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10th Anniversary Collector’s Edition of her Bestselling Poetry Collection Milk and Honey

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Internationally bestselling poet, artist, and performer Rupi Kaur today revealed the cover of the milk and honey 10th Anniversary Collector’s Edition of her bestselling poetry collection to be released by Andrews McMeel Publishing (AMP) October 1, 2024. This stunning collector’s edition features a brand-new cover design to celebrate the occasion.

In addition to the four iconic original chapters—the hurting, the loving, the breaking, the healing— the 10th Anniversary Collector’s Edition will include an exclusive new chapter of poetry, new original illustrations, an illuminating introduction by Rupi, a collage of behind-the-scenes photos and memorabilia illustrating the book’s decade-long journey, her handwritten diary entries, and heartfelt annotations from Rupi and some of today’s most respected voices on a selection of fan-favorite poems.

This exceptional new edition is a celebration of the trajectory of the book that transformed the poetry category and has impacted so many,” said Kirsty Melville, President of AMP, and CEO of parent company Andrews McMeel Universal. “We are thrilled with the opportunity to present it to readers who treasure the original milk and honey as well as to the many new readers who will eagerly anticipate its publication.”

Since debuting in 2014, milk and honey has gone on to sell over 6 million copies globally, becoming one of the highest-selling books of poetry in the 21st century and propelling Rupi Kaur into the stratosphere as the poetic voice of a generation. For the past 10 years, milk and honey has taken millions of readers on a journey through life’s most bitter moments, reminding them along the way that there is also sweetness everywhere, if only you are willing to look.

“I wanted to put this 10-year anniversary collector’s edition of milk and honey together as a thank you to my readers,” said Rupi Kaur. “It symbolizes the unexpected success from self-publishing as a college student a decade ago, to the incredibly fulfilling journey I’ve been on with my readers ever since. I’m excited to share a brand-new chapter of poetry with this edition, and hope milk and honey will continue to impact readers new and old, as it has for me.”

milk and honey spent more than three years on the New York Times bestsellers list and remained a staple on the list for more than 100 consecutive weeks, a feat matched only by a handful of books that are not part of a series. With its global impact milk and honey has been translated into more than 40 languages. Kaur has also published the sun and her flowers (2017) and home body (2020), both debuting at #1 on bestseller lists across the world, followed by Healing Through Words (2022), all with AMP. Together, these collections have sold over 12 million copies.

Upcoming Release: Tulsi Gabbard, “For Love of Country: Leave the Democrat Party Behind”

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Skyhorse Publishing announces the upcoming book by 2020 Presidential Candidate Tulsi Gabbard. For Love of Country: Leave the Democrat Party Behind will be published April 30, 2024

Tulsi Gabbard was the rising star of the Democrat Party. But the growing wokeness, fomenting racism, and intolerance were more than she could stomach, and she left. This is her story and a call to action to Americans who love our country and cherish peace and freedom.

Today’s Democrat Party is controlled by an elitist cabal of warmongers driven by woke ideology and racializing everything. They are a clear and present threat to the God‑given freedoms enshrined in the Constitution.

A combat veteran, 4-term member of Congress, and 2020 presidential candidate, Tulsi loves her country: “I answered the call to serve and swore an oath, dedicating my life to supporting and defending the Constitution, both in uniform and in public office. I have always been an independent-minded person but became a Democrat when I first ran for office because I saw a party that stood up for the little guy, free speech and civil liberties. That party is no more.”

Today that party is unrecognizable: undermining free speech, antagonistic to people of faith, hostile to the police and law and order, suspicious of law‑abiding Americans, supporting open borders, and using our national security apparatus to target political opponents.

Now an Independent, Tulsi calls on those who love America to stand up for peace, defend freedom and protect our democratic republic from those seeking to undermine it at every turn. It’s time to leave the Democrat party behind.

About the Author – Tulsi Gabbard
4-term Congresswoman and 2020 Presidential Candidate Tulsi Gabbard is a combat veteran and Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve, author, and keynote speaker. She was elected to the Hawaii Legislature at the age of twenty-one, served on three deployments to the Middle East and Africa, represented Hawaii’s 2nd Congressional District from 2013 to 2021, and was Vice Chair of the Democratic National Committee. She left the Democrat Party in 2022.

Behind The Words With Henriette Lazaridis

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Henriette Lazaridis is on the blog today to discuss her latest release LAST DAYS IN PLAKA. Welcome Henriette. Let’s start with a learning a little about you. Where are you from, where do you live? Is writing your full-time job?

I grew up in the Boston area, where I now live. I was born in the States, but my entire family is in Greece and Greek was my first language. Writing and teaching make up my workdays, along with the exciting work of co-founding a new publishing company, Galiot Press, with a writer friend and colleague.

How long have you been writing?

