Faith Is the Foundation

David L Shabazz Author Interview

Discover Your Gold Mind offers readers a reflective guide focused on a disciplined inner life shaped by self-awareness, faith, and purpose. Why was this an important book for you to write?

This book came from a combination of personal interviews and research I conducted back when I was a newspaper reporter. Reporters have the privileged opportunity to meet some of the wealthiest and most successful people from all walks of life. Just as a reporter wants to provide valuable information to their readers and subscribers, I felt that what I had learned should go beyond just the immediate weekly audience who read my newspaper articles. I felt this information should be shared with the public at large. So, I started conducting more research, which eventually became the book.

Media is known as the 4th Estate. Our purpose is to inform the public. As a journalist, it is my purpose to gather and distribute as much useful information to people as possible. That’s what I hope this book does.

Who did you have in mind as your primary reader while writing this book?

The book grew out of my speeches given at colleges and universities. The bulk of the book is the text – almost verbatim – from my speeches. So, I would have to say the book was geared towards college students. However, I believe the principles can be practiced by anyone. And that’s my desire. Only a select community read my newspaper articles. Only the audience in attendance heard my speeches. I wanted to preserve a version of my speeches and spread the information to as many people as possible.

What role does faith play in developing a “gold mind”?

Faith is the foundation. The bible describes faith as the evidence of things unseen. That means our vision for ourselves comes from having faith. Others have no idea why we do what might seem impossible or ridiculous to them. But every physical reality that we enjoy from nice homes, cars, cell phones, and even artificial intelligence came from a vision that originated in someone’s mind. Having faith is what allows us to persevere patiently in the midst of naysayers as well as endure through trials and hardships. Becoming the best version of yourself is not going to be easy. Making a change is not easy. Change is uncomfortable. There’s always some resistance and pain involved in making a change. But we have a choice: We can accept the pain of discipline or the pain of regret.

What daily habits most effectively help someone build a stronger mindset?

The way you start your day is the most important part of the process. Do not start your day with any form of media – radio, television, or social media. Begin each day with prayer and/or meditation in complete solitude for at least 5 minutes. I wouldn’t go longer because the body needs to be active. Start a 15–20-minute exercise regimen. Exercise will kickstart your endorphins. Skip breakfast and drink only water. Make sure you get sunlight early in the morning and throughout the day. Vitamin D does wonders within the body.

I know it might seem cliché, but reading, writing, and arithmetic are best for direct mental stimulation. The mind is a muscle, and it has to be exercised to grow stronger. Read and write every day. Do one or two mathematical word problems each day. Word problems combine reading, writing, and critical thinking to help solve real-world problems.

The second most important component is to end your day with reflection. This allows us to assess the effectiveness of our plan to reach the goal. Daily exercise, word problems, and meditation will develop a stronger mindset in as little as three weeks if it’s done consistently.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Website | Amazon

Discover Your Gold Mind by David L. Shabazz is a motivational self-help book that challenges readers to rethink the way they approach life, success, and personal fulfillment. It encourages individuals to uncover the hidden “gold” within their own minds – the unique talents, insights, and potential that too often go untapped – and offers a fresh outlook on how to harness that inner resource to build a more meaningful, successful life. With practical guidance aimed at helping readers break through self-limiting habits and beliefs, Shabazz’s work inspires a deeper understanding of one’s purpose, fosters greater self-confidence, and champions the transformative power of self-discovery and positive action. Originally published in paperback in 2001, this book blends motivational insight with spiritual and practical reflections to guide anyone seeking personal growth and a more empowered mindset.


Our World’s Precious Resources

Terry Birdgenaw Author Interview

Cyborg Contact follows a cyborg ANT who travels through a wormhole to Earth on a diplomatic mission to reconnect with humans who once visited his world and bring them a warning. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Cyborg Contact is the fourth book in The Antunite Chronicles series. I originally intended the series to be a trilogy, with Antuna’s Story, The Rise and Fall of Antocracy, and Antunites Unite. The first three books were all published in 2022, and that was supposed to be the end of the story. Two things inspired me to write this much later installment. First, the political climate in the United States prompted me to write another political satire lampooning the current administration’s policies. Second, as a Metis author, I wanted to include a strong Indigenous main character in one of my novels. I had previously included quotes from Indigenous leaders and statements that reflected Indigenous lore. Still, since the stories took place on a planet and moon inhabited only by insects and insectoids, I could not include such a character. By bringing a cyborg insect from Bilaluna to Earth, my fourth book, Cyborg Contact, allowed me to achieve both these objectives.

