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Pandora’s Box Has Been Opened

Craig Weidhuner Author Interview

Liberator: The People’s Guard follows the Liberator as he faces off against two new super villains, one has the ability to take any form, both organic and not, and a being that absorbs the life force of others. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

It was really just the natural evolution of the story. Volume 2, left off with the idea of the various nations ramping up their eugenics experiments, so it naturally led to the question of “what would happen if someone were accidentally exposed to this super soldier serum?” Like the book says, Pandora’s box has been opened and there’s no closing it now. Plus it was also a case of creating a rouges gallery for the hero. A hero is only as good as the villains they fight. The Liberator really doesn’t have a main adversary the way Superman has Lex Luthor, Batman has the Joker, or the Ninja Turtles have Shredder. I just needed some more villains for him to fight and I decided to make these two female for a more gender balanced story. Incidentally, several months ago I was in a store at a mall, talking with one of the staff about my books. When I told her about Oksana and her ability to absorb the life force of others, she loved the irony of the fact that women are the live givers, and here’s this woman who’s essentially taking that life force energy back. Something I never even thought about when writing, or at least I wasn’t consciously aware of it. 

What were some ideas that were important for you to personify in your characters?

In the case of the villains, as stated above, it was really just a matter of creating a rouges gallery for the hero. Upon creating the villains the first question was “How did they get these powers?” Then I went from there. With Oksana, it was about a plant operator who hated her job, her life, who was under constant stress and upon getting her powers her reaction was basically, “Now’s my chance to get back at everyone who ruined my life.” As for Mistika, I’ve often read about how in the Soviet Union they would brag about how they evolved beyond “capitalist/materialist greed”. While that was the official government stance, the reality was quite different. For Mistika it was just a case of, “With these powers I can have/do whatever I want and no one can stop me!” As for Tovarich, it was really hammering home the fears and doubts in the back of his mind. The idea that maybe he’s not the hero everyone thinks he is. He’s the guy who’s staying up at night wondering “What if the state I’m supposed so serve is actually the REAL bad guy here?”

How did you balance the action scenes with the story elements and still keep a fast pace in the story?

I always put the story first. For me it’s a question of “does this scene serve the overall story?” I’m not the type of person to just put random action scenes just for the sake of having an action scene. It’s like with a movie, having gratuitous violence, sex, language, CGI, special effects for no reason other than “Hey, look what we can do,” doesn’t make for a good story. It’s like my script writing teacher in college (the late Michael Monty) often said, if your story is garbage, no amount of violence, special effects, sex and so on will save it. Basically I play the scene out in my head as if it were a movie, then I try to find the words to properly describe what I’m seeing in my mind, so I can give you as clear a picture as possible when you’re reading the book. Particularly when the Liberator was fighting Oksana. When it begins, you’ve basically got Superman fighting a normal woman only for it to end with him being the normal man fighting Supergirl. It was a case of how do I realistically make her drain his powers without him figuring it out too soon. The idea of her messing with his mind seemed like a logical way to throw him off. That and I like it when a story goes into the character’s heads; what are they thinking? Why do they think/feel this way? What do they believe in and so on. For me personally, that’s more exciting than giving them cool powers and seeing what they do with them.

Will there be a follow-up novel to this story? If so, what aspects of the story will the next book cover?

Oh yes volume 4 will continue the story. (Don’t tell me you didn’t notice the “sneak peek at volume 4” part in the book!) I actually wrote both together as one story, but I was having a bit of writer’s block, so the story as a whole wasn’t finished. I was debating, “should I wait until I finish it all, or just put out what I’ve got so far and make it like a two-part episode of a TV series?” In the end I decided, since I’ve got most of the first half done, I’ll finish that part up and come back to finish the rest later. I don’t write in a linear fashion. I’ll often just jump between parts in no particular order, writing and playing connect-the-dots with the different scenes in the book. If I can’t think of something, I’ll just write down  “add more later” in brackets, then come back to it. While I don’t want to give away too many spoilers, it will feature some unexpected twists and a villain team up with Mistika, Oksana and the Intellectual.

