Blog Archives
War of the Words
Posted by Literary Titan

Carol Karels’ War of the Words: The Office Revolution That Transformed the Lives of Women and the Men They Worked For is a fascinating mix of family memoir and tech history. Karels tells the story of Microsystems Engineering Corporation (MEC), the small family company her father and uncle founded in the late 1970s that created MASS-11, a powerful word processor that quietly helped shape the modern office. From NASA contracts to the early days of Digital’s VAX computers, she traces how a homegrown business rode and was eventually crushed by the wave of the Information Age.
What grabbed me right away was how personal it felt. Karels doesn’t hide the messiness: her brother’s public one-star review of her first book, her father’s fierce ambition, and the family’s chaotic dynamic all sit side by side with the story of a company at the center of a digital revolution. When she recalls their product being featured at the Paperless Office event at the Watergate Hotel or the excitement of reading Alvin Toffler’s The Third Wave, the scenes feel alive, filled with awe and possibility. Yet underneath, there’s tension, the sense that every success came at a cost.
I loved how Karels mixes technical history with heart. She writes about computers, word processors, and office automation, but always brings it back to people: her father’s restless drive, her brother’s pride, and her own search for purpose. Her prose has a natural rhythm, part storytelling, part confession, and even when she dives into details about the DEC VAX or the shift from typewriters to terminals, it feels human and intimate.
One of the most memorable moments for me was her father’s blunt advice: “Learning MASS-11 might be the best goddamn thing you ever do.” That line sums up the entire book, equal parts tough love and belief in possibility. Karels writes with humor, honesty, and just enough bite to keep you hooked.
War of the Words is perfect for readers who love memoirs that connect personal lives to cultural change. It’s about family, ambition, innovation, and the strange beauty of watching a dream take shape, and then fall apart. Anyone curious about women in tech or the human side of the computer revolution will find this story both moving and unforgettable.
Pages: 332 | ISBN : 978-1953728432
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Biographies of Business & Industrial Professionals, biographies of business professionals, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, business, Carol Karels, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, War of the Words: The Office Revolution That Transformed the Lives of Women and the Men They Worked For, writer, writing
You Don’t Have to Be Famous to Write a Memoir
Posted by Literary Titan
You Don’t Have to Be Famous is a witty, warm-hearted memoir that proves a life well-lived doesn’t require a red carpet or celebrity status. The author takes the reader on a journey from his Jewish-American childhood and his formative Boy Scout years, through his coming-of-age college experiences, to his moving to Brazil and teaching English in the heart of the Amazon Rainforest. Along the way, he weaves in pop culture gems-from Marilyn Monroe to “Dancing Queen”-alongside quirky facts, jokes, humorous quotes, and thoughtful reflections on regrets, apologies, amends, gratitude, and forgiveness. Part autobiography, part cultural time capsule, and part boomer wisdom, this memoir is a nostalgic, chuckle-to-yourself celebration of the ordinary moments that shape us. Perfect for fans of light-hearted memoirs, cultural commentary, and anyone who believes that every life has a story worth telling.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, goodreads, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Stephen Mark Silvers, story, trailer, writer, writing, You Don't Have to Be Famous to Write a Memoir
Connecting the Dots
Posted by Literary-Titan

Girl, Groomed is a raw and unflinching memoir that traces your childhood experiences of grooming and abuse at a horse stable, and the long, painful process of understanding how that past shaped your adult life and relationships. Why was this an important book for you to write?
I wanted to offer what I have learned personally and professionally about the importance of lining up with and healing from past trauma. I chose to use my own story to encourage readers that it is only through walking directly into the painful places that we can heal ourselves.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
The path towards reclaiming our lives is through an understanding of how trauma continues to impact ourselves and others. This shows up in many forms, but through an awareness of this, we gain the agency to decrease our reactivity and defensiveness that are constricting byproducts. This, in turn, gives us more choice and liberation over our lives going forward.
What was the most challenging part of writing your memoir, and what was the most rewarding?
Writing my memoir required me to delve back into memories that I had disconnected from. The process of re-experiencing what I had fractured off was both painful and healing. After all, we can only heal from what we can accurately name. Connecting the dots of my life helped me integrate and reclaim my story.
What do you hope is one thing readers take away from your story?
One takeaway is that trauma informs our lives, but it doesn’t define who we are or who we are becoming.
Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Instagram | Amazon
Raw and riveting, Girl, Groomed is seasoned psychotherapist Carol Odell’s evolving story of deepening her understanding of how the crisis she blindly imposes on her marriage is rooted in her own history of sexual abuse and violence at the hands of a predatory horse trainer who, for far too much of her young life, held all the reins. Chapters toggle back and forth between scenes of her childhood growing up jumping horses on the show circuit in Virginia and the therapy sessions she later undergoes as an adult sitting in “the other chair.”
Using her own journey, Carol demonstrates in this insightful memoir how unintegrated trauma limits us and our connection with others—and how the work of uncovering and reintegrating “what we do with what happens to us” can become the very source of our liberation.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Carol Odell, child abuse, ebook, Girl Groomed, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoirs, nonfiction, nook, novel, post-traumatic stress, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
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
Searching for Bowlby
Posted by Literary Titan

