Ingram
Posted by Literary Titan

Ingram by Louis C.K. is a literary coming-of-age novel that follows a boy named Ingram as he’s pushed out of a brutal, impoverished home and onto the road, where hunger and fear become his constant companions. The opening sets him on a farm with animals, a distant father, and a mother worn thin by hardship, then quickly snaps into motion when his father disappears, and the family collapses, forcing Ingram to leave with almost nothing and “keep going as long as you can, anyway you can.”
What I liked most is how the voice carries the whole book on its back. It’s plainspoken and has that steady, child-shaped logic where everything is literal and huge at the same time: roads feel like monsters, buildings feel like animals, and a hungry stomach is basically a second character. There’s a stubborn innocence in the way Ingram watches and reports, even when what he’s reporting is violence, neglect, and the kind of loneliness that doesn’t need any big speeches to land. The sentences can spool out, then suddenly stop short. It feels like walking with him.
C.K.’s choices as a storyteller are interesting because he leans into sensory reality and lets meaning arrive late. The early chapters make the world feel physical before it feels “themed”: bare feet on a hard road, the noise of traffic, the humiliation of stealing food, the weird, half-comic, half-terrifying moments where a kid is trying to interpret adult life without the vocabulary for it. And then there’s the way Ingram talks to his own body, like his feet have opinions, like hunger is a barking animal you can bargain with. That could have come off as a gimmick. Here, it reads more like a survival trick. When you’re alone that young, you make a little council in your head and you listen to whoever talks.
I’d put Ingram in the lane of literary fiction with a strong picaresque, American road-story backbone, the kind of book where a young protagonist moves from place to place and each stop reveals another hard truth about people. If you like novels in this genre that are voice-forward and unsentimental, and you can handle a story that sits close to poverty, cruelty, and fear without blinking, this will likely work for you. If you’ve read Cormac McCarthy, Ingram has a similar stripped-down, road-worn intensity, but it stays closer to a child’s plain, immediate perspective and leans more on raw survival than mythic bleakness. If you want a grim yet tender journey that feels authentic, Ingram is a fantastic read.
Pages: 288 | ASIN : B0F7HY9B2V
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, coming of age, ebook, goodreads, indie author, ingram, kindle, kobo, literature, Louis C.K., nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Small Town & Rural Fiction, southern fiction, story, writer, writing
Runaway Artist
Posted by Literary Titan

Runaway Artist by Sheila Hansberger is a romantic suspense thriller set between Beverly Hills polish and a mountain town that plays by different rules. Brooke Arnelletta, a young artist interning at Robelloff’s Fine Art Gallery, gets pulled into a violent crime and an art theft that no one seems to fully believe at first. Her strange gift is that she can “see” what happened when she draws it, and her sketches become a kind of evidence trail for Detective Lawson. When the pressure spikes, Brooke bolts to her family’s cabin in Wildridge, expecting a quiet hideout, and instead finds survival problems, suspicious locals, and the uneasy feeling that danger has followed her up the mountain.
What I liked right away is how the book uses art as more than a personality trait. Brooke doesn’t just “love art.” She thinks in images, notices small visual details, and that becomes the engine of the mystery. There’s also a nice tension in watching someone used to comfort and structure get shoved into uncertainty. Hansberger keeps the stakes personal, not abstract. Brooke is scared, defensive, and sometimes stubborn, and it reads like a real young adult trying to sound brave while privately spiraling. I also appreciated the way the gallery world is painted. It feels glossy, but not magical. Even early on, the alley behind the gallery is dark and vandalized, and the book quietly tells you, “This pretty world has blind spots.”
The author’s choices give the book momentum. Short chapters, quick turns, and a steady drip of trouble that keeps pushing Brooke from one decision to the next. Sometimes Brooke’s choices made me wince, the kind of “please do not do that” feeling you get watching a thriller protagonist walk toward the basement door. That worked for me because the book seems aware of it. Brooke is learning, sometimes the hard way, what it means to be independent. And the Wildridge sections brought a warmth I didn’t expect. There’s a community texture to the mountain town, plus a grounded, slow-burn romantic thread that sneaks up on her, especially once Conner becomes more than the competent guy behind the hardware store counter.
