Book Review: ‘The Education of a Traitor’ by Svetlana Grobman
The Education of a Traitor by Svetlana Grobman is a memoir about growing up in Russia during the Cold War. It is the story of a young Jewish girl, who learns her place in society, and in her family,...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘All We Have Is Today’ by Michelle Wulfestieg
All We Have Is Today by Michelle Wulfestieg is an inspirational and metaphysical book that describes the strength, faith, and perseverance of 11-year-old Michelle, in the face of a tragic event. Young...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Lucien and I’ by Danny Wynn
Lucien and I by Danny Wynn is a story of friendship. Nearing the end of his 30s, David still feels like his life has been unfulfilling. When he meets Lucien, who is in his mid-20s, he begins to live...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Author, or The Characters’ Short Living Story’ by Facundo...
The Author, or The Characters’ Short Living Story by Facundo Raganato grabbed me from the synopsis, and hooked me from the first page until the very end. This is not your typical fiction book; it is a...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Cello’s Tears’ by Geza Tatrallyay
Cello’s Tears by Geza Tatrallyay expresses through contemporary poems, a literal meaning of words. His words in the different languages will express and make you feel the sense of emotions and the...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Are You Fully Charged?’ by Tom Rath
As one with always a million things on my mind, a thousand tasks, and hundreds of projects, I am fully aware that more does not equal better. Are You Fully Charged? The 3 Keys to Energizing Your Work...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Butcher’s Sons’ by Scott Alexander Hess
You could look inside the back room of a butcher shop in the 1930s and think the tragedy belongs to the animals hanging crudely from their hooks, yet in The Butcher’s Sons, the animals get off lightly...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘System: With His face in the Sun’ by Jon A. Davidson
In System: With His Face in the Sun author Jon A. Davidson ventures into the not-so-distant, seemingly Utopian, future with a “what if” scenario that is all too easy to imagine. Technology has advanced...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Maximizing Your Injury Claim: Simple Steps to Protect Your...
In his book Maximizing Your Injury Claim: Simple Steps to Protect Your Family After An Accident, Matthew D. Dubin provides readers with guidance to help protect their families through personal injury...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Witches Protection Program’ by Michael Phillip Cash
In Witches Protection Program by Michael Phillip Cash, we meet Agent Wes Rockville who, after a failed assignment that resulted in an escaped prisoner, is given nothing more than a name and an address...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘An Unbroken Educational Apartheid Legacy’ by David E. Morgan,...
An Unbroken Educational Apartheid Legacy by Dr. David E. Morgan provides information and insight not only to the people of Chicago, but to everyone in the United States who cares about equality in...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Suffering of Innocents’ by Marc Zirogiannis
In The Suffering of Innocents, author Marc Zirogiannis considers the question pondered over the ages, stemming from the Old Testament’s Book of Job, “Why do innocents suffer?” Sam and Laura Job are...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Legend Of Fast Eddie,’ Crime Fiction by Anthony Murillo
Originally published as Wicked Sick nearly a decade ago, The Legend Of Fast Eddie is a “nail biting joyride through the treacherous world of organized crime.” Author Anthony “Smiley” Murillo wrote the...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Invective’ by Andy Owen
Invective by Andy Owen is a difficult story to categorize. At its core it is a spy thriller about Ismael, a Secret Service informant who ends up on the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan, while working...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Storyteller: My Years with Ernest Thompson Seton’ by Leila...
The Storyteller: My Years with Ernest Thompson Seton by Leila Moss Knox is a book that beautifully shares the stories and legend of Ernest Thompson Seton, Leila’s uncle, whom she called “Granddaddy.”...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Martian’ by Andy Weir
Life, as the esteemed Dr. Ian Malcolm (of Jurassic Park fame) told us, can only exist on the edge of chaos. Our existence as human beings is only possible due to the delicate balancing act between...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Painful Truth’ by Lynn R. Webster, M.D.
As a patient with rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia, among other chronic conditions, I was eager to begin reading The Painful Truth by Lynn R. Webster, M.D., as I just was referred to a pain clinic...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘East of Coker’ by Andy Owen
East of Coker is the second book by Andy Owen that I have reviewed. Like the first book, Invective, it is excellent. It is also, however, completely different. Unlike Invective, East of Coker is not a...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘The Hidden and the Maiden’ by Eben Mishkin
In The Hidden and the Maiden by Eben Mishkin, we first meet James Rathbone, an ex-student of the last wizard. When James agrees to take on the challenge of stopping an evil medium named Kenton Dean...
View ArticleBook Review: ‘Kasmah Forma’ by S. Vagus
Kasmah Forma by S. Vagus explores death, life and chaos, in Kasmah, a world divided into three distinct regions: The Maharaan Expanse, the Land of the Gadori, and Integrum. In The Maharaan Expanse we...
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