Murder on the Set: An Amanda Pennyworth Mystery

James Gilbert’s Murder on the Set drops Amanda Pennyworth, American consul, amateur sleuth, and increasingly conflicted woman, into a Puerto Vallarta movie production that begins as a logistical nuisance and turns into a double-murder investigation. A Hollywood crew arrives to film a glossy romance on location, Amanda is pulled in to smooth relations between studio egos and local authorities, and the novel steadily tightens from social comedy into a mystery about performance, authorship, and the things people will do to protect an invented version of themselves. The setup is clever on its face, but what gave it lift for me was the way the book makes the film set feel both seductive and faintly toxic, all bright surfaces and hairline cracks.

What I liked most was the book’s sense of place. Puerto Vallarta is not a pasted-on backdrop here; it has weather, texture, sidewalks, petty irritations, good coffee, bureaucracy, sea air, gossip, and the faint shimmer of a life Amanda may not want to leave. That local fullness gives the novel ballast. I also liked Amanda herself. She is observant without turning brittle, competent without becoming superhuman, and her interior conflict about duty, desire, and departure gives the mystery a second pulse. The book is at its best when it lets the investigation move through social nuance, class signals, artistic vanity, diplomatic tact, and expat performance. There is a pleasingly old-fashioned intelligence to that.

The novel unfolds with a deliberate, almost courtly pace that lets the tension gather naturally, and I found that measured rhythm one of its strengths. Rather than chasing constant shocks, it rewards patience with richer atmosphere, sharper character work, and a deeper satisfaction as the story gradually comes into focus. Gilbert writes in a way that is more measured than trendy, and the book’s pleasures come from the sharpened dialogue, the sly observations, the metafictional wrinkle in the case itself, and the growing realization that this is a murder story about fabrication in more than one sense. By the end, I felt the book had earned its composure.

I’d hand this to readers of traditional mystery, cozy-adjacent mystery, international mystery, and murder mystery with literary elements, especially anyone who enjoys sleuthing mixed with atmosphere and character rather than nonstop mayhem. It reminded me a little of Donna Leon, if she wandered onto a film set in coastal Mexico, and readers who like Louise Penny’s interest in psychology over pyrotechnics may also find something to admire. This is a polished, sea-breezed mystery that knows glamour is just another kind of disguise.

Pages: 272 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0G87FDWB6

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A Potential Outbreak of World War

J.D. Duncan Author Interview

Article Five follows a prime minister who tries to maintain political and moral stability as coordinated attacks and sabotage push NATO toward collective defense. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

In truth the inspiration came from news events back in 2023 and 2024, I would see news feeds that hypothesised a potential outbreak of world war three, and on seeing government responses I wondered how that would pan out if the unthinkable actually happened. So, the book evolved from a short story about a British tank crew in Estonia, growing to over ten thousand words which is quite unwieldy for a short story, and I began to wonder what was happening elsewhere, such as the corridors of power in Whitehall and the story grew into a multi-person perspective following the different views of war, from the civilian to the combat troops on the front line. I was keen to include a prime minister who grows throughout the story, in the beginning he is preoccupied about his polling numbers and public image, but soon becomes a war time leader who has to make life and death decisions.

What kind of research went into putting this book together?

That was the exciting part! Writing can sometimes feel like a challenge, and it takes dedication—and maybe a little nudge to remind yourself about commitment. But I never lost my enthusiasm for the research. Every scene had me online, immersed in military books, or revisiting works by Tom Clancy and Harold Coyle, exploring the technology they mention. Of course, since the mid-1980s, times and technology have evolved, so I dedicated myself to in-depth research into military technology, ranks, unit structures, and the capabilities of equipment such as missiles and helicopters. My goal was to get everything just right—I didn’t want to invent details I couldn’t back up. If the real technology couldn’t handle it, neither could my story. I was committed to realism, and through thorough research, I aimed to bring that to life. When it came to political details, I’ve always enjoyed keeping up with the news and staying interested in our national politics. Much of those elements in the novel are based on what I’ve observed our politicians say and do, with a bit of artistic license to imagine those secret conversations behind closed doors.

