Honesty and Compassion

Kay Blake Author Interview

In The First Call Was Mine, you share the abuse of your childhood, the hardships of your adolescence, including suicidal despair, and the long road to healing. Why was this an important book for you to write?

For a long time, my story lived quietly inside of me. I carried the memories, the fear, and the resilience without ever fully putting words to them. Writing The First Call Was Mine became a way of reclaiming that story, not just as something that happened to me, but as something that shaped who I became.

    Growing up in instability and abuse can make you feel invisible, as if your experiences don’t matter or your voice isn’t worth hearing. Writing this book was my way of pushing back against that silence. It was important for me to tell the truth about what it looks like to survive a chaotic childhood and still build a life defined by purpose.

    I also wrote this book for others who have lived through similar experiences. Trauma can convince people that they are alone or broken beyond repair. If someone reads my story and realizes that survival, healing, and even joy are still possible, then sharing my story was worth it.

    How did you approach writing about childhood experiences that were both formative and painful?

    I approached it with a balance of honesty and compassion for my younger self. When you revisit painful memories, it’s easy to relive them through the lens of pain or anger. Instead, I tried to write those moments with the understanding I have now as an adult.

      That meant allowing the experiences to be truthful without letting them become the entire definition of the story. The book isn’t just about trauma; it’s about resilience, growth, and the complicated ways we survive difficult circumstances.

      At times, writing those chapters was emotionally heavy, but it was also surprisingly healing. Putting the experiences into words allowed me to process them differently and see the strength that existed in moments where I once only saw survival.

      You draw a powerful connection between childhood survival and your work in EMS—when did you first recognize that link?

      For a long time, I didn’t consciously recognize the connection. I just knew I was drawn to emergency services, the chaos of it all, and helping people in their most vulnerable moments. It felt natural to step into chaos and try to make things better.

        Over time, I began to realize that my childhood had quietly prepared me for that kind of work. Growing up in an unpredictable environment teaches you how to read situations quickly, stay calm under pressure, and protect others even when you’re still trying to protect yourself.

        EMS gave me a way to transform those survival instincts into something meaningful. Instead of chaos defining me, I was able to use the skills I learned from surviving it to help people in their most critical moments. In many ways, the career that grew from that path became part of my healing.

        What is one thing you hope readers take away from your experiences?

        I hope readers understand that the circumstances we come from do not have to determine the limits of our lives. They don’t have to define us.

          Many people grow up believing that their past defines them, that trauma, hardship, or instability will always control their future. My story is proof that those experiences can become something different. They can shape strength, compassion, and purpose.

          Healing doesn’t happen overnight, and it doesn’t erase what happened. But it does allow you to build a life that isn’t ruled by those experiences. If readers walk away believing that change, growth, and healing are possible, even after the hardest beginnings, then the book has done what I hoped it would.

          Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon

          At eight years old, Kayla entered the foster care system. What followed was a childhood marked by instability, survival, and learning how to endure when the world offers no safety net. Moving through foster homes, homelessness, and constant uncertainty, she learned early how to protect herself and the people she loved long before anyone taught her how to be a child.

          The First Call Was Mine is a raw and unflinching memoir about growing up in chaos and choosing a different future. With honesty and dark humor, Kayla traces her path from a traumatic upbringing to a career in emergency services, where she found purpose in running toward the very crises she once lived inside.

          Becoming a firefighter and paramedic did not erase the past but it gave her the tools to face it. Through demanding calls, hard-earned resilience, and moments of unexpected grace, she begins to understand how survival can transform into strength. The book explores themes of foster care, trauma, identity, and healing, while examining how service, discipline, and community can help rebuild a life once shaped by loss.

          This memoir does not offer easy answers or tidy resolutions. Instead, it tells the truth about what it means to carry trauma forward and still choose to show up, again and again. It is a story for anyone who has lived through adversity, questioned where they belong, or wondered whether it’s possible to break cycles that feel inescapable.

          The First Call Was Mine is a testament to resilience, chosen family, and the quiet courage it takes to keep going, even when the past is loud.

          Everybody Knows Everybody

          Author Interview
          Victor Coltey Author Interview

          I Was Just Sitting There Eating A Salad… is a collection of humor-laden short stories presented to readers through a cast of dynamic characters deep in the heart of small-town America. What draws you to the short story genre?

