Deadly Serious
Posted by Literary Titan

Deadly Serious by A. J. Thibault is a darkly comic spy thriller about Dan Goodis, an anxious would-be stand-up comic whose ordinary life gets pulled into a dangerous web of Cold War secrets, murder, romance, family history, and strange science. The book moves between 1980s Los Angeles and later consequences, mixing comedy clubs, intelligence operations, anti-gravity intrigue, and personal unraveling into a genre-bending thriller that is part espionage novel, part mystery, and part dark comedy.
This book feels restless in a good way. One minute, I was in a violent, snowy opening that feels almost cinematic, and the next, I was with Dan and his sheepdog in Los Angeles, watching his life veer between awkward humor and real danger. Thibault makes a bold choice by letting comedy and brutality stand close together. Sometimes that contrast is sharp enough to make you wince. Sometimes it works like a pressure valve. The jokes are not just decoration. They are part of how Dan survives, or tries to.
I also found myself thinking about how much of the book is really about fear beneath performance. Dan wants to be funny, but he is also exposed, insecure, and often overwhelmed by forces he barely understands. That gives the spy-thriller machinery a more personal edge. The author’s choices can feel big, strange, and occasionally messy, but the ambition is clear. This isn’t a neat little thriller that follows one clean track. It swerves. It piles on conspiracies, odd characters, romance, violence, and satire until the whole thing starts to feel like a feverish backstage tour of power and paranoia.
I would recommend Deadly Serious most to readers who like thrillers with personality, especially people who enjoy espionage stories that are willing to get weird, funny, and emotionally jagged. Readers who appreciate dark comedy inside a mystery-thriller will likely enjoy its nerve and unpredictability. It’s a book for someone who wants a plot with bite, a little chaos, and a main character who keeps trying to laugh while the world keeps raising the stakes.
Pages: 342 | ASIN : B01I92QGRQ
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A.J. Thiabault, Assassination Thrillers, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Conspiracy Thrillers, dark comedy, Deadly Serious, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, murder, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, spy thriller, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
Praying for a Wounded Child: Encouragement and Prayers for You and the Child You Love
Posted by Literary Titan

Praying for a Wounded Child by Virginia Wells is a devotional prayer guide for parents, grandparents, foster and adoptive caregivers, and anyone carrying deep concern for a child who has been traumatized. Wells names her audience with tenderness, then offers this simple reassurance: “God sees your pain and cares. I do too.” That sentence captures the heart of the book. It’s pastoral, personal, and written for people who are tired, confused, and still trying to love well.
The book is built around seven sections that move from the caregiver’s relationship with God, to spiritual practices, family life, child development, trauma, the child’s relationship with God, and the caregiver’s own wellness. Wells doesn’t rush straight into fixing the child. She starts with the adult’s soul, then widens the lens to the whole family and the long work of healing.
Wells’s voice is conversational, faith-filled, and grounded in lived experience. She writes, “This book was carved out of times of desperation,” and that honesty gives the prayers weight. The chapters often combine reflection, Scripture, guided prayer, practical prompts, and “Going Deeper” questions, so the book feels less like a lecture and more like a companion someone might keep beside a Bible, journal, or nightstand.
One of the strongest parts of the book is how specific it gets. Wells writes about abandonment, abuse, neglect, incarceration, prejudice, birth mothers, heritage, education, identity, siblings, marriage, single parenting, and self-care. The prayers don’t stay vague. They give readers language for situations that are often messy, lonely, and hard to talk about. Her reminder that therapy and interventions are encouraged alongside prayer also helps the book feel responsible rather than simplistic.
Praying for a Wounded Child is a warm, Scripture-centered resource for caregivers who want to pray but may not know what to say anymore. It’s not mainly a trauma textbook or a parenting manual. It’s a prayer companion shaped by counseling experience, chaplaincy, parenting, and Christian conviction. For readers who share Wells’s faith framework, it offers steady encouragement, practical reflection, and language for loving a wounded child without forgetting the caregiver’s own need for restoration.
Pages: 292 | ISBN : 978-1646458707
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Adoption (, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, conflict management, devotional, ebook, family, family conflict resolution, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Praying for a Wounded Child, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, Virginia Wells, writer, writing
Sisters of Twelve
Posted by Literary Titan

Sisters of Twelve is a historical mystery thriller built around the Voynich Manuscript, imagining that its unreadable pages are not a failed puzzle but a deliberately protected vault of knowledge, carried across centuries by a hidden lineage of women called the Custodians. At the center is Gia Braccia, the final Custodian, who must decide whether the world is finally ready for what the manuscript contains—and whether preservation has become its own kind of captivity. The novel braids real historical figures, archival intrigue, secret societies, scholarly obsession, and speculative systems into a story about women who kept knowledge alive when history preferred them nameless.
