Author Archives: Literary-Titan

Universal and Relatable

Sara Causey Author Interview

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

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

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

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

How does nature influence your storytelling?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Story, Education, and Real Recipes

Michelle Magnie Author Interview

Mimi’s Magic Kitchen: The Great Brownie Bake-Off Disaster follows two children who enter a baking competition where they are challenged to make brownies with some very unexpected ingredients. Where did the concept come from, and why brownies specifically?

Really, the concept came from my love of food and cooking. I’ve always been a foodie. I love food, I love cooking, and I especially love baking. At that point in my life, I decided I wanted to spend more time doing things I genuinely loved, so I started getting back into cooking and baking again and sharing some of it online. That’s when I realized how much I wanted to encourage kids and parents to get back in the kitchen together more often. Some of my favorite memories growing up happened around the kitchen and homemade food, and I felt like that experience was slowly disappearing a little because life has become so fast and convenient.

Once I had the idea to make a children’s book centered around baking, the brownie idea came together pretty quickly because I already had this brownie recipe I’d been making for years that everyone always loves. The brownies are super easy to make, really forgiving, and honestly just really good, which made them perfect for the story.

Then I realized the unusual ingredients in the recipe sounded strange enough to become the actual story itself. That’s where the bake-off disaster idea came from. I thought it would be funny if the “normal” brownie ingredients people usually think of when making brownies disappeared, and the kids had to figure out how to make brownies using all these unexpected replacements instead.

Emma and Archer actually became the two kid characters in the book because they’re my real kids. My son was 9, and my daughter was 6 while I was writing it, which felt like the perfect ages for the world and audience of the story. They also have very different personalities, which made them really fun characters to write and helped bring a lot of personality into the story.

From there, everything else kind of grew naturally: the baking competition, the little educational section about ingredients and kitchen tools, and the real recipes in the back of the book. One thing that was really important to me was making sure the recipes were recipes families would actually want to make again and again, not just recipes meant to keep kids busy for twenty minutes.

The baking tips and ingredient explanations make the book feel interactive and educational without losing its playful tone. How did you balance storytelling with hands-on learning?

From the beginning, I already knew I wanted the book to be a mix of story, education, and real recipes. But honestly, once I wrote the story and really developed Mimi’s character, the rest of it kind of fell into place naturally.

I completely fell in love with her while I was writing. She’s funny, a little chaotic, creative, confident, and somehow always seems to know how to handle things without getting too flustered. She’s the kind of person kids would want to hang out with and the kind of fun, comforting adult I think a lot of us wish we had around growing up. She really became the heart of the whole book.

Once her personality started coming to life in the story, it became really obvious to me how I could make the educational parts and recipes feel fun too. I never wanted kids to feel like the story suddenly stopped, and now it was time for “learning.” I wanted it to feel like they were just continuing along with Mimi into her magical little kitchen world.

So I started writing the educational tips and recipes in her voice, with all her little comments, humor, and personality sprinkled throughout. I still remember testing some of the early recipe drafts on my daughter after I had rewritten them in Mimi’s voice. She was completely entertained by them and genuinely wanted me to keep reading the recipes out loud, which honestly made me laugh because what kid gets excited about hearing a recipe? That was the moment when it really clicked for me that this approach was working.

After that, I leaned into it even more. I wanted the whole experience to feel lighthearted, cozy, creative, and fun for both kids and parents. In my opinion, people do their best cooking when they’re relaxed, using their imagination, making memories together, and ending up with something delicious they can’t wait to make again.

This book feels designed to continue after story time ends, especially with the real brownie recipes included afterward. Why was it important to make the baking experience part of the book itself, and did you hope the story would encourage more family cooking and baking together?

Absolutely. One of the biggest goals of the book was to make the experience continue after the story ended. I didn’t want it to just be something kids read once and put back on a shelf. I wanted it to turn into something families could actually go do together afterward.

