The Atlas of Elsewhere

The Atlas of Elsewhere follows Elsie Vine, a quiet librarian whose life has grown too small for her spirit, even if she has not admitted that to herself yet. When a mysterious atlas appears in her library, filled with living maps and impossible worlds, it pulls her into a journey that is as much inward as outward. Each realm she enters reflects a part of her identity. Scale, emotion, memory, choice. All of it blends into a story that feels half fantasy and half self-examination. It is a tale about possibility, courage, and the stubborn tenderness of becoming someone new.

I loved how the story plays with imagination in a practical world. The magical pieces feel warm and handmade. Nothing grand in a showy way. More like pockets of wonder stitched into the edges. I kept getting caught on the gentle humor, too. The philosophical beetle made me grin, and the Cartographer made me feel oddly comforted. I kept thinking about all the places in my own life where I have chosen the chair instead of the door.

The emotional honesty kept pulling me back to this book again and again. The fragility in Elsie’s choices felt real. The regret, the soft longing, the almost childlike ache to believe that something impossible might still be waiting. I got swept up in it. I found myself rooting for her, not in a heroic way, but in a human way. I wanted her to remember her own size. I wanted her to walk through every door, even when it scared her. The writing made me feel that, and it has been a while since a book did that so simply and directly.

The Atlas of Elsewhere reminded me a bit of The Night Circus in the way quiet magic slips into ordinary life and stirs something deep and unexpected. I would recommend The Atlas of Elsewhere to anyone who loves quiet fantasy, reflective journeys, or soft magic that grows out of everyday life. It is perfect for readers who enjoy character-driven tales and for anyone who has ever felt stuck in their own routine and wondered what might happen if they finally picked the door instead of the chair.

Pages: 198 | ASIN : B0FRC44BRZ

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Students on the Margins

Alexander Greengaard Author Interview

The Elephant in the Ivy follows a theater student at an Ivy League campus whose playful interdepartmental spy game blurs into real danger, exposing how performance, power, and privilege shape identity and loss. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I had a couple of influences here. First, I had some students a long time ago when I was a middle school teacher that really inspired me. I wanted to imagine what they’d be like in college, and the whole set-up is a metaphor for the kinds of challenges that students on the margins face. Second, I currently teach at a community college, working with students that are often coming back to school after a long break. This population benefits from reassurance that they are “real” college students, that this community is here for them. Alison is a scholarship student in the Ivy League. Her feeling out of place and finding her own ground to stand on– that’s something I see a lot from community college students. 

How did your background or observations of academic life influence the book’s tone and details?

College can be a setting where marginalized populations don’t feel welcome. A lot of that comes from the standard dialect being enforced in classrooms. I learned to talk like my teachers and my privileged peers when I was a scholarship student, but I never felt that ownership of the space that others seemed to feel. With Alison, I wanted to show the audience what outsiders feel like in this setting. It’s only when she stumbles upon the game that she starts to see the university as her own space. I think college can be a wonderful place to find your footing, to find something you’re passionate about that makes you want to dig your heels in. For me, it was building sets for the theatre department.

The novel balances humor with real grief and danger. How did you know when to let scenes stay light and when to let them turn dark?

My default is probably light. I’m a funny person, and I make light of most everything. I think there’s even some good jokes in the scene where Alison has to mother her mother. I make the case that Hamlet could be a comedy if you played it for laughs. I actually did that. I played Hamlet and hammed up the stuff I thought was funny. The local papers didn’t like it much, but I did get laughs. The world has light moments and sobering ones, too. I guess I just tried to be Rainbow Rowell during the hard ones, and P. G. Wodehouse the rest of the time. Taking a low-stakes thing and giving it higher stakes by making characters want what they want even harder– that’s a Wodehous move, I think. 

What conversations do you hope students, educators, or first-time readers have after finishing the book?

Well, I very much hope I covered the bases of the stuff that’s in literature. Something to say, and a long-form story that says it. A nice mix of passages, characters, and literary devices that serve as metaphors for the big ideas. I’m hoping that the book being free is helpful so that classrooms can take advantage and have one less hurdle to take on. I hope they read it in class and then just stop when it reminds them of something– a life experience, another story, a concept from class. And that they chat about that a bit, and then move on. I think that’s what it takes to become a stronger reader: a place and time dedicated to reading, a community to read with, and someone to talk to about the book. 