The book doesn’t rush toward revelation; it understands that secrecy has texture, procedure, dust, paperwork, and dread. The scenes inside libraries and archives have an almost mineral stillness, and I liked how the novel makes bureaucracy feel thrilling, not through car chases or melodrama, but through delayed emails, loan agreements, box numbers, and the soft violence of institutional language. Its best passages treat knowledge not as treasure, but as burden: something that must be timed, guarded, doubted, and eventually released.
I also found the book most compelling when it resisted the easy glamour of conspiracy. The Sisterhood is not simply a clever hidden order; it is an argument about history’s missing hands. The novel’s emotional current comes from its insistence that preservation is work, and that women have often done that work without signatures, monuments, or applause. The scale of the mythology can feel heavy, but that weight is also part of the book’s design. It wants to feel like a codex being opened slowly, page by page, with each layer asking whether understanding is always a gift.
This book is for readers who enjoy mysteries, thrillers, historical fiction, and the intrigue of the Voynich Manuscript. Fans of The Da Vinci Code may recognize the pleasure of symbols, suppressed histories, and dangerous knowledge, but Giulio A. Savo’s approach is quieter and more contemplative, closer in spirit to Umberto Eco’s fascination with texts, interpretation, and the peril of certainty. Sisters of Twelve is a novel about the moment a secret stops being protected and starts becoming responsible to the world.
Pages: 509 | ASIN : B0GTW2FJ1P
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: Ancient Historical Fiction, Ancient History Fiction, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, fiction, Giulio A. Savo, goodreads, historical mysteries, historical mystery, history, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Sisters of Twelve, story, trailer, writer, writing
Faith Foundations
Posted by Literary-Titan

Baker Vaughan follows a man in his fifties who leaves a polished but hollow life in New York, heads to Idaho, and tries to reclaim a calling to the priesthood that he abandoned decades earlier. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The setup came directly from my own life, though Baker’s journey diverges significantly from mine in the details. Sixteen years ago, I left New York City for Idaho—traded the polished surfaces and relentless pace for something quieter, more spacious. Five years after that move, I began discerning a call to the Episcopal priesthood. I spent two years in that process before ultimately deciding it wasn’t my path.
What I discovered during those two years became the heart of this story.
As a parishioner, I liked the church, but I didn’t love it. I found meaning in the liturgy, community in the congregation, and solace in the rituals. But when I stepped into discernment—when I began to see the church not from the pews but from the inside—everything shifted. I encountered the business of it all: the politics, the bureaucracy, the institutional machinery that keeps a church running. Budgets, committees, and personnel issues. The gap between the idealized faith I’d held and the messy, human reality of the institution was… painful. Disorienting.
That disillusionment is what I wanted to explore with Baker. He comes to Idaho carrying an old, half-remembered sense of calling—something he abandoned decades earlier. Unlike me, he had that youthful pull toward the priesthood, but he never pursued it. Now, in his fifties, with his polished New York life feeling increasingly hollow, he decides to try again.
And like me, he’s never seen behind the curtain before. He’s been a believer, perhaps even devout, but always from a distance. When he finally steps into the inner workings of the church, he discovers it’s not what he imagined. The sacredness is still there, but so is the machinery—the compromises, the egos, the institutional inertia.
I wrote this story because that reckoning felt important to me. Not as a condemnation of the church, but as an honest exploration of what happens when our ideals meet reality. What do we do when something we’ve held as sacred reveals itself to be deeply, stubbornly human? How do we reconcile faith with institution? Those questions haunted me during my own discernment, and they haunt Baker throughout his journey in Idaho.
The novel resists the idea of “starting over” and leans into excavation. When did that distinction become central to Baker’s story?
Baker’s excavation is multifaceted—he’s digging into all three layers. The first layer is his younger self. He has to examine why he abandoned the priesthood impulse decades ago. The concrete reason is clear: his wife died in the middle of seminary. But what he’s been wrestling with for the next forty years is whether that was the right decision—whether grief was reason enough to walk away, or whether he used it as permission to run from something he was already afraid of. What was he running from? What was he running toward? The loss is real and devastating, but there’s something else in that younger version of himself—some fear or ambition or wound—that he never fully understood. He can’t reclaim a calling without understanding why he let it go, and whether the reason he’s told himself all these years is the whole truth. The second layer is his faith foundations. Baker has held an idealized version of faith for most of his life—a set of spiritual assumptions that shaped him, or perhaps shaped the absence of a life. Now he has to question those foundations. Were they ever solid? Were they his, or were they inherited, unexamined? Excavation here means asking whether the faith he thought he had was ever real, or just a story he told himself. The third layer is the church’s institutional reality. This is where he uncovers what the church actually is beneath the preconceptions—the business behind the sacredness. The politics, the compromises, the human messiness. It’s not what he imagined, and that gap forces him to reckon with whether his calling was to an ideal that never existed.
