Book Review
Dividend of Deception
by Gary Presley
Diana Goodwin and Victoria Graydale relate a story of embezzlement—a theft that robbed Goodwin of almost $80,000. While many people serve prison time for theft, the perpetrator of this crime, though caught, escaped with minimal...
Book Review
Beyond Instinct
by Gary Presley
Pastor W. J. Walls has counseled privately and spoken publicly about methods for bettering relationships. He is also a man who found himself “faced with the pain, misery, and humiliation of a failed” marriage. Thus, readers have the...
Book Review
Dad, Me, and Muhammad Ali
by Gary Presley
Youngsters learn early that there are three primary responses to fall back on when they’ve done something wrong. For example, if a boy were to break his father’s favorite sports souvenir, he could lie, keep silent, or confess and...
Book Review
How to Apologize to Your Woman
by Gary Presley
A cynic would say that the men who should read "How to Apologize to Your Woman" are the least likely to do so. Moreover, statistics might show that a man who cannot see the value of a proper apology in the male-female relationship is too...
Book Review
Deadly Roses
by Gary Presley
Deadly Roses is a true-crime story rendered in just-the-facts, police-blotter language*.* The author summarizes his book as the “… true story about the murder of Lita McClinton Sullivan and the investigation, arrest, trial and...
Book Review
Brown Eyes
by Gary Presley
Few are the dog owners—let’s say, “people who live with dogs as companions”—who do not believe that their faithful furry friend is devoid of a thought or two worth recording. Such a thing has even happened at the White House,...
Book Review
The Legend of Adam Caine
by Gary Presley
In The Legend of Adam Caine, the title character is a former Marine who has taken up the mundane life of a London theater usher. It’s 2006 and Caine is on his way to work, peacefully reading an action-adventure novel taking the...
Book Review
Death Just Happens
by Gary Presley
Post-traumatic stress disorder is commonly assumed to be an unwelcome souvenir of battle, but PTSD also affects people who have never heard a bomb explode or a rifle shot fired in anger. Margaret J. Scott enjoyed most of her duties as a...