Searching for Bowlby is a sweeping and deeply personal exploration of the life and legacy of John Bowlby, the father of attachment theory. Told through vivid scenes and finely tuned historical detail. It’s an enthralling biography tracing Bowlby’s journey from his lonely Edwardian childhood to his groundbreaking work on human connection. Wooster weaves history, psychology, and his own story of loss and self-discovery into a narrative that feels as intimate as it is ambitious. The writing flows with a quiet rhythm, carrying readers from the fog-laden streets of London to the bomb-scarred fields of wartime Europe, always returning to one haunting question: what happens to a child who grows up unseen, and how can love heal what neglect has broken?
What struck me most was the warmth beneath the scholarship. Wooster doesn’t write like an academic standing at a distance; he writes like a man sitting across from you, sharing something that still aches. His prose has a softness to it, but it’s also sharp where it needs to be. He paints Bowlby not as a saint of science but as a flawed human being, brilliant, haunted, sometimes difficult. I enjoyed the emotional honesty in the writing. I could feel Wooster’s own grief bleeding through the page, his search for Bowlby folding into a search for meaning after personal loss. There’s something raw and redemptive about that honesty.
The historical passages are beautifully written. I caught myself wishing Wooster would linger less on the scenery and more on the man. But then, just as I was about to lose patience, he’d pull me back with a line so clean and true it stopped me cold. That’s the magic of this book. It breathes, it pauses, it meanders, and then it finds you again. Reading it felt like talking to an old friend about things that matter.
Searching for Bowlby isn’t just about psychology or history; it’s about the quiet revolution of being seen and loved after a lifetime of distance. It’s about the way we carry our parents’ ghosts into adulthood and how we learn, if we’re lucky, to forgive them. I’d recommend this book to readers who love reflective biographies, to anyone fascinated by the inner lives of thinkers, or to those who have ever felt the pull of childhood wounds into their grown-up hearts. It’s a thoughtful book, not just of one man, but of the fragile, beautiful thread that ties all of us together.
Pages: 369 | ASIN : B0DZ1DC8F3
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, biographies of philosophers, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, C.V.Wooster, ebook, goodreads, Historical UK biographies, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Searching for Bowlby, story, writer, writing
Manifesting the Impossible
Posted by Literary_Titan

In The Dressing Drink, you share both the memories and challenges of growing up with a mother born of high society and an absent father. Why was this an important book for you to write?
My mother passed away when I was 11, and I met my father at 14. He died when I was 15. Because I never really knew my parents, I felt it was important to explore their scrapbook, memorabilia, and the stories of personalities from show business and friends. This process was essential for me to create a mythology around them and to gain a better understanding of who they were for my mental health, especially at the age of 22.
I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?
The most challenging perspective I faced was that of a lost child. I lived a wild life, mostly in boarding schools. It never felt like I was lost; I simply moved from one situation to another, either happy or high. It wasn’t until I entered rehab that I had a conversation with my inner child, who looked up at me and said, “You tried to kill me.”
Did you learn anything about yourself while planning and writing this book?
Everything I have done in my life feels like “manifesting the impossible.” Even the journey of writing and compiling this book seemed like an unrealistic goal from the outside. Therefore, it’s a significant accomplishment to document my mother’s life, my father’s life, my family’s life, and parts of my own life. The five books that emerged from this effort are just a small glimpse into the larger story of my life.
What is one thing you hope readers take away from your experiences?
Certainly, the concept of being a survivor is about transcending survival to reach recovery. If we are honest, we are all in the process of recovery, whether we acknowledge it or not. I have been sober for 26 years and consider that borrowed time. Writing the book at 22 and publishing it at 68 is a lifelong compilation of my experiences.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
From the grand estates of old money to the memoir, which spans decades and explores themes of money, power, alcohol, deceit, death, war, and murder, Thomas King Flagg navigates a complex labyrinth while pulling up the roots of his family tree with all its glory and devastation.
Thomas King Flagg is the great-grandson of David Hazlitt King Jr., renowned for his significant contributions to the assembly of the Statue of Liberty. Flagg’s mother was a debutante and a radio personality who graced the cover of Cosmopolitan Magazine. At the same time, his father was a dancer and comedian who starred in several theatrical productions and some movies. He also starred on Broadway with Ethel Merman in Hello Dolly. Unfortunately, Thomas did not reconnect with his father until shortly before his death, missing out on a connection that could have profoundly influenced his life.
Once you begin reading The Dressing Drink, you won’t be able to stop until you’ve savored every last drop!
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Actor & Entertainer Biographies, author, Biographies of Actors & Actresses, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoirs, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Dressing Drink, Thomas King Flagg, writer, writing
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
The Cauldron: A Struggle for Survival by Joe Clark
A Jericho’s Cobble Miscellany by Tom Shachtman
Childhood’s Hour: The Lost Desert by E.E. Glass
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🏆The Literary Titan Book Award🏆
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) October 3, 2025
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. #WritingCommunity https://t.co/LFXGuQUthF pic.twitter.com/ffQGZJQwBG
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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
Literary Titan 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
Just a Little Witch, Mostly a Mom by Diana Jonas
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🌟Celebrating excellence in #nonfiction!🌟
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) October 3, 2025
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/sgq6sPhCVe pic.twitter.com/jRw5oJCgTs
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