I suppose I’ve been writing fiction since childhood, and particularly since high school when my freshman English teacher would read and critique vignettes I churned out. I took a detour into academia after graduating from college, and taught at Harvard for ten years after getting my Ph.D. in English from the University of Pennsylvania. About eight years into my time at Harvard, I realized I had always planned to be a novelist, and I was able to make a course correction while also raising my two children. For the first time in their childhoods, I was home when they got off the bus, in theory (!) having spent the day on my writing.

What does your typical writing day look like?

The typical day changes from project to project, season to season. But let’s say my favorite typical day involves a crack-of-dawn workout (either rowing on the Charles River, or running, or something like that), and then a morning of writing. Usually, the afternoon is when I’ll do other work, or–if other work permits–I’ll type up the material I wrote longhand in the morning, editing it as I go. My favorite winter writing day begins with a pre-dawn writing session, and then the rest of the day gets under way after about 8:00 am.

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

My next novel is Last Days in Plaka, a book that came to me as two sentences, out of nowhere, before I went to sleep one night. The sentences were still there in the morning, and so I set aside the novel I’d been working on to answer the call of this new one. Last Days in Plaka is set in contemporary Athens and centers on the complicated friendship between an old Athenian woman and a young Greek-American, each woman searching for a way to give their lives meaning. Their world is the Athens of strivers, refugees, old-timers, graffiti-artists, parkour runners, churchgoers, and denizens of old cafes.

Could you share one detail from your current release with readers that they might not find in the book?

One of the settings for the novel is a rooftop cinema in the Plaka section of Athens called the Cine Paris. It’s probably the most famous of the city’s outdoor cinemas, thanks to its unobstructed view of the Acropolis, and it’s a place I’ve visited many times, to see French arthouse films or the latest rom-coms. It felt very natural to put the cinema into the story, as, like Anna my young character, I’ve often been there with people of my parents’ generation (and with my parents specifically), and loved the overlay of time periods the place evokes.

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

The most challenging character was one of the two Ethiopian refugees who are part of a tiny church congregation led by Father Emmanouil in study of the Book of Revelation. Tamrat is a journalist who has left Addis Ababa for political reasons, and he continues to write pieces freelance in Athens, wiring money back home, and expecting to return to Addis at some point. He’s a bit grouchy, and he is on the alert for the way Athenians judge him and his friend Oumer, and assume them to be desperate, while they are not. It was challenging to be sure to write this person without succumbing to any of the assumptions Tamrat sees in those around him, and to make him a rounded character even though he’s not on stage, so to speak, for a lot of time.

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

I think I might choose Nefeli, the wife of the priest Father Emmanouil. She’s a modern woman, with a great sense of style and a wry sense of humor. She and her husband have a good relationship of frankness combined with teasing. I’d like to see what her day to day is, when she gets rid of her two sons and meets her friends at cafes and then spends the evenings with her husband. Either Nefeli or Mel, short for Melpomene the Muse of tragedy. She’s an art student who keeps breaking up with boyfriends and then leading her new friend Anna to create graffiti art (read: revenge graffiti) on their homes.

If you could spend the day with your character, what would you do? What would that day look like?

Ha! See above: Nefeli at the coffeeshops and then hanging out with her soccer-playing priest husband.

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

I’ll probably get this quote wrong, but Zadie Smith once said something along the lines of ‘I’m a novelist. I don’t do research, I make things up.’ Now, if you’ve read Smith’s latest, The Fraud, you know that she does do research. But I like the sentiment. I tend to look things up either for a bit at the start, or–more often–as I go, as needed. There are so many approaches, and there’s no right or wrong, but I think you have to use historical information in a novel according to the rules of that particular book. Are you telling the reader a lot? Are you requiring them to do more work of inference? Are you using the information you researched as a sort of hidden but felt background, or are you presenting that as an important part of the story?

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

I aspire to write like Kate Atkinson, but I don’t know that my work would reflect that, especially since my books are all fairly different, in style and content. And Smith, but then again who wouldn’t want to write like Zadie Smith?!

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

I’m a solid intermediate mandolin player. I took it up finally after years of self-taught guitar and a brief stint on the fiddle (and after many more years of piano), because I have always loved the sound. I try to play every day, and I’ve taken some lessons–and need to take more!

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

Coffee! French press coffee with a tiny bit of milk. Hot.

What is your writing kryptonite?

The idea of writer’s block. I understand that it’s not always easy to make progress, and I’ve certainly experienced those challenges myself. But I try to stay away from the idea that there’s such a thing as writer’s block because that sounds like some external reality that you can’t avoid, when in fact, I think you can find ways to work around it.

What is the one question you never get asked at interviews, but wish you did? Ask and answer it.

Question: What were your favorite books in childhood?

Answer: Banner in the Sky, by James Ramsey Ullman, and The Incredible Journey really stand out for me. They were the books I read and re-read. I used to imagine myself on that mountain that Rudi climbs, and I used to imagine the trek of those dogs (and cat), and feel that same bond with my own dog Scotty, my Golden Retriever, as I explored in the woods all day.

Thank you very much for joining us today, Henriette. 

