Untold Outside The Family
Posted by Literary Titan

Patriot of the Lowcountry follows a young widow who navigates the British occupation of SC, gathering intelligence, evading raiders, and warning General Francis Marion, while asking, ” Who is the war actually for?” What first drew you to Eliza Wilkinson’s real letters and experiences?
My own genealogy research led me to a family tale about my sixth great-grandmother, Anna Asbury Stone. She made a dangerous, 200-mile journey from Virginia to Valley Forge in the winter of 1778 to bring supplies to her husband and brothers. Along the way, a congressman in York asked her to carry a letter to General Washington, and soon after she was underway the following day, a man blocked her way on the road and claimed the congressman had changed his mind and wanted the letter back. She did not believe him and hurried away, and managed to travel the remaining 80 miles and deliver the letter, and her supplies, safely.
This tale, untold outside the family and the DAR chapter named for Anna, was the perfect framework for a thrilling historical novel, and I used it to write Answering Liberty’s Call: Anna Stone’s Daring Ride to Valley Forge. After spending about three years on research and writing, I had a good grasp on daily life in the Revolutionary War era, and the desire to find other worthy women patriots and share their stories, too. Eliza was intriguing because her backstory was so poignant, and I had access to her thoughts and opinions in the 150 pages of letters she wrote to friends. Patriot of the Lowcountry was a completely different experience for me as an author. Without a linear story to flesh out, I pulled anecdotes from her letters and built them into the timeline of events leading up to and following the Fall of Charleston. I had very little information about her two husbands, so I built identities and personalities for them. Because Eliza had strong opinions about how men and women interacted and also what she wanted in a second husband, I decided her first marriage had either been very good, or very bad. I chose to give her a kind and loving first husband with a lighthearted nature that would have appealed to her as a teenage girl, knowing all the while that he would be taken from her in the first year of their marriage. That loss, and the loss of their baby, would cause profound change in her, so naturally a different kind of man would suit her better the second time around.
Eliza is proud, stubborn, brave, sometimes naïve, and always learning in real time. How much of that portrait came from the letters, and how much did you have to fill in through imagination?
Eliza was indeed brave, sometimes naive, and learning in real time, and I created her character based on what she wrote in her letters. The first six chapters rely heavily on her accounts of the British raids on her home and the Battle of Stono Ferry. The major difference is that in reporting the events a few years later, Eliza sometimes came across as brave and defiant one minute and then frightened the next. If I had transcribed those letters as written, her character would have suffered from the inconsistency. Many of her letters are undated, and it is unclear in which order they were written, so portraying her character as changeable as she appears in her narratives would have been unfair to her!
The book keeps asking who gets to claim freedom and who is still denied it while centering women’s independence and slavery alongside the patriot cause. Was that always the heart of the novel, or did it deepen through the writing?
The comparison of women’s limited independence and slavery definitely deepened through the different drafts of the novel. My first editor pushed me to consider the disparity between how the British treated imprisoned officers and the enlisted men, and how it would make Eliza feel to see the officers throwing an Independence Day barbeque when her friends were starving on the prison ship.
I definitely wrestled with how to treat the enslaved characters in the story, knowing that Jefferson’s penultimate draft of the Declaration of Independence blamed King George III for bringing slavery to America’s shores, and the paragraph was stricken because it would not have been approved by the delegates from South Carolina and Georgia.
To people in that time and place, slavery was a part of daily life. I could not ignore that her family owned slaves and stay true to the real Eliza, but neither could I paint my protagonist in a wholly unsympathetic light. There was evidence in her letters that she defended both her maid and a man the soldiers found spying on them as they traveled a lonely road (both of those anecdotes used in the book are taken from her letters), and so I introduced characters that would make her look at her world through different eyes. Especially after her journey to Charleston, I compared society’s expectations for Eliza’s life and her maid Jennie’s. I was glad the story arc allowed for Jennie to anticipate a greater measure of freedom in her future, even though it meant stripping Eliza of her most trusted friend and companion.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon | Website
Eliza is no stranger to both privilege and heartbreak. Widowed at eighteen, she gained self-sufficiency while managing one of her father’s plantations. Now, at age twenty-two, marauding Redcoats destroy her home and hard-won independence.
