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Book Review

The Secret Keepers

by Rich Wertz

This debut novel starts out calmly enough, as if the author is driving a taxi slowly down a New York street, pointing out quirky neighborhood characters. Then, when the introductions are over, she puts the pedal to the metal, there’s a... Read More

Book Review

A Time for Treason

by Rebecca Rego

Walther traces a triangle between America, England and France as passion and political intrigue arrive by land and sea to a world on the brink of the Revolutionary War. In an effort to avenge her parent’s death, whose ship was sunk by... Read More

Book Review

H. D.

by Jeff Gundy

Long known mainly as the author of tiny Imagist poems, H. D. (Hilda Doolittle) has been increasingly recognized as a major Modernist writer. A classmate of Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams at Penn State, later married to British... Read More

Book Review

Second Wives

by Elizabeth Millard

Marriage in today’s society, with remarriages prevalent and blended families more common, can bring a host of issues that a bride of any age may dread encountering. If this isn’t the groom’s first trip down the aisle, it’s... Read More

Book Review

A Woman's Path

by Dorothy Goepel

A sense of the spiritual arises in short spurts and over a lifetime of cherishing the soul and all things divine. Reassurance, peace and miracles are perpetual pursuits on Earth, thus from one vantage point humans encounter the mystical... Read More

Book Review

Witches' Night Out

by Carol Lynn Stewart

Bethany Salem will stop at nothing to find the murderer of her boyfriend Joe. Her father, a New York City police detective, can’t stop her. Certainly her father’s power-mad lawyer girlfriend, the “Bitch from the East,” can’t... Read More

Book Review

Swan, What Shores?

by Aimé Merizon

The relationship of this title and the poems within are intuitively connected to a line in a poem that reads “What country have you come from, swan, what shores are you flying to?” The poems themselves are grouped under five titles... Read More

Book Review

Major McKinley

by Karl Helicher

Theodore Roosevelt accused President McKinley of having “no more backbone than a chocolate éclair” because he viewed the President as being overly cautious about committing American troops to war with Spain. Yet, as Armstrong, a... Read More

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Book Reviews