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Dec 20 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Lela MichaelTags: contemporary fantasy-mystery, self-publishing
Glancing at the cover of this book we know right off the bat something is up with that well. There are too many historical writings about fountains of youth to count, not to mention the legendary island of Avalon and utopian villages such as Shangri-La. In The Puddingstone Well, the second novel from William Westhoven, [...]
Tags: contemporary fantasy-mystery, self-publishing
Dec 17 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine Tosko
Rajam, named after a distant Indian friend, decides, on a whim of teenage wanderlust to leave it all behind in her small Alabama town and take to the road to follow the hippy festival trail across the country and beyond. Giving away all her “stuff” she takes off to the famous Rainbow gathering and falls [...]
Dec 13 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine Tosko
The book, a sequel to Colt O’Brien Sees The Light centers around Colt O’Brien, a student who takes an internship as an IT helpdesk assistant as part of his college studies, and follows his career in IT and his personal life as he discovers more about life. An unusual format is used as emails between [...]
Dec 12 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Elaine L. Orr
If you heard that Saving Grace by Ann Grant was the story of a perfectionist who tanks after a debilitating fall and ends up leaving her husband and kids, you might think you didn’t want to read that story. You’d be making a big mistake. With humor, insight into the human spirit and, well, grace, [...]
Dec 7 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine Tosko
This book is the ponderings on life by pharmacist John D Mosley, a thinker who has written several of these monologue style works on his opinions about life, with handy points to remember at the end of each section. Written in the Kahlil Gibran style, the book is separated into several themes, including how to [...]
Dec 5 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine Tosko
Did you know bees can smell bombs? Or that it could soon be possible to fly from the US to Japan in 30 minutes? Would you like to know exactly how your Kindle works? How could a tree be related to a laptop? Did you know there is a handshake invented to combat Swine Flu? [...]
Dec 3 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Catherine Tosko
It is not often that I pick up a book of short stories with a song in my heart because the genre is just so damn difficult to get right – and when a writer succeeds he then has to stand against the greats such as H.P. Lovecraft, Saki, Angela Carter, Roald Dahl. Why do [...]
Nov 29 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Avery Hurt
In life, Hanna Singer, protagonist of this unique fantasy, was a rare individual: a medieval atheist. After she dies, she finds out just how wrong she was. As it turns out, the Christian villagers who had tried so hard to convert her didn’t have it quite right either. In the afterlife, Hannah becomes a Celestial [...]
Nov 28 2012in Book Reviews, Features by tbmarkinsonTags: Fiction, Mystery Thriller
In the novel Spitting Image, by M. K. Mattias, the main character can’t stay out of trouble. Simone Darling is terrified of flying. After her father plunged to his death when he fell out of a helicopter, Simone never wants to step foot onto a plane. Also, she’s afraid of America, especially Miami. Her fear [...]
Tags: Fiction, Mystery Thriller
Nov 27 2012in Book Reviews, Features by Lela MichaelTags: Car Johnson, comedy, Rebekah Webb, self-publishing
The Life and Times of Car Johnson by Rebekah Webb is a comedic biography of a fictional character. One could almost say my reading experience of this book was a trip. The book is presented in first-person, as though the character is dictating. During the first few chapters, I thought I was reading a transcript [...]
Tags: Car Johnson, comedy, Rebekah Webb, self-publishing