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Book Review

The Dream Continues

by Jada Bradley

In the tradition of works like The Tao of Pooh and The Gospel According to Peanuts, Eden Tedla proposes to illustrate the spiritual values that frame creative work and that are a part of pop culture. "The Dream Continues" examines the... Read More

Book Review

The Smallborn

by Robin Farrell Edmunds

Ivy Teasel is twelve winters old and impatient for life outside her sheltered home to begin. She’s anxious to shed her youngling status and grow into a helpful member of her community and to discover her specific gift or talent. But... Read More

Book Review

Quip Factory

by Patty Sutherland

Caleb Atwood is an amazingly astute aficionado of alliterations, rhymes, and incongruities, having put his almost obsessive interest with words to good use in writing a primer everyone can use for creating endless variations of... Read More

Book Review

Mary's Cat

by Diane Taylor

The lives of the Holy Family are seen up close and personal through the eyes of a loyal pet cat named Fearless. Intended for readers between the ages of ten and fourteen, Mary’s Cat follows the exploits of a hardscrabble kitten lucky... Read More

Book Review

Jake, Dad and the Worm

by Carolyn Bailey

A frustrated child learns a lesson from one of nature’s most unassuming creatures in this cozy picture-book offering. Jake crashes his skateboard into a tree and trips over his legs while walking on stilts. He plays his kazoo for... Read More

Book Review

Harlem Travel Guide

by John Michael Senger

“Nieuw Haarlem” was taken from the American Indians by the Dutch in 1658, who, in turn, lost it to the British in 1664. Being more parsimonious in their use of vowels, the British renamed the place “Harlem,” and it has been so... Read More

Book Review

A Half-Empty Glassful of Optimism

by Lee Gooden

Tim Goral should not be concerned if the self-help guru Anthony Robbins reads this novel, "A Half-Empty Glassful of Optimism". Where some celebrities less secure with their positions in life might take offense, Anthony Robbins would find... Read More

Book Review

Fred and Pete's

by Dawn Goldsmith

Fred and Pete’s: They’re All Nuts is a time capsule: a 1960s diner. Paul Jellinek cracks it open with a series of in-depth interviews, some touching vignettes, and his own comments that tie it all together into a cohesive sense of... Read More

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