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FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL By JOHN HOPE

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Operation HOPE announced today that Wiley will publish “FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR ALL,” written by its Founder, Chairman and CEO John Hope Bryant, on April 16, 2024. From the best-selling author of “Up from Nothing, Love Leadership and How the Poor Can Save Capitalism,” this new book delivers a powerful resource for everyday Americans seeking to build a stronger financial future. Part call to action, part inspiration, “Financial Literacy for All” offers a roadmap to increase prosperity for individuals, families, communities, and our nation, from one of the world’s foremost experts.

The book will support establishing a financial mindset that contributes to success and wealth, rather than debt and struggle, and help answer tough financial questions Americans grapple with daily. The author issues a call to action for public and private sector leaders to help bring financial literacy education to young Americans and working adults while outlining a plan that invites individuals and organizations of every stripe to join this movement for financial self-determination.

Pre-orders of the book are available now through AmazonBarnes and Noble, and Walmart, and will be featured at the T.D. Jakes International Leadership Summit, the Consumer Bankers Association Annual Meeting, and the Wall Street Project’s Economic Summit at the New York Stock Exchange, where Bryant will receive a Lifetime Achievement Award. It also includes a special forward by Walmart President and CEO Doug McMillon.

“Fixing income inequality will reignite the American dream, and John takes aim at one of the biggest challenges of our time in Financial Literacy For All. I share John’s optimism that we can help change the world and address our problems with the right skills, tools and knowledge. Drawing on lessons learned from history and his own personal experiences, John creates a powerful business plan for America to drive empowerment through education,” said Jamie Dimon, CEO, JPMorgan Chase.

“If there was ever the right book for the wrong time, it’s this one! Misinformation is at an all-time high and financial literacy is at an all-time low. As a result, regular folks out there are struggling! Thankfully John Hope Bryant, a man I’ve known for years as an incredible entrepreneur and philanthropist, has come through with actual and actionable steps people can take to turn their lives around,” said Charlamagne Tha God, Media Mogul, Bestselling Author, TV and Radio Host.

ABOUT JOHN HOPE BRYANT
John Hope Bryant is an American entrepreneur, thought leader, and philanthropic executive who is referred to as the “conscience of capitalism” by numerous Fortune 500 CEOs. Bryant is the Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer of Operation HOPE, Inc. the nation’s largest on-the-ground nonprofit provider of financial literacy.

In 2008, Bryant inspired President George W. Bush to make financial literacy the official policy of the U.S. federal government. As a result, Bryant was appointed Vice-Chair of the inaugural U.S. President’s Advisory Council on Financial Literacy. In 2016, Bryant inspired U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew to rename the Treasury Annex Building to the Freedman’s Bank Building, in honor of the Freedman’s Bank created by President Lincoln, designed to teach newly freed slaves about money. Bryant’s work has been recognized by five U.S. presidents, and he has served as an advisor to three sitting U.S. presidents representing both parties.

Bryant is a CNBC Contributor, host of the iHeart Radio podcast “Money and Wealth with John Hope Bryant,” a best-selling author of six books, and was selected in 2024 by TIME for the inaugural class of “The Closers” – one of 18 extraordinary global leaders working to close the racial wealth gap.

For more information, visit Wiley Books. Join the conversation on TwitterFacebookInstagram and LinkedIn.

Operation HOPE Contact: 
Kevin Boucher, Operation HOPE
Kevin.boucher@operationhope.org

Behind The Words With Christopher Reich

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Welcome Christopher, we’re very excited to have you on Reader’s Entertainment.  We’ll be talking all about your latest release MATTERHORN. First, tell our readers a bit about yourself.

Hi there. I’m Chris Reich. I grew up in Japan and California. Currently, I make my home in Newport Beach. I’ve been writing full time since the publication of my first novel, Numbered Account in 1998.

What does your typical writing day look like?

