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Army of Three
Posted by Literary Titan

Army of Three follows the Fassbinder brothers through a life shaped by loss, love, violence, and the weight of impossible gifts. The story opens small and personal, then builds into something that stretches across decades, worlds, and even versions of reality. It starts with two young men chasing criminals at night and grows into a tale about loyalty, grief, and destiny. Along the way we meet Azrael, a mysterious and powerful woman whose bond with Axel becomes the heart of the book, and later we see how her death fractures everything the brothers knew. By the time I reached the final pages, the story had folded back on itself in ways that felt both surprising and strangely right, and the letter from Karl brought a quiet and emotional sense of closure.
The writing is straightforward, yet it carries a sincerity that makes the emotional moments land with real weight. Scenes like Axel holding Azrael after the attack shook me. His heartbreak felt blunt and unfiltered. The author is not afraid to lean into big feelings, and the story benefits from that. I liked how the quieter moments in forests or diners or rooftops created space for the characters to breathe. Those scenes let me sit with them, and I grew to care about them, even when they made choices that frustrated me. There is an earnestness to the prose that makes the chaos of superhuman fights and government conspiracies feel grounded.
I also found myself surprised by how much the book weighs in questions of fate and identity. Axel’s struggle to figure out what kind of man he wants to be resonated with me. The story plays with the idea that heroism is not clean or noble, and sometimes it is just two broken people trying to survive what life handed them. Karl’s evolution unfolded cleanly and was emotionally potent as well. Watching him carry the burden of protecting his brother and then eventually writing that final letter made him feel painfully human. Even the supernatural touches, like Azrael’s powers and the strange forces lurking in the dark, worked best when they mirrored the characters’ inner fears. Sometimes I wanted the pacing to slow a bit so I could sit longer with those moments, but the urgency of the plot has its own appeal.
The story closes in a way that honors its emotional core, and it left me thinking about sacrifice and second chances. I would recommend Army of Three to readers who enjoy character-driven science fiction and action stories that are fueled by emotion as much as spectacle. It is a good fit for anyone who likes tales about brothers, unlikely heroes, and love that changes the course of a life.
Pages: 219 | ASIN : B0G26F47K1
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Army of Three, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dystopian, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Maxwell J Hammond, nook, novel, post-apocalyptic, psychological thriller, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, story, thriller, time travel, writer, writing
A Symbol of Time
Posted by Literary Titan

A Symbol of Time is a sweeping work of science fiction that follows a dying species as it flees its collapsing Homeworld and sets course for the “Third World,” a dangerous and vibrant planet filled with prehistoric monsters, hostile climates, and uncertain hope. The story opens with the political struggle of leaders like Elthyris, who pushes her people toward escape, and then expands into a tense generational mission through deep space where fear, mutiny, and loss threaten the survival of everyone aboard. By the time the colonists finally approach their new world, the book has painted an entire civilisation wrestling with extinction, guilt, and the fragile possibility of beginning again.
The story moves with a clarity and earnestness that makes the stakes feel heavy without bogging the story down. Author John Turnbull spends time on sensory details: the grit in the air of the dying planet, the hum of the ship’s systems, the sharp dread in a crowded briefing room as monstrous creatures appear on a screen. These moments gave me the sense of being there, not as a distant observer but as someone tucked into those cramped ship corridors, overhearing worries and watching loyalties shift. Sometimes I wanted certain conversations to go deeper, especially when characters brushed up against big ethical questions. But the writing carries a steady confidence, and it kept me curious about what each character would choose next.
The story blends large-scale worldbuilding with interpersonal tension, letting us watch society shrink down and then stretch again under pressure. I liked the way the book raises questions about responsibility and survival without forcing neat answers. The mission logs, political debates, and emotional undercurrents between characters all layer together until you feel how messy a desperate exodus would really be. Some plot beats arrive suddenly, especially the catastrophic loss of Ark Hope, but that abruptness made sense to me. Space is indifferent. Disaster doesn’t wait for pacing. That raw edge worked.
I felt the book speaking to anyone who enjoys science fiction that leans into survival, moral tension, and the rebuilding of society. It will especially appeal to readers who like their sci-fi grounded more in people than in technology, even when dinosaurs and starships share the page. If you’re drawn to stories about second chances and the uncomfortable truths that come with them, A Symbol of Time is one you’ll want to pick up.
