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Janice Everet: a southern gothic Jane Eyre retelling
Posted by Literary Titan
What if Jane Eyre were blind and lived in the rural South during the Great Depression, World War II and the 1950’s? This inverted story, inspired by a beloved classic, explores these questions and many more.
Growing up in the oppressive home of her Aunt Richards, Janice is stifled by condescending attitudes and flagrant disregard. She finds solace helping the household servants as they, too, are belittled. Janice especially enjoys the company of Gustav, her aunt’s servant, who is often mistreated because of the color of his skin.
When a harrowing event forces Janice to take an unexpected journey, doors are opened and opportunities are revealed. As Janice navigates school years of both triumphant and tragic times, helps with the war effort and makes both friends and enemies, her dark past lurks in the shadows.
When Janice accepts a position to teach a precocious and rambunctious little girl who is also blind, the malevolent events of her past prove to have shocking connections with her brusque and mysterious employer. Hidden passions, danger and self-discovery await in this account of a strong woman who will stop at nothing to protect the ones she has grown to love. Yet true love often means letting go. A story of confronting adversity, hidden secrets and forbidden love, Janice Everet will make you see Charlotte Bronte’s classic with new eyes.
This book is the adult debut of the author. The story contains mature sexual content as well as some mild profanity.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, fiction, goodreads, gothic, historical fiction, horror, indie author, Janice Everet, kindle, kobo, literature, Meredith Leigh Burton, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, writer, writing
Illuminating Human Connection
Posted by Literary-Titan

Navigate Family Technology explores the modern family’s dilemma of how to help children thrive without letting technology consume them, focusing on topics such as communication struggles, social media traps, empathy loss, anxiety, and sleep disruption. Did you find anything in your research of this story that surprised you?
I learned so much while researching the book, I’ll try to narrow the answer down to a few!
- That most Modern Tech executives strictly limit their family’s tech-use time and send the kids to low-tech schools
- The number of online predators actively working every day
- The amount of information we take in daily compared to 20 years ago
- The staggering number of hours of screen time displaces connection and well-being activities
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
My mission is about illuminating human connection in a disconnected modern world. Technology is one of the key drivers of this. We are often alone together on individual devices.
I also found it important to cover technology’s impact on empathy and distress tolerance.
What is one thing that you hope readers take away from Navigate Family Technology?
That overuse of technology is not our fault. Or our kids’ fault. But now that we understand the problem, it’s our responsibility to be intentional about it. And that we can do it – we have so much living to do and real-world connections to make.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Website | Amazon
Modern tech is an invaluable resource though its rapid development has created downsides. Nora provides accessible strategies to live our tech lives with intention rather than constant reaction mode. The content inspires hope for connection and comfort in knowing we do not face tech challenges alone.
Entertain a quest to level up your knowledge of modern tech’s influence and explore how to navigate its challenges
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: anxiety, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, communication, ebook, family, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Navigate Family Technology, nook, Nora O'Brien, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, social media, story, tech, trailer, writer, writing
The Cathedral of Quiet Power
Posted by Literary Titan

Evan Yoh’s The Cathedral of Quiet Power is a poetic manifesto about surviving modern life without losing your soul. It’s part memoir, part philosophy, part self-destruction manual. Yoh takes us through his journey from sleeping in a leaking car to becoming a successful consultant, then tearing it all down to find what freedom actually means. The book moves like a confession and a sermon at once. It’s written in sharp, metallic prose that cuts through the noise of self-help clichés. Instead of offering comfort, Yoh offers confrontation. He argues that the world isn’t broken but rigged, that systems of power feed on our noise and dependence, and that real strength lives in quiet rebellion.
Yoh doesn’t sugarcoat a thing, and I admired that. His stories about corruption, burnout, and the “golden handcuffs” of success hit hard because they’re not abstract ideas; they’re lived pain. The writing is raw and unfiltered, full of short sentences that land like punches. And yet, underneath all the anger, there’s an aching tenderness. He’s not trying to burn the world down; he’s trying to build a new one inside himself. Some parts veer close to nihilism, but his insistence that silence, integrity, and sovereignty can coexist feels strangely hopeful. It’s messy hope, the kind that comes after losing everything.
What struck me most was Yoh’s honesty about ego and self-delusion. He admits to weaponizing ambition, mistaking control for love, and building a life that looked perfect but felt hollow. Those chapters were hard to read. They felt like someone holding up a mirror. The prose switches between poetic intensity and quiet introspection. But that’s also the beauty of it. This isn’t a book you breeze through. It’s one you wrestle with. Yoh doesn’t want followers. He wants witnesses–people willing to see the architecture of their own cages. His “doctrines” at the end of each chapter make the ideas stick; they’re like little grenades of wisdom you carry long after closing the book.