What draws you toward the political thriller genre? 

Initially, I wasn’t intending to write a political thriller, I was trying to write an out and out military thriller. However, as the novel grew, I needed to explore the political aspects that would be unravelling in the background, and so I began to explore that and bring in a prime minister who didn’t expect to be leading a nation in war. That said, I really enjoyed writing about the challenges a prime minister might face during a war, the need to keep the king informed, the combative nature of parliament, and dealing with endless intelligence briefings and misinformation on social media. For me that brings a military story to life, those political machinations behind the scenes that are often hidden until a tell all documentary is released many years later.

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

​I’ve definitely got the writing bug. That said, juggling family and a full-time job means writing is not always my priority, so finding the time becomes the issue. Article Five took me two years to write, but I was very much learning during the process. Since its release in September 2025, I have continued writing and learnt how to better manage planning a novel. My next book is due out after easter, but that one returns to my roots and is a historical military thriller. Set in 1941, the story predominantly follows one character, the skipper of a British submarine operating in the meditation as he and his crew try to halt supply conveys reaching from Italy to feed Rommel’s Afrika Corps panzers in North Africa. The plan is this will form the first in a sequence of three books; all set in in the Mediterranean theatre, early 1941 and from a British perspective. 1941 was known as the long year in Britian as they were very much alone, with Axis forces occupying most of western Europe, and at this point neither Russia or the United States were officially in the war, and so the British felt very much alone and isolated. The next book in the trilogy, Hellfire Pass, will examine the experiences of a tank commander in the 8th Army in the North African desert facing a resurgent Rommel, and the third, Tail End Charlie, will examine the experience of a rear gunner in a Wellington bomber in the skies over North Africa. All that will certainly keep me busy over the next year.

Author Links: GoodReads | Website

It was supposed to be a fool proof plan… Until the world caught fire.

When a newly elected U.S. President abandons NATO, Russia seizes the opportunity to strike, launching a full-scale invasion of Estonia. As Europe stands alone, British forces scramble to hold the line against an unstoppable enemy.

In London, MI6 operative John Rafferty hunts a Russian defector—until a sleeper agent turns the streets into a war zone. At sea, Commander Anderson of HMS Daring fights to keep critical supply routes open as Russian warships close in. On the frontlines, Sergeant Johnson and his tank crew face overwhelming odds in a desperate battle for survival. And in the shadows, a traitor at the highest level is pulling the strings, tipping the balance of war.

From the corridors of power to the heart of the battlefield, Article Five is a pulse-pounding geopolitical thriller where loyalty is fragile, alliances are crumbling, and the world is one misstep away from global catastrophe.

Will NATO’s most sacred principle—Article Five—hold? Or has the first domino of World War Three just fallen?

Fans of Tom Clancy, Mark Greaney, and Frederick Forsyth won’t be able to put down this gripping, high-stakes military thriller.

Encounter – A Journey into Chaos, Culture and Compassion

Encounter is a memoir about an Australian Christian couple who go to Samoa in 1990 to teach at Leulumoega Fou College, then find themselves plunged into culture shock, institutional confusion, cyclone damage, scarcity, village life, classroom struggle, and morally wrenching encounters with the people around them. But that description is almost too tidy for the book Ian Reilly actually writes. What unfolds is less a neat missionary narrative than a long, bruising education in how little he knows, how quickly comfort evaporates, and how culture becomes legible only after it has first humiliated you. The early passport fiasco, the absurd misery of the Seaside Inn, the cyclone and its aftermath, the daily negotiations over water, food, heat, discipline, hospitality, and shame all accumulate into something larger than travel writing. It becomes a record of bewilderment, slowly turning into attention, and attention slowly turning into love.

