Discover Your Gold Mind

Discover Your Gold Mind by David L. Shabazz is a motivational and reflective guide about cultivating what the author calls a “gold mind,” a disciplined inner life shaped by self-awareness, faith, purposeful action, goal-setting, persistence, and care for the body as well as the spirit. Shabazz moves from self-concept and perception to dreams, confidence, perseverance, character, health, income, and legacy, drawing on examples such as Maya Angelou, Joe Dudley, Tom Dempsey, Satchel Paige, Walt Disney, and Maurice Ashley to argue that success begins long before the visible achievement. The book insists that poverty and abundance are not only material conditions, but habits of thought, and that a person’s future is deeply affected by the way they speak to themselves, imagine possibility, and act under pressure.

I found the book most affecting when Shabazz turns from broad exhortation to concrete human moments. The Volkswagen Jetta story, where he realizes he has neglected the value of what he already possesses, quietly becomes one of the book’s best metaphors: we often treat our minds like inherited property instead of sacred equipment. That idea stayed with me. So did the discussion of the Johari Window, especially the “unknown” quadrant, because it gives the self-help material a welcome tenderness. It suggests that we are not merely broken things to be fixed, but undiscovered countries. The book’s recurring emphasis on self-concept, inner speech, and disciplined imagination has real emotional force, particularly when paired with stories of people who had every reason to surrender to humiliation, injury, poverty, or delay.

The writing is warm, direct, and sermon-like, with the rhythm of a speaker who wants to reach the person at the back of the room. I admired that accessibility. Shabazz writes with conviction, and his best passages have the cadence of lived counsel rather than abstract theory. The phrases about goals, thought, discipline, faith, and self-mastery begin to accumulate like a drumbeat. By the time the book reaches practical habits such as planning the day, exercising the body and mind, and building a spiritual foundation, its message feels less like a slogan and more like a daily ethic.

I respected Discover Your Gold Mind for its heart, its moral seriousness, and its refusal to let readers hide behind talent, circumstance, or delay. I’d recommend it to readers who appreciate faith-inflected personal development, students or young professionals looking for a practical push, and anyone drawn to motivational writing that blends self-reflection, discipline, and purpose with a strong sense of spiritual accountability. Its best audience is someone ready not just to be encouraged, but to be confronted with the responsibility of becoming.

Pages: 149 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GS7LK64L

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Dag and the Apple

Dag is a quiet little unicorn who enjoys exploring the forest and noticing the simple wonders around him. One day, he discovers a beautiful red apple on the ground. What begins as a small moment quickly turns into a gentle adventure when the apple rolls away. Dag follows it through the forest, finally catches it, and enjoys eating the juicy, sweet apple beneath a tree. As he rests, he notices a rabbit hopping through the grass and takes in the peaceful beauty of his day.

Dag and the Apple is a short, sweet, and thoughtful story featuring Dag the Unicorn. I appreciated the calm pace and simple structure, which make the book easy for young readers to follow while also giving them time to reflect on each moment. From noticing the apple’s bright red color to imagining how it tastes, smells, and feels, the story naturally encourages children to pay attention to their surroundings.

This would be a wonderful book to read aloud with preschool and kindergarten-aged children. It opens the door for conversations about the senses: What colors do you see? What do apples taste like? What sounds might you hear in the forest? What animals might be nearby? Dag’s quiet and observant personality also makes the story especially appealing for sensitive, imaginative children who enjoy gentle adventures.

A lovely bonus is that the story is presented in both English and German. This makes Dag and the Apple a great choice for bilingual families, homeschoolers, or anyone introducing children to a new language in a relaxed and natural way. The repetition and simple sentences help young readers begin recognizing words and noticing patterns between the two languages.

The illustrations add helpful context by showing Dag discovering the apple, chasing after it, smelling it, and enjoying his peaceful day in the forest. Dag and the Apple is a charming starter story for early readers and a gentle introduction to language learning through storytelling.

Pages: 24 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GQJXWVFJ

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Terrifying Ambition

Mike Rawson Author Interview

Resonance Portal Wars blends war fiction, science fiction, fantasy, and conspiracy myth. How did you approach balancing those tones? Were there moments where one genre tried to overpower the others?