          Short stories are about a way of expressing yourself without losing your audience. Sometimes, while reading a novel, I get bored with all of the extras, but with a short story, there are no extras. There is just the information needed to enjoy the story with no additional fillers. Of course, at times it does leave you wanting more.

          The stories gradually build a kind of local mythology—did you map that out, or did it emerge organically?

          Maybe a little of both. Some stories I wanted to connect in some way, others just fell into that groove. It is a small town, so everybody knows everybody, like the old song says.

          How do you know when to stop a running joke in a narrative versus letting it run longer for effect?

          I am a smart ass. I don’t know.

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

          I have a sort of companion to this one called A Doggone Halloween. Not a collection of short stories, a novella, maybe. It connects to I Was Just Sitting There Eating A Salad through Vladamir, the sasquatch.

          I also have Butterflies, which looks at one possibility of DNA modification. Short Stories, a book where each story speaks of death: some stories kind of poignant, others humerous. Then The Valley of Eden, a post apocalyptic story of survival.

          Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

          “I Was Just Sitting There Eating A Salad…” is a collection of short stories that explore the possibilities that may exist in any Small Town America. Find out if aliens and ghosts truly exist. Have fun with some quirky residents as they enjoy their mis-adventures. Is it possible to keep secrets from the government? These and more questions await as you read and chuckle along with Edward Loomis, Private Detective, Ida Law, Police Chief (Really that’s her name), Jerald Cross, teen genius, and others as they tell their stories.



          Harmony and Balance

          Leigh Podgorski Author Interview

          Feathers of Wisdom is a collection of forty-four legends, myths, and historical portraits of Indigenous women from various nations and traditions. Why was this an important book for you to write?

          I have had the privilege of interviewing two remarkable women, Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross, and Cahuilla elder and healer, Dr. Katherine Siva Sauble, for plays I was writing for the festival Celebrate Women. Working with Indigenous artist and illustrator Kait Mathhews, we created Flowerwise: Oracle Deck and Guidebook. As we tossed about ideas for our next effort, Kait suggested the tales and legends of Indigenous women. I knew immediately this was the work we should do. We live in very frightening and threatening times. To move forward, we need to look back. The voices of women have been progressively silenced, including Indigenous women. Within the stories these women tell is the necessity of living in harmony and balance with everything on our Earth. This is a philosophy we must return to if we as a species, if our small blue beautiful world is to survive.

          How did you decide which stories and figures to include among such a vast range of possibilities?

          We started first with the choosing of the tribes and the women who represented those tribes. There are several Native cultures, Cherokee, Sioux, Navajo, for example, that are well known and abundant research is available. There were several others that required deeper digging. Once the tribe was found, the research for the stories began. A few of our original choices had to be set aside, either for lack of historical references or for lack of the types of stories we wanted to tell. One very disturbing incident was the discovery that one of the stories we very much liked was a complete fabrication. The whole thing had to be tossed.

          We wanted to tell the stories of the women. Who were they? What were the tasks? What did they believe? Who and how did they love? What did they eat? I’m one of those people who can get lost in research. I loved casting my wide net to find the perfect story.

          How do you see storytelling functioning as a form of cultural survival?

          All the stories presented in Feathers of Wisdom have been passed down through the generations in the oral tradition. Storytelling achieves many ends: warnings, food preparation, and the retelling of the Creation Story. Stories are history. They tell who we are, where we come from. They reunite, reacquaint the present with the past, the rituals practiced long ago with the ceremonies practiced today. Stories hold the original culture deep within their mysteries, legends, and myths, whispering on the wind who, what, where, and why.

          If readers take away one lasting idea from Feathers of Wisdom, what would you want it to be?

          Live a life in harmony and balance. Everything upon the earth is sacred. We Are All One.


          Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon

          A sacred celebration of story, spirit, and artistry-honoring the enduring wisdom of Indigenous women.
          Crafted with museum-quality design and artistry, Feathers of Wisdom is a collector’s volume that transforms the ancient legends of Indigenous women into a visual and literary masterpiece.

          Across more than forty legends from tribes throughout the Americas, this stunning hardcover volume brings to life the voices of goddesses, warriors, healers, and mothers-figures whose wisdom shaped their cultures and whose stories continue to echo through generations. Author Leigh Podgorski’s lyrical prose preserves these narratives with deep reverence, while artist Kait Matthews, a proud Ojibwe/Potawatomi woman, illuminates each tale with lush, museum-quality illustrations that honor the spiritual power and beauty of Indigenous storytelling.

