Becoming a Certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt
Posted by Literary Titan


Becoming a Certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt is a large, serious study guide that tries to do more than help someone pass an exam. It maps the Master Black Belt role as both strategist and technician, moving from enterprise-wide planning, governance, project selection, and organizational culture into training, coaching, advanced analytics, DOE, DFSS, case essays, and a simulated exam. The book keeps insisting that Six Sigma at this level is not just about statistical fluency. It’s about building systems, teaching people, and translating strategy into disciplined action across an organization.
What I admired most is the book’s refusal to let Six Sigma become a sterile toolbox. Again and again, it pulls the reader back toward leadership, alignment, and the stubborn human realities of change. The Hoshin Kanri section captures this especially well. The idea that “red is okay” if targets are truly ambitious is one of those deceptively simple insights that lingers after the page is turned. That case study, with its weekly Hoshin meetings, X-Matrix discipline, and eventual sale of the company at 175% of the anticipated price, gives the book a welcome pulse. It reminds me that process excellence is never only about neat dashboards. It’s also about nerve, candor, and the willingness to look directly at uncomfortable signals without flinching. I also found the training chapters unexpectedly strong. Their emphasis on application over passive instruction, and on coaching as the bridge between classroom learning and real work, gives the book a humane center.
The book is dense, often deliberately so, and sometimes reads more like a well-stocked reference shelf than a continuously shaped argument. That breadth is valuable. There are moments when the writing feels utilitarian, especially in the more technical sections on measurement systems, nonnormal capability, nested ANOVA, simulation, reliability modeling, and DOE. Still, even there, I found myself respecting the ambition. The authors are trying to honor the full sprawl of the body of knowledge, and the result is a book with real heft. I also liked that the later DFSS material does not simply repackage DMAIC for everything under the sun. By distinguishing improvement from design, then moving into QFD, TRIZ, axiomatic design, and the pressure cooker example, the book quietly argues that quality thinking should begin before defects ever appear. That’s an idea with more philosophical force than the book sometimes lets on.
This isn’t a breezy business book. It’s rigorous, exhaustive, and often genuinely useful, especially when it connects methodology to judgment, culture, and coaching. I’d recommend it most strongly to serious Six Sigma practitioners preparing for Master Black Belt certification, to Black Belts ready to widen their view beyond project mechanics, and to operational leaders who want to understand how improvement work is supposed to connect to strategy rather than float beside it. For the right reader, it will feel less like a manual and more like a hard-earned apprenticeship in how improvement actually lives inside an organization.
Pages: 372 | ASIN : B0DWKX7S41
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Becoming a Certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, business, ebook, goodreads, Hemant Urdhwareshe, Husain A. Al-Omani, indie author, kindle, kobo, leadership, literature, management, Manufacturing Industry, nonfiction, nook, novel, quality control, read, reader, reading, Six Sigma Quality Management, story, Thomas J. West, total quality management, writer, writing
The Last Druid
Posted by Literary Titan

In The Last Druid, we follow Ganna, a teenage survivor of a Roman massacre, as she stumbles out of annihilation with vengeance in her mouth and ash in her lungs. What begins as a survival story quickly widens into something more layered: a journey through grief, memory, druidic inheritance, and the question of whether a shattered self can become a vessel for wisdom rather than only for revenge. Author Ivy Gilbert gives the novel a stark opening and then steadily deepens it, carrying Ganna from raw trauma into a larger struggle over what it means to preserve a people’s spirit when their world has been burned almost to nothing.
I found the book’s emotional temperature very compelling. It doesn’t ease the reader in; it throws readers into ruin. I admired that severity. Ganna’s fury is not ornamental. It has weight, and Gilbert lets that weight remain ugly, exhausting, and at times nearly feral. I especially liked the evolving dynamic between Ganna and Fionn, because their conversations keep the novel from becoming a simple revenge march. He presses against her rage without cheapening it, and the book is strongest when it lets wisdom arrive as resistance rather than comfort.