My writing day looks a lot like any full-time job. I hit my desk by 8 in the morning and try and stay until 4 or so. Sometimes later, sometimes earlier. I write longhand, then type into my laptop.

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

My newest book is titled, Matterhorn. It’s a spy story set primarily in Switzerland pitting two old friends – one American, one Russian – now bitter rivals, against one another in a race against time to prevent a deadly terrorist attack. The story opens and closes on the Matterhorn and was inspired by my love of alpinism, and of course, of the Matterhorn, itself. The most iconic mountain in the world.

I began writing at the age of 32. I’d never taken a writing class or even tried to pen a short story before starting my first novel. I guess I’m self-taught, though I’d say it was the books of John Le Carre, Ken Follett, Frederick Forsyth, and Tom Clancy that were my teachers.

Advice for new writers?

My advice for first time novelists is to pick out several of your favorite books that your story resembles. Make sure those books are bestsellers! See how those authors told their story and maybe follow their example!

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

Research is my favorite part of writing. I like to travel to the story’s location. Exotic locales and foreign destinations are a hallmark of my books. I grew up in Japan, Switzerland, and the States. I feel comfortable pretty much anywhere in the world. I love transporting my readers to places they haven’t been…or maybe didn’t even know existed. The imagination is a wonderful thing!  But…and this is important…don’t let your research get in the way of a good story! As Shakespeare said, “The plot is the thing.”

What’s coming up for you?

My Simon Riske series from Netflix is about to get underway filming in the UK with Edward Berger directing. We’re just finalizing casting, so big news to come!

Oh, Simon Riske…..a movie, how exciting. Join us again to talk about the film! Thank you so much for joining us today.

Readers, here’s a quick look at MATTERHORN.

A sudden family death and an old nemesis bring retired agent Mac Dekker in from the cold in this alpine thriller from New York Times bestselling author Christopher Reich.

Robbie Steinhardt lives a peaceful life. A fixture of his small alpine village, he tends cattle, minds his own business, and doesn’t dwell on his former life and the family and lover he left behind―back when he was Mac Dekker, CIA.

But when he learns his son Will died following in his footsteps, he needs answers. What mission took Will up into the alpine heights, and why is Ilya Ivashka on the same trail? Ilya―his close friend, his rival in love. Ilya, who framed Mac for treason and sent him into hiding.

Wiping away the years, Mac returns to the field to find the secrets Will hid and finds himself facing the Herculean task of stopping a terrorist plot that threatens thousands. But in a field of double agents, who can he trust?

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

(Releasing TODAY!)

New York Times bestselling author Christopher Reich has lived a life as exciting and fast-paced—though thankfully not as dangerous—as any of his protagonists.

Born in Tokyo, he divided his youth between Southern California and Switzerland. It was in the Swiss Alps where he first developed his love of mountaineering. Along the way, he attended the Outward Bound School of East Africa and summited Mt. Kenya.  He earned his undergraduate degree from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University and his MBA from the University of Texas at Austin. Upon graduation, he worked for the Union Bank of Switzerland in Zurich and Hong Kong, before founding a watch company in Neuchatel, Switzerland.

Mr. Reich left the corporate world for good at age 32 to pursue a career as a novelist. His first international thriller, Numbered Account, drew upon his experiences working in the super-secret world of Swiss banking. The book sold more than a million copies in twenty-two countries around the globe and spent a combined twelve weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.  He has since penned fourteen acclaimed bestsellers including Rules of Deception and The Patriots Club, which won the International Thriller Writers inaugural Thriller award for Outstanding Novel. His series The Take, featuring debonair private spy Simon Riske, is in production at Netflix as a limited television series to be directed by Oscar and BAFTA winner, Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front). His next novel, MATTERHORN, will be published by Thomas & Mercer in April 2024.