          Printed on premium stock in full color, Feathers of Wisdom is designed as both a work of cultural preservation and a collector’s art book. Each page is an offering-pairing timeless myth and contemporary artistry to create a reading experience that feels sacred, immersive, and alive.

          This extraordinary edition invites readers to reflect on the enduring strength of the divine feminine and to reconnect with the earth, the ancestors, and the stories that remind us: We are all one.

          Highlights include:
          Forty richly illustrated stories from Indigenous nations across North and South America

          Evocative original artwork by Kait Matthews, blending traditional motifs with modern fine art technique

          Elegant design, heavy matte paper, and full-color printing that make this volume a treasure for art collectors and cultural enthusiasts alike

          A celebration of Indigenous women’s wisdom, language, and spirit across centuries
          Feathers of Wisdom is not just a book-it is an heirloom, a conversation between past and present, and a tribute to the women who kept the sacred stories alive.

          Journey of Self-Discovery

          Jeff Hendricks Author Interview

          Adventure: Antarctica! follows a high school senior who sets out on an unforgettable trip to Antarctica that takes him far from the miserable events he has recently endured. What was the inspiration behind this story?

          I wrote Adventure: Antarctica! to remind readers–especially young adults–that science is an adventure, not just a subject. Antarctica, Earth’s last true wilderness felt like the perfect setting to explore that truth. At its heart, this story is about finding purpose when life takes an unexpected turn. For Danny Gage, the Antarctic internship begins as a reluctant consolation prize, but becomes a journey of self-discovery, friendship, and awe. I wanted to capture how exploration–of the world and of ourselves–often begins where comfort ends.

          What kind of research went into putting this book together?

          Interviews, geographical map examinations, reading of science blogs, and watching many videos that scientists and support personnel have posted of their work and downtime over the years.

          Your prose is clear and accessible, especially for younger readers. How do you approach writing for a teen audience?

          I taught middle school for sixteen years, so my narrator’s voice is just kind of naturally tailored to that audience.

          Can we look forward to seeing more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?

          Yes. I’m currently working on a sci-fi/fantasy novel. I also have a time travel screenplay, a musical, and an unfinished comic book series that I’d like to revisit as I have time.

          Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

          What if the worst week of your life became the beginning of the greatest adventure imaginable?

          When high school senior Danny Gage’s world unravels, his soccer dreams collapse, his girlfriend breaks his heart, and his family fractures, he never expects an impossible opportunity to change everything. Instead of a sun-soaked volcano internship in Hawaii, Danny is offered something far more daunting: a last-minute placement on a scientific expedition to Antarctica, the coldest, most unforgiving place on Earth.

          Thrown into a world of crevasses, sub-zero survival, active volcanoes, meteorite hunts, and cutting-edge polar research, Danny must confront not only the frozen wilderness but his own doubts, fears, and sense of identity. As danger mounts and the stakes grow higher, one misstep could cost lives, and force Danny to discover what he’s truly capable of when everything is on the line.

          Adventure: Antarctica! is a fast-paced coming-of-age adventure that blends real Antarctic science with gripping survival storytelling. Perfect for readers who love exploration, extreme environments, and stories of courage forged under pressure, this novel captures the awe, danger, and wonder of Earth’s last great frontier.
          Sometimes, the coldest places reveal the strongest hearts.

          Metaphysical Talents

          Kurt D. Springs Author Interview

          Legacy of Valor follows Major Liam O’Connor as he leads a fractured alliance into a brutal campaign on a hostile moon—while navigating family, loyalty, and a mysterious Dreamscape power. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

          Earth’s recent history contains many memorable battles and warriors to draw inspiration from. The Civil War’s Gettysburg and the Battle of the Ia Drang Valley in Vietnam inspire much of Legacy of Valor. At the Battle of Gettysburg, during the defense of Little Round Top, Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain and his regiment were on the extreme left of the Union line with orders to hold at all costs. He used the terrain to his advantage, ultimately driving the Confederates back. As Chamberlain did to win the battle (and possibly the war), Major Liam O’Connor does in Legacy of Valor, using the ground topography to win the Battle of Treespo; outnumbered, he held his position until reinforcements arrived.

