Book Review
Addiction Is Addiction
The mixture of practical information and reassurances make this essential reading for patients and their loved ones. With their first book, "Addiction Is Addiction", Raju Hajela, Sue Newton, and Paige Abbott aim to foster “more open...
Book Review
From Hell to Heaven, One Man's Journey
Gustav’s in-the-moment reactions to his feelings of betrayal are easy to relate to. Reflecting on divorce and other personal betrayals, Daffy Gustav shows the religious road to recovery in From Hell to Heaven, One Man’s Journey. The...
Book Review
DNA of Mathematics
A mathematician muses on how scientific theories have been used and misused through history. “We need to keep science from being used as a political and social tool in the power struggle of the few over others,” Mehran Basti argues...
Book Review
The Blessing of Movement
Konrad’s story is an inspirational memoir about life with disability and caring for dying relatives. Deborah Konrad’s "The Blessing of Movement" tells the story of her family, in particular her sister Sandra, who became a...
Book Review
When All Goes Quiet
This religious memoir should interest those who are curious about how spiritual experience can infiltrate everyday life. “When all goes quiet, I know that Heaven is trying to show me its glory,” Augustinus F. Lodewyks writes in When...
Book Review
The Hidden Treasure of Dutch Buffalo Creek
Otherworldly ghostwriters compose biographies for ordinary people in this playfully metafictional novel. "The Hidden Treasure of Dutch Buffalo Creek" is the first novel in a projected series by Jackson Badgenoone. Blending aspects of...
Book Review
Talk to Me of Love
This well-structured collection celebrates different types of love through meditative verse. The poems in Julia Anne Bernhardt’s first collection, "Talk to Me of Love", range from erotic to spiritual as they investigate love in all its...
Book Review
The Suicide of Claire Bishop
Memory, mental illness, and modern art are central themes in this clever literary puzzle. “There are so many ways to die, and even more ways to imagine it.” Carmiel Banasky’s first novel, "The Suicide of Claire Bishop", questions...