Blog Archives

Star People’s Wisdom: Messages From Beyond The Stars For Human Awakening

Star Peoples Wisdom is a channelled transmission encoded in light.
Infused with crystalline frequencies, it carries the resonance of a new field called Megaquantic; one emerging beyond the boundaries of known science and spiritual knowledge.

Within its pages lie quantum revelations, vibrational formulas, and soul-coded keys that activate dormant memory and recalibrate perception.

This book is a harmonic bridge between ancient knowing and future consciousness. It unveils the ancient knowing carried by the Star Peoples – Beings of Light, wisdom, and cosmic lineage.

Each passage pulses with light codes, designed to attune the reader to higher frequencies, to connect with new ET races and unveil wisdom humanity has yet to embrace.

For those who feel the stir of multidimensional truth and the call to embody it, this is your invitation.

Not to learn – but to remember.
Not to follow – but to awaken.

All Men Would Be Tyrants If They Could

All Men Would Be Tyrants If They Could, by Judie Mitchell, tells the story of two sisters, Abby and Connie, living in New England in the years leading up to the American Revolution. Abby is trapped in a marriage to John, a man who shifts between charm and cruelty, while Connie both supports her sister and struggles with her own feelings of powerlessness. Through their alternating voices, the book brings to life the injustice of coverture, the fragility of women’s independence, and the private rebellions of two women caught in a society that denies them a voice. It’s a work stitched together from historical truth, personal pain, and quiet defiance.

Reading it felt like stepping into a private diary. The language is simple but heavy with feeling. I found myself both frustrated and protective of Abby, who clings to hope that love might reform John even as his behavior worsens. Connie, meanwhile, became the heart of the story for me. Her quiet observations, her curiosity, her occasional small rebellions all carried an honesty that made me ache. At times, the writing made me uncomfortable in the best way. It didn’t let me slip into easy judgments; it forced me to feel the tangle of love, loyalty, and oppression that defined their lives.

I do feel that the repetition of John’s temper and Abby’s endurance sometimes dragged, though maybe that was the point. Abuse circles and grinds. The historical details were fascinating, but occasionally they crowded the page with information on trade goods or church sermons. Yet even in those slower sections, I sensed the author’s passion for uncovering the hidden lives of women, and that kept me turning pages.

Reading All Men Would Be Tyrants If They Could reminded me of The Handmaid’s Tale in how it exposes the quiet violence of patriarchy, though Mitchell roots her story in history rather than dystopia, making the injustice feel even more immediate. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy historical fiction that leans close to lived experience, who want to feel the weight of the past pressing on the present, and who are willing to sit with discomfort in order to better understand the silenced women history tried to erase.

Pages: 312 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FFR7BKXW

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A Broader Canvas

Drema Deòraich Author Interview

Broken centers around a shapeshifter plagued by the chaos of living as a human and enduring her own lost sense of self. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I have to admit that my own experience has partly led to Alira’s story. While I don’t have dozens of voices in my head (other than the characters in my stories, that is), I always felt like an outsider among those around me. It took me many years to find my tribe, and to reach a place in my life where I felt I could be myself and not struggle to fit in.

I’ve known many others like this, and it’s hard. For all of us. Struggling to be the kind of person you think others expect of you can be soul-draining. That’s what started Alira’s tale for me. From there, it took off on its own.

What is it that draws you to the science fiction genre?

I like science fiction because it allows me to stretch reality in ways that drive home the point of the story. I feel like The Founder’s Seed books could also be called science fantasy, since there are elements of it (the harvesting of souls, for one) that can’t be supported by science. But these genres expand the boundaries of what is possible or probable, and allow the reader a greater leeway for suspension of disbelief.

My stories usually ask big questions; so far, science fiction and science fantasy have both offered a broader canvas for that work.

Do you have a favorite character in The Founder’s Seed series? One that his especially enjoyable to craft?

Of course, Alira is my favorite. She’s me in so many ways that count. She’s definitely the hardest to write, but also the most rewarding.

A very close second favorite is Botha; he’s a joy to write! Putting myself in his head, so that I can write him with authenticity, is always fun!

Where will the next book in the series take readers? When can we expect to see it released?

The next book, Driven, picks up where Broken left off; it gives a closer—and thoroughly raw—look at the new antagonist, Knøfa; follows Alira’s journey through her time with Botha, and what comes after (no spoilers!); settles Thrace/Galen in her/his role; and sets the threads for the follow-up trilogy that is already in the works.

Driven was released in late June and is now available for readers.

Author Links: GoodReads | BlueSky | Facebook | Website | Amazon

Disguising herself as a human is easy for shapeshifter Alira. Living as one turns out to be harder than she’d expected. And imitating a human well-known to millions on all the colony worlds may have been a mistake.