That is a fantastic question, and to be completely honest, balancing those wildly different elements was like walking a tightrope during the entire drafting process. When you set out to write a book that is essentially Saving Private Ryan meets The Lord of the Rings—with a healthy dose of cosmic UFO conspiracy thrown in—the risk of the story collapsing under its own weight is massive.

Here is how I approached it, and where the struggles really lay:

Grounding the Bizarre in Historical Reality

My primary rule for the series was that the history had to act as the anchor. The timeline of World War II, the troop movements, the political stakes, and the brutality of the era had to feel meticulously accurate.

If I could make the reader fully buy into the grounded, gritty reality of WW2 and the terrifying ambition of SS Obergruppenführer Hans Kammler, it became much easier to ask them to take the next leap. The science fiction—the crashed UFO in Antarctica and the extraction of Element 115—was treated not as magic, but as cold, calculated military research. By treating the sci-fi with the same clinical, historical lens as the actual war, it paved a logical bridge right into the high fantasy of Ilyndor.

The Constant Tug-of-War

There were absolutely moments where one genre tried to hijack the wheel.

The Pull of High Fantasy

The biggest threat to the balance was Ilyndor. Once Kammler opens the portal and we meet Durgar, Balfur, and their Orc factions, it was incredibly tempting to just stay there. High fantasy offers boundless creative freedom, and there were drafts where the interdimensional politics and the portal-tearing ripples in Ilyndor started to completely overshadow the grim reality of Earth’s global conflict. But hey – there is always Book 2 🙂

The Weight of Historical Fiction

Conversely, there were times when I would get so deep into the weeds of actual WWII history, Nazi hierarchy, and the build-up to D-Day that the fantastical elements felt like they were intruding on a purely historical war novel.

The Cosmic Conspiracy as the Glue

Whenever the tones started to clash, or one tried to overpower the other, I had to rely on the conspiracy mythos—the overarching proxy war between The Watchers and The Hive.

That cosmic layer was the ultimate equalizer. It reminded me (and hopefully the reader) that the gritty trenches of WWII and the high-fantasy battles of Ilyndor weren’t separate stories competing for page time; they were two fronts of the exact same war. Everything had to serve that central spine. If a scene in Ilyndor didn’t have direct, terrifying consequences for the war back on Earth, or vice versa, it had to be reeled in.

It was a tough balancing act, but leaning into the contrast—letting the visceral horrors of human history collide violently with the cosmic and the fantastical—is ultimately what gives the trilogy its pulse.

The alliance between human soldiers and fantasy beings is central. What interested you about that dynamic?

What fascinated me most about putting someone like Hans Kammler in a room with Orc leaders like Durgar and Balfur was the opportunity to completely invert the classic fantasy concept of “the monster.”

When we read traditional high fantasy, Orcs are usually the ultimate, irredeemable evil—a savage horde meant to be slaughtered by the noble heroes. But by bringing them face-to-face with the SS in WW2, I wanted to ask a really uncomfortable question: When the “civilized” humans in pristine uniforms are orchestrating industrialized genocide, who is the real savage?

Here is what really drove that dynamic for me:

The Clash of Brutality

You have two entirely different philosophies of war colliding.

On one side, you have Kammler and the Nazi war machine: cold, calculated, mechanized, and utterly devoid of empathy. It is the horror of the spreadsheet and the laboratory.

On the other side, you have the Orc factions of Ilyndor. Yes, they are violent and brutal, but it’s a visceral, primal warfare. There is a twisted kind of honesty to it.

I loved writing the scenes where Durgar and Balfur realize the sheer scale of human cruelty. There are moments where the fantasy “monsters” are actually taken aback by the cold, bloodless way Kammler views life as a disposable resource for his Element 115 experiments.

A Tense Alliance of Mutual Exploitation

I also wanted to avoid making them “buddies.” There is no friendship here; it is a powder keg of an alliance built entirely on mutual exploitation and convenience.

Kammler looks at the Orcs and sees shock troops and a means to master portal technology to win the war for the Reich. Durgar and Balfur look at Kammler and see an opportunity to harness the cosmic power of Element 115 to dominate their own rivals in Ilyndor. Both sides are absolutely convinced they are the ones using the other, and writing that constant, underlying tension—waiting to see who would betray who first—was incredibly fun.