Reilly has a real eye, and not just for beauty. He sees the gleam of lagoon water and mountain light, but also mildew, diesel fumes, mirror shards, cockroaches, centipedes, shabby classrooms, and the comic indignities of bodies trying and failing to cope with heat and fear. That balance matters. The prose is vivid without becoming ornamental, and funny in exactly the right places. I laughed at the Germans trying to open a coconut in the middle of the night, and I winced at the fan-forced oven of the Seaside Inn, but the humor never breaks the sincerity of the book. If anything, it deepens it. Reilly’s best passages have a kind of patient moral clarity. He doesn’t rush to make himself look wise, and that gives the narrative its credibility. He lets his confusion stay on the page. He lets other people remain difficult to interpret. I found that restraint appealing, because it makes the book feel lived rather than processed.

I was even more taken by the book’s ideas, precisely because they’re unsettled ideas rather than packaged lessons. Reilly keeps returning to the gap between judging and understanding, between romanticizing a culture and actually living inside its demands. The book is sharp about the limits of outsider perception, but it’s not coy about hard moral questions either. The sections on classroom discipline, communal obligation, and especially Pelopia’s story are painful because Reilly refuses easy moral vanity. He is trying to think seriously, as a Christian and as a guest, about what compassion means when you don’t control the social world you’re in, and when intervention itself can be clumsy, partial, or damaging. I appreciated that the book doesn’t confuse humility with moral passivity. Its compassion has weight to it. By the time Reilly writes about suffering, shared scarcity, and the way disaster forces him into a more intimate understanding of dependence, community, and providence, the ideas feel earned rather than declared. I didn’t agree with every theological or cultural framing, but I trusted the earnestness of the inquiry, and that trust carried me a long way.

I found Encounter moving, unsettling, and unusually mature in its self-scrutiny. It’s a book that understands that beauty and damage often occupy the same frame, and that cross-cultural love is rarely graceful at first. What stayed with me wasn’t a single grand insight so much as the cumulative moral weather of the book: the embarrassment, the tenderness, the stamina, the slow relinquishing of certainty. I’d recommend it especially to readers interested in memoir, faith, teaching, development work, and the messy reality of cultural encounter, but also to anyone who values nonfiction that is thoughtful enough to let complexity remain complex. It’s a thoughtful book, and I closed it feeling that Reilly had not only remembered Samoa vividly, but had remembered his own unfinishedness with unusual honesty.

Pages: 380 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GRPXC3SD

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Things Are Going to Happen

Thomas Roberts Author Interview

Husband Wants Hotwife follows a happily married woman who tests the strength of her marriage when she explores the eroticism of the “hotwife” world. Where did the idea for this book come from? 

The idea came from the first paragraphs. As soon as those words “I told him I couldn’t do it” stuck in my head, the remainder of the book fell into place.

Emma’s voice is very conversational, and the pacing moves quickly from one major scene to the next. How did you shape her narrative voice and rhythm to keep readers engaged?

How to explain this? When I’m writing, it’s as though the characters have taken over and I’m merely recording their stories. In Emma’s case, it’s clear from the first page that her hormones have taken over. She’s eager and open to sex, and as a good-looking woman with a kinky husband, things are going to happen.

Consent and communication are central to the story, especially in high-intensity situations — what real-world influences shaped how you portrayed the dynamics in Chris and Emma’s relationship?

Communication is key to any successful marriage, but it’s absolutely essential in a hotwife union where the possibilities of jealousy and misunderstandings are so close to the surface.

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

I just released Creating a Cuckold, and I’m working on a new novella that will take a unique track. Below is the blurb for Creating a Cuckold: Even though it scared him, Brad wanted his beautiful wife, Isabella, to cheat on him. He planned always to leave her unfulfilled, then to introduce her to his friend Mike as a test. He knew Mike had a way with women, but Brad wasn’t ready for the hold Mike soon had on Isabella. It wasn’t long before he discovered that his wife was being shared at work, and that she was a size queen.