To make matters worse, the harvests of knowledge and memories she’s gathered from the dead aren’t adequate to fully understand her assumed role—unless she surrenders control to the one internal voice she thinks can make things right. But that harvest isn’t willing to share the space in her head, and soon Alira is no longer sure which voice is his, and which is her own.

Galen has vowed to help Alira succeed and follows her increasingly unbalanced directives, until he realizes that her harvests have corrupted her conscience, maybe even her sanity. Galen has never been a leader. But as the crisis screams toward them, he must make a choice: abandon their people to save Alira or sacrifice her to save them all.

The Stomp-Clomp-Clump Monster Above the Bed

What’s scarier than a monster under your bed? For Fred and his dust bunny friends, it’s the NOISY HUMAN who just moved in above them.

Fred has lived peacefully under the bed for years with Brutus Bunfluff (the brave one), Gunnar Puffbutz (the scaredy-cat), and Dust Puff Ted (the neat freak). But when a boy named Billy takes over the bedroom, their cozy world is turned upside down with thunderous footsteps, bouncing bedsprings, and falling puzzle pieces.

In this delightfully twisted tale, discover what REALLY happens beneath the bed when monsters must face their greatest fear—children. Can Fred and his dusty crew make peace with the beast above, or will Billy’s messy habits drive them to declare war?

A heartwarming story about friendship, understanding, and the discovery that sometimes… monsters aren’t always monsters after all.

Power of Forgiveness

VJ Garske Author Interview

The Raven Moonstone follows an orphaned high schooler who discovers a wizard’s journal and accidentally turns the town librarian into a goat, sending him on an adventure to find an arcane artifact to reverse his spell. I enjoyed the depth of the main character, Noah. What was your process to bring that character to life?

I wrote The Raven Moonstone, sitting cross-legged in the back of our van. It was a time for stepping outside my comfort zone. I walked away from my career in IT and decided it was time to retire. The plan was to drive the backroads of America and explore. Somewhere in Missouri, we had pulled into a free campsite, and sometime during the night, another camper arrived. In the morning, I peeked out the window to catch a glimpse of our neighbor when a young man opened the back of his SUV to let his dog out. But it wasn’t a dog, but a goat. My curiosity sparked, and I grabbed my coffee and walked over to introduce myself. The young man’s name was Noah, and he was traveling cross-country with a pet goat with no name.

My grandson is just learning to read, so I thought I’d write him a story. It had always been on my bucket list to write a book. I’d thought it’d take years, so I targeted it for when he’d be about twelve. My goal was twofold: 1) create a fun story, and hopefully he’d grow to love books as much as I do, and 2) pass on words of wisdom, as a legacy, in a way that he wouldn’t. I was speaking to him. After my character Noah showed up on the page, the book wrote itself.

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

The Raven Moonstone is a weird, funny, whimsical story of family and secrets and courage, but underneath it all, it’s a story about the undeniable power of forgiveness.

Can you tell us more about what’s in store for Noah and the direction of the second book?

The Dragon Moonstone, book 2 in Noah’s adventures, brings us to Castle Dragon, where Noah is sent to master his gifts. Noah’s magic is out of control, and his powers caught the attention of some unsavory characters. Noah is impulsive and impatient, and decides to take shortcuts during his lessons, which turns out poorly. Determined to right his wrong, he is sent on a quest, but his plans become complicated when the Dragon Moonstone goes missing. He must find it and restore the balance to the realm. Along the way, Noah meets many new characters, all with their own agenda. Typically described as a loner, Noah must rely on his friends and work together and learn to trust if he is going to solve the mystery.

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon

When Noah discovers a wizard’s journal, he accidentally turns the town librarian into a goat. Naturally, he hides her at his uncle’s farm.

Now ominous ravens lurk in the shadows, watching his every move.

Noah is determined to reverse his magical mishaps. To do that, he must find a powerful arcane artifact—the Raven Moonstone. With the help of his friends, Sara and Jesse, he sets out to solve the mystery behind the missing heirloom.

With unexpected magic, an evil witch, and a herd of feisty goats, Noah’s journey is about to spiral wildly out of control.

Book One of The Moonstone Legacy Series

Quiet Pride

Author Interview
Mike Carotta Author Interview

In A Long Cast, you share with readers your experiences with family and friends over five decades of surfcasting on Martha’s Vineyard. Why was this an important book for you to write?

The stories were starting to evaporate as time went on. I could feel them slipping away, and I wanted to capture them so years from now the kids would be able to simply share the book with someone they cared about and say, “It was like this.”
For the last several years, my adult daughter would keep prodding: “You should write these stories down, Dad.” And I kept deflecting it. Then, when I turned 70, I secretly decided to give it a try so I could maybe surprise them in the end. But I stalled. It was just dry, boring details at first. But when I asked my fishing friends if there was anything they would like to share for the book, it became clear that they, too, wanted documentation for their family and friends to have forever. I sensed their quiet pride and an unspoken hope, and this is what gave me the motivation I needed to get it across the finish line. I used the Dedication page to give the rationale for the book.

