whose fates are intertwined not only with each other, but with nobles and peasants, knights and corsairs, tyrants and galley slaves, on both sides of the conflict as the novel glides across the Mediterranean world of the sixteenth century—from Malta, a barren Christian outpost, to Istanbul, the glittering seat of Islam, from filthy prison cells to lush palace gardens.
Against soaring sea-cliffs and open sea-lanes, the men and women of Eight Pointed Cross face corruption and oppression, broken vows and betrayal, as two great empires collide. Surviving this battle-soaked world of swords and scimitars will test the limits of every character’s courage, loyalty, and love.
A Knock in the Attic
By John Russell
From the very first chapter to the very last, A Knock in the Attic is a page-turning adventure every fan of the paranormal and good old-fashioned ghost story will love. A captivating and sometimes humorous collection of the author’s personal interactions with the metaphysical and unexplained over his lifetime, the book serves up a heaping share of goosebump-worthy accounts that will make it difficult for even the staunchest non-believer to dismiss the existence of ghosts and visitors from the Other Side. And for some readers, learning how the author has used his psychic gifts to help others adds a warm touch to what could otherwise be a ‘chilling’ story!
“If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to be psychic, read this fascinating book. John Russell describes in detail what it’s like to see a ghost, hear an otherworldly voice, receive information telepathically, and other paranormal phenomena. John writes from the heart, and his easygoing, down-to-earth prose gives you the sense that you’re talking to an old friend.
The Blind Boxer
By Jim Lester
Set in the real American dystopia of the Great Depression, The Blind Boxer is the story of a prison inmate known as Harvard, who is offered his freedom if he will participate in a mysterious boxing match. Harvard, who is a former professional fighter but suffers from failing eyesight, is joined by two other fighters. But when the Big Fight begins Harvard and his friends quickly learn that the rules of prize fighting and fair play no longer count and survival is the name of the game.
Bloodroot
By Daniel V. Meier, Jr.
England, 1609. Matthew did not trust his friend, Richard’s stories of Paradise in the Jamestown settlement, but nothing could have equipped him for the privation and terror that awaited him in this savage land.
Once ashore in the fledgling settlement, Matthew experiences the unimaginable beauty of this pristine land and learns the meaning of hope, but it all turns into a nightmare as gold mania infests the community and Indians become an increasing threat. The nightmare only gets worse as the harsh winter brings on “the starving time” and all the grizzly horrors of a desperate and dying community that come with it.
Driven to the depths of despair by the guilt of his sins against Richard and his lust for that man’s wife, Matthew seeks death, but instead finds hope in the most unexpected of places, with the Powatan Indians.
In this compelling and extensively researched historical novel, the reader is transported into a little-known time in early America where she is asked to explore the real meanings of loyalty, faith, and freedom.
No Birds Sing Here
By Daniel V. Meier, Jr.
Two young people, Beckman and Malany, set out on an odyssey to find meaning and reality in the artistic life, and in doing so, unleash a barrage of humorous, unintended consequences. No Birds Sing Here is a multi-layered novel about a journey in which the characters are struggling to survive in an increasingly chaotic world.
The characters that the two meet along the way reflect the allegorical evolution of humanity from its primal state, represented by Beckman’s dismal life as a dishwasher to the crude, medieval development of mankind in a pool hall, and then to the false but erudite veneer of sophistication of the academic world—all demonstrated in the embodiment of the characters they meet along the way. The world these protagonists live in is a world without love. It has every other variety of human drive and emotion, but not love. Do they know it? Not yet. And they won’t until they figure out why no birds sing here.
1877
By David Cornish, MD
Riots. Murder. Terrorism. Threats of another civil war heard throughout the country. Government troops attempt to restore order. A political party seeks to remove the Electoral College from the Constitution. Rampant voter fraud. Racism rears its ugly face. A Presidential election is thrown into chaos. Sound like present-day news? No. Actually, it is 1876-1877. Dr. Charles Noble is a US Civil War veteran, and an Army surgeon reservist, who is recommissioned by the government eleven years after the war. Rising extreme violence in the former Confederacy, in anticipation of a national election, has caused President Grant to send additional federal troops to the Southern states. Dr. Noble uses his Army deployment as an opportunity to help heal the wounds and afflictions of Southern US citizens. However, terrorists are determined to counter Noble’s good intentions, as they threaten the civil rights, and the very lives, of all who oppose them.
Renditions
By Reginald Gibbons
In Renditions Reginald Gibbons conducts an ensemble of poetic voices, using the works of a varied, international selection of writers as departure points for his translations and transformations. The collection poses the idea that all writing is, at least abstractly, an act of translation, whether said act “translates” observation into word or moves ideas from one language to another. Through these acts of transformation, Gibbons infuses the English language with stylistic aspects of other languages and poetic traditions. The resulting poems are imbued with a sense of homage that allows us to respectfully reimagine the borders of language and revel in the fellowship of idea sharing. In this tragicomedy of the human experience and investigation of humanity’s effects, Gibbons identifies the “shared underthoughts that we can (all) sense: ” desire, love, pain, and fervor.
What Happens is Neither
By Angela Narciso Torres
A deeply-sensorial reflection on presence, absence, and the act of losing
“What Happens Is Neither / the end nor the beginning. / Yet we’re wired to look for signs,” offers the speaker of Angela Narciso Torres’s latest collection, which approaches motherhood, aging, and mourning through a series of careful meditations. In music, mantra, and prayer, Torres explores the spaces in and around grief—in varying proximity to it and from different vantage points. She writes both structurally formal poems that enfold the emotionality of loss and free verse that loosens the latch on memory and lets us into the sensory worlds of the speaker’s childhood and present. In poems set in two countries and homes, Torres considers what it means to leave a mark, vanish, and stay in one place. In a profound act of recollection and preservation, Torres shows us how to release part of ourselves but remain whole.
Mannahatta, the Sequel
By Sherry Ostroff
From the author of Caledonia, Mannahatta, once again brilliantly links the stories of 17th century Anna and 21st century Hanna.
Abandoning the ship was risky. It meant Anna might never return to Scotland and reunite with her young daughter. Instead, Anna and her Highlander, Alain MacArthur, faced an uncertain future in colonial Manhattan where they knew no one except for a former acquaintance, who abandoned them when they were most desperate, and an old adversary, seeking revenge.
Anna’s story would have remained unknown if it were not for the sudden death of Hanna Duncan’s father on 9/11 and her dogged pursuit of the truth about her ancient ancestor. But first, Hanna must make her way through the dangerous Central American jungle, the Scottish Highlands, and the glass and steel canyon-land of New York City. Mannahatta continues the tale of two strong women living three-hundred years apart, bound by mysterious circumstances. Both encounter adventure, mystery, and tragedy as the reader witnesses them becoming more and more connected.
Reliquary
By Abigail Wender
An introspective lyric on how the opiate crisis alters families and futures In her debut collection, Reliquary, Abigail Wender addresses losing a brother to prison and, ultimately, opiate addiction. The text also considers womanhood, motherhood, and marriage in lyric poems that confront the complicated nature of grief, the effects of illness on family, and how love—even bliss—figure into grief’s equation. The collection suspends time, as the speaker weaves between flashbacks and the present, assembling fragments and vignettes of her childhood and marriage. In the book’s moments of solace and interiority, such as in the poem, “Hiking,” Wender contemplates how to hold on and to what. In this particular poem’s reflection on forgiveness, the speaker asks “Are there words for us, / high on an uppermost branch?,” and the collection responds with a resounding yes.
Twin Bill
By Mike McSorley
Welcome to the Continental Baseball League!
This fictional league operates in competition with the established American and National leagues. The players may be fictional, but they face very real career obstacles. In Payback lefty Alan Coltard is looking for validation for his efforts. To do that he must get even with one man who he thinks held him back. Slugging outfielder J.C. Taylor confronts a different set of obstacles. First he must reconcile his new situation when he is traded from the contending Washington Federals to the lowly Columbus Buckeyes. On top of that he must somehow deal with the reappearance of an old flame that could threaten everything else that he holds dear.
Where Eagles Never Flew
By Helena P. Schrader
Based on actual events and eye-witness accounts,
“Where Eagles Never Flew” shows the Battle of Britain from both sides of the Channel through the eyes of pilots, controllers, ground crews – and the women they loved.
RAF Battle of Britain Ace Wing Commander Bob Doe called it “The best book about the Battle of Britain I have ever seen!” USAF General Heaton noted: “The description of the flying scenes is so accurate, I can easily imagine myself in all of the air-to-air battles.” Kirkus Reviews praised the “complex characterizations.” Foreword Clarion called the book both “compelling” and “humanizing.”
Summer 1940: The Battle of France is over; the Battle of Britain is about to begin. If the swastika is not to fly over Buckingham Palace, the RAF must prevent the Luftwaffe from gaining air superiority over Great Britain. Standing on the front line is No. 606 Squadron. As the casualties mount, new pilots find a cold reception from the clique of experienced pilots, who resent them taking the place of their dead friends. Meanwhile, despite credible service in France, former RAF aerobatics pilot Robin Priestman finds himself stuck in Training Command. On the other side of the Channel, the Luftwaffe is recruiting women as communications specialists — and naïve Klaudia is about to grow up.