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Alice didn’t realize her best friend was an active hotwife until her own husband suddenly showed an interest in sharing her with other people. Emma decides to introduce Alice to the lifestyle, including membership in a very high-end sex club!
~~~~~ PG Excerpt ~~~~~

We could hear them going at it upstairs as I made fresh coffee for us in the kitchen. My body was humming like a cord stretched tight for too long. I’d put on a long housedress, but my husband Chris was sitting naked at the table.

“We need to talk,” he said.

I turned to look at him, thinking, “Oh, no.”

“How do you feel about all the things we’ve done today?” He started.

My thoughts went from “Oh, no” to “No way!” I saw nothing good coming from this conversation.

“I don’t know,” I said while attempting to look busy. “How do you feel about it?”

What a chickenshit I was. I was happy to be wearing the old housedress, which covered everything but my head, feet, and hands. It felt like a layer of flimsy armour.

“Did it turn you on?” Chris asked.

What a stupid question! I was still wet down there, and I could feel my lady parts vibrating. So, what did I say?

“Yeah, kinda. What about you?” I needn’t have asked. Chris was sporting a magnificent boner.

“I got excited watching you with her, and now I’m wondering if the same thing would happen if I watched you with another guy.” Chris was so upfront about it that he just blew me away with his honesty.

“How would you feel about watching me with another woman?” There it was, Chris had asked the magic question, the question I suspected was the real reason for his eagerness to share me. He wanted to get himself some strange.

“Nope,” I said. “That’s not happening. You’re mine, exclusively.”

I was happy to see Chris smiling. Happy, but confused. “Why are you smiling?” I asked.

“It’s what I hoped you would say. I don’t want another woman. I just want to share you and enjoy the pleasure it gives me.”

The next day, Chris asked a question that surprised me, and that’s not easy for him to do. I pride myself on being able to anticipate him. I believe all wives in successful marriages possess this skill or something similar. After a while together, you can anticipate where your significant other is usually going. But not this time.

“What would you think of us joining a sex club?”

Feathers of Wisdom

Feathers of Wisdom is a lavish, wide-ranging collection that gathers forty-four legends, myths, and historical portraits of Indigenous women across many nations and traditions, pairing each retelling with cultural context and luminous illustration. Authors Leigh Podgorski and Kait Matthews frame the book with a moving concern for language, survival, and cultural continuity, then build a mosaic of women who are not flattened into a single ideal but appear as warriors, lovers, creators, protectors, mothers, visionaries, and divine figures. Reading it, I felt the book was trying to do two things at once: preserve story and kindle reverence. That dual ambition gives it its shape, from the harrowing prologue about residential schools and the Sixties Scoop to the recurring chapter pattern of historical background, legend, and reflective “speaks” passages that invite the reader into contemplation.

What stayed with me most was the emotional range of the women gathered here. The book can move from fierce sacrifice to tenderness in a heartbeat. Aliquipiso stepping forward to save her people has the stark clarity of myth at its most elemental, while Blue Flower’s refusal to betray her promise gives her story a quiet, almost painful dignity. Later, Buffalo Calf Road Woman charging into battle to save her brother and then riding into the legend of Little Bighorn brings a different force altogether, one rooted in nerve, momentum, and defiance. I admired how insistently the book resists any small, ornamental idea of womanhood. These figures are not decorative symbols. They act, endure, create, rescue, foresee. At its best, the book made me feel the old power of story as moral weather, something you don’t just observe but stand inside.

The book is earnest, incantatory, and often quite beautiful. Podgorski clearly favors a heightened, devotional register, and sometimes that lyric intensity works wonderfully, especially when it leans into image and transformation, as in Aliquipiso becoming honeysuckle and woodbine, or in Spider Woman learning to weave the geometry of the universe from the night sky itself. The illustrations deepen that dreamlike quality and give the book much of its atmosphere. The reflective “speaks” sections occasionally felt more prescriptive than the legends around them, as though the spell of the narrative was being translated into a lesson. I respected the sincerity of the impulse. The ideas here about language as identity, story as continuity, and women as bearers of cultural memory are not casually offered. They come freighted with grief, repair, and conviction, and that gravity gives the whole project real heart.