I also really wanted kids to feel more confident in the kitchen. I think a lot of people grow up believing they “can’t cook” just because they had a few bad experiences or messed something up once and got intimidated by it. But honestly, cooking and baking are messy sometimes. I’ve had complete disasters in my own kitchen, and I love cooking. That’s just part of learning.

That’s why the story itself became so important to me. The kids in the book get overwhelmed when everything starts going wrong, and then Mimi comes in with this attitude of, “Okay, so we’ll figure it out.” She teaches them that there’s usually a solution, even if it means thinking outside the box a little.

That’s a huge part of cooking to me. Some of the best things happen in the kitchen when you experiment, get creative, substitute ingredients, or make something your own. I’m notorious for taking recipes and scribbling all over them, changing ingredients and amounts until they become my version of the recipe. I wanted kids and parents to feel like the kitchen could be a place for imagination and creativity instead of pressure and perfection.

I also really wanted families to make memories together through the experience of the book itself. Read the story together, laugh at the chaos, learn a few things without it feeling overly serious, then go make brownies together and maybe make a little mess while you’re at it. Honestly, who cares if flour ends up all over the counter? That’s part of the fun.

My hope was that families would walk away not only feeling entertained but feeling proud of what they made together. Because when kids make something genuinely delicious that other people love too, it gives them confidence. That’s the kind of confidence that makes them want to get back in the kitchen and do it all over again.

Will Emma and Archer return to Mimi’s Magic Kitchen? If so, what other baking disasters might be waiting for them there?

Absolutely. Once I created Mimi, Emma, Archer, and this magical kitchen world, I honestly did not want to leave it behind. I always intended for this to become a series, which is why the book ends with “to be continued.”

The biggest inspirations for me were the kinds of worlds I grew up loving, things like Candy Land, Strawberry Shortcake, and The Magic School Bus. I loved those imaginative, colorful worlds as a kid, so a magical world filled with funny food creations, baking disasters, strange ingredients, and things you don’t totally understand yet just felt like such a fun place for kids to explore.

Once I finished the first story, I remember thinking, “Oh my gosh, this could be a whole world.” Not just one story, but an actual Mimi’s Magic Kitchen world with all these different places, food adventures, kitchen experiments, and lessons hidden underneath the fun. That’s something I really want to keep expanding more and more throughout the series.

The next story is actually already in the works, and it’s centered around homemade sodas, which is why the first book ends with “it’s about to get bubbly.” While I was finishing the brownie book, my kids and I started experimenting with homemade sodas and fermentation at home, and we had so much fun with it that I immediately knew it needed to become the next adventure.

We made things like ginger bug sodas, fruit syrups, and homemade versions of drinks that still felt exciting and magical for kids. I loved the idea that something as simple as making soda at home could turn into this big creative kitchen experiment where kids are learning new things almost without realizing it, because they’re too busy having fun making bubbly drinks.

I also love the idea of helping families realize that homemade things can still feel exciting and special. You don’t have to be some hardcore health person to enjoy making things from scratch. I just think there’s something really special about kids getting into the kitchen, experimenting, making a mess, and getting excited because they made something themselves that tastes amazing, and bonus, is so much better for them than anything at the store.

I already have ideas for more adventures after that, too, possibly even something savory after the bubbly adventure. But really, the biggest goal with all of it is just continuing to create experiences that kids and parents can genuinely have fun with together. I want families to get immersed in Mimi’s world, laugh at the stories, learn a few things along the way, and then feel excited and confident enough to go try something new together in the kitchen.

Honestly, I had an absolute blast writing the first story, and I’m having just as much fun working on the second one. I’ll definitely keep everybody posted on when that adventure might be coming next. But in the meantime, I really hope families enjoy stepping into Mimi’s Magic Kitchen world together, and I can’t wait for them to see what adventure is waiting for Emma and Archer next.

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This isn’t just a storybook, it’s a brownie night waiting to happen.

Mimi’s Magic Kitchen and the Great Brownie Bake-Off Disaster is a highly illustrated kids storybook that turns story time into a real baking experience, complete with six brownie recipes families can make together.

