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Paul Is Missing By Donna M. Cramer

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Paul Is Missing
A novel of overcoming loss and tragedy in a new direction by children’s author, Donna M. Cramer

Two young families are on the brink of new beginnings. Brynn and Eric Branson, recently married, are overjoyed with their baby, Paul. Alison and Jared Jensen are equally excited to start their life together, with Alison eager to escape the influence of her overbearing father, Cecil. Both couples are filled with anticipation for their futures.
However, life takes a dramatic turn when Jared is deployed to Afghanistan. In a misguided attempt to help Alison cope with a devastating loss, Cecil and Gail, Alison’s parents, intervene in ways that profoundly affect both young couples.

As they navigate through heartbreaks and some victories over the next twenty years, will these couples find their way back to happiness? Can they overcome loss and tragedy, and will hope ultimately triumph?

Paul is Missing by Donna M. Cramer | Kirk House Publisher (kirkhousepublishers.com)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Donna M. Cramer is a retired special education teacher from Massachusetts, where she worked with young special needs students (preschool through first grade) for over 20 years. Her teaching career was cut short due to a life-altering brain injury sustained while working at school, which forced her into early retirement. 

“Paul Is Missing” is her first published adult novel. Donna has loved writing since childhood, and during her long recovery from her brain injury, she realized the profound importance of hope, even in the most traumatic situations. Her brand is built around this message of hope. In addition to her novel, Donna is also writing a series of children’s books featuring the character Lester Lion. She stays busy writing, practicing yoga, and walking on the beach. She lives with her husband and their two Maine Coon cats. Her motto is: Never give up, and always believe in hope!

There’s a Book For That: Hispanic & Latine Heritage Month

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Welcome Hispanic & Latine Heritage Month which runs from September 15 through October 15, during which time we honor the contributions of Latine and Hispanic Americans to the United States and celebrate their heritage and culture. Enjoy the following array of new and acclaimed titles – biography, memoir, cooking, fiction, history, and poetry – to mark the occasion.

 

NONFICTION

 

Stranger in the Desert by Jordan SalamaSTRANGER IN THE DESERT: A FAMILY STORY by Jordan Salama

Inspired by family lore, a young writer embarks on an epic quest through the Argentine Andes in search of a heritage spanning hemispheres and centuries, from the Jewish Levant to turn-of-the-century trade routes in South America. Combining travelog, history, memoir, and reportage, Stranger in the Desert transports readers from the lonely plains of Patagonia to the breathtaking altiplano of the high Andes; from the old Jewish quarter of Damascus to today’s vibrant neighborhoods of Buenos Aires. It is also a fervent journey of self-discovery as Salama grapples with his own Jewish, Arab, and Latin American identities, interrogating the stories families tell themselves, and to what end.

 

Magical/Realism by Vanessa Angélica VillarrealMAGICAL/REALISM: ESSAYS ON MUSIC, MEMORY, FANTASY, AND BORDERS by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

Longlisted for the National Book Award

Part memoir and part cultural criticism, this brilliant, singular collection of essays explores migration, violence, and colonial erasure through the lens of music and pop culture, and from the perspective of a Mexican American daughter from the Rio Grande Valley. With Magical/Realism, Vanessa recovers the truth from the absences and silences of migration, colonialism, and white supremacy. She looks closely at music as a stand-in for the archive of the undocumented and how pop culture leaves objects behind as portals for memory. This is a wise, tender, expansive collection from a dazzling, essential voice.

 

Rivermouth by Alejandra OlivaRIVERMOUTH: A CHRONICLE OF LANGUAGE, FAITH, AND MIGRATION by Alejandra Oliva

In this powerful and deeply felt memoir of translation, storytelling, and borders, Alejandra Oliva, a Mexican American translator and immigrant justice activist, offers a powerful chronical of her experience interpreting at the US-Mexico border. As investigative and analytical as she is meditative and introspective, sharp as she is lyrical, and incisive as she is compassionate, seasoned interpreter Alejandra Oliva argues for a better world while guiding us through the suffering that makes the fight necessary and the joy that makes it worth fighting for.

