Category Archives: Interviews
Resilience and Mystery
Posted by Literary-Titan
Seeking Yesterday unfolds as both a personal quest and a sweeping historical account, blending memoir, genealogy, and local history into a seamless narrative. Why was this an important book for you to write?
The drive to understand our roots is a primal human need, and this book began with my husband, Bob’s, quiet desire to reclaim his. After over 50 years of marriage, I knew he wouldn’t write an autobiography, so my initial mission was simple: to create a family scrapbook of a 7-day ancestral journey.
But what started as a small, personal commemoration grew into something far grander.
The deeper we delved, a passion ignited in me. The focus shifted from merely collecting facts to understanding how history shaped these lives. Relying on family recall left too many tantalizing questions:
Why did a WWI veteran choose to homestead in the unforgiving desert?
Where did they find the grit to persevere through the Great Depression and a second World War?
What were the final, crucial details of the WWII pilot shot down in action?
The untold answers transformed a simple family record into a fascinating tale of resilience and mystery. My ultimate decision was to write the book in Bob’s voice—to impersonate his perspective and make his silent story heard. While unique to one family, I believe the powerful quest for identity, the perseverance through hardship, and the secrets unearthed resonate with anyone seeking their own vital connection to the past.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
Ancestry is more than a list of names; it is a profound journey of discovery. While we may feel our own lives fall short of “extraordinary,” the tales of our forebears often sound instantly intriguing. Why?
The answer lies in the dynamic and vital intersection of two forces: individual personality and historical context.
This book is dedicated to exploring that very synthesis: the idea that character is not innate, but forged in the fires of world events. The questions that propelled my research became the essential themes I needed to share:
What is the true cost of global conflict on a single family’s spirit?
What does real resilience look like when played out against the backdrop of the Great Depression?
How are the universal qualities of grit, love, and loss magnified when they intersect with military service, homesteading, or personal tragedy?
My goal is to show how the seemingly “ordinary” lives of these ancestors were, in fact, extraordinary products of their time, and to demonstrate that understanding their story is the key to understanding the enduring identity—and resilience—of the generations that followed.
How has writing your family’s memoir impacted or changed your life?
Writing this book—stepping into my husband’s character to pen his family’s memoir—did more than create a historical record; it fundamentally deepened my relationship with him.
After 53 years of marriage, Bob and I have always been “joined at the hip,” but this project provided an unprecedented path to understanding. By immersing myself in his ancestry, struggles, and triumphs, I gained a profound, intimate appreciation for the forces that shaped the man I love. It served to reinforce the already strong bonds, continuing the love affair by giving it a rich, historical dimension.
Beyond the personal growth, the book offers an unexpected, yet deeply humbling, value: the chance to resonate with and help others on their own quest for roots. The fact that my personal labor of love is being met with accolades and can serve as a catalyst for other families is a rewarding bonus that extends the book’s personal legacy.
What advice do you have for aspiring memoir writers?
Begin with familiar family stories and traditions, imagine how your ancestors may have lived, review world events as it was during their lives, research important milestones, and ask questions… many questions! The secret is in the answers.
Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon
A file of old documents, including a 1922 desert homestead land claim for 160 acres, copies of war commendations and World War II medals, a Purple Heart, and fading memories ignited Bob’s compelling quest to rediscover his roots. What prompted his grandparents to become homesteaders in the unforgiving desert? The deeper he looked, the broader a story unfolded as global and regional history interceded, shaping their lives and decisions. He discovers how a devastating World War II loss redefined the family, how another tragic accident cast its own long shadow on their lives, and how the true resilient spirit of “Grandma R” emerged through it all.
Told from Bob’s perspective, Seeking Yesterday is a testament to the enduring bonds of family, the profound impact of shared experiences, and a journey that reveals how yesterday’s echoes can illuminate today’s path and forge an unbreakable legacy for future generations.