This is a rich Celtic historical fiction novel and a female-led epic, carried by Ganna’s ferocious will and by a world that feels steeped in ancestral memory, conquest, and myth. Beneath the historical-fantasy scaffolding, the novel is trying to write about trauma not as a single wound but as an organizing force in consciousness. A late revelation recasts much of what came before, and while that move is daring enough to divide readers, I thought it gave the story a haunted coherence. The prose can be emphatic, but it also has flashes of real vividness: fire, bark, breath, blood, and wind recur until the whole book feels hypnotic rather than merely descriptive. I came away feeling that the novel’s strongest magic is not its mysticism but its insistence that survival itself is strange, sacred labor.
I’d recommend The Last Druid to readers of historical fantasy, mythic fantasy, Celtic fantasy, trauma fiction, and female-driven coming-of-age stories, especially readers who want grief and spiritual inheritance to matter as much as plot. Fans of Madeline Miller may recognize a similar seriousness about myth, memory, and interior transformation, though Gilbert’s book is rougher-edged and more flame-scored. This is a fervent novel that turns survival into its own kind of sorcery.
Pages: 385 | ASIN : B0GNBYQJMG
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: ancient fiction, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, Ivy Gilbert, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Last Druid, writer, writing
Mississippi Rain
Posted by Literary Titan

Mississippi Rain is a work of fiction that reads like a legal thriller crossed with a Southern crime novel, with a satirical streak running underneath it. The story centers on Phillip Murphy, an author pulled into a defamation fight after a book of his draws the fury of Benjamin and Caroline Samples, two deeply corrupt attorneys. From there, the novel opens into a bigger world of rigged courtrooms, dirty deals, local power networks, and an FBI effort to expose how rotten the whole system has become. It starts fast, with a sniper outside a courthouse and a courtroom already bent out of shape before the hearing even begins, so the book tells you right away that it is aiming for high drama, not quiet realism.
I was taken in by Justin Foster’s commitment to going big. He doesn’t flirt with excess. He cannonballs into it. The villains are not just corrupt. They are monstrous, theatrical, almost fever-dream versions of greed, lust, and abuse. That choice gives the book a lurid, pulp energy that can be strangely compelling. When every scene is turned up to full volume, shock starts to compete with substance. Still, I could feel the author’s anger at the abuse of power, especially in the courtroom material and in the way ordinary people are trapped by people with money, connections, and no conscience.
I was more interested when the book slowed down just enough to let a character breathe. Kip Morris, in particular, gives the novel some heart. His background, his decency, and the quieter details around his marriage and work life add a human center that the wilder material needs. I can see the appeal. There is a raw, unfiltered confidence here. The book feels less like a polished chamber piece and more like someone telling you a story with absolute conviction. Mississippi Rain reminded me a bit of The Firm by John Grisham, but with the volume turned way up, trading that novel’s polish and restraint for something rawer, louder, and far more chaotic.
I would recommend Mississippi Rain most to readers who enjoy hard-edged, over-the-top legal thrillers and Southern crime fiction that play everything in bold strokes. If you are open to a wild, unruly story about corruption, revenge, and power, then there is something memorable here. I would also say this is a book for readers who can handle graphic violence and cruelty, because it goes there without much hesitation. For the right reader, that fierce, pulp-driven energy may be exactly the point.
Pages: 136 | ISBN : 1662972172
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime thriller, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Justin Foster, kindle, kobo, literature, Mississippi Rain, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
The Phoenix CODEX: 138 Palindromic Mirror Edition Complete Phoenix Chronicles: Complete Phoenix Chronicles: A Trilogy of Trilogies
Posted by Literary Titan

The Phoenix Codex is a theatrical metaphysical thriller that treats structure as part of the story, not just a container for it. Bradley Rogue builds the book as a “palindromic mirror” with ascending and descending arcs wrapped around a central point, and that design gives the whole thing a ritualized, incantatory feel rather than a straightforward adventure-novel rhythm. The opening makes its intentions clear right away: “It’s also a novel. Also a seed. Also a key.” That line captures the book’s whole personality. It wants to be read as fiction, transmission, puzzle box, and initiation text all at once.
At the center of it all is Dr. Natori Saira Evren, who isn’t just a protagonist so much as the book’s tuning fork. Her synesthesia, her academic outsider status, and her role as a traveler through patterns of recurrence make her the ideal guide for a world built on hidden frequencies, ancient architectures, and repeating catastrophes. The book follows her through interrogations, prequels, secret histories, temporal jumps, and revelations about the Phoenix cycle, and it does so with total conviction. Rogue writes like someone fully committed to the reality of his invented cosmology, and that commitment gives the novel its distinctive heat.
