Fear of the Unknown
Posted by Literary-Titan
Big Lies follows an astronomer whose discovery of an asteroid careening toward our planet reveals an even more devastating crisis here on Earth. Where did the idea behind this novel come from?
I previously worked with several government agencies, and during that time, I witnessed events that unfolded quite differently from how they were presented to the public. Information was sometimes deliberately distorted or framed in misleading ways. It was shocking at first, and it stayed with me.
I began to think about telling a story from the perspective of someone who firmly believes in science and facts—someone grounded in reality—who is suddenly forced to confront hidden layers of the world that most people never see. I explored the idea of what an ordinary person, armed only with general public knowledge, would do if they were pushed to uncover the truth behind events often dismissed as conspiracy theories—but which, in this story, turn out to be real.
From there, I gathered various conspiracy concepts and shaped a narrative around them. Big Lies was born from that central question: What if it were all true? And what if the protagonist experienced it firsthand?
What role does fear play in shaping both institutions and individuals in the story?
Fear—especially fear of the unknown—plays a central role in both individual behavior and institutional control. One of the most unsettling forms of fear is the loss of trust in the systems and people we rely on most.
Big Lies explores what happens when those institutions—ones that shape our lives and promise stability—are revealed to be built on manipulation or hidden agendas. When the structures we depend on begin to fracture, it forces individuals to question everything they thought was certain.
To me, the most terrifying realization is not external danger, but the possibility that the life we trust is built on layers of half-truths and lies. That psychological shift is at the core of the story.
Were there particular books or films that influenced your approach to this story?
The X-Files and the Deus Ex series were major influences, especially in their use of conspiracy theories and hidden truths. I was fascinated by them as a teenager—the sense of uncovering secrets and confronting deeper fears left a lasting impression on me.
However, those stories typically follow trained professionals—agents or operatives—who have the tools, authority, and support to investigate the unknown. They can act, defend themselves, and call for backup.
With Big Lies, I wanted to remove that safety net. I placed an ordinary civilian at the center of the story—someone without special training, resources, or protection. Thomas Jeffries is not an FBI agent like Fox Mulder or Dana Scully, nor a cyber-enhanced operative like J.C. Denton or Adam Jensen. He is simply a scientist caught in something far beyond his control.
That vulnerability was important to me. He must navigate events as they unfold, relying only on his intelligence, moral compass, and determination.
Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?
Yes, I’m currently working on several books simultaneously. My next major release is a cosmic science fiction horror novel titled Ghost Planet, which I’ve been developing for the past seven years. I’m aiming to release it within the next few months.
In addition, I have three other titles in development.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
Inside the secretive halls of elite councils and engineered media narratives, Jeffries is tasked with engineering a cosmic escape for the elite while preserving the illusion of safety for an oblivious world. As he uncovers the truth about ancient bloodlines, synthetic political leaders, and pre-selected survivors, he’s also charged with finding a new home off-world for a civilization that may never know the sky is falling. With everything at stake, Jeffries must weigh the exodus of the few against the future of the many.
Big Lies is a dark, gripping thriller about the cost of knowledge in a world built on deception. Perfect for fans of Deus Ex (elite conspiracy), Altered Carbon (privileged immortality), and Don’t Look Up (satirical apocalypse), this is a chilling ride through the machinery of control—where truth is a weapon, and survival is a privilege reserved for the chosen—unless one man can rewrite the rules.
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Big Lies, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Conspiracy Thrillers, Dystopian fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Political Thrillers & Suspense, read, reader, reading, Stephen Wayne, story, supsense, thriller, writer, writing
A Deeper Insight
Posted by Literary-Titan
IYSH centers around a Jewish medical student and a fashion designer in 1940s Germany who face their worst fears when their lives are upended by Nazi forces. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
My wife and I have traveled to many parts of Europe, the Mediterranean countries, and several times to Israel. The places mentioned in the novel, cities, and a Kibbutz in Israel have all been visited by us. Hence, we have experienced firsthand the historical and current lifestyles prevailing in that part of the world. From my teenage years, I have always had an interest in the events that took place during the Second World War; I studied extensively the characters of the generals, battles, and how the world was drawn into this conflict. All the while, I had the overriding conviction that the war was not only about Germany conquering Europe and the rest of the world, but that there was a satanic influence that spearheaded the origins of the conflict, namely the eradication of God’s chosen people, the Jews.