I came away from Feathers of Wisdom less interested in judging it by the standards of a conventional anthology than in recognizing what it is trying to hold together: beauty, homage, loss, resilience, and remembrance. I don’t think every page lands with equal force, but the book’s spirit is generous and unmistakable, and its strongest passages have a solemn radiance that stayed with me. I’d recommend it to readers drawn to mythology, Indigenous storytelling, women-centered spiritual history, and illustrated books that invite slow, reflective reading rather than quick consumption.

Pages: 294 | ISBN : 978-1966187059

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The Fragility of Belief

J.S. Ash Author Interview

Abducted follows a 16-year-old who is abducted onto an alien warship, where she must use the deadly training she knows to fight through a biological nightmare and save her best friend. Where did the idea of a living alien warship come from?

A boring answer, but it originally grew out of trying to solve a story-mechanic problem. I knew I wanted the alien ship to be in Earth’s atmosphere in present and flashback timelines, as opposed to deep space, and I needed a plausible reason for that to be a necessity. The ship being powered by Oxygen provided the answer which eventually led me to making it a living organism. Once that had unlocked, I kept finding organic ways to fold the concept into the story, eventually tying it directly to the aliens’ search for a cure. In the end I think it provided a really unique backdrop for the story and opens interesting questions about the world beyond Earth in the context of the novel.

Abigail isn’t a “chosen one” in a traditional sense of hero novels. How did you shape her personality and her character arc?

I’ve always been more interested in everyman-type heroes than in chosen ones, so I shaped Abigail in that mold. At the same time, I gave her skills and experiences from her past that provide a foundation, enabling her to confront the situation she finds herself in.

One of the central themes of the novel is the fragility of belief, which manifests in different ways for each character. Abigail’s arc centers on learning to believe in herself. Self-belief can be difficult for adults to sustain, and it’s even more challenging for teenagers. I was drawn to the idea of someone whose life seemed to be moving in a clear direction suddenly being thrown wildly off course—shattering her confidence in the process—and then struggling to gather the pieces and put herself back together.

If you look at the three main characters, this becomes the throughline of the story. Harris begins the novel fully believing his father’s story and holding, deep down, an unshakable conviction that his mother is still alive. He ends the novel with those beliefs confirmed. Abigail starts the novel having lost her self-belief, gradually regains it—albeit shakily—and finishes the story fully assured of who she is. Taylor, by contrast, begins the novel confident in himself, his worldview, and in Abigail; by the end, all of that has shattered. His arc is almost the inverse of Abigail’s, which ultimately leads him to make the decision he does. All of that feels inherently relatable to me.

The friendship between Abigail and Harris anchors the story. Why center on loyalty?

I’ve always loved the trope of best friends who are secretly in love with each other. I’m also drawn to stories in which the loyalty forged in an early bond is tested as the characters grow up and their circumstances change.

If Abigail’s father hadn’t made the choices that knocked her off course, I think her relationship with Harris would have evolved far less dramatically—because the detour with Taylor likely wouldn’t have happened. The domino effect of those decisions felt like a strong starting point for the story and something that could organically thread its way through the novel. Abigail’s pull toward her loyalty to Harris is tied to her longing for a time when her life was simpler, and perhaps to a purer version of who she once was. I believe she has been in love with him all along. At the same time, her relationship with Taylor may have changed her in fundamental ways. For Harris, loyalty lies at the heart of his struggle—torn between wanting to be with Abigail and needing closure about his mother. In that situation, where should his loyalty rest? That tension is what makes the question so compelling to me, and I’m curious how readers will feel about the decisions he makes.