Mr. Reich lives in Newport Beach, California.
Visit his website at www.christopherreich.com.
Instagram: @christopherreichbooks
Facebook: @ChristopherReichAuthor
X: @ChReichAuthor

BUY LINKS

B&N
AMAZON
BOOKSHOP

Buckley’s Family Fishing Trip From Children’s Author Susan H. Hines

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Educator, publisher, and children’s author Susan H. Hines announced the release of the much-anticipated second volume in her ongoing Buckley Series: “Buckley’s Family Fishing Trip.” In another exciting tale, Buckley the family Schnauzer pup explores the outdoors, learns new skills, overcomes challenges, and spends a joyful time with the family who loves him. All in a book packed with gorgeous illustrations and playful language – including sight words and rhyming words that help children enjoy the time they spend reading.

Buckle-up for a fun-filled journey with Buckley the lovable Schnauzer pup, alongside his “big brother” Ralphel, and Grandpa. Brimming with anticipation, Buckley can barely wait to embark on his very first fishing adventure with the family. And as he gets ready to visit Grandpa’s favored fishing spot, Buckley daydreams about the tasty fish they’ll grill later. Preparation is key though, so they start by heading to the garage to gather their gear – the essential yellow bucket and fishing hooks – while Buckley wags his tail and supervises.

But just when they are about to leave Grandpa’s house, Buckley realizes something crucial is missing: the bait! So, he quickly dashes off to the backyard to dig for worms. Will Buckley’s digging yield the needed bait in time for their fishing escapade? And will they have a good time, or catch any fish at all? Open the book to find out, as the fishing adventure begins.

With each page, the book’s rich, vivid illustrations promise to whisk readers away to a realm of imagination. Making “Buckley’s Family Fishing Trip” not just a delightful story to read aloud, but also an experience that fosters creativity, resilience, and the joy of problem solving. Allowing young minds to dream and learn as they explore with Buckley, their newest four-legged friend.

Award-Winning Buckley Series: Available on Shelves and Online

Crafting fun narratives and interactive reading activities for children aged 5 and older, Susan H. Hines has already earned multiple prestigious awards for her work, including #1 Author, Best Author of the Week, and #1 Seller. The newest Buckley book is available now via Amazon, AbeBooks, Audible, Google Books, Kidswrd, Kobo, and Rakuten Kobo and TJP Publications website www.tjppublications.com. Along with physical copies located at fine brick-and-mortar bookstores across Georgia:

  • Birdsong Books, Henry Co., Locust Grove, GA – Buckley Books and merchandise available
  • The Book Cellar, Rockdale Co., Conyers, GA – Buckley Books and merchandise available
  • All five branches of the Henry County, GA library system.

The Buckley Series and Susan H. Hines: Rave Reviews

Reviewed by Holly Connors at Feathered Quill: https://featheredquill.com/buckleys-family-fishing-trip/

Other Buckley title reviews:

For more information on Susan’s work and updates on future adventures with Buckley, follow her on social media: FacebookXInstagram, TikTokLinktree.

About Susan H. Hines, M.B.A.

Susan H. Hines has been writing children’s books for many years, helping children to develop basic language, communication, and writing skills. She created TJP Publications to offer self-authored books for children that focus on helping kids during their most important, foundational learning stages. From teaching the names and sounds of letters to practicing writing in a wide variety of genres, each book helps children learn and grow. Susan is committed to offering children the best resources that can open the door to knowledge, adventure, and fun. Learn more at: www.tjppublications.com.

Late Yankees Ace Publishes New Memoir

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The first of April, 2024, will be a big day for a late, great man. Waite Hoyt of the 1927 New York Yankees will release a new book: “Schoolboy: The Untold Journey of a Yankees Hero.” (University of Nebraska Press) His memoir!

Wait – what? “Schoolboy” Hoyt died in 1984. How is this possible?

Waite Hoyt was not only the ace pitcher of the 1920s Yankees, but he was also an incredible storyteller who left behind eight boxes of notes, writings, interview transcripts and memoir attempts. Co-author Tim Manners used this trove, afforded to him by Waite’s son Chris, to compose this memoir in the Yankee legend’s own words, 40 years later.