 

Magical Urbanism by Mike DavisMAGICAL URBANISM: LATINOS REINVENT THE US CITY by Mike Davis

A CONTEMPORARY CLASSIC, Magical Urbanism focuses on how Latinos are attempting to translate their urban demographic ascendancy into effective social power. Mike Davis chronicles the Dickensian underworld of day labor in New York, tracks the development of new ecologies and levels of development along the border, and examines the shifting realities of life and work for Latinos in US cities. The cosmopolitan result of the  Latinization of America’s cities “is a rich, constantly evolving” culture that has the potential, argues Davis, to become a radical new American counterculture.

 

THE DAY OF THE DEAD: A CELEBRATION OF DEATH AND LIFE by Déborah Holtz, Juan Carlos Mena

A tribute to Mexico’s most important holiday, this extraordinary and definitive volume documents the immense creativity displayed by this popular annual celebration.

 

 

FICTION

 

The House on Mango Street by Sandra CisnerosTHE HOUSE ON MANGO STREET by Sandra Cisneros; Introduction by John Phillip Santos

A 40th anniversary hardcover edition of Sandra Cisneros’s beloved coming-of-age novel about a young Latina girl growing up in Chicago: The House on Mango Street is one of the most cherished novels of the last fifty years. Readers from all walks of life have fallen for the voice of Esperanza Cordero, growing up in Chicago and inventing for herself who and what she will become. “In English my name means hope,” she says. “In Spanish it means too many letters. It means sadness, it means waiting.”

 

América del Norte by Nicolás Medina MoraAMÉRICA DEL NORTE by Nicolás Medina Mora

Moving between New York City, Mexico City, and Iowa City, a young member of the Mexican elite sees his life splinter in a centuries-spanning debut that blends the Latin American traditions of Roberto Bolaño and Fernanda Melchor with the autofiction of US writers like Ben Lerner and Teju Cole.

 

 

The Wind Knows My Name by Isabel AllendeTHE WIND KNOWS MY NAME: A NOVEL by Isabel Allende; Translated by Frances Riddle

This powerful and moving novel from the New York Times bestselling author of A Long Petal of the Sea and Violeta weaves together past and present, tracing the ripple effects of war and immigration on one child in Europe in 1938 and another in the United States in 2019. Intertwining past and present, The Wind Knows My Name tells the tale of these two unforgettable characters, both in search of family and home. It is both a testament to the sacrifices that parents make, and a love letter to the children who survive the most unfathomable dangers—and never stop dreaming.

Click here for the spanish edition

Catalina by Karla Cornejo VillavicencioCATALINA: A NOVEL by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio

A year in the life of the unforgettable Catalina Ituralde, a wickedly wry and heartbreakingly vulnerable student at an elite college, forced to navigate an opaque past, an uncertain future, tragedies on two continents, and the tantalizing possibilities of love and freedom. Brash and daring, part campus novel, part hagiography, part pop song, Catalina is unlike any coming-of-age novel you’ve ever read—and Catalina, bright and tragic, circled by a nimbus of chaotic energy, driven by a wild heart, is a character you will never forget.

 

A Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana EnriquezA SUNNY PLACE FOR SHADY PEOPLE: STORIES by Mariana Enriquez; Translated by Megan McDowell

A diabolical collection of stories featuring achingly human characters whose lives intertwine with ghosts, goblins, and the macabre by “one of Latin America’s most exciting authors” (Silvia Moreno-Garcia) “Horror has found its master.”—Joy Williams

 

 

POETRY

 

Homeland of My Body by Richard BlancoHOMELAND OF MY BODY: NEW AND SELECTED POEMS by Richard Blanco

A rich, accomplished, intensely intimate collection with two full sections of new poems bookending Blanco’s selections from his five previous volumes.