Author Links: GoodReads | Website

The Elephant in the Ivy is a whimsical and irreverent spy novel- of sorts- in the beautiful and mysterious New England college underground.

Alison Ashe is a junior at Bauer. A scholarship kid, a theatre major, strapped for cash and even more strapped for time; she’s easily annoyed and something about her privileged peers really wigs her out. But unlike most of her peers, Alison has an outlet where starting on third base doesn’t do anyone any favors. Ancient and secret, Bauer is home to a spy game of sorts. A game where all that matters is that your wits are sharp and you’re willing to take big risks. And, of course, who you trust.

All proceeds for The Elephant in the Ivy are used to purchase books for classrooms. Teachers are invited to reach out to the author to participate in this program.

Praise for The Elephant in the Ivy:

“It’s a real book!” -Danyelle Khmara, Arizona Public Media

“A rollicking heist of a book. Alison Ashe will trick you, and you’ll thank her for it.” -Grace Olsen, WMHC Radio

Written with support from Pima Open Digital Press, an open educational resource initiative at Pima Community College.

Your Problems Solved: Cold Clues

Your Problems Solved: Cold Clues hooked me right from the first scene, where retired librarian Dory Frame steps onto her porch and finds a troubled young woman asking for help. That moment kicks off a mystery rooted in a small California town in 1955, full of heat, old secrets, sharp characters, and the quiet grit of a woman who never expected to become a sleuth. The story winds through murder, corruption, community ties, and one woman’s stubborn insistence on truth. It moves with a gentle rhythm that feels like a stroll through a neighborhood, then tightens when things turn dark. I found myself caring far more than I expected to.

As I read, I kept smiling at the voice of Dory. She is steady and thoughtful, yet she surprises you with a streak of bravery that sneaks up on you. The writing made me feel like I was sitting beside her at the kitchen table, sipping iced tea while she sorted through clues and her own memories. Author Lennette Horton paints small-town life with such affection that even the gossip feels warm. There were moments that hit harder, though, like the quiet grief wrapped around Dory’s widowhood or the unease of a veteran struggling with trauma. Those scenes caught in my chest. They added weight to a book that could have stayed light but chose something richer.

I also appreciated the layers tucked inside the plot. What starts as a simple request from a desperate daughter slowly becomes a tangle of civic corruption, hidden relationships, and buried ledgers. Horton balances this with soft humor and everyday detail. One moment I was caught in the tension of a new clue, and the next I was listening to neighbors talk tomatoes and grandbabies. Oddly enough, that blend worked. It grounded the danger in something very real. I felt like I knew these people. I wanted them safe. I wanted justice to land where it should.

By the final pages, I closed the book feeling satisfied. This story would be wonderful for readers who love cozy mysteries with heart, fans of historical settings, and anyone who enjoys a heroine who solves problems with brains, kindness, and a little stubbornness. If you like mysteries that feel authentic rather than flashy, this one is a great pick. I’m looking forward to reading more of Dory’s adventures.

Pages: 342 | ASIN : B0FNTBNHY3

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The Relentless Lure of Greed and Power

Barbara Hanson Clark Author Interview

Polar Deception follows a man living in a time of environmental collapse and geopolitical fractures who steals rare crystals from a remote research center and murders his colleagues to secure himself a lucrative deal. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

It’s interesting that you characterize the story as following Carlos, the antagonist. Carlos represents all that is wrong with the world—the relentless lure of greed and power. While he doesn’t steal the crystals, he hides them to double‑cross his prospective buyer, China. That act underscores his manipulative nature and the destructive choices people in power often make. History and current events remind us that unchecked ambition and exploitation lead to suffering for the many and lasting damage to our only home in the universe. Diana’s struggle against Carlos is symbolic of humanity’s broader fight to resist those forces.

For me, the heart of Polar Deception is Diana’s story—a smart, adventurous woman who has endured profound personal tragedy, from a difficult childhood to the loss of both her mother and husband within just a few years. Her journey is about resilience and finding the courage to stand up to someone like Carlos.