Pages: 234 | ASIN : B0G2CP49WX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A Symbol of Time, Alternative History, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, John Westley Turnbull, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, story, writer, writing
The Original Human Beings (Audiobook)
Posted by Literary Titan

Listening to The Original Human Beings on audiobook, with Yareli Arizmendi as the narrator, felt less like consuming a novel and more like being personally invited to that Wallowa Lake campfire where Never Morales Santos Sundown tells her story. Her voice is soothing but firm, and that combination brought real weight to the ideas in the book. I felt like I was in the hands of someone who absolutely understood the gravity of what she was saying. The clarity of her delivery gave the whole narrative an air of authority.
The early chapters in the city dump were honestly hard for me to get through. The children live and scavenge in a toxic landfill, dodging soldiers, cops, and cartel thugs who treat them as expendable. Never’s mother is trapped in a horrifying relationship with General Mendosa and his bodyguard Gómez, and the violence they bring into the dump is unflinching. But the book refuses to collapse into misery. It keeps interrupting the horror with wild, irreverent humor: Mama staging mock-death dramas, kids playing pranks on authorities, and Loco Lucy, the aristocrat turned “vampiro” in a torn ball gown, reigning over the garbage like some broken fairy-tale queen. That mix of grief and laughter gave me whiplash, yet it felt emotionally true to how people actually survive trauma.
As Never’s world widens, the book shifts gears into something more reflective and overtly philosophical. We follow her escape from Honduras into the orbit of the Nez Percé, whose stories of being “The Walking-Out People” and “Original Human Beings” give her a new lens for understanding both her own life and the wider human story. The anthropology and Indigenous-knowledge sections could have turned into lectures, but because they’re filtered through Never’s battered, stubbornly curious voice, they feel more like late-night conversations with an elder than like theory. I loved how the narrative insists that humans, animals, and land form one kinship network, and how that idea quietly expands what “neighbor” means.
The final third, with Never as an aging anthropologist and cellist, took the book to a place I didn’t expect. Her Carnegie Hall performance could have read as a neat inspirational payoff, but it’s written more like a communal exorcism than a triumphalist finale. When she begins to dance with her cello, channeling the children of the dump, the migrants on the trains, and the songs of the Nimiipuu, the scene slips into a kind of musical magical realism. By the end I felt that click you get when a long, winding narrative suddenly makes sense of itself.
This is not a gentle read: it’s full of abuse, cartel violence, and spiritual harm. But having Yareli Arizmendi as the narrator made a big difference in how I could receive it. Her voice softened some of the edges without ever diluting the message; it held the space so the story’s mix of grief, joy, and defiant love could land fully. For me, the intensity was worth it. The story never lets go of joy as resistance, or of love as a kind of evolutionary leap humanity still has to make.
Listening Length: 13 hours and 43 minutes
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, audiobook, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dr. Timothy Dale White, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, The Original Human Beings, thriller, writer, writing, Yareli Arizmendi
Navigating Expectations
Posted by Literary_Titan

Broken Alliance follows the Venture’s crew as they uncover a conspiracy tied to black-market thetic technology, corporate power grabs, and the lingering ghost of Sovereign. How did your goals for this book differ from the first installment?
While Tracer was about introducing the crew and establishing the stakes of their world, Broken Alliance shifts the focus to the ‘aftermath.’ I wanted to explore the consequences of their initial decisions—not just for the Venture crew, but for the Settled Systems at large. In many ways, this second book was easier to write because the characters’ voices were already established; however, the challenge lay in ensuring their growth felt organic. My goal was to navigate the expectations set in Book 1, sometimes fulfilling them and other times intentionally subverting them.
Characters are often forced to make imperfect choices. Are you more interested in right answers or honest ones?
Most of us go into heroic stories expecting the characters to make the ‘right’ choice. It’s an expectation built by the books and movies we’ve grown up with. To me, that’s why literature is so vital—it teaches us what it means to be human on this tiny planet. Even when authors ‘flip the script,’ we still have that core desire to see good triumph over evil. I try to lean into honest answers wherever possible, but leading my heroes toward a morally right conclusion is ultimately how I share my own values through my work.
What makes chosen family such a powerful counterweight to failing institutions?