At the age of 27, I was ordained as a Christian minister and continued with my interests in the Jewish people, in particular during the time of the war. That led me to study the Diaspora and the settlement of the Jews throughout Europe. It was during the 1970s and 1980s that I read about the trials and struggles many Jews experienced during the war, as well as how many Christians did things secretly to help them.
Then one morning, as I was reading the Bible, I came across this verse in Ezekiel 22:30 that said, So I sought a man among them who would make a wall and stand in the gap before Me . . . I researched the word “man” and found the translation to mean “champion.” I received the revelation that God wasn’t looking for an ordinary man to stand in the gap but that He needed a “champion.” That took me to events that many people experienced during the war, namely, they had to “champion the cause” to survive.
I began the journey of creating a story about a Jew and a Christian who did this during the war.
In short, the inspiration for the setup of the story was interlaced with my interests in the events of the war, my interest in the Jews, and the revelation I received about an IYSH – “champion” who would survive against the worst odds possible.
How did you approach writing scenes of persecution and displacement with both honesty and care?
I read about the many and varied persecutions people suffered during the war, and I wanted to explain how so many endured through it. I tried not get too gruesome and emotional about these scenes, always trying to balance the suffering with the characters’ endurance and tenacity that was propelled by their inner conviction that they should “champion the cause.” While some of the trials they experienced were common to most who were taken prisoners, the events I created were all my own thoughts. Scenes when Leo’s family was shot and killed in front of him, the suffering on the train ride to the camps, the arrests in the farmhouse, how Leo had his left hand amputated, and the tragic shooting that cost him his life were done to express the emotional roller coaster ride many experienced in the “heat of the battle.”
Sitting in a chair typing a story should never be influenced by the affluence the writer has while describing a horrific scene. Either too much gruesome explanation is given, or too little suffering is explored, leaving the reader at a loss about the real essence of the story. Thus, I tried to encase the trauma through the experience with the ever-present reminder that they were “champions” – IYSH who can make it no matter what.
I tried approaching scenes of persecution and displacement with both honesty and care that explained the characters’ reliance on their faith in God, their dedication to being a “champion,” and their care for those around them. Scenes when Ivy, Karen, and her sister form a friendship that transcends the death of one of them and forges an everlasting friendship and partnership in both the bad and the good times. Also, when Leo confides in the Rabbi about his guilt and how he does all he can to help those he believes he turned his back on.
Ivy plays a central role in the emotional arc—what drew you to her story?
It is important that we understand who these two main characters are and how they influenced the story. While living in South Africa, I met Leo Butlion through a business relationship, and over thirteen years, we forged a friendship that had a remarkable impact on my life. I was overly impressed with his uprightness, deeply seated commitment to be honest, and his unwavering integrity that stood the test of time throughout our relationship and his career as an attorney. He was a little older than me, but he always conducted himself with respect for others and gave me advice on issues that helped me during a difficult time in my banking career.
Leo’s wife, Ivy, is a close friend and confidant of my wife, Sandra. She is also an upright and honest person. Her honest approach to life was an example to her family, friends, and the members of the synagogue. Leo is a Jew and active in his synagogue, who has at times brought a word to the congregation. Ivy was a Christian and converted to the Jewish faith. She committed her life to being a faithful wife, mother, and member of her new faith. She was not deformed like the Ivy in the story. I wanted to express Ivy’s tenacious commitment to surviving and based her character on the Ivy we know. I thought the best way was to present her in the novel as someone who could “champion the cause” even with an impediment. I was drawn to present her as the one who could endure trials, always revert to her faith roots, and do what was needed even when faced with the worst challenges to survive. Scenes when she was found hiding in the barn and then taken to the house where Leo was also captured; how she was thrown to the floor and had her prosthesis exposed from under her coat sleeve, demonstrated her ability to act convincingly under the most trying circumstances. Her eventual collapse during the parade ground scene, when she tried to conceal her deformity and fell to the ground, only to be discovered by a guard, and how she conducts herself in the matron’s presence, is an explanation of her character and truthfulness.