Fornicationally Challenged
By Judi Lee Goshen
In the vein of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Sex and the City, Judi, freshly out of an oppressive marriage, discovers a talent for comedy. Feeling like the sexual equivalent to Rip Van Winkle, she’s terrified an STD will lead to death or worsewarts. So, she decides to be celibate, until the raging hormones of her sexual prime start calling the shots. With conflicting opinions from her Jewish mother and very experienced best friend, she navigates a new dating world where men desperately want marriage. She remains happily single, comedically dating, and enjoying career success until she falls in love with a younger man and faces the risk of being silenced once again.
Adapted from her successful solo show, Fornicationally Challenged is a twenty-year journey of self-discovery, one man at a time.
Pivot
By L.C. Barlow
From the age of seven, Jack Harper is raised by the leader of a mystical cult, Cyrus Harper. Through Cyrus, Jack receives a full education in all usual subjects–economics, literature, mathematics, history–as well as one unique skill useful to a person in Cyrus’s position: assassination. With the help of Roland James, a man incapable of dying, Cyrus hones Jack into the perfect weapon to use against all who oppose him.
It is not long, however, before Jack discovers that Cyrus and Roland are not the only ones living in Cyrus’s mansion. There, too, exists a mysterious creature in the depths of the house with supposed immortal magic. According to Roland, this creature is responsible for all the miraculous things Jack has witnessed throughout her childhood, including Roland’s resurrection. The creature, potent and powerful, only weakens in the presence of Cyrus’s red velvet box–a dark, enchanted tool that grants Cyrus his invincibility and ensures his reign.
Lonely and terrified by her life in the cult, under Cyrus’s never-ending watch, Jack desperately pursues the mysterious being. When they finally meet, her world is turned upside down, as he offers her more than she could have ever expected–the possibility of escape and her own secret, magical power.
Perish
By L. C. Barlow
Jack Harper is a dangerous woman, capable of death and resurrection. Raised and utilized by Cyrus, the leader of a mystical religion, she was once a fearless and brilliant weapon against all who blasphemed. Now, having destroyed Cyrus, Jack is free to be more.
While starting anew, Jack begins receiving letters from children trapped in Infinitum who beg for rescue, and she soon discovers that Cyrus’s cult is alive and thriving, with tendrils branching across the world. One of these tendrils leads Jack to Patrick, a man who speaks of a contraption that “bleaches anything white.” Yet another tendril stretches beyond death, where the Builder and Jack’s brother, Alex, reside. Jack must now seek to permanently destroy the following she once escaped by fixing her sights on a higher target–the infamous demonic Builder, who once supplied Cyrus with overwhelming power.
Potential aid arrives from an unusual source when Jack encounters Jonathon Roth and his kill-for-hire outfit. Combined, they hope to become an unstoppable force, but only the future will tell. Jack may be falling into her old acolyte ways, and Roth may have found in Jack the very thing that made Cyrus so powerful–his own magical being.
The Cardiff Giant
By Larry Lockridge
The Cardiff Giant, set in Cooperstown, New York, has up its novelistic sleeve Puck’s profound declaration, “Lord, what fools these mortals be!” Jess Freeman, investigative reporter, arrives on the scene to look into the weird disappearance from the Farmers’ Museum of a huge human figure. He had been unearthed in the late nineteenth century near Cardiff, New York. Jess confronts locals and outsiders who all have a theory, including that the giant has been reanimated and is lurching throughout the community. They are enmeshed in self-punishing belief systems such as alien abduction, astrology, kabbalistic numerology, New Age rebirthing, and religious dogmas reduced to literal absurdities. The fast-paced action centers around episodes where they pay a sorry price for their beliefs. But skeptics don’t fare much better, susceptible as they are to mental disorders that show the faculty of reason is fragile indeed. These characters group and regroup, with romance always on their minds, and finally come to recognitions at once surprising and moving.
Orthicon
By David Perlmutter
The United States government discovers, to its horror, that the creatures featured in animated cartoons are not fabrications but real beings.
Fearing the social and political consequences of the discovery being made public, they proceed to exile them off Earth to another planet.
However, things do not go according to plan…
Porno Valley
By Phillip Elliot
It’s the year 2000 and 78-year-old Mickey O’Rourke has been a Los Angeles PI for a very long time. He’d thought he’d seen it all until the disappearance of porn star Jeffrey Strokes sends him from the sex-filled studios of the San Fernando Valley to the desperate streets of Compton where Mickey’s final case becomes his biggest test.
Flash back to 1998 and struggling hair salon employee Jemeka Johnson, suspecting boyfriend Ray-Ray of infidelity, follows him one night from their East Compton home to what turns out to be a drug deal gone sour where a twist of fate finds Jemeka tossed onto a dark and dangerous path-one that offers huge reward for someone bold enough to seize it.
Meanwhile, in 1999, tired of robbing small-town diners and shooting bad dope in filthy motel rooms, newlyweds Richie and Alabama return to LA in search of the perfect score. Paths cross and past meets present as bad decisions hurtle toward worse consequences-and no one will ever be the same.
Fedor
By Brant Vickers
“You can’ throw too much style into a miracle, and you my friend are a miracle,” Mark Twain says to Feodor Adrianovitch Jefticheff, also known as Jo-Jo The Dog Faced Boy. Fedor lives, travels, works, and loves among the haunting cast of performers in the Black Tent Sideshow of P.T. Barnum’s Circus in the late 1880s. Fedor not only survived, but also profited by being a memorable and unforgettable human curiosity. Along with being an intelligent and avid reader of Tolstoy, Twain, Alcott, and Melville, he has remarkable interactions with a myriad of these and other world-renowned characters, one being Nicholas II the Russian Tsarevich.
This proves that more than just being a “sideshow,” there was a lot of individuality and heart to this “dog-faced boy.” Fedor is a magnificent fictional account… one that will appeal strongly to your intellect and emotions. The novel shows us something new, making us feel – the ever-shifting dynamic between resignation and hope. Richly authentic, dramatic, beautifully written, and always thoughtprovoking, Brant Vickers tells Fedor’s story in an epic account of this young man’s extraordinary life.
Those Darn Stripes
By Tyrel Stripes
In the fall of 2008, Tyrel Nelson returns to the United States after teaching English in Ecuador for a year. Although living overseas was quite an adjustment for the Minnesotan, the months to follow (mostly spent around his stomping grounds) bring on life changes far bigger than anything he had encountered in South America. Fortunately, his pop and confidant, Jay, is there to guide Tyrel through his depression in the Great Recession, which is not only caused by a stretch of joblessness but also exacerbated by the breakup with his longtime girlfriend.
The days slowly start to look brighter for the writer nevertheless. He unexpectedly finds love again. He eventually finds work that is meaningful. Just when he turns the corner, though, Nelson runs into another awful trot: he learns his best friend is going to die.
Those Darn Stripes captures an intimate and intense period which precedes and succeeds the death of Ty’s father. Using his bond with nature—a connection he learned from and shared with his dad—the author pictorially sets the scene of each vignette, taking his readers to meet memorable gals and gents, on foreign jaunts, to old haunts, and through moments that continue to haunt him.
Travels and Tribulations
By Tyrel Nelson
In the spring of 2020, Tyrel Nelson lost his mother. And he lost his job in the summer. Isolated by the pandemic and hamstrung by agony, he felt forgotten by the world as it marched on. Unhappy, uneasy, and unemployed, he began picking himself up by putting down his thoughts on a yellow legal pad.
Battling through his bereavement on paper proved to be cathartic. But he needed more – a writing project he could sink his grief into. So he sorted through many of the narratives he had composed over the last dozen years. Reflecting and reexamining his existence, Tyrel brainstormed what to do with the pieces which pulled at him the most. A compilation describing significant individuals, places, and moments during the past decade-plus started to take shape.
Travels and Tribulations is an emotional and chronological collection of vignettes, which commences in 2008 and concludes in 2020. While readers follow him on excursions in North, Central, and South America, they also accompany Nelson to the peaks and valleys of his personal life. Profoundly impacted by the deaths of both his parents, the author guides the audience through his anguish, depicting reminiscences and regrets as he openly tries to make sense of everything.
A Few Words about Words
By Joe Diorio
Penned by a writer who had to teach himself the rules of English grammar, A Few Words About Words offers an accessible approach to understanding the English language. In a world dominated by countless media outlets, written communication is king. Writing “your” when you mean “you’re” and “there” when you mean “they’re” can make the difference between getting or not getting new business. A missing comma can result in a PR catastrophe, and a well-written line can be remembered for generations. And yet, many native speakers struggle with the English language. Spawned from the widely-circulated and beloved newsletter of the same name, Joe Diorio’s A Few Words About Words blends quick-witted anecdotes from more than 30 years of newsletter entries that highlight the common, uncommon, and surprising grammar mistakes most English speakers make. For anyone who has ever wondered whether “also” should follow or precede the verb; if there’s a difference between ‘preventive’ or ‘preventative’; or whether the Oxford comma is as important as everyone says it is, this book provides relief for many common grammar anxieties. Humorous, enlightening, and completely comprehensible, A Few Words About Words will be the go-to grammar guide you pick up and can’t put down.
