The Soul Octopus Analogy – The Soul’s Endless Dance Across the Web of Creation

The Soul Octopus Analogy, by Bud Megargee, presents an unconventional spiritual model of reincarnation, afterlife review, soul guides, free will, past lives, and multidimensional healing. Its central image is striking: the soul is imagined as an octopus, with each tentacle representing a separate incarnation or soul-extension, all connected to a larger core consciousness. Rather than treating life as a single linear progression, the book asks readers to consider existence as a vast web of simultaneous learning, energetic resonance, karmic repair, and spiritual remembering.

The octopus metaphor gives the material a tactile, living shape; it is not a dry metaphysical chart but a creature with motion, mystery, and reach. The chapters on afterlife review, soul-splitting, time slips, and near-death experiences are especially engaging because they turn familiar spiritual ideas sideways. I did not always need to accept the framework literally to appreciate its imaginative force. The book feels less like doctrine and more like a lantern lowered into dark water.

What also stayed with me was the book’s insistence that spiritual growth is not tidy. The author makes room for fear, hate, confusion, shadow, repetition, and unfinishedness without reducing them to failure. I appreciated that the book treats free will as meaningful rather than decorative; the blueprint may exist, but human response still matters. The prose has a devotional intensity that suits the subject. The result is a work that feels earnest, curious, and unusually oceanic.

This book will appeal most to readers of spiritual nonfiction, metaphysical philosophy, reincarnation, afterlife studies, soul journey books, New Age spirituality, and mystical self-discovery. Readers who enjoyed the expansive spiritual imagination of Michael Newton’s Journey of Souls may find a more metaphor-driven, poetic cousin here. The Soul Octopus Analogy is a sincere and memorable invitation to see the self not as a single thread, but as a living weave.

Pages: 90 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0H1S58JTP

Buy Now From Amazon

Evolving From the Storm

Dr. Iris Wright’s Evolving From the Storm is a personal reflection on injustice, survival, faith, and the slow, deliberate work of healing. Beginning with the author’s experience as an eighteen-year-old mother accused of harming her daughter, the book traces the long aftermath of that rupture: the loss of custody, the collapse of trust, the years spent functioning rather than truly living, and the eventual awakening that led Wright toward forgiveness, self-love, purpose, and advocacy through the Injustice Movement. Part memoir, part devotional guide, and part reflective workbook, it asks readers to examine the wounds they may have closed but never fully healed.

What moved me most was the emotional honesty of Wright’s central idea: that survival can look deceptively like healing. Her distinction between a closed wound and a healed wound gives the book its strongest thread, and it’s one I found both plainspoken and powerful. When she writes about building walls after betrayal, or about realizing that those same walls kept her trapped inside her own pain, the book feels intimate. I also appreciated the tenderness with which she handles anger. She doesn’t condemn it, but she doesn’t romanticize it either. Her “mirror moment,” where she begins to take responsibility for her healing without taking blame for what happened to her, is one of the book’s most resonant passages.

The writing is direct, rhythmic, and prayerful, often shaped by repetition and short lines that give the prose the feeling of testimony spoken aloud. At times, that simplicity is its strength; the book doesn’t hide behind ornament or theory. It speaks plainly to women who are tired, guarded, grieving, or quietly carrying more than anyone knows. I was especially struck by the chapter on restored love, where Wright admits that she once told her now husband she never wanted marriage, then later found herself proposing from a place of peace rather than fear. That moment gives the book warmth and vulnerability. I occasionally wished for more scene-level detail and narrative texture, especially around the legal ordeal and the long years of rebuilding. The ideas are heartfelt and accessible, but the most compelling sections are the ones where Wright lets the lived moment breathe.

I found Evolving From the Storm sincere, faith-filled, and emotionally generous. It’s a healing companion written by someone who wants her pain to become useful in the lives of others. Its greatest value lies in its invitation to stop mistaking endurance for wholeness, and to believe that peace can be practiced, protected, and chosen. I would recommend this book to readers, especially women of faith, who are working through betrayal, injustice, family separation, emotional guardedness, or the difficult passage from survival into purpose.

Pages: 92 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GXXBL4CS

Buy Now From Amazon

Aletheia Vol. II The Binds Of Fate

Aletheia Vol. II: The Binds of Fate, by Luigi A. Kohli, continues the ambitious historical vision established in Aletheia Vol. I: In the Shadows, carrying its story of secrecy, vengeance, faith, and political danger into an even broader ancient world. Where the first volume moved through the fraught transition from Tiberius to Caligula and centered on the dangerous inheritance binding Cassius and Justus, this second volume widens the frame across Rome, Parthia, Judea, and the early Christian movement. It remains a work of historical fiction, biblical-era drama, and political intrigue, but its sense of consequence feels larger now, as private grief and buried truth begin to press more forcefully against empire.