What challenges came with writing Earth from the perspective of a nonhuman traveler?

As Cyborg Contact is a Cli-Fi story with stinging political satire, the biggest challenge was to determine just how far I and my main character could go with my intended messages. When writing a tale on another planet, the satirical elements told by aliens are metaphors, and the story’s allegorical nature softens the parody. But when you bring an alien to Earth to further spoof an administration’s political policies, lampooning can come across more as direct mockery. I tempered the ridicule by combining political satire with a highly adventurous story and by having my main character interact with multiple species on Earth, not just humans. My human-sized cyborg ANT first interacts with Earth insects, who see him as a god. Vigilantes and ICE agents later hunt him as the ultimate illegal alien. He adopts the name Dee, short for Dios, as the insects call him, and continues to meet various ant and other insect species who help him overcome obstacles he encounters along his way. But he also meets marginalized humans, particularly immigrant teens, and an Indigenous woman, who help him learn about Earth and human civilization as Dee takes a road trip from the Yucatan to the Yukon across a near-future, splintered America. Dee’s naivety and sense of wonder tone down events that might otherwise shock or enrage a more worldly individual, as he witnesses a civilization in political and environmental turmoil.

How do you hope readers respond to the environmental themes in the novel?

I hope readers will respond with urgency to the novel’s environmental themes, which illustrate the dire consequences if we do not alter current trends. And although some may see the novel as apocalyptic, the high levels of action, adventure, humor, and cross-species connections soften the story, making it not simply a tale of drought and devastation. There are hurricanes, droughts, flash floods, and forest fires, but there are also wondrous moments in lush green jungles, blue-green seas, and arctic-boreal forests. We see the magnificence that nature offers and how that beauty can be lost if not nurtured. We also see a contrast between Indigenous traditional ecological knowledge, which reflects a measured stewardship of Earth’s environment, and a colonial civilization that has lost its way, both politically and in its overuse of our world’s precious resources.

Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?

I continue to be obsessed with dystopian stories that have environmental undertones. Still, after moving my Sci-Fi stories back to Earth, I plan to keep my feet grounded here while I tell my next story from a human perspective. However, the characters may spend some time at sea before they are Marooned (the working title for my new novel).

Author Links: GoodReads | Bluesky | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Dee didn’t plan to become the world’s most wanted illegal alien. He just wanted to find his friends.

A cyborg ANT from Bilaluna, Dee crash-lands in a Mexican cenote and embarks on an epic road trip from the Yucatan to the Yukon across a splintered near-future America. He travels with only a syntax generator and a bag of cicadas and has little understanding of human politics. He befriends Earth insects, rescues kidnapped teens, and battles the elements and a trigger-happy border patrol. His key ally? Seka, a brilliant Indigenous chemist with a sorted past, a spirit strong enough to tame grizzlies, and a heart warm enough to melt his hard exoskeleton.

But as ICE agents close in and climate disasters escalate, Dee realizes his warning about environmental collapse might come too late. Can Dee and Seka spark the change Earth desperately needs?

Find out in Cyborg Contact, an action-packed cli-fi road trip featuring first contact, political satire, and the ultimate fish-out-of-water hero. Grab your copy to ride shotgun with the galaxy’s most charming ANT today!

Tropes

First contact, fish-out-of-water, road trip adventure, climate apocalypse, unlikely romance, found family, political satire.

Microtropes

Alien POV, cross-species bond, damsel-in-distress, hunted by authorities, stranded together, nature’s fury, Indigenous wisdom, secret police.

Obesseus: Operation Gravy Blockade

Obesseus: Operation Gravy Blockade, written by D.T. Tucker, is a wildly energetic children’s fantasy comedy set in Snackland, where food characters, workplace panic, gravy floods, ninja muffins, overtime signs, and anti-fun villains collide in one long burst of cartoon chaos. At the center is Obesseus, a loud, gravy-loving force of joy who pushes back against the characters who want to control, measure, or remove fun from Snackland Press. The book’s genre is children’s humorous fantasy, with a strong dose of absurd adventure.

The book is playful in a way that feels breathless. The author leans into repetition, big reactions, silly names, and escalating jokes. Allen Apple keeps fainting. Molly Mushroom keeps arriving late. Grant the Grapefruit bends reality through confusion. Obesseus turns gravy into a whole philosophy of life. It’s not subtle, but I don’t think it’s trying to be. The humor works best when the story fully commits to the ridiculous, like when corporate rules and spreadsheets are treated as the great enemies of childhood joy.