By the end, it left me with that satisfying mix this genre does best: danger contained, life reassembled, and a main character who feels a little more solid in her own skin. The epilogue lands on a simple, human note, and a small romantic gesture that fits the title in a sweet, earned way. If you like romantic suspense where the thriller plot keeps moving but the relationships still matter, you’ll have a good time here. I’d especially recommend it to readers who enjoy fish-out-of-water stories, small-town dynamics, and mysteries that use a character’s craft as a believable tool.
Pages: 322 | ASIN : B0FMGY5ZV6
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Runaway Artist, Sheila Hansberger, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
Cognitive Kin: How to Work, Win, and Make Meaning with Agentic AI
Posted by Literary Titan

Cognitive Kin paints a big picture of how AI is shifting from a clever autocomplete helper to something closer to a digital coworker with its own goals. The authors walk through what they call “agentic AI” and show how these systems plan, act, and coordinate with people across work, infrastructure, and even questions of consciousness and identity. The book moves from technical basics to leadership playbooks, then out to the social, economic, and ethical stakes, so it feels like a tour of the whole landscape rather than a narrow tech manual.
The book’s tone feels confident, and I enjoyed it. I could hear a human voice behind the arguments, not a white paper. I liked how they open with the Renaissance image and keep returning to art, history, and philosophy. It gave me a sense of scale and made the topic feel less like a product launch and more like a cultural shift. The short sections, clear headings, and the “Leader’s Playbook” at the end of each chapter kept me moving. The book is long, and the parade of new terms and patterns sometimes felt like drinking from a fire hose. Still, even in the heavier chapters, the metaphors helped me stay grounded, like the Roomba comparison for an agent moving around a messy digital world or the Borges library image for intelligence without action.
I found the core message both exciting and unnerving. The claim that execution is cheap and imagination is scarce really resonated with me, because it flips the usual story about productivity and hard work. I liked how the authors frame agents as a new kind of labor and talk about software as staff instead of only tools. That felt honest about what is really changing in companies. The book discusses governance, kill-switch illusions, and trust, and those chapters helped balance the hype.
I would recommend Cognitive Kin to senior leaders, product people, and technical managers who need a big-picture frame for agentic AI and also want concrete prompts to use with their teams. It also suits curious general readers who are comfortable with long, idea-heavy books and who enjoy references to philosophy and science mixed with business talk. If you want help thinking about how humans and AI might actually live and work together over the next decade, this book is for you.
Pages: 690 | ASIN : B0GKPX9B8M
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Business & Organizational Learning, Christophe Kolb, Cognitive Kin, ebook, Generative AI, goodreads, Human-Computer Interaction, indie author, Jan Rosen, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Social Aspects of Technology, story, writer, writing
Unchained: Your AI Blueprint for Liberation
Posted by Literary Titan

Unchained: Your AI Blueprint for Liberation by Mark Mueller walks through three big moves at once. First, it argues that the modern economy is deliberately rigged, tracing how policy choices, corporate power, and debt have boxed ordinary people into a kind of financial servitude. Then it shifts into how schools and corporate culture have trained us to think like factory workers instead of free agents. Finally, it offers AI, mindset shifts, and some unconventional tools as a way to reclaim control over money, work, and personal purpose, wrapping all of that in the author’s own story of layoffs, illness, burnout, and slow rebuilding.
The sections on housing, healthcare, food stamps, and debt resonated with me personally. The personal scenes, like sneaking into a friend’s condo to have a place to sleep or waiting hours with a painful infection because treatment was unaffordable, land with real emotional weight. The writing there is emotional and almost messy on purpose. It feels like someone talking late at night after a long day. I liked that. The numbers and historical context around tax law, CEO pay, and wealth gaps are presented in plain language, with enough detail to feel grounded. The rhetoric can get heated, yet that intensity matches the point of the book.
