Foreword INDIE
2014 Finalist for Humor
Book Review
Survivor
Music fans will be fascinated by this very personal deep dive into the real life of the blues. For years, Benny Turner was the slim, understated bass player who stood in the background, calmly thumping out the steady, melodically...
Book Review
The Diary of an Immortal (1945-1959)
This novel shows that selfishness may lead to great power, but that power still requires selfless responsibility. David Castello’s The Diary of an Immortal is an engrossing novel set in a rapidly changing world. Vivid details bring to...
Book Review
Remembrance of Blue Roses
by Karen Rigby
With themes of sacrifice and the search for beauty amid tragedy, this novel lingers in idealism. In "Remembrance of Blue Roses", a divorced United Nations civil servant forges an unusual friendship with a German coworker and his wife,...
Book Review
Addicted To Love
This young adult novel brings notions of self-acceptance to the fore, against an exciting 1970s background. A fragile young woman attempts to put the pieces of her life back together following several traumatic experiences in Addicted to...
Book Review
Technically Dead
Meisel’s absorbing work keeps pages turning and minds churning, and his ability to combine the technological with the personal makes him an author to watch. William Meisel’s intriguing, technologically sound thriller, "Technically...
Book Review
Twin River III
by James Burt
From the first to last page, this action-packed, exciting mystery is never dull. “I’m no good at this.” This utterance from weary protagonist Wesley Palladin, as he confides in his lover, Jane Romano, seems indicative of Palladin...
Book Review
There's an App for That
Lighthearted satire and high-tech devices meet in There’s an App for That. Advances in software and gadgetry are often met with a certain degree of public mania. In the mind of comedy writer Ed Toolis, the conveniences of the...