Less a memoir than one man’s treatise on America in the early 1970s, Frederick Keogh’s "Dream Weaver" exposes both the spiritual void and the deceptive mysticism of a generation emerging from the upheaval of the 1960s. Keogh sticks... Read More
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... Read More
New weight-loss books appear on the market as quickly as those extra pounds return after a diet. While many people have a need, and a desire, to lose weight, statistics suggest that even if they succeed in reducing, they might find it... Read More
An ancient and little-known group of principles from China, the “Bright Beautiful School of Thought,” and “Ming Chia,” are brought to light for today’s readers in Dr. Glen Hepker’s book A Glimpse of Heaven: The Philosophy of... Read More
In “Auguries of Innocence,” William Blake wrote: “Every night and every morn / Some to misery are born.” These words express what some might consider to be their destiny. However, while certain people may experience greater... Read More
A troubled woman seeks serenity and consults her inner goddess to resolve tribulations that plague her daily. In Open with Love, Roberta Raye delivers this popular theme with a creative twist by presenting it in a fictional context... Read More
We all know Wikipedia, so there must be a Wikidictionary, right? Not exactly, but Derek Abbott has created "Wickedictionary", a volume of humorous definitions in the vein of Ambrose Bierce’s collection, The Devil’s Dictionary,... Read More
Presenting itself as the first to drive a nail “into the stinking coffin of your rotten Christian religion,” "I Am the Antichrist", by Kostyantyn Sitalo, angrily and disjointedly attempts to portray Christianity as a monolithic... Read More