Is there anything else you now wish you had included in A Long Cast? A memory? An experience?

No. Not at all. But if there was a Prologue, it would contain the reactions after it came out. Everything from the successful construction company owner who said, “Only read one book my entire life. But I read this one in two days.” I gave each of the twenty-five featured fishermen a copy when it came out. One guy, looking at his copy, said to the other, “Geez. Didn’t know he (me) could write.” The other fishermen replied, “Didn’t know you could read.” The wife of a fisherman texted and explained that she always wished him well as he headed out the door for his annual fishing trip, but never figured out why he liked it so much. Now she knew, she said.

Right after the book came out, he got really ill and had to stop fishing. One day, she was reading the book outside his hospital room and started to laugh out loud. He asked her what was so funny. She read him the two paragraphs, and he laughed so hard and long that they had to settle him down. “It’s true.” He kept laughing. “It’s true. That’s Ed.” (The fisherman in the story.)

Different fishermen would reach out and tell me which story they liked best, and everyone has a different one. A younger fisherman said he bought a copy for his dad and told him it was because of the piece on The Partner. Another told me it was Retie. I think mine might be The Car. I still laugh out loud when I read it.

What advice would you give someone who is considering writing their own memoir?

Don’t make it about you. Make it about the encounters and conversations and actions of others that have been illuminating, convincing, affirming, paradoxically true, righteous, courageous, challenging, grace- filled, perplexing. Don’t report facts, and details, and accomplishments. Tell the stories of who and what has enriched the journey.

What is one thing you hope readers take away from your book?

I hope the reader can also find one or two things in the book to be true.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

Our passions have a way of doing that for us: extending our lives

In 1971, a father and son ventured out of their apartment in New Jersey to the Island of Martha’s Vineyard to try their hand at surfcasting. That trip began a life of Spring trips to the waters’ edge in search of bluefish and striped bass. Fifty years later, Mike Carotta takes readers along for thirty straight nights and days of fishing.

This is not a How To book. It does not contain the secrets to a fantastic fishing career. Rather, hard fishing has a way of revealing lessons from the shore and the people who gather there-binding together strangers in conversations and gestures, failures and successes, new learnings, and, eventually, creating old friends.
Through it all, more than fish are caught-and shared. The result is a thoughtful collection of essays on life with some notes from the trade filtered in. Join Mike on his pilgrimage back to where the distance between heaven and earth gets a little thinner and the real “keepers” of the trip go far beyond the fish on the end of the line.

“I am not a good surf fisherman. There are no helpful fishing hints here. This is a collection of recollection: stories of saltwater characters, occurrences, and conversations. Like stars in the night sky, they are best enjoyed when you get some distance from the lights of other stuff.” – Excerpt from A Long Cast

If I Had One Wish: I’d Wish That You Were Here

If I Had One Wish: I’d Wish That You Were Here, by August E. Allen, introduces us to Wynter, a snowman whose heart aches with loneliness. One quiet winter’s night, he lifts his gaze to the stars and makes a simple wish, for friends to share the snowy world around him. His wish is answered with gentle magic as a pair of cardinals and a colony of bunnies arrive, filling his days with laughter, warmth, and companionship. Though Wynter delights in this newfound joy, a quiet longing remains. He comes to understand that those he misses are never truly gone; they remain close, tucked deep within his heart, and with friends by his side, he will never be alone again.

Wynter is a character brimming with charm and relatability. His yearning for connection mirrors our own human need for belonging. The story’s closing realization, that love endures across distance and even loss, is both poignant and universal. It speaks to anyone who has felt the absence of a loved one and found comfort in the strength of family and friends.

The illustrations enrich the narrative beautifully. They capture Wynter’s solitude with quiet grace, then burst into joy and warmth as his companions gather around him. The snowy scenes evoke the enchantment of winter nights and the anticipation of the holiday season, adding layers of coziness and wonder to the tale.

If I Had One Wish: I’d Wish That You Were Here is a gentle reminder, cloaked in snowy wonder and touched with starlight. For young readers, it offers a way to understand the complexities of missing someone, whether through loss, distance, or change. For adults, Allen provides a reminder of the healing power of companionship. Heartfelt, tender, and visually delightful, If I Had One Wish is a perfect winter read for families to share.

Pages: 30 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FNDJ4JQ5

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An Eye for Vengeance

In the dust and blood of the frontier, one man’s world was torn apart. Jed McCallister watched his family slaughtered, his body broken, and his eye carved open so he could never look away. Left for dead, he was found by the Crow, healed by their medicine man… and cursed with the Eye for Vengeance. Beneath a leather patch, a hellish red light waits. When revealed, ghosts rise to rip the souls from their flesh, hands rise up dragging them screaming into Hell. Blackwood thinks he’s untouchable. But Jed has returned. And he has but one purpose… vengeance.

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