The Proxy War Reality

Ultimately, this dynamic serves the overarching conspiracy of the series. Both the SS and the Orcs view themselves as the apex predators of their respective universes. Watching them posture and plot against one another is doubly tragic and ironic for the reader, who eventually learns that both humans and fantasy beings are nothing more than pawns being moved around the board by The Watchers and The Hive.

Balancing their egos against their cosmic insignificance was one of the most rewarding parts of writing Book 1 and already creates high stakes for Book 2!

Can you tell us where the book goes and where we’ll see the characters in the next book?

A Changed World and Dead Portals

The world has fundamentally changed since the climax of Book 1. Physical Resonance, which was the source of all the magic we saw, is completely extinct. It’s been replaced by a finite and costly ‘Stored Resonance’ economy, which means all the portals between worlds are completely dead. The genre shifts gear a bit here, elevating the WWII espionage from the first book into full-blown cosmic horror.

Ian Fleming and Project Chimera

As for our characters, the Allies have a secret unit called Project Chimera racing to reopen those dead portals. The one person who has the power to bridge that gap is British Commander Ian Fleming. Fleming makes a terrifying discovery about Element 115 and himself, realizing he has to weaponize his own corruption to hunt down his greatest nemesis.

Kammler’s Horrific Ascension

That nemesis, of course, is the god-like remnant of Hans Kammler. He is being powered by the decaying Pattern and is trying to overwrite reality itself. Readers will see him doing something truly horrific: harvesting the mass suffering of the final, bloody battles of WWII. He essentially tries to turn the historical inferno of war in the Pacific into a grotesque ritual chamber for his own apotheosis.

A Three-Way Cosmic War

Finally, the secret war is no longer just a two-sided conflict. The ancient Watchers step directly into the fray to prevent reality from collapsing. They start using Soviet agents as their pawns on Earth. This escalates everything into an existential three-way clash between Humanity, the Hive, and the Watchers. It all converges on August 1945, and let’s just say the true, cosmic nature of the war’s final historical events is going to shatter everything the characters think they know.

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The Reich found the key in a crashed UFO. The Allies found the doorway. Two worlds are about to collide.Antarctica, 1945. SS Engineer Hans Kammler has uncovered a secret never meant for human hands: an alien crystal recovered from a downed UFO. But when he activates the artifact, he doesn’t just win the war—he shatters reality.

Portals thunder open across the globe, bleeding the dying realm of Ilyndor into our own. Now, Captain Ian Fleming faces a mission that no military manual could prepare him for. On the other side of the rift, orc warlords ride monster wolves through the ruins of civilizations, and elves desperately cling to the last remaining leylines.

An Impossible Alliance. A War Beyond Earth.To stop the Reich from weaponizing a god-like power, Fleming must forge an alliance with Commander Lithariel, an Elven warrior bound to a failing magical Pattern. Together, they must lead a ragtag unit of commandos, spies, and shamans into the heart of the storm.

Element 115 is rewriting the laws of physics. The Dark Portal is hungry. And if Fleming fails, Earth won’t just be conquered—it will be erased.

This is the secret history of WWII you were never told.

Trusting the Reader

Author Interview
Tasha He Author Interview

In a fractured city built on control and genetic hierarchy, a manufactured soldier and a rebel outsider form a dangerous bond. The title Caenogenesis suggests new or altered origins. What does that idea mean within Yin’s story?

Caenogenesis is a biological term for developmental traits that appear in an organism without precedent in its ancestors—new features that deviate from the inherited pattern. Within Yin’s story, that idea operates on at least two levels.

The literal one is straightforward: Yin is a being without precedent. She’s the first human grown outside a womb, engineered from Aja’s and Ryūnosuke’s genetic material, designed to be something humanity has never produced before. Her very existence is a caenogenetic event.

But the deeper resonance is in what Yin becomes versus what she was made to be. Her Creator designed her as a weapon and then stripped away the traits he considered flaws. Her “ancestral pattern,” so to speak, was a blueprint for a perfect soldier. What emerges instead is something her creators never programmed and couldn’t have predicted: a person who learns what home means, who chooses to sacrifice herself not because she was ordered to, but because she wants to protect someone she cares about. Her arc from “I am not a person” to “you are my home” is itself a kind of caenogenesis. It’s a development of something genuinely new from a template that was never supposed to produce it.