“An engineer, poet, Cuban American…his poetry bridges cultures and languages—a mosaic of our past, our present, and our future—reflecting a nation that is hectic, colorful, and still becoming.”—President Joe Biden, conferring the National Humanities Medal on Richard Blanco, 2023

 

Latino Poetry: The Library of America Anthology (LOA #382) by LATINO POETRY: THE LIBRARY OF AMERICA ANTHOLOGY (LOA #382) edited by Rigoberto Gonzalez

This landmark Latinx poetry collection offers “a wondrous journey through the passions, the ideas, and the diversity of a people redefining what it means to be American” (Héctor Tobar, Pulitzer Prize winner). Now, in an unprecedented anthology edited by the poet and critic Rigoberto González, Library of America brings together more than 180 poets whose poems bear witness to the beauty and power of this vital and expanding tradition: its profound engagement with pasts both mythical and historical, its reckoning with the complexities of language, land, and identity, and its vision of a nation enriched by the stories of immigrants, exiles, refugees, and their descendants. Latino Poetry spans the 17th century to today, and presents those poems written in Spanish in the original and in English translation.

 

COOKING

 

Trejo's Tacos by Danny TrejoTREJO’S TACOS: RECIPES AND STORIES FROM L.A.: A COOKBOOK by Danny Trejo

In Trejo’s Tacos, Trejo not only shares 75 recipes for cantina favorites like succulent carnitas, vegan cauliflower tacos, and pillowy-sweet cinnamon-sugar lowrider donuts, but offers insights into his life and pays respect to his hometown, his roots, and all of the colorful characters who helped him along the way, creating a delicious tribute to L.A. and the city’s vibrant Latino culture.

 

Latinísimo by Sandra A. GutierrezLATINÍSIMO: HOME RECIPES FROM THE TWENTY-ONE COUNTRIES OF LATIN AMERICA: A COOKBOOK by Sandra A. Gutierrez

In this monumental work, culinary expert Sandra A. Gutierrez shares more than three hundred everyday dishes—plus countless variations—that home cooks everywhere will want to replicate. Divided by ingredient—Beans, Corn, Yuca, Quinoa, and almost two dozen more—and featuring an extensive pantry section that establishes the fundamentals of Latin American cooking, Latinísimo brings together real recipes from home cooks in Argentina, Brazil, Belize, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

 

Dinner At Frida's by Gabriela CastellanosDINNER AT FRIDA’S: 90 AUTHENTIC MEXICAN RECIPES INSPIRED BY THE LIFE AND ART OF FRIDA KAHLO by Gabriela Castellanos, Hubertus Schüler

From the kitchen of a world-renowned chef comes this treasury of authentic Mexican recipes inspired by the painter Frida Kahlo and filled with mouthwatering photography. In engaging texts, Castellano explores Kahlo’s relationship to food, as well as the historic importance of Mexican culinary arts in Kahlo’s work. Fans of Kahlo’s art will gain a deeper understanding of her use of color and her connection to Mexican tradition. Anyone interested in authentic Mexican cooking will be drawn to the flavors and textures of Castellanos’ gorgeously illustrated recipes.

For more on these, and related, titles visit Hispanic & Latine Heritage Month, 2024

 

Banned Books Week!

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From the American Library Association:

The American Library Association condemns censorship and works to defend each person’s right to read under the First Amendment and to ensure free access to information. Every year, ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) compiles a list of the Top 10 Most Challenged Books in order to inform the public about censorship in libraries and schools. The lists are based on information from reports filed by library professionals and community members, as well as news stories published throughout the United States.

Because many book challenges are not reported to the ALA or covered by the press, the Top Most Challenged Books lists and data compiled by ALA represent only a snapshot of book challenges. A challenge to a book may be resolved in favor of retaining the book in the collection, or it can result in a book being restricted or withdrawn from the library.

ALA documented 4,240 unique book titles targeted for censorship in 2023—a 65% surge over 2022 numbers—as well as 1,247 demands to censor library books, materials, and resources. Pressure groups focused on public libraries in addition to targeting school libraries. The number of titles targeted for censorship at public libraries increased by 92% over the previous year, accounting for about 46% of all book challenges in 2023.

Of the record 4,240 unique titles targeted for censorship, the most challenged and reasons cited for censoring the books are listed below.

Looking for the most challenged books from previous years? Check out the Top 10 Most Challenged Books Archive for lists and data going back to 2001, as well as the 100 most challenged books of past decades.