The chapters that explain AI as pattern recognition and prediction, along with the “Trash Bot” story and the breakdown of how jobs may shift instead of simply vanish, are clear and practical. I found those parts useful, and I appreciated how the author keeps saying, in different ways, that AI is a tool, not a god, and not a monster. As someone who values numerology, I really enjoyed the numerology chapter and the more cosmic language about destiny and unseen threads. I like how he mixes intuition, meaning-making, and data. It feels like he is inviting the reader to see life as both pattern and mystery at the same time. That blend makes the practical advice feel deeper and more personal. The book uses bold images and wild metaphors like Galactus eating worlds or workers as nutrients, and I found that style fun and memorable. It kept the ideas from feeling dry and made the whole thing feel more like a graphic novel for the soul.
Unchained is heartfelt, sincere, and useful. I would recommend Unchained to readers who feel stuck in their jobs, anxious about money, or scared of what AI means for their future, and who prefer a human, story-driven approach instead of a dry manual. It’s a good fit for people who like a mix of social critique, personal confession, and step-by-step encouragement, and who do not mind a passionate, sometimes fiery tone. If you want someone to sit next to you, point at the system, and say, “Here is how it broke you and here is how we might break free,” then this book delivers.
Pages: 125 | ASIN : B0GHZX358D
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Artificial Intelligence & Semantics, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Career Advancement & Professional Development, Computer Science, Computers and Technology, ebook, goodreads, Human-Computer Interaction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Mark Mueller, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Social Aspects, Social Aspects of the Internet, story, Tech Culture, Unchained: Your AI Blueprint for Liberation, writer, writing
A Story Worth Sharing
Posted by Literary_Titan

We All Want To Be Happy, Volume 3 follows your brother John through the mid- and late-sixties as he searches for peace through army life, factory work, fiery revivals, marriage, and the uneasy space between faith and fulfillment. Why did you decide to devote an entire volume to your brother John’s early adult years?
Every person experiences challenges in becoming an adult; however, those challenges were multiplied by the early death of his mom, his dad’s rather unique approach to fatherhood, as well as his way of dealing with losing a second wife. I observed firsthand my brother’s courage and journey and believe his journey is both inspirational and educational, i.e., worth sharing with the public.
Looking back, what do these years reveal about growing up in the 1960s South?
The 1960s were a volatile time in the South, particularly in the rural South where we attempted to determine “our” place. The older generation, such as John’s father, born in 1895, was uncomfortable with and afraid of the changes. Rock and roll and integration were among the areas generating fear, and that fear created a greater gulf between parents and children, even more so in rural areas.
How does the idea of “peace of mind” evolve across the volume?
As John encounters each obstacle, he fully embraces and studies the opportunities attached to the “possible” ladder out of his instability. Each time, he is reminded of his mother’s teachings and takes another step toward realizing that peace and happiness are his responsibility.
What does happiness mean to John in this volume? Do you think he finds it?
Yes, John does find peace, or at least the road toward peace and joy. He learns that it is not something to find outside oneself, but rather an acceptance of who you are. Once he stops looking outside of himself for the source of contentment, he finds it. He learns: “If you want someone to make you happy, look in the mirror.”
Author Links: GoodReads | Website
As I spend more time with others, particularly young people, I find many are unable to find the bright side of what seems to be a tragedy, a mistake, or a bump in the road. A lack of maturity and experience often creates the inability to look beyond the surface. Some people get lost in what didn’t happen, rather than see the blessings of what did. It may be a normal human reaction, yet as we age – another blessing of getting older – we realize unexpected outcomes result in the most valuable life lessons.
In Volume III, my goal is to share experiences that I observed in my brother’s life. He has been kind enough to allow me to share pertinent times in his much younger years. His memories, as well as our conversations, provided me a deeper look into and understanding of his life. Perhaps the stories will remind you of your own experiences, or those you have witnessed, or provide a laugh, a tug at the heart strings, or a reason to rekindle a friendship.
I WISH YOU JOY AND PEACE OF MIND.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Ann Mullen, author, biogaphy, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, happiness, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nook, novel, personal transformation, read, reader, reading, story, WE ALL WANT TO BE HAPPY VOLUME 3, Women's Biographies, writer
What is Home?