I liked the author’s choice to make “fun” feel like something worth defending. Gravy isn’t just gravy here. It becomes the warm, messy symbol of play, freedom, and appetite. On the other side, the no-fun characters want order, points, overtime, and control. That contrast gives the madness a simple shape that kids can understand. The action rarely slows down, and the cast grows quickly. There is a real charm in how confidently strange it all is. It reads like a playground game that kept adding new rules because everyone was laughing too hard to stop.

I would recommend Obesseus: Operation Gravy Blockade to young readers who enjoy loud, silly, high-energy stories with food jokes, bizarre battles, and characters who act like every small problem is the end of the world. It will especially appeal to kids who like cartoon-style humor and absurd fantasy adventures. Readers who want chaos, comedy, and gravy-powered rebellion will have a blast.

Pages: 237 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GXGRBTL9

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So You Want To Be A Pilot

Linda Soules’ So You Want To Be A Pilot is an engaging and informative children’s book that takes young readers beyond the fantasy of flying and into the real world of aviation. Written for curious readers ages 10 to 14, the book captures the excitement of watching a plane cross the sky while also explaining the discipline, training, and responsibility behind every safe flight. Soules doesn’t present piloting as simply sitting in a cockpit and steering through the clouds; instead, she shows that becoming a pilot requires dedication, precision, teamwork, and a deep respect for safety.

One of the book’s greatest strengths is the way it makes complex aviation concepts accessible without watering them down. Readers learn about aerodynamics, weather, navigation, cockpit instruments, and the many systems that help pilots fly safely even when visibility is poor. Soules explains fascinating details, such as why pilots rely on checklists, why cockpit communication must be exact, and how modern pilots work with autopilot systems. These facts are presented in clear, down-to-earth language, making the book an excellent STEM resource for children who want real answers about how airplanes work.

The line, “The most extraordinary achievement in aviation is not the speed… it is the calm ordinariness,” stood out to me because it shifts the focus from the excitement of flying to the incredible safety and discipline behind it. It made me think about how amazing it is that hundreds of people can travel seven miles above the earth at incredible speed and feel comfortable enough to fall asleep. I also liked how the book lists pilot code words like “wilco” and “squawk,” because kids can start using them right away and feel like real pilots learning the language of the cockpit.

The book also gives readers a thoughtful look at the profession itself. From early training and first solo flights to commercial aviation, cargo flying, bush flying, and test piloting, Soules shows that there are many paths into the sky. The book’s “day in the life” approach helps young readers imagine the routine and responsibility of the job, from early morning walk-arounds to careful landings. Profiles of aviation figures such as Amelia Earhart, Chuck Yeager, and Bessie Coleman add historical interest and help readers see aviation as a field shaped by courage, innovation, and persistence.

So You Want To Be A Pilot is both inspiring and honest. It celebrates the wonder of flight while making it clear that piloting is a calling built on preparation, judgment, and lifelong learning. With its practical guidance, glossary, career insights, and wonderful illustrations, this book is a fantastic choice for children who love airplanes, dream of becoming pilots, or enjoy learning how things work. Soules gives young readers the respect of telling them the real story, and in doing so, she reminds them that big dreams begin with curiosity, effort, and the courage to keep looking up.

Pages: 38 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GX2Z6499

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I’m on Assignment! – An Alternate View of Past Lives, the Impact on Our Current Lives, Soul Mates, World History, and the Akashic Records

In I’m on Assignment!, Diane Marie Taylor blends spiritual memoir, metaphysical inquiry, and personal testimony into an unconventional exploration of reincarnation, soul mates, karma, cell memories, the Akashic Records, and the hidden continuity she believes links individual lives across centuries. The book moves from practical reflections on life purpose and forgiveness into deeply personal material, including her mental health struggles, her frightening COVID-19 hospitalization, her working-class childhood, motherhood, divorce, and her conviction that past lives, including connections to the House of Bourbon and Marie Antoinette’s world, shape the patterns of the present.

Taylor writes with a startling lack of varnish, and that directness gives the work much of its pulse. Her account of COVID-19, especially the moment she arrives at the emergency room and realizes her body may no longer be under her command, has a raw, lived-in terror that stayed with me. I also appreciated how often humor becomes her lantern in dark rooms. She can move from grief, suicidal ideation, or family pain into a line so earthy and mischievous that the whole page suddenly exhales. That tonal risk may not work for every reader, but for me it made the voice feel unmistakably human, less like a polished lecture on spirituality and more like a long, bracing conversation with someone who has survived enough to stop pretending.