Readers, here’s a look at LAST DAYS IN PLAKA:

An immersive and multifaceted novel—The Talented Mr. Ripley by way of Elena Ferrante—that explores the lies at the heart of an old woman’s identity and the desperation of a young woman’s struggle to belong.

Today’s Athens is a city of contradictions and complexity—it is grand and scruffy, ancient and modern, full of strivers, refugees and old-timers—and nowhere more so than the neighborhood of Plaka, where the Parthenon looms overhead and two women grapple with what is right and what is true, and how to live your life when you are running out of time.

Searching for connection to her parents’ heritage, Greek-American Anna works at an Athens gallery by day and makes street art by night. Irini is elderly and widowed, once well-to-do but now dependent on the charity of others. When the local priest brings the two women together, it’s not long before they form an unlikely bond. Anna’s friends can’t understand why she spends so much time with the old woman, yet Anna becomes more and more consumed by Irini’s tales of a glamorous past. As they join the priest’s tiny congregation to study the Book of Revelations in preparation for a pilgrimage to Patmos, Anna sinks deeper into Irini’s stories of an estranged daughter and lost wealth and the earthquake damage to her noble home.

Looking for revelation of her own, and driven by a sense that time is running out, Anna makes a decision that puts her in peril, exposes Irini’s web of lies, and compels Anna to confront the limits of her own forgiveness.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Henriette Lazaridis is the author of three novels. Her debut, The Clover House, was a Boston Globe bestseller and a Target Emerging Authors pick. A lifelong fascination with explorer Robert Falcon Scott led her to write Terra Nova, about two fictional Antarctic explorers in 1910 and the woman who loves them both. The New York Times’ reviewer called it “ingenious.” 

Her third novel, LAST DAYS IN PLAKA, is set in Athens and centers on an extraordinary friendship between two women of different generations. It will be published by Pegasus in April 2024.

Henriette earned degrees in English literature from Middlebury College, Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes Scholar, and the University of Pennsylvania. Having taught English at Harvard, she now teaches at GrubStreet in Boston. She was the founding editor of The Drum Literary Magazine and runs the Krouna Writing Workshop in northern Greece. Her essays and articles have been published in Elle, Forge, Narrative Magazine, The New York TimesNew England Review, The Millions, and Pangyrus, and earned her a Massachusetts Cultural Council Artists Grant.

An avid athlete, Henriette trains on the Charles River as a competitive rower, and skis, trail runs, or cycles whenever she can. She writes about athletic and creative challenges at The Entropy Hotel on Substack.

Visit her website: www.henriettelazaridis.com 

Instagram: @writerhenriette, @entropyhotel

Facebook: @HenrietteLazaridis

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Tlotlo Tsamaase’s 5 Favorite Horror Novels

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Mage of Fools by Eugen Bacon

This novel is an amazing sci-fi, dystopia, and eco-fiction rollercoaster into a folkloric narrative dripping with beautiful lyricism. Conceptually and well executed, Mage of Fools’ summary serves it justly: A sun that has killed all the able men, and a woman, Jasmin, who has come into possession of her husband’s secret story machine that tells of a better world. The worldbuilding is immersive and refreshing and brings something new to dystopia genres.

Out by Natsuo Kirino

One night, after working the graveyard shift at a bento factory in Tokyo, a young mother, devastated by her husband’s relentless drinking sprees and reckless money-spending habits, murders her husband. Distraught, she calls on her coworker, who devises a plan to hide the body. Pulled into this crime scene are two other women, each motivated by their low economic status and vices. Kirino’s pages unravel with raw and unflinching storytelling techniques that dissect and psychoanalyze poverty, patriarchy, ageism, and the crippling effects of conforming to beauty standards. Alongside the gruesome detail of the violent scenes, Kirino explores the thought processes behind each character’s motivations, including that of a former Yakuza member who is framed for the murder and begins to hunt the women down.

A Kind of Madness by Uche Okonkwo

I quickly swallowed this short story collection. I was simply taken away by how expertly Okonkwo told most of these stories from the young characters’ perspective; the pages gleam with beautiful female friendships, bullying, family tensions, wisdom, youth, nostalgia, bitterness, and humor through the incisive eye of cultural analysis. The horror is slight, and the circumstances the characters find themselves in are heartbreaking. I am particularly fond of a story that authentically depicts how chronically ill people are treated by family, friends, and society within an African setting, which was told in such a meditative manner.

Blood Cruise by Mats Strandberg

I was lucky to chance upon this copy on the desk of a relative and was astounded by the narration. Told from several points of view, we follow several characters amongst 1200 passengers who board a 24-hour cruise to Finland. One of these characters is a strange mother-and-son pair; the young boy appears to be an innocent 5-year-old, but something is amiss when he tackles a grown man in a creepy scene. Over the ensuing hours, a disease seems to spread through the cruise. This novel reads like the film Blood Sky, but rather than vampires stuck on a plane, they’re stuck on a ship, and everyone is slowly converting into a vampire, getting attacked by one—it’s a very bloody cruise.