Also I naturally have to throw in a plug for my other series “Mystical Force”, as I’m currently writing volume 7 of that one. That will introduce a character I’ve been teasing for the last few volumes, the “descendant of the darkness” mentioned in the prophecy all the way back in volume 1. Hopefully that one will be out around spring of 2026. 

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Pandora’s Box has been opened, and now there’s no closing it. In rushing to create more super soldiers, Ruthenia inadvertently unleashed two new super villains on itself. Mistika, who has the ability to take any form, including non-organic, and Oksana Ovechkin, who can absorb the life force of others and, in the Liberator’s case, gain his strength and powers.

While trying to fight her, she ends up draining the Liberator of his powers, leaving her the super- powered being while he’s nothing more than an ordinary man. The Liberator’s super-strength and invulnerability left many criminals cowering in fear. Now it seems he’s about to find out what it’s like to be on the receiving end.

Included in this book is a special bonus story: “The Misadventures of Captain Communist,” a humorous parody of the Liberator series. Meet Vladimir Prokov, dictator of the Soviet Union and its greatest hero (by decree of the Central Committee), Captain Communist, along with his trusty sidekick (and real hero of the story), Socialist Boy. Together, they fight to protect the workers of Russia from the icy hand of that cold-hearted capitalist, Mr. Free-Enterprise, who wants to run his own business selling frozen treats. It’s camp comedy and political satire blended with superhero shenanigans for flavour. See good triumph over evil, or evil triumph over good, or one form of evil triumph over another form of evil. It really all depends on where your social/political/economic views lie . . .

Tooth-builders Came to Life

Nate Moeller Author Interview

Twinkling Wings and Toothy Things follows a tooth-builder from the Tooth Fairy Realm who, while on a mission, experiences some mishaps leading to a late-night adventure filled with valuable lessons. What was the inspiration for your story?

The inspiration was my daughter, Sadie.  During family dinner, when my little girl got frustrated because she didn’t have teeth to chew, the idea of the tooth-builders came to life!

I found Nutter Nate to be an entertaining and likeable character. What was your inspiration for this character?

In real life, my brother and I own and operate a building company so naturally there would need to be a leader in the tooth building realm and I’m a little nutty, so Nutter Nate rhymed and it made goofy sense for the young audience to think that might be funny!

What were some educational aspects that were important for you to include in this children’s book?

Teamwork is definitely one of the main takeaways along with in life there will always be challenges to overcome whether it is on a job site or in an office building or at home.  

What story are you currently in the middle of writing?

I left the ending open for more adventures for the characters.  Maybe a book about lost teeth that are thrown in trash cans or swallowed (don’t want kids to be devastated thinking the tooth fairy won’t have their lost tooth).  I’m always listening for book ideas that are not out there.  

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Have you ever wondered where teeth come from? Or where they go after you put them under your pillow?
Before a tooth fairy gets their wings, they work day and night as tooth-builders. Equipped with pearly paste, calcium soil, and bristly brushes, tooth-builders help build and install children’s shiny new adult teeth so that kids can smile with pride. Join Nutter Nate’s team of talented tooth-builders as they leave the Tooth Fairy Realm to install Sam and Sadie’s new teeth. But watch out for adults and animals—a pup’s bark could ruin Sam and Sadie’s bites!

BeBe the Not-So- Brave Butterfly

Bravery rarely comes easily to anyone, yet for a butterfly, it can feel almost impossible. BeBe learns this the moment her life as a caterpillar ends and she awakens as something startlingly new. Her brilliant wings captivate her, but they also unsettle her. She now stands apart from everything familiar, and the world, once predictable, feels suddenly immense. Should she embrace this transformed identity and step forward, or retreat and hide? The story lingers on that tension and follows BeBe as she wrestles with the uncertainty of being seen in a shape she barely understands. With the help of friends to cheer her on, she discovers that being a butterfly isn’t nearly as frightening as she imagined and that an even larger world waits for her to explore.