Behind The Words With CRYSTAL KING


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Today, we are welcoming IN THE GARDEN WITH MONSTERS author Crystal King. Let’s begin with telling our readers a bit about yourself. Where you’re from, where you live? Is writing your full-time job?

I’m originally from the Pacific Northwest, having spent time in Spokane, Boise, and Seattle, but I’ve called Boston my home for the last twenty-eight years. I’m currently working a pesky day job, but one I’m fortunate to also love, teaching social media and AI for a tech firm.

How long have you been writing?

I’ve been writing in some form or another since I could hold a pencil. My mom has a box with poems and stories I wrote from when I was five. But I began writing novels in earnest starting in 2012. It took me a bit for my first book, Feast of Sorrow, a novel of ancient Rome, which was published in 2017.

What does your typical writing day look like?

I write or edit every morning for an hour first thing when I get up. It’s the one way to make sure I’m making consistent progress. On weekends when I have more time that often extends by several hours. And if I’m working on some really heavy edits under deadline, I’ll try and fit editing in between everything else I’m doing that day.

Tell us about your latest release? Where the idea came from? Perhaps some fun moments, or not so fun moments?

In the Garden of Monsters is a wild retelling of the Hades and Persephone myth set in 1948. It is told from the point of view of a model that Salvador Dalí brings to the Sacro Bosco, a Renaissance-era garden of stone monsters an hour north of Rome.

I came to the idea in an interesting way. Back in the middle of the pandemic, I was struggling to sell a novel about a Renaissance meat carver. “Renaissance historical fiction isn’t selling right now,” I was told (mere weeks before Maggie O’Farrell’s The Marriage Portrait hit the bestseller list). I was discouraged. This sentiment also didn’t bode well for the book I was writing about an obscure Baroque steward, Antonio Latini. I was lamenting about the whole thing on Zoom with an author friend, Kris Waldherr. “If I were going to write something that would actually sell, what would it be?” I remember her tilting her head in thought. “Well, gothics are hot right now (says the author of the gothic masterpiece Unnatural Creatures).” And I thought to myself, hmmm. If I were to write a gothic, what would I write?

Immediately, the location came to me. And if you’ve read many gothics, you know it’s all about the location. I had been to the town of Bomarzo, an hour north of Rome, a couple of years before, completely on a whim only because it was near Caprarola, which I was visiting for my work on that Renaissance meat carver book. In Bomarzo is a spectacular Mannerist garden of sixty-six stone monsters called Il Sacro Bosco, or the sacred wood. It has a fascinating history which begins in the late 1500s, then pauses for nearly 400 years when the whole garden is abandoned and overgrown, then rediscovered by poets and artists in the early 20th century, and in particular, Salvador Dalí, who visited in 1948. In the 1950s a couple bought it and restored it for the public to visit. The garden is certainly beautiful, magical, strange, and somewhat creepy, but looming above it on the hill is the medieval palazzo, making it an extra perfect setting for this ghosty story.

Who has been the most difficult character for you to write? Why?

Salvador Dalí was a bold choice of character for me to tackle. In today’s world, he would have been canceled in two seconds. He was narcissistic, misogynistic, and racist, and he admired the power (not so much the actions or policies) of dictators like Hitler and Franco. But he was also extremely charismatic, fascinating, entertaining, and highly influential. I had to walk a fine line in demonstrating his problematic side with everything else about him that made him one of the most important—and interesting—artists of the twentieth century.

If you could be one of your characters for a day which character would it be?

That’s tough! Crazy things happen to my characters and I’m not sure I want to be in their shoes. But maybe Lillian, Julia’s best friend, whose indomitable spirit I love.

What’s your take on research and how do you do it?

I love research and it’s part of the reason I write novels that have some historical fiction element to them. I’m fascinated with history and how we humans have tackled (or not) all sorts of challenges throughout the eons. Before I begin a novel, I read voraciously, and spend a lot of time on the Net, gathering information. I store up factoids and ideas in a few places: Evernote, My Mind, and Scrivener. I work in tech so technology is my friend in managing all the details.

Are there any particular authors that have influenced how you write?

