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THE HIT MIDDLE GRADE FANTASY “GOBLIN” RETURNS WITH “GOBLIN: THE WOLF AND THE WELL”

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What would you give up to protect the one you love? This question is explored in the upcoming sequel to Eric Grissom and Will Perkins’ successful fantasy tale, Goblin. The new graphic novel, Goblin: The Wolf and the Well, is written by Grissom and illustrated by Perkins.

“After Rikt’s first adventure in Goblin, I knew I wanted to throw him up against something even bigger and scarier than a blood-thirsty warrior with a tattooed face,” said Grissom, “and what’s more frightening for a kid than a new school? But there’s so much more going on at Underwood than homework. Rikt and his best-wolf, Fish-breath, are in for a rough ride, but at least they’ll make some friends along the way…and, unfortunately, some enemies, too. Sometimes, it can be hard to tell the difference. I can’t wait for readers to discover the mysteries behind Underwood’s iron gates.”

After losing his parents, Rikt struggles with a fear of being alone. The anxiety becomes unbearable when he receives three prophecies from a mysterious witch, one of which foretells a terrible fate for his best friend, a wolf named Fish-breath. After the first two prophecies prove true, Rikt meets Ms. Evelyn, a friendly human who offers them protection at Underwood, her boarding school for monstrous creatures and wayward wolves. Rikt soon learns things at Underwood are not what they seem and suspects the other children are in danger. With the help of a servant troll girl and a neurotic faun, Rikt must uncover the mystery of Underwood before he learns first-hand what horrors await at the bottom of an ancient well.

Goblin: The Wolf and the Well 
journeys into bookstores on July 16, 2024 and into comic shops on July 17, 2024. It is now available to pre-order for $19.99 at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and your local comic shop and bookstore.

Be sure to follow Dark Horse Comics on social media and check our website, www.darkhorse.com, for more news, announcements, and updates!

Praise for Goblin:

“Every page of Goblin not only overflows with imagination, but also with heart, humor, and a deeply emotional journey. I love it.”— Jeff Lemire (Sweet ToothBlack Hammer)

“A heartfelt fantasy yarn about finding light in a world filled with darkness.”— Dave Scheidt (Mayor Good Boy)

Goblin is a treasure! Beautifully illustrated and evocatively told.”—Steve Orlando (Ben 10Batman)

“There is an incredible amount of wisdom waiting in this book. Perfect for fantasy fans and middle schoolers. A must-add to your shelves” —Rosemary Kiladitis, Mom Read It

The Life-Changing Power of Self-Love By Tina Green

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Brave Healer Productions announces the release of The Life-Changing Power of Self-Love, a collection of 24 stories written by Tina Green, the “Self-Love Queen,” and her team of expert teachers, coaches and therapists whose sole purpose is to help women embrace a fresh start through self-love.

Green says, “Many women don’t understand the concept of self-love. It’s often passed off as self-care, which makes it sound frivolous. It runs deeper than taking a walk, eating a salad, or having a spa day. Self-love is a state of love and acceptance of one’s body, mind, and spirit as is. Self-love means having a high regard for your own well-being and happiness.”

Green began her journey to self-love in her fifties, pointing out that it is never too late for women to eliminate the shame they feel or the imperfections they dwell on. The book contains chapters on overcoming the fear of being seen, the transformative power of living for yourself first, and befriending your anxious parts. The books co-authors include  Alyssa AnayaCandra AnayaDasha Allred BondKim CollinsJayne Jacova Feld, Lydia Greenwoods, Thais Harris, Madrone KalilBeverly LaZar, Rev. Annie MarkCharleen M. MichelNatalie Petersen, Holly M. Rapport, Sharon Siegler, Dr. Ruth A. SouthernLaura SpinnerLinda (Jyoti) Stuart, Lisa Swid, Rev. Stephanie Urbina JonesMichelle Vesser, and Heather Westling.

Praise for The Life-Changing Power of Self-Love

“This is not your everyday read; it’s an illuminating expedition into the origins of shame and self-doubt, offering practical tools for soul-level healing in every chapter. I encourage you to travel this pilgrimage of self-discovery. The gift of transformation is waiting for you on every page!” — Dr. Ahriana Platten, best-selling author of Rites and Rituals, Harnessing the Power of Sacred Ceremonies

“This book belongs on every woman’s bookshelf. It will awaken you to your beauty, your bravery, and your capacity to give yourself the expansive love you’ve always yearned for.” —Sage Cohen, author of Fierce on the Page, The Productive Writer, and Writing the Life Poetic.

