The Price of Redeeming Love: A Modern Retelling of Ruth

The Price of Redeeming Love is a work of Christian fiction and contemporary biblical retelling that reimagines the Book of Ruth in a modern setting, moving the story into drought-stricken California and a farming community in Sonora, where loss, migration, loyalty, and costly love shape the lives of Grace, Lucía, and Bo Porter. The book begins in collapse and keeps one eye on grief even when it turns toward romance, which I appreciated. It is not shy about its roots either. Mike Cleveland openly frames the novel as a faithful modern Ruth retelling, with Grace standing in for Naomi, Lucía for Ruth, and Bo for Boaz, and that clear framework gives the whole story a steady backbone.

I found the protagonist compelling because she feels shaped by pressure rather than built as a symbol first. Grace, especially in the opening stretch, comes across as tired, doubtful, loving, and stubborn in a way that feels relatable. I liked that she isn’t presented as endlessly strong. She is grieving even before the worst losses arrive, and her faith is frayed, which gives her emotional weight and makes her growth feel earned. She carries the novel’s questions about loyalty, survival, and grace without ever seeming too neat, and that roughness is part of what made her believable to me.

What stayed with me most was how grounded the emotional world felt when the book was at its best. The early sections, especially the move from a dying farm into the strange abundance of Sonora, have real texture. I could feel the dust, the heat, the fatigue, and then that almost disorienting shock of green after so much loss. Author Mike Cleveland writes grief in a direct way. He doesn’t try to make it pretty.

I also found the author’s choices interesting because he is doing more than updating a Bible story. He’s translating its moral and spiritual shape into modern concerns like immigration status, farm labor, climate strain, and belonging. That gives the book a wider frame than a simple inspirational romance. Bo is clearly written as more than a love interest. He carries the kinsman-redeemer role very deliberately, and the novel makes its Christ-centered symbolism plain. That will certainly be moving for some readers. For me, the strength of the book is that it understands redemption as something material as well as spiritual. Food, shelter, paperwork, work, land, family, protection. Love here is not abstract. It has weight. It costs something. And that idea gives the story a sturdy, old-fashioned force.

By the end, I came away feeling that this is the kind of novel best read by people who don’t mind wearing their hearts a little closer to the surface. I would recommend The Price of Redeeming Love most to readers who enjoy Christian fiction, redemptive romance, and biblical retellings that stay openly tethered to scripture while still trying to live and breathe as contemporary fiction. Readers who want a story about grief slowly turning toward grace, and who want that story told with conviction, will probably find a lot to value here.

Pages: 395 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GRCWP23X

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In Silence

In Silence is a trauma thriller that grows into a recovery story, a love story, and finally something close to an elegy. The opening pages throw Zara Holt into a brutal fight for survival, and the book commits hard to the physical reality of pain, cold, shock, and endurance. What kept me reading, though, wasn’t just the danger. It was the way Revka Ashford builds Zara as someone defined by discipline, dark humor, and pure refusal. Early on, the novel runs on that stubborn pulse of survival.

What gives the book its heart is the shift from survival to care. Bill and Betty could have been written as simple rescuers, but they become the emotional center of the story for a long stretch, and the novel is strongest when it lets their steadiness do its work. Their kindness doesn’t feel decorative. It feels lived in, awkward at times, funny at times, and deeply earned. The book understands that healing is made of routines, meals, rides, teasing, check-ins, and people who stay. That makes the emotional arc feel grounded even when the plot keeps moving through danger, grief, and suspense.

Ashford also has a real instinct for tonal layering. The novel is heavy, no question, but it isn’t one-note. Zara’s voice can be sharp and dry even in awful circumstances, and that edge keeps the character from flattening into pure suffering. Later, when Bella becomes central, the book opens into a different register. It becomes gentler, warmer, and more romantic without losing the tension that shaped the beginning. That blend gives the story a wide emotional range. It’s a book about injury and fear, but also about devotion, trust, found family, and the strange ways people learn how to be seen by each other.

The structure is ambitious. The story keeps widening, from a close survival narrative to a larger web of relationships, investigation, secrecy, and consequence. At times, the book can be melodramatic, and some scenes are written with maximum emotional volume, but Ashford’s sincerity carries a lot of that weight. The book believes in its characters’ feelings completely, and that confidence gives it momentum. By the end, the novel feels less like a single-genre story and more like a sweeping character drama built out of suspense, romance, and grief.

