Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction
Posted by Literary Titan
The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.
Award Recipients
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🏆The Literary Titan Book Award🏆
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) February 6, 2026
We celebrate #books with captivating stories crafted by #writers who expertly blend imagination with #writing talent. Join us in congratulating these amazing #authors and their outstanding #novels. #WritingCommunityhttps://t.co/GDWVevNLgi pic.twitter.com/MGFKsqe8FY
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Posted in Literary Titan Book Award
Tags: author, author award, author recognition, biography, book, book award, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens books, christian fiction, crime fiction, crime thriller, dark fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, historical romance, horror, indie author, kids books, kindle, kobo, Literary Titan Book Award, literature, memoir, mystery, nonfiction, nook, novel, paranormal, picture books, read, reader, reading, romance, science fiction, self help, story, supernatural, suspense, thriller, western, womens fiction, writer, writing, young adult
Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Nonfiction
Posted by Literary Titan
The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes outstanding nonfiction books that demonstrate exceptional quality in writing, research, and presentation. This award is dedicated to authors who excel in creating informative, enlightening, and engaging works that offer valuable insights. Recipients of this award are commended for their ability to transform complex topics into accessible and compelling narratives that captivate readers and enhance our understanding.
Award Recipients
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🌟Celebrating excellence in #nonfiction!🌟
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) February 6, 2026
The Literary Titan Book Award honors #authors who turn complex topics into engaging narratives, enriching our understanding with top-quality #writing and research. #BookLovers #WritingCommunity #ReadingCommunityhttps://t.co/hE0CuTfvQ8 pic.twitter.com/OOcjaY1VBa
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Posted in Literary Titan Book Award
Tags: author, author award, author recognition, biography, book, book award, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, business, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, leadership, Literary Titan Book Award, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, spirituality, story, writer, writing
Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Children’s Books
Posted by Literary Titan
The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes children’s books that mesmerize audiences with incredible narratives, vibrant illustrations, charming characters, and fresh ideas. Offering well-earned accolades, we salute the imagination and exceptional skill of authors who create tales that spark curiosity and delight in young minds.
Award Recipients
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🏅 The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes #ChildrensBooks that amaze #kids with incredible narratives, illustrations, characters, and ideas. The imagination and skill of these talented #authors spark curiosity and delight young #readers.#PictureBookshttps://t.co/S4yfLLL4mS pic.twitter.com/OXTyI7qNRH
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) February 6, 2026
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Posted in Literary Titan Book Award
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Literary Titan Book Awards: Poetry
Posted by Literary Titan
The Literary Titan Book Award recognizes poets who demonstrate exceptional artistry and proficiency and push the boundaries of language and expression. The recipients are poets who excel in their technical skills and evoke deep emotional responses, challenge thoughts, and illuminate new perspectives through their work. The award honors those who contribute to the literary landscape with their unique voices and powerful words.
Award Recipients
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🌟 The Literary Titan Book Award celebrates #poets who push boundaries and evoke deep emotions with their powerful #poetry. We celebrate the artistry, emotional depth, and thought-provoking themes in their work. #PoetryLovers #PoetryTwitter #POEMS https://t.co/cKqUOoK6VV pic.twitter.com/7MCb476Moc
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) February 6, 2026
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Posted in Literary Titan Book Award
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, poem, poet, poetry, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Literary Titan Silver Book Award
Posted by Literary Titan
Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.
Award Recipients
Hug whispers Between Worlds by William Klenk
Cover Up by John Wendell Adams
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🏅 Literary Titan Book Awards🏅
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) February 6, 2026
Celebrating the brilliance of #authors who captivated us with their prose and engaging narratives. We recognize #books that stand out for their storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and #fiction. #WritingCommunityhttps://t.co/RXZk14Xwpp pic.twitter.com/cRSduvoTp0
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Posted in Literary Titan Book Award
Tags: author, author award, author recognition, biography, book award, childrens books, christian fiction, crime fiction, crime thriller, dark fantasy, fantasy, fiction, historical fiction, historical romance, horror, indie author, kids books, Literary Titan Book Award, memoir, mystery, nonfiction, paranormal, picture books, romance, science fiction, self help, supernatural, suspense, thriller, western, womens fiction, writing, young adult
The ME Factor: Your Secret Weapon for Author Visibility
Posted by Literary Titan

The ME Factor lays out a full system for authors who want to stand out in a crowded marketplace. Author Lisa Towles starts with a blunt look at the four-million-books-a-year problem, then walks through identity, market intelligence, branding, diagnostics, digital visibility, human connection, and a 90-day review rhythm. She anchors everything on the “ME Factor” formula of Goal + Audience + You, adds the idea of an “emotional promise” to readers, and closes with a disciplined approach to long-term differentiation instead of one-off launch tricks.
I enjoyed the writing more than I expected for a marketing book. The tone feels conversational and firm at the same time, like a good coach who has receipts and also remembers what it feels like to be scared. The chapters are broken into clear sections, with “Workroom” exercises and tiered “Level 1 / Level 2 / Level 3” actions that make the material feel very hands-on rather than theoretical. The book takes its time, circling back to key ideas, and I found that this repetition actually helped the concepts sink in while keeping the same warm and encouraging tone.
I liked the mix of hard-nosed strategy and real empathy for creative people. Towles treats the author as the CEO of a small but serious brand, yet she keeps pulling the focus back to human connection, self-care, and the reader’s emotional experience. The sections on defining an emotional promise and on quarterly 90-day reviews felt especially strong to me. The idea that your brand is not your genre but the feeling readers trust you to deliver hit home, and the practical rhythm of pausing every quarter to ask, ‘Is this still working? Does this still feel like me?’ felt realistic rather than idealistic. I also appreciated the emphasis on physical spaces like bookstores and libraries, as well as on boundaries and burnout prevention, not just on algorithms and posts.
The ME Factor turned book marketing from a foggy mystery into a clear plan that actually feels like something any author can accomplish. I would recommend The ME Factor to authors who are ready to treat their writing as a long-term career, not a lottery ticket. I think it will be especially useful for indie and hybrid authors, mid-career writers who feel stuck, and business professionals working on a first book who already think in frameworks and want help translating that mindset to publishing. Writers who are tired of random tactics and want a grounded, actionable, step-by-step playbook will find this book a solid companion.
ISBN : 978-1-64456-888-0
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, author resources, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, diagnostics, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, marketing, marketing books, nonfiction, nook, novel, publishing, read, reader, reading, reviews, self help, story, The ME Factor, The ME Factor: Your Secret Weapon for Author Visibility, writer, writing
Lost in Bone Cave
Posted by Literary Titan