The Life-Changing Power of Self Love by Tina Green speaks to the constant desire to be liked, to look perfect, to be all the things others find beautiful. It helps readers redefine beauty and authentically tap into and love their own unique selves. I highly recommend it as a way to shift your thinking and create a more powerful self.” — Tabitha A. Scott CEM, CDSM, CHTP, founder, Global Institute of Growth

About Tina Green

Tina Green has 20 years of experience as an executive in nonprofits and financial services. She is a founder and transformational coach at Exposing The Roots, a best-selling author, an ordained minister, and a certified celebrant. She runs the Women’s Self-Love Community, a free private Facebook group that offers access to self-love events to its several hundred members.

Green was a master apprentice with Jeremy Pajer and Stephanie Urbina Jones in Teotihuacan, Mexico. In 2024, she and Pajer will co-facilitate the Toltec Medicine Wheel of Transformation, a powerful map of transformation based on ancient Toltec wisdom and Native American traditions.

New Release:::: The Twin Flame K.T. Anglehart’s Epic Young Adult Series Continues…

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The Twin Flame By K.T. Anglehart

Mckenna O’Dwyer knows she’s impulsive. Sometimes reckless. She also knows she’s a witch and keeps reincarnating as one, for reasons only her mother, Abby, can help her fully understand.

After weeks of searching, mother and daughter finally reunite—just like Elizabeth Dunlop’s prophecy states—and Abby is keen on helping Mckenna get a firm grasp on her abilities. She teaches her the proper way to channel elemental magic…but Mckenna soon discovers there’s a shortcut, something Cillian fully supports if it means getting quicker, more powerful results.

At first, Mckenna will do anything to thwart the High Priestess once and for all, before her powers are used to wipe out billions of souls. But the white horse Eachna’s devastating vision of Mother Nature continues to haunt her. Is that the future awaiting them if the Scottish Scrolls aren’t fulfilled?

Which is the lesser evil?

Enthralling, passionate, and with twists you won’t see coming, Mckenna’s magical education begins in book II of The Scottish Scrolls.

The Scottish Scrolls (2 book series) Kindle Edition (amazon.com)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Katrina Tortorici Anglehart is an award-winning author from Montreal, with a multilingual prowess in English, French, Italian, and “Spanglish”. A dedicated academic, she holds a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism, a graduate certificate in Scriptwriting, and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing.

Inspired by the wizarding world, the land of Narnia, and parallel planes, she penned The Wise One, inviting readers to connect with nature and its everpresent magic. Her exploration of the landscapes and folklore of Ireland and Scotland greatly influenced her debut YA urban fantasy, marking the inception of The Scottish Scrolls series.

K.T. Anglehart is a passionate advocate for bunnies, thanks to her late Netherland Dwarf, Magic—the inspiration behind her imprint, The Magic Dwarf Press. When she’s not writing or diving into magical reads, she revels in hiking, antiquing, and Netflix binges alongside her high-school-sweetheart-turned-husband, Andy. They currently live in Toronto with their three pets: Nessie, a mysterious rescue dog from Puerto Rico, and their whimsical bunnies, Onyx and Stirling

Sneak Peek: A Glooming Peace This Morning By Allen Mendenhall

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A Glooming Peace This Morning By Allen Mendenhall

Cephas recounts childhood events in the 1970s that retell the story of the improbable, forbidden love between Tommy Cox, who has an intellectual disability, and Sarah Warren, the underage darling of polite society. The two are pushed together by a mysterious illness, and their resulting illicit relationship results in a heated trial that stirs the entire town. Tommy’s prosecution turns on whether he could have, under the law, formed the requisite intent to be found guilty of the crime for which he’s charged. Cephas and his friends―Lump, Brett, and Michael―struggle to come to terms with their growing knowledge of Tommy and Sarah’s intimate relationship. Along the way the four learn much―perhaps too much―about justice, truth, lust, and love.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Acclaimed author, legal scholar, and former editor of the Southern Literary Review Allen Mendenhall is releasing his latest literary gem, “A Glooming Peace this Morning” in November. The novel is a riveting journey through the tumultuous 1970s South, where an illicit romance collides with a legal drama that will leave

A Glooming Peace This Morning

readers breathless.

Mendenhall is an experienced author and editor who has a unique blend of legal insight and literary craftsmanship, and I thought he’d be a great interview for your show, if you’re interested!  Mendenhall’s masterful storytelling not only captivates readers but also compels them to confront fundamental questions about love, justice, and morality.