Kohli’s strength is still his seriousness of atmosphere. He writes as though the texture of the ancient world matters, from Roman law and imperial maneuvering to Parthian custom, military culture, spiritual unrest, and the fragile lives of those caught between power and belief. Justus’s concern with justice, Saif’s search for purpose, Cassius’s corrosive hunger for vengeance, and Michtam’s movement through the shadows all give the novel a steady moral tension. Compared with the first volume, The Binds of Fate feels less like the uncovering of a dangerous secret and more like the spreading of its consequences. The pace still allows room for reflection, but the story has a stronger sense of outward motion, especially as its characters move through unfamiliar lands, shifting alliances, and widening historical stakes.

The novel’s relationship to Lew Wallace’s Ben-Hur is especially important, and it’s more than a shared setting or a coincidental similarity of themes. Kohli is making a deliberate nod to Wallace’s classic, while writing in his own modern historical style. Judah Ben-Hur is not merely a distant influence on the book; his presence and dreams become part of the story’s unfolding design. Like Wallace, Kohli is interested in how individual lives cross the path of early Christianity, but the pattern has changed. This time, the focus is not on Judah’s encounter with Jesus, but on the sons of Pilate crossing paths with Jesus’ disciples. That shift gives the novel a compelling sense of literary continuation while allowing it to stand as its own interpretation of faith, fate, and the hidden costs of empire.

One of the most intriguing aspects of The Binds of Fate is the way it asks readers to think about the border between legend and history. The closing “Legend or History” section makes clear that Kohli isn’t simply using the past as decoration; he’s asking whether a story like this could be plausible within the gaps left by the historical record. The novel’s use of real events, real figures, disputed identities, and imagined connections gives the book an intellectual charge. Its suggestion of hidden Essene writings, tucked away in the hills with other documents of importance, quietly evokes the kind of revelations associated with ancient scroll discoveries. That idea fits the title’s concern with truth: history may not be fixed only by what has already been found, but also by what remains buried, waiting to complicate what we think we know.

Aletheia Vol. II: The Binds of Fate is a rich and serious continuation of Kohli’s ancient-world saga. It deepens the moral unease of In the Shadows while expanding the story into a more sweeping meditation on justice, vengeance, faith, and historical memory. Readers drawn to Ben-Hur, Roman historical fiction, biblical fiction, and political conspiracy will find a novel that respects its inspirations without being confined by them. The ending offers enough resolution to satisfy the movement of this volume, but its epilogue also leaves the strong impression that Kohli’s larger design may not yet be finished.

Pages: 478 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FGJWQQW8

Buy Now From Amazon

Driven by Desire: Path to Unstoppable Success

Driven by Desire is a motivational book about rebuilding a life from the inside out, using passion not as a vague slogan but as a daily discipline. Author JW Radford frames the argument through his own story, especially the shattering sequence of his MS diagnosis, medical retirement from the military, depression, addiction, and that stark ATM moment on the way to Chipotle when “Insufficient Funds” jolts him back into himself. From there, the book widens into a practical philosophy of desire, discipline, authenticity, mindset, long-term goals, review, and steady action. It’s less interested in grand theory than in turning private urgency into a usable system for living and working with intention.

I appreciated the book’s emotional candor. The sections about performing a life he no longer believed in, praying in the driveway before going into the house, and realizing that pretending had become its own form of suffocation give the book its pulse. Those moments have grain and heat. They make the later advice feel earned. I also admired the book’s insistence that passion is not some glamorous flash of destiny, but something closer to commitment under pressure, a choice repeated when you’re tired, frightened, or bored. That idea gives the book real ballast. Radford can write with force and directness, and he leans on the same vocabulary of fire, drive, purpose, and resilience.

Much of the advice is familiar: set goals, review progress, celebrate milestones, guard your mindset, build systems that can carry you when motivation fails. What makes it really work in this book is the way he threads it through lived experience, especially when he contrasts ego desires with authentic ones, or when he argues that sustained effort matters more than waiting to feel inspired. I liked, too, that he keeps returning to adaptation, to the notion that passion has to survive changing circumstances rather than remain frozen in one heroic pose. The recurring emphasis on visible progress, incremental change, and practical follow-through keeps the book from drifting entirely into uplift. The central vision is sturdy and humane: a meaningful life is built by aligning action with what genuinely makes you feel more alive, not merely more impressive.

I found Driven by Desire earnest and genuinely affecting. JW Radford is compelling and his message is conveyed with palpable conviction. I finished it feeling that Radford’s greatest strength is the moral seriousness with which he treats the question of how a person gets back up and stays awake to his own life. I’d recommend it to readers who are at a crossroads, burned out, rebuilding after loss, or trying to recover a sense of purpose that has gone dim. For someone who wants a warm, experience-forged push toward a more deliberate life, it could meet them at exactly the right moment.