I found the central metaphor of life as an “assignment” genuinely useful, especially in the way it reframes hardship as experience rather than punishment. Her discussions of forgiveness and karma are at their strongest when they turn away from abstraction and toward moral responsibility, urging the reader not to confuse justice with revenge or pain with identity. The historical reincarnation material is the most polarizing part of the book. Taylor’s claims about recognizing souls from the French court, Marie-Thérèse, Diane de Poitiers, and others are presented with conviction, and I found myself reading those sections as a deeply personal spiritual map.

I finished I’m on Assignment! with a sense of having encountered an author who isn’t merely explaining a belief system, but offering the architecture of how she has survived her life. Its sincerity gives it a radiance. I’m on Assignment! is best suited for readers open to metaphysics, reincarnation, Akashic Records work, and spiritually framed memoirs, especially those who appreciate humor braided through pain. It’s an intimate, unruly, and often affecting book, and I’d recommend it to readers who are willing to meet it on its own personal terms.

Pages: 166 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DFLPCLFD

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Grandfather and Grandson

Author Interview
William Klenk Author Interview

The Corridor follows a grandfather with vast knowledge of the Blue Ridge Mountains who sets out on a mission alongside his teenage grandson to document a wildlife corridor threatened by a resort development. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I really wanted to do a reverse mentorship piece. I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains, and I see all the time grandfathers showing grandchildren the nature that surrounds us here. I thought it would be fun to explore a different type of relationship. One where Ellias, the grandson, takes exception to Richard, the grandfather’s, lack of motivation on saving the wildlife corridor, even when he has economic reasons, property values, and the knowledge to save it. This shift happens not only in Ellias’ familiarity with social media and technology but also in motivating Richard to do something. This is a wonderful dynamic between grandfather and grandson.

Richard’s emotional arc is so understated but powerful. How did you approach writing a character whose growth happens through small shifts rather than dramatic revelations?

That is something I like to present while writing. I think it’s important for writers to engage their readers by not presenting the obvious but to deliver it in such a way that it’s believable, and hopefully they understand this the way you did.

Nature writing can sometimes overpower character, but here, landscape and psychology feel inseparable. How did you balance the two?

That’s a great question. And the answer is that I see daily the subtle balance between people and nature. I see a family of black bears crossing the street, and people stop their cars, being very respectful to let them pass. Pulling their phones out recording the encounter. It truly is magical, and while writing, I can’t help but bring that perspective. And I’m happy that you noticed.

If Richard and Eli met again ten years later, what do you think each would have taught the other by then?

Ah, you are skipping ahead. The Corridor is the first book in a 6-book (novelette) series…stay tuned.

Poetry Gave Me Permission

Oquirrh Keyes Author Interview

Careless Whispers follows a speaker through the heat, rituals, lies, and aftermath of a controlling affair as she slowly transforms obsession and betrayal into self-possession. What compelled you to shape this experience into poetry rather than prose or memoir?

I’ve always considered The Quiet Whispers Trilogy more of a verse memoir than a traditional poetry collection. The books are interconnected emotionally and structurally, with recurring symbols, rituals, timelines, and contradictions building a larger narrative across all three volumes.

Poetry felt honest to the experience in a way prose never could. Affairs don’t unfold in neat chronology, they happen in fragments: repeated phrases, songs, screenshots, parking lots, silences, rituals you don’t realize are becoming sacred until they’re gone. Poetry allowed me to capture the emotional reality of that experience rather than simply document events.

I’m also deeply interested in compression. A single image or line can carry enormous emotional weight if it’s placed correctly. That mirrors how memory actually works. We don’t remember entire years equally, we remember a coffee cup, a sentence, a look across a parking lot that changed everything.

The trilogy was originally written as one larger body of work before I separated it into books. the quiet calendar explored grief and silence. Careless Whispers explores desire, illusion, ego, power, and self-deception. Poetry gave me the ability to move between tenderness and danger quickly, almost like emotional snapshots, without flattening the experience into explanation.

Poetry also let me hold contradictions without forcing resolution. In prose, there’s often pressure to explain why you stayed, why you returned, why you ignored what you already knew. But obsession rarely makes sense while you’re inside it. Poetry gave me permission to write the fragments exactly as they felt — heat without context, want without justification, shame without distance.