There’s also the species-level layer. Aja’s entire crusade is predicated on the belief that humanity needs a new origin to survive. They believe that the old evolutionary pattern is a dead end in a post-nuclear world. Yin was supposed to be the proof of concept for that new beginning. The irony is that Aja sees her as a tool for species-wide salvation while treating her as an object, while Kraken—who has no grand evolutionary agenda—is the one who actually witnesses and nurtures the new thing Yin is becoming.

Yin begins as detached and controlled, yet becomes deeply human over time. What was the hardest part of writing that shift?

The hardest part was keeping Yin’s voice intact while letting her evolve. She speaks in a very specific register, and that voice is core to who she is. It’s not a mask she’s wearing that gets peeled away to reveal a warmer person underneath. It’s genuinely how she processes and communicates. So the challenge was never “how do I make Yin sound more human?” It was “how do I show humanity growing inside someone who will never express it the way we expect?”

The shift had to be subtle. Yin doesn’t learn to say “I care about you.” She drops the word “Human” from Kraken’s name. She doesn’t tell him she was worried. She finds the medical kit on her own, kneels beside him, and while she’s cleaning bullet wounds out of his arm and leg, she tells him his injuries suggest “carelessness and poor tactical judgment” and that this is “hardly a surprise” because he’s human. She doesn’t laugh at his jokes, but she attempts one of her own and has no idea it landed. Those micro-movements had to carry the entire emotional arc because anything bigger would have betrayed the character.

The real tightrope was the moments where emotion overtakes her against her will. She doesn’t have the vocabulary for what she’s feeling, so she frames it as a problem to solve or a weakness to overcome. Writing those moments meant trusting the reader to recognize the emotion Yin herself can’t name.

If she’d suddenly started speaking in warm, flowing sentences, the whole arc would have collapsed. The point is that she becomes deeply human while still sounding exactly like herself. The growth isn’t in how she talks. It’s in what she chooses to do.

The action scenes are sharp, but the novel keeps returning to the cost of violence. Why was that important to explore?

Because action without consequence is just spectacle. And that’s not the story I wanted to tell.

Kraken is one of the most capable fighters in the book. He can clear a room, hack a prison, and outrun a gang. But every time he pulls the trigger, it costs him something. He kills Markus, the leader of the Metal Vultures, a man who used to be his brother in everything but blood, and the weight of it doesn’t lift from his chest. He whispers “sorry” to a man he just stabbed. He shoots three gangsters, and then he stares at the bodies and feels that cold, sour twist in his gut. I needed the reader to understand that being good at violence and being okay with violence are two very different things.

Yin carries violence differently. She never flinches from a fight and never looks back at the bodies. Her Creator carved out the part of her that would care. So her healing doesn’t come from reckoning with what she’s done. It comes from learning that people have value. The first time Kraken cries out in pain while she’s treating his wounds, something unnamed seizes in her chest, and she doesn’t know what to do with it. She turns away from him, shoves the medical kit shut, because the feeling is so foreign it confuses her. She’s coming to the realization that someone else’s pain matters to her. And once that door opens, it changes everything. It’s what eventually drives her to throw herself between Yang and Kraken, choosing his survival over her own.

The two of them together tell the full story of what violence does. Kraken shows what it costs to feel everything and still have to fight. Yin shows what it costs to have that ability taken from you entirely. Both are consequences.

And then there’s the political cost. Aja weaponizes other people’s violence to justify authoritarian control. Elder Statesman Valenstrom’s murder gets repackaged as a righteous cause. The Farm’s destruction becomes propaganda. Violence in this world doesn’t just hurt the people involved. It reshapes the entire society around it.

But violence in Ignis isn’t limited to bullets and bombs. The wall between Modernist and Retro Ignis is violence. The sweeps that drag homeless people off Market Street before the Liberation Festival so the city looks presentable, that’s violence. Tracking citizens through implanted chips based on where they were born is violence. Kraken walks into Nassar Industries and feels physically sick because the opulence exists specifically at the expense of people like him. The system that starves Retro Ignis while Modernist Ignis glows with LED displays is doing damage every single day.