Posted by Literary_Titan

The Girl from Korn follows an eleven-year-old Mennonite girl leaving Russia for Oklahoma in 1903, who exsperances a harsh new land and strict community that tests her courage, faith, and understanding of what it truly means to find home. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
This story is inspired by my grandmother’s family memoir. She was born in Corn, Oklahoma, and often spoke about her grandparents’ move to Corn and what life was like during that time. One day, after visiting Corn and seeing my ancestors’ gravestones in the cemetery, the idea for this story began to take shape in my mind. I started researching what life was like back then and created a strong-willed, curious character named Tillie as part of the DeFehr family.
How does Tillie’s journey resonate with modern immigration stories?
There are so many heart breaking stories right now about immigrants and the way they negative ways they are treated. For this reason, I wanted to include Tillie’s arrival to New York City and her seeing the Statue of Liberty, as a simple reminder that most of us descended from immigrants and the U.S. has a history of welcoming others from across the globe. We need to keep finding ways to take care of each other and treat each other with respect and kindness.
Family bonds are a major theme. Which relationship was most meaningful for you to write?
I appreciate Tillie’s relationships with several characters in the story. I admire how she struggles to understand her mother but ultimately comes to terms with her. I also love her bond with Preacher; he is kind, humble, and genuinely listens to Tillie. However, the most significant relationship is with her sister, Teenie. Tragically, Teenie passes away at the end of the book, and Tillie and her family each navigate their grief in different ways. This resonates with me personally, as my own sister passed away last year after a long illness. Therefore, Tillie’s relationship with Teenie reflects my experiences with my sister in many ways.
The idea of “home” evolves throughout the story. What do you hope readers take away about belonging?
I think our ideas of what is home changes over our lifetime, especially if you grow up in more than one culture. Tillie’s home kept changing, but ultimately it was always where her family was. However, she had to learn a new language, live in different houses, experience a new way of life. She had to contiually adapt in order to belong. Many of us do that thoughout our lives as well.
Author Links: Facebook | Website
At the turn of the century, Anna Mathilda DeFehr, known as Tillie to her friends and family, sets off on a life-changing journey from Europe to America. Immigrating with her Mennonite family, Tillie braves the open sea, a long train from the shining New York harbor to the rolling plains of Oklahoma, and the strange new world she finds herself in.
As her family journeys from the cramped and crowded steerage of a ship to the bustling crowds of Ellis Island, then again to settle in a quiet community that doesn’t understand her way of life, Tillie faces countless challenges: Learning a brand new language. Adjusting to life in a sod house. Confronting the elements and unsuitable living conditions. And, most of all, finding out how on earth she can call this place her home.
This historical fiction story explores how one girl’s faith, hope, and love for her family can propel her through a storm of obstacles to claim her rightful place within her own heart. With allies like Julius, a book-loving new friend, and Crazy Wolf, a member of the local Arapahoe tribe who introduces her to a new world, Tillie learns that home is something you build—it’s who you are and the people you belong to.
A captivating tale of the might of innocence to break barriers and adapt to change, The Girl from Korn inspires young readers to embrace their cultural roots while exploring the beauty of discovery in brand new places.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's Books on Emigrants, Children's Books on Immigration, Children's Fiction, children's inspirational, Children's New Family Experiences Books, ebook, Eileen Hobbs, Francesca Watt, goodreads, historical, Immigrants & Refugees, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing, YA Novel
You-Gin One-Gin: Sort of a Novel
Posted by Literary Titan

You-Gin One-Gin: Sort of a Novel is a strange, clever, and self-aware book that lives somewhere between literary metafiction, campus novel, and sports novel. It starts as a stage adaptation of Eugene Onegin for a small Midwestern university, with Pushkin himself striding around the stage and arguing with his own characters. Around that, an editorial foreword and the later sections, “Pushkin” and “Nabokov,” spin out a campus story involving a near assassination, an alleged alien abduction at a lingerie league football game, and a ghostly Vladimir Nabokov who may or may not be narrating part of what we are reading. All of it sits inside a fake university press package that treats the whole thing as if it were a serious publication from Liberal State University Press, complete with squabbles over authorship and attribution.