You treat religion as complicated, entangled, and sometimes uncomfortable. Why was it important not to present faith as easy or purely redemptive?
As the author, I was deliberately avoiding the redemptive arc—the one where disillusionment becomes cathartic, where seeing the church’s flaws leads to clarity and renewal. That felt dishonest to me. In my experience, and I think in most people’s experience, faith doesn’t work that way. The complications don’t resolve. They accumulate.
That’s where Karl Thompson came in. He’s a former bishop, and he becomes Baker’s mentor. But Karl isn’t offering redemption or answers. He’s already lived through his own disillusionment about the church. He’s seen the machinery, the politics, the human messiness of it all. And he’s made a kind of peace with the fact that faith and the institutional church aren’t perfect—that they can’t be separated from human limitation.
What’s crucial is that Karl’s peace isn’t clarity. It’s not that he’s figured it out or found a way to reconcile the contradictions. He’s simply accepted that the complications are irreducible. That faith will always be entangled with institution, with ego, with failure.
And Baker sees him as fundamentally human first. Not as a spiritual authority. Karl is flawed, tired, and sometimes cynical. He’s a man who’s learned to live with discomfort rather than transcend it. That prevents the novel from treating him as someone who offers easy answers or models a “right” way through.
I think that’s more honest to the actual texture of faith and human experience. We want religion to be clean, to offer us certainty or transformation. But it’s made of people. It’s compromised from the beginning. The peace, if there is any, comes from accepting that—not from resolving it from sitting with the entanglement rather than trying to escape it.
Baker is in his fifties, which is unusual for a “coming-of-self” narrative. Why tell this story at that stage of life? Do you believe it’s ever too late for transformation?
I don’t think it’s ever too late for transformation. But I also don’t think transformation at fifty looks like what we imagine it does at twenty-five. There are real constraints. The Episcopal church has a mandatory retirement age of seventy-two. Learning becomes harder as we age—that’s just biology. So Baker is in this liminal space where he’s old enough to know what he’s risking, young enough that he could theoretically still pursue priesthood, but acutely aware that the window is closing.
Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon
Love, Rebuilding, and Discovery Keep Calling
Baker Vaughan is a man shaped by success, and suddenly undone by a loss that changed the course of his life.
After heartbreak shatters his world during his second year at Yale Seminary, he runs. From grief. From faith. From himself. What follows is a carefully constructed life built on achievement and distraction, as he trades his spiritual calling for a high-powered advertising career on Madison Avenue.
For twenty-five years, Baker moves through life outwardly successful but inwardly unmoored, carrying the persistent weight of absence he has never learned to face.
Until Idaho.
In a small town with an unexpected sense of welcome, Baker begins to glimpse something he thought was gone forever: the possibility of starting again. But healing is never simple. In Boise, he meets Karl Thompson, whose presence forces him into uncomfortable questions about truth, morality, connection, and what it really means to be known.
Baker Vaughan is a deeply human novel about grief, reinvention, and the fragile courage it takes to stop running. It explores what remains when everything else falls away, and the surprising ways life offers second chances when we finally allow ourselves to receive them.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Baker Vaughan, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, death, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Grief & Bereavement Fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, psychological fiction, read, reader, reading, Small Town & Rural Fiction, story, Stuart Hotchkiss, trailer, writer, writing
Kindness and Humanity
Posted by Literary-Titan

Killing Einstein follows an FBI agent assigned to surveil Albert Einstein and Kurt Gödel during World War II, only to be pulled into their friendship, ideas, and a deadly web of espionage, loyalties, and danger. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I was a math nerd in a former life, and I’ve always been fascinated by Gödel’s incompleteness results. I’ve also always been fascinated by the fact that Einstein and Gödel walked together for so many years, and no one really knows what they talked about. So I thought I’d mix those two fascinations into a spy story.
How did you balance the demands of espionage plotting with the novel’s philosophical and mathematical ideas?
Great question. I am what they call in the fiction world a “pantser,” meaning I do not outline, I do not know who the characters will be, and I do not know how the story will proceed. I just get a core idea and start writing from the seat of my pants. That made balancing the spy story and the metaphysical ideas especially hard for me, and I ultimately found the balance during the long editing process. The original versions had a lot more math and were much less page-turning!