More than a memoir, the book weaves a microcosm of American history by using one family’s experiences to illustrate broader events and social changes, including homesteading, WWI, the Great Depression, WWII, land development, community building, and the evolving American Dream. It is a tale that highlights the strength, resilience, perseverance, and adaptability of ordinary people in the face of extraordinary challenges.
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Posted in Book Reviews, Interviews
Tags: american history, author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, genealogy, goodreads, history, indie author, kindle, kobo, Lis Richardson, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Seeking Yesterday, story, writer, writing
Their Bodacious Second Act is Waiting
Posted by Literary Titan

In Divorced at 50 F**K, Now What?, you share all of the heartbreak of a troubled childhood and a broken marriage and offer readers hope through your own resilience.Why was this an important book for you to write?
Because I felt so alone during these times, and maybe there were books out there for me, but I couldn’t find them easily. I wanted a book title that said exactly what I had been through, so it could be a support to others.
I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?
Probably the moment in the back seat of the wedding car. My mind was taken back to that exact moment. My hand was frozen on the door handle.
What is a common misconception you feel people have about coping with life after divorce?
That things will never be ok again, and that they will never find ’the one’.
What is one thing you hope readers take away from your experiences?
That their bodacious second act is waiting, and even if they spend their time alone, it is better than being with someone who doesn’t value or see you. That was my mindset. But lucky for me, I did find someone, and we are very happy.
Author Links: Facebook | Website | Instagram
In this bold, honest, and empowering book, Menopause Mentor and Speaker Lara Portelli shares her personal journey of heartbreak, reinvention, and rising stronger than ever. This isn’t just her story—it’s a survival guide for every woman staring down the barrel of midlife chaos and wondering, “Now what?”
Inside, you’ll discover:
🔥 How to rebuild your confidence when everything feels like it’s falling apart
💡 The power of gut instincts (and what happens when you ignore them)
🌱 The roadmap to your Second Act—one filled with purpose, joy, and unapologetic freedom
Raw, real, and packed with practical wisdom, Divorced at 50. (F**K). Now What? will remind you that your story isn’t over—it’s just getting good. You’ll laugh, cry and probably feel a little excited…
This is your comeback. Your rewrite. Your rise towards your bodacious life.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Divorced at 50 F**K, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Lara Portelli, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, Now What, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing
Why Everyone Was Suffering
Posted by Literary Titan

Why Are You Sick? Introduces listeners and readers to your Ultimate Health Model™, a framework that connects cellular health with lifestyle factors like breathing, sleep, water, food, movement, environment, and even thoughts and feelings. Why was this an important book for you to write?
It was important because not only did I lose family members and friends to chronic disease, I wanted to really understand why everyone was suffering with health problems.
How did you develop your Ultimate Health Model™, and what sets it apart from other guides on how to improve your health?
Years and years of research, sifting through and reading hundreds of articles and slowly putting the pieces together. When I found that chronic inflammation might contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction I cross referenced it hundreds of times. I did the same for all the circles until I came up with the cellular framework happening in background. Then I added the the lifestyle factors that contribute to chronic disease or optimal health. Our guide is different because its all inclusive. Its a roadmap a ten year old could follow. Engage in as many on green side as possible and as few on red side its that simple.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
Nonmainstream topics were important for me to share. Factors like structured water, grounding and sunlight which are rarely discussed are more important than diet which is talked about insenantly.
What is one thing that you hope readers take away from the audiobook?
I hope readers and listeners will understand their health better. My model gives them agency to take control of their health instead of being at the mercy of the medical establishment. Plus our audiobook finally makes health fun, entertaining, engaging and immersive.
Author Links: YouTube | Instagram | Website
Sometimes, it feels like the ability to reclaim our health is just out of reach.
Why Are You Sick? How to reclaim your health with the Ultimate Health Model™ by health coach Benjamin Smith shows you the root causes of your health challenges and teaches you how to reclaim your vitality. Using his proprietary Ultimate Health Model™, you will understand how to turn the negative cycle of ill health into a positive cycle of optimum health.