What drew me to include her in the story was so that there would be a balance between the faiths, Jewish and Christian. Also, I needed to draw a parallel between the suffering and endurance that both men and women experienced during the war and afterwards. There was a need to balance Leo’s commitment to his medical practice with what Ivy did, namely, her talent as a designer. Both had an unwavering desire to succeed, and Ivy did this even though she was deformed. Her character is intended to bring warmth to the story and a caring that in spite of hardships, one can endure and make it through trials. Molding the novels’ Ivy was made easier when using the Ivy in South Africa as the example to follow.
What do you hope endures from this story in the minds of your readers?
It is my sincere hope that when this story is read, people will have a deeper insight into the trials so many endured during the worst atrocity the world has even known. This should never be removed from our history books, and the story needs to be told to remind future generations of what it took so many to do to survive. Also, it should encourage readers to adopt the attitude that everyone, in spite of their shortcomings, handicaps, and deformities, that all can be a “champion” – IYSH even in the worst of times. This is a story of character, uprightness, integrity, and commitment. All these are so rare in today’s modern society.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Greg Price, indie author, IYSH, kindle, kobo, literature, Literature & Fiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing, wwII
Intimacy and Immediacy
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Inheritance of Light follows two families through war and migration and generations of grief and survival. Where did the idea for this novel come from?
The Inheritance of Light grew out of family stories, old letters, historical fragments, and the long memory of two families shaped by war, migration, grief, and survival. But the deeper impetus for beginning the novel was also tied to the approaching 250-year anniversary of American democracy and the question of what, exactly, gets handed down from one generation to the next.
Benjamin Franklin’s warning…“A republic, if you can keep it”…has always resonated with me. It captures the truth that freedom is fragile and that democracy requires vigilance, engagement, and moral courage to survive. In that sense, the novel is not only about family inheritance but also about civic inheritance.
I wanted to explore how people inherit more than land, names, and photographs. They inherit wounds, silences, values, resilience, and obligations. The same is true of a nation. Each generation receives both light and burden, and each must decide what it will preserve, what it will repair, and what it will risk passing on.
So, the novel came from both the intimacy of family memory and the larger American question of survival, how people endure hardship without surrendering their humanity, and how a republic endures only if its people remain awake enough to keep it. Around here, we might say freedom is a little like an old porch roof: you cannot just admire it from the yard. Every so often, you have to climb up there with a hammer before the whole thing starts leaking on everybody.
Were there particular traits or patterns you wanted to trace across the Templeton and Sewell families?
Yes, very much so. I wanted to trace the ways certain traits keep showing up in families like old songs nobody meant to teach, but everybody somehow knows.
In both the Templeton and Sewell families, I was interested in resilience, certainly, but not the shiny, sermon-on-Sunday kind. I mean the lived-in kind, the kind that gets people through war, loss, disappointment, uprooting, and the long stretches when life is more grit than glory. I wanted to follow how courage, endurance, loyalty, and a deep sense of duty can be passed down right alongside silence, stubbornness, pride, and unspoken grief.
I was also fascinated by how families develop emotional habits. Some people learn to bear pain quietly. Some learn to press forward no matter what. Some turn to humor, storytelling, or hard work as a way of keeping despair from taking over. In the South, that often means somebody is cracking a joke while the whole house is on fire, then asking who wants iced tea while they look for the hose.
Another pattern I wanted to trace was the tension between independence and belonging. Both families produce people who are strong-willed, sometimes maddeningly so, yet they are also bound by kinship, memory, and obligation. They may leave home, rebel against family expectations, or try to outrun the past, but the pull of inheritance, emotional, moral, and historical, never quite lets go.
I also wanted to show how love travels through generations in imperfect forms. It is not always spoken tenderly. Sometimes it arrives as sacrifice, protection, labor, duty, or sheer persistence. In families shaped by hardship, affection is not always dressed for church. Sometimes it comes to the table in overalls.
