Injustice: My Story

In Injustice: My Story, Dr. Iris Wright recounts a life shaped by early instability, teen motherhood, a devastating false accusation, and the long, bruising work of reclaiming her name, her daughter, and her sense of self. The memoir moves from her childhood in the Booth Street projects, where she learns too young how bias and abandonment can mark a child, into the shattering experience of being accused of burning her daughter after what began as a mother’s urgent response to a skin infection. From the cold reduction of her identity to SBI Number 00400319, to the refusal of a ten-year plea deal, to the four-year custody battle that follows, Wright frames her story not as a clean triumph over suffering, but as a hard-won account of survival, faith, motherhood, and becoming what she calls a Black Diamond.

Wright has a preacherly cadence, full of repetition, declarations, and lines that feel carved out of lived pain. That style circles the same truths, especially around resilience, pressure, and purpose, but I found that repetition revealing. Trauma does repeat itself in the body. It returns, insists, asks to be named again. The strongest passages are the ones where concrete memory grounds the lyricism: the teacher who failed her despite correct work, the stormy night with broken windshield wipers, the burning logs placed around her car, the obscene message written across her windshield, the daughter asking when she was coming to get her. Those moments have a pulse. They make the broader reflections feel earned.

I also appreciated the complexity of the book’s central ideas. Wright writes about faith and destiny with conviction, but the memoir is most affecting when it refuses easy consolation. Her victories are not simple victories, and I respected the way the book lets grief and gratitude sit in the same room. Its moral force comes from that tension. Wright isn’t asking the reader to pity her. She’s asking us to understand what systems do to human beings when labels become stronger than truth.

I felt that Injustice: My Story was less a conventional memoir than a testimony, one that turns personal anguish into a language of witness. It’s intimate, wounded, forceful, and maternal, with a voice that keeps reaching toward healing. I’d recommend it to readers drawn to memoirs of survival, wrongful accusation, motherhood under pressure, faith-rooted resilience, and the long aftermath of institutional harm. This is a book for people who understand that becoming unstoppable doesn’t mean nothing hurts you. It means you kept rising with the hurt still speaking.

Pages: 146 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GX2YQT32

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Fate of an Angel

Fate of an Angel, by Barb Jones, is a dark, prophecy-driven supernatural novel that throws Zaraquel, Marcus, Amber, Chloe, and their allies into a widening war against the Tall Dark Man. Set partly in Hawaii and threaded with bloodlines, gods, witches, vampires, angels, ancestral memory, and the dangerous arithmetic of sacrifice, the book centers on Zaraquel’s struggle to keep her light while forces around her try to bend her into something useful, broken, or doomed. It is Book Two in The Dark Prophecy Series and very much a continuation of the larger Blood Prophecy world.

I was struck by how much this book wants the supernatural to feel inherited rather than decorative. Magic here is not just sparkle or spectacle; it is obligation, old debt, family damage, and the residue of choices made long before the present characters were born. The Hawaiian setting gives the story a charged atmosphere, especially in the prologue, where myth, violence, and memory knot together before the modern plot begins. Jones is at her best when she lets dread seep into ordinary rooms: a cup of tea, a cottage floor, a museum case, a child who will not cry. Those moments have a sharp, uncanny pressure.

Marcus’s love for Zaraquel is fierce, but not clean. Zaraquel’s light is precious, but not invulnerable. Amber’s power carries history with it. Even victory feels provisional, as if every rescue has a shadow folded inside it. At times, the sheer breadth of characters, lore, and prophecy can feel dense for a newcomer, and I think this is not the ideal entry point for readers who want a standalone fantasy. But for readers already invested in the saga, that abundance becomes part of the appeal: the book feels crowded with consequence, like a storm system gathering over several bloodlines at once.

I would recommend Fate of an Angel to readers who enjoy dark fantasy, paranormal fantasy, supernatural thriller, vampire fiction, and mythic horror with a strong serial arc. Fans of Anne Rice’s The Vampire Chronicles may recognize a similar appetite for immortal grief, family entanglement, and beautiful damnation, though Jones pushes harder into prophecy and ensemble warfare. Fate of an Angel is a tense and emotionally charged installment about family, loyalty, and the cost of holding on when darkness keeps closing in.

Pages: 304 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CYGPHS4Z

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Pancakes Are For People! 

Pancakes Are for People, by Sara Brown, is a charming and cheerful farm story that will draw young readers in from the very first page. Lucy’s day begins early on Grandpa’s farm, where breakfast is not only for people. Before she can enjoy her favorite pancakes, there are horses, cows, pigs, and plenty of other hungry animals waiting to be fed. The busy morning creates a lively setting that feels familiar, playful, and full of movement.

As Lucy helps Grandpa with each chore, the story gently shows how caring for others can be fun, rewarding, and worth the wait. Each task adds to the excitement, especially as Lucy keeps thinking about the delicious breakfast still to come. Her repeated reminder, “Pancakes are for people!” brings humor, rhythm, and personality to the narrative. It also builds anticipation for the warm, well-earned meal waiting at the end.