I read so much and so widely that it’s difficult to say. But I have long admired authors like Margaret George, Italo Calvino, Catherynne Valente, V.E. Schwab, and Haruki Murakami. Wait, there is one writer who has made a big difference for me—M.F.K. Fisher. Her food writing was what inspired me to go down the path of writing novels with a central theme of food (including In the Garden of Monsters!)

Do you have a secret talent readers would be surprised by?

Not terribly secret because I talk about it a bit, but people are usually shocked that I can read as fast as I do, 800 words per minute or so. I can easily read a book a day if I have the time to do it. Books are sort of like candy to me. I can never get enough! But being able to read so much has been very helpful for me in the world of social media and marketing, as well as all the research I need to do for my books.

Your favorite go-to drink or food when the world goes crazy!

Ice cream or gelato! It’s my favorite indulgence and greatest weakness.

What is your writing kryptonite?

Shiny things? Seriously, I am easily distracted, so I need a space where I can really focus and music playing to keep me from being pulled into other things.

You said food is a central theme of your novels. Do you have recipes that accompany your books?

Yes! On my website, crystalking.com, I have free companion cookbooks available for download. I work with food book bloggers, chefs, and food historians to recreate the recipes. And of course, there are some of my own recipes as well. The In the Garden of Monsters cookbook includes recipes inspired by various eras in Italian food history as well as some interpretations of dishes found in Salvador Dalí’s 1973 cookbook, Les Dîners de Gala. Recreating the recipes in my novels has been one of the most enjoyable parts of my author life.

Oh, recipes! That is awesome.

Thank you very much for joining us today, Crystal. Readers, here’s quick look at IN THE GARDEN OF MONSTERS which releases today!

A woman with no past. A man who seems to know her. And a monstrous garden that could be the border between their worlds…

Italy, 1948

Julia Lombardi is a mystery even to herself. The beautiful model can’t remember where she’s from, where she’s been or how she came to live in Rome. When she receives an offer to accompany celebrated eccentric artist Salvador Dalí to the Sacro Bosco—Italy’s Garden of Monsters—as his muse, she’s strangely compelled to accept. It could be a chance to unlock the truth about her past…

Shrouded in shadow, the garden full of giant statues that sometimes seem alive is far from welcoming. Still, from the moment of their arrival at the palazzo, Julia is inexplicably drawn to their darkly enigmatic host, Ignazio. He’s alluring yet terrifying—and he seems to know her.

Posing for Dalí as the goddess Persephone, Julia finds the work to be perplexing, particularly as Dalí descends deeper into his fanaticism. To him, she is Persephone, and he insists she must eat pomegranate seeds to rejoin her king.

Between Dalí’s fevered persistence, Ignazio’s uncanny familiarity and the agonizing whispered warnings that echo through the garden, Julia is soon on the verge of unraveling. And she begins to wonder if she’s truly the mythical queen of the Underworld…

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Crystal King is the author of In The Garden of Monsters, The Chef’s Secret, and Feast of Sorrow, which was long-listed at the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize and designated as a MassBook Awards Must Read. A social media and AI professor by trade, her writing is fueled by a love of history and a passion for the food, language, and culture of Italy. Crystal has taught writing, creativity, and social media at Harvard Extension School, Boston University, and GrubStreet. A Pushcart Prize-nominated poet and former co-editor of Plum Ruby Review, she holds an MA in critical and creative thinking from UMass Boston. You can find her at crystalking.com.

“Real Impact, Daily Inspiration” by Dennis J. Henson Shows the Importance of Developing a Reading Habit

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Dennis J. Henson has curated profiles, quotes and poems that get people beyond doubting themselves, questioning why their momentum is stalled or suffering from imposter syndrome in a new book, “Real Impact, Daily Inspiration.”

He has a career of singular achievement. Currently the Founder and President of Vanguard Marketing and Investments, Inc and a renowned leader and educator in both the real estate and personal growth industries, he was stumped for a moment when a podcast host asked him: “If you could name the one thing that’s had the greatest impact on your students’ what would it be?”

And then it became clear to him. “Form the habit of reading something every day that educates or inspires them.”