So yes, I was tracing patterns of resilience, sacrifice, pride, silence, humor, loyalty, and the complicated ways people carry both wound and wisdom forward. What interested me most was how those traits can save a family, burden a family, and sometimes do both at once.
The novel uses letters, linked episodes, and shifting perspectives—how did you develop this mosaic structure?
I developed the mosaic structure because it felt truest to the way families and nations actually remember. We do not inherit one seamless story. We inherit letters, fragments, silences, conflicting memories, and episodes that only reveal their meaning over time. I wanted the form of the novel to reflect that.
The letters create intimacy and immediacy. The linked episodes let me trace how choices and losses echo across generations. And the shifting perspectives allowed me to show that history looks different depending on who is carrying it. That was especially important in portraying people trying to fit into a new country or culture. Belonging is rarely simple. It involves dislocation, adaptation, misunderstanding, and the struggle to hold on to your identity while learning how to survive in a place that may not fully welcome you. The mosaic form gave me a way to honor those layered experiences without forcing them into a single, tidy narrative.
A family story is rarely one straight sermon. It is more like six cousins talking at once, one aunt crying in the kitchen, somebody reading an old letter out loud, and a newcomer on the porch wondering whether they are ever really going to belong. That felt like the right shape for this novel.
What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?
The next book I’m working on is tentatively titled Too Much Gravy for One Enchilada, which ought to tell readers right away that I have not entirely surrendered my fondness for the odd, the heartfelt, or the slightly overstuffed.
It’s a collection of short stories, poems, plays, and essays I’ve written over the years, so in many ways it brings together the different rooms of the same house. Some pieces lean literary, some humorous, some reflective, and some carry the kinds of voices and questions that have stayed with me for a long time. What ties them together is a deep interest in memory, survival, human folly, and the strange ways people try to make meaning out of love, loss, history, and everyday life.
I like to think of it as a gathering of mischief and meditation under one roof. Around here, we’d probably say it’s the kind of book where laughter and heartbreak might sit down at the same table, pass the biscuits, and argue kindly over who gets the last word.
As for availability, it is still in progress, so I’m reluctant to give a firm publication date just yet. Let’s just say late 2026 or early 2027. But it is very much alive on the worktable, and I’m hoping it will make its way into the world once I’ve had time to shape it into the collection it deserves to be.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Charles L. Templeton | EMergeLit | Website | EMerge Magazine | Flapper Press | Amazon
In a layered portrait of American family and identity, generations of the Templetons and Sewells are carried along the currents of history, each one bearing the hopes and burdens of those who came before.
Through the earliest battles that forged a fledgling nation to the streets of midcentury Washington and the crucible of World War II, their stories are masterfully woven together to paint the resilience, devotion, faith, and bonds that define family in this historical fiction. It’s an epic, both gritty and deeply human, that traces the extraordinary paths of love, identity, and family, showing how the choices of one generation ripple across the next.
Through heartbreak and triumph, devotion and sacrifice, these intertwined lives illuminate what it truly means to honor the past while shaping the future, carrying forward a light that guides generations yet to come.
With profound insight and narrative mastery, bestselling author Charles Templeton brings history and relationships to vivid, unforgettable life in this monumental family saga fiction.
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Biographical & Autofiction Fiction, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Charles L. Templeton, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Multigenerational Fiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Southern United States Fiction, story, The Inheritance of Light, writer, writing
Water Your Flowers With Love: A Collection of Poems
Posted by Literary Titan

Water Your Flowers With Love is a poetry collection that moves through grief, memory, exile, tenderness, and moral urgency without ever letting go of its faith in love as a sustaining force. Across poems about childhood, a lost father, immigration, war, kindness, and the consolations of the natural world, Author Koula Hadjitooulou keeps returning to one central conviction: the human spirit is fragile, but it isn’t finished. The book’s title poem crystallizes that vision by turning childhood harm into an aching plea for gentleness, while poems like “Cyprus and the Girl with the Water Jug,” “Warrior of Life,” and “Three Little Birds” widen the emotional field into displacement, survival, and the cost of violence borne by children.
