Van Why’s 9/11 is a heartfelt memoir of September 11th, 2001 that lends voice to the event’s survivors. Artie Van Why’s memoir 9/11 recounts his experiences as a witness to the September 11th, 2001 attacks and details the long,... Read More
"Intellectual Helplessness in America" is a good guidebook to overcoming current intellectual malaise. Steven A. Danley’s "Intellectual Helplessness in America" sets out to accomplish a Herculean task: to positively impact the ways in... Read More
"The Mouse That Snored" is whimsical and original, with often excellent comedic timing. Mel Horowitz’s "The Mouse That Snored" is an amusing farcical reinterpretation of American revolutionary heroes and myths. Humboldt “Humby”... Read More
"A Fish Called Bad Eyes" is an entertaining story for young readers that imparts important ocean knowledge. In Larry Golicz’s imaginative tale "A Fish Called Bad Eyes", a bespectacled fish reveals his curiosity and caution as he... Read More
"Stock Market and Foreign Exchange Market" is a deeply considered and rigorous inquiry. Ian Charles Robert Gracias’s "Stock Market and Foreign Exchange Market" is a deep and illuminating examination of how the markets really work, both... Read More
"Tiger Farms" is a heroic tale, an action story, and a morality play all in one—and thoroughly fun. The battle between the East and the West is an old canard. Matthew James’s debut novel "Tiger Farms" takes this old duel and injects... Read More
"The Door" follows a teenager as she unearths her true identity in a high-speed adventure of good versus evil. Craig Wickersham’s young-adult fantasy "The Door" is steeped in the supernatural and occult. "The Door" follows a teenager... Read More
Chaim Linder’s remarkable memoir reaches into widely interesting territory. "Angels Always Come on Time" is a memoir that reaches into the realm of epics and odysseys as well as being a religious and cultural history. In its present... Read More