Here’s a bit more about the book: In the heart of the 1970s, “A Glooming Peace this Morning” unveils the unforgettable story of Tommy Cox, a young man with an intellectual disability, and Sarah Warren, the charming belle of high society. Their fateful encounter is anything but ordinary: a mysterious illness draws them together, sparking an illicit romance that will set an entire town ablaze. As their love flourishes in the shadows, a heated trial ensues, forcing the community to confront its prejudices and biases. At its core, the case hinges on one critical question: did Tommy possess the intent required by law to be found guilty of the charges against him? In the midst of this legal battle, Cephas, the narrator recalling these childhood events, and his friends—Lump, Brett, and Michael—are faced with the daunting task of reconciling their knowledge of Tommy and Sarah’s intimate relationship with their own beliefs about justice, truth, lust, and love. Only a few know what really happened–but the truth can never truly be buried.

READ AN EXCERPT:

Excerpt from Book:

CHAPTER ONE: Magnolia County

 

            Let me tell you a story from my childhood, a tragedy worthy of ancient Attic theater, a sordid account of illicit love and unfortunate loss, of law and order, justice and mercy, life and death.  Some forty years later I recall these sad events with the clarity and devotion with which Matthew, Mark, and Luke—faithful followers each—recounted their timeless message of hope, grace, and promise.  Only my story is different, more ominous.  Listen and hear my voice.  Pay attention to what I have to say.  Store up my words for wisdom and instruction.

I used to stick out my tongue to lick my mashed potatoes, not as an eater but as a cartographer.  To prove my world was measurable, I’d slide my fat pink tongue along the steaming mush, bulldozing it into lumpy mountains along the corners of my plate and flattening it into a smooth valley somewhere in the middle.  Eventually I tongued the topography of Andalusia, my hometown in Magnolia County.  Mom’s hollering or smacking me with a napkin or spoon almost always disrupted this modest achievement.  Despite her interruptions, I maintained the skill to actualize into small-scale the enormous world I envisioned.

The place now known as Andalusia was once named for the Etowah Indians whom the British and Spanish, on the pretext of trading, gradually and thoroughly dispossessed.  Andalusia’s first European settlers, all Christians, didn’t record the Etowah name because, the story goes, it signified sun-worship.  They couldn’t have foreseen the long stretch of highway that split the cotton fields and brought truckers and hookers and other unsavory characters to the rest stops and gas stations on the outskirts of Magnolia County, where hitchhikers gathered and poor black families lived in shacks and shanties even though it was, for heaven’s sake, the 1970s.  Words like “folks” and “yonder” still circulated back then, and everyone was “fixin’” to do something but never actually doing it.  The class divide was sharp.  It was déclassé to speak like a redneck or a hick, though we all had strong accents and used strange colloquialisms.  The aspirational and ashamed among us spoke as we imagined refined Southerners to have spoken a century ago: with Victorian vocabulary and musicality, a ridiculous mix of faux-aristocratic inflection with theatrical, measured enunciation.  We didn’t know many Yankees and couldn’t bear the thought of them labeling us “uneducated” or “ignorant.”  So we overcompensated, making speech into a differentiating form of recreation, a pretend pedigree.

I sometimes wonder whether other small Southern towns were anachronistic like ours: a simulacrum of feudal plantation society disconnected from the distant, daily machinations of President Nixon, the political fallout from Roe v. Wade, the Kent State massacre, the hostage crisis at the Munich Olympics, and whatever else occupied the news.

Black folks were not, I’m sorry to say, part of my quotidian experience as a boy.  They lived on the margins of town, in isolated neighborhoods, and attended different churches.  They had their own restaurants and little leagues.  I saw black fathers and mothers walking to and from work but did not interact with them.  The law, mind you, no longer permitted segregation, which was accomplished instead through habits and practices that amounted to law in those days.  Left to their own preferences, the blacks and whites at that time and place regarded each other with polite and tactical distance, avoiding at all costs the fraught history that had hardened the hearts of their mothers, fathers, grandmothers, and grandfathers.  We wanted to understand each other, perhaps forgive each other, but didn’t know how and wouldn’t risk the effort.  We favored an imperfect peace over disruptive improvement when it came to race relations.