We live in cities where neighborhoods a few miles apart have life expectancy gaps of decades. Where people are criminalized for being poor and then blamed for the desperation that poverty creates. Where governments respond to protests by expanding police power instead of addressing what people are actually protesting about. Aja’s playbook, using fear to pass authoritarian legislation, framing dissent as terrorism, and manufacturing consent through tragedy, none of that required much imagination to write. I just had to pay attention.

The Metal Vultures are desperate people in survival mode, shaped by a system that abandoned them. Kraken says it himself. The question the book keeps asking isn’t “who is violent?” It’s “what made them that way, and who benefits from keeping it going?”

As the first book in The Gemini Files, what groundwork were you most focused on laying, and where will the next installment take readers?

Caenogenesis is the appetizer before the main course. It’s there to draw readers into the world, get them invested in these characters, and set the table for what comes next. Yin and Kraken’s bond had to feel earned. Everything in the sequel depends on the reader believing that bond is real.

The political groundwork mattered just as much. Aja’s rise had to feel inevitable rather than sudden. Every move they make across Caenogenesis builds toward the epilogue: Valenstrom removed, the R.R.C.A. passed, the Outsiders crushed, and Aja sitting in their dead mentor’s chair holding his wooden dove. The reader needed to watch each piece fall into place so that by the time Aja wins, the horror isn’t a surprise. You saw it coming and couldn’t stop it. Neither could anyone in the book.

As for Metempsychosis, the title means the transmigration of the soul into a new body after death. I’ll leave it to readers to discover how that applies. What I can say is that the world expands far beyond Ignis, the stakes become deeply personal, and everything Yin learned about herself in Caenogenesis gets tested in ways she could never have prepared for. Aja is still moving pieces. And the consequences of that epilogue follow everyone.

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100% of profit goes to non-profit Disenfranchised Writers’ Voices

A wall isn’t the only thing dividing the ruined city of Ignis.


In a post-apocalyptic world of gleaming towers and crumbling slums, the high-tech Inner Ring thrives while the Outer Ring fights to survive. Political corruption runs deep, and the government’s grip tightens daily. Rebels like The Outsiders are branded as terrorists—except for those trapped in the shadows, they’re the only hope left.

For Theopold Kraken, a genetically-engineered Recombinant with enhanced abilities, rebellion is more than survival. It’s a cause worth dying for. When Yin, a mysterious woman who may not be entirely human, crashes into his path, everything changes. She’s secretive, strange, and dangerous… and Kraken can’t walk away. As their fragile alliance deepens, he sees in her not just a failed experiment, but someone who longs for freedom—just like him.

Yet trust is lethal. And saving her may cost him everything he’s fought to protect.

Yin doesn’t remember much, but she knows she’s being hunted. Built for a purpose she’s no longer sure of, emotions were never part of the design. Though Kraken’s loyalty and stubborn compassion stir something unexpected in her: curiosity, respect, and the terrifying whisper of humanity. As she strays from what she was made to be, Yin faces a choice: embrace the humanity she was programmed to ignore or run from it forever.

Two broken souls. One chance at freedom. In a world where trust can kill you, choosing each other might be the most dangerous act of all.

Explosive, witty, and raw, Caenogenesis is a genre-bending sci-fi dystopian where identity is rewritten, survival is anything but clean, and what it means to belong when your entire existence was engineered to be alone.

Multidimensional Characters

Jarrett Brandon Early Author Interview

Lovestruck Maggot follows a scarred, middle-aged, fiercely competent woman working on a brutal alien world where scavengers harvest volatile creatures for profit, who risks everything to rescue the man she loves. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I’ve found that writing’s first step—determining what you want to write about—is by far the most difficult. Therefore, I’ve started giving myself “challenges” to simplify this step. For my last novel, Children of Madness, I challenged myself to write a story that had giant snails at its center. For this one, I was intrigued with the idea of writing a love story with the word “maggot” in the title. With this in hand, I simply began asking myself questions. What would a human “maggot” do? Would this “maggot” be a male or female? etc. Once I settled on a female main character, I asked myself what would put such an obviously tough woman on “love tilt.”

