Human Physiology is Beautiful

Michael Dow Author Interview

Nurse Florence®, What is Plasma? follows curious students as Nurse Florence uses simple, accurate explanations to reveal how plasma keeps the body balanced, nourished, and healthy. How did you decide which plasma functions were essential to include while still keeping the material accessible for children?

I used the medical reference sheet by Cleveland Clinic to guide my writing.  I trust kids are smart and can learn complex things if it’s broken down enough.

Were Jean, Condi, and Sonia inspired by real students or experiences from your own medical background?

No.  Jean was named after Dr. Jean Watson, Condi after Condoleezza Rice, and Sonia after Sonia Sotomayor.

What challenges did you face in balancing scientific accuracy with age-appropriate language and illustrations?

Every page is a challenge and sometimes I have to trust my instinct, but the books are reviewed by the family prior to publication.

How do you hope this book will influence children’s curiosity about their own health and bodies?

Human physiology is beautiful, and I hope to inspire a whole generation into the health science careers.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Essay Contest | YouTube | Dow Creative Enterprises® | Nurse Florence Project | LinkedIn | Amazon

Sometimes it seems only a nurse can bring technical information down to an understanding that an ordinary person can grasp. The Nurse Florence® book series provides high quality medical information that even a child can grasp. By introducing young kids to correct terminology and science concepts at an early age, we can help increase our children’s health literacy level as well as help to prepare them for courses and jobs in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math. We need more scientists so I hope that many children will enjoy this book series and consider a job involving science. Introducing Some Medical Words to Kids in Every Book® A Movement of Global Health Promotion and Literacy Dow Creative Enterprises® Help Civilization Reach Its Potential®

Answering the Hard Questions: Let It Be the End of a Chapter, Not the End of the Book

Answering the Hard Questions is part memoir, part self-interrogation manual, and part spiritual recovery narrative. Devin Fish builds it out of the wreckage of his own life, beginning with poverty, instability, addiction in his family, military disillusionment, blackmail, suicidal ideation, and the decision to admit himself to the hospital, then widening that story into a sequence of reflections on faith, purpose, discipline, fear, failure, self-worth, and the necessity of asking oneself better questions. What gives the book its shape is the insistence that survival is not the same thing as transformation, and that change begins when a person stops hiding and answers with painful honesty. The title idea, letting something be the end of a chapter rather than the end of the book, is not just a slogan here. It’s the governing metaphor for the whole work.

Fish is willing to write directly into shame, and that gives the strongest passages a genuine charge. The scenes involving his father’s blood-soaked apartment, his mother’s final days, and the awful ambiguity of the scam that pushed him toward the edge aren’t polished into something neat or nobly instructive. They still feel scorched. I respected that. I also found the book most compelling when it lets memoir lead, and philosophy follow, because the ideas land hardest when they rise naturally from lived experience. When he writes about silence, about telling the truth after years of saying “I’m doing fine,” or about discovering that the real dividing line was not between being alone and being lonely, the book finds an emotional clarity that feels earned rather than borrowed.

I had a more mixed reaction to the writing and the ideas, though, and that mix is part of what made the reading experience feel real to me. There’s an earnestness here I admired, but the prose can also become declarative, circling the same convictions about purpose, faith, darkness, and choice. The book reads like a motivational address to the self. The sections on returning to belief and reading suffering through Job are clearly heartfelt, and I never doubted their sincerity. Fish writes like someone trying to think his way toward the light in real time, not like someone posing as a finished product. That vulnerability matters. It keeps the book relatable.

I found Answering the Hard Questions imperfect, intense, and often affecting. I think its value lies in its refusal to look away from damage, regret, and the labor of remaking a self. I came away feeling that Fish has written a book less about having answers than about building the courage to ask better questions. I’d recommend it most to readers who are drawn to candid recovery narratives, spiritually inflected self-examination, and first-person books that speak from bruised experience. It left me feeling unsettled in places, but also oddly heartened, which is probably the right ending for a book like this.