With her family’s properties in ruins and their financial future threatened, Eliza’s father insists she seek the stability of a new marriage. As she reluctantly navigates the romance and intrigue of Charles Town’s social season, two very different men vie for her attention.
The season’s revelries come to an end amid the chaos and terror of siege, and when the city falls to the British, Eliza joins other rebel ladies in relief work, intelligence gathering, and sabotage.
Danger mounts as the British banish and imprison patriots to quell civil unrest. Eliza learns of a military operation that could spell disaster for General Francis Marion, commander of the only significant rebel force left in South Carolina. Can she locate the exclusive Swamp Fox and deliver a message of warning in time?
Based on Eliza Yonge Wilkinson’s letters that recount her experiences during the American Revolution.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Patriot of the Lowcountry: Eliza Wilkinson and the Fall of Charleston, read, reader, reading, romance, story, Tracy Lawson, womens fiction, writer, writing
Arcadian Alcove
Posted by Literary Titan

Arcadian Alcove, by Karen Black, is a cozy contemporary fantasy about Lia Alexander Sinclair, who inherits her great-aunt Melissa’s secluded North Carolina estate and discovers that the family stories about fae, telepathic cats, and hidden magic were never just stories. As Lia and her husband Eric settle into Arcadian Alcove, she becomes the guardian of its supernatural residents, including bropis, elves, talking animals, and Athena the telecat, while also fighting to protect the land from political greed and an eminent domain threat. It is a gentle fantasy with an environmental heart, built around inheritance, wonder, family, and the duty to protect what cannot protect itself.
What I liked most about the book is how sincerely it believes in its own magic. Karen Black doesn’t treat the fae as a clever twist or a dark secret waiting to explode. She lets them sit at the kitchen table, drink peppermint tea from thimbles, worry about their homes, and become part of Lia’s daily rhythm. That choice gives the story a warm, lived-in feeling. It’s not trying to be flashy. It’s trying to be kind. I found that refreshing. The writing is plainspoken and direct, sometimes almost old-fashioned in its sweetness, but that fits the genre and the mood. This is the kind of fantasy where the house matters, the garden matters, and a small creature’s fear can carry as much weight as a courtroom battle.
I also appreciated the way the book ties magic to responsibility. Lia does not just inherit land. She inherits a promise. That idea gives the story more shape than a simple “woman discovers magical world” plot. The conflict with Governor Lassiter and the highway project adds real stakes, and I liked that the book connects the survival of the fae with the survival of ordinary wildlife. The wolves, fish, frogs, birds, and little people all belong to the same fragile web. Some parts favor clarity and comfort, which gives the story a softer touch than more intense fantasy, but that gentleness feels in keeping with the book’s overall spirit. Still, I did not mind that much. The book’s heart is so clear. It wants to argue that belief is not childish when it leads to care, courage, and protection.
I would recommend Arcadian Alcove to readers who enjoy gentle fantasy, cozy magical realism, nature-centered stories, and books where family legacy and found community matter more than battles or darkness. It will especially appeal to readers who like talking animals, benevolent fae, protective homes, and a hopeful tone. This is a quiet, warm fantasy for anyone who wants a story that feels like stepping into a sunlit herb garden and finding out the whispers in the leaves are real.
Pages: 311 | ASIN : B0GDS6FCFB
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: Arcadian Alcove, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary fantasy, Cozy Fantasy Fiction, ebook, Fae, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Karen Black, kindle, kobo, literature, magic, magical realism, nature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing, YA
The Absurdity of All Kinds
Posted by Literary Titan
The Legend of Leanna Page follows a servant’s daughter with dream-born powers as she challenges kings, kingdoms, and ancient hatred in a fairy-touched world where magic, grief, and prejudice threaten peace. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
This one kind of hit me out of nowhere. I was reading this 19th century novel, and in it the author briefly alludes to this even older story, and I didn’t know what he was referring to. I tried to just context-clue it to keep reading, and in a matter of milliseconds I had this whole legend in my head, and I wasn’t sure whether I remembered it or made it up. When I realized it was mine to write if I pleased, I started thinking about the metaphors within the environment of the legend, and I decided it was particularly important in these times to write something that highlighted the absurdity of all kinds of borders and the power people can have to cross them.