          Another battle on Earth that took place 100 years later was in the Ia Drang Valley of Vietnam. Lt. Colonel Harold (Hal) Moore faced a numerically superior North Vietnamese force. He coordinated his troops to use the artillery on the ground along with air power to hold their position. Using these same battle tactics, Major O’Connor channeled the spirits of Chamberlain and Moore by remaining outwardly calm in the face of overwhelming odds and thinking quickly. He employed the terrain, artillery, and air power, along with orbital forces, to keep his warriors alive.

          In this second novel of the series, Legacy of Valor, the triplets are still children who grew up hearing stories of their father’s exploits. Liam now leads Etursci’s Special Operations Company and is attached to the New Terran Marine Corps’ Third Division to retake the moon called Treespo, orbiting the planet Beta Proximus IV, from Marshal Kergan’s Rebel forces. “No plan survives its first encounter with the enemy,” is an old Marine saying. Minutes after landing on the hostile surface of Treespo, treachery decapitates the division, leaving Liam the senior combat officer. Deception has stripped the Third Division of its support. As forces scramble to assist both sides, Liam must keep the warriors under his command alive.

          For personal inspiration, there are science fiction books that use psionics like ESP (Extra Sensory Perception), though I put my unique twist on it. Few Military Science Fiction books explore a person’s consciousness being used outside the body, which is called “Dreamwalking.” While Dreamwalking, a person often has to fight enemy Dreamwalkers. I also drew inspiration from video games such as Halo, in particular with weapons and tactics in space combat.

          The Dreamscape adds a unique layer to the story. What narrative challenges came with blending physical and metaphysical combat?

          I explore the military use of Extra Sensory Perception (ESP) powers. For such metaphysical talents to be convincing, I must clearly explain the ESP abilities and their associated costs. To do this, I show that the protagonist does not have an overwhelming advantage, or the reader won’t believe they could lose in a battle.

          Belief is critical in the Dreamscape. If a person doesn’t believe he or she can do something in the Dreamscape, such as fly or walk through something, they will not be able to do it. Conversely, when someone is attacked in the Dreamscape, weapons directed at them don’t really exist. Therefore, the victim can only be harmed if they believe the weapon can harm them. This makes the ability to disbelieve an important defense against someone’s attack. However, believing and disbelieving require years of training to discipline one’s mind. As Jarek (an expert at Dreamwalking in Dreamscape Warriors Series) said, “the slightest doubt could kill you.”

          While moving around, one’s own subconscious uses very little energy, communicating over a great distance or moving outside the body uses energy more rapidly. When a person is exhausted, the Dreamscape seems filled with fog to the point that they might not be able to find their way back to their body.

          Related to Dreamwalking is the ability to “Step Out of Time.” This technique enables a warrior to slow the time around him without it affecting him. In battle, they can move very rapidly, giving them a distinct advantage over their enemy for a limited time. However, like Dreamwalking, it uses energy, and a person can be dragged back into regular time once they become tired.

          Are there more stories planned in this Dreamscape Universe?

          In my books, I explore family dynamics, especially during times of crisis and separation. The triplets and their brother play a major role in the third novel, Promise of Mercy. Aisling, Bayvin, and especially Deirdre, needed to be their father’s daughters. The girls returned home after advanced training in the Finnian Shock Forces. They’ve inherited their father’s marksmanship, his leadership skills, and his ESP powers. However, they aren’t clones of each other. Deirdre is their best shot, and leadership comes naturally to her. Aisling is an explosives expert and pilot. Bayvin specializes in electronic warfare and excels in military intelligence. Their brother is still in his teens but is already a skilled pilot. We also meet Marissa, a former Rebel war criminal who must confront her past once her daughter, Gayla, is born. Marissa goes against Kergan to befriend Liam and return him to his family.

          In the fourth book, Addiction of Power, Liam is older. His daughters are now middle-aged. His son, Aidan, is a veteran fighter pilot. The daughter that Liam and his wife Celinia conceived in Promise of Mercy, Tetia, is in her teens and planning to follow her mother’s path as a priestess and healer. The theme of family carries over. Aidan agrees to deliver information to Finnian Intelligence while on a trip with his Great Aunt Máire and sister Tetia when Kergan attacks their ship. After escaping, Marissa and her daughter Gayla, whom the audience meets in Promise of Mercy befriend Aidan and his family. This starts a journey to end a 700-year interstellar civil war. Factions on both sides of the conflict must wrestle with the implications of peace: an end to the bloodshed versus losing power. It also plants the seeds for threats from beyond the Milky Way.