What stayed with me most is that In Silence is really about being witnessed after pain has tried to erase a person. The title lands because the book keeps returning to silence as injury, protection, intimacy, and memory all at once. The final lines, “In silence, I was heard / In darkness, I was seen,” bring that thread into focus in a way that feels simple and earned. This is a book that wants to hold survival and tenderness in the same hand, and a lot of the time, it does exactly that.

Pages: 437 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GR9MDBGQ

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… and to take over my life

T. A. Keenan Author Interview

Tom Ryan’s Shoes is a ghost-tinged Irish historical novella in which a famine-era journey becomes a story of survival, courtship, folklore, and the inheritance of memory. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Well, it’s difficult to give one simple answer. The Canterbury Tales and The Wizard of Oz were literary inspirations. So were stories of elves, fairies, and leprechauns I heard as a pre-schooler, along with family stories I heard about the Great Famine. I had long assumed that the famine had driven my family to come to America. But then, in recent years when I took up genealogy, I learned that my family did not arrive here until the 1880s or so (decades after the famine). I ran up against the paucity of good Irish records for pre-famine family histories. So, gradually, a story began to take shape in my head … and to take over my life, a bit, for a few weeks or so.

This storytelling is something of a mysterious process to me. I mean, I did not set out to explain my great-great-grandparents’ experience of those times, then embellish the tale with a few folklore nuances. Writing for me is more like playing with pieces of a jigsaw puzzle (characters, conflicts, themes, snippets of history) and exploring how they might fit together in an interesting way.

How did you approach writing the Great Famine in a way that honored its suffering without letting the novel become emotionally one-note?

I did struggle a bit with that, as indicated in the Introduction.

I’m not aware of very much wonderful literature to come out of the famine. Maybe it is there and I’ve overlooked it. But it has seemed to me, it is almost a taboo subject. Unlike war, there is nothing much heroic or romantic about starvation. I’ve seen probably dozens of films about WWII, but can only think of one major motion picture about the famine (2018’s Black ’47). So I wanted to pop the lid off and take a look at this time period, without strong notions about what might unfold.

Now, given my family history, it occurred to me that, even though the famine killed or displaced some 25% of the population, many families not only survived but in some cases must even have profited from others’ suffering.

It was too simplistic to blame the British government for the whole calamity. I saw in the Canterbury Tales a framework for laying out a range of human character types, with all their shortcomings, that might have been on display.

Once I started to follow that path, I had begun to avoid monotony. But I did find myself getting caught up in the romance, toward the end, and had to be careful not to lose sight entirely of the horror.

Folklore feels inseparable from daily life in the book. Was that balance shaped more by historical research, family stories, or imagination?

A little of each. But again, the lack of reliable history was a factor. So we’re back to: “Never let the truth (or lack of it) get in the way of a good story.”

Toto the pig brings so much texture and vitality to the story. When did you realize she was essential rather than incidental?​

Somewhere along the way I read an old review of The Wizard of Oz, and realized I’d never given much thought to Toto and the role the little dog played in the story.

Toto represents innocence, but a knowing, uncorrupted innocence (not unlike that of the little boy who points out the emperor has no clothes).

It is Toto who pulls back the curtain on the Wizard. When I realized how appropriate that was, iI realized it would be quite nice to have the pig pull off the Hag’s cloak.

Now, in Tom Ryan, there’s another dimension to the pig. Toto represents a few good meals worth of meat. So it’s a marvelous thing she survives the journey.

But Toto the pig isn’t entirely there for explanatory power (as a metaphor for a relationship between innocence and wisdom). She’s there, too, to allude to the Wizard of Oz, to resonate with a story-telling tradition and our shared childhood memories.

Author Links: Facebook | Website

In famine-stricken 19th-century Ireland, young Tom Ryan leaves Ballyhooly with his cousin Frank, setting out across the Galtee Mountains toward the promise of opportunity in Tipperary. What begins as a practical journey soon becomes a passage through a country unraveling under the weight of hunger, eviction, violence, and despair.
The Irish countryside has turned perilous. Starving families line the roads; ruthless land agents enforce brutal order. Soup kitchens trade food for faith as secret societies lurk in the shadows. And always nearby is the enigmatic old seer known only as The Hag, who dispenses cryptic wisdom, demands small services, and intervenes in destinies with unsettling precision.
Tom Ryan’s Shoes: The Legend of the Banshee Castle is historical fiction infused with Celtic legend, magical realism, and mythic storytelling. Rich in atmosphere and grounded in the history of the Great Famine, this coming-of-age adventure blends folklore, literary depth, dark humor, and historical drama into a powerful tale of resilience and transformation. A Literary Titan Book Award winner.

