Supported by emotive personal stories, the self-help guide "The Art of the Inner Journey" is about working through personal troubles via art. Art therapist Margaret Carpenter Arnett’s compassionate self-help book "The Art of the Inner... Read More
Encouraging realistic, sensible thinking about decision-making, "Decisions for Living" is an illustrative self-help book. Gopal Dorai’s self-help book "Decisions for Living" scrutinizes choice-selection processes on subjects ranging... Read More
A girl’s relationships and mastery of her emotions help her through an important quest in the coming-of-age novel "Magic in the Blood". Filled with elemental magic, Michael Foster’s enchanting fantasy novel "Magic in the Blood" is... Read More
A riveting story set in the hemispheric crossroads between Panama and Colombia, journalist Belén Fernández’s "The Darién Gap" reports on the inhospitable journey migrants and refuge seekers endure for a chance at a better life in... Read More
Swift and concise, the biography "Out of the Tub" reintroduces William Howard Taft as a president worth celebrating. Carol A. Josel’s "Out of the Tub" is a compact yet revelatory biography of William Howard Taft, the only president of... Read More
Told in a stream-of-consciousness style that reflects the chaos of grief, "Blackbird" is an affecting memoir. Betsy Thibaut Stephenson’s grief-filled memoir "Blackbird" is about the loss of her son. Stephenson’s youngest child,... Read More
In Suzanne Manizza Roszak’s radiant novel "The Poison Girl", a brilliant, determined girl escapes the maledictions of her jealous father. Just after Bice was born, her beleaguered mother died. Her father—perhaps blaming himself;... Read More
A work that seeks to strengthen Christian faith by explaining Christian precepts in detail, "Why Did Jesus Have to Die?" is a persuasive theological text. Pastor Chris Conrad’s thoughtful theological book "Why Did Jesus Have to Die?"... Read More