Few written records survived Andalusia’s infancy.  The first settlers were either illiterate or didn’t safeguard information.  Maybe they felt no need to document their existence or connect with their posterity.  Whatever the reason for their interminable silence, they left behind no information about Andalusia’s early years.  Legend held that an old blind man, the oracle in overalls, wandered Magnolia County in the 1920s and prophesied that Andalusia would perish if a local virgin murdered her one true love.  He was found dead in a field with coins over his eyes, possibly the victim of foul play.

I lived in the valley, the nucleus of the county.  Some thirty miles east of my house were the homogenous buildings of the gray and graying city.  At night these lit up like a fluorescent forest.  From town, on a clear evening, you could see the distant glow of these colossal structures as if they were teeny candles illuminating the yawning divide between urban and rural, cosmopolitan and country.  I never set foot in these towers but heard that they afforded a full view of Andalusia.  I pictured businessmen and elegant women gathered on the rooftops and upper floors, looking down on me and my house, all those miles away, with disdain and aloofness.

Many were the twilights when, alone and brooding, I would watch the sun set behind that inadvertent sum of architectural ambition: the gray and graying city.  During these moments of solitude I learned that day is day and night is night, and that the distinction between the two can be beautifully ambiguous.  I also developed a notion that the vital forces of the universe were not the result of human choice but simply the given state of things.  A city could spring up, unwieldy and without design, to no one’s fault or credit.  Sure there were engineers and builders and countless workers, but no individual purpose could explain the disorienting energy of the mighty metropolis with its incomprehensible multitudes.

Little lay to the west of Andalusia besides allegedly haunted forests and fields where goats and cows groveled and grazed.  Etowah burial mounds—massive conical heaps of dirt—gave the landscape there the look of pregnant women lying prone.  Near those mounds, Michael’s dad and my dad shared a law office, formerly a doctor’s home with a Greek revival design and thriving japonica bushes.  In warm seasons, cheerful Morning Glories trained along the railing of its front porch.  You could hear the highway from its rooms and see the huge wooden replica of a Coca Cola bottle that lured tourists en route to the beach or the mountains, depending on which direction they were headed.

Michael Warren was my best friend.  Our fathers, too, were friends, not just business partners.  They drank scotch together every afternoon before calling it a day.  Not far from their office was the public library where I spent many hours and discovered that I wanted to tell my story one day—whatever that story turned out to be.  I wanted to be Ishmael, Huck Finn, Nick Carraway, Jack Burden, Holden Caulfield.  But you cannot touch time.  You cannot grasp it as you can a baseball.  I didn’t have a story yet to tell.  Not until Tommy Cox and Sarah Warren gave me one.

West of Dad’s office and the library, the arresting and lonesome splendor of the Blue Ridge Mountains bent like an arthritic finger pointing to England, the home of my Anglo-Saxon ancestors.  In the summer, on a clear day, these wide ranges looked like giant green broccoli bulges cast up on the horizon by some fantastic film projector, above them a long reach of white clouds across a bright blue sky.   

Folks referred to the heart of Andalusia simply as “town.”

Town was a geometry of eclectic shops, aromatic bakeries, quaint restaurants, and ostentatious law offices.  Its centerpiece, withdrawn from the bricked streets and manifold statues, was the courthouse, a commanding structure announced by wood-mold brick and a stately, neoclassical colonnade of imposing height and width.

Behind the courthouse, away from the square, pine trees steepled above a copper cranium dome where a clock, forever stuck at six, stared down like a panoptic cyclops.  Dad used to say that the courthouse was so daunting that William Tecumseh Sherman couldn’t bring himself to burn it.  Others said that Sherman spared the building, and much of the town, because he had a girlfriend there.

The belly of the courthouse was no less astounding.  Beneath a vast rotunda the tip-taps of loafers echoed off marble floors, up to the cupola above.  Adorned with handsome antiques and oil paintings and patterned in floral arabesques, the hallways led to various courtrooms and the judges’ cloistral chambers.  Busts of Washington, Jefferson, Story, and Kent guarded the ornamentally carved doors within these semi-sacred corridors that led, at length, to an oil portrait of Sir William Blackstone, a Bible in his right hand and a law book in his left, who greeted visitors, or so it seemed, with a mischievous smile.

Georgian revival oak paneling lined the courtrooms.  Unfinished sketches of Andalusia’s legal legends—judges, prosecutors, government officials—filled the unpatronized rooms down the dark hallways leading to the judges’ chambers.  In the atrium, people of distinction, and some of disrepute, scuttled here and there, indifferent to any children, like me, who might have been wandering without supervision.