H1 L1 A0

H1, L1, A0 is a science fiction novel with a strong climate-fiction pulse, and at its core, it imagines a future where Earth is buckling under environmental collapse, overcrowding, and political failure, pushing humanity toward vast Ark-like space projects, strange new technologies, and eventually contact with alien forces. The story follows James Kidd, who tells much of it in the first person, beginning from a crisis point high above an unknown planet and then reaching back across centuries of memory, survival, and transformation. What stayed with me most was how the book tries to braid together personal memoir, planetary warning, military adventure, and big-idea speculative fiction into one long arc.

What I found interesting is that the novel doesn’t move like sleek, polished hard science fiction that’s obsessed with efficiency. It feels more talkative than that, more authentic, almost as if James is sitting across the table trying to tell me everything before time runs out. Sometimes that means the writing rambles, circles, and doubles back. But that same looseness also gives it a certain honesty. The book has a homemade intensity to it. I could feel the author wanting not just to entertain me, but to argue, warn, and remember. That choice gives the novel a rough sincerity I ended up respecting, even when I wanted a firmer editorial hand.

This is not shy fiction. It’s deeply concerned with climate damage, human selfishness, political cowardice, and the fantasy that someone else will save us. Even when the story opens outward into alien tech and deep-space possibility, the moral center stays pointed back at Earth. The novel keeps asking what kind of species creates brilliance and ruin at the same time. James, Charlotte, May, and Alexander help ground that question because they are not just symbols in a debate. They’re part of the machinery of the plot, but they also feel like the human anchors that keep the book from floating away into concept alone. And the ending note from the author makes the book’s purpose even clearer: this story may be speculative, but its anxiety about the planet is not.

I’d recommend H1, L1, A0 most to readers who enjoy idea-driven science fiction, especially fiction that mixes environmental warning, future history, and space adventure with an earnest, personal voice. Readers who like ambitious, talky, reflective sci-fi that cares more about the size of its questions than perfect polish will find a lot to engage with here. For me, it felt like hearing a long, urgent story from someone who has been carrying it for years and cannot quite let it go until he has said his piece. That gives the book its own distinct gravity.

Pages: 184

Their Own Personal “Storms”

Author Interview
S.E. Cunningham Author Interview

In After the Storms, you share with readers your story of survival shaped by faith, from your childhood marked by disaster, poverty, and alcoholism to your inspiring return to grace. What inspired you to share your story with others?

I was inspired to share my story by a deep-seated desire to provide a roadmap for others navigating their own personal “storms” and to show that one’s beginnings do not have to dictate their end. My journey from a childhood marked by disaster and poverty to a life defined by service and faith taught me that resilience is often forged in the most difficult circumstances.

By being transparent about my lowest points and the long road to redemption, I hope to testify to the power of grace and the possibility of finding peace and purpose no matter how much has been lost. I wrote this book to offer a message of hope, proving that it is always possible to rebuild and thrive after the clouds have cleared.

Your family is portrayed with both struggle and deep love. How do you understand that duality now?

I understand that duality now as the very foundation of resilience; the struggles we faced weren’t in spite of our love, but often the crucible that proved how deep it actually ran. Looking back, I see that while poverty and personal battles created immense pressure, they also stripped away everything but our commitment to one another. That friction between hardship and devotion taught me that grace doesn’t require a perfect environment to grow—it often takes root most firmly in the broken soil of our shared trials.

How did your experiences during the Gulf War shape your perspective on life and faith?

My time as a Cavalry Scout during the Gulf War served as a profound turning point, stripping away the abstractions of life and replacing them with a raw, immediate dependence on faith. In the chaos of combat, I quickly realized how little control I truly possessed, which forced me to seek an anchor beyond my own training and equipment. This experience instilled in me a permanent perspective on the fragility of life and a conviction that grace is often most visible in our most uncertain moments. Ultimately, the desert taught me that no matter how vast the landscape or how dark the storm, there is always a purposeful path forward for those willing to trust in a higher power.

What is one thing you hope readers take away from your story?

The single most important message I hope readers take away is that your history does not have to be your destiny. Whether you are standing in the wreckage of a physical disaster or the quiet ruins of personal struggle, there is always a path from “red dirt” to redemption. I want people to see that resilience is not about avoiding the storm, but about finding the faith and grit to rebuild once the wind stops blowing. Ultimately, I hope my story serves as a reminder that no matter how much has been lost, it is never too late to return to grace and find a life of profound purpose and peace.