What stayed with me most was the book’s emotional sincerity. This is not guarded poetry. Hadjitooulou writes as someone who means every line, and that directness gives the collection its pulse. The poems about her father especially landed hard for me. In “I Can Still Feel His Warmth” and “Letter to My Dad,” the grief isn’t abstract or ornamental. It feels authentic, almost tactile, as though memory itself were giving off heat. I also found myself moved by the recurring image-world of flowers, stars, hills, wind, and birds. In another writer’s hands, that language might feel overly sweet, but here it often works because it comes from a genuine instinct toward repair. Even when the book turns toward atrocity and abandonment, it keeps searching for what she calls “pockets of light,” and I admired that refusal to surrender to bitterness.
What I appreciated about the collection is also where I felt its limits. The writing is strongest when Hadjitooulou anchors her hopeful, exhortatory style in a specific story or image, as she does with the child carrying a water jug in a refugee camp, the young girl forced into marriage in “She Was Only Fifteen,” or the immigrant soul suspended between two worlds. In those pieces, the poems gather weight and texture. Elsewhere, the book leans on affirmation, repetition, and uplift. The ideas are earnest and relatable, sometimes beautifully so. What I felt was a writer trying, again and again, to make compassion usable. And in a collection so preoccupied with survival, resilience, and the moral necessity of tenderness, the insistence itself becomes part of the art.
Water Your Flowers With Love gave me the feeling that I had spent time with a voice shaped by hurt, gratitude, and an almost stubborn belief in mercy. I’d recommend it to readers who like accessible, heartfelt poetry, especially those drawn to poems about healing, family, displacement, inner strength, and the attempt to keep faith even when the world makes that difficult.
Pages: 160 | ASIN : B0G4F2K2TC
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, collection, ebook, goodreads, indie author, inspirational, kindle, kobo, Koula Hadjitooulou, literature, nook, novel, poems, Poetry by Women, Poetry Subjects & Themes, read, reader, reading, story, Water Your Flowers With Love: A Collection of Poems, womens poetry, writer, writing
Heart’s Dzyer
Posted by Literary Titan

Heart’s Dzyer is a memoir built from more than 193 letters exchanged between author Woo-Ae Yi and her former boyfriend Snail between 2011 and 2015, then transcribed after his death in 2023. What begins as a prison pen-pal reconnection between two people who knew each other in middle school slowly opens into something stranger, riskier, and more intimate: a record of affection under surveillance, of art made in confinement, of addiction, depression, longing, manipulation, tenderness, and the way a person’s voice can outlive the body that carried it. The book moves through requests for photo enlargements and tattoo sketches, coded financial favors, flirtation, emotional collapse, private jokes, fox-and-hound imagery, and eventually the ache of loss, all while insisting on the rawness of the original letters rather than smoothing them into a cleaner memoir.
I was surprised by how alive Snail feels on the page, and how uneasy that aliveness can be. He can be lyrical one moment and coercive the next, self-deprecating and charming in the same breath. A line about a “6×9 labyrinth” gives way to instructions for mailing hidden cash; a meditation on loneliness turns into delight over stickers, cartoons, dubstep, or a glowing light box. That instability is the book’s power. Yi doesn’t sanitize him into a noble tragic figure, and I respected that. She lets the contradictions stand. I found that deeply moving, because love here isn’t sentimental at all. It’s full of care, fascination, danger, rescue fantasies, and blurred boundaries. The emotional truth comes precisely from the fact that the book refuses to turn this correspondence into something tidier than it was.
As writing, the book is rough in ways that are sometimes frustrating and often essential. The preserved misspellings, abrupt tonal swings, and sheer accumulation of letters can make the reading experience challenging. But that feels earned. Prison correspondence should not read like a polished novel. It should snag. It should circle. It should sometimes feel like being trapped in somebody else’s head. I also admired the way art keeps breaking through the prose. The requests to enlarge drawings, the graffiti pieces, the tattoo designs, the “Gentle” image caged in chain-link logic, even the odd tenderness of The Fox and the Hound references all give the relationship a visual pulse. The book’s ideas about identity, loneliness, performance, and survival aren’t laid out as arguments, but they accumulate by pressure. By the end, I felt I’d spent time not just with a doomed romance, but with a record of how people improvise meaning when freedom, time, and dignity have all been damaged.