The Adventures of Syd: Lost in Bone Cave tells the story of a girl named Syd who joins her scientist father on a real caving expedition in West Virginia. What starts as a planned research trip to observe bat colonies turns into a long, muddy, sometimes frightening journey through Bone Cave, complete with tight crawls, glowing rock walls, wildlife encounters, and a moment where things go genuinely wrong. The book follows Syd as she moves from curiosity and doubt into courage, responsibility, and trust in herself during an underground adventure that tests both her nerves and her judgment.
What struck me first was how grounded the writing feels. Author Danielle Simone clearly knows this world, and she takes her time letting readers learn it alongside Syd. The explanations about caves, bats, and equipment are woven into conversations instead of dropped like lessons, which makes them easier to absorb. I liked that Syd does not magically become brave overnight. She complains. She gets scared. She makes mistakes. The fear in the Devil’s Pinch crawl is especially well done. You can almost feel the dust in your throat and the panic tightening your chest, and it never tips into melodrama. It feels honest, like the kind of fear kids actually experience when something goes beyond what they expected.
I also appreciated the author’s choice to center the story on a parent and child working together. Syd’s dad is capable but not perfect, and that matters. Adults in this book do not have all the answers, and sometimes they get hurt too. That balance gives Syd room to grow without turning her into an unrealistic hero. The science elements, especially the focus on bats and White Nose Syndrome, add weight to the adventure. This is not danger for fun. There is a purpose, and that purpose keeps pulling the story forward.
Lost in Bone Cave fits squarely in the children’s adventure genre, with a strong thread of nature and science exploration running through it. I would recommend it to middle-grade readers who like outdoor stories, animals, and realistic challenges rather than fantasy quests. It would also be a great pick for kids who enjoy learning how things work while following a character their own age. If you have a reader who loves hikes, caves, or asking big questions but still feels nervous about new experiences, this book will likely feel like a steady hand on their shoulder, saying you can be scared and keep going anyway.
Pages: 104 | ASIN : B0FQDCNFDX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, animal stories, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's Action & Adventure Books, Children's books, Danielle Simone, ebook, family, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Lost in Bone Cave, middle-grade readers, nature, nook, novel, outdoor stories, read, reader, reading, science, series, story, writer, writing
Christ Sent Me Not to Baptize: Paul’s Gospel and the One Baptism
Posted by Literary Titan

Christ Sent Me Not To Baptize by Michael Del Brown lays out a sweeping study of every baptism in Scripture and funnels it toward one sharp claim. Paul teaches that only a single baptism applies to believers today. The book begins with a lexical deep dive, wanders through ancient rituals, walks carefully through Israel’s history, then lands on Paul’s letters where the author argues that Spirit baptism alone defines the present dispensation. It is a detailed trip. The argument keeps circling back to Paul’s insistence that he was sent to preach and not to baptize. That idea becomes the backbone of the entire work.
The writing often feels like a scholar talking straight at a kitchen table, which I sort of liked. It moves briskly from word studies to cultural history to doctrinal claims. The author clearly cares about precision. He keeps coming back to identification with Christ as the core theme behind baptism. I found that emphasis refreshing. I found myself energized by the pace. The ideas come one after another, and it pushed me to pause on my own and really let each point sink in. I ended up appreciating how the steady movement kept me alert and thinking as I read.
Emotionally, the strongest pull for me came from the sections that place Paul in contrast with the Twelve. That contrast shapes the whole book. It felt bold and at times almost confrontational. I appreciated the author’s confidence, though. He really believes that Paul’s revelation changes everything about how we read baptism. Whether or not one agrees, the conviction behind the writing gives the book a kind of charge. I found myself nodding, arguing back, agreeing again, shaking my head, and then leaning forward to see what he would say next. It kept me engaged even when I wrestled with the conclusions.
The book reads like a long conversation that mixes study, passion, and a firm desire to set the record straight. I walked away with a clearer sense of why the author believes water baptism belongs to Israel’s program and not to the Body of Christ today. I also walked away with plenty to think about. I would recommend this book to readers who enjoy deep dives into Scripture, to pastors sorting out doctrinal questions, and to anyone who likes wrestling with big theological claims. It rewards methodical reading and a curious mind.
Pages: 137 | ASIN : B0FSVGGFFC
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, bible reference, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Christ Sent Me Not to Baptize: Paul's Gospel and the one Baptism, Christian Literature & Art, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Michael Del Brown, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, reference, religion, Religious Studies Education, spirituality, story, theology, writer, writing













































































































































































