Author Links: Facebook | Website

The Science of How to Bring Back Eden

This is a wide-ranging book that blends spiritual argument, personal testimony, environmental planning, and futuristic invention into a single narrative. It opens from a personal place, then expands outward until it’s trying to account for the fate of the Earth, the meaning of Eden, the role of conscience, and the future of science all at once. The author presents the book as both an explanation and a call to action, and that gives it a distinctive shape. It isn’t just meant to be read. It’s meant to persuade the reader that restoration is possible and that human beings have a direct role in bringing it about.

What makes the book different is how little distance there is between the author’s inner life and his big ideas. Aubin writes as someone who sees personal experience, biblical history, environmental crisis, and technological possibility as parts of the same story. That’s why the book can move from reflections on telepathy and immortality into discussions of hydrogen, greenhouse gas removal, species recovery, and space travel without changing its tone. In his hands, those subjects belong together because they’re all part of one central effort to repair a damaged world.

The book is also full of purpose. The author isn’t circling around his themes or cautiously laying out options. He tells you exactly what he thinks the book is for. Early on, he writes, “I found my mission in life,” and that sense of mission never lets up. Later, he says, “This is a book that can help save the world.” Those lines are important because they explain the book’s voice. It’s direct, earnest, and completely committed to the idea that moral clarity and technical creativity should work side by side.

I found the environmental material especially revealing because it shows what kind of book this is at its core. The author isn’t only writing about belief. He’s trying to sketch systems, machines, and research paths that could, in his view, move the planet toward renewal. His interest in photosynthesis, air quality, water treatment, and cleaner energy makes the book feel constructive. There’s a strong impulse here toward design and repair. The author wants a world where science is used not just to increase power, but to restore balance, protect life, and push civilization toward something more durable.

This book attempts to gather everything that matters to its author into one place and give it direction. It’s a book of ideas, but it’s also a book of conviction. The author is trying to define what healing the Earth would mean, what living rightly would require, and what kind of future humanity should be building. That gives the book its identity. It’s a restoration project in prose, written by someone who believes the world can still be remade if conscience, invention, and responsibility are brought back into alignment.

Pages: 143

Jannah Essa Author Interview

Author Interview
Jannah Essa Author Interview

Twenty Years and Then Some follows a spiritually restless woman who moves across cities and relationships in search of love and meaning, only to discover that faith, desire, and identity refuse to align. What was the initial idea behind this story, and how did that transform as you were writing the novel?

I began writing the novel in November 2024, following a year-long stay in the United Kingdom and shortly after the events of October 7, 2023. Many of the events described in Chapter 8 were written in direct response to real-life incidents as they unfolded. Because of this, the novel cannot be categorized as typical autofiction. The narrative begins in the present day before retreating twenty years to narrate Aisha’s journey—a story largely inspired by my personal experiences, my frustrations in romance, and stories from my inner circle. Following the climax in Chapter 5, the script gradually transitions back into the present.

I was in shock, much like the rest of the world, and I felt compelled to build an authentic voice from within the region. I realized that if I, a native, could not initially see the full truth, how could the rest of the world? I wondered how many others, like me, once dismissed such realities as mere conspiracy theories. As I delved deeper into the history of Zionism and modern geopolitics, the “bigger picture” became clearer and more predictable. This is why I was able to anticipate the events we see today—such as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the escalating energy crisis. It is proof that humanity is interconnected, regardless of where one lives. However, when I speak of “humanity,” I do not mean the United Nations; I have come to view it as a deceptive organization.

The most difficult challenge in writing this script was weaving together history, religion/spirituality, and romance without creating a disjointed narrative. My natural style consists of short, romantic pieces—the kind I publish on Instagram—and I often require that “romantic flair” just to find the mood to write. Chapter 6 alone required five months of research, drafting, and constant revision. I considered discarding it several times, but I ultimately retained it because it provides the necessary foundation for Chapter 8. I have included an “Author’s Note” for that section to guide the reader.

The main plot explores the connection between Aisha’s spirituality and the “illusions” of her 2009 vision, paralleling the illusions under which humanity currently lives due to a small group seeking to control the earth for their own benefit. While Aisha’s journey is individual, the Zionist vision is collective; I believe we, as humans, must unite regardless of our beliefs to rid ourselves of that evil.

