Set in England’s Midlands during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, James Connor’s "Two Milliners" creates a promising opening for a book intended for a young adult audience. Two teenaged boys go for a swim in a river, while two... Read More
In "Surfing Summers", Turk and Kenny decide early in the beach season that this is the summer they will ride the waves on real surfboards. Due to three drownings in Seagrove the year before, the fourteen-year-old best friends have been... Read More
A book on leadership is only as good as the examples the author uses. In this regard, Lee Ellis’s book is unique: The author employs scenes he observed as a POW at one of the Vietnam War’s most notorious camps, nicknamed the “Hanoi... Read More
In rural Turkey in the 1960s, during the week-long marriage celebration of a young couple, the bride and her parents become the victims of revenge killings. With the help of his aunt and uncle, the girl’s teenage brother escapes,... Read More
Have you ever wished you could go back in time a few minutes, hours, or days, and make a different choice? Do you ever despair that a certain moment of weakness ruined your life? We’ve all had the feeling that if only we could return... Read More
This memoir follows the life of Doris Geist, a wife and mother, over the past nine decades. The author begins by describing her grandparents, German and Norwegian immigrants, and their efforts to assimilate and thrive in the western... Read More
"Genes and Human Nature" is an accessible work of popular science, and a cross-disciplinary showcase for Dr. Amin’s soon to be testable Gene Suppression-Activation Theory. The postulate, G-SAT for short, states that “Junk DNA IS the... Read More
The life and times of the controversial Manhattan Project leader J. Robert Oppenheimer are lightly touched upon in this novel by writer Robert Montagnese. The author weaves his web of fiction using actual people locations and events.... Read More