The courtrooms were eerie when vacant.  This, I suspect, had to do with Dad’s telling me once that if you listened closely, when no one was around, you could hear the faint echoes of long-ago closing arguments sounding from the rafters.  Dad also claimed that, because Sherman had spared the courthouse, these disembodied voices belonged to lawyers living before the Civil War, or, as he called it, the War Between the States.  They alone of their generation endured as apparitions to monitor the halls of justice, he said.

Outside the courthouse, each weekday, around noon, lawyers in tweed and seersucker filled the town square, smoking pipes or cigars, conversing about politics and recent cases, the noisy industry of sparrows and crows convening at their feet.  Sometimes lawyers would grab a bourbon at Bar Noon, or at the rowdier Y’all Come Back Saloon.  Because drinking was considered out of keeping for a lawyer, most of the bench and bar carried flasks or didn’t drink at all.  Those who didn’t drink lost the most cases.

A funny feeling overtook me if I walked by these bars in the mornings, their lights off and doors shut, the smell of beer in the air.  Hours before, they were full of conviviality, conversation, energy, ambition.  But sleep had set in.  The sun was up, but sleep had set in.  The floors had been mopped, the chairs were stacked on the tables, and the doors were locked.  And sleep had set in.  The taps stopped flowing.  The malaise of the workaday world presented itself just as the sleep had set in.  And it had set in.

On one corner of the square was a butcher shop owned by a Turkish man who had immigrated to the United States and, however improbably, settled in Andalusia.  When he saw how pleased people were to be eating turkey on Thanksgiving, a holiday he had never experienced before, he decided that, each and every holiday thereafter, he would sell a particular item suitable for the occasion.  Easter arrived.  He saw chocolate bunny rabbits and eggs in the shop windows where turkeys had been during Thanksgiving.  So he slaughtered some rabbits in the back of his store and displayed their raw carcasses in the window of his shop.  Children were horrified.  Some cried.  One stood outside the window weeping, “He killed the Easter bunny.”  The butcher didn’t make that mistake again.

Little new besides happened in Andalusia.  Our perceived novelties were reformulations of old manners and methods of living.  No two days were alike.  Yet everything was the same.  We were indifferent to Watergate, removed from bellbottoms and flower power, and thrilled when Hank Aaron broke the Bambino’s homerun record.  The Babe, after all, had been a philandering, potbellied Yankee with bad manners and a loud mouth.

No matter what news arrived by print or television, we favored ourselves over alien outsiders, especially Yankees.  We were irrationally loyal like that.

These details about Andalusia are important—they must be important—because I remember them and consider them necessary to my story, which, as I say, is chiefly the story of Tommy and Sarah, who made me who I am.  Knowledge is an awareness of truths you create for yourself from images your mind retains.  The mind processes facts, in other words, but truth emerges only after you’ve pieced them into narrative.  It took me a long time to realize the truth about Tommy and Sarah.

I understood, when I was looking through photographs I’d taken from Dad’s drawer, that Magnolia County was fixed in time and space; the natural rules of temporal succession—of moment followed by consecutive moment—didn’t apply to us.  I remember looking at the images in my hand and thinking how the town appeared no different today than it had a century ago.  I fingered the faded, busy outlines of folks in the square, tracing their dark suits and flowing dresses with my thumb, they being so alive, occupied, and unaware of me, a boy they’d never know in an era they wouldn’t reach.

Then I remember wondering whose face was behind the camera.  Why had he or she taken these photographs in what must have been, in those days, an explosive flash of smoke and lamplight?

I gazed down into the palm of my free hand and imagined time slipping through my fingers as would water.

I shaped the words, to no one in particular, Give me something new.  And something new came.

 

 

New Release: RUBY TAKES CHICAGO By Diann Floyd Boehm

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RUBY TAKES CHICAGO By Diann Floyd Boehm

The stylings of the Jazz Age begin as Ruby’s journey continues by acclaimed author Diann Floyd Boehm

Ruby Takes Chicago, is the sequel to Rise! A Girl’s Struggle for More. It’s now the 1920s, and a young Ruby Dinsmore leaves her hometown of Oilton, Oklahoma, and heads for Chicago to make her dreams come true. In the first book, Ruby, born in 1904, grows up wanting to be a businesswoman and does everything she can to make it happen. At the end of Rise!, Ruby’s family realizes her dreams can only come true in a larger town where a young woman with a college education would be accepted in the workforce. Once in Chicago, Ruby is surprised to learn that, even in a big city, society as a whole is still reluctant to accept women working outside the home. Determined to stay true to herself, she takes on the challenges of life in tumultuous times of Prohibition, protests, and women’s rights marches. Ruby meets like-minded women, and together they break through the barriers until Ruby lands the perfect job, all amidst discovering the joys of life and love, and heartbreak…and love again.