Step into Mimi’s Magic Kitchen for a brownie bake-off gone wrong. Archer and Emma are left with a pantry full of things like pickled turnips, almond butter, and Essence of Mystery, with no idea how to turn any of it into brownies. What could possibly go right?

After the story ends, the fun continues with simple baking tips, ingredient explanations, and real recipes inspired by the book, because reading about brownies without making them would just be mean.

Hardcover and paperback editions coming Summer 2026!

Perfect for:
• Kids who love baking
• Family baking nights
• Cozy screen-free activities
• Parents looking for hands-on fun together
Includes:
• Six real brownie recipes
• Four gluten-free options
• Kid-friendly baking basics
• Highly illustrated full-color pages

Gravitational Anomalies

David Crane Author Interview

Cold Earth follows a deep-space commander and a far-future doctor whose memoirs collide when a black hole mission sends one crew 50,000 years ahead, where they become accidental saviors of a war-torn Earth. What inspired the idea of linking a deep-space mission with humanity’s world in 50,000 A.D.?

I have always been a big fan of science fiction involving space travel. The idea about linking a deep space mission commander and a far-future doctor came to me during a lunch break at work, after I recalled watching a science channel video about the black holes in deep space. These powerful gravitational anomalies are so powerful that even light cannot escape their gravitational pull. The science program also explained that time would drastically slow down when a spaceship gets close to the black hole, even if it will not cross the Event Horizon, which would be fatal for the ship and the crew, because there will be no escape. I thought, why not make a near-future spaceship experience the same phenomenon and accidentally travel forward in time? And thus, the idea for the Cold Earth novel was born. The rest of the setup involved the character design and the list of events in the story.

Why did you choose to tell the story through alternating memoir-like timelines?

This is a very good question. By choosing to tell the story through alternating timelines, I wanted to tell the readers about the two very different worlds: the world of a science expedition commander, Martin Hall, of the year 2248 A.D., and the far future scientist, Dr. Antares Lang, of the year 50,000 A.D. The world of Martin Hall, in many ways, is similar to our own. He is a professional astronaut, a family man, a husband, and a father. He lives in a time where humanity has finally developed the means to bend space and time, thus ensuring faster-than-light travel without violating the fundamental laws of physics. In comparison, Dr. Antares Lang lives in the distant future, on planet Earth gripped in the period of a New Ice Age. Like Martin Hall, Antares is a former soldier who has a family but lives deep underground in one of the high-tech exotic cities where humans hide from the elements and battle rogue and highly evolved ancient cybernetic organisms on the surface.

How did you approach balancing scientific explanation with character-driven storytelling?

Before I began writing this novel, I wanted to make it grounded in a solid science of astrophysics without boring the reader with technical details. My idea was to present the scientific facts, and present them to the readers in an entertaining as well as educational manner. There is a genre called hard science fiction, where the exact science of today is applied in a very academic manner and woven into the story. I also wanted this novel to be character-driven, where each protagonist is given his or her voice that makes them unique. As for the black hole Gaila BH-1, which becomes the cause of the ship’s accidental travel into the very distant future, such an active celestial object does exist in the constellation of Snake Catcher, and although formidable, it poses no danger to us, being more than one thousand light years away.

Which part of the far-future Earth was the most exciting or challenging to build?

I am not a futurologist, but just like the highly educated people of science and people who are very familiar with human social dynamics, I tried to imagine the far distant future of humanity, where the situation is hard but far from hopeless. Just like we, in our own time, try to handle our own problems of political instability, environmental pollution in the name of profit, unrestrained corporate greed, corruption, and economic uncertainty, I thought that the world fifty thousand years from now would seem radically different from our own in languages, traditions, customs, and technology. I was excited to build the subterranean world, where the return to the deep caves was a temporary measure, and the struggle of men against a new race of intelligent, hostile machines that have evolved from ancient military robots, is presented in a realistic manner, but without many action scenes that readers might have expected. Cold Earth is a tale of evolutionary philosophy, as well as a high adventure beyond time and space.