The Dark Descent
By Kimki Kita
An aspiring university student whose only wish is to be normal is forced to cope with debilitating anxiety and depression. After the loss of her grandmother, Kokoro will face the biggest challenge of her life: psychosis.
Based on true events, this autofiction will spiral you down the path of a mentally ill twenty-year-old in Southern Ontario, Canada, who has to fight for her sanity.
When I Got Drunk with My Mother: Poems about Growing Up Southern
By Shelley Townsend-Hudson
The poet behind these powerful, nostalgic poems grew up in a house at the foot of Hibriten Mountain in North Carolina. These richly sensual and accessible poems display the awesome and sometimes fearful beauty of life in the Appalachian Mountains in the 1950s and ‘60s, as the author tackles such topics as nature, family, God, the polio epidemic, race relations, friends, aging parents, and the kind of villains and saints who can only be found in small-town America. This is a far cry from from Andy of Mayberry, but it is as true to the bone as poetry gets.
Jack the Giant Killer: Southern Retellings of the World’s Oldest Stories
By Robert Hudson
Everyone is familiar with Jack and the Beanstalk—well, this rollicking collection presents twelve all-new stories about Jack the giant killer. The stories are adapted from the great trickster and hero tales of ancient literature—from Sumer, Greece, Egypt, Israel, Rome, Chine, Japan, and elsewhere—and retells them as Southern “neofolktales” in which the ever-unconquerable Jack prevails over bullies, demons, ghosts, and, of course, giants. This sometimes suspenseful. sometimes hilarious, and always entertaining book is a tribute to the Jack Tales by classic American folklorist Richard Chase. The appendix includes a bibliography, a biography of Richard Chase, a scholarly afterword explaining the history of Jack tales in English, and annotations to each of the stories.
Book Endings
By Syntell Smith
Robin Walker is not used to the quiet life. As a library clerk at the 58th Street Library in Manhattan, the disruptions come from office politics. But when Robin’s grandfather, Jon Walker, is found collapsed on Robin’s living room floor, Robin must brace himself for the worst. As he reaches out to family members, he holds onto slim hope that his grandfather will somehow come through.
Robin tries to find solace in his co-workers. But when his supervisor Sonyai Yi is locked in a private battle with head librarian Augustus Chavez, loyalties are tested. He’ll soon realize its not easy knowing who to trust, especially when his job could be on the line. As the days grow long and his grandfather’s time dwindles, Robin is suddenly energized when he dates Shinju, a beautiful Asian woman he saw months ago. When this motley crew of characters finally comes together, a sudden departure leaves the library in a different place.
In this thoughtful sequel, life is what you make of it. Like books borrowed from the library of the universe, we’re only here until we must be returned to the earth… because our time is borrowed.
Harry Harambee’s Kenyan Sundowner
By Gerald Everett Jones
A lonely widower from Los Angeles buys a tour package to East Africa on the promise of hookups and parties. What he finds instead are new reasons to live.
Aldo Barbieri, a slick Italian tour operator, convinces Harry to join a group of adventuresome “voluntourists.” In a resort town on the Indian Ocean, Harry doesn’t find the promised excitement with local ladies. But in the supermarket he meets Esther Mwemba, a demure widow who works as a bookkeeper. The attraction is strong and mutual, but Harry gets worried when he finds out that Esther and Aldo have a history. They introduce him to Victor Skebelsky, rumored to be the meanest man in town. Skebelsky has a plan to convert his grand colonial home and residential compound into a rehab center – as a tax dodge. The scheme calls for Harry to head up the charity. He could live like a wealthy diplomat and it won’t cost him a shilling!
Harry has to come to terms with questions at the heart of his character: Is corruption a fact of life everywhere? Is all love transactional?
Surviving Chaos, How I Found Peace at A Beach Bar
By Harold Phifer
For more than fifty years, Harold Phifer’s childhood living conditions remained a secret, even from those who thought they knew him best. No one knew about his past growing up with a mother who suffered from mental illness; a greedy aunt; a mindless and spoiled older brother; an absent father.
It wasn’t until an explosion in Afghanistan that his memory was blasted back into focus. This book is the result of a long, cathartic chat witha stranger at a beach bar, where Harold finally found some peace.
A Mistake Incomplete
By Lorenzo Petruzziello
A neo-noir caper set in modern-day Milan.
An incompetent thief makes another attempt at burglary. A hopeless bartender struggles to manage her last patron. The pair reluctantly work together to figure out why a man they presumed dead may have returned, while a lonely tourist inadvertently gets in the way.
First Course
By Jenn Bouchard
When four life-altering catastrophes hit in just one day—including the loss of her parents in a tragic plane crash—twenty-four-year-old Janie Whitman retreats to her family’s summer house in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Here she tries to provide stability for her older sister Alyssa and two young nieces by cooking them amazing food. Through a mix-up with the alumni office at her parents’ alma mater, Janie meets a young high school guidance counselor named Rocky at a volunteer event, and their fast-tracked romance helps Janie to see possibilities beyond the life she had known just a few weeks prior. But with her ex-boyfriend (and former boss) making overtures beyond her wildest dreams, as well as Alyssa’s estranged husband willing to do whatever it takes to win her back, the Whitman sisters are faced with big decisions. Despite the obstacles in their way, when Janie and Alyssa are tasked with establishing a lasting memorial for their parents, they just might find the second acts they are seeking.
Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
By Alice McVeigh
Sixteen-year-old Susan Smithson – pretty but poor, clever but capricious – has just been expelled from a school for young ladies in London.
At the mansion of the formidable Lady Catherine de Bourgh, she attracts a raffish young nobleman. But, at the first hint of scandal, her guardian dispatches her to her uncle Collins’ rectory in Kent, where her sensible cousin Alicia lives and “where nothing ever happens.”
Here Susan mischievously inspires the local squire to put on a play, with consequences no one could possibly have foreseen. What with the unexpected arrival of Frank Churchill, Alicia’s falling in love and a tumultuous elopement, rural Kent will surely never seem safe again…
Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel brilliantly captures Jane Austen’s Lady Susan as a young lady.
The Parables of Sunlight
By Margaret Dulaney
Creative nonfiction.
A memoir of a neglected farm, an abandoned and injured horse, and the prevailing resilience of hope.
Written by the principal writer and spoken word artist Margaret Dulaney of Listen Well. A spoken word website exploring open faith ideas through story and metaphor.
Camille
By William Graney
In the year 2076, the members of a secret society fulfilled a sacred mandate when they departed the earthly realm. One person, Camille Lyons, stayed behind to pave the way for the next incarnation of the society. Camille was a search and rescue officer in the Coast Guard, a wilderness guide, and she is a staunch defender of the small town of Mountaintop.
Now in her fifties, Camille has been waiting for signs that the new society will emerge as she protects her town from marauding zealots. The first indication that the secret society (La Soci.t. de la Fronti.re Ouverte) may be reforming occurs when Camille has an encounter with Simone, a woman with genetic links to previous society members. When former residents with societal connections return to Mountaintop, Camille tries to put the puzzle pieces together as she wonders, why now?
The novel follows Camille’s growth as she tries to distance herself from a troubled past and find a new love interest in an environment of extreme paranoia. In addition to the challenges in her personal life, Camille must also introduce the new society members to ancient legends, a mystical crystal cave, and present them with an awareness of alternate realms. Her ultimate goal is to witness the return of democracy and the end of wide-spread hatred and violence.
Watkins Glen
By Eleanor Lerman
In Watkins Glen, Susan, a woman in her sixties, finds herself caring for her estranged older brother (Mark) who has Alzheimer’s. After a life spent in New York City, Susan has moved upstate to Watkins Glen where she takes her brother to live—temporarily, she thinks. In the throes of his illness, Mark has developed Acquired Artist Syndrome, a rare but not unheard of symptom of dementia whereby people who have never picked up a paintbrush suddenly become obsessed with the art. In Watkins Glen, Mark also becomes possessed by the idea that there is a Loch-Ness like monster living in nearby Seneca lake and he begins painting the creature. When a stormy season brings mudslides and floods to the region, Mark becomes fearful that dredgers brought in to clear the lake after the deluge are a danger to the lake monster, and he wanders the shoreline looking for the lost and possibly injured creature that his sister knows does not exist. Later, when Mark, beset by the increasing confusion brought on by his illness, walks off with a little girl that he mistakes for his sister when she was a child, there is a real possibility that Susan won’t be able to save him from the consequences of this otherwise harmless outing into the past. What she decides to do mirrors the decisions that many people have to make as they get older: give up, give in, or use the strength of love, memory and imagination to find a way to carry on.