Amazon.com: Ruby Takes Chicago: 9781989833384: Floyd Boehm, DiAnn: Books

“Step back to the time of ‘The Charleston’, speakeasies, and the Jazz Age as one fearless young woman navigates the changing social mores, economic opportunities, and mindset of the 1920s in America. A page-turning fictionalized account of a trailblazing independent woman.”  Aimee Ravichandran, founder Abundantly Social
“A captivating tale of a young woman’s brave journey from a small town to 1926 Chicago. Amidst dreams and determination, she discovers her place in the world. This beautiful story offers timeless lessons that resonate with the reader long after the final page.”  Lucia Matuonto, Author and host of The Relatable Voice

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Diann Floyd Boehm is an award-winning international author. Diann writes children’s books and young adult books. In addition, Diann writes books to inspire kids to be kind, like themselves, and to “Embrace Imagination”.  You can find all her books on Amazon.

Diann’s Story Garden YouTube Channel gives children the opportunity to hear different children authors read their stories.

Diann is the co-host with Dr. Jacalyn on USAGLOBALTV.

Diann continues to be involved in various humanitarian projects with multiple organizations.

Diann was born to parents of George and Mabel Floyd in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but grew up in Texas with five brothers. She has traveled extensively to many parts of the world and has lived in the Philippines and Dubai.

Keep in touch with Diann by joining her newsletter: www.Diannfloydboehm.com.

First Book, General Motors, and Blue Star Families partner to distribute 35,000 STEM books to military families and local educators

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National organizations spurring interest in STEM careers among communities historically underrepresented in STEM fields

On November 11, in partnership with Blue Star Families, First Book and General Motors are hosting a Veteran’s Day STEM Book Family Festival to distribute 35,000 diverse STEM books to local Title I educators, military families, and community members. More than 300 guests from the First Book Network, the families they serve, and members of the National Capital and Baltimore chapters of Blue Star Families are gathering at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. for a day of family activities and free STEM book giveaways.

First Book and GM have been partners since 2021 with the collective goal of elevating student exposure to STEM careers through the distribution of diverse STEM books and year-long reading events culminating in the STEM Book Family Festival. Leveraging First Book’s Network of more than 575,000 educators serving children in need nationwide, events like this family festival not only offer communities essential reading materials but help foster an interest in and pursuit of STEM careers for all students.

“First Book is committed to breaking down every barrier that we see limiting the potential of our youngest generations and the lack of high-quality, diverse STEM resources has become a clear challenge to addressing the lack of diversity in STEM fields,” said Kyle Zimmer, President and CEO of First Book. “We are thrilled to collaborate with GM and Blue Star Families to inspire the next generation of STEM innovators through a love of reading.”

More than half of the nation’s students are children of color and yet these communities are vastly underrepresented in STEM careers. With limited access to STEM curriculum and career fields, the inequitable career opportunities for low-income and underserved communities are creating a barrier to education and the workforce.

“Literacy is foundational to the academic and professional success of all students and fostering an interest and pursuit of STEM careers begins with a mastery of reading skills,” said Heidi Magyar, Executive Director of Corporate Giving at General Motors. “Bolstering home libraries with STEM focused books and cultivating a love of reading at an early age is a vital step to increase representation of historically excluded communities in STEM.”

Blue Star Families, the leading network of military families supporting more than 275,000 members across the globe, has been a vital partner in distributing books and supporting the healthy development of children in military families. This event also spotlights these families to bring awareness to the challenges of military families and the programs in place to help empower and stay connected to our neighbors in the armed services.

“Blue Star Books was one of Blue Star Families’ first programs because we understood that harnessing the power of reading high-quality books was an easy and evidence-based way to support military families,” said Kathy Roth-Douquet, CEO and Co-Founder of Blue Star Families. “Reading not only helps families address unique educational challenges which can arise from frequent military moves, but it also gives families an opportunity to spend quality time together, which our research shows strengthens a military family’s resilience. This is why we are grateful and excited to partner with GM and First Book to meet the needs of our youngest learners and families serving our country.”

The event builds on the success of the partnership’s distribution of 35,000 STEM books in Tacoma, Washington with Blue Star Families on Oct. 28th and a virtual celebration of diverse STEM jobs with GM employees as part of a National STEM Day event on Nov. 8th.