Leanna’s bravery is rooted in tenderness as much as defiance. How did you develop her moral center?
I read a lot of philosophy books! I do a lot of work personally on being the morally strongest person I can be, and a lot of that work has been through a study – both academic and independent – of philosophy, psychology, and spirituality. All those studies very directly influence my characters’ behaviors. That balance of tenderness and defiance you mention is particularly missing in the world right now. People tend to lean too far toward one or the other, both to their own detriment and to that of those around them. I know that living up to our own moral codes can be hard work, and I wanted Leanna to embody that constant effort to do the right thing, even in the most difficult of circumstances.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
I wanted to explore the question of whether something with a wicked history can one day bring larger goodness. Humanity has done plenty to earn the name wicked. After billions of years of natural harmony, we come along and literally start destroying the earth, not to mention the atrocities we’ve done and continue to inflict on each other. But, through her story, Leanna learns that for something (or someone) to be good, someone else first has to believe they can be so. Can we do that for each other? Can we believe in humanity’s ability to bring about large-scale long-term goodness? If we can start with believing that, then I think we’d really have a chance at proving ourselves right.
How did you approach writing the bond between Leanna and Kennedy, especially within the larger political conflict?
It was vital to me that they brought each other joy. Because they grow up together, there’s a childlike playfulness they share that sustains them even when things get complicated. The very things we’re taught to fret over as adults can look very simple to children, and most often that simplicity is more truthful than any fretted over conclusion. When they’re older, both Leanna and Kennedy become an anchor for the other, and when one starts to fret, losing faith in her own goodness, the other believes in that goodness twice as hard. This relationship more than any other is what teaches Leanna the power of believing in someone. If Kennedy hadn’t done that for her, she might have had a very different path.
Author Links: GoodReads | Instagram | Facebook | Website
In this long lost legend from the ancient World Within The Woods, a found family unites across impossible borders. Two servants from warring nations and a pair of fairy warriors from the Infinite Wood come together in a hidden cave to raise two little girls, Leanna and Kennedy, whose very existence poses a threat to the structures of their societies.
Discovery and danger go hand in hand, but the children can’t stay in the cave forever. When they emerge, they find themselves in a world riddled with myth, prejudice, and dangerous power. More, they discover it’s up to them to try and put the world right – even if it means losing everything.
The debut of emerging non-profit publisher For Elenvia Publications.
For Elenvia: Publications and Productions is an interdisciplinary arts organization focused on using theatre and literature to collectively imagine a better world and consider how we might make it real. It’s mission: “With a focus on theatre and literature, we use the arts to unite people under a common philosophy of limitless respect, empathy, and curiosity. We believe in the possibility of a better world and work towards its creation through artistic education and active community organizing.”
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Addam Ledamyen, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, lgbtq, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Legend of Leanna Page, writer, writing
Benjamin & Honka’s Backyard Adventure: Second Edition
Posted by Literary Titan

Benjamin & Honka’s Backyard Adventure is a gentle picture book about a six-year-old boy who discovers a woodland duck near the pond in his backyard and names him Honka because of his funny, husky call. What begins as a simple encounter turns into a sweet friendship, with Benjamin learning how to care for Honka properly, including the important lesson that bread isn’t good for ducks and healthier treats are a kinder choice. The story settles into a warm rhythm of pond play, small discoveries, and the quiet promise that ordinary days can hold real wonder.
I liked the tenderness of this book most. It has the feel of a memory a parent might tell at bedtime, soft around the edges and full of backyard magic. The writing is simple and direct, which suits the age group, and I appreciated that the story doesn’t force a big, dramatic lesson. Instead, it lets care and curiosity do the work. Benjamin’s sadness when Honka disappears for a day felt especially true to childhood, that quick little ache children feel when something they love suddenly isn’t where it should be.