          While I was writing the Dreamscape Warriors Series, I realized my central characters had interesting personal life adventures—and I wanted to write about them. These can be major emergencies that only last a matter of minutes, or everyday surprises that take us down unexpected roads. They make up the backstories of each person’s life. This realization started me writing the Sci-Fi Short Book Series based on the characters in the Dreamscape Warriors Novels.

          The first short book in the series, Way of Forgiveness, highlights the main character, Liam O’Connor, between the first and second volumes. Liam is not sitting idle between the novels. Things happen in his life that are not covered in the full-length novel, but make a good story in this short book. Here, I focus on Liam’s journey to understand the nature of forgiveness as he struggles through and learns from his archenemy, Licinious.

          In the next short book, Evolution of Leadership, Deirdre (one of Liam’s triplet daughters) goes from being a scamp who always leads her siblings to mischief into a military leader. As she goes through her advanced trooper training, Deirdre learns to make responsible decisions when others’ lives are on the line.

          Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Kurt’s Frontier | Facebook | Price of Vengeance | LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | Amazon

          The ground shook! Liam spun to see a jet of flame towering into the air. “Dear Creator,” Liam whispered. Then he shouted. “That’s the command bunker!”

          Major Liam O’Connor is a hero in his own right. He is descended from a family of heroes. Now he will be tested. Now he will become legend. The Rebel faction lead by Marshal Kergan has seized Treespo, the fifth moon around the fourth planet of Beta Proximus. Treespo is a major source for valuable rare metal elements. With all other Alliance forces out of position, Liam’s Special Operations Company has been attached to the New Terran Marine Corps Third Division. Their job is to provide the spearhead to retake Treespo.

          There is an old Marine saying: “No plan ever survives its first encounter with the enemy.” Treachery kills all senior officers in Third Division, leaving Liam in command. With humans of Terran, Neo-Etruscan, and Finnian descent looking to him to keep them alive, Liam must reach deep inside himself. Failure leaves the bulk of the galaxy’s rare metal elements in Kergan’s hands. If Liam succeeds, he will find himself an heir to his family’s legacy of cunning, their legacy of courage, their Legacy of Valor.

          Youth Truth: Engaging In Conversations That Can Change Lives

          Youth Truth is a compassionate and story-driven work of nonfiction in which author Carlamay Sheremata, drawing on her years as a school resource officer, reflects on the lives of young people standing at the edge of crisis and the adults who either reach them or fail to. The book moves through a series of case-based chapters on suicide, addiction, sexual coercion, identity, abuse, eating disorders, self-harm, and bullying, always circling back to one central claim: a life can change when a young person feels truly heard.

          What stayed with me most was the book’s insistence that intervention rarely begins with brilliance. More often, it begins with a question, a hunch, a small act of care, like noticing a boy’s hollow face and handing him a cafeteria card, or recognizing that a teen who has nowhere left to go still knows which office feels safe enough to enter.

          I enjoyed the book’s emotional candor. Sheremata doesn’t write from a great height, and that matters. She writes close to the ground, inside school hallways, cramped kitchens, ambulances, offices with doors half shut, the ordinary places where unbearable things are quietly carried. Jon’s imagined waffle breakfast, so painfully vivid because he’s starving, is the kind of detail that lands with a thud. So is Jane clutching the last cigarette before returning to rehab, or Cameron, tangled in gang expectations, coming alive at the possibility of working with food. These moments give the book its pulse. I felt, again and again, that Sheremata understands something essential about young people in distress: they are often dismissed as dramatic when they are being most truthful. The book is strongest when it trusts those intimate particulars and lets them do their work.

          The book’s deepest strength is its moral clarity. Sheremata is not coy about what she believes. She believes adults should show up, listen better, speak more honestly, and stop mistaking control for care. I respected that conviction. At the same time, I did fee that the writing can be a bit repetitive, and the reflective passages sometimes spell out lessons that the stories have already made beautifully obvious. But even there, I understood the impulse. This is not a detached literary exercise. It’s a book written by someone who has seen too much suffering to hide behind polish. The prose is straightforward, yet it carries real feeling, and the ideas feel urgent because they’ve been earned in lived encounters.

          Youth Truth is moving, sincere, and unsettling in the best way, because it asks whether the young people around us are less unreachable than we claim and more neglected than we admit. I finished it thinking not only about the youth in these pages, but about the adults around them, and how often salvation arrives in the form of patient attention. I’d recommend this book especially to parents, teachers, counselors, coaches, and anyone who works closely with adolescents, though I think it could also reach careful teen readers who want to feel less alone. It’s heartfelt, useful, and humane, and that combination makes this book highly recommended.