I found Heart’s Dzyer messy, haunting, intimate, and brave. I finished it feeling tender toward both the love it preserves and the pain it refuses to disguise. This is a book I’d recommend to readers who are drawn to epistolary memoirs, prison writing, complicated love stories, and books that leave the seams showing, because those seams are the whole point.
Pages: 574 | ASIN : B0GKY4MF85
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, Heart's Dzyer, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, love, love story, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, prison writing, read, reader, reading, relationships, story, Woo Ae Yi, writer, writing
Dunya: The Mages of Ersa
Posted by Literary Titan

Dunya: The Mages of Ersa is a work of fantasy, more specifically epic or high fantasy, built around a fractured realm, old magic, political struggle, and the burden carried by a handful of powerful figures trying to hold peace together. The book opens in a world shaped by past wars and prophecy, then moves through the lives of mages, witches, rulers, and ordinary people whose fates keep crossing as conflict grows across Ersa and beyond. What stayed with me most is the sense that this is not just a story about magic as spectacle. It’s a story about inheritance, duty, loss, and the hard question of what kind of power protects a people and what kind destroys them.
What I responded to first was the book’s sincerity. Author R.A. McKee writes like someone who genuinely loves the old building blocks of fantasy: maps, lore, lineages, rival realms, ceremonial moments, named chapters, and characters whose journeys feel tied to something larger than themselves. There is a handmade quality to the novel that I found appealing, especially with the inclusion of the author’s own artwork and the attention given to place and atmosphere. The writing feels almost oral, like a tale being told beside a fire rather than polished into something cool and distant, and I think that works in the book’s favor. It gives the story warmth. Even when the plot moves into war, coronation, and darker magical intrigue, I kept feeling that human thread underneath it.
I also liked that the book seems more interested in moral weight than in empty grandeur. The mages are not treated as shiny fantasy pieces on a board. They carry history, responsibility, and damage. The glimpses of characters like Fionn, Orin, Elias, and Primus suggest a world where magic is bound up with kinship, choice, and consequence, and I appreciated that the story gives room to both large political events and quieter exchanges between people trying to understand what they owe one another. This is the kind of fantasy that asks the reader to lean in and accept its cadence, names, and lore on their own terms. It’s not trying to be brisk. It wants immersion. For me, that made the book feel earnest and distinctive.
I would recommend Dunya: The Mages of Ersa most strongly to readers who enjoy classic-feeling fantasy with deep worldbuilding, mythic stakes, and a clear affection for the genre’s traditional pleasures. If you like fantasy that values lore, kingdoms, mages, prophecy, and the slow gathering of larger destinies, this book will probably speak to you. For someone who wants a heartfelt fantasy novel with ambition, atmosphere, and a genuine sense of lived-in magical history, this is a worthwhile read.
Pages: 421 | ASIN : B0GML5J38Q
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dunya: The Mages of Ersa, ebook, epic fantasy, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mages, magic, nook, novel, R.A. McKee, read, reader, reading, story, witches, writer, writing
The Pressures of Abuse
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Reluctant Bully follows a group of children who try desperately to make sense of the existing pain caused by bullying that occurred long ago. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The characters were originally introduced in my first book of the trilogy, The Lunch Money Treasure. Without giving away the ending of the first book, I wanted to offer different perspectives on bullying, and my intention was to write a more nuanced story for TRB that demonstrates the different ways children handle the pressures of abuse.
What drew you to include the 1982 storyline alongside the 2006 narrative?
Two reasons, and again, I do not want to give away any surprises in either book. I always planned to provide backstories for some characters from TLMT in future books, and the 1982 storyline drives adult decisions in the 2006 narrative. In both books, you are introduced to an adult with a calm demeanor. However, as with a river, what you see on the surface might appear calm, but you do not know what turmoil lies beneath.