The artwork gives the picture book much of its charm. The pond scenes are especially calming, with muted greens, golden light, soft water, and little details like butterflies, reeds, and garden plants that make the backyard feel alive. I also liked how Honka is drawn with personality rather than exaggerated cuteness. He feels like a real animal, a child might observe closely and come to love. There are a few places where the text could be smoother, and some phrasing feels a bit uneven, but the heart of the book comes through clearly. Its best idea is a lovely one: children can learn compassion not through lectures, but through paying attention.
I found Benjamin & Honka’s Backyard Adventure to be an affectionate children’s book with a sincere love for animals and nature. It has a comforting sweetness that stayed with me after I finished it. I’d recommend it for young children who enjoy animal stories, backyard exploration, and gentle books about kindness, especially for parents looking for a calm read-aloud with a little real-world care lesson tucked inside.
Pages: 32 | ASIN : B0GRTCML8T
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: animals, author, Benjamin & Honka's Backyard Adventure: Second Edition, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, Children's Books on Emotions & Feelings, Children's Duck Books, Children's Ducks & Other Waterfowl Books, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kindness, kobo, literature, nature, nook, novel, picture book, read, reader, reading, Sergio Teodoro, story, trailer, woodland animals, writer, writing
In Madagascar, History is found on the plate.
Posted by Literary Titan

In A Taste of Madagascar: Culinary Riches of the Red Island, you describe Madagascar’s cuisine as a mosaic woven from migration and cultural exchange. How does the food tell a history that more conventional historical accounts might miss or flatten?
In Madagascar, History is found on the plate. People’s migrations and trade are reflected in the food around the island.
Take rice, for example. To most, it is a simple staple, but in Madagascar, it is an anchor that connects the present to the voyagers of the past. When I look at a bowl of fragrant rice, I don’t just see a crop; I see a history of survival and agricultural adaptation that traveled across the Indian Ocean and eventually reached the Carolinas. It is a record of how people carried their lives and their tastes with them through exploration, trade, and even forced migration.
Then there is vanilla. A history book might cite Madagascar as the source of 80 percent of the world’s vanilla beans. A statistic that strips away the soul of the ingredient. But when I stood in the lush hills of the SAVA region and watched a farmer perform the “marriage”—hand-pollinating a single orchid blossom with a wooden needle—I saw the heritage of extreme patience and craft. That moment of pollination is a tactile memory of how traditions are passed down hand to hand across generations, transforming a delicate orchid into a core part of Malagasy identity. It reveals a depth of human labor and devotion that a “commodity” label could never capture.
Even at the dining table in the capital, history is being reimagined. At Chef Lalaina’s restaurant, Marais, I have tasted dishes like foie gras ravioles with vanilla and cocoa. It is a tapestry of diversity where French techniques, Asian inspirations, and local ingredients entwine to create something entirely unique. It tells a story of cultural exchange that is harmonious and evolving, rather than one of mere historical collision. While conventional accounts might focus on the isolation of an island, the food tells a story of resilience, renewal, and a shared global future.
The book’s central method is using ingredients as entry points into work, history, ecology, and identity. Which ingredient opened the most unexpected door, and which took the longest to understand beyond its flavor?
If I were to trace the paths of my journey, the most unexpected door was opened by caviar. Arriving with a mind full of rainforests, vanilla, and the heat of wild pepper, finding one of the world’s most coveted delicacies being produced in the highlands of Madagascar felt like a beautiful contradiction.
I remember sitting at Marais, Chef Lalaina’s restaurant in Antananarivo, and realizing that this sturgeon roe was a testament to the Red Island’s future. It opened a door into a world where Malagasy effort and innovation were redefining a global industry. It taught me that Madagascar is not just a source of raw materials, but a place of sophisticated creation and visionary entrepreneurs.
As for the ingredient that took me the longest to understand beyond its flavor, it is undoubtedly **vanilla**. Having spent decades in the flavor industry, I knew vanilla through the cold precision of statistics—80 percent of global production, market prices, and chemical profiles. For thirty years, it was a familiar commodity in my professional life, yet I had only scratched its surface.
