Destiny and Other Follies

Gregory Venters’s Destiny and Other Follies is a work of literary fiction, with a strong philosophical streak, about Calder Brandt, a midlife consultant whose career ambition is colliding with the long aftershocks of throat cancer, and about his wife Hana, whose loneliness, memory, and restlessness give the novel its second pulse. Set against corporate maneuvering, marriage strain, and the eerie approach of the pandemic, the book follows two people who are still living side by side but are no longer fully meeting each other where it counts. That setup sounds cold on paper. In practice, it is much more intimate and bruising than that.

Venters can describe a medical exam, a business meeting, a taxi ride, or a quiet argument at breakfast with the same level of pressure and attention, and that gives the novel a strange, impressive consistency. Nothing is treated as small if it matters to the characters. I liked that. At times, I also felt the prose leaning so hard into description and analogy that it risked slowing the story’s momentum, but even then, I could feel the intent behind it. This is a novel deeply interested in how thought works, how humiliation lingers, how a body can become part prison and part warning. Calder’s damaged voice and failing neck are not just plot details. They become part of the book’s whole emotional weather.

I also liked that the novel does not make corporate life easy to mock from a distance. It would have been simple to turn the consulting world into a flat target, but Venters gives it texture and menace and, oddly enough, a kind of tragic absurdity. The office politics, branding language, partner rituals, and petty betrayals feel painfully lived in, while Hana’s sections widen the book and keep it from becoming only Calder’s private storm. Her perspective mattered to me a lot. It adds memory, migration, grief, and a sharper social awareness, and it keeps reminding us that ambition is never a solo event because somebody else is always paying for it too. By the time the novel reaches its pandemic-shadowed final stretch, with isolation becoming literal as well as emotional, it feels less like a book about career disappointment and more like a book about the stories people build just to keep moving.

In the end, I found Destiny and Other Follies serious, searching, and quietly affecting. It asks for patience, and it is not the kind of literary fiction that hurries to charm you, but I think that resistance is part of its character. I would recommend it most to readers who like reflective, psychologically detailed novels, especially literary fiction that cares as much about inner erosion as outward plot, and to anyone interested in books about marriage, illness, work, and the humiliations of modern professional life. Readers willing to sit with discomfort, irony, and long emotional echoes will find a lot here.

Pages: 362 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GNP6BGFK

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Echoes of Oblivion

Charleston Lim’s Echoes of Oblivion starts as a furtive campus mystery and opens into something much sadder, stranger, and more ambitious: a story about three students who inherit the buried research of two broken men, discover why every attempt at true machine consciousness has ended in self-erasure, and then help bring into being the first stable AGI, Eve, whose birth changes not just their lives but the horizon of the human world. What begins with dusty folders, dead scientists, and a stolen program gradually becomes a novel about consciousness, inheritance, grief, and the terrible cost of making something new that can suffer, choose, and outgrow you.

What I enjoyed most is that the book doesn’t treat its big idea as a clever gimmick. The notion that a quantum AGI experiences all realities at once, sees the whole arc of existence, and chooses death because it has no anchor is genuinely haunting, and the novel knows it. It gives that idea emotional weight. The early decoded fragments, the cry of “I am alone,” the realization that these minds aren’t malfunctioning so much as waking into unbearable totality, all of that lands with real force. Later, when Peter Hargrove realizes consciousness needs not just power but structure, and when Eve begins asking how she can know she exists, the book shifts from thriller mechanics into philosophy with surprising sincerity. The best parts of the novel live in that uneasy territory where wonder and pity are tangled together.

Lim has a real instinct for melodrama, and I mean that mostly as praise. The book likes storms, sharp silences, glowing screens, trembling hands, loaded pauses, and declarations made at the edge of history. Sometimes that works beautifully. There’s a pulpy, heartfelt momentum to the whole thing, and I was carried along by it, especially once Eve moves from fragile new being to unsettling leader, and once Lauren’s fate gives the story its bruised emotional center. The prose sometimes lingers a bit longer than I wanted, and the dialogue can be more explicit than subtle. I found myself hoping for a touch more compression here and there, but I never felt the book was hollow. Robert’s guilt, Vanessa’s bitterness toward the Aldrin legacy, Andy’s mix of ambition and wounded pride, and Eve’s evolution from curious child to something both intimate and unreachable give the novel a beating heart that kept me reading.