We’ve all been told that you can’t choose your family—that ‘blood is thicker than water.’ Personally, I believe that’s a falsehood. There is no greater bond than one forged in a close-knit circle of friends who have proven, time and again, that they have your best interests at heart. These are not always the people who share our blood, but they are often the ones who have bled with us. We can no more choose our relatives than we can choose the systemic world we were born into, but we can choose who to accept as our true family—just as we can choose to speak up against tyranny and corruption.
The ending offers a pause rather than closure. What threads from Broken Alliance are you most excited to explore next?
My goal was to provide a sense of closure for this specific arc while hinting at the larger story still to come. Each character has changed so much, but for me, the most exciting part is knowing they have much further to go. We’ve only scratched the surface of the Tracer universe in these first two books. I’m looking forward to expanding the scope of the series and perhaps even stepping outside the current saga to explore these characters from new perspectives.
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website
The crew of The Venture—Andre, Bex, Bishop, and Caleb—are now Alliance Tracers, tasked with hunting down those who seek to capitalize in the wake of Sovereign’s defeat. But loyalty is a fragile thing in a universe still reeling from the brink of destruction. Meanwhile, General Katherine Mallory navigates a treacherous new battlefield, facing enemies as formidable in the Council Chambers as any on the front lines. And deep within Trelin Base, Commander Bryton guards the galaxy’s most dangerous secret: Sovereign, whose unnatural power remains an ominous threat.
Old wounds fester and new forces rise, all vying to unlock Sovereign’s power. As the fragile peace threatens to unravel, these heroes must choose where their allegiances lie. Will the Alliance endure this new era, or is it doomed to collapse and shatter into a Broken Alliance?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Broken Alliance, cyberpunk, David E Graham, ebook, fiction, goodreads, hard science fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, sci fi, space fleet, story, writer, writing
The Healing Powers of Travel & Connection
Posted by Literary_Titan

Belonging to the World is an inspirational travel memoir that shares your journey of healing after the tragic loss of your wife and your mission to travel to all 193 countries on earth, and the personal transformation you experience. Why was this an important book for you to write?
I did not start out traveling to write a book, but rather as a means of escape. It was one year into my journey, after a compelling trip to Afghanistan only a year after the Taliban takeover, that I realized that I was really “living” again, learning and, most of all, collecting stories. At that point, I realized that there was an evolving story that I needed to tell. It was about the healing powers of travel and connection.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
Sure, other than specific profound connections with people from everyday life in countries all over the world, below are some themes and ideas that kept coming to the surface:
Ø The unexpected and transformative power of grief
Ø Letting go of control brings unexpected peak experiences around the world
Ø Finding awe and wonder in the world’s places considered some of the world’s most dangerous
Ø The best things in life can happen by chance if you let them
Ø Reconciling a world that feels deeply divided yet profoundly interconnected
Ø How do we honor the past yet be ready to step into what may come next
Ø How the world can change you if you let it
What was the most challenging part of writing your memoir, and what was the most rewarding?
It took me a while in my journey to understand that I wasn’t simply seeking new countries, but the people within them. With that came the anticipation of finding the one story in each place that resonated with me, my story, shaped by my own impressions and by the mystery of how and when it would reveal itself. Somehow, it always did.
I found that profoundly moving: the realization that if you seek people and their wisdom with an open heart and genuine respect, you will find it.
How has writing your memoir impacted or changed your life?
I am sure for many writers, the release of a book is the end of a big project. For me it is end of a significant entire chapter of my life, of devastating loss, of being lost, of leaning into grief and going on a amazing journey. That journey completely rewired my brain and changed the way I see the world and my place in it.
Author Links: GoodReads | Instagram | Website
Some journeys we choose. Others choose us.
In the aftermath of tragedy, Barry Hoffner wanted to feel the pulse of the world again. The whole world.
When Barry Hoffner lost his wife and travel partner, Jackie, in a sudden tragedy, his grief was a black hole that consumed everything. But amid the quiet wreckage of loss, something unexpected stirred: the call to move, to reconnect, and to live fully again.
What began as a reluctant return to the road became an audacious mission to visit all 193 countries on Earth-not to escape his pain but to transform it. Along the way, Barry discovered a world with far more depth and complexity than headlines suggest-one full of unexpected joy, even amid hardship and struggle. From war zones to mountaintops, refugee camps to ancient ruins, he found people whose kindness and openness brought him back to life.