The Cathedral of Quiet Power isn’t a guide. It’s a reckoning. I’d recommend it to readers who are disillusioned by hustle culture, who’ve burned out and need a new kind of strength, not louder, but steadier. It’s for anyone ready to stop performing and start rebuilding from the quiet ruins of who they really are.
Pages: 166 | ASIN : B0FX8MG5C3
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, Business Mentoring & Coaching, ebook, Evan Yoh, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nook, novel, Personal Success & Spirituality, philosophy, read, reader, reading, self help, spirituality, story, The Cathedral Of Quiet Power, trailer, 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
Filaments by KZK Zuganelis Kasling
Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.
🏅 Literary Titan Book Awards🏅
— Literary Titan (@LiteraryTitan) November 7, 2025
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/Ib7Hb0FCGx pic.twitter.com/bcN3dwIMVf
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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, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, 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, trailer, western, womens fiction, writer, writing, young adult
The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes: Return to Southampton County
Posted by Literary Titan
With a victorious end to the Civil War, Parson Sykes fulfilled the goal of self-liberation, but he grew frustrated with the Reconstruction programs. At the suspension of open hostility, he recognized the need for complete emancipation. Following the defeat of the Confederacy, he must advance civil and human rights to gain real freedom. As post-war planning emerged, new challenges arose. Parson grew frustrated with the connivance practices in racial superiority and inferiority that hindered everyday freedom.
Parson experienced the chaotic end of the Civil War while serving in the Union Army. Grappling with military-civil affairs duty, political uncertainty, and the unfulfilled promises of emancipation, Parson realized the Emancipation Proclamation did not go far enough. Following the defeat of the Confederacy, vicious racial violence characterized the resistance to integrating Black people.
Parson joyously learned that Federal government created the Freedmen’s Bureau to help formerly enslaved people transition to freedom with humanitarian aid. Parson relentlessly advocated and pursued education, political participation, and full citizenship. With the creation of the Bureau, he felt less pressure.
Parson witnesses the final year of the Civil War and the chaotic dawn of Reconstruction, learning about the complex political fight for civil rights from mentors and personal observation. Parson’s insights taught him that in war, the victory is just the blossom, and nothing is more frustrating than a bloom that refuses to morph into some fruit.
Parson returns to Virginia, where he confronts the defeated confederates, including the rise of hate groups and violent insurgents. In Southampton County, the Bureau mediated sharecropping agreements between white landowners and Black families after the constitutional end of enslavement. Despite granting freedom, the federal government took little action to help Black families acquire the promised land.
Through his interactions with mentors, Parson becomes a fierce advocate for the human and civil rights of Black Americans, focusing on education, land ownership, and political participation. He navigated the legal and social struggles surrounding the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, revealing both the hope they inspired and the violent backlash they provoked.
With the passage of these amendments, they guaranteed equal rights for all citizens and prohibited states from denying the right to vote based on race or color. Simply put, Parson’s efforts to gain freedom, citizenship, and equality required long-term commitment, resilience, and perseverance.
Having secured his right to vote and purchase land, Parson married, started a family, and established himself as an independent community leader in Southampton County, achieving a hard-won personal liberation despite the systemic failures of the Reconstruction era.
As revealed by Parson’s genealogy, Reconstruction has ongoing effects, especially in the importance of addressing root causes and the need for ongoing human and civil rights enhancements. Racism is an inescapable reality in the American society. Still, the complexities of social problems, with their cultural subtleties and interconnectedness, demand a deeper understanding and more nuanced approaches than those used in managing a political solution.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, david mason, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Self-Liberation of Parson Sykes: Return to Southampton County, trailer, writer, writing
Little Creatures
Posted by Literary Titan
What if your curiosity unlocked a hidden world?
Can a science-loving girl save a place where magic rules?
When twelve-year-old Zowie Lillian Saintclair moves from bustling Houston, Texas, to the quiet town of Greenwood, Arkansas, with her family, everything seems normal until she begins to spot little creatures that only she can see hiding in the shadows of her backyard. And just as she thought things couldn’t get any more bizarre, she discovers something otherworldly living within her bedroom walls. That’s when she realizes her life is about to change in ways she never imagined.
Perfect for readers of all ages who love fantasy, adventure, and a smart heroine who isn’t afraid to explore the unknown.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, childrens books, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kids books, kindle, kobo, literature, Little Creatures, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, Shana Congrove, story, trailer, writer, writing
The Never Witch (A Thorne Witch Novel #1)
Posted by Literary Titan

JP McLean’s The Never Witch opens with Adeline Thorne, a woman trying to live an ordinary life while being anything but ordinary. She’s the sister of a powerful witch, yet stripped of her own magic and burdened by a complicated past that’s steeped in betrayal, mystery, and supernatural politics. When an encounter with a dying warlock leaves her scarred, physically and otherwise, Adeline becomes caught in a dangerous web of secrets that threaten the fragile peace between witches and warlocks. The story twists between two worlds: the mortal calm of Vancouver and the hidden, charged realm of covens, spells, and old feuds. It’s part mystery, part fantasy, part family drama, and all heart.