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In the 23rd century interstellar distances are no longer a limit Thanks to the Minamoto-Bender drive, starships can now travel to other star systems and come back without the relativistic delayed time effect. In the year 2248, crew of starship USS Phoenix departs the Earth solar system to study a distant space phenomenon more than 1,500 light years away. They are the first humans to venture this far, and to study a binary black hole system Gaia BH-1. When they arrive at their destination, the crew studies the exotic alien worlds, until both black holes begin to merge into one, even larger black hole, generating powerful gravitational pulses that affect time and space. Barely escaping destruction by radiation super storm, the starship returns back to Earth. Only this is not the Earth they all knew. Because of the gravity pulse effects, they arrived tens of thousands of years into the future. Now, trapped in the year 50,000 A.D. They must figure out how they got so far away from home, explore the far future human civilization, and try to get home defying the laws of time and space.


True Epic Fantasy Readers

Andrew Beardmore Author Interview

Cold Sanctuary centers on a pair on the run after they are accused of a crime they did not commit, as they separate: one joins forces with a highwayman, and the other seeks refuge among pacifist monks. What is the most rewarding aspect of writing a series?

Well, the Jake and Emilya threads are only two of ten, so Cold Sanctuary far from focuses on just those two characters. That said, Jake and Emilya are definitely the two most-loved characters amongst readers – but the storylines of the other eight characters are every bit as important, and I know that a number of readers are already excited as they are seeing signs of storylines converging – which a handful do before the end of this series. However, it is in the sequel to The Nessemiah that many threads will converge!

As to the most rewarding aspect of writing a series, it has to be the reward for patience and discipline. You have to get the pace right from beginning to end. Never rush. Slowly build the story, build your characters, build the authenticity of their world and their homes, and above all, make people love your cast, hate them, and even weep for them. If you do this, readers will genuinely miss your characters and pine for them when the book or series is finished. Other authors have certainly done that to me, and people have told me that The Nessemiah books have had the same effect on them, too.

I must also mention that written praise is rewarding, as well. It is a wonderful moment when all of your hard work is endorsed by the comments that you receive, especially when from true epic fantasy readers. There is no feeling to match someone praising the depth of your characters or the authenticity of your world-building; or, indeed, referring to you as “a master storyteller” as Literary Titan has here – and as have a number of others, too, for which I am deeply honoured.

Jake and Emilya spend much of the novel apart, moving through very different environments. Why was it important to separate them physically in this installment?

If you put yourself into the position of the hunted, it just makes sense to split them up. The move has the effect of drawing away Prince Magnus from Emilya and Elyse – and I must confess, it gave me the opportunity to have some fun with the roguish Harry Black and his two sidekicks, Swede and Turnip! Of course, what starts off as high jinks soon becomes much more serious.

And then on the other hand, the Emilya side of the story significantly brings on her relationship with her surrogate mother, Elyse, and that still remains the favourite relationship that I have built in The Nessemiah. It also presented the opportunity to put them both into the apparently peaceful setting at Kifsel Place Monastery – but with a permanent undertone of something being not quite right about it – culminating in the shocking ending to Cold Sanctuary, which I know has deeply affected a number of readers!

The looming presence of Nessemi creates a sense of inevitability. Did you think of it as a war, a prophecy, or something more existential?

I agree that Nessemi creates a sense of inevitability; that was always its intention, and that is why it is deliberately brought out into the open (for the reader) around three-quarters of the way through Book One (The Strains of Malice). Interestingly, there is an element of prophecy about Nessemi that comes later in the series – as in it was foretold – but there is certainly no element of war! And clearly, a two-mile-wide asteroid on an unavoidable collision course with Planet Thera is indeed rather existential!