Learn which shocking nighttime habit is possibly making you sick.
Get the health hacks that you probably never heard of.
They’re invisible and all around you—find out what surprises lurk in your environment that might be damaging your health.
Beat inflammation once and for all with practical, hands-on strategies.
Exercise isn’t the answer to losing weight. I’ll tell you what is.
It’s time to open your eyes to greater health. Energy and vitality can be yours.
Ben Smith is a certified health coach with Primal Health Coaching and a self-taught alternative wellness expert. He has spent fifteen years researching health practices and distilled the unconventional answers that he developed into the Ultimate Health Model™. Using research as his guide, Ben tests hypotheses by putting them into practice in his own life. Since seeing astounding results in his health, he has been sharing his findings with others.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Benjamin Smith, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, health, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Why Are You Sick, writer, writing
Americans and Ex-Nazis Working Together
Posted by Literary Titan

A Cry for Vengeance follows a professor and writer investigating war criminals who learns of ex-Nazis living in hiding who were recruited as Cold War spies, and now he faces a moral dilemma with deadly consequences. What was the inspiration for your story?
I was inspired to write my novel after reading a non-fiction book titled, The Spy Next door. The author provided detailed accounts of ex-Nazis living in this country under the protection of the U.S. Government. For years I had believed that most ex-Nazis had fled to South America, and so I was shocked to learn that many had come to the United States under a secret government program that allowed them to live and work as free men. The unbelievable story of Americans and ex-Nazis working together intrigued me, and so I decided to write a fictional account based on facts and revelations that have come to light since the end of the Cold War.
What kind of research did you do for this novel to ensure you captured the essence of the story’s theme?
Over a period of months I read numerous accounts, not only about the recruitment of ex-Nazis, but also about their victims, living and deceased. Much of what I wrote, especially about the Holocaust survivors is based on true stories published in various books and journals.
I find that authors sometimes ask themselves questions and let their characters answer them. Do you think this is true for your characters?
This is true. The protagonist in my novel is faced with a moral dilemma that blurs the line between good and evil, causing him to ask if he should seek justice or revenge. The question will nag him throughout the entire story, leaving me to wonder what I would do if I were in his shoes.
What is the next book that you are working on and when can your fans expect it to be out?
I’ve just completed another thriller titled A Rush to Judgment. The plot centers around two women: an exotic dancer who had been unjustly charged with a crime and sent to prison where she died from Covid. The other, a Native American woman, serving in the Army in Afghanistan, where she was brutally raped by her fellow soldiers. Shortly after her return to the U.S., she committed suicide. The two women did not know each other but they had something in common that is revealed halfway into the story. The novel will be published sometime next year.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
Moments before his death, Karl Muller, a terminally ill patient, makes a chilling confession to nurse Helen Darby: he’s a former Nazi guard responsible for thousands of deaths at Treblinka concentration camp. Shocked but determind, Helen enlists the help of Bryan De Luca, a professor experienced in investigating war criminals.
Their search leads to disturbing revelations–Muller, along with numerous ex-Nazis, was secretly recruited by American intelligence as Cold War spies. Soon, De Luca finds himself trapped between ruthless contractors protecting Nazis and the militant group Jews for Justice, seeking vengeance. When violence erupts, and De Luca is thrust into mortal danger, he faces an impossible choice: protect killers or unleash vengeance.
A powerful tale of secrets, betrayal, and moral reckoning. Buy now to uncover the hidden truths of a chilling conspiracy and its deadly consequences.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: A Cry for Vengeance, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Ernesto Patino, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, writer, writing
A Dark, Morally Ambiguous Story
Posted by Literary Titan

The Grotesque follows three people, each broken in their own ways, who are haunted by childhood trauma and seeking to escape it and control their own futures. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
My original concept was to tell a story about three people who each saw the world in very different ways due to their individual experiences. I envisioned a scene of three people sitting together in a café that sat across from a park. In the park would be a father, yelling corrections out to his young son as they tossed a football back and forth. One of the three in the café might perceive a wonderful father-son moment, something they never had as a child. The second might feel disgusted or angered by the sight of a father berating his son for not being good enough. And the third might feel heartbroken by the sight of the young boy, nearly in tears, trying and failing to please his dad, too afraid to tell his father that he clearly doesn’t enjoy football. The exact same sight, but three different perspectives based solely on individual experience.