The book wants myth, conspiracy, sacred geometry, speculative archaeology, simulation theory, apocalypse, and spiritual transformation all in the same breath. Sometimes that makes the prose feel deliberately overwhelming, but that excess is also part of the reading experience. This is a book that likes pressure, repetition, symbols, and declarations. It keeps returning to numbers, mirrors, cycles, names, and encoded meanings until the language starts to feel ceremonial. Even the narrative instructions invite readers to treat the novel as an object with multiple valid pathways, which is a pretty revealing choice. The Phoenix Codex isn’t shy about asking the reader to participate in its pattern-making.
The most interesting thing about the novel is how openly it explains its own method. In the author’s note, Rogue says, “The Phoenix Chronicles make no claims to historical accuracy. They are mythology—but mythology that is aware of its own mythological status.” That self-description is useful because it points to what the book is really doing. It isn’t just telling a story about a hidden truth. It’s dramatizing the human urge to arrange history, fear, destiny, and transcendence into one giant meaningful design. That gives the novel a strange double quality. It’s earnest and self-conscious at the same time, immersive but also always nudging readers to notice the architecture holding it together.
The Phoenix Codex is less a conventional novel than a designed experience, and that’s what makes it memorable. It reads like a fusion of esoteric manifesto, sci-fi myth cycle, and visionary character saga, all organized around symmetry and recurrence. Readers who click with its wavelength will probably admire the sheer audacity of the construction and the intensity of its voice. Even when it gets wild, it knows exactly what it’s trying to summon: a story where reading becomes a form of initiation, and where narrative structure itself becomes part of the spell.
Pages: 550 | ASIN : B0GF7YTNQ8
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: Alternative History, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Bradley Rogue, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, saga, sci fi, story, The Phoenix CODEX, The Phoenix CODEX: 138 Palindromic Mirror Edition Complete Phoenix Chronicles: Complete Phoenix Chronicles: A Trilogy of Trilogies, thriller, time travel, trilogy, writer, writing
M.B.A. Discover The Truth About Leadership
Posted by Literary Titan

D.M. Christensen’s MBA: Discover the Truth About Leadership is a satirical broadside against the credential economy, the mystique of leadership language, and the institutional habit of confusing polish with substance. Beneath the provocation and the barbed humor, the book argues something fairly simple and fairly serious: degrees don’t guarantee competence, leadership isn’t a title or a seminar, and most organizations limp along by rewarding visibility, confidence, and bureaucracy instead of clarity, judgment, and responsibility. The book moves from lampooning MBA prestige and the absurd theater of higher education to a more forceful case for self-education, systems thinking, and the hard, unglamorous discipline of actually getting better.
I found the book unexpectedly effective because it doesn’t just sneer from a distance. The funniest passages are often the ones with real irritation underneath them, and that gives the book a pulse. The early MBA classroom anecdote, where Christensen punctures the room’s reverence for the degree by calling it a checkbox, sets the tone beautifully. So does the ridiculous, self-incriminating toilet paper chapter, which should be a throwaway gag and somehow becomes a warped little mission statement about honesty, bloat, and educational fraud. I laughed quite a bit, but I also felt the author’s exhaustion with systems that charge enormous sums for status, then hand back jargon, debt, and a professionally laminated illusion. That emotional current keeps the book from feeling glib. It feels annoyed in a way I recognized.
What I liked most were the ideas that survive after the jokes. Christensen is strongest when he writes about competence, clarity, and systems: the claim that schools teach compliance more readily than independent thought, that organizations promote confidence over ability, that teams often diffuse responsibility instead of sharpening it, and that broken systems can exhaust even good people while heroics merely hide structural failure. Some arguments are deliberately overstated, and the repeated contempt for institutional language can become blunt. Still, I admired the book’s nerve. It has the courage to say simple things that many management books spend 250 polite pages avoiding. When Christensen writes that clarity is dangerous because it exposes competence, or that leadership is proven rather than granted, the book stops being merely funny and becomes bracingly clear.