Pages: 266 | ASIN : B0GR1LSNBQ

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Masters of the Ocean Sea: The Epic Saga of the Portuguese Explorers Who Redrew the Map of the World

Masters of the Ocean Sea opens as a history of Portuguese exploration, but it quickly reveals itself as something larger and thornier: a story about spice, ambition, faith, commerce, and the machinery of empire. Andrei Romanov begins with the almost tactile lure of pepper, cinnamon, and cloves, then follows the men who pushed Portuguese ships down the coast of Africa and into the Indian Ocean, from Prince Henry to Vasco da Gama and beyond. What I found most compelling is that the book does not present discovery as a clean heroic arc; it repeatedly links navigational daring to profit, conquest, and the early architecture of the Atlantic slave trade.

I enjoyed the book’s willingness to dwell on contradiction. I admired the author’s sense of propulsion. He knows how to make maps, winds, capes, and court politics feel urgent rather than inert, but I also appreciated that he keeps puncturing any temptation to romanticize the enterprise. His portrait of Prince Henry is especially effective for that reason: not a cardboard visionary, not a simple monster, but a severe, devout, administratively gifted figure whose piety and brutality are tangled together. That moral doubleness gives the book its voltage.

There are passages where the prose leans theatrical. Still, even when the author oversaturates a scene, the book remains highly readable because its governing intelligence is clear: he wants the reader to see exploration not as a pageant of flags and hulls, but as a system with consequences. I came away impressed by the breadth of the narrative and even more by its refusal to let technical ingenuity cancel moral damage. That refusal gives the book a stern, necessary backbone.

I would recommend this book to readers of maritime history, world history, imperial history, and narrative nonfiction, especially anyone drawn to Age of Exploration history with a strong interest in trade, empire, and historical ethics. Readers who enjoy Antony Beevor’s sweeping historical momentum or Simon Winchester’s knack for turning infrastructure and geography into drama will likely find much to admire here, though Romanov is darker in his accounting. Masters of the Ocean Sea is an entertaining and illuminating read. It’s a book that reminds me that every horizon someone “opened” was already inhabited by consequence.

Pages: 563 | ASIN : B0GJFPH6SJ

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The Children of Missing Time “It Wasn’t Random, It Was By Design”

Children Of Missing Time…………The HIdden Legacy of Abduction, Hybrid, Bloodlines, and Alterted Couciousness…….. In the shadows of forgotten hours, entire generations were marked by experiences they couldn’t fully remember.and defy conventional logic …..until now. Children of Missing Time unravels a decades…… long mystery that connects Alien Abductions, Missing Time phenomena , Experiencers, and the potential secretive hybridization of human bloodlines……. Drawing on personal experiences, encounters,spiritual awakenings, and deep research , this book exposes the unsettling truth of an experiencer and that some families carry within them the echoes of a program that began in the 1950s………one designed to potentially alter humanity’s future from within …… With each chapter Children of Missing Time reveals the patterns, Traits, and spirtual Signatures of those affected………..humans, hybrids, hybrids, the watchers, and the awakened …… For decades, stories of alien abductions, Missing Time, and unexplained pregnancies have haunted the edges of belief .Children of Missing Time reveals these events may not be isolated, random, or even accidental ..?Instead they could be fragments, part of,a potential deliberate Hybrid program, one designed to rewrite humanity…….FROM THE INSIDE…… Blending personal experiences, hidden family history,, spirtual awakenings, this book explores the unsettling possibility that some families potentially carry Hybrid, Hybrid DNA…..some without ever knowing ……Are you one of those families..??.

Detective Lucian

Detective Lucian is a romantic suspense novel that drops a love story into the middle of stalking, assault, kidnapping, and a police investigation on Haven Island. At its center are Josie Hale, a realtor whose life is shaken when a showing turns into an attack, and Detective Lucian Warrick, the gruff, intensely competent officer who takes the case personally almost from the first page. The book moves between danger and desire, building a small-town world where everyone seems connected, and every new clue pushes the romance and the threat forward at the same time.