“Schoolboy” captures Hoyt’s jaw-dropping journey, from a teenager cavorting with men twice his age in the hardscrabble Minor Leagues to somehow becoming the best pitcher on the greatest baseball team of all time – the 1927 New York Yankees. While Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig were hitting those epic bombs, “Schoolboy” Hoyt was the pitcher who smoked opposing batters and sparked the Yankees Dynasty.

Hoyt was also a vaudeville star who swapped dirty jokes with Mae West, a mortician who left a body chilling in his car while pitching an afternoon game at Yankee Stadium, a recovering alcoholic who drank champagne with Al Capone, and, following his 23-year pitching career, the beloved radio voice of the Cincinnati Reds for 24 years.

“Schoolboy” is not only for baseball buffs, Roaring ’20s aficionados, or those struggling with addiction, but also anyone who has lingered over the paradox of success. Despite being a dominant pitcher for the Yankees throughout the 1920s and among the one percent of Major Leaguers selected for the National Baseball Hall of Fame, Hoyt felt he would have had more success had he finished school and gotten a “real” job.

Some of Waite Hoyt’s vignettes are funny, many are poignant and others are tragic, but he never flinches from an unsparing account of his remarkable 84-year odyssey.

Schoolboy is shipping now via Amazon and will be in bookstores after April 1, 2024.

Tim Manners is a writer, communications consultant and baseball fan. Waite Hoyt (1899-1984) pitched twenty-one Major League seasons and led the Yankees to three World Series championships. He later became a popular broadcaster for the Cincinnati Reds and was elevated to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1969. Bob Costas, the noted sportscaster, wrote the book’s foreword. The University of Nebraska Press was founded in 1941 and is an academic publisher of scholarly and general-interest books.

Book Website:

http://schoolboyhoyt.com

Happy Easter

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To our readers who celebrate the Easter Holiday…..we wish you a Happy Easter.

FINDING COLOR By Candace MacPhie

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FINDING COLOR By Candace MacPhie
A hilarious and messy backpacking adventure in the ’90s

I have a nice job, a nice one-bedroom apartment, and a few nice friends. My days are filled with drab meetings, subway commutes, and lonely nights watching must-see Thursday TV.

I used to be the life of the party but have led a lackluster existence since my mom’s death. I’m twenty-five, but I might as well be seventy-five.

Desperate for change, I take off for a three-week vacation to Greece in search of fun. And I meet him. He reignites my zest for living, and the thought of returning to my dull routine after getting a taste of sublime is soul-crushing.

So I don’t. I sell everything and leave for England to reunite with him for my grand escape—but there are no piña coladas. Instead, I get a roller-coaster relationship, lame temp jobs, and endless misunderstandings while sharing a flat with Aussies, Kiwis, and the sexcapade Spanish couple in a sketchy part of London. But as my delicious and cringeworthy moments collide, I discover a path that changes the course of my life forever.

Grab your backpack and get ready for an adventure in the ’90s when the Internet was scarce but laughs weren’t. Finding Color is book one in the five-part Back in a Year series, the true story of a young woman traveling around the world. Each book can be read independently, but it’s more fun to take the full trip.

Finding Color: A hilarious and messy backpacking adventure in the ’90s (Back in a Year Series Book 1) eBook : MacPhie, Candace: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Born in Montreal, Quebec, I spent years backpacking and working around the world. I have a Bachelor of Commerce degree, an MBA, and worked for twenty years on four different continents and now call Calgary, Alberta home.

I got married, had kids, and things got busy. Time was moving by quickly and my kids were growing up fast. I shifted gears and quit my job to spend time at home. During the COVID lockdown, I had time on my hands, decided to try writing, and started writing the Back in a Year series.