About First Book
Education transforms lives. First Book is building a world where every child has access to a quality education. We work to remove barriers to education and level the playing field for kids in need. At the heart of our work are the 575,000 members of the First Book Network, the largest online community of educators and professionals dedicated to children in need across North America. This Network is the key to creating systemic change. Through our research arm, First Book Research & Insights, we conduct studies that aggregate their voices to identify barriers to equitable education and inform strategic solutions. To address their needs, we provide free and low-cost books, resources, and access to leading experts through the First Book Marketplace, which uses aggregated buying power to support this underserved community. Founded in Washington D.C. in 1992 as a nonprofit social enterprise, First Book is dedicated to eliminating barriers to learning and inspiring young minds. Learn more at FirstBook.org and visit our award-winning eCommerce website at FBMarketplace.org.

About GM
General Motors (NYSE:GM) is a global company focused on advancing an all-electric future that is inclusive and accessible to all. At the heart of this strategy is the Ultium battery platform, which will power everything from mass-market to high-performance vehicles. General Motors, its subsidiaries and its joint venture entities sell vehicles under the Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, Cadillac, Baojun and Wuling brands. More information on the company and its subsidiaries, including OnStar, a global leader in vehicle safety and security services, can be found at https://www.gm.com.

About Blue Star Families
Blue Star Families (BSF) is the nation’s largest chapter-based military and veteran family support organization. Its research-driven approach builds strong communities with a focus on human centered design and innovative solutions. Since its founding in 2009, BSF has delivered more than $200 million in benefits and impacts more than 1.5 million people each year. For more information, click here.

SOCIAL SECURITY HORROR STORIES: Protect Yourself from the System and Avoid Clawbacks

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A New Book from Larry Kotlikoff and Terry Savage Just Released and as Seen on 60 Minutes!

Social Security is Terrorizing Retirees and the Disabled Because of Its Own Mistakes!

Social Security is clawing back $21.6 Billion in mistaken overpayments to elderly retirees and disabled people because the agency miscalculated benefits, often for decades! It could happen to you – or your parents. Social Security has unchecked power. If you don’t repay their mistakes, they simply stop sending your monthly benefit!

Now a new book — Social Security Horror Stories –– Protect Yourself from the System and Avoid Clawbacks – by Laurence Kotlikoff (co-author of the best-selling Get What’s Yours From Social Security) and nationally syndicated personal finance columnist Terry Savage (author of The Savage Truth on Money), reveals the secrets of avoiding clawbacks and other “scams” perpetrated by an agency that often deliberately misleads claimants into taking the wrong benefits at the wrong time — mistakes that cost a small fortune.

Kotlikoff and Savage described these Horror Stories on 60 Minutes, where Anderson Cooper expressed his dismay that the Social Security Administration refused to talk on-camera in its own defense. That’s because something is terribly wrong when a government agency openly terrorizes our most defenseless citizens.

What plans can you make to protect yourself and ensure you get the benefits you deserve, while avoiding costly mistakes and clawbacks? This book is more than a warning; it’s a clear guide to avoiding your own Social Security horror story.

A review copy of the book is available upon request. The Kindle and print editions are available on Amazon. An audio book will be out soon.

Note: This book is not about the future solvency of Social Security, although the authors are prepared to discuss that issue. This book is about the current situation – and the unfair bullying that the Agency has been perpetrating upon the most dependent Americans.

New Release: Scorch Mark, A Dark Dreams Novel By JP McLean

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Scorch Mark, A Dark Dreams Novel By JP McLean

Jane stands alone between a powerful artifact and the wrong hands. Jane Walker’s alarming dreams, in which she sees events that have yet to happen, have finally subsided. The man who killed her parents and kidnapped Jane is behind bars. So it’s the perfect time for Jane and her partner Ethan to set out on a road trip to unravel the secrets of her ancestry.

But their journey takes a spine-chilling turn when they encounter a gang of men who stare at Jane as if they recognize her. That can only mean one thing: they’ve met her in a dream she has yet to experience. When the gang begins stalking her, Jane realizes she must have witnessed a deadly event. But what could it be? She slips into hiding and waits for the disturbing dream to arrive.

And now her BFF, Sadie Prescott, is dating a cop whose curiosity about Jane leads him to unearth the mysterious deaths that litter her past. When his latest investigation crosses paths with Jane’s stalkers, Jane must intervene and turn the skeptical cop into a believer before he kills himself and causes the deaths of his entire law enforcement team.