Just as he personally has done for a lifetime. And that is the core of the philosophy that he has used to inspire thousands of other businesspeople and leaders who desire more out of life. And it has led to his profound new book “Real Impact, Daily Inspiration.”

Over the course of the past 30+ years, when Dennis was moved by a quote, a poem or someone’s empowering story, he gathered it for his own inspiration. And now 32 of those captivating stories, a hundred quotes and a handful of meaningful poems are providing profound wisdom and life-changing impetus for readers.

“Real Impact, Daily Inspiration” is designed to get people beyond doubting themselves, questioning why their momentum is stalled or suffering from imposter syndrome. The book shows how so many people of humble beginnings, limited means and nearly insurmountable obstacles, persevered with unflagging belief in their ideas and succeeded beyond anyone’s expectations—except their own! You’ll recognize most of the profiles, but you may not know what they had to go through to become the figures we recognize and honor today for the impact they made.

Dennis’ book is intended to help people develop the habit of reading daily something that will improve their belief in themselves and inspire them to action. He suggests not reading the book cover to cover, but rather a bit at a time. “It should be sipped like fine wine and consumed in combination with other good books.”  A suggested reading list of which he offers within “Real Impact, Daily Inspiration’s” pages.

The reason the book features a genie’s lamp on the cover is that Dennis holds that reading is the superpower that unleashes all other powers and whose magic is indeed the powerful “Law of Nature” — similar to the effect of gravity, inertia or magnetism. He says, even though it is invisible, it can move mountains, change seas’ tides and even conquer space.  Reading the right content can conquer inner space—moving the heart and mind—which in turn produces impact.

Dennis J. Henson’s Real Impact, Daily Inspiration is available on Amazon.com

About Dennis J. Henson

With a proven track record spanning over five decades, Dennis J. Henson has solidified his position as a leading authority in the business world. Beyond his successful entrepreneurial ventures, Dennis is a dedicated educator, inspiring countless individuals to achieve their goals through his bestselling books, captivating workshops, and international speaking engagements.

Dennis initially made his mark in the real estate investment world. He founded Vanguard Marketing and Investments, Inc. in 2003 and continues to serve as president. He served as president of the Arlington Real Estate Investing Association from 2005-2018. Over the past several years, he also taught individuals and classes in Real Estate Investing.  His books The Royal Flush of Real Estate Investing and A Millionaire’s Treasure Map To Real Estate Investing were widely hailed.

Website:

Coaching/Training:

Social Media:

Bizstarters CEO Shares Insider Tips for Successful Encore Entrepreneurship

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eff Williams, CEO and Chief Coach of Bizstarters, an organization dedicated to helping people over 50 start businesses, shares 20 essential tips for finding success as an encore entrepreneur in his new book, The Ultimate Retirement Business Success Guide.

Williams founded Bizstarters to help individuals who have left corporate but still want to do rewarding work to leverage their life experiences to start fulfilling second careers as business owners. His new book provides a roadmap for readers to overcome obstacles, find the right business opportunity, and build a venture poised for success.

“People over 50 have a lifetime of skills, knowledge, and business relationships that can be channeled into a successful business,” said Williams. “The key is focusing on opportunities that play to your strengths, planning thoroughly, and executing well. My book provides practical advice for doing just that.”

Highlights from the Ultimate Retirement Business Success Guide include:

•Clearly see how to gain your desired income. Just complete a simple math exercise to estimate how much in sales you need to achieve your goal.

•Ask your customers what they want. Use free online tools to survey your desired customers to determine what they want.

•Discover how to create multiple streams of income. No matter where the economy goes, you make money.

•Build your team. Hire experts to fill any knowledge gaps and consider taking on a business partner. Two heads are better than one.

•Learn how to borrow the best. Continually search for people smarter and more experienced than you and borrow their best tips and techniques.

•Tell your selling story frequently. Learn how to compose a selling story that attracts attention on social media, your website and in person.

•Market strategically. Develop a marketing plan that targets your ideal customers where they already are, like on social media or at industry events.

•Learn how to become an expert. Use a variety of free and low-cost digital tools to stand out by offering insightful information for your business specialty.