My novel was inspired by my own visit to Antarctica aboard a ship with a Russian captain. One night was set aside for camping on the shores of Paradise Bay. After digging my “grave” in the snow and arranging my bivy bag, I watched the Zodiac head back to the ship and wondered: What if they don’t come back for us? There are no trees or plants, we were told to bring no food, and going inland only meant the danger of crevasses. My concern for the environment and awareness of rare‑earth issues grew around that moment, eventually forming the foundation of a story I knew I had to tell.

What character did you enjoy writing for? Was there one that was more challenging to write for?

I especially enjoyed writing Angie. She’s a lively, fun companion for Diana, yet she carries her own inner demons that I hope to explore more fully in the next book.

Carlos, on the other hand, was the most difficult. I envisioned him as a narcissistic sociopath, but early (and even recent) feedback suggested he came across as cartoonishly evil. To balance that, I gave him a more nuanced background shaped by personal tragedies, and even a faint conscience—he avoids harming those he believes “don’t deserve it.” Writing such characters is tricky: while narcissistic sociopaths exist in real life, their behavior can feel unbelievable in fiction. Still, if we are to understand and deal with such sociopaths in reality, at the very least we must be able to acknowledge that they have a role to play in fiction.

I felt there was a clear warning in these pages about the direction Earth is headed. What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

The central theme is the butterfly effect—how a single action, whether natural or human, can ripple across the globe for good or ill. The Russian earthquake is one example, echoing the real-life 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami that impacted Antarctica. It’s a reminder that it only takes one event in one corner of the world to reverberate thousands of miles away in mere hours

Another theme is the outsized influence of individuals. History shows us how one person—Hitler being a stark example—can alter humanity’s course through threats or promises of power. Carlos embodies this danger, justifying his actions as serving the “greater good.” But Diana ultimately strips that power from him, at least for now, preserving the fragile balance. 

What will your next novel be about, and what will the whole series encompass?

Without giving too much away, the next book begins with a global event that sends Diana and Angie to Greenland, where a crisis is brewing. Book 2 is set in 2053 and will explore sustainable alternatives to today’s technology—solutions that are based on existing innovations that are not yet considered economically feasible. The series as a whole will continue to examine how humanity’s choices, both large and small, shape our shared future.

Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads | Website

In 2050, a world without rare earth minerals runs like it’s 1985.

And Thwaites—the infamous Doomsday Glacier in Antarctica—has collapsed. Submerged coastlines and yesterday’s technologies are the new normal. But deep within Antarctica’s mountains, revolutionary magnetic crystals hold the key to resurrecting the modern era. There’s just one problem—with Thwaites gone, mining will unleash a catastrophic chain reaction, shattering Antarctica’s ice, and reshaping Earth’s future forever.

Dr. Carlos Perez doesn’t care. Prestige and profit are all that matter. After collecting crystal samples at a Chilean research station, he murders three colleagues under orders from his Chinese buyer—then hides the samples until he can cut a new deal. To avoid detection, he returns to the facility aboard a pleasure cruise.

Also aboard is Diana Harris, a recently widowed sustainability advocate with a background in geology, traveling with her spirited best friend, Angie. Diana hopes for healing—but after she stumbles upon a mysterious red crystal and a trail of hidden agendas, she’s pulled into a deadly conspiracy. The CIA is watching. China is listening. And Carlos is ready to kill again.

When Diana and the other campers are left stranded in the icy wilderness, the countdown begins. A rare cyclone is closing in. The truth is cracking through the ice. And Diana must summon her strength to stop a man-made disaster that could redefine civilization.

The truth lies beneath the fracturing ice.

And if it surfaces—nations will kill to control it.

Leann and the Lost Planet Chronicles

Leann, Noctis, and their star-pirate crew sweep across the galaxy aboard an enchanted vessel, charting courses few dare to imagine. Their mission: track down a whispered, almost mythic planet said to shimmer just beyond the edge of known space. The search proves anything but simple. Secrets drift in their path, riddles tighten like knots, and a string of troublesome hurdles slows every advance. Yet the narrative isn’t driven by adventure alone. It doubles as a gentle instructional guide for young readers, and it excels on both fronts. With each light-year gained, Leann and her companions discover as much about their resilience and wit as they do about the strange cosmic neighborhoods they traverse.