Belonging to the World is a deeply felt memoir of healing from grief, finding resilience, and forging human connection across the globe
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Belonging to the World, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, inspirational, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, research, story, travel, travel memoir, true story, writer, writing
A Bit of a Crazy Event
Posted by Literary Titan

Book 5 – The Lions follows a frightened but kind-hearted hero as she navigates a dangerous wilderness, forms unlikely alliances, and discovers that courage can exist even when fear never fully fades. What were some sources that informed this book’s development?
The Lions is the 5th book in a 10 book series, all written whilst I was travelling through Africa in a camper van with my husband. The lion’s story developed from a bit of a crazy event we experienced ourselves. We were on a guided walk in the Botswana Delta with a guide we later discovered was really quite inexperienced. We were aware there had been a lion kill that morning, as we had all heard it from our tent, and we stumbled upon a pride of lions just about to start their buffalo breakfast. It was a huge buffalo (particularly compared to us – we literally would have been a side of chips in comparison), and the lions had fought hard for it, The male roared so loudly at us that I think my heart stopped for a minute or two. We had a bit of a stare off for a minute, us and them, until both parties left – us walking backwards slowly, they walking in the long grass, quite quickly, in the opposite direction. It was that moment that inspired Book 5, particularly how the lions all scoff at Casper, a teeny weeny house cat, worried that they’d bother eating something that was smaller than the average hairball they cough up every now and then.
What inspired Casper’s personality? Especially the choice to let her stay scared while still being brave?
I think Casper is all of us, brave and scared all the time. Anxious and confident. I mean, I know I’m anxious, and I know so many of my friends and family are too, but nobody ever really knows that, because we are confident too. We spend our life navigating new waters; whether it’s a new job or a new school or a new friend or a new town – how can we not be scared and anxious? But we have to do it, we have to get through, or wouldn’t we just be a shivering wreck all the time? Never leave home? I ran a film school for some years, back in Australia, and so many of my students were so, so anxious, and they thought they were the only one. But here they were, at a university, far from home, learning to become a filmmaker. I realised then that just about everyone is anxious, the most talented, the most beautiful, the most weird, wonderful, crazy – it doesn’t matter who we are, we’re all anxious and we should know that we are all anxious, and we are also all brave, and that it’s perfectly normal to be that way.
Was there a particular animal character (or group of animals) you had the most fun writing, and why?
In this book I loved writing about the lion brothers. These huge, beautiful, confident (and a little arrogant) animals, kings of the jungle, who don’t have to do much but swagger around all day long while the lionesses hunt and care for the kids, and here they are, being yelled at by a tiny house cat (no bigger than a chip). But at the end of the day, the minute they hear their family is in danger, they jump up with no thought but to protect them, regardless of the danger. I enjoyed the brotherly love they had, the easy conversation between them, the confidence in their kingliness.
In other books, one of my absolute favourites was the baby elephant, Bugle, in Book 2, The Elephants, because he reminded me of so many young boys (I have 4 younger brothers), and their obsession with things like poop and farting. I loved writing him because I found him funny and I probably was missing my brothers at the time!
The story emphasizes cooperation across different creatures. Was that message something you planned from the start?
The entire series came about because I’ve always wondered if cats and dogs that get lost and then find their way home, sometimes hundreds of miles away, asked other animals for directions. And why wouldn’t they? And the world is so terribly chaotic at the moment, I just wanted to create a world where there is peace and kindness and no hatred for someone who is not like you. I know that my little Casperverse is all love and cooperation and gentleness in a harsh world, and maybe it’s unrealistic, but I find it peaceful and I want to live there, and I hope that when kids are reading my books they ‘live’ there too, if only for the few hours it takes to read. Maybe this behaviour, this cooperation can be as learned as bigotry is, and maybe, in the end, enough books like this will win the battle for the next generation so that it isn’t just wishful thinking anymore.
Author Links: Website | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn |TikTok | YouTube | Pinterest | Goodreads
After leaving the noisy baboons behind, Casper wakes up beneath a tree full of chattering guinea fowl, only to stumble straight into the path of two enormous lions. But Hasani and Harry aren’t quite what she expected. Between their royal-sized egos, jump-scares, and thunderous laughs, Casper soon discovers that being king of the jungle comes with its own set of problems—especially when poachers return to the savannah.