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
As a pantser, the themes bubbled up through the writing process rather than being planned in advance. Once everything settled, the themes I saw included Gödel’s insight that there are true things that cannot be proved true, but also the difference between right and wrong, and the difficulties all of us face when we confront that difference. The book also became about how some things are not what they seem, while the most important things are often exactly as they seem.
What did you most want to capture about the friendship between Einstein and Gödel?
Their energy, their love for one another, their kindness and humanity, and their shared devotion to the idea that there are deep truths—including moral truths—that are real and not relative. That may seem strange coming from the father of relativity, but Einstein’s theory is actually built on a remarkable invariant truth: the speed of light never changes, regardless of one’s frame of reference. Morally, against the backdrop of Nazism’s profound evil, neither man lost confidence in the reality of good and evil, though each remained sensitive to the challenges we all sometimes face in choosing between the two.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Espionage Thrillers, fiction, goodreads, Historical Thrillers, indie author, Killing Einstein, kindle, kobo, literature, Morris Hoffman, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, technothrillers, thriller, writer, writing
Silent Revolution
Posted by Literary-Titan

Masters of the Ocean Sea takes readers back in time to the great age of exploration and shows how Portuguese explorers were the first to push beyond the known seas and to develop maritime technology long before Columbus. What drew you to telling Portugal’s story of global exploration?
I live in the Algarve, just twenty minutes from the windswept shores of Sagres. Every day, I am reminded that the modern world was effectively born here. We often think the Age of Discovery began with Columbus in 1492, but for eighty years before that, the Portuguese were engaged in a “silent revolution”, a systematic, gruelling, and dangerous dismantling of the medieval world map. I wanted to restore that original “hinge” of history to its proper place, showing how a small kingdom at the edge of Europe managed to stitch the globe together by sea.
The book consistently pairs innovation with moral cost. Was that balance your starting point or something that emerged as you researched?
It was the starting point. I don’t believe you can write honest history by separating the brilliance of the caravel from the tragedy of the cargo it eventually carried. My personal background gives me an inherent wariness of “Great Systems.” I wanted to celebrate the staggering technical ingenuity of these explorers while remaining clear-eyed about the conquest, profit, and the early architecture of the slave trade that followed. To me, the “voltage” of history lies exactly in that contradiction.
The book gives winds, currents, and coastlines real urgency. How do you turn geography into narrative energy?
I wanted the reader to feel the deck tilting. Geography isn’t just a map; it’s a series of lethal obstacles. When I was researching, I didn’t see these routes as static lines on parchment; I saw them as battle plans against a physical enemy. The Cape of Good Hope wasn’t a landmark; it was a wall of water. By treating the environment as a primary antagonist, not just a setting, it turns historical navigation into a high-stakes survival narrative.
What is one thing that you hope readers take away from Masters of the Ocean Sea?
That the connected world we inhabit today was not an inevitability, it was forged by hand. I want readers to see that the “Age of Discovery” wasn’t a clean pageant of flags, but a messy, human, and often brutal reorganisation of the planet. If they walk away, realising that every horizon someone “opened” was already inhabited by consequences we are still living with today, then I have done my job.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
THE UNTOLD SAGA OF THE FIRST GLOBAL EMPIREStructured in five parts spanning 1415 to 1560, this narrative history follows eighteen key figures whose lives shaped the modern world. You will journey alongside:
The Pioneers: Prince Henry the Navigator, Gil Eanes, and Diogo Cão as they challenge the “Sea of Darkness.”
The Record-Breakers: Bartolomeu Dias rounding the Cape of Good Hope and Vasco da Gama’s hazardous voyage to India.
The Conquerors: The strategic brilliance of Afonso de Albuquerque and the accidental landfall of Pedro Álvares Cabral in Brazil.
The Globalizers: The daring world-circling expedition of Ferdinand Magellan and the far-reaching journeys of Fernão Mendes Pinto and Jorge Álvares.
BEYOND THE MAP: TECHNOLOGY & TRIUMPHBlending vivid storytelling with rigorous historical detail, this book traces the evolution of maritime technology and royal policy that enabled the conquest of the Atlantic. Discover the reality behind the lines on a map:
Nautical Engineering: How advances in shipbuilding (the Caravel), cartography, and celestial navigation turned the ocean into a highway.
The Cost of Ambition: The gritty truth of storms, shipwrecks, and mutinies, alongside the human and political cost of colonial expansion.
Global Trade Routes: How the opening of sea-roads to Africa, Asia, and the Americas triggered the first wave of globalization.