When I’m not at my computer yelling “Just a few more pages, then I’ll make dinner,” I love hiking in the Rocky Mountains, hot yoga, reading romance novels, and making up new cake recipes. I especially like to laugh and spend time with my husband, the self-proclaimed grumpy motherf*%ker, and my three awesome kids.

 

L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future Contest Winners: Michael Kortes and Lance Robinson

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TWO CANADIAN AUTHORS ARE WINNERS IN
INTERNATIONAL WRITERS CONTEST

Canadian authors Michael Kortes and Lance Robinson are winners in the L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future Contest earning them both a trip to Hollywood, a week-long master-class workshop, and their winning stories published in the international bestselling anthology, L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 40

Why should you order and read
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 40?

Because…

  • These stories will bring you into fresh new worlds and new ideas.
  • Some of your favorite authors chose them.
  • Reading the stories will teach you what it takes to win the contest.
  • Illustrators of the future illustrate the stories.

The Contest, one of the most prestigious writing and illustrating competitions in the world, is currently in its 41st year and is judged by some of the premier names in speculative fiction.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

In his day job, Lance Robinson is an environmental social scientist who often works closely with mobile peoples. He is a sporadic nomad himself, having lived variously in countries such as Ghana, the Gambia, Colombia, and Kenya. He began writing speculative fiction as a child, and by his early twenties his stories began appearing in small press magazines. In the early 1990s, he even entered the Writers of the Future Contest two or three times. Eventually, though, his life filled up with other things and he set creative writing aside.

Recently, however, when he returned home to Canada, he decided    it was also time to come back home to writing. Since then, his stories have often explored how our relationship with the natural world is intertwined with our spiritual journeys—as individuals, as communities, and as a collective humanity. Lance is also an avid astronomy and space-travel nut, and he found the germ of his story “Five Days Until Sunset” at the intersection of pondering the spiritual search that never ends and wondering what life might be like on a tidally locked, “eyeball” planet. The story also asks what it means to live in harmony with a world that is ready to kill you, and what it means to have faith in the face of inconvenient truths. Lance and his two children currently make their home in Robinson-Superior Treaty territory on the traditional land of the Anishnaabeg peoples and Fort William First Nation in the City of Thunder Bay, Ontario.

Michael Kortes (pen name in the book Galen Westlake)

Born and raised in Canada, Galen practices law in Toronto and spends his days talking a great deal to a great many people. His family of four, however, confidently assures him the less he says the better. To this end, he more quietly expresses himself by writing stories during his daily commute on the train. When the stranger sitting next to him stops reading over his shoulder, he knows his tale needs a little something extra.

Galen’s fiction has appeared in Galaxy’s Edge and Unidentified Funny Objects. His most recent legal writing may be found in Advocates’ Quarterly, if someone is so inclined.

Galen was awarded the Silver Play button by Google (they have yet to ask for it back) and he once competed in a Mud Hero-Ultra race event without dying. For a decade, Galen alternated as the VP and treasurer of a nonprofit, operating a nursery school for inner-city children in Toronto. He has been a janitor, a camp counsellor, and once spent a summer mining a crypto currency that may or may not have actually existed. His laser tag score is outstanding.

A strong proponent of paragraphs, Galen claims to have invented the word “cacophony. ”He has also incorrectly memorized pie to one-hundred decimal places. Galen is forever indebted to the Writers of the Future forum and to his beloved writer’s group: the One Ring. But right now, he needs to go chase some kids off his lawn.

Behind The Words with Erin Bartel

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Welcome to the blog Erin. Today, we’re excited to be talking about your latest release The Lady with the Dark Hair. First, tell our readers a little bit about the book.

Esther Markstrom and her artist mother have always been proud of their ancestor, painter Francisco Vella. They even run a small museum and gallery dedicated to raising awareness of his scandalously underappreciated work. But when Esther reconnects with her former art history professor, she finds her once-solid family history on shaky ground as questions arise about Vella’s greatest work—a portrait entitled The Lady with the Dark Hair.