And honestly, I couldn’t hide in verse the way I could in prose. Prose can organize and rationalize. Poetry demands emotional precision. It asked me to tell the truth.

Objects like cuffs, keys, screens, cars, and mirrors carry a lot of emotional weight in the collection. How did you decide which images would become recurring symbols?

I chose objects that already carried emotional electricity in real life. I wasn’t trying to invent symbols afterward — the symbolism was already embedded in the experience. In many ways, I didn’t choose the objects; they chose me. They were the things I couldn’t stop thinking about afterward. The things that felt like evidence.

The cuff became important because it represented devotion and control at the same time. A phone screen became symbolic because so much intimacy existed digitally — texts, location sharing, screenshots, playlists, timestamps. Cars became transitional spaces where truth slipped out more easily. Mirrors represented the gradual return of self-perception after years of distortion.

I’m fascinated by how ordinary objects absorb emotional residue. After something intense ends, a person can look at a coffee shop, a bracelet, or even a GPS dot on a screen and feel grief immediately. I wanted the collection to show how attachment transfers itself onto physical things.

The affair itself kept returning to those objects, so the poems did too. Repetition wasn’t really a stylistic choice,  it was the actual shape of obsession. A cuff isn’t just restraint; it’s proof someone wanted to be restrained. A screen isn’t just technology; it’s the architecture of secrecy. Keys, cars, mirrors — they became the physical world of the affair, almost like stage props in a private performance.

The recurring symbols also helped create cohesion across the trilogy. The dragonfly key motif, the music references, the maps, the screens — they all reinforce the idea that people leave traces of themselves everywhere, whether intentionally or not.

The poems are candid about desire, complicity, pain, and power. How did you balance emotional honesty with the vulnerability of revealing so much?

I think the balance came from accountability. I never wanted the speaker to position herself as innocent or purely victimized because that would have made the work less truthful. The collection openly acknowledges desire, ego, fantasy, complicity, betrayal, and manipulation all existing at the same time. Human relationships are rarely emotionally clean, especially when secrecy and power dynamics are involved.

I was more interested in examining why people stay, what emotional needs are being fed, and how identity can slowly erode inside illusion. It would have been easier to write the speaker as only reckless or only wounded, but the truth was messier than that. I wanted what I wanted, and I also paid for wanting it. Both things are true.

Writing the book required accepting that some readers would feel uncomfortable — and honestly, they should. The vulnerability was the point. If I sanitized the experience into something morally simple, I would have been lying again.

I made a choice early on that if I was going to write this at all, I wasn’t going to flinch. The vulnerability itself wasn’t the real risk — the dishonesty would have been. Once I stopped writing to protect perception and started writing toward clarity, the work became much more honest.

In many ways, the trilogy is less about exposing another person and more about documenting the speaker reclaiming her own narrative after years of fragmentation.

What do you hope readers take away from the speaker’s movement from obsession and betrayal toward reclaiming herself?

 I hope readers understand that healing rarely arrives all at once. It happens gradually — through awareness, honesty, and the quiet decision to stop abandoning yourself.

At the beginning of the trilogy, the speaker measures herself through someone else’s attention. By the end, she begins returning to her own instincts, her own voice, her family, her body, her work, her mountains, her life. That reclamation matters more to me than the affair itself.

I also hope readers recognize that people can hold conflicting truths at once. Someone can genuinely love another person and still participate in unhealthy dynamics. Someone can feel empowered in one moment and deeply diminished in another. I wanted to write about those contradictions without simplifying them.

Ultimately, the books are not really about romance. They are about identity, illusion, silence, shame, and the long process of becoming honest with yourself again.

I hope readers see that reclaiming yourself doesn’t mean the obsession never happened. It means you stop pretending it didn’t cost you something. The speaker doesn’t end the book redeemed or cured — she ends it awake. That’s the shift. From performing for someone else to noticing herself again. From waiting to be chosen to realizing she still belongs to herself.

I don’t think recovery is neat or final, but I do think there’s power in the moment you stop asking permission to leave.