Lost Ark Dreaming  by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

I swallowed this in one sitting. This reminded me of the 2019 Spanish film The Platform, a mix of dystopia, African politics, eco-fiction, and thrilling scenes that dissect classism, sexism, and sheer levels of horror that aspects of society will go to survive climate devastation. It’s interspersed with folkloric poetry. Society exists in five towers submerged off the coast of West Africa, wherein hierarchy splits them across the towers, from the Uppers that host the elite to the Midders and Lowers that reside below the Uppers and the sea level. Fast-paced and beautifully rendered novella!

Reprinted with permission from Kensington Books.

Sneak Peek: The Song of Sourwood Mountain by Ann H. Gabhart

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The Song of Sourwood Mountain by Ann H. Gabhart

For nearly twenty years, readers have been coming to bestselling author Ann H. Gabhart for thought-provoking and heartwarming stories set in fascinating times and places, and her newest offering, The Song of Sourwood Mountain, is no exception. This gripping tale about having the courage to follow the Lord’s leading (even when it seems he is leading us down strange and unpredictable paths) has everything Gabhart’s fans expect: a memorable setting, a realistic conflict, and complex characters you love to root for.

Though the twentieth century dawned with such promise, it is just 1910 when Mira Dean’s hopes of being a wife and mother are dashed to pieces. Her fiancé is dead from tuberculosis and Mira must resign herself to being a spinster schoolteacher. But then Gordon Covington shows up and the doors that once seemed forever shut begin to open—even if it’s just a crack.

No longer the boy she knew from school, Gordon is now a preacher who is full of surprises. First, he asks Mira to come to Sourwood in Eastern Kentucky to teach at his mission school. Second, he asks her to marry him. Just like that.

Though the prospect of stepping onto a new path is scary, Mira takes a leap of faith and lands in a life she never imagined. In this place filled with its own special challenges, the people she serves just might end up becoming the family she always yearned for.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Ann H. Gabhart is the bestselling author of many novels, including In the Shadow of the River, When the Meadow Blooms, Along a Storied Trail, An Appalachian Summer, River to Redemption, These Healing Hills, and Angel Sister. She and her husband live on a farm a mile from where she was born in rural Kentucky. Ann enjoys discovering the everyday wonders of nature while hiking in her farm’s fields and woods with her grandchildren and her dogs, Frankie and Marley. Learn more at AnnHGabhart.com.

Library, Poet Laureate to Launch Mary Oliver Memorial Event in National Poetry Month

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The extensive papers of Mary Oliver, one of America’s most acclaimed and widely read poets, are now part of the Library of Congress due to the generosity of Bill and Amalie Reichblum. The Reichblums, who are the executors of Oliver’s estate and members of the Library’s James Madison Council, have also created the Mary Oliver Memorial Event Fund for Emerging Poets.

The fund establishes a new annual memorial event at the Library, honoring Oliver’s generosity as an artist who mentored young poets. The Reichblums gifted the Mary Oliver Papers manuscript collection to the Library in December 2023.

On April 4, U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón will return to the Library of Congress to kick off the inaugural Mary Oliver Memorial Event as well as celebrate the launch of Limón’s signature project, “You Are Here.”

“Amalie and I are so delighted that Mary Oliver’s archives will now be in the care of the Library of Congress and reside alongside her touchstones Walt Whitman, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and so many other writers and artists who have defined the possibilities of the American imagination,” said Bill Reichblum. “Mary Oliver’s commitment to her work was matched by her willingness to help emerging poets throughout her life. The Fund continues Mary Oliver’s remarkable legacy.”

The April 4 event will feature Limón with Molly McCully Brown, Jake Skeets, Analicia Sotelo and Paul Tran — emerging poets featured in Limón’s new anthology, “You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World.” A small advance sampling of received Mary Oliver Papers collection materials will be shown in a display prior to the event.

Part of the Library’s Live! at the Library series, the event will take place in the Coolidge Auditorium at 7 p.m. ET. Register for free tickets here.

The new Mary Oliver Papers collection at the Library of Congress is rich with primary documentation, including correspondence, writings, notebooks, interviews and other materials related to Oliver’s personal life and her long career as a poet, essayist, critic and teacher. Many of the personal photos, letters to publishers and friends and poetry and prose writings reflect Oliver’s devoted love of the sea, woods, flora and fauna, her dogs and her introspective meditations on the natural world.

The full collection is currently being archivally processed and will become available to researchers through the Manuscript Division later this year.

Mary Oliver (1935-2019) was the recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for “American Primitive” in 1984 and of the National Book Award for “New and Selected Poems” in 1992. She began writing poetry as a teenager and published her first book of poems, “No Voyage, and Other Poems,” when she was 28. It was followed by a succession of bestselling poetry and essay collections published across her lifetime and beloved by an international readership. Oliver was committed to environmental sustainability. She found inspiration for her work and her spirituality in the poetry and meditations upon nature of Emerson, Whitman, Shelley, Keats, Millay and Rumi, and through her frequent forays into woodlands and along the seashore of Cape Cod.