Defying the Ghosts
By Joan Marie Verba
Thrown out of the house by her mother on her eighteenth birthday, Charlene Griffin needs a place to live. Her attempts to find housing fail time after time until she learns of a haunted house. The owner has agreed to give the house away to anyone who can stay in the house overnight. Many have tried and failed, claiming the house has homicidal ghosts who tried to kill them.
Nonetheless, as Charlene becomes more and more desperate for somewhere to stay, she goes to the owner and arranges to stay overnight. Even though Charlene thinks she’s prepared, she finds that the ghosts are determined to get rid of her by any means necessary. Equally determined to stay, Charlene finds she’s in the fight of her life to last until dawn.
Light of Ganymede
By Peter C. Greene
Jee thinks she’s a normal 1950’s teenager until her strange uncle proves that she’s not even human. At the age of seventeen, he takes her to Jupiter’s moon Ganymede, the world of her birth. There, Jee is welcomed as the “Glasśigh”—a princess-like figure, the first and only direct descendant of her nation’s two founding families. She plunges into a life of world-wide celebrity, excessive privilege, complete adoration, and unlimited wealth. In this alien but stunningly beautiful world, her every whim is gratified with dizzying speed. What more could anyone want?
But affluence and entitlement can’t silence the tiny voice of doubt growing in Jee’s heart. The wealth that makes her new life so splendid has been torn from the downtrodden castes beneath her. From her comfortable seat atop the social pyramid, Jee becomes aware of the people being crushed beneath the weight of appalling injustice, discrimination, and oppression.
Now, she must make a choice: accept the costs of her pampered birthright, or risk her life by using her position to ignite a revolution aimed at destroying a powerful thousand-year regime of cruelty and despair.
Sparrows and Dust
By Zilka Joseph
Is this the bird way? Where is home? What is the fate of wanderers? Have we all been “elsewhere”? Will truths be revealed to us in the end?
In this finely tuned chapbook, the poet uses free verse and form to sing her stories, her history, her geography, her experience as an immigrant who finds rest after loss and upheaval with imagination and passion. With deft use of imagery, language and the senses, she travels and shape-shifts. She weaves in science, mysticism, imagination and myth. We fly from India to Michigan and back, from this world to other in-between states where memory, death, loss, the present, the search for home and the self all sing through several voices, and become a miniature symphony.
As Attar tells us through his bird characters in his allegorical rendering of Sufism— “the way is long” so we must persevere to find the truth. We are but “water mixed with dust”. The bird-soul can only rest briefly, then it must move on.
A Heart Full of Whiskey
By Raquel J. Lesser
She’s all alone; lost. She drinks her problems away. She hides herself with makeup. Hanging out with friends she would never hangout before. Going to clubs and getting lost in the music and hooking up with strangers. She’s a girl she never thought she would become.
She fell apart and It’s all because of Vince. Before Vince she was a straight A student. She was a dreamer but now what is she? She reminisces the past searching for hope. She’s losing her mind all because she is keeping one little secret; hidden and it all has to do with Vince.
So what is that secret she is hiding and can she get herself back together?
Briarwood Girls
By Mariel Gates
Aubrey’s life has unraveled. She is about to enter a women’s rehab facility for the first time in an attempt to put the pieces back together. Aubrey is prepared for the mantras and platitudes she has heard about in twelve step programs but she is not prepared for the women she’ll encounter and the truth about her own addiction.
Addiction is a lonely disease. It makes us lie to ourselves. Can she face the person she has become? Are rehab facilities really what we think they are?
Faron Goss
By Diane Lechleitner
When the body of Alison Goss washes up on Menhaden Island, in the Gulf of Maine, the working-class fishing community of hard-hewn ways and salty perspectives is faced with handling the future of her unusual son, Faron. They soon discover how different he is, in strange but endearing ways, including his fascination with moths and his stunning artistic talent.
Bound together by weather and sea, Menhaden neighbors with good hearts and blunt opinions overlook Faron’s peculiarities. But their nurturing embrace cannot completely erase his troubled past, which eventually morphs into a life-changing event and forces him to confront lingering memories.
Faron faces that which haunts him, works as a sternman on a lobster boat, and paints in his studio. When he meets a bird-watching woman who has returned to Menhaden to live in her grandparents’ house, his life takes another unexpected turn.
Through the Waves a Steady Path
By Patrick Garry
Reilly has nowhere to go. Her mother is selling the house, her ex-boyfriend is painting her father’s condo, and she has been expelled from high school, just weeks before graduation. In a moment of desperation, she remembers a goodbye letter left on her bedroom dresser five years ago by her father’s girlfriend at the time, Elaine Connor. So Reilly drives into the city and knocks on the door of Elaine’s house.
Elaine has tried to change her life since her time with Reilly’s father. Back then, Elaine was a detective in the Minneapolis Police Department and living a lifestyle barely different from those of the criminals she arrested, hitting bottom when her son died in an accident. In an effort to reform her life, or maybe as an act of penance, Elaine quit the police force and moved back to the neighborhood of her youth, two houses down from her contentious mother. She now works in the campus security office of a large university.
Grim Honey
By Jessica Barksdale
In the poetry collection Grim Honey, the poet’s past comes alive like a Faulknerian ghost as Barksdale grapples and attempts reconciliation with time’s wounds. But through this sifting of hard memories, there are undercurrents of pure joy at being able to witness experience in all its blood and grit, the broken as well as the whole. It is this love of the world in all its gory realness that illuminates the apt title of the collection. Though we may not invite the grim realities of the world, we can find soothing in their sweetness. Grim Honey is an indispensable book. If we can take any honey from these past two grim years, it is that we have been given a necessary space to uncover our own life’s movements through time. Through Barksdale’s own recollections and reckonings, we are prompted to examine our own lives, sans blindfold. If there is a lesson in this collection, it is that we can hold each experience dear. This book reminds us that what is bitter is sweet, and only when we acknowledge and hold space for our blunders and impasses can we move forward.
Although alarmed by Reilly’s sudden appearance, Elaine takes her in, just as she did Owen and Nathan – two ex-cons living across the street in a partially renovated house Elaine bought specifically for that purpose.
Vicarious
By Rhett C. Bruno
In High Earth, entertainment is everything. Virtual worlds, hyper-realistic simulations, endless streamable content—there’s something for everybody. You don’t ever have to leave your home.
For Asher Reinhart, nothing compares to Ignis: Live, a reality show that pushes human beings to their very extremes. As a volunteer director, he closely monitors the lives of those living on an Interstellar Ark who falsely believe they’re the last of humanity out searching for a new Earth.
Mission is the show’s brightest young star. Born in hiding, her intelligence and near-perfect genetics have allowed her to rise up the ranks faster than any before her. But now that it’s her turn to provide for the Ark, everything changes…
With Mission’s life placed in danger in order to boost ratings, Asher must choose between protecting the show he’s dedicated his life to, or the woman who has been the focus of his attention since the day he was born.
Chosen to Fall
By Emmie Hamilton
Faria Agostonna, heir to the Queendom of Anestra, is tired of hearing about the Fates. That she must follow her Destiny. That it is already Chosen for her. Knowing she needs to be lifebonded in an archaic Elven ceremony makes it even worse. But when a darkness invades her land and threatens her people’s existence, Faria must figure out what sacrifices will need to be made and how far she will have to go to choose what is right for her people, even if it means ignoring the needs of her heart.
Nellie, a teenaged shapeshifter banished from Earth, spent years living in Anestra disguised as a human. After whisperings of a Warlock rebellion begin to surface, Nellie is recruited by Queen Amira to do whatever it takes to protect Faria – no matter the cost. Grappling with the risk of revealing her true nature, Nellie must come to terms with the depths she will travel to prevent the Final Battle and whether she has what it takes to protect her best friend, even if it means revealing the truth of her deception.
Spurred by their rebellious nature, both girls discover the truth of a lost prophecy, face the betrayal of those closest to them, and discover how many pieces of themselves they are willing to surrender to the dark magic that calls to them to save not only their home, but all connected to it.
Why Can’t Somebody Just Die Around Here?: A Story of War, Deprivation, Courage, Perseverance, and Triumph
By Gerhard Maroscher
A true story of a Romanian family’s miraculous survival of WWII, becoming refugees, fleeing their homeland, starving after the war, and coming to the USA to live the American Dream.
Life was full of promise for the young Maroscher family. Gustav was a teacher; Helene was busy rearing two boys and managing their small farm. WWII changed everything. While Gustav fought the Russians on the Eastern Front, Helene fled the advancing army to her sister’s house in Germany. To reunite the family, Helene and her sons made a dangerous nighttime border crossing from communist East Germany to the West. After being reunited in West Germany they faced discrimination and hunger.
The family immigrated to the USA and embraced the freedoms and opportunities of America. Gustav became an engineer working on the Moon Shot. Helene became an independent businesswoman.