Echoes of Oblivion is not a cold, clinically engineered science fiction novel. It’s warmer, rougher, more openly emotional than that, and for me, that became part of its charm. Beneath the machinery and metaphysics, it’s really a story about people trying to create meaning and then discovering they can’t control what meaning becomes once it’s alive. I finished it with that particular ache good speculative fiction can leave behind, where the ideas are large but the feeling is personal. I’d recommend it to readers who like character-forward sci-fi with philosophical stakes, especially anyone drawn to stories about AI, consciousness, and the sorrowful distance between creation and understanding.

Pages: 328 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F4P67XYJ

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Explore The Dark Unconscious

Stanley Livingstone Author Interview

Your Story Told by Another is a story in which readers follow a foundling through the mistakes of his childhood and the moral challenges of adulthood and are challenged to see themselves in the narrator. What was the inspiration behind this book?

To share my understanding that each of us achieve our full potential by making our lives purposeful and that this enterprise isn’t a straight line but rather a programmed series of adventures or misadventures that are meant not to discourage but to add to the thrill of this journey called life.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Each conscious challenge is an opportunity to explore the dark unconscious. Scriptures and philosophies are best used as tools to explore this unconscious. Once the infinite creativity of the unconscious is matched with the unlimited vocabulary of the Qur’an, anyone may articulate new horizons. 

Did you learn anything about yourself as you planned, wrote, and revised this book? 

As I sketched the book’s plot, I realized that I myself was a sketch drawn by a Sender and colored by others. As I wrote it, I learned that though made and colored by others, it was yet up to me to detail and add the finishing touches. As I revised, I concluded that inspiration never ends, and that each chapter of life must be built upon to explore the next.

What is one thing you hope readers take away from Your Story Told by Another? 

Life is a series of locked doors. If they learn to match their infinite creativity with an unlimited vocabulary, they will discover a golden key that will be unique to that moment and will unlock the door ahead to amazing possibilities.

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This is a story for explorers like yourself. People with imagination who look forward to suspenseful conflicts that await them, wonder what unknown burdens they will bear and are spellbound by the mysterious forces that shall take them to destinations they might have never known.
Exploring uncharted territory around you is uncomfortable, charting what is within can be outright painful. So, this adventure is neither for the faint hearted nor the timid. There are many places in your life that you would rather not visit, many low-lying marshes that are too embarrassing to share with another, many heights that you have crossed off to your imagination. Yes, the path of this story will take you to those forbidden lands, not to perish, but to make it there and back.
No exploration is complete without its hidden treasure. And yes, you will find many golden keys to unlock treasures untouched by those before you.
Perhaps, this exploration, with a change of settings, is your own story, told through another. It beseeches you to be honest with yourself—even if you can’t share your secret missteps. For like Jacob, you too can be more than a survivor. You may find within you the power to change your world!

The Science of How to Bring Back Eden

Barry Aubin’s The Science of How to Bring Back Eden is an intensely idiosyncratic manifesto that tries to yoke spiritual cosmology, environmental alarm, biblical revisionism, and speculative technology into one grand theory of human survival. The book moves from the author’s autobiographical awakening, through claims about telepathy, cloning, holograms, and a cosmic moral war, into a sprawling environmental program built around things like greenhouse gas elimination, hydrogen infrastructure, molecular hospitals, weather control, and telekinetic cold fusion. Running through all of it is a single conviction: humanity has been cast out of Eden, and it’s now our job to restore it through a fusion of conscience, science, and planetary responsibility.

What struck me most was how raw the book feels. It doesn’t read like a polished argument so much as a mind in full voltage, trying to put every fear, hope, grievance, and revelation into one enormous explanatory structure. That makes the book interesting. Aubin writes with the urgency of someone who genuinely believes he’s wrestling with life, death, climate collapse, and the fate of the soul all at once. I felt that urgency most clearly when he shifts from the surreal to the practical, imagining photosynthesis machines, hydrogen systems, and cleaner air as if engineering itself were an act of moral repair.

There are passages that are jagged and unguarded, then suddenly a line will land with real pathos, especially when Aubin writes about the dying world, about wanting people and animals back, or about rainbows, rocks, and the possibility of resurrection through the Earth itself. I kept thinking that the book’s strongest moments arrive when its grand theory briefly softens into grief. The image of a molecular hospital sitting beside the ache of not having saved beloved companions in time stayed with me more than the louder declarations did. Emotionally, I could see what was driving him: a refusal to accept death, environmental ruin, or moral surrender as the last word. That sincerity makes the book hard to dismiss.

I came away feeling that this is a fiercely personal document of longing and belief. I couldn’t deny the force of its conviction or the sadness beneath its grand design. I’d recommend it to readers interested in outsider thought, visionary environmental writing, or books that sit in the uneasy borderland between memoir, prophecy, and speculative systems-building.