In 1879, Catalan orphan-turned-fugitive Viviana Torrens has found sanctuary serving in the home of an aging artist in Southern France. It is in his studio that she meets Francisco Vella, a Gibraltarian merchant who sells artists’ pigments. When her past catches up to her, she is compelled to pose as Vella’s sister and join him on his travels or be deported back to Spain to stand trial. Along the way she will discover that the many parts she has been playing in order to hide her identity have far-reaching implications she never could have foreseen.

What was the inspiration for your novel?
I don’t remember a time when I did not draw and paint. From an early age, when I had free time I was doing one of four things: reading, climbing trees, pretending to be a tiger, or making art. Painting has been a way to escape, a way to explore, and, in recent years, a way for me to do something that doesn’t involve looking at a screen.

I became very interested in women painters specifically after reading The Mirror and the Palette by Jennifer Higgie. I think it was around that time that I started work on The Lady with the Dark Hair—and I started trying my hand at self-portraiture. Over the course of 2022, I painted one self-portrait each month in an attempt to get better at painting people. At the same time, I was writing this book about women artists, identity, and what we see when we really take the time to look at ourselves for who we are.

The Lady with the Dark Hair is a dual-time story. What are the different locations and time periods covered in your book?
The past storyline begins in 1879 in Toulouse, France, and takes readers to early 1880s Gibraltar, by way of Paris at the very beginning of La Belle Époque. The present-day story begins in East Lansing, Michigan, and takes readers to modern-day Gibraltar.

Can you please tell readers about your two protagonists, Esther Markstrom and Viviana Torrens? How are the two connected?
Esther is a former art history major who has been running her family’s small museum in the American Midwest and taking care of her eccentric artist mother for twenty years. Her life is restricted to about a five-mile radius around her home, the walls of which are covered in decades’ worth of her mother’s self-portraits. She presses on, fulfilling her duties to take care of her mother and the family legacy of being Francisco Vella’s descendants. But she yearns to slough off these responsibilities to live a bigger life, one filled with travel, adventure, and, if she’s lucky, a bit of romance.

After posing as a boy to serve alongside her brother in the Catalan army’s war with Spain in the 1870s, Viviana is now working as a scullery maid in an artist’s home in Southern France. There she meets a Gibraltarian merchant, Francisco Vella, who sells paints and pigments to artists. She becomes a model for her artist employer, then his student, but is compelled to leave in the guise of Vella’s sister when news of her crimes during the war reaches France. As she follows Vella on his trade route, she gets to see the world, but everywhere she goes she is underestimated, restricted, and condescended to, because of both her sex and her assumed identity.

Though they live in vastly different worlds, both women feel caged by societal expectations and their own self-doubt. And in some sense, both have Francisco Vella to blame.

Esther’s once-solid family history is on shaky ground when questions arise about her ancestor, painter Francisco Vella. Can you please provide some clue to the mystery surrounding her family?
Esther’s most prized possession, among all the other paintings her family owns and displays in their museum, is a portrait entitled The Lady with the Dark Hair. It hangs over the fireplace in the home she shares with her mother, an artist in her own right who suffers from schizophrenia. Their family has always believed it was painted by their ancestor, Francisco Vella. But when Esther reconnects with a college art history professor and shows him the painting, he questions the long-held view and starts her on a quest to defend her position and prove its provenance.

Viviana is determined to hide her identity. But doing so results in far-reaching implications. Can you provide some insight into what these implications are?
With Viviana’s character I wanted to explore the ways in which women change themselves in order to fit others’ expectations. In her case, this tendency is extreme because she truly is using assumed names and identities to avoid legal repercussions. But as she pretends to be these other people, she loses more and more of her essential self until Viviana Torrens is altogether forgotten by history, even though she leaves behind an enormous amount of evidence of her existence.