Of course, this would be a boring scene to write at length, let alone read. But I loved the idea behind it. And the most interesting aspect, to me, was the exploration of how three such people might have very similar backgrounds but react in extremely different ways due to slight differences in their original perspectives. And trauma seemed a fitting place to start since it would create such a larger, more intricate reaction across their entire lives.
I felt that your book delivers the drama so well that it flirts with the grimdark genre. Was it your intention to give the story a darker tone?
I love the grimdark comparison! Yes – absolutely, my intent was always for this to be a dark, morally ambiguous story. The first image I had for this story was the little boy hiding beneath the bed, which became a recurring theme throughout the story. Things were never going to lighten up much from there.
My characters were affected by childhood trauma—physical and/or emotional. So, while what happened to each of them was definitively wrong, their responses to it would always be much less black and white. They’re each responding to the darkness that shaped them, all while living in a society that never stepped up to help them when they needed it most, so they’re naturally going to be skeptical of the world. While they’re dependent on their own survival instincts, they also feel a responsibility to save others from suffering their same fates, but lack the role models to guide them. So it’s fitting that the story would involve characters who do seemingly horrible things, but for reasons they believe are morally good. And some of their decisions will accordingly go very wrong.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
There are several themes that I hope will emerge from The Grotesque. Family is a big one, both actual and found. Within that, there’s also the theme of self-reliance and how it may be in conflict with our connection to the world, specifically in seeking help when we need it most. These also impact the ideas of perceived guilt and assumed responsibility.
The biggest theme, though, to me, is the question of how we see ourselves in the world. The person we feel we could be versus the person we think we actually are in everyday life versus the person others see. This gets played out a lot in the Frankenstein comparisons within the novel. And it encompasses the entire story as a question of perspective itself and how it shapes the ways we might interpret the world, ourselves, and each other.
What were some goals you set for yourself as a writer in this book?
There were several variations of this story. In converting the original screenplay version into a novel, I wanted two things: to get it on paper, and to explore all the tiny details of every scene – details that you don’t add to a screenplay. That first novel version was a tad boring and overwritten. It was also light on emotion, which was the point of telling the story in the first place.
For the rewrite, I wanted to find a way to dig deeper into the minds of my characters and to really see the world through their eyes. In other words, I wanted to learn to become a much better writer than I’d previously been. I also wanted to ‘find my voice as a writer.’ You hear that phrase a lot when reading books on writing, and I’d never fully understood it before, until I really started to narrow down what it was that I loved about certain other writers.
I also wanted to free myself from caring how my writing might sit with a general crowd. Of course, I want people to like, even love my book, but it doesn’t need to be everyone. I know my writing style won’t be for everyone. And that’s okay. I needed to do what was right for me and for the story I had to tell.
Author Links: GoodReads | BlueSky | Facebook | Website | Amazon
It was their house. He had no right. No right at all. But that man took what he wanted, just to cap off that sad little boy’s already unspeakable childhood. And for the next thirteen years, that pathetic useless child would cower and hide, hallucinate and obsess. Thirteen years. Until the past started circling back.
This Halloween, one way or another, things are going to change.
Because the focus of that boy’s obsession—that desperate, failing dancer—has an agenda of her own: to escape his watchful eye and rid herself of the volatile boyfriend who takes anything he wants. To live the dream she’s worked so hard to achieve.
For Katrina, Jared, and Michael, every dream for the future is forever chained to the traumas of their childhoods. But it all ends when they become integral parts of a deadly masquerade to absolve the guilt-ridden secrets of the past.