Pages: 183 | ISBN : 978-9699896316

Buy Now From Amazon

Where is Robbie?: That Grumpy Bumpy Rooster (Part 2)

Where Is Robbie? Part 2, by Lesa Melnyczuk, follows the mystery of Robbie, the grumpy, bumpy rooster who has disappeared after terrifying the younger chickens with his bullying. When he returns, he’s nearly unrecognizable: glittery, musical, and leading a rowdy rooster rock band called The Bubbie Rooster Rockers. The story reveals that Robbie was taken to a patient farmer who helped him redirect his anger into music, but it’s careful not to pretend that a costume change and a guitar can erase the hurt he caused. Lucy and Tekla are still afraid, and Robbie has to begin the slower work of earning trust back.

The book’s emotional center is surprisingly thoughtful. I appreciated that the book doesn’t flatten bullying into a neat “bad rooster becomes good rooster” lesson. Robbie changes, yes, but the book lets the frightened little ones keep their fear. That mattered to me. Children are often asked to forgive too quickly, especially in stories that want a tidy ending, and this one has a gentler, wiser instinct. It says change is possible, but safety still comes first. I liked that balance.

The writing is energetic and playful, which suits a story full of crowing, guitars, dancing chooks, and big feelings. Some of the language has a funny, breathless rhythm, and the repeated sounds give it a lively read-aloud quality. The artwork has the same bold personality. Veronica Rooke’s illustrations are bright, quirky, and full of motion, from the Ukrainian village setting to Robbie’s outrageous rock-star transformation. I especially enjoyed the contrast between the worried, watchful chickens and Robbie’s flamboyant return. The pages feel busy at times, but that busyness also mirrors the chaos of the story, so it mostly works in the book’s favor.

I thought Where Is Robbie? Part 2 was a warm, offbeat, and emotionally grounded picture book about anger, accountability, and the long road back after hurting others. It has humor and flash, but underneath the feathers and guitars, it’s really about learning self-control and respecting someone else’s need to feel safe. I’d recommend it for families and classrooms talking about bullying, forgiveness, fear, and second chances, especially with children who are ready for a story that admits trust takes time, hard work, and care.

Pages: 18 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GHZM32BK

Buy Now From Amazon

If Only

If Only, by Manmohan Sadana, is a wide-ranging collection of stories, poems, dramatic scenes, and reflective pieces that move through love, faith, memory, grief, service, and human dignity. The book feels like a gathering place for many Indian voices and landscapes: Punjab’s mustard fields, Delhi homes and streets, Madurai’s temple life, Kolkata’s Durga Puja, Partition memories, Sikh traditions, Buddhist reflection, and everyday people trying to live with kindness. It’s built less around one plot and more around a shared emotional current, where each piece asks the reader to look a little more closely at compassion.

One of the strongest threads in the book is its attention to people who are often made to feel invisible. “Born under the same Silence” opens with Zainab and Meher, two hijra characters who meet in a world that wounds them but also slowly makes room for hope. When Meher tells a tea vendor, “The way is wide enough for all of us,” the line becomes more than a reply. It captures the book’s larger belief that dignity doesn’t need permission. That same spirit carries into stories about disability, speech, blindness, old age, poverty, and loneliness, where the characters aren’t treated as symbols so much as people who want to be seen clearly.

Sadana’s writing is deeply drawn to tenderness in ordinary life. In “Every Day I Meet You for the First Time,” love becomes an act of daily renewal as Aarav keeps meeting Maya after she forgets him each morning. In “Loving Son,” a beagle named Prince becomes the most devoted child in a house marked by absence. In “The Stuttering Heart,” patience becomes romance. These pieces work because they understand love as attention, repetition, and care. One line from the book puts this beautifully: “Hope is not tied to breath.” That idea keeps returning, whether the story is about soldiers, parents, lovers, teachers, servants, or strangers.

The collection also has a strong spiritual pulse. Sadana writes about Bulleh Shah, Sikh symbols, Buddha, Vishnu’s avatars, the months of the year, and the moral imagination behind Indian traditions. These sections don’t just explain belief systems; they place them beside lived experience. The book’s spirituality is practical and human, rooted in service, humility, forgiveness, and respect. Even when the writing becomes poetic or devotional, it keeps circling back to how people treat one another. In that sense, faith here isn’t distant or abstract. It’s found in a shared roof, a returned wallet, a held hand, a patient listener, or a person who refuses to abandon someone in pain.

What makes If Only memorable is its emotional range. It can move from a battlefield trench to a wedding night, from a five-hundred-rupee note’s journey to a Partition survivor’s household, from mythic reflection to a simple conversation between two people learning trust. The book is sincere, expansive, and openly compassionate. It invites readers to slow down and notice the quiet forms of courage that often go unnamed. More than anything, If Only is a book about human connection: how it survives loss, how it grows through patience, and how it becomes a kind of prayer when people choose kindness first.

