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Book Review

Fishing for Light

by Mark Laiosa

Science fiction that doesn’t take itself too seriously, "Fishing for Light" is a wildly creative story. Take a science fiction story with multiple subplots, add a love element and a bit of satire on twenty-first-century American life... Read More

Book Review

Beyond Compulsion

by Wayne Cunningham

Georges Lefanu is a gambler and a psychotic killer. D. Valencia takes those compulsions to a substantial depth in a penetrating story of Georges’s upbringing, the degradation of Georges’s love-struck partner, and the execution of a... Read More

Book Review

The First Jews in North America

by John Senger

Aaron Hart, patriarch of the prominent Hart family, settled in Quebec in 1760, likely the first Jew to live there. He arrived with the British army as a merchant; nearly two centuries later, in 1938, his great great grandson, Cecil Hart,... Read More

Book Review

Decatur's Dig

by Mark McLaughlin

“History without legend would be pretty drab stuff,” or so the marine archaeologist and heroine in Ray M. Schultze’s Decatur’s Dig tells the president of Portugal after uncovering a priceless artifact on the Lisbon waterfront.... Read More

Book Review

Brave

by Lynn Evarts

Shyness can be crippling, but Helen Rivas-Rose shows the way toward better communication and a better life. In Helen Rivas-Rose’s detailed and poignant memoir, "Brave", she details her lifelong struggle with shyness and how she learned... Read More

Book Review

A Bride Most Begrudging

by Carol Lynn Stewart

It is 1643, and when Lady Constance Morrow bids farewell to her beloved Uncle Skelly—who is chained for transport to the Virginia colony, where he will serve out a sentence placed upon him by the British lords—she is taken by the... Read More

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Book Reviews