The Library of Congress is the world’s largest library, offering access to the creative record of the United States — and extensive materials from around the world — both on-site and online. It is the main research arm of the U.S. Congress and the home of the U.S. Copyright Office. Explore collections, reference services and other programs and plan a visit at loc.gov; access the official site for U.S. federal legislative information at congress.gov; and register creative works of authorship at copyright.gov.

BEHIND THE WORDS with Robert Dugoni

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Welcome Robert, we’re excited to have you on Reader’s Entertainment. Before we talk about your latest release, how about you tell our readers a bit about yourself. Where you’re from, where you live? Is writing your full-time job?

I was raised in the Bay Area and lived there until 1998. A lawyer, I took a sabbatical with my wife and young son and we moved to Seattle, Washington so I could begin my career as a novelist. I’ve been writing ever since.

How long have you been writing?

I knew I wanted to write stories since the sixth grade. I had a marvelous teacher, a nun, who saw promise in me and told my mother I needed to read more. So my mom, an English literature major began to hand me classic books like The Old Man and the Sea, The Great Gatsby, The Count of Monte Cristo and many others. I fell in love with stories.

What does your typical writing day look like?

Pretty boring. I’m up early, have a smoothie and set to work at my computer in my home office. I take a break to work out and usually go until late afternoon when I head out to meet with friends and golf a few holes.

Tell us about your latest release A KILLING ON THE HILL. Where the idea came from? Perhaps some fun moments, or not so fun moments?

I was cleaning out the attic in our home and came across several scrapbooks. I opened them and found hundreds of newspaper clippings. They were all from the 1930s. The scrapbooks had been my wife’s grand-fathers. He had been a prominent lawyer in Seattle. I found one story in particular, a murder at the Pom Pom Nightclub on Profanity Hill. It sounded too good to be true and it was. The story was of a man, Frankie Ray, shot and killed in the early morning at this club by a gangster named George Moore. The trial soon became the trial of the century. This was in the midst of the Great Depression, Prohibition, bootlegging, Hoovervilles and these speakeasies and nightclubs where the rich would head out each night for illegal gambling and drinking and glorious dinners. I created a fictional news reporter, a young man cutting his teeth to tell the story, and he soon finds himself in way over his head.

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

Victor Cruz, the Marine Sergeant in The World Played Chess was difficult for me because of the circumstances he was in during the Vietnam War. I wanted Victor to live, but 50,000 young men never came home from that war. It was such a tragedy. So sad.

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

Oddly, I’d choose Sam Hell. Despite all the bullying he endures, he had a loving mother and father, as do I, and two of the best friends a kid could ever ask for.

If you could spend the day with your character, what would you do? What would that day look like?

I’d just like to go back to my childhood and relive growing up with so many brothers and sisters and so many friends. It was a magical time in my life.

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

I do as much as I need to get my story started then continue researching as I go.

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

Stephen King. I love the way he uses all his senses in every scene he writes.

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

Not really. I’m an average golfer, and a pretty good cook.

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

I love a good sandwich on sour dough French roll.

What is your writing kryptonite?

Haven’t found it yet. Don’t want to. I love what I do and hope to do it forever.

What is the one question you never get ask at interviews, but wish you did? Ask and answer it.

What was it like growing up with so many brothers and sisters?

It was an education. I came to realize that although we have similarities, we are each different and unique. Genetics only goes so far. It was a marvelous childhood with 9 siblings. Not perfect, but on the whole, the holidays were magical and I was never bored. I don’t know how my parents did it, and I admire them for it.

Thank you so much for joining us today, Robert!

Reader’s, here’s a quick look at A KILLING ON THE HILL which releases today.

A gripping new thriller from New York Times bestselling author Robert Dugoni.

The Great Depression. High-level corruption. And a murder that’s about to become Seattle’s hottest mystery. It’s the kind of story that can make a reporter’s career. If he lives to write about it.

Seattle, 1933. The city is in the grips of the Great Depression, Prohibition, and vice. Cutting his teeth on a small-time beat, hungry and ambitious young reporter William “Shoe” Shumacher gets a tip that could change his career. There’s been a murder at a social club on Profanity Hill―an underworld magnet for vice crimes only a privileged few can afford. The story is going to be front-page news, and Shoe is the first reporter on the scene.

The victim, Frankie Ray, is a former prizefighter. His accused killer? Club owner and mobster George Miller, who claims he pulled the trigger in self-defense. Soon the whole town’s talking, and Shoe’s first homicide is fast becoming the Trial of the Century. The more Shoe digs, the more he’s convinced nothing is as it seems. Not with a tangle of conflicting stories, an unlikely motive, and witnesses like Ray’s girlfriend, a glamour girl whose pretty lips are sealed. For now.