Of course, by the end of Book Two, the general public of Thera are not yet aware of their approaching doom – that comes towards the end of Book Three – at which point, every human story that readers are invested in takes a completely different turn, as people react in very different ways; all culminating in a spectacular end to Book Four and the perfect conclusion towards everything that I have been slowly building towards. But who will live and who will die?

Finally, for those who haven’t worked it out yet, Nessemi is an anagram of Nemesis – the Greek goddess of divine retribution!

As the series progresses, do you find the world surprising you, or is the long arc already mapped in detail?

There are a few occasional surprises, where storylines take you down routes you weren’t expecting. And that is always a joy. But overall, I mapped everything out right at the beginning when I started writing this series six years ago!

I actually share how I went about this process in the companion book to the series, which was released last month – called Decoding the Hidden World of Thera. The book obviously reveals all of the series’ secrets as well – this after a Goodreads reader spotted that Thera was an anagram of Earth and the supercontinent Epanaga was an anagram of Pangaea! But that is just the tip of the iceberg. Every placename and coastline is a mirror of somewhere on Earth, whilst numerous characters are based on famous historical people – all revealed in Decoding the Hidden World of Thera!

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Book two of the gripping new historical fantasy series, The Nessemiah.

Is anywhere on Thera safe from Nessemi? Or the hell that lies beyond?

“I’m afraid there are good and bad everywhere, Emilya. It’s a fact of life that wherever you look, there are strains of malice.”

Emilya and Jake have separated to increase their chances of avoiding capture and execution for a crime they have not committed. While Jake and infamous highwayman, Harry Black, lead Prince Magnus a merry dance across Glennad, Emilya has landed in even greater peril at Kifsel Place Monastery, where amongst the peace-loving monks, there are others with sinister motives.

Meanwhile, unaware that their governments are preparing for deadly Nessemi, matters deteriorate for our other northern islanders at the hands of murderous smugglers, scorned exes, and ruthless Abolitionists. Four hundred leagues south, the Theran Empire is also preparing for Nessemi – by rolling out diversions on a massive and brutal scale. As well as the demographic cleansing that is Expurgatio, Emperor Calidius is also driving the deaths of thousands in Liatia’s fighting pits – where former Demonacian general, Draxaelen, battles to stay alive. But little does Drax know that time is running out for his revenge; in fact, time is running out for everyone.

Sights, Sounds, Teamwork

Mark C. Fava Author Interview

Andy the Admiral and the USS Shipshape follows Admiral Andy and his crew as they go about their daily activities aboard the Navy aircraft carrier, the USS Shipshape. Where did the idea for Andy the Admiral’s character come from?

Andy the Admiral was inspired by my thirty-year career in the Navy and by the wisdom and example of my father, who also served in the Navy. Throughout my life, I’ve seen how military service can teach leadership, teamwork, integrity, and resilience in very practical ways.

I wanted to create a character who embodied those values in a warm, encouraging, and approachable way for children. Andy is the kind of leader who is calm, kind, experienced, and always looking out for his shipmates. In many ways, he reflects the best qualities I saw in the leaders I admired throughout my naval career.

The book does a great job making Navy life feel exciting and approachable for kids. How did you decide which details of shipboard life to include?

In 2024, I spent time aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, and that experience reminded me just how unique life at sea really is. Aircraft carriers are incredibly busy places filled with teamwork, precision, energy, and purpose, but they are also communities where friendships are formed, and people depend on one another every day.

When deciding what details to include, I focused on moments that children would find exciting and memorable while still remaining authentic to Navy life. I wanted young readers to experience the sights, sounds, teamwork, and adventure of serving aboard a carrier, but in a way that felt fun, positive, and understandable for families reading together.

One thing I appreciated is that the lessons about honesty, teamwork, and responsibility come through naturally in the crew’s actions rather than feeling overly preachy. Why was that important to you?

That was very intentional. Children usually learn best through stories, examples, and relationships rather than lectures. I wanted the lessons in the book to feel natural and woven into the adventure itself.