Whisper
By Tracy Bilen
After her friend Samantha is murdered, seventeen-year-old Olivia is the only one who still hears her voice.
Years ago, Jacob closed his eyes. In a park. Playing hide-and-seek. His little brother is still missing. And Jacob’s mom is the FBI agent who couldn’t find him.
Now Jacob has dreams he can’t explain. And draws faces of those about to die. In a town terrorized by a serial killer, Jacob meets Olivia. Sparks ignite.
Until the voice in Olivia’s head echoes the warning in Jacob’s dream…
You’re next.
Slip on through Cielo Drive
DENNIS WILSON is about to make the biggest mistake of his life!
Forty-Two year old history teacher KEN CLAYBOURNE has the chance to change history. He has slipped back to 1960s Los Angeles and meets The Beach Boys drummer and devises that it is his mission to save him. With the help of two of his top former students KASS and DARBY, they are out to stop Dennis innocently from picking up two hitchhikers. They fail, and now Dennis has fallen under the hypnotic spell of CHARLES MANSON. A gruesome course of history has been set which will end with the TATE-LABIANCA murders. Ken, Kass and Darby must regroup to stop Manson and his FAMILY, no matter the sacrifice. Throughout this time, we follow the group as they ‘slip’ back and develop their plan. The story proceeds through the next twelve months on specific dates where different takes happen on real life events.
The story takes a turn after the events of AUGUST 9th, 1969 where the group save the initial intended victims. However, they unwittingly become targets themselves. Ken, Kass and Darby enroll the help of the BLACK PANTHERS to set up a final showdown with the Family.
A River for Gemma
By Debra Whiting Alexander
Miracles abound in Sugar Creek, a smalltown nestled near the horse trails and hazelnut orchards of Oregon’s lush countryside. It is here, where twenty-six-year old Gemma Porter lives a vibrant life chasing her dreams.
But Gemma is underestimated by a world that pigeonholes her as “intellectually disabled.” While the naysayers and bullies only see Gemma’s limitations, her beloved grandmother sees the heart of a genius–and a soul of divination. When Gemma’s longing to be a mother collides with her grandmother’s hidden past, three generations of Porter women are put in peril.
A harrowing adventure unfolds into a heroic quest to save their lives. As Gemma’s bravery is tested, she will need to prove that regardless of age or intellect, a mother’s love knows no bounds.
Living Dolls and Other Women
By S. Montana Katz
In our era of #MeToo and fresh attempts to break the gender biased holds on our culture, a portrait of gender bias in the art world offers a microcosm of the pervasive challenges to achieving equality. Living Dolls and Other Women provides a fictionalized account of that world set against the pervasive sexual harassment in every corner of urban daily life. Set in the late 1980s, with New York City in the middle of a real estate crash, Living Dolls and Other Women chronicles the lives of five urban women as well as an activist organization comprised of women in the art world, the Living Dolls.
Living Dolls and Other Women is an urban drama, chock full of action: crime, mystery, culture, and romance. The book takes on the contemporary issues of sexual harassment and discrimination, artistic merit, feminism, family values, and sexual preference. It delves into the main characters’ lives and traces dramatic and personal transformations of each. The comical yet dead serious antics of the Living Dolls thread through the novel as the backbone of the book.
Zelda Blair
By Jane Foster
The story of Zelda Blair explores the denial a victim of domestic abuse goes through before finally breaking away.
Zelda is the youngest of eight children. Her mother is an American Literature professor, her father the NY police commissioner. We meet her as the mother of four young children, living in San Francisco. Her husband Nick Blair is a rising star in the financial industry. Through her mother, Zelda meets a Stanford English professor who befriends her and plays a big role in waking her up to the danger her husband poses for her and her children.
Although Zelda is trapped in an abusive marriage, she navigates through a life in which appearances are everything. For a period, she thinks her close friend Brooke is having an affair with Nick. Fortunately, she does not confront her and finds that the real problem is a financial scandal involving Nick.
Zelda returns to her parent’s house with her children. She finds it hard to admit to her feelings of shame, confusion and intimidation. We see her struggle with the emotional contradiction of loving a husband who attacks her physically with increasing hostility.
These Walls Between Us
By Wendy Sanford
A founding author of Our Bodies, Ourselves—a classic on women’s health and sexuality—Wendy Sanford has turned her sharp mind to her own life as a white woman in today’s world of race and class inequities.
In These Walls Between Us, Sanford tells a story, at once profoundly intimate and powerfully political, of her sixty-five year friendship with Mary Norman, whom she met as a Black domestic worker in her privileged white family when both were in their teens. Coming of age within the cultural revolutions of the 1960s, 70s and 80s, Sanford becomes a feminist, a lesbian and a Quaker, and begins to face her biases around class and race. As she reckons with the impact of her white skin privilege and training in “the habits of dominance,” she learns to see Ms. Norman more fully and to become a more dependable friend.
Bugs, Weeds, and Water
By Evangeline Greene
Zoey Starling has no idea what it means to be normal. Everything she touches has a taste, and her father’s identity is a town secret.
Her sisters have issues of their own. While it’s a struggle for Celeste to connect with the world, Ruby, who has a flair for the dramatic, doesn’t seem to worry about anything.
Orphaned at birth, the fourteen-year-old triplets live with their aunt in rural Leamington, Ontario, steps from Point Pelee National Park.
From their little cottage on the lake, they mark the seasons by the yearly migration of captivating birds that pass through the park. Despite an almost idyllic childhood grounded in Aunt Flory’s home-cooked food and family values, Zoey struggles to define her identity in a community where the Starling family is the subject of gossip and speculation.
But secrets run deep in the small town, and the triplets aren’t the only ones with something to hide…
By observing the people around her, Zoey discovers that the truth isn’t always straightforward and different perspectives shape the world.
On the Way to Birdland
By Frank Morelli
Self-proclaimed teenage philosopher Cordell Wheaton lives in a sleepy, southern town where nothing ever happens; not since his hero, jazz musician John Coltrane, left some seventy years earlier to “follow the sound.” Cordy’s life has been unraveling since the night his father and his brother, Travis, exploded on each other. The night Travis’s addiction transformed him from budding musician into something entirely different. The night Travis took his saxophone and disappeared.
When Cordy’s father falls ill, the sixteen-year-old vows to reunite the Wheaton family. He embarks on a modern-day odyssey with forty bucks in his pocket and a dream to find his brother and convince him to be Travis again—by taking him to a show at Birdland Jazz Club in New York City, and reminding him of the common bonds they share with their legendary hero. Cordy’s journey is soon haunted by ghostly visions, traumatic dreams, and disembodied voices that echo through his mind. He starts to wonder if the voices are those of the fates, guiding him toward his destiny—or if he’s losing his grip on reality.
Heartstrings
By Marjorie Lin Kyriopoulos
“It all began when I opened up a box of my mother’s treasures and found photographs of my Aunt Wanda, along with a newspaper clipping from October 17, 1948. “Young S.L. Matron, 23, Killed in Rifle Mishap.” I wanted to know more about my aunt. My search took me down a winding road that led to my grandmother, my mother, and myself.” —Marjorie Lin Kyriopoulos
Heartstrings is a deeply personal and compassionate memoir that chronicles the history and lives of the author’s Greek-American family in her own creative way. Based upon actual events and interviews with family members, she explores how tragic events can have a ripple effect on past, present, and future generations in surprising and unexpected ways. From stories about immigrant experiences in the early 1900s to the writer’s personal journey of growth through the tumultuous and radical changes of the 1960s up to now, this book is a reminder that the past is deeply rooted in the present. Through stories, poetry, and photographs, the author illustrates how trauma is often carried unconsciously from parent to child, and into the future. Brilliantly written, HeartStrings will send you on a path to find meaning in your own family’s stories.
The Baseball Widow
By Suzanne Kamata
When Christine, an idealistic American teacher, marries Hideki Yamada, an aspiring Japanese high school baseball coach, she believes that their love will sustain them as they deal with cultural differences. However, Hideki’s duties, and the team of fit, obedient boys whom he begins to think of as a surrogate family, take up more and more of his time, just as Christine is struggling to manage the needs of their multiply disabled daughter and their sensitive son. Things come to a head when their son is the victim of bullies. Christine begins to think that she and her children would be safer – and happier – in her native country. On a trip back to the States, she reconnects with a dangerously attractive friend from high school who, after serving and becoming wounded in Afghanistan, seems to understand her like no one else. Meanwhile, Daisuke Uchida, a slugger with pro potential who has returned to Japan after living abroad, may be able to help propel Hideki’s team to the national baseball tournament at Koshien, fulfilling Hideki’s ambitions and securing the futures of his players, some of whom come from precarious homes. Hideki must ultimately choose between his team and his family.
In the Aftermath
By Jane Ward
When David Herron—overwhelmed and despairing, his family’s business and finances in ruin due to the bursting lending bubble of 2008—takes his own life one chilly spring morning, he has no idea the ripple effect his decision will set into motion.