No more living in the shadows. It’s time to spotlight the ugly truth. In a world where the innocent are broken, beaten, and betrayed, everything is a dance. Everyone is the audience.
It’s time to make it or break it all.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, horror, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Sean Foy, story, suspenese, The Grotesque, thriller, writer, writing
One of the Greatest Acts of Love
Posted by Literary Titan

In MENtal Health: Take It “Like a Man,” you share stories from men from all walks of life who reveal their experiences with masculinity, trauma, and healing. Why was this an important book for you to publish?
From the moment this project began, I knew it mattered deeply. Writing has always been, to me, one of the greatest acts of love and faith. Love, because authors return to some of their hardest truths in order to share them with others — and faith, because we trust those stories will find the people who need them most.
As a publisher, I’ve worked with hundreds of women telling their stories. But over time, I kept hearing from men who were struggling to find a place where their stories of vulnerability and healing could be told. There’s still so much silence around men’s emotional lives. This book became a way to hold space for that — to say, your voice matters, too.
When we launched the book and I got to tell the authors they were now international bestsellers — in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., the Netherlands, and Brazil — it wasn’t just about the title. It was about seeing men stand taller in their truth.
Can you share with us a little about your process for selecting contributors for this anthology?
The process was both intentional and intuitive. I wanted a group of men (and a few women) who represented a wide range of backgrounds, professions, and perspectives — but who all shared one thing: a willingness to be honest.
We have psychotherapists, musicians, social workers, coaches, fathers, and sons. Each man came forward with a story that felt necessary. As I often say, I don’t chase the writers; I listen for the stories that want to be told.
Many of these authors had never written before. Some were terrified to speak about what they’d been through. But they showed up. They wrote about depression, abuse, sexuality, loss, and the courage it takes to heal.
As one author, Coach Zeke, said:
“I wanted to shine a light in dark places — to make visible the conversations men rarely have about love, connection, and vulnerability.”
That’s exactly what this anthology does.
Did you learn anything surprising about the assumptions surrounding men’s mental health while putting this book together?
Absolutely. What struck me most was how deeply ingrained silence is.
As Dr. Vince Johnson Jr. shared during our call,
“We walk through life saying we’re fine — but are we really? We’re bleeding out, and we just raise our hand and say, ‘I’m okay.’”
That line has stayed with me. It reflects the pressure men still feel to appear strong even when they’re in pain.
I also learned how universal this struggle is — across cultures, professions, and generations. Whether it was Jason Schneider talking about middle-age reflection, Eric Campos sharing his work with LGBTQ youth, or Natalie Goodfellow reflecting on the grief and silence in her small Canadian town — the themes of love, loss, and healing are the same.
We tend to think of men’s mental health as a “niche” issue. It isn’t. It’s a human issue.
What is one thing you hope readers take away from MENtal Health?
I hope readers — men and women alike — walk away knowing that strength and vulnerability are not opposites.
As Dr. Stacey Kevin Frick said so beautifully,
“True strength is trusting yourself enough to be soft, to be courageous, and to live with grace.”
This book is an invitation to talk about things we’ve been told to hide. To understand that healing doesn’t happen in isolation — it happens in community, in shared truth.
If even one reader feels less alone after reading these stories, then the book has done its job.
Author Links: Amazon | Goodreads | Facebook | LinkedIn | Website
**The mental health conversation men desperately need—15 powerful stories that prove healing is possible.
In MENtal Health: Take it “Like a Man”, fifteen authors from diverse backgrounds share their raw, unfiltered journeys through depression, anxiety, PTSD, addiction, and personal transformation. These aren’t just survival stories—they’re blueprints for male mental health recovery and proof that seeking help is the ultimate act of courage.
BREAK THE “MAN UP” MENTALITY
For generations, men have been told to suppress emotions, avoid therapy, and suffer in silence. This groundbreaking men’s mental health book shatters those toxic expectations. Entrepreneurs, fathers, veterans, athletes, and everyday heroes reveal their darkest moments and the breakthroughs that saved their lives.