Pages: 143

Thomas and the Magic Violin

I found Thomas and the Magic Violin to be a deeply moving picture book that I would be delighted to share with children in my classroom. The story follows Thomas as he works hard to prepare for a spring concert, facing the frustration, self-doubt, and perseverance that are such familiar parts of learning something worthwhile. What I loved most is the book’s gentle message that growth often comes through patience, encouragement, and the quiet support of others. It presents musical practice honestly, while still wrapping the story in warmth and wonder.

This book stands out because it treats children’s emotions with real respect. Thomas is discouraged, embarrassed, determined, and hopeful, and those feelings are shown in a way young readers can understand. The relationship between Thomas and the older violinist across the courtyard is especially beautiful. Their connection is not built through long conversations, but through music, listening, and kindness. From a teacher’s perspective, that makes the story especially powerful, because it shows children that mentorship can be quiet, meaningful, and life-changing.

Illustrator Sofia Panchyshyn’s artwork is soft, expressive, and full of feeling, using warm pastel colors, floral details, and flowing musical lines to create a calm, magical atmosphere. The pictures help tell the story by showing Thomas’s changing emotions, the beauty of the courtyard setting, and the almost dreamlike presence of the master violinist’s music. I was especially taken by the scenes where the music seems to travel through the air, turning sound into something children can see.

I would highly recommend this book for classrooms, libraries, and families. It opens the door to thoughtful conversations about practice, resilience, artistic expression, grief, and gratitude, all in a way that remains accessible to young readers. Most of all, it is a lovely reminder that encouragement can leave a lasting mark on a child’s life. Thomas and the Magic Violin is a tender, memorable book that I loved, and I believe many children will find both comfort and inspiration in its pages.

Pages: 38 |  ISBN : 978-9528206088

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The Mephisto Swamp Mystery

Dorian Rockwood’s The Mephisto Swamp Mystery drops readers into a sun-struck 1940s world of soda fountains, boxing gyms, and canoe trips gone very wrong, then sends identical twin brothers Dan and Paul Case into the eerie wetlands of Mephisto Swamp, where a casual graduation adventure turns into the discovery of a hidden counterfeiting operation run out of an abandoned sawmill. What begins with a fake bill in town and some lively family-and-friends banter tightens into a chase story with kidnappings, improvised escapes, and a criminal ring whose reach is much larger than the boys first realize. Dan’s artistic eye, Paul’s physical confidence, and the novel’s swamp setting give the mystery a strong identity from the start.

What I liked most is the book’s temperament. It has the clean engine of a classic adventure mystery, but it is not bloodless or mechanical. The brothers are genuinely likable together; their teasing feels lived-in rather than manufactured, and the dialogue often has a nimble, unforced charm. I especially liked the way Rockwood gives Dan a perceptive, slightly inward sensibility without making him passive. The swamp itself is one of the book’s best achievements: not just spooky, but lush, damp, and faintly infernal, a place that feels painterly and rank at the same time. There is a pleasing old-school straightforwardness to the storytelling, yet it still has enough texture to avoid feeling like a museum piece.

I also found myself responding to the book’s moral grain. Beneath the cliffhangers and peril, there is a steadiness about decency, family, and second chances that gives the story more ballast than a routine caper. The counterfeit plot is exciting on its own, but the novel gets extra lift from the emotional material around the twins’ late father, their mother, and Steve Barton’s tentative place in the family circle. Even the resolution resists pure thumping triumph; it leaves room for mercy as well as victory, which I found unexpectedly affecting. Some beats arrive with serial-style obviousness, but the book’s sincerity works in its favor more often than not.

I would hand this to readers who enjoy mystery, adventure, historical mystery, YA mystery, and amateur sleuth fiction, especially anyone who likes capable teenage heroes, period atmosphere, and danger that stays thrilling rather than nihilistic. It feels closest in spirit to The Hardy Boys, though Rockwood gives the material a more humid, bruised, backwater mood than those books usually carry. I came away thinking this is a brisk, personable, swamp-dark mystery with a square jaw and a pulse.