Two years later, his widow, Jules, is now an employee of the bakery she and David used to own—and still full of bitterness over David’s lies. Their now-teenage daughter, Rennie, resents her work-obsessed mother, and is convinced she’s to blame for her father’s death. When Denise, the former police detective who worked David’s case, catches sight of Rennie at her sons’ school, she becomes obsessed with attempting to right the wrongs she believes she perpetrated two years earlier.
And as all this unfolds in Boston, Daniel, the guiltridden young man who, in his old life as a banker, helped create the circumstances that led to David’s suicide, continues to punish himself for his sins by living half a life, never staying anywhere long enough to make friends or build something lasting.
Ultimately, each of these very different people—all of them tied together by one tragic event—must learn in their own way how to say good-bye to the past and move into a brighter future.
Soul Seeker
By Kaylin McFarren
Crighton Daemonium arrives in the peaceful town of Lochton, Illinois, searching for wicked souls to add to his count. Benjamin Poe, a devoted husband, father, and firefighter, finds himself in a battle of wills against this evil, manipulating demon, while protect his only son. Ultimately, Poe is tricked into committing murder and Crighton is rewarded with the soul he was sent to retrieve.
Following Poe’s execution, Crighton continues his dark malevolent duties, until he’s kidnapped by members of The Sovereign Sector. This group of scientists, notorious for experimenting on supernatural creatures, forces Crighton into a soulmate relationship with the very angel he was sent to capture for the king of Hell, Lucifer.
With secrets revealed, darkness rules and loyalties shift. The demonic soul-seeker soon becomes the target of Lucifer’s revenge, and his journey to redemption and freedom–or eternal enslavement– begins.
Escaping Mercy
By Sam Polakoff
150 years in the future, hundreds of millions are homeless and the sick are forced into a euthanasia program called Mercy. Global leaders fiercely debate population control versus keeping people healthy.
When world-famous marine biologist, Dex Holzman learns about Aeternum, an ancient civilization at the bottom of the Coral Sea, he discovers a secret with the power to alter the trajectory of the planet. With the help of Cam Atkinson, a civil rights attorney, Dex travels a deadly path in his attempt to solve the world’s most ominous dilemma. Along the way, he uncovers a maniacal world leader’s vengeful plot to shed population and restore the Earth to its former glory.
Ophelia’s Room
By Michael Scott Garvin
A BRUTAL MURDER HAS TAKEN PLACE. The God-fearing citizens of the sleepy midwestern town believe evil has taken root.
A young married couple, Charlie & Delia Mull, are left to pick up the shattered pieces of their broken lives following the unspeakable tragedy. Townsfolk whisper from church pews that pretty Delia Mull has brought the misfortune upon herself – a cursed family legacy. Other locals believe the horrific crime is merely another sign of a violent and godless age.
A mysterious woman has rented the house six doors down. Betty Malcomb is the new teacher at the high school. Folks are suspicious of the outsider. Why has Betty traveled to their peeling little town? What would make her stay?
Located in the middle of the remote Kansas prairie sits the state penitentiary. Imprisoned in a concrete cell, a lone madman silently awaits his opportunity to complete his unholy calling. Best-selling author Michael Scott Garvin has released this riveting, genre-bending masterpiece. Equal parts — suspenseful story-telling and an in-depth character study on loss & forgiveness.
Her Scream: Redo
By Sheryll O’Brien
College-aged women in the Finger Lakes region of Upstate New York are targets of a serial rapist known as REDO.
Police departments from Syracuse to Geneva join forces to find the sadist who rapes his victims, not once, but twice. Detectives Matt Cambridge and Ray Chase of the SPD Sexual Crimes division lead the charge to find the man who’s raped and roamed for years.
Cambridge takes to the road to process clues.
Chase sticks close to home and plays a hunch.
They both find threads to pull – but only one detective will live long enough to prove the identity of REDO.
Hotel Bars and the Art of Being Conscious
By August Delp
Consciousness, experience & existence, friends & lovers, alcohol, meaning, life’s journey—all the good stuff—are rolled together in this idea-driven Gen X coming-of-middle-age story.
After dropping off her only son at a Swiss boarding school, independent and self-sufficient Daisy becomes a hotel bartender in order to pursue experience and search for meaning, looking to explore life’s next stage. She befriends Coop, an advertising executive and bar patron, who is also a recent empty nester. Together, they attend a consciousness conference at which Daisy reconnects with Bianca, a neuroscientist and Daisy’s college roommate from many years prior.
The brilliant and hyper-connected Bianca, once a rising star in the neuroscience world, has semi-secretly worked on the development of mind control drugs for the last two decades. She is recruited by a billionaire software mogul to help free his niece from a Japanese cult.
In parallel storylines, Bianca battles the cult and Daisy undertakes a backpacking pilgrimage to find meaning. The intertwined plots explore the nature of consciousness and its implications for the human experience.
The Life and Times of the Last Kid Picked
By David Benjamin
Through the telling of his own madcap childhood, David Benjamin pays homage to the exuberance of countless untamed boys who grew up in Middle America in the 1950s. Whether he’s stalking frogs through the bogs of Tomah, Wisconsin, playing four-kid baseball with his bothersome little brother and two favorite cousins, or sneaking into the theater to watch Saturday afternoon Westerns, Benjamin is the kind of little kid who eagerly would have fallen in with the redoubtable Tom Sawyer.
His tales–including one about a truly sorry incident with Snappy, the snapping turtle, and another about a run-in with a particularly fiendish squirrel–are by turns hysterically funny, caustic, aggrieved, and movingly sincere.
Traversing the nooks and crannies of kidhood, from ballfields to swimming holes, The Life and Times of the Last Kid Picked captures a moment in twentieth-century American life, as Benjamin magically recalls the myriad scrapes, intrepid adventures, and wanderlust that once made childhood such an exhilarating enterprise.
The Life and Times of the Last Kid Picked
By Roger W Stark
Young lovers trying be be a family, but duty called, interrupting them.
He answered. She, with child was left behind.
The war did end, but he never returned.
“They Called Him Marvin” is a history. A history of war and of family. A history of the collision of the raging politics of a global war, young love, patriotism, sacred family commitments, duty and the horrors and tragedies, the catastrophe that war is.
They Call Him Marvin
By Roger W Stark
Young lovers trying be be a family, but duty called, interrupting them.
He answered. She, with child was left behind.
The war did end, but he never returned.
“They Called Him Marvin” is a history. A history of war and of family. A history of the collision of the raging politics of a global war, young love, patriotism, sacred family commitments, duty and the horrors and tragedies, the catastrophe that war is.
Winds Across Beringia
By Benjamin H. Barnette
Nearly 15,000 years ago a daring young Mammoth Hunter named Harjo sets out on a life-changing journey across the now inundated ancient land bridge that once interconnected Alaska and Siberia called Beringia. He is bound for the land of the Sea Mammal Hunting people on the coast of the Bering Sea. There he encounters a beautiful, mysterious, servant girl named Onna; the likes that no one had ever seen before or imagined existed. She was taken captive from an unknown land far to the west across the great massive glaciers that all believed were impassable.
Together they began an incredible adventure to return to Harjo’s people and his river valley homeland within interior Beringia. The sage continues and tells the story of their life long relationship thorough many wondrous escapades, harsh desperate struggles, and intimate romance within the back drop of the lost land of Beringia—a wondrous world that was once bursting with breathing taking sights and sounds and teeming with exotic astonishing animals but equally an unforgiving perilous environment.
Harjo’s people, the Mammoth Hunters, and other prehistoric inhabitants of Beringia are destined to be the ancient ancestors of all Native peoples of North and South America.
Tripping Past Om
By Shelby Cochran
Jemma, engulfed in self-loathing from a failed romance and boredom from caring for an autistic brother, plunges herself into a dangerous relationship with a head, a proselytizer of LSD. He soon controls her through the drug and her own false perceptions. She emerges into a life of drugs, sex, and violence. The escapades she experiences, both literally and symbolically, roller coast Jemma into self-awareness. She finds that Om (blessedness) is neither out nor in but who and what she is.
Tripping Past Om sensually and lyrically pays tribute to the quest for spiritual and personal value in the postmodern world.
Union Made
By Eric Lotke
In Union Made, a fast-paced romance with a political edge, Pac-Shoppe department store employees are fighting for union representation. The novel reveals the tactics, strains, and risks of mobilizing a multiracial group of workers to stand together against a merciless management holding them down.
With a strong female lead and a gripping labor campaign that explores union organizing from the inside, Eric Lotke puts the reader in the shoes of Catherine Campbell, a labor organizer, and Nate Hawley, an accountant whose company is planning a hostile takeover of Pac-Shoppe, the company she’s trying to organize. There are sparks between the union activists and the company’s dirty tricksters, and sparks between Catherine and Nate.
As Catherine’s campaign falters in the face of Pac- Shoppe’s illegal hardball tactics, Nate’s sympathy for the workers and his fascination with Catherine grow. Can the lonely accountant interest the determined labor organizer by sharing evidence of Pac-Shoppe’s dirty tricks? How much trouble will he be in if he reveals corporate secrets to the union? Find out in this touching love story wrapped in a contemporary labor battle.