In a city steeped in Old West debauchery, Shoe’s following every lead to a very dangerous place―one that could bring him glory and fame or end his life.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Robert Dugoni is a critically acclaimed New York TimesWall Street JournalWashington Post, and Amazon Charts bestselling author, reaching more than ten million readers worldwide. He is best known for the Tracy Crosswhite police procedural series. He is also the author of the Charles Jenkins espionage series, the David Sloane legal thriller series, the Keera Duggan legal thriller series, and several standalone novels, including The 7th CanonDamage Control, and The World Played Chess. His novel The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell was named Suspense Magazine’s 2018 Book of the Year, and Dugoni’s narration won an AudioFile Earphones Award. The Washington Post named his nonfiction exposé The Cyanide Canary a Best Book of the Year. Several of his novels have been optioned for movies and television series. Dugoni is the recipient of the Nancy Pearl Book Award for fiction and a four-time winner of the Friends of Mystery Spotted Owl Award for best novel set in the Pacific Northwest. He has been a finalist for many other awards. 

Robert Dugoni’s books are sold in more than twenty-five countries and have been translated into more than thirty languages. He lives in Seattle.  

Visit his website at www.robertdugoni.com 

Facebook: @AuthorRobertDugoni

Instagram: @robertdugoni

X: @robertdugoni

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The Journey from Manuscript to Print By Ann Aubitz

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The Journey from Manuscript to Print
A guide to publishing your book

A game-changing tool for authors in their literary journey by expert publisher, Ann Aubitz

Do you have a book manuscript that you’ve poured your heart and soul into but don’t know the next steps to getting it published? The author, publisher Ann Aubitz, has seen countless authors struggle to navigate the publishing process. But it doesn’t have to be so mysterious or daunting!

Publishing your book can be one of the most rewarding experiences for an author. But it requires understanding the steps from manuscript to bound book. This book will walk you through the publishing process, from editing to production to sales and marketing. You’ll learn insider tips to ready your manuscript for publication and make your book stand out.

Imagine holding your published book in your hands for the first time. Seeing your name on the cover and knowing you made your dream a reality. The sense of accomplishment is unmatched! But it all starts with deciding to publish. This book will provide you with the knowledge you need to navigate the publishing process and successfully avoid rookie mistakes. You’ll be ready to publish like a pro!

If you’re ready to go from manuscript to printed book, this book is for you. Follow along as the author breaks down the steps and provides real-world advice. You’ll gain the clarity and confidence to publish your book and start sharing your story with the world. Let’s start the journey together!

Amazon.com: The Journey from Manuscript to Print: A Guide to Publishing Your Book eBook : Aubitz, Ann: Kindle Store

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Co-owner and Publisher of Kirk House Publishers. After years of reading everything I could get my hands on, I decided to help others achieve their dream of becoming an author.  My mission is to help authors achieve their dreams by seeing their book in print.

About Kirk House Publishers:

Are you ready to share your story with the world?

At Kirk House Publishers, we believe that a good book has the power to ignite imaginations, stir emotions, and inspire humanity. When you choose us, you’ll have access to a team of publishing experts who are committed to bringing your vision to life. We offer personalized attention, unparalleled support, and a commitment to quality that is second to none. With Kirk House Publishers, you’ll have the ideal partner to help you fulfill your dream of becoming a published author.    Bookstore | Kirk House Publishers

There’s a Book for That: National Poetry Month

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“A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness.”
― Robert Frost

Welcome to National Poetry Month! April is rich with inspiration for poetry lovers – with poetry readings, workshops, and new books from debut and beloved poets alike. Whether you are well-versed or simply poetry-curious, we invite you to dip into the following standout, recently published, volumes:

 

Rangikura by Tayi TibbleRANGIKURA: POEMS by Tayi Tibble

A fiery second collection of poetry from the acclaimed Indigenous New Zealand writer that U.S. Poet Laureate Joy Harjo calls, “One of the most startling and original poets of her generation.” At once a coming-of-age and an elegy to the traumas born from colonization, especially the violence enacted against indigenous women, Rangikura interrogates not only the poets’ pain, but also that of her ancestors.

 

Stones by Kevin YoungSTONES: POEMS by Kevin Young

Whether it’s the fireflies of a Louisiana summer caught in a mason jar (doomed by their collection), or his grandmother, Mama Annie, who latches the screen door when someone steps out for just a moment, all that makes up our flickering precarious joy, all that we want to protect, is lifted into the light in this moving book. Stones becomes an ode to Young’s home places and his dear departed, and to what of them—of us—poetry can save.

 

Being Reflected Upon by Alice NotleyBEING REFLECTED UPON by Alice Notley

Notley’s new collection is at once a window into the sources of her telepathic and visionary poetics, and a memoir through poems of her Paris-based life between 2000 and 2017, when she finished treatment for her first breast cancer. As Notley wrote these poems she realized that events during this period were connected to events in previous decades; the work moves from reminiscences of her mother and of growing up in California to meditations on illness and recovery to various poetic adventures in Amsterdam, Berlin, Prague, and Edinburgh. It is also concerned with the mysteries of consciousness and the connection between the living and dead, “stream-of-consciousness” teasing out a lived physics or philosophy.