•Be ready to partner. Discover different ways to boost your market power through partnerships.

Williams’ book provides a roadmap for finding success as an encore entrepreneur. By following his tried-and-true tips, readers can turn their life’s work into life’s purpose.

The guide is available by visiting www.bizstarters.com. Click on the orange action button.

About Bizstarters

Bizstarters is an organization dedicated to helping people over 50 start businesses. CEO Jeff Williams founded Bizstarters in 2000 to help pre-retirees and retirees leverage their life experiences to start fulfilling second careers as business owners.

Murder by Storm By Russell Little

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**This Just In**

Murder by Storm
the newest Thriller by critically acclaimed author and lawyer, Russell Little

Marilyn is a master of deception, a chameleon living multiple lives to shield her sweet son while ensnaring naive couples in her web of schemes across Houston, Texas. Free from the clutches of the law, she weaves her plans with calculated precision. But shadows from her past loom large—her deranged mother and subservient stepfather, relentlessly badgering her with their fearful questions.

And then there’s O.C. Simms, the disgraced police detective obsessed with bringing her down. Fired for failing to catch her, Simms is haunted by the belief that Marilyn murdered her lover and lawyer, Larry. He’s relentless, determined to hunt her until he’s either vindicated or dead, defying his former captain’s orders.

As a hurricane bears down on Houston, Marilyn sees both a threat and an opportunity. The storm’s fury will devastate the city, creating chaos and diverting attention. Amid the tempest’s destruction, she crafts her most daring plan yet, aiming to exploit the storm to erase all traces of her crimes.

But Simms remains undeterred, a relentless force pursuing her through the floodwaters.

Can Marilyn turn the storm to her advantage, keeping the police at bay and obliterating the evidence? Will she slip through the cracks of justice once more? In this high-stakes game of cat and mouse, the storm is just the beginning. Dive into a crime thriller where every moment is a battle for survival, and every decision could be her last.

AMAZON

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Russell G. Little is a writer and practicing divorce attorney. Murder for Me is a fictionalized compilation of the many people he’s encountered over his lifetime and thirty-two-year career.

He lives in Houston, Texas, with his wife of thirty-two years, Melinda.

www.russelllittleauthor.com

When a Commercial DNA Test Multiplies Your Sibling Count

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From 3 to 13: A Story of Secrets and Siblinghood By Tracey Maniskas

A Story of Secrets and Siblinghood is the personal, true account of the head spinning thoughts, feelings, and experiences that follow when author Tracey Maniskas, along with her sisters, learn a forever-held family secret.

At the age of 42, via a commercial DNA test, Tracey and her two sisters, with whom she was raised as triplets, faced a stunning revelation: At least one sister had a biological father different from the dad who had raised them. From 3 to 13… A Story of Secrets and Siblinghood covers the year following this genetic discovery as the sisters seek to determine if they are truly full siblings, confirm the identity of their unknown biological father, and navigate their unexpected new reality, all while connecting with additional family members they never knew they had.

“The majority of the story was composed by transcribing actual text and social media messages as we journeyed through this surreal experience,” said Tracey. “I wanted to immerse readers in the authentic conversations between my family members and friends as we discovered the full truth of who we are.”

Although it’s a story about donor-conceived individuals, the concept of secrets hurting families is relatable to nearly everyone. The broken trust after the secret comes to life compounds further information-seeking and creates additional pain when the truth emerges.

“My decision to write our story was to provide a glimpse into what a late-discovery donor conceived person may experience as they begin to integrate this new understanding of who they are,” continues Tracey. “I believe that our story will be helpful to both the donor-conceived person as well as the friends and family who provide them support along their journey.”

From 3 to 13 also focuses on how difficult it is for both the children and their parents, who years ago were instructed to hide this biological truth, to have this revelation occur after decades of secrecy. An understanding of how this news may be received and affect the person newly let in on the secret may be helpful for parents whose children just learn of their donor conceived status, or who are considering acknowledging the truth to their children.

This complicated story is filled with numerous ups and downs, but in the end, the ups far outweigh the downs.