Leann and the Lost Planet Chronicles, by Elizabeth Earnst, marks the second entry in a series delightfully preoccupied with unconventional space exploration. The book balances education with high-spirited piracy, offering children a lively escapade wrapped around meaningful lessons.

The illustrations elevate the experience even further. Rich in detail and scale, they echo the author’s reverence for the vastness of space and the ragtag charm of a good-hearted pirate crew. Every character, misfit though each may be, contributes a distinct spark, and the narrative makes room to explore their motivations, quirks, and personal stakes.

Earnst presents space as a realm of ceaseless wonder, and she proves her point through bite-size insights on stars, asteroids, telescopes, and the pioneers who first illuminated humanity’s understanding of the cosmos, including Galileo himself. Most impressive, though, are the clever riddles and side quests she threads throughout the journey, each one crafted to draw readers deeper into the adventure.

Parents hoping to blend entertainment with educational value will find a strong ally in this book. The fusion of pirates and cosmic travel captures the imagination with ease, and Leann’s crew feels right at home in a sweeping, multi-volume saga. Their enchanted ship has room for many more voyages, should Earnst choose to expand the trilogy into further tales among the stars.

Pages: 88 | ASIN : B0FXXW37G3

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The Kindred Chronicles: Shifting Sands

Shifting Sands follows the survivors of Sol Thalen in the immediate aftermath of its fall. The story opens on a city crushed into ruins and a people clinging to hope by the thinnest threads. Chris, Grace, Elline, Raham, Camille, and the thalenar struggle through endless hours of digging through collapsed halls, pulling survivors from the rubble, mourning the dead, and trying to understand what comes next. Their grief shapes every choice. Their loyalty holds them upright. And the central tension of the book becomes clear early on. How do you rebuild a culture when the ground beneath it has literally vanished? The novel is driven by emotion and community and a sense that every character must decide who they are now that their world has been unmade.

I found myself slipping into the atmosphere without effort. The author leans into sensory details, and the rubble and smoke and sand build a world that is both beautiful and bruised. What struck me most was how the story rarely lets the characters breathe. Grief becomes a kind of weather. it’s constant, pressing, and shaping them in ways they cannot fully articulate. I enjoyed that the book doesn’t rush healing or transformation. It lets emotions sit heavy and raw, and that made the characters’ quieter victories hit harder. At times, the prose felt a little lofty for the scenes it described, but even then, it carried an emotional punch that kept me invested.

I kept thinking about what it means to lose not just people, but culture. identity. the songs and rituals that tie a community together. The thalenar blade lore and the meaning of song within their traditions stood out as some of the most compelling worldbuilding in the book. And I found Raham’s arc especially moving. the quiet strength, the slow cracking, the way he tries to hold others together while he’s barely holding himself. Grace’s exhaustion and determination also pulled me in. Her efforts to see the essence of life while losing pieces of herself felt intimate and aching. If anything, I wish the story had paused more often to let certain emotional beats land, but the constant urgency also felt true to the setting.

This book would resonate with readers who enjoy character-driven fantasy, stories about surviving loss, and worlds built through culture as much as magic. I’d recommend it to anyone who likes tales that sit with hard emotions and still reach for light. Fans of the series will find this entry in The Kindred Chronicles especially satisfying, since it deepens the world and the characters in ways that feel rewarding.

Pages: 488 | ASIN : B0G64WJHFQ

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Janice Everet: A Southern Gothic Jane Eyre Retelling

Janice Everet is a Southern gothic historical romance that retells Jane Eyre through the perspective of a blind heroine growing up in the 1930s American South. We follow Janice from a childhood shaped by cruelty and neglect, through her years at a school for the blind, and into adulthood as she becomes a teacher and finds both purpose and love. The book mirrors the familiar arc of Jane Eyre but transforms it, rooting the story in disability representation, trauma survival, and the complicated social dynamics of its time.