FOR READERS OF MARITIME HISTORY & NAVAL ADVENTUREWhether you are a fan of world history, naval warfare, or biographies of famous explorers, Masters of the Ocean Sea offers a sweeping account of how Portuguese ambition and seamanship launched the modern age.
Behind every discovery stands a story of courage, greed, faith, and failure. Are you ready to set sail?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Andrei Romanov, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Expeditions & Discoveries World History, goodreads, history, History eBooks of Spain & Portugal, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Maritime History & Piracy, Masters of the Ocean Sea, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Docia’s Diary
Posted by Literary Titan
Docia Ingalls was more than just the little sister of Charles “Pa” Ingalls from the Little House books. She was a spirited, fiercely independent, passionate woman, who experienced love, heartbreak, hard work, trials, and tribulations, but kept on going. She was a true pioneer woman from the hardy stock that filled the Ingalls family. A romantic, loving and naive young woman, she married twice, divorced once and birthed and raised nine children all the while doing the best she could with what she had. Married to an alcoholic whom she loved despite his faults, Docia carried her family and their fate on her thin, yet strong shoulders. An imperfect person from a legendary and beloved family, Docia followed her heart and lived a life of adventure, sadness, love and ultimately, satisfaction. This is her story, in her own words, at long last.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, Docia's Diary, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, trailer, western, womens fiction, writer, writing
Shared Sense of Excitement
Posted by Literary-Titan

Detective Lucian follows a stubborn detective on Haven Island who makes it his personal mission to protect a sassy realtor who was attacked by a client, but falling in love was not part of his plan. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I dedicate a significant amount of my time volunteering for our local sheriff’s office, where I contribute to realistic role-playing scenarios for recruits and participate in numerous ride-alongs. Our sheriff’s department is deeply committed to its community, and I aimed to reflect that strong bond in my writing. Also, with several realtor friends, I’ve learned how careful they are when they show a house. I put a lot of my experiences into my writing.
Josie and Lucian clash almost immediately. How did you balance Lucian’s protective instincts without letting him overshadow Josie’s independence?
My goal was for Josie to come off as a capable, independent woman who wasn’t afraid to ask for help, but could also go it alone. Josie needed to have a hard and soft side to her personality. It was crucial to demonstrate Lucian’s unwavering support for her, without infringing on her independence.
The novel leans into emotion without hesitation. Do you think romantic suspense works best when feelings are close to the surface?
I do. By allowing their emotions to surface, the characters create a stronger connection with the reader. Then, not only does the character’s adrenaline begin to surge, but the reader’s does too, creating a shared sense of excitement.
I hope the series continues in other books. If so, where will the story take readers?
The focus of this series is the Haven Island Police Department, detailing their work on diverse cases as they strive to ‘protect and serve’ their community. Book 1 acted as my transition from my initial series, “Path Series,” to the setting of Haven Island. It introduced Deputy Sean, who relocates to a new town and finds himself falling for the diner’s waitress, who is unfortunately being stalked. Book 2 delved into Chief Alejandro’s past, revealing his heroic rescue of Sammie’s daughter from an unhinged ex-husband. The fourth book, releasing soon, focuses on Hudson, a Patrol Officer tasked with locating a missing child.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Instagram | Website | Amazon
Josie
I’ve worked two jobs for as long as I can remember—realtor in the afternoon, hotel host before sunrise. Exhausting? Absolutely. But after years of grinding, my nest egg is almost full, and my dream is finally within reach.
Then one client crosses a line.
And everything spirals.
Someone is watching me. Waiting. And the infuriatingly intense Detective Lucian Warrick—the man who drives me crazy on a good day—is suddenly the only shield between me and the darkness closing in.
He swears he’ll protect me.
He swears he won’t let anything happen to me.
I pray he gets to me in time.
Lucian
Josie Hale crashed into my life with a smart mouth, a stubborn streak, and a smile I can’t shake. She gets under my skin in all the wrong ways… and all the right ones.
But when a predator sets his sights on her, the lines blur fast. And keeping her safe means ignoring the heat between us, the one that could burn down every rule I’ve lived by.
I’ll tear apart this island to stop him.
I’ll put my life on the line without hesitation.
Because somewhere between the chaos, the danger, and her damn irresistible sass… I realized Josie Hale isn’t just another case.
She’s mine.
And I’ll do whatever it takes to keep her with me… forever.
Detective Lucian is a first-person, dual POV, slow burn, police protection, suspenseful romance. HEA guaranteed.
Preorder your copy today!
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Action & Adventure Romance, author, Haven Island PD: Protecting Paradise, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Detective Lucian, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Neri Lopez, nook, novel, police romance, read, reader, reading, romance, romantic suspense, series, story, writer, writing