WHAT YOU’LL DISCOVER:
✅ Real stories from real men confronting depression, anxiety, and trauma
✅ Practical mental health tools and coping strategies that actually work
✅ Permission to be vulnerable without losing your masculinity
✅ Hope and brotherhood from men who’ve survived and thrived
✅ Cultural insights on supporting men’s emotional wellness in families and workplaces
PERFECT FOR:
• Men struggling with depression, anxiety, or mental health challenges
• Partners, family members, and friends seeking to understand male mental health
• Mental health advocates and professionals
• Anyone passionate about breaking mental health stigma
FEATURING CONTRIBUTIONS FROM:
Eric Campos, Bestselling author Dr. Stacey Kevin Frick, Roje Khalique, Alan James Duro, Federico Soto, Juan Camilo Posada Arenas, Marc Longwith, Jonathan Dubrulle, Jason Schnieder, Steven A Schechter, Joshua Engle, Dr. Vince Johnson Jr, Coach Zeke (Azuka Tuke), Natalie Goodfellow, and Christen E. Bryce.
These stories will challenge everything you thought you knew about strength, vulnerability, and what it truly means to be a man in today’s world.
Get Your Copy Today before the price goes up.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: anthology, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, MENtal Health: Take It "Like a Man", nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Sierra Melcher, story, writer, writing
I Lived This Journey
Posted by Literary Titan

Seven Blank Pages shares your story of how, after divorcing your husband, you set out to rediscover yourself by embracing change and trusting your instincts while traveling the world on a pilgrimage of spiritual and personal discovery. Why was this an important book for you to write?
I lived this journey never intending to write about it. But when I was pregnant with my first child, I found myself telling stories of a younger me to my baby bump. Then a little voice whispered: write it. If I’ve learned anything from my awakening, it’s to listen.
As the manuscript evolved, so did my clarity and purpose. I realized the story could serve others—that the messages were bigger than me. I wrote it for the person standing on the edge, to remind them that internal freedom comes from trusting the unseen.
In your prologue, you describe the day you and your ex-husband went skydiving together to celebrate your divorce from each other. This instantly pulled me into your story and gave me a new perspective on letting go. What is one piece of advice someone gave you that changed your life?
I was walking with Blake in India, just outside the gates of the Taj Mahal, when she said: “We are just spirits who chose to be human—to experience being human.” That single perspective shifted everything. I was able to step out of judgment and attachments, to reframe fear and sadness with sincerity instead of resistance. It made the present moment sweeter, and decision-making far less heavy.
What was the most challenging part of writing your memoir, and what was the most rewarding?
The most challenging part, quite literally, was time. I wrote this book over three years while also birthing two children. There were months I didn’t touch the manuscript at all, and then long stretches where finding the energy and focus to dive back in was difficult.
The most rewarding thing has been hearing from readers. Knowing that a single line, a scene, or a moment of struggle resonated and inspired people who had never met me—that connection has been the fuel that kept me going.
What do you hope is one thing readers take away from your story?
Embrace the blank page. You are not only capable of handling the unknown—you were designed to thrive in it. It’s in the void where we create, and in the quiet that we remember.
Will it be uncomfortable? Yes.
Will it be worth it? Absolutely.
Author Links: Instagram | Website | Amazon
FIVE Stars, Gold Book Award Winner —Literary Titan
Seven Blank Pages is an inspiring, globe-spanning memoir about losing everything and daring to start over. When author Whitney Joy loses her husband, home, and career in just twenty-four hours, she makes a bold choice: to leave it all behind and embark on a solo, around-the-world journey in search of freedom, healing, and purpose.
From the romantic streets of Paris to the snow-capped Swiss Alps, from the turquoise waters of the Andaman Sea to the sacred temples of India, and finally to the wild coasts of New Zealand, Whitney’s travels become more than a physical adventure—they are a deep, spiritual transformation. Along the way, she faces heartbreak, financial uncertainty, and identity loss, while discovering the power of intuition, the magic of manifestation, and the courage to live authentically.