Author Links: GoodreadsFacebook | XWebsite

Before the silence came the fire.
Careless Whispers is the second book in the Quiet Whispers trilogy by award-winning poet Oquirrh Keyes.
Where The Quiet Calendar captured the grief of ending, this collection reveals what burned before the ashes settled.
These 46 poems trace the arc of a decade-long affair – from the first spark of desire to the slow unraveling of everything it touched. Written with unflinching honesty and dark humor, Careless Whispers explores the space between want and consequence, between surrender and control, between the lies we’re told and the ones we tell ourselves. This is not a story of victimhood. It’s a story of agency, complexity, and the uncomfortable truth that desire doesn’t wait for permission. The speaker is not innocent – she’s aware, sharp-eyed, and unwilling to let anyone else write her narrative.
Through intimate vignettes and stark confessions, the collection moves from seduction to illusion to rupture. Hotel rooms and parking lots become crime scenes. Text messages become evidence. A steel cuff becomes both promise and prison. And silence – weaponized, wielded, survived – becomes the thread that connects this book to the one that came before. Featuring original pencil illustrations by the author, Careless Whispers pairs visual storytelling with verse to create an immersive reading experience. Each sketch serves as artifact and evidence – objects that carry the weight of what words alone cannot hold.
For readers of confessional poetry, verse memoirs, and literary explorations of infidelity, power dynamics, and reclamation, Careless Whispers offers something rare: a woman’s unfiltered account of wanting, losing, and refusing to disappear.

Universal and Relatable

Sara Causey Author Interview

Dag and the Apple centers around a quiet little unicorn who sets out on a gentle adventure after discovering a beautiful red apple in the forest. Where did the idea for this story come from?

Necessity truly is the mother of invention. I was working on my reading comprehension of Swedish, in particular. As I looked on Amazon for resources, the books I found were honestly too advanced for a beginner. When I learned to speak Russian, I relied on books for very young children that didn’t include complex sentences. Something truly A0/A1. So I thought to myself, “You’re an author. Write what you need. Write what you’d like to see on the market for true beginners.” And I did!

Dag is very observant and calm. What drew you to writing a quieter main character?

Dag the Unicorn is a recurrent character in my universe. In my How to… with a Unicorn series, Dag is an adult. But in my Learning with Dag series, he’s a toddler. A toddler-corn, I guess we could say. Learning with Dag is an educational series. Most children and adults learn and retain information much better in a calm, low/no-pressure environment. American business culture in particular is inundated with the hustle-and-grind, “business bro” mentality, and I’ve seen a real backlash against that in recent times. People don’t necessarily want someone yelling at them to wake up at 5 a.m. and memorize complex grammar tables if they need to learn a new language. And for early learners, we want to create an environment that’s welcoming, inclusive, and accepting. Learning should be enjoyable, not tediously dull or a punishment. Neither should it be overwhelming.

How does nature influence your storytelling?

The natural world is a great place to draw from for language learning. You have weather, seasons, colors, shapes, etc. Nature is also universal and relatable. Flowers, trees, grass, sky, sun, and so forth.

Did writing the story bilingually change how you approached the text?

Absolutely. The focus is on simple words and basic sentence construction, as well as repetition. Toddlers and adult A0 level beginners are not looking for Tolstoy, Nietzsche, or Joyce. I think the challenge of truly keeping things simple is something every writer should do here and there. In some cases, less is more!

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Dag and the Apple / Dag und der Apfel is a bilingual English–German children’s picture book where young readers meet Dag the Unicorn and begin exploring a new language through a gentle and thoughtful story.

Dag is a quiet, observant unicorn who enjoys simple things—like walking through the forest and discovering a beautiful red apple. But sometimes even a small discovery can become the beginning of a big adventure!

In this charming story from the Learning with Dag series, children experience a short and engaging tale while seeing the story presented in both English and German. The simple structure makes it easy for young readers to recognize words, notice patterns between languages, and begin building vocabulary naturally.

Unlike many language-learning books, Dag and the Apple focuses on curiosity, calm storytelling, and emotional warmth. Dag’s thoughtful personality makes the story especially appealing to quiet, sensitive, and imaginative children. (And adults!)

Whether you are raising a bilingual child, homeschooling, or simply introducing a new language for fun, this book offers a gentle way to begin.

Perfect for:
• bilingual families
• early language exposure
• preschool and kindergarten readers
• homeschooling language learning
• adults looking for A0/A1 language level resources
• children who enjoy unicorn stories

Part of the Learning with Dag seriesThe Learning with Dag books combine storytelling with language discovery and other important early learning skills. Each story introduces young readers to a new language in a relaxed and approachable way while following the quiet adventures of Dag the Unicorn.

Young readers will enjoy the story.
Parents will appreciate the natural introduction to language learning.