 

A Year of Last Things by Michael OndaatjeA YEAR OF LAST THINGS: POEMS by Michael Ondaatje

Following several of his internationally acclaimed novels, A Year of Last Things is Michael Ondaatje’s long-awaited return to poetry. Moving from a Sri Lankan boarding school to Molière’s chair during his last stage performance, to Bulgarian churches and their icons, to the California coast and his beloved Canadian rivers, Michael Ondaatje casts a brilliant eye that merges memory with the present, in the way memory as the distant shores of art and lost friends continue to influence everything that surrounds him.

 

Stubble Archipelago by Wayne KoestenbaumSTUBBLE ARCHIPELAGO by Wayne Koestenbaum

This book of thirty-six poetic bulletins by the humiliation-advice-giver Wayne Koestenbaum will teach you how to cruise, how to dream, how to decode a crowded consciousness, how to find nuggets of satisfaction in unaccustomed corners, and how to sew a language glove roomy enough to contain materials gathered while meandering. Koestenbaum wrote many of these poems while walking around New York City. He’d jot down phrases in a notebook or dictate them into his phone. At home, he’d incorporate these fragmented gleanings into overflowing quasi sonnets. Therefore each poem functions as a coded diary entry, including specific references to sidewalk events and peripatetic perceptions.

 

Robert Frost: Sixteen Poems to Learn by Heart by Robert Frost and Jay PariniROBERT FROST: SIXTEEN POEMS TO LEARN BY HEART by Robert Frost, Jay Parini

Celebrate Robert Frost’s 150th birthday with a deluxe keepsake edition featuring 16 of his greatest poems—with brilliant essays highlighting his special genius and the power of memorization to unlock the magic of his language. In short accompanying commentaries, Parini illuminates the stylistic and imaginative features of each of the poems, drawing in biographical material from Frost’s life to provide further context.  “The goal of this little book is to encourage readers to slow down—to listen to Frost’s words and phrases, to locate their deepest rhythms, and hear the tune of each poem as it unfolds. . . . Memorizing a poem can teach us much about a poem’s structure and argument, and about the resonance of particular words. And best of all, memorization makes a poem part of our inner lives. Once committed to memory, a poem is available to us for recall at any time—and the occasions for remembering it will make themselves known to us. It isn’t something we have to work at.”

 

Spellbound by SPELLBOUND: POEMS OF MAGIC AND ENCHANTMENT edited by Kimiko Hahn, Harold Schechter

A unique anthology of poems from around the world and through the ages that celebrate magic and magicians. Venerable literary wizards such as Shakespeare’s Prospero, Tennyson’s Merlin, and T. S. Eliot’s Mr. Mistoffelees make appearances here alongside illusionists and prestidigitators in Kay Ryan’s “Houdini,” Ted Kooser’s “Card Trick,” Charles Simic’s “My Magician,” and Richard Wilbur’s “The Mind-Reader.” Here is a treasury of poetic spells, charms, and incantations, from Elise Paschen’s “Love Spell,” Robert Graves’s “Love and Black Magic,” and Lu Yu’s “The Pedlar of Spells,” to a Cherokee “Spell to Destroy Life.” And here, too, are all sorts of sorcerers, conjurers, enchantresses, and witches, as captured in Emily Dickinson’s “Best Witchcraft is Geometry,” Michael Schmidt’s “Nine Witches,” and H. D.’s “Circe,” keeping company with magical poems from cultures around the world.

Everyman’s Library’s Pocket Poets are pocket-sized hardcovers that feature acid-free cream-colored paper bound in a full-cloth case with two-color foil stamping, decorative endpapers, a silk ribbon marker, a European-style half-round spine, and a full-color illustrated jacket.

 

36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem by Nam Le36 WAYS OF WRITING A VIETNAMESE POEM by Nam Le

In his first international release since the award-winning, best-selling The Boat, Nam Le delivers a shot across the bow with a book-length poem that honors every convention of diasporic literature—in a virtuosic array of forms and registers—before shattering the form itself. In line with the works of Claudia Rankine, Cathy Park Hong, and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, this book is an urgent, unsettling reckoning with identity—and the violence of identity.

 

Spectral Evidence by Gregory PardloSPECTRAL EVIDENCE: POEMS by Gregory Pardlo

Elegant, profound, and intoxicating—Spectral Evidence, Gregory Pardlo’s first major collection of poetry after winning the Pulitzer Prize for Digest, moves fluidly among considerations of the pro-wrestler Owen Hart; Tituba, the only Black woman to be accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials; MOVE, the movement and militant separatist group famous for its violent stand-offs with the Philadelphia Police Department (“flames rose like orchids . . . / blocks lay open like egg cartons”); and more.

 

Sunset Gun by Dorothy ParkerSUNSET GUN: LIGHT VERSE by Dorothy Parker

One of the Jazz Age’s most beloved poets, Dorothy Parker earned her reputation as the wittiest woman in America with her popular light verse, which was regularly published in Vanity Fair, Life, and The New Yorker. Her debut poetry collection, Enough Rope, was a runaway bestseller, and she followed it up in 1928 with the equally delightful collection Sunset Gun. The poems gathered here range from barbed satires to light-hearted laments, all laced with Parker’s unmistakable sense of humor, one that manages to be both cynical and sparkling.