In the Navy, being a “shipmate” means taking care of one another, helping people when mistakes happen, and working together toward a common mission. I wanted children to see characters who support each other, tell the truth, work hard, and grow from challenges with encouragement and kindness. Those lessons become much more meaningful when they are experienced through the story instead of simply explained.

The book says good character is just as important as doing a job well. What do you hope a child remembers from that idea, and what would you say to a parent using the book to talk about character at home?

I hope children remember that character matters everywhere they go and in everything they do. Skills and talents are important, but honesty, kindness, courage, and integrity are what truly define a person over a lifetime.

For parents, I hope the book creates opportunities for simple but meaningful conversations at home about doing the right thing, helping others, admitting mistakes, and treating people with respect. Those lessons begin early, and stories can often help children understand them in a way that feels both memorable and encouraging.

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All aboard.

Set sail on an unforgettable adventure with Andy the Admiral as he leads his crew across the high seas on the USS Shipshape, where young readers discover what it truly means to be a great leader and a great friend.
In this engaging and beautifully illustrated story, children step into life aboard a Navy aircraft carrier and learn valuable lessons through real-world inspired moments. Andy shows his crew that strong character matters just as much as skill, teaching them to lead with kindness, honesty, respect, and teamwork.
Perfect for families, classrooms, and young readers who love adventure with meaning, this story blends exciting naval life with powerful character-building lessons kids can use every day.
What kids will learn:


Honesty and integrity
Good manners and respect
Teamwork and helping others
Responsibility and preparedness
Confidence and leadership skills
An introduction to life on a Navy aircraft carrier

With heart, adventure, and meaningful lessons on every page, Andy the Admiral inspires young readers to become the best version of themselves on land and at sea.
Climb aboard the USS Shipshape today and inspire your child to lead with courage, kindness, and character.

Journey Into Romance

Steven Crandell Author Interview

A Is for Amy follows a widowed mother of three who stumbles back into romance, desire, and selfhood through a chaotic alphabet of flirtation, exhaustion, and second chances, discovering that opening your heart again is both ridiculous and necessary. What was the inspiration for your story?

I wrote this novella when my two youngest children were under 3. Though I loved being a parent, I felt my prior self was completely submerged in the care of my kids. So, I decided to write something quick with a big heart, something for grown-ups to explore. A journey into romance grounded in the real-world of parenting young kids. I wanted to capture the economy and directness of short fiction with the ability to follow the significant development of a main character that comes with the novel.

The novella never treats motherhood as separate from desire. Why was it important to keep those parts of Amy’s identity intertwined?

She is a whole person. Her sexuality is a part of this wholeness. Her loss and suffering have affected how she perceives herself and her life. Her negativity at the beginning can be reductive and limiting. Sexuality is one way we can awaken to our true spirit. Amy is awakening in this novella.

The idea of Amy naming her life one piece at a time: Attraction, Baby Bartlette, Freedom, and Nutella, gives the structure emotional meaning. Did those specific entries arrive early, or did they accumulate through drafting?

Those are names that I choose, not Amy. Amy would see them as part of the ebb and flow of her life. They are details, not necessarily stages. They are on the cover to engage the reader. I see the cover as the beginning of the book, the beginning of the adventure for the reader. These words are welcome, mystery, and invitation. A tease if you like.

The alphabet format also makes the book look like a children’s picture book from the outside. Was that visual misdirection intentional — and what do you want a reader to feel when they open it and discover what’s actually inside?

Yes, the cover is deliberately deceptive. So parents, grandparents, and any caregivers can read the book incognito as they care for the children. The deception is clearly stated on the back cover. The inside design is quite different, too. It is for grownups. Like the story. I wanted the reading experience to be a refuge for the reader. A world grounded in the reality of parenting, but free from it at the same time. This is a book for the person every parent was before they were a parent. A place to laugh and cry and engage with a compelling character – to celebrate and suffer with her. To read not for a child, but for themselves. I hope the readers feel at their ease as they journey. My goal is to delight them.