Kimberly Robinson’s BeBe the Not-So-Brave Butterfly offers a gently crafted, warmly illustrated story that celebrates the courage we find when life presents its challenges. Through BeBe’s hesitant journey, young readers witness the emotional terrain of change that is confusing, intimidating, yet rich with the possibility of discovery.

Robinson’s connection to the narrative is unmistakable. After undergoing the discovery and removal of a brain tumor, she endured a long, difficult recovery, an experience that reshaped her life as profoundly as BeBe’s metamorphosis. That personal transformation becomes the book’s emotional engine, and children are the fortunate beneficiaries of the lessons she extracted from her experience.

The result is a genuinely lovely story. Soft, muted illustrations, evocative of gentle watercolor exercises in a youth studio, provide a serene canvas for the tender, economical prose. BeBe, clearly a reflection of Robinson herself, voices her confusion with striking honesty. She no longer recognizes her own form, a sentiment often echoed by those recovering from serious medical trauma.

Books exploring such territory can easily slip into somberness or didacticism, yet Robinson skillfully avoids both. Instead, she offers an uplifting message: change will find us, sometimes abruptly, sometimes painfully, but it need not be feared. In fact, opening our wings to unfamiliar possibilities may lead to joy and meaning far beyond anything we once imagined.

Motion Dazzle: A Memoir of Motherhood, Loss, and Skating on Thin Ice

Motion Dazzle is a memoir about a daughter trying to keep her life steady while everything around her seems to slide in unpredictable directions. The book shifts between her years as a competitive figure skater and the present day as she juggles early motherhood, a marriage, and the slow, heartbreaking decline of her own mother. The chapters move in short, vivid pieces that echo the idea of dazzle camouflage and the incomplete way memory works. What unfolds is a layered story of love, loss, identity, and grit. The author’s voice is warm and sharp at the same time, and the result feels honest in a way that hits straight in the chest.

I was pulled into her world. The skating scenes are full of pressure and sparkle and fear, and Jocelyn Jane Cox writes them with such clarity that I felt like I was watching from the rink boards. The early chapters show her constant push to perform, to smile when she is hurting, to carry herself with poise even when she feels anything but composed. Later, watching her try to shape a first birthday party while her mother is in the hospital had me tensing up in real time. The tiny details of the zebra books, the blue painter’s tape, the quiches cooling on the counter caught me off guard because they were so tender and so fraught at once. I could feel her heart splitting open as she tried to make something lovely for her son while her grief pressed in from the edges.

The portraits of her mother are what stayed with me the most. The way she describes their twenty-year daily phone call, the quiet jokes, the listening, the stories from childhood that finally spill out in fragments. Grief shows up in the book like a tide that rises slowly, then all at once, and I found myself rooting for her to catch her breath. The writing feels bright, then raw, then bright again, and I loved that. It felt real. Not polished grief, but grief that stumbles and snaps and softens. I could feel her longing for more time and her guilt and her fierce love drowning each other out in waves. It made me think about my own family more than I expected.

Motion Dazzle would be a powerful read for anyone who has cared for an aging parent or anyone who has tried to grow a new life at the same time another one is fading. It would also resonate with former athletes or anyone who knows what it means to chase perfection even when it costs more than it gives.

Pages: 273 | ASIN : B0FHF95RKB

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The Goldilocks Effect in Prescription Drugs

Elizabeth Reed Aden Author Interview

The Goldilocks Genome follows an epidemiologist investigating the death of her best friend, who uncovers more suspicious deaths that can be linked to the Goldilocks effect in prescription drugs. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I heard an NPR interview with Irv Weissman, a leader in stem cell biology, was asked, “How does the lay public learn about science?” His answer: “Fiction.” Weissman’s insight inspired me to use my knowledge and background in pharmaceuticals, genetics, and epidemiology to craft a medical thriller to introduce the lay public to the importance of personalized medicine.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

One of the most important themes I wanted to explore in The Goldilocks Genome was the concept of the Goldilocks effect in prescription drugs. Meaning the prescribed dose of a medication can be “too little”, “too much”, or “just right” depending on a person’s individual genetics. Today we have the tools to discover how our genes process prescription drugs and initiate a discussion with their healthcare provider or physician to get a prescription or dose that is right for them.    