The shift happened when I stood in the humid hills along the Ankara River. I was no longer a writer or a flavor expert; I was just a student with a wooden needle in my hand, attempting the “marriage” of the vanilla orchid. That tactile memory of hand-pollinating a single flower, a task that requires immense patience, finally stripped away the commodity label. I realized then that vanilla isn’t just a flavor; it is a story of human labor and traditions passed hand to hand across generations. It took a lifetime in the industry and a trek into the forest to truly “see” the bean for what it is: a fragile link between the land and the lives of those who nurture it.
You weave deforestation, biodiversity loss, and climate pressure into the culinary narrative as lived realities rather than abstract concerns. How do you keep the environmental stakes present without letting them overwhelm the food story?
I believe that to separate the flavor from the forest is to tell only half the story. I keep the environmental stakes present by treating the landscape not as a background, but as a primary ingredient. When I write about the culinary riches of Madagascar, the ecology isn’t an abstract concern; it is the very thing that makes the flavor possible.
I often use the wild pepper, or voatsiperifery, as a bridge to this reality. I remember standing on a curve of the RN2 with Olivier Rama, who shared the “bittersweet story” of this endemic spice. The pepper grows only on vines in the high canopy of the primary forest. However, the stakes become visceral when you realize that some harvesters, driven by immediate need, cut down the entire tree to reach the berries, a practice that threatens the very sustainability of the spice. If we lose the forest, we lose this extraordinary flavor forever.
I take a similar approach with honey. When I visited the rural yards near Ambanja or the mangroves of Antsohihy, I saw how bees turn blossoms into farmers’ survival, one golden drop at a time. Each variety, whether it’s the tangy mokarana or the smoky Menabe forest hone, is tied to a specific, fragile ecosystem. The stakes remain present because they are rooted in the survival of the people and the rituals I describe.
Ultimately, I want the reader to feel that “A Taste of Madagascar” is a story of resilience. By centering the narrative on the *farmers and visionary entrepreneurs who are “giving back to local communities,” I frame conservation as an act of creation rather than just a struggle against loss. The environmental stakes are there in every bite, every scent, and every human encounter, making the “hidden cost of culinary bounty” something we can all understand through the language of food.
The book repeatedly suggests that flavor itself carries memory and history. Do you think cuisine can preserve cultural identity in ways archives sometimes cannot?
I believe that while an archive can store a fact, only a kitchen can keep a culture truly alive. An archive is a collection of static records, but cuisine is a “living thread” that pulls the past directly into the present, allowing us to taste the very survival and spirit of those who came before us.
I saw this most clearly in the work of the late Mariette Andrianjaka. She was a true cultural ambassador who acted as a bridge between the old world and the new. Her legacy wasn’t found in dusty ledgers, but in her “remarkable ability to salvage recipes and techniques” that were on the very verge of being forgotten. When she prepared a dish incorporating dried fish into a vegetable stew, she wasn’t just following a recipe; she was meticulously documenting the diverse heritage of Madagascar, the waves of migration from Austronesian peoples to Arab and European traders. A history book might list those migrations, but Mariette allowed you to experience the “complex layers of flavor” they left behind.
Then there is the story of rice. To an archivist, rice might be a commodity to be tracked along trade routes. But to me, this fragrant rice is a record of an “intricate web of migration, trade, and survival”. It carries the memory of people who moved through exploration and even forced migration, carrying their seeds and their tastes with them across continents. When you sit at a table with a bowl of this aromatic grain, you are connecting to an “anchor of Malagasy daily life” that ties the fields to the table and the past to the present in a way no document ever could.
Even the zebu, the Madagascar hunchback cattle, tells a story that transcends the written word. I remember a defining meal with Chef Henintsoa Moretti, where she served *manaramo-lotra*—a slow-cooked confit of zebu tail, tongue, tripe, and ribeye. In that single dish, she captured the “essence” of the Malagasy culinary soul. It was a timeless homage to a culture where food is ritual and renewal. These flavors leave a “permanent imprint” on us, transforming history from something we study into something we breathe and embody.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: A Taste of Madagascar: Culinary Riches of the Red Island, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Emmanuel Laroche, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, travel, writer, writing
Truth Seeker: The Story of Zoroaster
Posted by Literary Titan

Truth Seeker: The Story of Zoroaster tells the story of Zoroaster from his mother Dugdav’s frightening vision to his own lifelong search for truth, kindness, wisdom, and justice. Author Rebecca DesPrez frames the book as playful historical fiction for ages 8–12 rather than a strict biography, blending legend, imagination, humor, and moral reflection as Zoroaster grows from a laughing baby into a teacher whose ideas challenge cruelty, superstition, and fear.