 

The Asking by Jane HirshfieldTHE ASKING: NEW AND SELECTED POEMS by Jane Hirshfield

The long-awaited new and selected collection by the author of “some of the most important poetry in the world today” (The New York Times Magazine), assaying the ranges of our shared and borrowed lives: our bonds of eros and responsibilities to the planet; the singing dictions and searchlight dimensions of perception; the willing plunge into an existence both perishing and beloved, dazzling “even now, even here.”

 

Aednan by Linnea AxelssonAEDNAN by Linnea Axelsson

The winner of Sweden’s most prestigious literary award makes her American debut with an epic, multigenerational novel-in-verse about two Sámi families and their quest to stay together across a century of migration, violence, and colonial trauma.

 

Sign-up here for Knopf Poetry Poem-A-Day!

For more on these and other relevant titles visit National Poetry Month

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I SAY BZZ BZZ BZZ: “BARFLY” RIDES INTO TWILIGHT CITY WITH KYLE STARKS AND RYAN BROWNE

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A direct tie-in to the hit “Minor Threats” series by Patton Oswalt, Jordan Blum, and crew!

Dark Horse Comics is buzzing with some exciting news: the world of Minor Threats continues expanding with a new spinoff series, Barfly! Comic book legend Kyle Starks (Where Monsters Lie) joins Patton Oswalt and Jordan Blum on writing duties on a feel-good, coming-of-age series about an insect monster-man searching for his identity in the criminal underworld of Twilight City. Ryan Browne, co-creator of the critically-acclaimed series Eight Billion Genies, will provide artwork for Barfly, with letters handled by Nate Piekos (Minor Threats). The first issue will also feature a main cover art by Minor Threats co-creator Scott Hepburn, with three variant covers featuring art by Browne, Martín Morazzo, Dan Hipp (1:10 ratio), and one more to be revealed at a later date. The series is set to begin this July.

Back in Twilight City…

The Lower Lair bar is home to all sorts of supervillains, lowlifes, and scumbags… but only one of them has to puke digestive fluids onto his food to eat. $#!%eater, the humanoid mutant fly, is a loser–a lifelong minion who lives to serve his criminal master. But what happens to a henchman when he no longer has anyone left to hench for?

Here’s what the creative team had to say about Barfly:

Patton Oswalt: “It’s a punk rock human/fly hybrid that pukes and does crime! What are we NOT doing?”

Jordan Blum: “It’s Kyle @#$!’ing Starks and Ryan @#$!’ing Browne making a comic about $#!%eater! What else is there to say?! That’s the quote! Buy a hundred @#$!’ing copies and become an instant millionaire! It’s that easy!”

Kyle Stark: “I’m so excited to be invited to add to the tapestry that is the wonderful, superpowered world of Minor Threats that Jordan Blum and Patton Oswalt have brought to comics. To get to do it with incredible, unequaled Ryan Browne is an unbelievable cherry on top of an already delicious great comic ice cream sundae. I truly think people are going to fall in love with the lovable loser Sh*teater – a sweet little fella who’s just trying to find his place in the world after years of being a nameless minion!”

Ryan Browne: “I got drunk and destroyed Kyle Starks prize winning begonias with a hedge trimmer. The least I could do was repeatedly draw a sad fly man for him as an apology.”

From the World of Minor Threats: Barfly #1 (of 4) flies into comic shops on July 10, 2024. It is now available to pre-order from your local comic shop for $4.99.

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 From the World of Minor Threats: The Alternates:

“Impeccable, vibrant, smart—bursting with ideas and wonderful art, you will fall straight into this world and never come back.”—Guillermo Del Toro

“Leave it to the minds behind Minor Threats to crack the Super Hero Support Group content just right. This story is so original and entertaining. Enjoy the ride.”—Seth Green

Minor Threats reminds me that comics can have the depth and power while also being fun and entertaining. Incredible inspiring.”—Bill Hader

The Alternates is the rare comic spinoff that not only continues the magic of its flagship series, but manages to work as something unique and accessible. Unsurprisingly, Patton Oswalt, Jordan Blum, and Tim Seeley all nail the script, hooking you into the characters and the narrative immediately. Coupled with Christopher Mitten and Tess Fowler’s ambitious and scrappy art, this issue is great, plain and simple.”—Comicbook.com

“From stunning artwork to intriguing world-building, The Alternates #1 is a comic book worth reading. It’s a fresh take on the superhero genre that will have readers coming back for more.”–Capes & Tights

“If you enjoyed Minor ThreatsThe Alternates is a worthy sequel that expands the same universe. And if you haven’t enjoyed Minor Threats (which just came out in TP), it will still appeal to anyone who enjoys tales of weird heroes in a world they never made! The artwork equals the story, evoking the spirit of 1990s Vertigo in every panel.”—Kabooooom!