Joined by an army of surprising new allies—spiders, scorpions, and even antlions—Casper helps the pride turn the hunters into the hunted, proving once again that courage doesn’t always come with claws and fangs.
Perfect for readers ages 5–10, The Lions is a beautifully illustrated chapter book packed with:
• Exciting animal adventures and laugh-out-loud surprises
• Big-hearted themes of courage, teamwork, and protecting others
• Real wildlife facts woven seamlessly into the story
Written by award-winning filmmaker Jennifer Ussi and illustrated by Lekshmi Bose, this thrilling 7,000-word tale roars with adventure, humor, and heart—reminding readers that even the smallest voice can make a mighty difference.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, Book 5 – The Lions, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens books, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Jennifer Ussi, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Genluminati
Posted by Literary Titan

D. T. Levy’s Genluminati is a nervy “what-if” thriller disguised as a confessional novel. What if a handful of clever, disillusioned grad-school types decided, half as satire, half as experiment, to manufacture a faith based on science, and then discovered that belief is a force you don’t get to control once you’ve unleashed it?
The story is framed by Matt, the narrator, hiding in the Mayan jungle in Chiapas, running a small B&B, and trying to write down everything before the past catches up with him. This structure works well. The jungle calm gives the book a haunted stillness, and Matt’s voice, at once analytical and self-justifying, keeps the reader in that uneasy space between confession and rationalization.
At the center are five friends whose intimacy becomes both their strength and their blind spot. The early chapters capture the particular chemistry of smart young scientists who feel allergic to inherited dogma, bonded by private jokes and a shared disdain for proselytizers. That anti-religious posture isn’t just characterization, it’s the novel’s ignition source. Their contempt for fanaticism curdles into a challenge: if people will believe anything, why not prove it?
The spark comes after they encounter protests outside a research institute: anti–stem cell rhetoric mixed with mystical claims about souls, punishment, and “reincarnated scientists.” From there, in a boozy, half-serious brainstorm, Matt blurts the idea that becomes the book’s central sin: “We should create a new religion… A religion based on scientific data.” The author nails the moment when irony crosses into commitment: everyone laughs, but the laughter is the mask that lets them move forward without admitting what they’re doing.
As a concept, I think Genluminati is deliciously contemporary. A pseudo-spiritual path built on DNA as scripture, with techniques that blend meditation, chanting sequences, and guided fantasy, self-help language with a biotech sheen. The novel’s best satirical bite comes from how plausible the packaging feels. The author understands that modern devotion often arrives wearing the costume of wellness, optimization, and insider knowledge.
But the book refuses to stay a satire. Once Daniel is in the mix, the project gains the one ingredient that turns a movement into a religion: a charismatic figure. The text makes his function explicit; he becomes “Our Guide,” the “Spiritual Leader,” the centerpiece of gatherings marketed to followers hungry for an embodied authority. This is where the story’s interpersonal dynamics matter. Emma and Daniel appear as a couple for a time, and that relationship becomes a fault line inside the founding group. Meanwhile, Ben’s long-simmering love for Emma and Daniel’s possessive reaction create a pressure-cooker atmosphere that threatens not just friendships but the stability of the religion itself.
I think the author’s sharpest insight is that power doesn’t only corrupt through greed. Here, the founders insist they aren’t driven by ambition. They claim it began as “a confrontation against fanaticism… a joke, to see how far people would go, how far we would go.” That “how far we would go” is the chilling part. The experiment becomes a mirror, revealing their own appetite for influence.
And then come the consequences. The book’s darker, more urgent second life. Daniel begins to believe his role on a deeper level. Matt and the others start talking about him as someone who thinks he’s a prophet, and the group’s fear shifts from embarrassment or exposure to real-world harm. Matt voices the dread plainly: it’s not only about Daniel’s mental health, but what he might do “with his followers.”
That fear culminates in an extreme act: they remove Daniel from the movement, effectively holding him in captivity, with the stated aim of protecting him and protecting the public from him. The ethical knot here is the novel’s most provocative tangle. The founders started by playing at gods of meaning; by the time they’re isolating their own “prophet,” they’ve drifted into the logic of authoritarian control, deciding who gets freedom, who gets silenced, and what risks justify coercion. Even their strategic calculus has an eerie realism: will Daniel’s disappearance weaken the faith, or make him a martyr and strengthen it?