          Pages: 121 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DJ7M94GW

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          The Bible of Blackwater County

          What first struck me is how confidently The Bible of Blackwater County builds its world. From the opening pages, author Jenny Cafaro gives Blackwater County the weight of a lived-in place, not just a backdrop, with Bessie’s voice carrying gossip, pain, memory, and warning all at once. The setup is instantly compelling: an eighteen-year-old Bessie is being drawn into marriage with sixty-two-year-old Grady Richardson, and the novel makes that fact feel both personal and social, like one woman’s crisis and a whole community’s moral failure rolled into one. The Depression-era Appalachian setting feels gritty without turning into museum glass, which helps the book feel alive instead of dutiful.

          The strongest thing here is the narration. Bessie doesn’t sound polished, and that’s exactly why she works. Her voice has texture, humor, anger, and a kind of hard-earned clarity that keeps the book from slipping into generic historical fiction. Even when the prose is dealing with cruelty, judgment, and the way a town can feed on scandal, it keeps its grip on the intimate human cost. There’s a line early on about truth being messy and bloody and not always making sense, and that idea seems to shape the whole novel. Cafaro is more interested in emotional truth than tidy storytelling, and the book is better for it.

          The novel doesn’t beg the reader to admire its seriousness. It trusts the material. The dedication to Grandmaw Bessie and the framing as a story drawn from family history and a newspaper article could have pushed the book toward reverence, but instead, it feels urgent and personal. The result is a story that is raw without being shapeless. At the same time, that rawness may be a challenge for some readers. The trigger warning is there for a reason, and the book seems willing to sit in ugliness. Still, that choice feels honest to the world it’s portraying.

          The Bible of Blackwater County is a memorable, voice-driven novel that succeeds because it feels told rather than manufactured. Its biggest strength is the sense that someone is finally saying the thing that was buried for too long. That gives the book a pulse that will stick with readers. It’s not always easy, and I would not call it subtle in the delicate literary sense, but it’s vivid, emotionally committed, and grounded in a strong sense of place. For readers who want historical fiction with bite, personality, and a narrator who feels like a real person, this book has a lot going for it.

          Pages: 399 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0G5Z9KQ42

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          Wings Against The Wind

          JoDee Neathery’s Wings Against the Wind begins as a Paris-set tale of illicit love and suspicious death: Gretchen Cassidy, a young American in France, loses her older married lover, Andrew Dupont, just as their affair seems poised to alter both their lives; from there the novel veers outward into grief, exile, reinvention, motherhood, custody battles, illness, and second chances, carrying Gretchen from the charged glamour of rare books and police interviews into a much broader saga about survival and chosen family.

          I was pulled in less by the initial mystery than by the book’s willingness to keep changing altitude. What starts with a dead man at the foot of a staircase and a wife who seems almost too composed gradually opens into something warmer and more sprawling: a story about being battered by circumstance without surrendering one’s tenderness. Gretchen, especially, is written as someone both naïve and stubborn in a way that feels emotionally legible; she’s not polished into a saint, which helped me stay with her. I also liked the novel’s unabashed affection for books, places, songs, and gestures of care. Neathery does not write in a minimalist register; she likes ornament, atmosphere, and emotional declaration, and when that sensibility works, it gives the novel a kind of full-bodied earnestness that feels almost old-fashioned in the best sense.

          This story takes risks by piling on turns that another novelist might shave away: Heidelberg, homelessness, triplets, adoption, a custody fight, a new romance, a child’s medical crisis, even an act of startling generosity late in the book. Sometimes the novel can be melodramatic, but I was still genuinely moved. The book has a real pulse for consolation, and it kept persuading me with its sincerity. By the end, I was reading to see whether these bruised people might finally be granted a harbor. On that score, the novel absolutely knows what it is doing.

          I’d recommend Wings Against the Wind to readers of women’s fiction, family drama, romantic suspense, contemporary romance, and emotionally driven literary fiction who like sweeping, eventful novels with ache, uplift, and a strong belief in redemption. Readers who enjoy authors like Nicholas Sparks will recognize the blend of heartache, fate, and healing here, though Neathery’s book is baggier and more baroque in its plotting. It’s a story that keeps reaching for grace even when life has already slammed the door.

          Pages: 326 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GR89T9PL

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