What are some of the main themes covered in The Lady with the Dark Hair?
From the very start, this book is about women—women artists, women business owners, women caretakers, women who serve—women who are limited by circumstance, societal expectations, and their own inner critic, who doubt their contribution to the world, their worth, and their talent. It’s about confronting all the restrictions placed on women, both external and internal, and stepping out into a life of creativity, personal fulfillment, and rich relationships built on mutual respect and acknowledgment of one’s essential personhood. It’s also about owning your success, being proud of your accomplishments, and making your mark on the world.

What do you hope readers will gain from reading your book?
I hope readers will come away with an appreciation for and a desire to learn more about women’s contributions over the centuries to the arts specifically and to culture in general. I hope women readers in particular will turn that appreciation back on themselves and acknowledge their own gifts, callings, and talents. I hope that at least some come away energized to prioritize their own creative pursuits even as they are raising families, taking care of aging parents, and working at jobs that pay the bills. Because art is for everyone.

Where can readers purchase a copy of The Lady with the Dark Hair?
The Lady with the Dark Hair is available wherever books are sold. I always encourage people to support their local independent bookstore by ordering from them.

How can readers connect with you?
You can find me online at www.ErinBartels.com, on Facebook @ErinBartelsAuthor, and on Instagram @ErinBartelsWrites.

Thank you so much for stopping by the blog today, Erin. 

Reader’s here’s a quick look at The Lady With the Dark Hair:

Esther Markstrom and her artist mother have always been proud of their ancestor, painter Francisco Vella. They even run a small museum and gallery dedicated to raising awareness of his scandalously underappreciated work. But when Esther reconnects with her former art history professor, she finds her once-solid family history on shaky ground as questions arise about Vella’s greatest work–a portrait entitled The Lady with the Dark Hair.

In 1879, Catalan orphan-turned-fugitive Viviana Torrens has found sanctuary serving in the home of an aging artist in Southern France. It is in his studio that she meets Francisco Vella, a Gibraltarian merchant who sells artists’ pigments. When her past catches up to her, she is compelled to pose as Vella’s sister and join him on his travels or be deported back to Spain to stand trial. Along the way she will discover that the many parts she has been playing in order to hide her identity have far-reaching implications she never could have foreseen.

This dual-timeline story from award-winning author Erin Bartels takes readers from the sleepy Midwest to the sultry Mediterranean on a relentless search for truth, identity, and the freedom to follow one’s dreams.

The Seven Mistakes New Managers Make by Janet Polach PH. D

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The Seven Mistakes New Managers Make
How to avoid them and thrive
An expert guide to effective leadership and how to become one by Janet Polach PH. D

Whether you are a manager of many, or a team leader of a few, being a leader requires letting go of the day-to-day work tasks you did so well as an individual contributor and, instead, encouraging production and success through others. New managers are usually promoted because they were outstanding individual contributors: they spoke up in staff meetings, shared good ideas, and executed on time and within scope. Yet, these characteristics are not necessarily the same ones that will make you successful as a frontline manager. Often, organizations invest little in new manager development; thus, new managers are left to guess at what effective leaders do. They often find themselves pressing forward through trial and error. If this sounds familiar, then this book, which examines the seven most common mistakes new managers make, is for you. Each chapter highlights a common challenge that new managers will recognize and then describes strategies and behaviors to build the skills needed to avoid mistakes and achieve success. This book is ideal for the new manager who hopes to evolve into a great leader.

The Seven Mistakes New Managers Make: Polach PH D, Janet: 9781952976193: Books – Amazon.ca

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Janet is a global leadership development partner and coach.  She has developed leaders in the U.S., China, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Puerto Rico, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Switzerland.  She focuses on equipping first time and experienced executives with the skills and point of view for long term success.  Janet is a retired U.S. Marine Corps officer.

Excuse our Absence

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We’re updating our ‘Cyber-Closet’.

You know how that goes? Should we keep it? Does it bring us joy?

Eww, where did that come from? We don’t remember posting that.

We’ll be back up and running in a few days………thank you for your patience…..