Did any of the characters evolve in unexpected ways as you were writing?
Lynn, better known as Smoochie, was supposed to simply be a Nancy Drew-type character in my stories. However, as I was writing TRB, I decided that she would also become a more hardened character and occasionally demonstrate “bull-in-a-china-shop” traits.
What do you hope young readers take away from Lynn’s journey?
That the impossible is possible. I want readers to believe that they can determine their own endings, because they can.
Author Links: GoodReads | The Reluctant Bully | Facebook | Website | Amazon
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Gary Rivera, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Teen & Young Adult Coming of Age Fiction, Teen & Young Adult Fiction about Siblings, Teen & Young Adult Siblings Fiction, Teen and YA, The Reluctant Bully, The Reluctant Bully: A Smoochie Family Story, writer, writing, YA
Lenswoman in Love – a novel of the 1960s & ’70s
Posted by Literary Titan

Lenswoman in Love follows Maddy, a gifted young photographer coming of age in the upheaval of the 1960s and 1970s, as she moves through Berkeley activism, UCLA film culture, music scenes, political awakening, and an enduring, half-tormenting, half-sustaining love for Jake. What struck me most is that the novel isn’t just built around romance. It’s really about a sensibility forming under pressure: grief after her father’s death, the thrill of learning to see through a lens, the moral charge of documenting history, and the slow, uneven process of becoming herself. The early material alone gives that shape vividly, from Maddy filming police violence at an antiwar protest, to photographing the Free Speech Movement, to meeting Jake at her family’s folk club, where art, politics, and desire begin to tangle together in ways that define the rest of her life.
I liked the writing for its warmth and immediacy. Author Kim Gottlieb-Walker has a way of narrating feelings that is unabashedly romantic without becoming weightless. Maddy’s first attraction to Jake has that feverish, slightly humiliating intensity that actual young longing has. It’s not cleaned up for elegance. It blushes, stumbles, aches. I especially liked the scenes in which emotional awakening and artistic awakening mirror each other: the moment Jake opens her ears to electric music after she dismisses it as unserious, the candlelit Bob Dylan sighting, the way she notices faces, light, posture, gesture before she fully knows what any of it means. Those moments make the book feel less like a conventional love story than a record of consciousness being sharpened. The prose can be earnest, and at times that earnestness edges close to old-fashioned, but in this case, I found that more affecting than limiting.
I was more interested in the book’s ideas than in its romance, which is saying something because Jake is very skillfully drawn as a formative figure. The novel keeps circling back to a tension that feels genuinely alive: how a woman can be swept up in love without surrendering the self she is still building. Maddy’s mother gives some of the book’s wisest emotional counterweight when she insists that women don’t need men to be complete and warns her daughter not to kiss every clever frog. That note matters because the novel is clearly fascinated by longing, but it doesn’t finally confuse longing with fulfillment. I also admired the way politics are woven into the fabric of personal memory rather than pinned on as historical decoration. Andy Goodman’s murder, the antiwar marches, the police brutality, the sense that art can bear witness, all of that gives the book a pulse beyond nostalgia. I think the novel’s closeness to lived experience is both its strength. It produces texture, conviction, and vivid social detail.
Lenswoman in Love is appealing because it knows that youth is rarely one clean story. It’s heartbreak and glamour, self-invention and confusion, politics and vanity, courage and naivete, all happening at once. I came away feeling that the novel’s real subject is not simply whether Maddy and Jake belong together, but how a woman learns to trust her eye, her appetite, and her own unfolding life. I’d recommend it especially to readers who enjoy coming-of-age fiction, artist-novels, and period stories that care as much about atmosphere and inner weather as plot. It’s a tender, intelligent book for anyone who has ever fallen in love while trying, at the same time, to become a person.
Pages: 320 | ISBN : 978-1916966833
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, Kim Gottlieb-Walker, kindle, kobo, Lenswoman in Love - a novel of the 1960s & '70s, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, Women's Literature & Fiction, writer, writing