I came away thinking this is a messy, funny, sharp-edged book with more substance than its gleefully unserious surface first suggests. It’s not elegant in the polished, buttoned-up sense. But it’s lively, candid, and often piercingly right about the emptiness of modern leadership posturing and the cost of mistaking credentials for capability. I’d recommend it to readers who are skeptical of business-school mythology, weary of corporate theater, or hungry for a management book that sounds like a human being rather than a committee.
Pages: 271 | ASIN : B0GDQJDDRM
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: American Fiction Anthologies, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, D.M. Christensen, ebook, goodreads, Humorous American Literature, indie author, kindle, kobo, Leadership & Motivation, literature, M.B.A. Discover The Truth About Leadership, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing
Aimed & Ready
Posted by Literary Titan

I found Aimed & Ready to be a spiritually focused book about how seasons of delay, silence, loss, and apparent backward movement can actually be forms of divine preparation. Author Nico Smit’s central image is the bow and arrow: the life that feels pulled back is not abandoned, but being aimed. From there, he builds a sustained meditation on surrender, waiting, spiritual alignment, and eventual release, moving through ideas like the “holy hush,” the reset that becomes a re-aim, David’s devastation at Ziklag, and the insistence that hope is not sentimental optimism but evidence that God is still at work. It’s a book written for readers who feel stalled and bruised, and it keeps returning to the same steady conviction that what looks like burial may be the first stage of resurrection.
What stayed with me most was the emotional steadiness of the book. Smit writes with the urgency of a preacher, but also with a pastoral tenderness that keeps the message from feeling harsh or abstract. I liked the way he lingers over images until they start to feel lived in. The bare fruit tree, the buried seed, the rowers facing one way while still moving forward, the ruined city of Ziklag, all of it feeds the same argument from slightly different angles, and that repetition gives the book a kind of devotional pulse. At its best, the writing has real lift. There are passages that feel genuinely bracing, especially when he reframes pressure as alignment and refuses the easy language of defeat. I also appreciated that he opens by reminding readers that this book is not Scripture and shouldn’t replace Scripture. That note of humility matters, and it gives the book a better spiritual proportion than it might otherwise have had.
Smit is so committed to the pullback/comeback framework that nearly everything gets absorbed into it. For readers already attuned to prophetic Christian language, that will probably feel clarifying and consoling. I admired the conviction. The prose can also swell into exhortation. Still, even when I felt the book pressing too insistently on one note, I couldn’t deny the sincerity behind it. Smit clearly believes these ideas down to the bone, and that kind of belief gives the book warmth, gravity, and a persuasive emotional center.
The book gives discouragement a shape people can actually work with. Smit turns spiritual exhaustion into something legible through the bow-and-arrow metaphor, the “holy hush,” and the Ziklag section, so a reader in a hard season can feel less lost inside their own experience. A lot of encouraging books tell you to hold on, but this one tries to explain what holding on feels like from the inside. I think that interpretive quality is one of its real strengths.
I found Aimed & Ready earnest, vivid, and often moving. It’s a book that wants to steady the heart, reframe suffering, and call the reader back into trust. I’d especially recommend it to Christians who are living through a season of disappointment, transition, spiritual fatigue, or long waiting, and to readers who respond to devotional writing that leans on metaphor, exhortation, and hope. For the right reader, this will feel less like a lecture than a hand at the shoulder, firm, warm, and convinced that the story isn’t over yet.
Pages: 168 | ASIN : B0GK9NMGRY
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Aimed & Ready, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Christian personal growth, Christian Spiritual Growth, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Nico Smit, nonfiction, nook, novel, personal growth, Personal Growth & Christianity, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing
Taking Risks
Posted by Literary-Titan
John B. Peoples follows a drifting man who, after splitting a lottery ticket with his boss, wins $40 million, only for his boss to disappear with all the winnings, sending him on a worldwide chase to reclaim his share. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration for the setup of the story was the question of how people deal with various types of loss. Some people deal with them better than others.
As John’s options narrow, he turns to increasingly extreme measures, including organized crime. How did you approach that moral progression?
I saw John becoming more and more frustrated, yet more and more convinced that he was right and therefore justified in taking risks to obtain justice.
The novel explores the frustration of living in a society where success is unequally distributed. How consciously did you engage with that theme?
This was very conscious, as undeserved inequality is rampant in our world.
What does the novel suggest about access to justice in the modern world?