As I read, I kept returning to how intimate Janice’s voice feels. Burton writes her with a sensitivity that made me slow down, especially during the painful early chapters. The scenes with Arnold, in particular, are hard to take. They’re written with an unflinching honesty that makes Janice’s fear almost tactile, and moments like the doctor noticing the bruising around her eyes and gently explaining her retinal damage hit me right in the chest. The book doesn’t sensationalize the abuse; instead, it sits with the emotional fallout and lets Janice carry both her pain and her stubborn resilience. I liked that the writing never turns her blindness into a metaphor or punishment. Burton even says in her author’s note that she wanted to challenge that trope directly, presenting blindness not as a tragedy but simply as part of Janice’s life and identity. That intention really comes through.

What surprised me most was how naturally the story shifts from gothic tension to warm, character-driven romance. The scenes with Edwin feel like stepping into sunlight after a long walk in the dark. Their relationship grows slowly, with a gentleness that contrasts with everything Janice has survived. I found myself appreciating the quieter moments: shared meals, woodworking, guiding each other through unfamiliar emotional terrain. Even the small exchanges with side characters, like Janice reading a story to a child on the bus or meeting friends at Pembrook, widen the world and keep the novel from sinking into despair. Burton’s choices here make the story less about escaping the past and more about claiming a future. And because the book is a romance, the emotional payoff lands in a satisfying, comforting way.

By the time I reached the end, I felt like I’d traveled with Janice rather than just observed her. The blend of Southern gothic atmosphere, historical detail, and classic romance gives the book a distinct flavor. It’s not a light read; some chapters sit heavily, especially for readers sensitive to themes of assault, trauma, and systemic prejudice. But the heart of the story is hopeful. It’s a journey toward dignity, connection, and the quiet courage of choosing joy after years of being told you don’t deserve it.

If you enjoy character-centered stories, historical romance with emotional depth, or retellings that genuinely reimagine their source material, this book will speak to you. Fans of Jane Eyre who have wondered what that story might look like with a heroine whose challenges aren’t tied to beauty or sight but to agency and survival might find this version even more resonant. I’d recommend Janice Everet to readers who appreciate Southern gothic atmosphere, nuanced disability representation, and a romance that feels earned and tender.

Pages: 238 | ASIN : B0FYK3JCKG

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Handsome Dark Stranger

Handsome Dark Stranger tells the story of Beth, a young woman living with her grandfather in a quiet coastal village, where grief, devotion, and the supernatural wrap themselves around the rhythms of daily life. The book follows her encounters with a mysterious figure who moves between light and shadow, showing himself in dreams, graveyards, and even burned fields. The line between the ordinary and the otherworldly blurs as Beth navigates her family’s past, her grandfather’s fading strength, and the strange force that seems to answer her unspoken longing. The story folds together gothic atmosphere, spiritual imagery, and the steady beat of village life to build a world where presence and absence feel almost the same.

The descriptions pulled me in with their quiet intensity. Some scenes made me pause just to take in the mood. I found myself caught between wonder and unease, which I loved because it made the world feel alive, even when nothing dramatic was happening on the surface. The pacing moved gently, almost deliberately, and at times I wished it would hurry, but the slow burn worked for me. It let the emotions simmer. The supernatural figure felt both beautiful and unnerving, and I liked how the author never rushed to explain him.

There were moments when the emotional weight of the story was surprisingly deep. Beth’s memories of her parents and grandparents felt tender and raw. I could feel the love in them. I could also feel the exhaustion that comes from carrying someone else’s grief while trying not to lose yourself. The gothic elements added another layer. The dreams, the howling, the flicker of stained glass coming alive, all of it made the story feel thick with something hidden just under the surface. At times, I wanted clearer answers, but part of me enjoyed the uncertainty. It kept me reaching forward, curious and slightly on edge.

I think that this book would speak most deeply to readers who like stories filled with atmosphere and emotion rather than fast action. It suits anyone who enjoys quiet supernatural tales, introspective characters, and a slow, thoughtful unraveling of mystery. If you like your fiction moody, poetic, and touched with both comfort and fear, you’ll enjoy this book.

Pages: 104 | ASIN : B0FTGFVZBB

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