What is your background and experience, and how did it help you write the medical thriller, The Goldilocks Genome?

My doctoral research was in biomedical anthropology where I used epidemiology to study the natural history of infection with hepatitis B virus. My post-doctoral studies focused on human genetics. I then went on to build a career in pharmaceuticals where I was learned the basics of pharmacology. The Goldilocks Genome combines all of these skills and passions while using antidepressants as the drug of choice to showcase why personalized medicine is important and necessary.

What is the next book that you’re working on, and when can your fans expect it out?

My next book is a memoir, Mud, Microbes, and Medicine that goes into depths of solving the problem of how infants in a remote Melanesian culture become chronic carriers of hepatitis B virus. Beyond the science it is also my coming of age story set in the 1970s across Melanesia, Philadelphia, the Silicon Valley, and Basel, Switzerland. Mud, Microbes, and Medicine will be published April 21, 2026 and is available for pre-order on Amazon and other booksellers.

Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website | LinkedIn | Instagram | TikTok

When San Francisco–based FDA epidemiologist Dr. Carrie Hediger uncovers a rash of unexplained deaths while investigating the suspiciously convenient death of her best friend, she becomes determined to find answers—even if it leads her to a murderer, and even if confronting authority, using her wiles, and bending the rules to get justice risks her future in the FDA.

To unravel the puzzle, Carrie assembles a team: some talented post-doctoral fellows, a quirky pharmacologist, an unctuous chemist, and a skeptical FBI agent that she can’t help her attraction for. Together, they follow the data through the twists and turns, eventually uncovering that the Goldilocks effect in prescription drugs—the premise that people are inclined to seek “just the right amount” of something—is central to understanding these mysterious deaths. Through the twists and turns, Carrie and her team enter a race to uncover the truth . . . and catch a killer.

Grounded in real data analysis techniques, real science and pharmacology, and actual current psychiatric practices, The Goldilocks Genome is simultaneously a taut, race-against-time thriller and a condemnation of the psychiatric industry’s failure to implement genetic-based “personalized medicine”—a problem that persists to this day.

Amongst Embers and Ashes

Amongst Embers and Ashes tells the story of Scarlet, a girl raised on an isolated farm who learns she is a pyro elemental. Her quiet life collapses as secrets spill open. She is taken from the only home she has known and thrown into a kingdom where politics, power, and fear swirl around her. The book follows her as she meets the other elementals, discovers the truth behind her past, and feels the weight of a world that both wants and fears her. The tale blends magic, trauma, and coming-of-age moments into a journey that keeps tilting between warm hope and sharp dread.

I felt swept up right away. The writing has this fast pulse to it, almost like Scarlet’s own nerves buzzing under the surface. Scenes crackle with emotion. Little moments hit hard, such as Scarlet lighting her fingertips so she can see in the dark, or the tight, bitter silence that fills the farmhouse during dinner. The dialogue feels natural and messy. People talk over each other. They misunderstand each other. I found that refreshing. The story leans into the confusion of being young and scared, and the author does not tidy it up. Sometimes Scarlet’s thoughts spiral in a way that feels raw and very emotional.

I liked the theme of being labeled dangerous before you even understand who you are. Scarlet’s guilt sits like a stone in her chest, and I could feel its weight while reading. The contrast between her rough farm life and the polished castle made me think about how power works and who gets to feel safe. I also enjoyed the mix of elemental magic with political tension. It gave the world a lot of texture, even in quiet scenes. The pacing is fast, and the energy of the story pulled me along, and I found myself caring more about the characters than the neatness of the plot. That says a lot about how well the emotional core is written.

This book would be great for readers who love character-driven fantasy, especially those who enjoy stories about teens pushed into roles they never asked for. If you like magic mixed with messy feelings, or if you want a tale that hits close to the heart, then Amongst Embers and Ashes is an easy recommendation.