Reading it, I felt like I was watching someone juggle too many glass balls and somehow not drop a single one. The play in Part 1 is funny and nimble, and the dialogue has that quick, teasing rhythm that makes you want to hear it spoken on stage, not just read it. I liked how Robinson lets Pushkin walk in and out of his own story, constantly poking at the thin wall between author and character, past and present. Sometimes it felt like sitting in the back row of a rehearsal where the playwright keeps changing lines on the fly, then turning to you to justify the change. That intimacy works. It made the classic material feel playful and modern.
Parts 2 and 3 shift tone, and I had mostly positive feelings as the book leaned into campus satire and metafiction. The attempted murder, the football game hysteria, the rumors about an alien abduction, the ghost narrator who may be Nabokov or may just be another mask for Robinson himself: all of that is fun, and often genuinely sharp about academic ego, gossip, and the way stories get told and retold until no one remembers what actually happened. Sometimes the book layered one clever reference on top of another. But even when I felt a bit lost, I never felt bored. The voice stays wry and curious, like that colleague who can spend an hour in your doorway unpacking one wild departmental rumor, and you do not quite want them to stop.
If you are in the mood for literary metafiction that plays with a classic text, makes fun of academia, and is happy to chase a joke or an idea as far as it will go, then You-Gin One-Gin: Sort of a Novel is worth your time. Readers who enjoy experimental fiction, campus and sports stories with a twist, or who already have a soft spot for Eugene Onegin and Nabokov will probably get the most out of it.
Pages: 380 | ASIN : B0GFPWGFTX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: american fiction, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, comedy, Douglas Robinson, ebook, fiction, goodreads, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, satire, story, writer, writing, You-Gin One-Gin: Sort of a Novel
Love For My Grandchild
Posted by Literary Titan

The Prince’s Dress Dilemma follows a young prince whose growth spurt launches his parents into the search for the perfect ball gown. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
This story began with love for my grandchild. Before she told us she was transgender, she loved wearing dresses, especially one particular nightgown that became her absolute favorite thing in the world. Watching her find comfort and joy in clothing that helped her feel like herself was beautiful, and our entire family supported her every step of the way. At the same time, I wanted to be very clear about something important: not every boy who wears a dress is transgender. Clothing is about comfort, personality, and expression, and children deserve room to discover who they are without pressure or assumption. So I wrote a story where the adults don’t panic, don’t argue, and don’t shame. They simply love their child and help them find something that feels right. That kind of support can change a life.
Do you have a favorite scene in this story? One that was especially fun to write?
I love the scenes at the dressmaker where Eric tries on gown after gown and nothing feels right. We’ve all been there, that moment when you’re standing in front of a mirror and the outside doesn’t match the inside. Whether it’s clothes, identity, or confidence, that discomfort is universal. Writing Eric’s frustration gave me a way to say to kids: you’re not strange for wanting to feel like yourself. And it let me give him the happiest possible solution – something familiar, something comfortable, something made with love. Plus, I adore that his version has pockets for rocks and seashells. That detail makes me smile every time.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
Acceptance without drama was the most important one. I wanted readers to see a family where love is immediate and unconditional. A place where a prince can wear a dress, worry about what fits, and still go to the ball like every other royal child. It’s also about bodily autonomy and comfort. Children should not have to perform for other people in order to be worthy of celebration. And ultimately, it’s about joy – the freedom that comes when you’re allowed to be yourself.
Can we look forward to more books featuring Prince Eric?
Prince Eric’s story stands on its own, but I continue to write books that create space for many different kinds of children. The year my granddaughter started kindergarten, I published The Kind Kindergarten Class, which includes both a transgender boy and a transgender girl – and readers never know which children they are. That’s intentional. The point is that kindness, friendship, and curiosity matter more than labels. So while Eric may not return, the world he represents absolutely will.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Instagram | Website
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, Sara Madden, story, The Prince's Dress Dilemma, writer, writing