For most, the justice system – even starting with how to choose a lawyer – is very confusing and can be of limited or of no use.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon
During his quest, John suffers a debilitating spine injury and struggles to heal physically and emotionally. Yet he continues pursuing White from Los Angeles to Paris to Marseille. Along the way, he tries navigating the legal system, meets a woman he believes he can only dream about, and eventually engages the help of organized crime. Ultimately, he is faced with the question of how far he is willing to go to retrieve and protect what is his.
John B. Peoples is more than the study of a character out to correct an injustice. It takes us on a powerful journey while examining loss, personal growth, and the everyday challenges of life in America today.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime thrillers, Disability Fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, John B. Peoples, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, Michael Cowan, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Absurd in the Best Possible Way
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Call From Buckingham Palace follows two cat detectives who are charged with protecting a giant wheel of cheddar at the King’s birthday ball at Buckingham Palace. Where did the idea for this story come from?
The idea grew from observing our own lovely cats, Otis and Zeno, who really are brothers. Otis has large, goofy fangs, and Zeno stands up on his hind legs and bangs the door with his large, fluffy paws. This sparked my imagination and inspired me to create a crazy world where Fang and Bang could live a life of adventure. I had a desire to place Fang and Bang in a setting that felt unmistakably grand, playful, and a little absurd in the best possible way. I wanted the first set of stories to be set in notable landmarks across the UK (though there is a possibility that they will go international at some point…), and celebrating Buckingham Palace naturally carries that sense of occasion off the back of 10 Downing Street in Book 1. Pairing locations that are meaningful to me with something as delightfully specific as a giant wheel of cheddar created the kind of contrast I enjoy writing. At its core, the story is about friendship, resilience, and trust, but told through a lens that keeps things light, imaginative, and entertaining for young readers, which works superbly well when I visit schools.
The illustrations in your book are wonderful. Can you share with us a little about your collaboration with illustrator Katie Tayler?
Working with Katie Tayler has been a genuinely rewarding experience. From the outset, she understood the tone I was aiming for; something expressive, character-driven, and visually engaging. Her vintage-style illustrations don’t just accompany the story; they expand it. She has a strong instinct for bringing out personality in Fang and Bang, and a little-known fact is that she is the ‘cat-mummy’ to Fang and Bang’s real-life sisters, and she has a knack for adding small visual details that give each scene extra life. I should add that I love how she’s created Midnight Mouse; it’s everything I wanted her character to be, which frankly is a smart, sassy antagonist! Our collaboration has felt very natural – we are long-standing friends – with a shared focus on making the book as immersive as possible for children.
What inspired you to incorporate interactive elements in this tale for young readers?
I’ve always been interested in making reading feel participatory rather than passive, especially for younger audiences. Many moons ago, when reading to my own children, I realised that interactive elements invite children to slow down, observe more closely, and engage directly with the story world. It turns the experience into something closer to play, which I think is where a lot of early enthusiasm for reading begins. The aim was to create moments where readers feel like they’re part of the investigation alongside Fang and Bang.
Can we look forward to more adventures featuring Fang and Bang?
Yes, absolutely. There’s plenty more to explore with these characters, and I see their world as one that can continue to grow in scope and imagination. Each new adventure offers an opportunity to place them in fresh, unexpected situations while keeping the humour, mystery, and PSHE themes of friendship, resilience, and trust at the centre. There are certainly more cases ahead for Fang and Bang, indeed, I am writing Book 4 at the moment…!
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Instagram | Website | TikTok | Amazon
Disguised as members of the Royal Company of Archers, Fang and Bang join forces with Tilly the guard dog to protect the prized cheese. But when the palace clock strikes twelve, the Midnight Mouse makes her move sending the runaway cheddar rolling through the ballroom with her surfing on top!
Can Fang and Bang stop the daring thief, save the cheese, and still make it home to their rickety barn? With dancing kings and queens, flying arrows, and a chase through the palace, this adventure is full of mischief, mystery, and plenty of laughs. A beautifully illustrated and funny book that introduces the PSHE themes of resilience and friendship makes it a great teaching aid for the classroom.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, childrens books, ebook, Fang Bang and the Midnight Mouse, Fang Bang and the Midnight Mouse: The Call from Buckingham Palace, goodreads, indie author, J-J Murray, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, writer, writing