The writing is clean and unpretentious, yet it hits hard where it counts. McLean paints vivid scenes with just the right amount of detail, never overdoing it. Her dialogue feels real, sometimes painfully so, and her characters carry their own bruises in ways that stick with you. Adeline is an intriguing character. She’s sarcastic, wounded, stubborn, and somehow still full of grace. I found myself rooting for her even when she tried to push everyone away. The pacing surprised me, too. It starts quietly, but by the second act, it’s hard to look up. Every chapter seems to add a new question or cut a little deeper into the old ones.
What really hooked me though was the emotion running underneath all the fantasy. Sure, there’s magic and danger and political scheming, but it’s the relationships that carry the story. The bond between Adeline and her sister, Sarah, felt honest, messy, protective, and full of old hurts that never quite healed. And then there’s Luke, whose own guilt and duty twist him into something both noble and tragic. The way their lives tangle together feels fated, like watching two storms collide. McLean doesn’t hand you easy answers. She lets you feel the tension, the fear, the hope, and the exhaustion that come with fighting battles you didn’t choose.
By the time I finished the book, I wasn’t just entertained, I was attached. The world McLean built feels layered and believable, and her characters have that rare spark that makes you wonder what they’re doing after the last page ends. The Never Witch is perfect for readers who like their fantasy grounded in emotion and their magic served with a side of grit. If you enjoy stories about found strength, sisterhood, and the kind of courage that comes from surviving what breaks you, this book will hit home.
Pages: 316 | ASIN : B0FCGK7MWV
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, contemporary fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, JP McLean, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, occult, occult suspense, read, reader, reading, series, story, suspense, The Never Witch (A Thorne Witch Novel #1), trailer, writer, writing
The Solar Current Is Nuptially Tuned
Posted by Literary Titan

Thomas M. Miovas, Jr.’s The Solar Current Is Nuptially Tuned is a lively, old-school science fiction adventure filled with invention, romance, and a touch of satire. The story follows Spencer Harling, a fiery engineer exiled from Lunar Industries who discovers that the so-called “alien ship” that crashes on the Moon is not an alien vessel at all; it’s piloted by his lost love, Adrian Lunar, the daughter of his former employer. What starts as a mysterious space exploration tale becomes a heartfelt reunion between two brilliant minds who combine science, love, and courage to outwit bureaucracy and rediscover their shared purpose. It’s an inventive mix of hard science fiction and playful romance, framed within the optimism of human ingenuity.
Reading this book, I felt like I’d stepped into a retro sci-fi movie from the golden age of the genre. The writing has that earnest energy, long paragraphs that brim with ideas, characters who speak in grand tones, and technology that’s both ambitious and oddly personal. Spencer is a classic idealist, the kind of scientist who believes knowledge and reason can solve anything, and I found that sincerity refreshing. Miovas has a knack for building tension in quiet moments, especially when Spencer debates the nature of communication and consciousness. The reunion with Adrian felt a little melodramatic, but in a way that fit the tone, like a satisfying reveal in an old pulp serial. The story’s heart lies in its belief that exploration, both scientific and emotional, is what makes life meaningful.
Some exchanges between characters feel a bit formal, which adds a unique charm. It is worth noting that the exposition can sometimes be heavy, but there’s also charm in that thoroughness. I could tell Miovas cares deeply about the science and the philosophy behind his fiction. I liked that the story wrestles with moral ideas, authority versus curiosity, fear versus discovery, and even what it means to be human when faced with the unknown. Beneath the space battles and romance, there’s a clear message about individual thought and integrity.
I’d recommend The Solar Current Is Nuptially Tuned to readers who love classic sci-fi with a philosophical edge, or anyone who appreciates a bit of romance mixed into their cosmic adventure. It’s a thoughtful and imaginative ride through human ideals and relationships. If you enjoy stories where love, reason, and invention all share the same orbit, this one will feel like a rare find.
Pages: 38 | ASIN : B0BRGCQBMR
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, fiction, goodreads, hard science fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, One-Hour Literature & Fiction Short Reads, One-Hour Science Fiction & Fantasy Short Reads, read, reader, reading, romance, sci fi, science fiction, Science Fiction Adventure, short reads, story, The Solar Current Is Nuptially Tuned, Thomas M. Miovas, trailer, writer, writing


































