After the particulars of their love affair were figured out, I was reminded of the 80s movie Romancing the Stone, and everything started to come together. I was going to write a sci-fi Romancing the Stone—words that no one would ever put together in a sentence.

Kalderra feels alive, toxic, and strangely beautiful. What inspired the planet’s ecosystem and tone?

Two things led to the creation of Kalderra. First, I’ve always been intrigued by the idea and visuals of bioluminescent plants/forests. You can see this in my novels Station and Children of Madness. So, I knew I wanted the planet to have such flora. Then, when I was playing around with potential names for the planet, I stumbled upon the word “caldera,” which is a large crater formed by the collapse of the ground surface after a massive volcanic eruption. I thought that these craters could be the perfect places to “plant” my magic forest. Once that decision was made, endless possibilities blossomed regarding the planet, its history, and its potential desirability on the galactic economic scale.

The novel moves between humor, violence, and emotional vulnerability with confidence. How did you manage those tonal pivots?

Honestly, I don’t have a great answer for this. One of my favorite book genres is the “new weird,” which usually entails severe tonal shifts. I like books that keep me on my toes, finding humor in the horrific and allowing characters to be both strong and weak at the same time. I think the key to this is creating fully fleshed-out, multidimensional characters and understanding how these characters would interact with each other. After that, it’s simply a matter of letting them talk to each other and acting more like a stenographer than a writer. In my opinion, my best stuff comes when I’m thinking the least. Not sure what that says about me lol.

Mona’s love for Darien is intense, but also complicated. Did you want readers to question it, believe in it, or both?

Oh, so this is an easy one for me. Please… question it! Love is a strange thing because it can often have more to do with yourself than the other person, which can make the mind do cartwheels. For example, being with this person makes me feel better about myself, and I think I love them for it. But is this the purest form of love? Is it even love? Just questions to be pondered.

I thought of successful people with “trophy” partners (individuals with little to offer beyond their glossy exteriors) and asked myself, “What would make a successful and confident but hardened woman love someone she had nothing in common with?” The answer came quite easily.

Throw this in the pot with my idea for a sci-fi Romancing the Stone, and you have Lovestruck Maggot, an odd fireball of a novel that burns fast and hot and is over before you know it… much like many love affairs.

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A heartbroken scavenger. An intrepid space cowboy. Some very good wood.

The planet Kalderra is known for several things. A blue sun. An oversized, violet moon. Massive craters formed through past volcanic activity. Strange forests comprised of the rarest, most magnificent trees in the galaxy. And kameeba, bizarre creatures whose scavenged parts can smooth skin, extend lives… and power worlds.

Mona “Ripper” Ripple is a Maggot—responsible for harvesting the volatile yet prized remains of recently deceased kameeba. As leader of the elite Karcass Five unit, Mona is the best Maggot that Kalderra has ever known. Tough and ill-tempered, demanding and crude, she’s also on the far side of forty—ancient for one in her trade—with all the scars and wrinkles and terrible memories to match.

Mona Ripple is also in love.

Smitten by a handsome recruit named Darien Vance, Mona revels in finally having something beautiful to call her own. She dares to dream of a picturesque future defined by passionate devotion rather than butchered extraterrestrials. As young Darien sleeps in her acid-burned arms, Mona prepares for their eventual planetary exit… together.

Unfortunately, Mona’s plans unravel when Darien catches the crimson eye of the reviled Countess Desma Ghool, who abducts the young man, adding him to her revolving collection of unwilling paramours.

As warm love gives way to cold rage, Mona sets out on a dangerous mission to liberate Darien from Ghool, a key figure in the galaxy’s ruling Morishita Syndicate, requiring her to forge an unwanted partnership with her least favorite Maggot—a notorious Space Cowboy named Mickie Brass.

Together, the improbable pair embark on a perilous journey that quickly goes beyond mere rescue operation, revealing the twisted history of the planet, the vital role of the kameeba, the horrifying intentions of the native Kalderrans, and what it truly means to be lovestruck.

Grit, Courage, and Heart

Al Leal Author Interview

Alex the Bull Rider-Riding Bulls from A – Z follows a fearless young rider who takes on a thrilling bull-riding adventure filled with challenges tied to the letters A to Z. What was the inspiration for your story?