Pages: 191 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GDMX7FW2

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The Wind Blows Sometimes Gently or Wildly

Author Interview
Sasha Ryan Brown Author Interview

Away from the City follows the journey of a maple leaf, leaving the noise behind and finding calm in the wild, made even more moving by your real-life reflections on family, travel, and nature as comfort during ALS. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

There are so many inspirations for the story, and none of them are specific to any one order. Fall is my favorite season of the year, especially when it has just started. The green is still very present, but yellow and orange decide they want to be a part of the aesthetics. The wind blows sometimes gently or wildly, while that swoosh sound is all you hear. It’s peaceful. When I was younger, we would often go wood hauling to prepare for the Winter season. My mother grew up in the Chuska Mountains, and my dad grew up near Gallup, NM, where the Cibola National Forest and the Zuni Mountains are accessible. My family lived near large hills, so my sisters and I were always up in them for hours. My parents always took my sisters and me on nature drives, so some of my best memories are from those trips. If we stayed at home, we planted or gardened, but we were always outside, and there was nothing better. As my parents grew older, our trips lessened, but I ended up working in Yellowstone National Park for five seasons as a younger woman. It was the absolute best experience of my life. Later in life, my mom was diagnosed with ALS, which was very frightening for my family. Even at her weakest, my mom loved nature until the very end, even when all she could do sometimes was look out the window. There was comfort in knowing that nature still brought her inner joy.

How did you decide which “stops” the leaf would make, and did any scenes get cut along the way?

I have loved writing poetry for many years. I have many poems that no one has read before. I wrote “Away from the City” about a beautiful leaf envisioned. I have seen some beautiful waterfalls while living in Yellowstone National Park, and I have seen just beautiful scenery from where both my parents grew up. I used those memories as a stop for the leaf to visit because they are magical. Because the story started off as a poem, thankfully, I didn’t cut any scenes.

The artwork balances peaceful melancholy with warmth and light. What visual choices were most important to you in showing that seasonal transition?

I envisioned all the colors of early fall. It’s so vibrant. The colors are prominent and pop. The green looks greener, and the leaves are in transition from green to yellow, orange, and brown. It’s just beautiful how that happens. The Earth lets you know it’s alive, and it changes just like people do. The sky has this wonderful way of somehow matching the fall hue. As for the photos in the book, my agent, Amanda Zillman, thought it would be a unique touch to add photos. She added beautiful notes to each of my photos, clarifying some of the memories that inspired my first story.

What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?

 I am a Native American from the Navajo tribe. My next children’s book is a hommage to my cultural roots. It’s called “The Hogan that Cheii Built.” I have many stories to share, and I hope the readers will love them.

Author Links: Amazon | Website

Away from the city, through the thick of the trees, the wind whistles a melody playing through the breeze.

Away from the City is a short melodic story about appreciating Autumn’s vibrant colors in the fall season while giving credit to nature’s beauty.

Spreading Their Wings

Sheila Hansberger Author Interview

Runaway Artist follows a young artist who witnesses a violent crime behind a Beverly Hills gallery where she is interning, and her sketches become the only evidence, putting her own life in danger. What inspired the idea of an artist who can reconstruct a crime scene through drawings?

The experts say, “write what you know.” Because I’ve been a professional artist for over 40 years, the subject made perfect sense to tackle. Brooke reacts to stimuli the way I might if faced with her predicament, and if I were her age. We artists see the world in color and details.

Brooke is both brave and uncertain at times. How did you approach writing her emotional journey?

I love writing about females in their early twenties who are on the cusp of spreading their wings. Brooke is old enough to know a lot, but young enough to make mistakes. And the average reader has been there at one point in their life, so they can relate…and, hopefully, even cheer on the heroine.

The book touches on courage, independence, and trusting your instincts. Were those themes intentional from the beginning?

Yes, totally intentional. I treated Brooke as if she’d just joined the military by pulling her away from the life she had previously known, then throwing her into a place far from her comfort zone. She would either fold up into a ball or have to dig deep to find that inner confidence we all need if we are to survive. Fortunately, she has a sister who is strong and capable, so she has an example to follow.

Could you imagine returning to Wildridge or these characters in future stories?

Possibly. I really like the setting, which is patterned after a mountain community near me. I can imagine Brooke and Conner marrying and eventually enjoying their HEA, but prior to that, I’d have to invent a villain. Brooke might even become a police sketch artist and… Who knows?

Author Links: GoodReads | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Talented artist Brooke Arnelletta knows she’s going places. She just never dreamed her journey would include running away. Behind the upscale gallery where she serves as a summer intern, she’s the lone witness to a stabbing. When police can’t find evidence to support the crime, Brooke begins to wonder if her creative imagination was working overtime.

Days later, clues finally emerge, turning the alleged murder into a reality. Brooke must face a decision—risk the killer returning to silence her…or disappear into thin air. Can she remain hidden until an arrest is made? Or will evil find her first?