Stay Safe
By Sheryll O’Brien
Law enforcement professionals from across Upstate New York are asking themselves a terrifying question: Is a twisted psycho serial killer avenging the death of REDO the serial rapist who scarred his victims and his community for decades? Tragically, the answer is yes.
Investigative teams: Kelly and Sanchez, Ridley and Delgado, and Vela and Plank need to find out how the two men are connected – and the only way they can accomplish that is to pull a lot of Twisted Threads.
Gone Before Glory
By Stephen G. Yanoff
Award-winning historian Stephen G. Yanoff illuminates William McKinley’s remarkable life and tragic death in this highly acclaimed work, as the small-town lawyer and Civil War officer rises from obscurity to reach the highest office in the land. GONE BEFORE GLORY brilliantly charts the turbulent beginning of the twentieth century, and the anarchist activity which led to President McKinley’s assassination. Though the story of the McKinley administration has been told many times, this is the rare version that conveys the true motivations of the participants and reveals the interconnected paths that led to the tragic death of the 25th President of the United States.
A spellbinding tale of immense importance for those who enjoy American history. Thoroughly researched and brilliantly written by a born storyteller. — Renegade Reviews
Expedition to Mystery Mountain
By Susanna Oreskovic
What’s it like to be an intrepid explorer . . . and a woman? Expedition to Mystery Mountain is a come-along adventure of a city-dwelling woman who, with five fellow climbers, re-enacts the 1926 exploits of fearless trailblazers and pioneering Canadian mountaineers Don and Phyllis Munday.
The team’s ambitious mission: to recreate the Mundays’ route to Mount Waddington, the highest peak of British Columbia’s Coast Mountains, outfitted with vintage hobnail boots, fifty-pound wood-frame packs, and only antique ice axes for safety. Is the one woman in the crew prepared to endure the hordes of mosquitoes, the grizzly bears, the thickets of devil’s club, and the other dangers on the List of Doom?
The way forward is uncertain. Fear is not. Her mantra: “Just keep going.” To push on, she’ll need to find inspiration in Phyllis Munday, a badass woman of courage, good humour, and old-fashioned grit. She’ll have to come to terms with her fear of not being good enough—even when the path ahead is only more arduous. She’ll be unstoppable if she can trust herself in the face of uncertainty and unleash her inner wild woman.
Dear Heroin: A Memoir of Goodbyes
By Linda Morrison
Dear Heroin: A Memoir of Goodbyes is a powerful book that tells the story of Linda, her son, and the fight to save him from his heroin addiction. Linda walks with her son through his darkness and her own, with nights filled with fear as he relapses time and time again. When he dies by suicide, one horrific journey ends and a new one begins: an unending journey of loss whose pain has no words. A journey no mother ever plans to undertake.
But with the support of God, family, and friends, Linda finds something she desperately needs: hope. Within that hope, she finds the strength to persevere and discovers a vibrant richness she didn’t possess before. Linda becomes a beacon of light for others, especially parents walking this same path.
Dear Heroin is an inspirational tale of life, death, and finding new life again.
Midori and the 1000 Stitch Belt
By Dr. C. Thomas Somma
Midori and the 1000 Stitch Belt is a fictionalized account of the Pacific theatre of World War II told through the unique perspective of a courageous Japanese midwife wedded to a General in the Imperial Japanese Army. Her husband, General Tanoka, led the barbarous assault on China in 1937 ending with the slaughter of 330,000 innocent civilians at Nanking. It tells of her valiant efforts to preserve the lives of her three sons, all serving in the Imperialistic Army and to keep their names from being embroidered on their families’ 1000 Stitch Belt, containing five centuries of her husband’s lineage of warriors, all who died for the glory of their empire.
Midori’s profession as a midwife to deliver and preserve life in an imperialistic society fanatically bent upon destroying it.. It is a tale of the senseless destruction of human lives by those caught up in the fanaticism of the times, and who willingly sacrificed themselves and others for the glory of their Emperor.
Getaway
By Glen Pourciau
Although the characters in Pourciau’s stories change face, story to story they all inhabit a world dominated by interior voices revealing fragmented selves. They find difficulty making their inner worlds, with their competing narratives and emotions, fit into the world surrounding them. As they confront everyday predicaments and encounters, they are oftentimes averse to expressing their thoughts, thereby leading themselves deeper into a conflicted interior landscape.
In Light of Stars
By Bruce Willard
Willard’s love of music combines with his love and respect for the natural world.
Often rooted in, or coming out of, domestic encounters, the poems of this collection rise up (much like the clouds over his oft-traversed Rockies), as the speaker throws his attention to earth and sky, better to understand his own dynamic and shifting inner weather.
The Newest Employee of the Museum of Ruin
By Charlie Clark
In The Newest Employee of the Museum of Ruin, poet Charlie Clark interrogates masculinity, the pastoral, the lasting inheritance of one’s lineage, and the mysterious every day. His speaker, ever aware of impending ruin, experiences a landscape colored by anxiety. But his speaker is also self-aware, curious and trying to refrain from too much self-judgement: “I am sorry / for this cruel wish, but I want my life to outlast / bitterness.”
The speaker turns over and over the materials of culture, asking what pleasure it creates, replicates, diminishes, or destroys. When the tension runs too high, the poet creates moments of relief: “Suffering is not a philosophy any more than rain is.” Readers follow a speaker searching for ways to enjoy living within a damaged and declining world. Rich in image and wide-eyed, the beautiful, the plain, the ugly coexist in a debut collection 15 years in the making.
It Isn’t a Ghost if it Lives in Your Chest
By Joan Houlihan
Houlihan’s sixth collection of lyric poems reflects upon the persistence of what is lost and the accidental ruptures of trauma that allow re-entry into our world.
These poems are at once despairing and hopeful.
Gentefication
By Antonio de Jesús López
“Gentefication” nuances Latinidad as not just an immigration question, but an academic one. It deals with Latinx death not as the literal passing of bodies, but as first tied with language. It asks, what are the hauntings of a tongue that is repeatedly told, ‘one must learn English in order to succeed in this country’? What is the psychological trauma deployed not by right-wing bigots, but of white liberal institutions that give scholarships to Latinx students, but nevertheless prop up white supremacy by viewing their payments as charity? How do Latinx students become complicit in this tokenizing?
“Gentefication” wrestles with this ‘survivor’s guilt’ of higher education, of feeling as if you’re the only one among your homies that ‘made it.’ And in an American moment dealing with scandals across multiple universities this work is a timely intervention that advocates for first-generation audiences, for readers of color, and for all those vested in the protracted struggle for our fair shot.
Sweetgum & Lightning
By Rodney Terich Leonard
Sweetgum & Lightning lets us into an extraordinary poetic universe, shaped by a vernacular rooted in the language of self, one’s origins, and music. In poems that are deeply sensual in nature, Rodney Terich Leonard considers gender and sexuality, art, poverty, and community. Imagery expands through unexpected lexical associations and rumination the function of language; words take on new meaning and specificity, and the music of language becomes tantamount to the denotations of words themselves. Through extensive webs of connotation, Leonard’s narratives achieve a sense of accuracy and intimacy. The nuanced lens of these poems is indicative of the honesty of expression at work in the collection—one that affirms the essentiality of perception to living and memory.
Praying for Mrs. Mombasa
By Doug Brendel
Praying for Mrs. Mombasa is a hilarious, surreal, irreverent look at how hope works. Along the way, ethnic stereotypes get turned on their head— there’s a Mexican, a Scandinavian, a Kenyan, a Korean, and a Samoan, to name a few — racism and sexism come under attack, and a six-year-old smokes Virginia Slims. The story? There’s a mild-mannered inner-city pastor (but he’s the Mexican; aren’t they supposed to be hot-blooded?). He’s besieged by his passionate wife (but she’s the Scandinavian; aren’t they supposed to be cool and calm?). He falls in love with a parishioner who’s beset by her insatiable husband. Cue the heavenly algorithm, triggering the arrival of an angel — she’s the Korean. Political incorrectness abounds, and it would all be terribly offensive if not for vigilant commentary by a brilliant twenty-something — who looks like an idiot. Then there’s the neurotic narrator himself, hopelessly white and male, desperately wishing he’d written a stage play instead of a novel because playwrights are so glamorous. Praying for Mrs. Mombasa is a rollercoaster of cultural insanity, complete with overlapping language barriers. And don’t forget Mona, who needs to make a phone call before disposing of her dead husband’s carcass. Good luck, dear reader!
Hezada! I Miss You
By Erin Pringle
The last Midwestern traveling circus is due to arrive in a rural village it has visited for a century of summers. Like the village, the circus is on its last leg. It’s down to one elephant and a handful of acrobats. The circus boss’s sweetheart is dying. The former starring act is recovering from cancer. The assistant, Frank, plans to retire after this show. Meanwhile, twins Heza and Abe wander the hot fields and roads, waiting for the circus or anything better.