I liked how much heart this book has. As a parent, I’m always drawn to stories that trust children with big ideas, and this one does. It talks about fear, social rejection, animal cruelty, courage, and moral choice without becoming heavy in a way that would shut a young reader out. The writing has a bouncy, conversational energy, with jokes tucked into serious moments, and that helps soften the darker scenes. Sometimes the humor is broad, almost goofy. I appreciated that the silliness never erased the emotional core. Zoroaster’s compassion for animals, his restlessness around injustice, and his insistence on asking hard questions all felt genuinely moving.
The artwork by Vishwamohini Sengupta adds a gentle, storybook warmth to the book. The images have a soft, rounded quality that makes even the mythic scenes feel accessible, especially the glowing figures, animals, village settings, and palace moments. I found the illustrations especially effective when they brought calm into the story, like visual pauses between danger, exile, storms, and confrontation. The book’s ideas are also unusually rich for a children’s picture book: truth over lies, kindness over cruelty, wisdom over fear, and the courage to stand apart from the crowd. I liked that it doesn’t reduce Zoroaster to a distant historical figure. It imagines him first as a child who notices suffering, asks questions, and can’t quite accept easy answers.
Truth Seeker is thoughtful, lively, and emotionally sincere. It’s not a quiet bedtime book, exactly; it has too much adventure, danger, and mischievous humor for that. But it’s the kind of book I’d want to read with a child and talk about afterward, especially because the back matter offers discussion questions, activities, and historical context for families and teachers. I’d recommend it for curious middle-grade readers, especially kids who enjoy ancient history, moral questions, animal-centered moments, and stories about brave people who keep choosing goodness even when the world pushes back.
Pages: 86 | ASIN : B0GTNJKB5Q
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Tags: author, bedtime stories, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's Action & Adventure Books, Children's books, Children's Religion Books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoirs, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, Rebecca DesPrez, story, Truth Seeker: The Story of Zoroaster, writer, writing
The Wonder And Horror Of It All
Posted by Literary Titan

Letters is a family history built around letters, postcards, memoir fragments, and voices that span more than a century. Why was this an important book for you to write?
My father’s World War II letter was the reason I wrote my book, a ten-year journey playing with literary ideas before determining how best to share his letter. I attempted one format, bogged down, and turned to writing my poetry book, Our Lives in Verse, Everyday Poetry, published by WestBow Press in 2022. Once that was completed, I turned again to my father’s letter, and the creative twelve-month structure for its presentation came together. Dad’s revelatory experiences driving a tank across Europe and the liberation of Dachau, as he describes the wonder and horror of it all, belong to the world.
How did you decide which documents to include and which private materials to leave out?
I cherish both the Catherine Marshall letter and the postcard from Elisabeth Elliot, spiritually important because of their expressions of faith and inspirational encouragement. The poignant Susan B. Anthony letter was a thrill to discover ten years ago when seeking more information about Annie Pillsbury Young. It is a valuable piece of American, suffragette history, and my connection to her was astonishing.
The private materials, of which there is much more, were chosen because of their humanity and relatability, each with an “Aha” sentence or two that especially resonates. Finding the letter Arie wrote to his parents after Sandy died was a major discovery during the writing process, and my granddaughter’s amazing poem was written toward the end. A note about her poem: Divya Greenleaf’s poem “The Final Duet For Ill-Fated Lovers” (which she tweaked some from the original) won First Prize in the Rhyming Poetry category for the Broward County Literary Fair, 2026! Mindful of not over-burdening the reader with my story, I did remove 6,000 words, including several letters, in the final edit.
Grief appears throughout the book, but so does gratitude. Did you see the project as an act of mourning, thanksgiving, or both?