The inspiration came from several places that are close to my heart: my love for storytelling, my respect for the Western way of life, and my nephew, Alex, who inspired the character himself. Alex has always had this outgoing personality and a rambunctious spirit about him. He’s curious, fearless, full of energy, and the kind of kid who isn’t afraid to jump into something new. Watching him grow and seeing that spark in him became a big part of the motivation behind these books. I wanted to create a character that captured that same spirit. At the same time, I’ve always admired the grit, courage, and heart of bull riders. Bringing those worlds together felt natural. This book became a way to combine adventure, learning, and life lessons into a story kids could connect with, while also honoring the spirit of a young boy who helped inspire it all.

Each bull represents a different letter. Was it challenging to match names, personalities, and visuals to every letter?

Absolutely, it was a challenge, but honestly, it was one of the most enjoyable parts of creating the book. I didn’t want the bulls to just be names on a page. I wanted each one to have its own personality, attitude, and presence, almost like they were characters of their own. Some letters came easily, while others made me sit back and really think. I’d ask myself, What kind of bull would this letter be? Would he be wild, smart, stubborn, explosive? Bringing each bull to life with a name, look, and personality took time, but that creative process is what made the story special.

Alex falls, gets back up, and keeps trying. How important was it to include that message for young readers?

That message was probably the most important part of the entire book. Life is going to knock all of us down at some point, kids included. I’ve lived enough life to know that success usually doesn’t come without setbacks, failures, and moments where you question yourself. But what defines us isn’t the fall, it’s the decision to get back up. I wanted kids to see that Alex isn’t fearless because he never falls. He’s brave because he keeps climbing back on. If a child reads this book and walks away believing they can keep going after a hard day, then I’ve done my job as an author.

I hope the series continues in other books. If so, where will the story take readers?

Without giving away too much, I can say Alex’s journey is far from over. My vision for this series has always been bigger than one book. I want to take young readers on adventures that entertain them, teach them, and open their imaginations. Alex may step into new worlds, whether that’s the circus, the ocean, the skies, or even becoming a young detective solving mysteries. Wherever he goes, one thing will stay the same: Alex will keep showing kids the value of courage, curiosity, character, and believing in themselves. That’s the heart of every story I plan to tell.

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Poet at Heart

Janell Strube Author Interview

Adélaïde: Painter of the Revolution follows a passionate woman artist who struggles to be taken seriously in institutions built to exclude women, and her entanglement in the upheaval of the French Revolution. What drew you to Adélaïde specifically as a historical figure?

When I was researching the women artists of the ancient regime (pre-French Revolution), I came across this phrase – “By that time, her works had long gone up in flames.” That sentence was too hard for me to resist. I had to know all about this artist and the crime that had been perpetrated against her works. What had she done that was so bad that her works had to be burned?

Admission to elite institutions is a central conflict. How did you portray the barriers women faced in spaces like the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture?

I portrayed them in many different ways: through dialogue, letters, and actions. For example, making Adélaïde wait in the Academy offices was a sign of disrespect. Having her letters go unanswered, not allowing her to speak, and having men give speeches or telling through dialogue why they were acting to keep her out. In fact, the Comte d’Angiviller went so far as to have the rule keeping admittance to four women ordered by the king.

The prose feels immersive and tactile, especially in studio scenes. How did you develop that sensory richness?

I discovered I loved writing dialogue, and I like moving characters through their scenes using dialogue and actions to reflect their inner feelings. But I am a poet at heart, so using wealth in a treasure of evocative words is my passion as a writer.

Do you see parallels between her struggles and those faced by women in creative fields today?

Absolutely. Perhaps about three years ago, I attended my first concert with a woman conductor. It was a shock to me to think about the import of that and why I had never seen that as a place where women were missing and held back. But once you see it, you cannot unsee it. I think that it goes beyond creative fields, however. And especially today, we are seeing the removal of qualified women from public roles, the undermining of women’s work, and its value. When we see works like Judy Blume’s being censored, it’s not long before other works will follow.

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In a world where women are seen but rarely heard, Adélaïde Labille-Guiard refuses to be silenced.

The daughter of Parisian shopkeepers, Adélaïde dreams not of marriage or titles but of earning a place among the masters of French art. With Queen Marie Antoinette on the throne and a spirit of change in the air, anything seems possible. But as revolution brews and powerful forces conspire to deny her success, Adélaïde faces an impossible choice: protect her life or fight for a legacy that will outlast her.