Pages: 210 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GTJS4LVN

Buy Now From Amazon

Hunting in the Orion Nebula

David Gwinn Author Interview

Jupiter’s Ghost follows a pilot who enters dangerous waters when he joins the crew of a spacefaring whaling ship. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I’ve always love sci-fi and fantasy. Years ago while I was watching the Moby Dick movie I decided to combine the two.  I was fascinated by the obsession of Captain Ahab and how it drove him to destruction.  For the Ishmael character, I picked an alien, a real outsider to humans, to join the crew – this way we get to see it through someone who was brand new to hunting in the Orion Nebula and his reactions.

I also wanted to show a vision of our future where humans still have base emotions, like revenge.

Did the image of Jupiter’s Ghost itself come first, or the legend of the Great Blue?

It was the legend of the Great Blue that came first.  A large Nebula Whale that wrecked whaling spaceships.  The whale is driving the story for Moby Dick and Jupiter’s Ghost.

How did you balance large-scale science fiction spectacle with the older maritime traditions running through the story?

It was tough, because I wanted to work in the traditions to pay homage to the original Moby Dick.  But I had to work hard to blend the two, keeping enough maritime traditions without going overboard (pun intended)…  The more difficult part for me was finding challenges that you couldn’t duplicate in space, for example, in the age of sail – when there’s no wind your just floating in the ocean until the wind picks back up.  But in space your having to think about engines and power system failures instead.

What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?

I’m working on a YA Sci-fi/fantasy series that I wrote for my teenage niece.  The premise is that my niece gets recruited for an international high school and ends up on a Space station training to become a magical warrior.  The first book should be out this year.

Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook

In the Orion Nebula, death is written in the stars.
Jóre, an alien outcast, joins the nebula whaling ship Jupiter’s Ghost—a vessel haunted by loss and hunted by something far worse. Whispers speak of the Great Blue, a monstrous whale that shatters steel and devours entire ships. In a crew bound by desperation and old grudges, trust is scarce and survival is a thin hope.
As Jupiter’s Ghost sails deeper into Orion Nebula, the line between hunter and hunted fades, and Jóre must decide how much of himself he’s willing to sacrifice for glory—and for revenge.
Not all who sail into the nebula will return.
Some dreams are meant to be swallowed whole.
* 2025 Storytrade Award Winner for Best Science Fiction

Ghost Blade

David Crane’s Ghost Blade follows Karen Gale, a former model whose life is violently derailed after an acid attack in Paris, leaving her disfigured, injured, and stranded between grief and rage. When the wealthy and enigmatic Norman Gray offers to restore her face, replace her lost eye, and train her as a Cyber Hunter, Karen enters a dangerous new world of rogue Reflectors, corporate secrets, anti-machine extremism, and moral compromise. What begins as one woman’s reconstruction becomes a wider story about technology, power, vengeance, and the thin line between protection and control.

I was drawn most strongly to Karen’s transformation, not because it is neat or glamorous, but because it feels deliberately forged. The novel gives her pain room to breathe before turning her into Ghost Blade, and that makes her competence feel earned rather than ornamental. Her cybernetic eye, weapons training, and armored missions are exciting, but the more interesting machinery is internal: the slow recalibration of a young woman who has lost beauty, safety, and trust, yet refuses to become only a victim. I appreciated that she doesn’t hate the machines themselves; she understands that the true danger often sits behind the controls, wearing a human face.

The worldbuilding is dense, sometimes almost encyclopedic, but it gives Newland City a hard, metallic texture. The class-divided sectors, corporate governance, Social Sanitation, Reflector technology, and the Outer Sector all create a future that feels polished on the surface and septic underneath. I found the action sequences most effective when they were tied to ethical unease, especially when Karen and Alex confront not just malfunctioning machines but the human systems that create disposable people and convenient monsters. The prose can be blunt, but that bluntness often suits Karen’s voice; she narrates like someone who has stopped trusting decorative lies.

This book will appeal most to readers who enjoy cyberpunk science fiction, dystopian action, techno-thriller adventure, and stories about augmented heroes fighting corporate corruption. Fans of William Gibson’s cyberpunk atmosphere or the action-driven moral machinery of Altered Carbon may find something familiar here, though Ghost Blade is more direct, combative, and revenge-tempered in its storytelling. It’s best for readers who want futuristic weaponry, rogue AI-adjacent machines, social collapse, and a heroine rebuilt by trauma without being softened by it. Ghost Blade is a riveting revenge-and-redemption story that asks whether humanity can control its machines when it has barely learned to control itself.

Pages: 216 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GXT4L56C

Buy Now From Amazon