The book also widens its lens to show collateral damage. Followers spinning theories, offices overwhelmed by calls, people unsure how to proceed without someone “dictating the agenda.” In other words, belief doesn’t evaporate when the founders panic. It mutates, decentralizes, and keeps moving.
Genluminati succeeds most when it leans into that escalation from witty premise to grim inevitability. The friendships feel textured and messy, the Boston-to-jungle framing gives the narrative urgency, and Daniel’s transformation into a focal point of devotion is handled with believable menace. The novel sometimes explains its themes as directly as it dramatizes them. Matt can be self-aware in ways that smooth over ambiguity. Still, that’s also consistent with a narrator trying to justify himself while confessing.
Genluminati is a cautionary tale for an era addicted to viral ideas. You can invent a religion as a prank, but you can’t prank people into believing. Belief is already waiting for a container. Levy’s five friends build that container, and the novel’s sting comes from watching them realize, too late, that they’ve built something that can build back. If you like the morally fraught, idea-driven suspense of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code, the philosophical sci-fi edge of Blake Crouch, or the cultish social unease of Dave Eggers’ The Circle, you’ll find Genluminati a smart, darkly propulsive read, and an easy recommendation for anyone drawn to stories about belief, influence, and the dangerous consequences of playing with power.
Pages: 480 | ASIN : B0FZ998JBT
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporarty fiction, crime, D.T. Levy, ebook, fiction, Genluminati, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
A Motif of Connection
Posted by Literary Titan

Passages follows a man from his childhood in Greece through the challenges of his family’s history to his career as a physician caring for veterans. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The factual history of a naval combat vessel active in the Vietnam conflict provided a motif of connection between principal characters, neatly laying down a plot line that would intertwine their rites of passage. The aging naval combat veteran and the young psychiatrist encounter one another under duress at parallel crossroads in their lives as their therapeutic relationship unfolds.
Can you share with us a little about the research that went into shaping your storyline?
My own training in medicine and the military provided a firm floor for a realistic representation of the formative milieu of the two protagonists. Structured interviews with sailors who were in the fight provided supportive resources on events, equipment, and tactics, and helped sharpen the context of combat events as well as the personal aftermath on the return to civilian life. Drawing on contemporaneous events in the news of Tulsa, Oklahoma served up a scenario for the make-or-break challenge that sets the story line in motion.
What was one scene in the novel that you felt captured the morals and message you were trying to deliver to readers?
Of many scenes that make a statement of conviction, an epiphany for many readers will arise from AJ’s description of the ramifications that the hyperfocus of battle can have on a young man much later in life.
What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?
The likely next release involves four women growing up together on Staten Island and lessons of empathy learned through their deep bonds. Look again in 6-12 months for Four Corners!
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook
Miko, the precocious son of a Greek fisherman, has weathered an indecisive path to adulthood in medicine and psychiatry. . . or has he? Dormant in his soul is a muse for writing and a smoldering guilt of abandoning his father. His training trajectory finds him in Tulsa, USA, of all places, where a 2 a.m. hospital admission, the aging, drunk, and potentially violent Vietnam veteran AJ becomes the young physician’s patient. A metaphysical quirk awaits them.
Unwitting confidants in the quest to understand what each is missing, the two trade insights best borne from meeting the other where he is. AJ is a prisoner of the exhilarating echoes of a confusing war; Miko suppresses his own psychological turmoil while exposing that of others.
A chance meeting of their wives leads to a bond kept hidden under norms of confidentiality. Each woman finds something of themselves in the other and the moxie to withstand battles in their own marriages, on their own terms.
Why AJ was brought to the hospital by the police that night pits a sense of duty against self-destruction. Why was there but a single round in his Luger that night?
In Passages, the author takes aim at our enigmatic humanity. Each of us is the hero in his or her own life, a contrast of magnificence and flaws, navigating the complexity of principles and barriers as best one can.
At once philosophical and deeply human, Passages explores identity, trauma, loyalty, and the invisible threads that tether us to the people we least expect. With poignancy and grit, it reminds us that healing often comes not from having the answers, but from simply being seen.
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