Available through: AmazonIngram

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tracey Maniskas earned her master’s degree in counseling psychology at Temple University. Having chosen her career path in eighth grade, she spent fifteen years focused on children’s public mental health before sustaining a life-changing brain injury at the age of 37. Following several years focused on recovery, Tracey opened a stress management practice where she combined her cognitive behavioral therapy background with her yoga teacher training to work with clients on personal awareness and relaxation techniques. Today, Tracey splits her time between suburban Philadelphia, Scottsdale, and Big Sky, Montana with her husband, Rich, and their dog, Sophie.

Dr. Beverly Hurwitz, MD’s book, The Tale of a Transplanted Heart, Asks the Question: Does Your Life Go on When Your Heart Beats in Someone Else?

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As transplant medicine has grown, increasing numbers of organ recipients are reporting the development of alien emotions, preferences, and memories that they attribute to their donors. While it’s not yet understood if and how organs can retain and express the personality traits of the deceased, some scientists are wondering if the human “soul” might reside in the DNA or the energy of all of our cells.

The Tale of a Transplanted Heart opens a window onto a world where people with failing organs languish on waiting lists. “The possibility that the memories from someone else’s body parts could impact their lives,” is just one of the many risks these patients must bear. This story follows the life of an internationally acclaimed researcher who studies the advanced immunologic defense systems of bats, but who becomes a threat to his own lab after receiving a donor’s heart.

This novel also pulls a curtain back on research labs where scientists seek ways to protect humanity from deadly diseases by manipulating the DNA of dangerous germs. The story exposes the darker side of such research: unenforced lab regulations, ferocious competition for funding, cutthroat competition to produce the next blockbuster vaccine, lab accidents, and the potential creation of biologic weaponry. Readers might be left wondering whether the COVID pandemic arose spontaneously in nature, or was it created in a lab? And if COVID was a “designer virus,” was its escape accidental?

This story might also provoke the reader to consider whether there could actually be a dangerous lab operating in their own back yard, as was the 2023 case for the agrarian community of Reedley, California. When a green hose was noticed sticking out the back of a Reedley warehouse, improperly-stored lethal germs, and hundreds of sick and dead animals were discovered in an illegal, foreign-owned lab hiding in this small town.

The ethical issues faced by the characters in this novel might also have the reader contemplating what makes each of us unique as individuals. Additionally, The Tale of a Transplanted Heart offers insights into the escalating war between health care providers and health care profiteers.

WARNING: This story might make some readers fall in love with bats.

The Tale of a Transplanted Heart is available in paperback and kindle editions with reading samples at: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=the+tale+of+the+transplanted+heart+hurwitz Find all of Doctor Hurwitz’s novels and hiking books at https://www.amazon.com/s?k=books+by+beverly+hurwitz

New Release: Margolyam By Matthew Hughes

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Margolyam By Matthew Hughes

The newest Dying Earth fantasy novel by critically acclaimed novelist, Matthew Hughes

Orphaned at twelve, Margolyam leaves the port city of Golathreon to live with her aunt Oleadora, a sorceress and healer in the inland market town of Keddrick. But her new life brings out qualities in the girl that she never knew she possessed, and Margolyam begins a journey of self-discovery that will plunge her into the world of wizardry, with all its manifold wonders and dire perils.

Margolyam eBook : Hughes, Matthew: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store

Amazon.com: Margolyam eBook : Hughes, Matthew: Kindle Store

Amazon paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1927880424

Kobo ebook:  https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/margolyam

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Matthew (Matt) Hughes writes fantasy, space opera, crime fiction, and historical novels. He has sold 24 novels to publishers large and small in the UK, US, and Canada, as well as 100 works of short fiction to professional markets.

He has won the Endeavour and Arthur Ellis Awards, and has been shortlisted for the Aurora, Nebula, Philip K. Dick, Endeavour, A.E. Van Vogt, Neffy, Derringer, and High Plains Book Awards.  He has been inducted into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association’s Hall of Fame

People who sign up for his monthly newsletter will receive a free ebook of his short story collection, 9 Tales of Henghis Hapthorn:  http://eepurl.com/cyNSA9

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Hughes_(writer)