Can you tell us more about where the story and characters go after book one?

Abducted ends with a ticking clock: three months to prepare for a rescue mission to the alien planet. In Infiltrated, the second book in The Beast’s Burden Chronicles, that mission finally unfolds. Readers will discover what Charlotte has been doing since Donovan’s escape—and how her actions reshape her dynamic with Harris. We’ll also get a glimpse into Phaust and Marvus’s home life, and see where they fit within the broader society of their world. Abigail and Taylor will be forced to join forces, with Abigail single-mindedly determined to rescue her best friend and Taylor striving for redemption. And it’s possible that one of the characters we glimpsed at the end of Abducted isn’t who they seem… Hopefully, it won’t take me another decade to write the next book.

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Trapped aboard a living spacecraft hidden above her hometown, a teenage outcast must wage war against ruthless alien mercenaries to save her best friend before the ship jumps into deep space.

A SHIP FULL OF ALIENS TOOK HER BEST FRIEND. THEY SHOULD’VE LEFT HER ON EARTH.
Abigail Ashby was raised to be a weapon by a dad convinced the world was on the brink of collapse. Then, inexplicably, he forced her into early retirement—aka high school.

These days, Abigail’s only battle is defending Harris, her outcast best friend who swears his parents were abducted by aliens. She’s secretly sure he’s delusional—right up until his bedroom explodes in amethyst light.

They wake up aboard the Beast’s Burden, an interstellar warship lurking above their town. Its leader, a sadistic warlord, seizes Harris as his prize, while Abigail slips away in the chaos—overlooked, underestimated.

Until she kills an alien to survive.

Now, hunted through the ship’s living corridors, Abigail must decide: retreat into the shadows, or unleash the lethal training she buried to wage a one-girl war and save everything she’s ever known… Because Harris isn’t just a hostage. He’s the trigger for humanity’s extinction.

Adventure: Antarctica!

Jeff Hendricks’s Adventure: Antarctica! follows Danny Gage, a bright but emotionally rattled high school senior whose life seems to come apart in a single miserable stretch: he blows a crucial soccer moment, loses his girlfriend in the middle of an ill-fated promposal, and watches his parents’ marriage crack just as he misses out on a dream Hawaii internship. What begins as a consolation trip to Antarctica turns into something much larger, as Danny is swept through McMurdo, Wright Valley, penguin rookeries, ice dives, Erebus, meteorite hunts, and finally a genuinely gripping scientific discovery involving strange life in Lake Vanda. The novel is both a coming-of-age story and a science adventure, and it keeps braiding those threads together until Danny’s outward journey and inward one feel inseparable.

I found a lot to admire here. What stayed with me most was the book’s earnestness. Danny’s voice has an open, slightly wounded sincerity that gives the early domestic material real weight. The sticky-note promposal going sideways could have played as mere teen melodrama, yet it lands with a real sting, and the family scenes around the separation have an authentic awkwardness I recognized immediately. Later, when the novel shifts into Antarctic mode, it doesn’t abandon that emotional texture. Instead, the frozen setting seems to sharpen it. The homesickness, the odd intimacy of fieldwork, the way Danny’s perspective slowly widens as he learns to stop centering his own disappointment, all of that feels honest. I was especially taken by how naturally the book moves from adolescent embarrassment to wonder, then from wonder to actual peril. A scene with a meteorite turning up in Danny’s pack and the later crevasse and ice-cave survival sequence gave the book a real pulse.

Hendricks clearly loves Antarctic science, and that enthusiasm is contagious. The explanations about Lake Vanda’s stratified waters, cyanobacteria, meteorites on blue ice, and the practical rituals of surviving cold are folded in with enough narrative energy that they rarely feel like homework. The book is strongest when it lets curiosity itself become dramatic. Danny isn’t just learning facts. He’s learning how scientific attention works, how to notice, how to persist, how to be useful to other people. I appreciated that. The prose is more sturdy than dazzling, but it has moments of vividness, especially in descriptions of cold, wind, brightness, and physical exhaustion. The novel sometimes spells out an emotional beat just after it lands. But its warmth is part of its identity, and by the time Danny is moving among Yura, Tatyana, and Ms. Nichols with something like earned confidence, the book has built a persuasive case for science not as abstraction but as a human vocation.