I especially enjoyed the illustrations of the farm animals. They add life and energy to each scene, while also giving young readers a chance to learn what different animals eat. Another delightful detail is the farm cat, who appears throughout the book as he tags along with Lucy and her grandpa. Children will enjoy spotting him on each page.

Warm, engaging, and full of family tradition, this book celebrates helping hands, patience, and shared memories. The blueberry pancake recipe at the end is a wonderful bonus, giving parents a fun way to continue the story in the kitchen with their little ones after reading.

Pages: 31 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DGXSW9M7

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Crossing Paths, Tempting Memories

Crossing Paths, Tempting Memories, by Dorothy Elizabeth Love, is a sensual African American romance built around escape, attraction, and emotional recovery. Caitlyn Crenshaw comes to Barbados trying to breathe again after a humiliating betrayal, while Richard Townsend arrives carrying the weight of a bitter divorce and a career under pressure. The book puts them in a setting that feels warm, colorful, and inviting, but the real draw is watching two guarded people slowly recognize something honest in each other.

The story has a strong vacation-romance feel, but it’s also very much about rebuilding. One line captures Richard’s need for the island perfectly: “Peace of mind was the best medicine for a frantic soul.” Barbados isn’t just scenery here. It becomes the place where Caitlyn and Richard can loosen their grip on the pain they brought with them, flirt without pretending they’re fine, and start imagining a life that isn’t controlled by old mistakes.

Caitlyn is especially easy to root for because she’s not simply looking for romance. She wants joy, independence, and the courage to stop letting other people choose her future. Richard’s charm works because he’s wounded too, but still warm, playful, and deeply drawn to Caitlyn’s spirit. Their chemistry is direct and steamy, but the emotional pull matters just as much. The book understands that desire feels different when it’s mixed with trust.

There’s also a lively supporting cast, especially Christina and Evan, whose relationship adds humor, tenderness, and a bittersweet counterpoint to Caitlyn and Richard’s path. The family drama, corporate tension, divorce conflict, and romantic complications give the story plenty of motion. One of the book’s clearest ideas comes through in the line, “Running from something was far worse than running to something.” That’s really what this novel keeps circling back to: the difference between escaping pain and choosing happiness.

Crossing Paths, Tempting Memories is a passionate and emotional romance with a big heart and a strong sense of place. It’s sexy, yes, but it’s also about second chances, self-respect, friendship, grief, and the relief of being seen by someone at the right time. Readers who enjoy romance with heat, travel, family ties, and characters working through real hurt will find a lot to enjoy here.

Pages: 289 | ‎ ISBN : 978-1585712366

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Would Jesus Do Time? (Badger Book Series)

A contest-winning prison writer attacks mass incarceration from within with this comical, yet deeply moving, musical by showing how even Jesus Christ himself would become an inmate in America if he committed the same acts today that he had in John chapter 2 verses 13 through 16.

Pain Killer

Pain Killer, by R.K. McKean, is a dark psychological thriller about grief, revenge, and the terrible afterlife of buried violence. The novel follows TJ Maverick, a psychology professor and criminal profiler whose life has already been carved by loss, from childhood tragedy to the death of his wife, Suzanne, in the 9/11 attacks. When a series of ritualistic murders points toward old crimes at the University of Florida, TJ is pulled into a case where the killer is not merely hunting victims but trying to cauterize a wound that never healed.

I was pulled in by the book’s insistence that pain is never inert. It moves, mutates, leaks into families, marriages, faith, addiction, and violence. McKean doesn’t treat trauma as a decorative backstory. He makes it the engine of the novel. TJ is compelling because he isn’t a stainless hero. He’s wounded, intelligent, devotional, angry, loving, and still unfinished. The result is a protagonist who feels less like a genre instrument and more like a man trying to keep his soul from becoming shrapnel.

I also appreciated the novel’s moral tension. Pain Killer is brutal in places, but its deeper interest isn’t gore; it’s consequence. The killer’s actions are horrifying, yet the motive grows from a recognizably human ache, which makes the story more troubling than a simple monster hunt. At times, the book moves with the force of a police procedural, and at other times it slows into grief-lit reflection, especially around TJ’s love for Suzanne and his attempts to live after devastation. That mixture gives the novel a unique tenderness beneath its violence.

This book will appeal most to readers of crime fiction, psychological suspense, revenge thrillers, and FBI profiler novels. Fans of James Patterson’s fast, violent plotting or David Baldacci’s justice-driven suspense may find familiar pleasures here, though McKean brings a more pastoral, grief-conscious sensibility to the material. Pain Killer is a thriller about the frightening distance between surviving pain and surrendering to it.

Pages: 366 | ISBN : 978-1958723678

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Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

The Corridor by William Klenk

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Nonfiction

The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes outstanding nonfiction books that demonstrate exceptional quality in writing, research, and presentation. This award is dedicated to authors who excel in creating informative, enlightening, and engaging works that offer valuable insights. Recipients of this award are commended for their ability to transform complex topics into accessible and compelling narratives that captivate readers and enhance our understanding.

Award Recipients

Transform Procurement by Janice Marquardt

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.