Hezada! I Miss You is a novel that explores tradition, love, and suicide—set under the fading tents of small-town America and the circus.
Last of the Annamese
By Tom Glenn
Saigon, 1974 1975. Chuck Griffin, a retired Marine officer, returns to Vietnam as a civilian intelligence analyst to do his utmost to win the war. He renews his friendship with a South Vietnamese Marine colonel, Thanh, at whose side he fought while on active duty. Chuck falls in love with a Vietnamese woman, Tuyet, who knows the country will fall and hopes Chuck will save her and her young son, Thu. As the fall of Saigon looms, Chuck discovers that Tuyet is Thanh’s wife. When the North Vietnamese attack the city, Chuck struggles to save Thanh, his wife, and his child. Thanh chooses to stay behind to face the North Vietnamese, but Chuck arranges for Tuyet and Thu to escape. He himself is evacuated under fire to a ship of the 7th Fleet in the South China Sea. There he discovers that Tuyet has chosen to stay in Saigon with Thanh. Only Thu has escaped. Liberation Radio, the broadcast service of the victorious North Vietnamese, reports that Thanh and Tuyet are both dead. Chuck embraces Thu.
Just One Look
By Joanne Kukanza Easley
In 1965 Chicago, Dani Marek falls in love at age thirteen, stuck boy-blind by a tall handsome fifteen-year-old named John. For five blissful years, she floats on a cloud of happiness and plans their future, but John is drafted into the Viet Nam War and loses his life. Shattered, Dani goes off the rails, wreaking revenge on the male population of Chicago. Her life is bereft of self-examination, but she is ambitious. She marries Luke, a man with money, using him for college tuition as he uses her as an ornament—their union is a mutual pact of convenience. After a night Dani would rather forget, she becomes pregnant, and her ambitions are derailed. When the marriage ends in Luke’s suicide, she’s left with a toddler, a fortune, and a budding career. At last, Dani turns a critical eye on how she’s conducted her life since John’s death. Her hard heart cracked open when Lorelei was born, then flowers when she meets John’s boyhood friend Noah, who served with him in the Army and has worshipped her from afar. Together, they put the ghosts who haunt her to rest.
Noki
By Douglas Farrago
When a highly skilled boxer with autism wants to take part in the corrupt world of professional fighting, whose decision is it to make?
A bankrupt boxing gym, a down-on-his luck drifter, and a desperate father grapple with an opportunity that could solve all their problems, but at a tragic cost.
Noki has grown up in his father’s gym, around the seedy world of boxing his whole life, the fighters there calling him a “man-child.” A young Black man with autism with a penchant for wearing Disney t-shirts, Noki is gifted with incredible boxing skills, considered by his inner circle as unbeatable. But when the unscrupulous boxing bigwigs see dollar signs, his gym family is torn: Are they permitting Noki to pursue his passion or are they taking advantage of someone with a disability. Noki, a new young adult fiction novel by Douglas Farrago, is a masterfully written coming of age story of loyalty, grit, and self-discovery in the most heartbreaking of circumstances.
An Elephant Ate My Arm: More True Stories from a Curious Traveler
By Laurie King
An entertaining and illuminating look at some of the world’s quirkiest places, creatures, and activities.
For anyone longing to get back out into the world, these twenty-one true stories are almost as good as a plane ticket! They bring you the very best of travel: steeping in the terroir of new places and connecting more deeply with unique people, food and wildlife.
King writes with insight, wit, and unquenchable curiosity, transporting readers to fantastical faraway places: a man-eating lake on a Caribbean island, the forest home of a three-eyed cannibal, the world’s first labyrinth, a portal to the Uncanny Valley, the perfect site for watching eagle sex, and many more. These almost-unbelievable locations really do exist, and the author has visited them all. She seems to find the marvelous in everything she encounters—each story reminds us we live in a world full of wonders.
The Demon in Disguise
By Ashley Elliott
In the late evening of May 18, 2002, prominent local businessman Carter Elliott and a young protégé. become the first double-homicide victims in the history of Conway, Arkansas. The Conway PD, Arkansas State Police, and FBI combined to launch a painstaking investigation into what seemed a meticulously planned mob-style execution. There were no eyewitnesses, recorded disturbances, fingerprints, evidence of a robbery, or DNA.
After weeks of investigation, and several theories, law enforcement had made no progress. Then, one month after the murders, the mother of Ashley Elliott, the estranged wife of Carter Elliott, went missing.
After several frantic hours, Ashley and her brother determined that Dr. Richard Conte, their mother’s second and divorced husband, had kidnapped their mom. After an excruciating back and forth, Conte released her and turned himself over to law enforcement. A Nevada court later sentenced Conte to six to fifteen years.
The kidnapping, however, breathed life into the stalled homicide investigation. Was there a connection? Did Conte kill Carter Elliott to eliminate perceived romantic competition?
Where Madness Lies
By Sylvia True
A masterful novel. Where Madness Lies unfolds against the backdrop of the Holocaust and seamlessly reflects back to us our own perilous times. Told with utter insight and beauty.
Annie Weatherwax, author of All We Had, now a major motion picture. Germany, 1934. Rigmor, a young Jewish woman is a patient at Sonnenstein, a premier psychiatric institution known for their curative treatments. But with the tide of eugenics and the Nazis’ rise to power, Rigmor is swept up in a campaign to rid Germany of the mentally ill. USA, 1984. Sabine, battling crippling panic and depression commits herself to McLean Hospital, but in doing so she has unwittingly agreed to give up her baby. Linking these two generations of women is Inga, who did everything in her power to help her sister, Rigmor. Now with her granddaughter, Sabine, Inga is given a second chance to free someone she loves from oppressive forces, both within and without. This is a story about hope and redemption, about what we pass on, both genetically and culturally. It is about the high price of repression, and how one woman, who lost nearly everything, must be willing to reveal the failures of the past in order to save future generations. With chilling echoes of our time, Where Madness Lies is based on a true story of the author’s own family.
The Noble Edge
By Christopher Gilbert
The Noble Edge: Reclaiming an Ethical World One Choice at a Time provides these answers as Dr. Christopher Gilbert invites readers into an inspirational conversation spiced with personal stories, humorous anecdotes and invaluable guidance about making consistently good choices. Based on three research-proven steps and nine principles for leading an ethically driven life, The Noble Edge brings a fresh approach to personal growth and inspires real change to empower a brighter future.
As useful in the board room as the family room, this easy-to-follow book contains insightful stories and a powerful model that sharpens the ethical lens and empowers readers to examine their own standards and values by applying transformational concepts to their life. Most importantly, readers will finish The Noble Edge encouraged that they have the power and capacities– individually and collectively– to achieve moral progress and bring better ethics into their organizations, families, communities and the world.
Behind the Lens
By Jeannee Sacken
Eight years ago, seasoned photojournalist Annie Hawkins Green barely survived a Taliban ambush that left her military escort dead and a young Afghan girl dying in her arms. Since then, she has managed to suppress her memories of that brutal day—until she returns to Afghanistan to teach a photography workshop at the secondary school for girls run by her expat best friend Darya Faludi. As the Taliban gain prominence in the once peaceful region, Annie’s nightmares from her last time in-country come roaring back with a vengeance. But are they just dreams? The unshakeable feeling of a grim, watchful presence makes Annie think otherwise.
As Annie struggles with her nightmares, more trouble brews with the suspicion that Darya’s teenage daughter is sneaking away at night to meet her shadowy boyfriend. Meanwhile, Annie’s own daughter wages war with her father and stepmother back home, feeding Annie’s all-consuming mom-guilt. Her only comfort, a poetry-writing U.S. Naval officer who saved her life all those years ago, is now at the other end of a satellite phone 7,000 miles away. How can he possibly keep her safe?
How can anyone?
The Patriot’s Grill
By Steven Day
It is May 12, 2099 and America has been controlled by a brutal dictatorship for 70 years. Democracy isn’t just dead; it’s been erased from history. For Joe Carlton, bartender at The Patriot’s Grill, concepts of self-government and personal freedom are unimaginable.
An old man enters the lounge and to Joe’s irritation, begins pestering him with stories about growing up in a free country and then watching that freedom die. He tells Joe that now, almost three quarters of a century later, he is one of only a few survivors left to tell the story: the last few lanterns in a darkening world.
Despite himself, Joe grows intrigued, eventually becoming so engrossed in the conversation he fails to notice the lounge filling with customers. When the crowd’s presence finally hits home, he panics, certain someone must have overheard their discussion and will turn him in. Desperate to save himself, he reports the old man’s treason to the Internal Security Service, something he immediately regrets. Just before ISS agents, responding to his call, violently take the old man into custody he whispers to Joe, “Remember, Joe you’re the light now.” The remainder of the story chronicles Joe’s quest for redemption, for himself and for America.
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Article originally Published in the December / January 2022 Issue: 2021 Indie Best Award Winners.