I came away feeling genuinely fond of Adventure: Antarctica!. It’s a generous, heartfelt novel with real narrative momentum, and its belief in growth, curiosity, and second chances feels lived rather than manufactured. It tells a good story and honors science. I’d recommend it most readily to teen readers, STEM-inclined readers, and adults who enjoy adventure fiction with a strong emotional center and a clean sense of wonder. It’s the kind of book that remembers discovery is thrilling not only because of what we find, but because of who we become while finding it.

Pages: 459 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GBQ4KWNC

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The Human Rules of Digital Marketing That Work

The Human Rules of Digital Marketing that Work is a broad, example-rich guide to modern marketing that keeps returning to one stubborn, worthwhile idea: beneath every dashboard, funnel, and automation lies a person making a decision. Across six parts and thirty chapters, Author Vamsi Bandi moves from fundamentals like funnels, positioning, and content to AI, privacy, UX, blockchain, and future-proofing, all while insisting that the real subject is not technology but behavior, trust, timing, and clarity. The book’s recurring case studies, from the saint posting “Mindful mornings. Coconut & clarity” to the midnight thermostat search, the biodegradable balloon launch, and Nikhil’s AI-driven tea shop, give the material a narrative spine and make its central claim memorable: marketing works best when it feels less like pressure and more like understanding.

What I admired most is the book’s temperament. It’s trying, very deliberately, to bring dignity back to a subject that’s often flattened into hacks and platform chatter. I liked that Bandi keeps translating marketing problems into human ones: uncertainty, hesitation, overload, and the need to feel seen. The balloon company’s mistake is not merely bad targeting but a failure of emotional understanding. The product was sold as eco-conscious novelty, yet customers were buying it for grief, ritual, and memory. That’s a sharp, humane insight, and the book is full of them. I also found the prose more lively than most practical business books. The stories sometimes feel polished to the point of parable, but they give the book warmth, rhythm, and a sense of forward motion. Even when the frameworks are familiar, the writing often makes them feel newly inhabited rather than mechanically repeated.

This is an expansive book, and its comprehensiveness is one of its virtues. There’s a clear, deliberate structure to the way it unfolds, with story leading into lesson, then framework, then takeaway, and that rhythm gives the book a reassuring sense of purpose. It feels carefully built, designed to help the reader understand an idea and carry it forward into practice. I especially appreciated the later chapters on AI, privacy, and emerging tools when they remained grounded in ethics and restraint. Even when the book surveys tools and trends, its deeper intelligence remains intact. It pushes back against empty techno-optimism and makes the persuasive case that personalization without empathy is just intrusion by another name, that privacy is a form of respect, and that AI is most valuable when it extends human judgment. That conviction gives the book both moral clarity and staying power.

This book is more thoughtful than the average marketing manual. It doesn’t reinvent marketing from the ground up, but it does something more useful: it rehumanizes it. I finished it feeling that Bandi is less interested in dazzling the reader than in steadying them, reminding them that tools change, channels fragment, and trends flare out, but people still want relevance, reassurance, and honesty. I’d recommend it most to founders, early-career marketers, and working professionals who want a single, wide-ranging book that connects strategy, psychology, measurement, and ethics without losing its pulse. It’s a book for readers who want to market with sharper judgment and a little more conscience.

Pages: 386 | ISBN : 978-1966355502

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