Author Neri Lopez does not circle around the book’s emotional stakes. She gets right into fear, attraction, jealousy, protectiveness, and lets those feelings sit close to the surface. That gives the story real momentum. I could feel how the book wants to be read fast, almost in one long breath. I also liked the alternating points of view because they keep the romance active instead of distant. We are not just told Lucian cares. We watch him fight it, deny it, and then fail in a relatable way. At the same time, Josie never feels like she is only there to be rescued. Even when she is terrified, she still has personality, pride, and bite.

I was especially interested in the author’s choice to lean hard into contrast. Lucian is controlled until he is not. Josie is rattled but stubborn. The island setting feels sunny on the outside, but underneath it there is real menace, which fits the “protecting paradise” idea nicely. That blend is where the book works best for me. It understands that romantic suspense is not just about chemistry or just about plot. It’s about pressure. It’s about watching two people try to reach for each other while the ground keeps shifting under them. Some scenes are sharp and funny, others are genuinely unsettling, and that swing gave the book a live-wire energy I kept responding to.

I felt like this book knew exactly what kind of ride it wanted to deliver: high-stakes romantic suspense with a protective detective, a strong-willed heroine, real danger, and a strong emotional payoff. I would recommend it most to readers who like their romance hot, their suspense close at hand, and their characters emotionally open rather than polished. If someone enjoys small-town romantic suspense, protective hero stories, and series fiction where side characters make the world feel bigger, I think Detective Lucian will be a very easy book to fall into.

Pages: 274 | ASIN : B0GF3C26DB

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Killing Einstein

Killing Einstein is a historical thriller with a wonderfully eccentric brainpan. Author Morris Hoffman imagines a wartime FBI surveillance operation around Albert Einstein and Kurt Gödel, then yokes it to espionage, philosophical argument, and an assassination plot. The story is told by Charlie Richards, a Bureau man whose first task is to trail the two thinkers through Princeton and eavesdrop on their walks, only to find himself drawn into their friendship, their ideas, and finally a lethal tangle of divided loyalties. It is, improbably, a novel about spies, logic, friendship, betrayal, and the terrifying gap between truth and proof, and it makes that odd compound feel deliberate rather than gimmicky.

Charlie is funny without being cute, self-deprecating without becoming shapeless, and just vain enough to feel human. Hoffman gives him a conversational intelligence that can pivot from deadpan Bureau satire to genuine wonder, and that tonal agility keeps the book buoyant even when it wanders into difficult intellectual country. The Einstein-Gödel scenes are the live wire here: Einstein comes off as playful, porous, almost meteorological in his energy, while Gödel is all fretful rigor and haunted exactitude. Their friendship has real charge. I didn’t feel that I was being handed two monuments in overcoats; I felt I was trailing two singular men whose minds alter the weather around them.

I was also surprised by how confidently the novel lets abstract thought matter. Many books flirt with big ideas and then retreat to plot when things get difficult. This one keeps its nerve. It asks me to care not only whether Einstein survives, but whether Charlie can understand what Gödel is trying to show him about incompleteness, and whether such understanding can actually change a life. That ambition gives the novel its splendor. The exposition is generous. Readers allergic to mathematical or philosophical detours may feel the gears showing. But I would rather read a book that risks density than one that trims its own mind to look more streamlined. Killing Einstein is thoughtful and contains more than a standard thriller usually dares.

I’d hand this to readers of historical thrillers, espionage fiction, alternate-history-adjacent suspense, and anyone who likes novels where ideas have teeth. Fans of Philip Kerr or Umberto Eco would probably find familiar pleasures here, though Hoffman is less noir than Kerr and less baroque than Eco; the closest comparison might be a wartime spy novel written by someone who genuinely enjoys the metaphysics. This is a book for readers who don’t mind being asked to think while the window glass is breaking. Killing Einstein is a thriller that makes the mind feel like a battlefield.