Writing Letters: Our American Story was an act of thanksgiving and celebration. It was a remarkable journey of discovery and insight that also brought tears of gratitude and sorrow from contemplating the loss of loved ones and the inevitable challenges from life. Writing this book was an amazing experience that still brings tears. It is an honor to have written Letters and is also very humbling, with my deep genealogical connections to American history only learned in the past five years. As exciting as these discoveries have been, however, I’m most humbled and awed by the everyday strength, faith, and courage demonstrated by my more recent ancestry and family. They inspire me the most.
If this book could leave readers with one emotional truth about memory, family, and faith, what would you want that truth to be?
It is hard to choose “one emotional truth.” In the end, I would say cherish your heritage, because your very life holds the wonderment of the past, the renowned or the ordinary, the good or the bad. Our genetics are not an accident. Letters is about the blessing of life itself. We wouldn’t be here without our ancestors. Additionally, my book is a tremendous demonstration of our connectedness as Americans. We are deeply connected through our common history, through our racial makeup, through faith and the hopes, dreams and accomplishments we share. Our family trees reveal a remarkable union of experience and life lived. All to God’s Glory!
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website
In Letters: Our American Story, Ann Brubaker Greenleaf Wirtz invites readers into a deeply personal yet profoundly universal journey through American history. Blending memoir, historical narrative, and poetic reflection, this unique work weaves together the voices of ancestors, iconic figures, and the author’s own insights—all rooted in the enduring tradition of handwritten letters.
From the Continental Congress (1774–1781) to the dusty plains of Kansas, with farms, universities, and church pews prominent in her tale, Wirtz captures the heartbeat of generations who shaped a nation and a family through courage, conviction, and connection. Featuring a World War II letter and correspondence from remarkable women—including a direct link to suffragist Susan B. Anthony—this book illuminates the story of America and our connection to each other.
Throughout, Wirtz underscores a timeless truth: words matter. Whether a letter is penned in grief, joyfulness, or quiet prayer, these writings carry wisdom and insight for today.
Commemorating America’s 250th Anniversary
A story of heritage. A tribute to people. A celebration of faith.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Ann Brubaker Greenleaf Wirtz, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Letters: Our American Story, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
The Limits: Walking the Mind’s Bogs (Second Edition)
Posted by Literary Titan

The Limits: Walking the Mind’s Bogs, by Dan M. Mrejeru, is a philosophical memoir and speculative nonfiction work about the boundaries of human thought, especially the tension between linear and nonlinear ways of understanding reality. The book moves through reflections on evolution, consciousness, science, spirituality, memory, illusion, and personal transformation, using recurring images of bridges, rivers, tunnels, and journeys to explore how the mind reaches for what it cannot fully explain.
I found the book ambitious in a way that feels deeply personal. Mrejeru isn’t simply presenting ideas. He’s walking through them, sometimes circling the same thought again and again until it opens from another side. That repetition can be demanding. But I also think that restlessness is part of the point. The book feels like a mind refusing to accept a flat map of reality. It wants depth, motion, and hidden structure. It wants the bridge.
I appreciated the author’s choice to blend science, mysticism, memory, and self-questioning without drawing hard borders between them. The result is somewhat uneven, but fascinating. Some passages read like philosophical inquiry, others like a dream journal, and others like a private lecture on consciousness and complexity. Even if you don’t follow every turn, you’ll respect the seriousness of the search. There’s a candid vulnerability beneath the abstract language, especially when the narrator admits uncertainty, obsession, and the desire to remake his own thinking.
I like how sincerely the book treats thinking itself as an adventure. Thinking becomes travel, conflict, discovery, confusion, and renewal. That gives the book energy, even when the ideas are dense. I especially liked that the author is willing to let uncertainty stay visible. He asks big questions without pretending every answer is within reach, and that makes the book feel more honest than a purely argumentative work.
I recommend The Limits to readers who enjoy reflective philosophical nonfiction, especially those drawn to consciousness studies, metaphysics, nonlinear thinking, and books that blur the line between intellectual exploration and inner journey. For someone willing to wander through a dense, strange, and searching landscape of thought, this book offers a singular experience.
Pages: 204 | ASIN : B0GZ3D6YNS
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
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