Part travel memoir, part soulful manifesto, Seven Blank Pages is a captivating story for anyone who’s ever felt broken, stuck, or ready to rewrite their life. With themes of resilience, feminine empowerment, synchronicity, and self-discovery, Whitney invites readers to see that the unknown isn’t something to fear—it’s where your truest life begins.
Readers of Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert, The Alchemist and The Pilgrimage by Paulo Coelho, Untamed by Glennon Doyle, and The Surrender Experiment by Michael Singer will love this debut memoir, which explores themes of divorce, loss, travel adventure, self-discovery, spiritual enlightenment, manifestation, and the magic of the universe.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Seven Blank Pages, story, Whitney Joy, writer, writing
I Love An Underdog
Posted by Literary Titan

Twisting in Time follows a young boy who finds himself entangled in a world of magic and tangled loyalties despite his overwhelming desire for a normal life. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I love an underdog, especially one with flaws that we can relate to. With Twisting in Time, I wanted to delve deep into the mysterious backstory of my favorite underdog, Goff, and explore the breadth and depth of his connection to the magical realm throughout time. He’s a tragic figure, although the themes of friendship, tolerating differences, and the power of a kind heart make his tale uplifting in a way, too. And, to be honest, I enjoyed writing actual fantasy instead of urban fantasy for a change. I’ve always wanted to craft a medieval setting with castles and peasants and see my characters explore it. Plus, I got to write songs for the performers, royals, peasants, and Lady Flattence to sing. It was such a joy writing this book.
Do you have a favorite scene in this novel? One that was especially fun to craft?
For me, the peak moment of the story, and the one that took the longest to craft, was the climactic scene where Goff decides to throw fate to the wind, literally, risking his life to see if he is truly the force of nature he has been told he is. It was important to me that the reader felt that he was willing to lose everything to save his friends. And then, the flying battle was hard to write (battles always are), but so much fun.
What do you find is the most challenging aspect of writing a series?
The problem with writing a series is ensuring that each book has a compelling story and well-defined arcs for the characters. Many sequels I’ve read turn into flat tales. Same characters, same world, but only action throughlines. Readers need to feel connected to a personal story, a struggle, a deeply felt and thwarted need, not just an overt conflict. Even if they love the characters, it will feel bland. So, finding a fresh way to craft a life-or-death struggle for the characters in each book is the most challenging. for sure.
Can we look forward to seeing the next installment in the Misfit’s Magic series soon? Where will it take readers?
I thought this book was the end of the series right up until I wrote the last scene and realized I wasn’t done writing Goff’s tale. Twisting in time twists back to the beginning of the first book…with a twist. I’ve been thinking about how interesting it would be to take the story back to Spraksville, but nothing is the same this time. The fact that Bones and Maxim breached the time continuum has shifted things, so it’s actually a whole new tale in that location. Perhaps I’ll even have Mathers be a teacher or something instead of the villain. I’ve often considered the possibility that the Orb had something to do with the creation of vampires, so I might head in that direction with the next book. I might even have Halstrom become one. Wouldn’t that be fascinating to see him battle with the preternatural urges in a “Halstrom” way? I’ve always wanted to write a vampire story (I loved reading Rice, Harker, Meyer, and Stoker)
And, I might add a little foster sister who is the heart of the story. The struggle for Goff this time will be keeping her safe despite being dragged along into an epic adventure with him. We’ll see Goff’s nurturing side, his “big brother” muscles come out. But, I’m not sure yet. Still in the noodling about it phase. I love that part of writing a book. I think about it when I’m chopping onions or mowing the lawn. Such a fascinating and emotionally engaging puzzle to ponder.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | TikTok
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Fred Gracely, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Misfit's Magic: Twisting in Time, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing