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A is for Amy is a new kind of romance. It’s a quick read with a big heart.

Amy Dellaconta Franklin is an independent mother of 3 kids under 5. Her life is often exhausting and isolating. Then, one day, love comes knocking at her front door.

Amy is a sassy, charming, yet lonely young widow who unexpectedly finds herself on the path of finding love again. Surprises overturn expectations at nearly every turn in this novella, which tells the story of how a life that seemed trapped in the too-hard basket became a voyage of romantic discovery.

A is for Amy tells it fast, straight and funny. From negativity to bliss. With no fluff and no wasted words.

Do you like reading but never seem to have enough space to start (or finish) a book? Each chapter in this romancecan be enjoyed in the time it takes to drink a good cup of coffee.

This is a great gift for parents or parents-to-be. It looks like an alphabet book for children. But inside, it’s a romantic adventure for grown-ups with a surprise ending that will touch your heart.

Forbidden Love

Susan Shalev Author Interview

Across A Starlit Sky follows a young pianist in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam who risks everything for a Jewish family and a forbidden love. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I read The Diary of Anne Frank many, many years ago. More recently, I became aware of the amazing loyalty and support of Otto Frank’s employees, particularly Miep Gies, his secretary, who kept the family and others hidden. While memoirs and other works of non-fiction describe the occupation of Amsterdam and the onderduiken, my research revealed a lacuna in fiction. Many of the most popular WW2 novels take place in France (Kristin Harmel, Pam Jenoff, and others), while fewer stories unfold in the Netherlands.

The Portugal timeline was a bold structural choice alongside a WWII story. When did you know Amelia’s story needed to be part of this novel — and what did she give Mirjam’s story that a single timeline couldn’t?

If I am honest, the story was inspired by a vacation in Portugal, rather than Amsterdam. I visited Belmonte and learned about the 500-year history of the Jewish community and the conversos. Then I visited Coimbra, the university, and the Fonte dos Amores, where I learned the story of Pedro and Ines. This planted the seed of forbidden love in my mind as a central theme. I also learned that the Esnoga in Amsterdam was a copy of the synagogue in Lisbon, destroyed by an earthquake in 1755. The Esnoga was built by Jews who escaped the Inquisition to the Netherlands. These connections and more sparked in my mind the idea of the dual-timeline story. Amelia’s story began to take shape before Mirjam’s, but very quickly, I saw how the two stories and timelines could be woven together under the common denominators of persecution, love, and survival. Amelia’s forbidden love affair opened the door to a similar storyline for Mirjam. The descriptions of the secret converso lifestyle helped to plant the seeds of speculation about Mirjam’s ancestry, and Amelia’s interest in the stars enabled a thematic thread to wind its way across the centuries and link them.

The book is deeply interested in hidden identity — faith kept secret across generations, names and histories buried for survival. What drew you to that particular form of inheritance and concealment?

The Story of Esther is familiar to most Jews. She is the arch-heroine, the hidden Jew, the savior of her people. I was particularly satisfied by the way I was able to enmesh her in the story. Jews have been forced to conceal their identity throughout various eras of history where being visibly Jewish meant risking livelihood, freedom, or life. As Mrs. Meijer tells Mirjam, “Unfortunately, in almost every generation a Haman rises up and tries to oppress us.”

Even in modern times, secret Jews continued to hide their identity. Practicing Judaism openly in Spain continued to be illegal until 1967, when the Spanish government granted non-Catholics the right of public worship. The Alhambra Edict of 1492 was only revoked in 1968. For generations in Russia and the former Soviet Union, Jews actively hid their identity to avoid intense state-sponsored antisemitism, discrimination in higher education, and restricted career opportunities.

In WW2, the Nazis did not offer their victims the opportunity to convert to save themselves. Some who survived, however, did so by procuring false documents, sending children to convents, or even hiding in plain sight. The Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitors were willing to spare heretics who converted to Christianity. Many Jews died or fled rather than betray their faith. Others continued the traditions in secret in order to survive without giving up their beliefs.