Inspired by the true story of one of the first women admitted to the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, Adélaïde: Painter of the Revolution is a sweeping, evocative portrait of ambition, courage, and resilience in the face of history’s fiercest storm.

Foundation of My Healing

Lisa McCarthy Author Interview

Unleashing the Power Within is a short, heartfelt collection of inspirational poems that moves through self-worth, recovery, faith, gratitude, nature, and personal renewal. Did you write these pieces as you were going through those moments, or after gaining distance from them?

For Unleashing the Power Within, I began writing these pieces in 2023, after my first book, Inspiring Book of Poems, Dreams and Stories, was published. While many of the experiences come from a past shaped by a toxic upbringing, the writing itself was very much alive in the present moment.

I was reflecting on current emotions, ongoing growth, and the lessons I had carried forward. In that sense, the poems were written from both a place of healing and awareness—looking back, while still living and feeling deeply in the now.

More than anything, this book became a way for me to continue my story, not just for myself, but to empower others who may be walking a similar path.

Faith plays a central role in the later emotional arc of the book. How did your spiritual perspective shape the way you approached recovery?

I have always trusted in God, even in the middle of chaos. Growing up without knowing my father and experiencing abuse from my stepfather led me to realize that the only father I could truly rely on was God.

That understanding became the foundation of my healing. Believing that God had a plan for my life gave me hope, even in the hardest moments. It reminded me that my story wasn’t over and that I wasn’t alone in what I was facing.

My faith shaped the way I approached recovery by helping me hold on, trust the process, and believe that freedom, healing, and purpose were still possible for me.

Your nature imagery—cedar trees, ocean, birds—brings a quieter energy to the collection. What draws you to those images?

Nature has always been a place where I feel deeply connected—both to my surroundings and to myself. When I’m outside, whether I’m hiking or simply sitting still, I take in what I see, feel, and hear, and that often becomes part of my writing.

I love the smell of fresh cedar, the sound of wind chimes, and watching birds, especially the golden finches that visit my yard. I have a bird feeder and bird bath, and those quiet moments—like seeing them in the rain—stay with me. They inspire both reflection and peace.

My poem about the Gulf of Mexico came from a very personal experience. It was my first time standing on the sand in Florida, looking out at the ocean and taking in something so vast and beautiful. That moment stayed with me in a powerful way.

Growing up in a more sheltered environment gave me a deeper appreciation for the world around me. Even as a child, I loved being outside whenever I could. Now, I notice everything more intentionally. Nature gives me space to reflect, to feel, and to breathe—and that quieter energy naturally finds its way into my poetry.

This book often feels like it’s speaking directly to someone who is struggling. Who did you imagine you were writing for?

I was writing to myself, and to anyone who has gone through or is still going through what I’ve experienced. Many of these poems came from moments where I needed comfort, encouragement, and a reminder that I could keep going.

At the same time, I was thinking about others who might be struggling in similar ways—people who feel unseen, overwhelmed, or unsure of their worth. I wanted the words to feel personal, like they were speaking directly to them.

If someone reads my work and feels even a little less alone, a little more understood, or finds the strength to keep moving forward, then I’ve written it for them too.



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If you have ever had to stay strong while quietly falling apart, this was written for you.

Unleashing The Power Within: A Journey of Self-Discovery  Through Poetry is a deeply personal, faith-filled collection for the moments that change you. The ones that shake you, stretch you, and slowly rebuild you.

These pieces give voice to what often goes unspoken. The silent battles. The long nights. The strength it takes to keep going when everything feels heavy.

Rooted in themes of healing, faith, and transformation, this collection gently guides you toward rediscovering your inner strength and purpose.

Inside this collection, you will find:
 
 

Strength through pain and personal struggle
Healing through faith and reflection
The courage to set healthy boundaries
Clarity in uncertain seasons
The confidence that has always been within you
 
Healing is not always a straight path. It can feel slow. Messy. Uncertain. But even then, something inside you is still shifting. Little by little, you do not just survive what broke you; you begin to live again.

If this speaks to your heart, this may be exactly what you need right now.