Pages: 362 | ASIN : B0F2ZFDN9W

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The Alchemical Grail: Unraveling the Hermetic Mysteries of the Templars & Cosmic Unity

The book dives into a sweeping mix of mysticism, history, and personal exploration, stitching together the Templars, the Holy Grail, ancient myth, and futuristic tech into one long thread. The prologue sets the tone at once. A Templar kneels in the shadow of Chartres Cathedral, guarding a secret of cosmic fire, and this becomes the spark for a journey through symbols, consciousness, and something the author calls the AetherForge, a device meant to unite energy and mind in a single pulse at 432 Hz. The book spreads out from there, touching Rosicrucians, Freemasonry, brain-computer interfaces, and the search for a universal pattern that ties everything together. It is part memoir and part esoteric treatise. All of it sits on the author’s belief that the Grail was never a cup. The Grail is a transformation of the self.

The author writes with a great deal of conviction. I liked the raw personal fire behind the ideas. The passages on destiny and fate, for example, use the image of a spider web to describe how our choices narrow as we move through life until we meet the center where the spider waits. It is simple and poetic. It worked for me. The shifts between medieval geometry, cosmic consciousness, and Neuralink-powered star gates left me thinking. Yet I kept reading. I felt the author’s passion and stubborn curiosity. I could tell he wanted me to feel it too.

I also found myself reacting to the emotional center of the book. The small autobiographical moments, the tough humor, the lived pain, and the sense that the quest is not just intellectual but personal gave the wilder ideas some grounding. The language can get grand at times, but the message came through clearly. Find the truth inside yourself. Accept your scars. Step toward the unknown anyway. It is an intimate kind of instruction wrapped inside a huge tapestry of history and speculation.

By the time I reached the sections on the AetherForge and the call to evolve through consciousness and technology, I could feel the author closing the circle. He writes that this device is not just tech. It is a bridge to tomorrow, a way for humanity to grow into something new if we can meet the challenge with unity and wisdom. Whether or not I believe in the device is beside the point. I understood the spirit behind it. The book is really about seeking a better version of ourselves and daring to imagine beyond the boundaries we accept without question.

I would recommend this book to readers who enjoy bold ideas, sprawling esoteric systems, and a voice that never tones itself down. If you like mixing mysticism with science, or if you enjoy authors who write with raw intensity and personal grit, you will get something out of this. If you are willing to follow a wild path and see where it leads, this book will open a door.

How to Host a Unicorn: A Tale of Hospitality & Manners

Dag, the unicorn, is devoted to order. It shows in his neat attire. It shows in his measured speech. It defines his careful, structured view of the world. Nick, by contrast, is a bear powered by noise, disruption, and cheerful mayhem. Their friendship is unexpected from the start. When Nick invites Dag to visit, good intentions collide with very different ideas of fun. Nick tries hard to entertain and include his guest. The results are disastrous. Dag is stunned by Nick’s lifestyle and unsettled by the chaos surrounding him. The question at the heart of the story is simple and resonant: can two opposites find common ground and truly understand one another?

How to Host a Unicorn: A Tale of Hospitality and Manners, by Sara Causey, belongs to a thoughtful corner of illustrated children’s literature. It tells a charming story while also offering clear moral guidance. The book is especially well-suited to readers aged ten and up, inviting them to engage with its richer social moments and emotional depth in ways that older children are well-equipped to appreciate.

The illustrations carry much of the emotional weight. Dag’s expressions are especially effective, capturing his anxiety and confusion with precision and humor. The artwork also delivers several memorable set pieces, each escalating Nick’s attempts at hospitality. Every effort to improve the situation only compounds the disorder, pushing the narrative forward with visual energy and comedic tension.

Causey’s message is clear and handled with care. Not everyone experiences the same activities as enjoyable. That difference deserves respect. Dag and Nick represent contrasting personalities, neither wrong nor superior. Friendship, the book suggests, requires compromise and empathy. Shared experiences must feel safe and pleasant for everyone involved.

At its core, How to Host a Unicorn is a story about inclusion. It presents that idea in a way that feels accessible and sincere. It is also a lesson worth learning early. Taken to heart, it has the potential to shape kinder interactions well beyond the page.

Pages: 32 | ASIN : B0FXYGMZHX

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