While hidden identity is a common theme in the two timelines, it is not exclusive to these two eras.

Despite the heavy historical material, the novel remains deeply interested in tenderness, rescue, and human connection. Why was that emotional openness important to you?

In essence, the story is an historical romance, the tale of star-crossed lovers, against the background of fear and unspeakable danger. I wanted to show that despite all the horrors going on around them, there was still the opportunity for love to reign supreme, for a happy ending. In the darkest of times, hope, warmth, friendship, and generosity of spirit can triumph.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

A forbidden love. A hidden past. A secret that spans centuries.

Two women. Three centuries apart. One choice that could cost everything.

Amsterdam 1939
As war looms, Mirjam, a young piano teacher, is drawn into a world of fear, resistance — and a love that could destroy her.

A gentile in a rapidly changing city, she falls for the brother of her gifted pupil, the daughter of a prominent Jewish family. But when Nazi forces invade the Netherlands, love is no longer safe — and neither is loyalty.

Entrusted with a dangerous mission, Mirjam must choose: the man she loves…or the lives she may yet save.

Portugal, seventeenth century.
Under the shadow of the Inquisition, faith is a crime — and love can be a death sentence.

Amelia Ferrera, the daughter of a secret Jewish family, lives a life of silence and fear. When she falls in love with the son of an Old Christian nobleman, their forbidden romance threatens to expose everything.

To save her family, she must flee — leaving behind the man she cannot forget.

Across centuries, their lives are bound by a secret that refuses to stay buried.

Across A Starlit Sky is a sweeping historical novel of love, sacrifice, and impossible choices — perfect for readers of WWII historical fiction and dual-timeline dramas.

For fans of Kristin Harmel, Pam Jenoff and Kate Quinn

The Lowest Common Denominator

Author Interview
Kip Cassino Author Interview

Supplicant follows a mother and son being used as fuel to keep the undying elite alive, who rebel and fight to liberate the supplicants. The idea that prayer can be measured, directed, and weaponized is central to the novel. When did that concept first take shape for you?

Like many veterans, I have found myself in places where there were few atheists. Prayer is an important, powerful force to me. The idea for Supplicant came when I watched Pope Francis hang on to life against impossible odds. “What if …” I thought. “What if such awesome power could be measured and replicated for others?” I wondered what the effects on an already unstable society might be.

KAX’s story carries much of the novel’s emotional weight. What drew you to her perspective?

KAX represents the lowest common denominator in a world where life has been made cheap. She holds within her the awesome power humanity gives each of us — a power that asserts itself in the worst of times. So, she became the obvious force behind the story.

The creation of supplicants raises deep ethical questions about autonomy and exploitation. How did you approach building that system?

Foundations for the world I imagined in Supplicant already exist — and may be far closer to realization in some laboratories than we care to imagine. Mankind’s ugliest concepts have never failed to find fertile soil. I only had to imagine the progression leading toward them. War, terrible disease, economic ruin, and the availability of a small privileged group to avoid them were not hard to envision.

The novel engages deeply with religious ideas while also challenging them. How do you hope readers interpret that tension?

Each of us is truly “hardwired” (in our parietal cortex, to be exact) toward faith in forces greater than ourselves. The greatest of us, along with the worst addicts, strive to attune ourselves to this reality — but life and the friction of living almost always get in the way. KAX and her son were led to their faith through a terrible experience, as others among us have been as well. I have seen hints that others have found their way to the enlightenment that religion promises. Still, it eludes almost all of us. I hope readers will find hope in my small book that most of us will, eventually, follow.

Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon

Five hundred years from now, those who can afford it enjoy unending life. Two hundred who do rule the world. The post-apocalypse future they command is a patchwork of marvelous technology, abysmal poverty, and climactic upheaval. Join tiny, gene-edited KAX as she fights to survive—and bring the blessings of supplication to all mankind