Pages: 218 | ASIN: B0GPHMMVPM

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A Symphony of Spies

A Symphony of Spies is a spy novel with a chamber-piece feel. It moves through interrogations, college rehearsals, intelligence briefings, hockey locker rooms, and private conversations, but it keeps circling the same question: how do ordinary attachments turn people into assets, liabilities, or both? What makes the book distinctive is the way author Thomas R. Boniello fuses espionage with music. The title isn’t decorative. The novel is built like an arrangement, with separate lines introduced, developed, and then braided together until the political and the personal are playing at the same time.

What I liked most is that the book treats spying less as glamour than as contamination. Information leaks through friendship, ambition, boredom, desire, and plain bad judgment. That gives the story a nervous energy, because the danger often comes from people who are not master schemers at all. They’re gifted, impulsive, lonely, or eager to belong.

The strongest thread for me is Elizabeth Orr. She brings a sharp, restless intelligence to the page, and the novel gets a real charge from the fact that her brilliance is inseparable from her recklessness. Her unauthorized algorithm is both plot engine and character study. It turns abstract policy into something immediate and human. Drew Reid is a different kind of risk, almost the mirror image of Beth. He’s dangerous not because he’s cold, but because he’s porous. That contrast gives the novel a lot of its shape. One person can’t stop thinking. Another can’t stop talking. Between them, whole systems start to wobble.

The musical material also gives the book its tone. Boniello clearly knows this world from the inside, and that confidence shows in the rehearsal scenes, the descriptions of instrumental performance, and the way he uses musicianship as a language for discipline, interpretation, and exposure.

A Symphony of Spies is an ambitious, idea-rich espionage novel that’s most alive when it lets intellect, music, and human frailty occupy the same space. It’s interested in tradecraft, but it’s even more interested in people who become entangled in tradecraft before they fully understand the cost. That makes the book feel less like a puzzle box and more like a score being played by talented people under pressure, with every entrance carrying a risk. It’s smart, unusual, and clearly written by someone who cares about both the machinery of spying and the texture of artistic life.

Pages: 354 | ASIN : B0GRB4QTR4

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Wreaking Vengeance

I read Wreaking Vengeance as a hard-edged police procedural that begins with a savage decapitation on a Chicago bike path and then widens into a methodical investigation involving wealth, dog-show circles, failed romances, and, eventually, a revenge plot. Joe Erickson and his partner Sam Renaldo work the case in the classic detective mode, interviews, forensics, false leads, gut checks, while the city around them feels specific rather than decorative. The book’s engine is not mystery for mystery’s sake so much as the slow, stubborn assembly of motive from scattered human damage.

What held me was the novel’s refusal to prettify violence while also refusing to wallow in it. The opening is grisly, but the book’s real texture comes from the contrast between brutality and ordinary life: dinners at home, dog care, office banter, long drives, the weary choreography of homicide work. I liked that balance. It gives the investigation a lived-in grain. Joe, in particular, comes across as competent without becoming stainless; he is steady, observant, sometimes wry, and recognizably tired in the way good detectives often are. The procedural detail has an old-school sturdiness to it, and I found that solidity more persuasive than flash would have been.

I also appreciated the way the novel keeps re-tilting suspicion. It moves through wealthy ex-lovers, professional grudges, family tension, and forensic fragments without feeling mechanically twisty. The dog-breeding and Affenpinscher material could have become gimmickry, but instead it gives the book an odd little signature, a slightly off-center domain of expertise that makes the case feel particular. The prose sometimes favors directness over flourish; still, that plainspokenness suits the book’s temperament. This is not a baroque thriller. It is a workmanlike, sinewed mystery that knows the difference between momentum and noise.

I’d hand Wreaking Vengeance to readers who like crime fiction, police procedural, detective mystery, serial-killer suspense, and investigative thriller novels with a strong case file backbone and a likable central detective. It should especially suit readers who enjoy the procedural patience of Michael Connelly, though Johanson’s tone is less lacquered and more blunt-force Midwestern. I came away thinking this book understands that the most unsettling crimes are not the loudest ones, but the ones pursued with calm, human persistence.

Pages: 281 | ASIN : B0FQZSVFDK

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