Immerse yourself in a supernatural thriller where dreams and reality meet, weaving a web of suspense that will keep you turning the page until the final, heart-stopping revelation.

Scorch Mark is available in eBook at all major retailers, in libraries and on subscription services.

Scorch Mark is available in print at Barnes and Noble, Amazon, and everywhere books are sold.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

JP (Jo-Anne) McLean is a bestselling author of urban fantasy and supernatural thrillers. She is an Eric Hoffer and Global Book Award winner and was a finalist in the Wishing Shelf Book Awards, the Chanticleer International Book Awards, and the Independent Author Network Awards. Reviewers call her books addictive, smart and fun.

JP holds a Bachelor of Commerce Degree from the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business, is a certified scuba diver, an avid gardener, and a voracious reader. She had a successful career in Human Resources before turning her attention to writing.

Raised in Toronto, Ontario, JP has lived in various parts of North America, from Mexico and Arizona to Alberta and Ontario. JP now lives with her husband on Denman Island, which is nestled between the coast of British Columbia and Vancouver Island. You can reach her through her website at jpmcleanauthor.com.

77-Year-Old Professional Racecar Driver Shares Life Lessons Learned in the Fast Lane in Inspiring and Purposeful New Memoir

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Life comes at you fast when you’re traveling 180 miles per hour. For professional racecar driver Ted Giovanis, it’s also where you can learn the most valuable lessons. After nearly three decades in the driver’s seat, Giovanis has divulged his most valuable wisdom in the new book Focus Forward: Life Lessons from Racing, published today by Amplify Publishing. It is available from AmazonBarnes & Noble, and more.

Ted Giovanis, previously a veteran of the healthcare industry, began his professional career in 2006, at the age of 61. Today, he is the owner of Team TGM and he races in the International Motor Sports Association series.

He has competed throughout the United States and Europe, including 24 Hours of Daytona and the Ferrari Challenge in Monza, Italy. In 2020, he clinched the International GT Championship. He is a previous class record-holder at Nelson Ledges road course in Ohio.

Giovanis is also the founder of the Jayne Koskinas Ted Giovanis (JKTG) Foundation, which funds innovative medical research, data analysis, events, and other projects and is named for his late wife. In 2023, the Giovanis Institute at Johns Hopkins Medicine was established to focus on the cellular aspects of cancer.

In Focus Forward, Giovanis shares the experience he’s gained since starting an auto racing career, a ride of three decades that is still in overdrive. He shows you how the tools of racing and the teamwork within it are applicable to life and business.

You may not know about Type 1 turns, outbraking, or be able to distinguish down force from dive planes—but by the time you reach the checkered flag of Focus Forward, you will have a better sense of how to live with more purpose and gratitude.

Whether preparing in the garage, taking practice laps, or revving the engine for the start of the race, Giovanis puts you in the driver’s seat with him to make the most of every day.

Focus Forward: Life Lessons from Racing is on sale now from AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Amplify Publishing. You can find more information and connect with Ted Giovanis at www.TedGiovanis.com.

Sneak Peek: Silver Lady by Mary Jo Putney

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Silver Lady by Mary Jo Putney

Cornwall calling! From New York Times bestselling author Mary Jo Putney, the first in an intoxicating historical romance series set on the rugged Cornish coast, filled with swashbuckling adventure and real-life history, intrigue and an unshakeable love—perfect for fans of Poldark.

A smoldering nobleman and a beautiful amnesiac with paranormal gifts discover they share a powerful passion, a unique legacy—and a common enemy.

Together they faced the past . . .

A sense of duty sends Bran Tremayne to Cornwall to confront his heritage of British nobility. Abandoned at birth, Bran wants nothing to do with the embittered remains of his family. But as a special agent for the Home Office, he senses trouble brewing along the coast. And he can’t turn away from the vulnerable woman he encounters in the Cornish countryside. Merryn’s amnesia makes her past a mystery to them both, but with her life in danger, the only thing Bran knows for sure is that the beautiful stranger needs his protection . . .

But would they share a future?

Leaning into Bran is difficult enough, but can Merryn trust the strong bond—and the powerful passion—she feels for her rugged rescuer? She has no choice once Bran uncovers that she is at the center of a plot between French agents and Cornish smugglers. From misty woodlands to stormy shores, the two join forces with a band of loyal Cornishmen to bring down a common enemy. Yet will their growing love survive the coming peril?