To provide context for an American audience: just last week, millions of ordinary American taxpayers participated in the “No Kings” protests. Yet, one must ask: who truly has the final say? If you follow the money, you find the truth. This is precisely what the plot of my novel addresses.

I chose to tell this story through the lens of my Shia faith, which required me to delve deeply into Shiism and its cultural nuances. With this context established, I believe I can now answer your questions in a way that will resonate more deeply.

Aisha’s relationships are marked by misalignment, chemistry without safety, safety without love. What interested you about that emotional pattern?

To speak candidly, the text reflects my frustrations with both the male ego and the dominant Sunni traditions of the Middle East. Even when the narrative shifts focus from a Sunni character like Abdulrahman to the Shia men in the opening chapters, the result is the same: men remain men.

Faith in this novel is not background; it’s active, shaping perception and experience. How did you approach integrating theology into the emotional life of the character?

To answer briefly, I should focus on Munther. He and Aisha share the same values: resilience in their faith and a pride that outweighs romantic love. She wasn’t angry at him for his choice, as she understood it; she was simply upset that he didn’t execute it properly. I hope you can see where I am coming from.

Do you see Aisha’s journey as leading toward resolution, or toward a different kind of uncertainty?

With Muhammad, I intentionally avoided a black-and-white conclusion. The ending serves as a reminder to stay true to one’s values and to never lose hope in a brighter future.

Author Links: GoodReadsFacebook | Website

From a cryptic vision at the age of twenty-two, Aisha begins a transformative journey across the world’s iconic cities—from the mist of London to the spiritual heart of Najaf, and from the neon streets of New York to the historic alleys of Madrid. Driven by a search for love and identity, she navigates a complex landscape where faith and doubt collide.

What starts as a personal quest evolves into a profound awakening: the illusions we harbor extend far beyond our individual lives. Aisha finds herself caught in the crosscurrents of long-standing sectarian divides and the geopolitical shifts following October 7th, where the myths of the past are confronted by the harsh realities of the present.

Her name itself, Aisha, carries a heavy symbolic weight—a bridge between identities in a world torn by religious and political strife. Through her intricate relationship with Abdulrahman, the narrative challenges the very boundaries of truth, asking: Can we truly wake from our illusions? And is the ultimate truth only found in the clarity of departure?.

“Two Years and Then Some” is not merely a tale of romance; it is a deep intellectual odyssey exploring how myths shape the destinies of nations, and the whispers of a soul caught between the living and the dead.

Margaret Ann and the Reckoning

In Margaret Ann and the Reckoning, Cindy Cortez Prieto drops readers into a cemetery where death is not an ending so much as a strange continuation: Margaret Ann, a dead girl living among other spirits with her grandpa and her friends Hazel and Marco, investigates the suspicious death of wealthy Florence Mason while also facing the return of the Gazer, a malevolent force hunting her essence. The book braids a murder puzzle with a supernatural struggle, and that combination gives it an unusually lively pulse for a ghost story aimed at younger readers.

What I liked most was the book’s tonal oddity in the best sense. It can be eerie, then playful, then unexpectedly tender. Prieto has a real affection for her cemetery world, and that affection keeps the novel from turning merely grim. I liked the way the dead still squabble, joke, investigate, worry, and form makeshift family bonds. That emotional logic matters more than strict realism here, and it gives the story a homespun sincerity that I found winning. Hazel, in particular, adds warmth, and Margaret Ann’s mix of bravery, irritation, curiosity, and vulnerability keeps the novel from feeling embalmed in sweetness.

I also appreciated the novel’s willingness to be melodramatic. The wicked voices, the family greed, the spectral menace, the sense that a child detective can step straight from library research into metaphysical peril, none of it is shy. Sometimes the prose is a little blunt, and some scenes land with more earnestness than polish, but there is energy in that directness. The book doesn’t smirk at its own haunted premise. It commits. And because it commits, the spooky set pieces and emotional beats have a kind of old-fashioned crackle. And that makes the story vivid.

I would hand this to middle-grade and young YA readers who enjoy paranormal mystery, ghost adventure, supernatural suspense, cemetery fiction, and kid-detective stories with a strong streak of heart. Readers who like Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book may recognize a similar fascination with childhood among the dead, though Prieto’s novel is less lyrical and more openly earnest, with a warmer, more familial glow. This is a spooky-hearted mystery that prefers soul to slickness, and that is its own kind of magic.

Pages: 143 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GQ6V5D7P

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