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The Hands-On Author: Taking Control of Your Book Marketing Journey

The Hands-On Author is a clear and practical guide for writers who want to take control of their own marketing. Author J. J. Hebert breaks the journey into simple steps, starting with building an online platform and moving through reader engagement, advanced promotions, networking, and long-term strategy. The book reads like a roadmap that shows authors how to move from invisible to visible, and from overwhelmed to confident, which makes the whole process feel more doable than many guides I have read.

As I moved through the chapters, I found myself feeling a surprising amount of relief. The writing is friendly and steady, almost like the author is talking directly to you and nudging you along. Some parts felt a bit dense, but in a helpful way. There is real substance here. I appreciated how Hebert explained why certain tasks matter instead of just telling you what to do. The sections on SEO and author websites stood out to me. They made something that usually feels technical seem almost simple. I kept thinking, “Okay, I can actually do this,” which is not a feeling I get from most marketing books.

The ideas themselves are practical and are presented in a fresh way. I liked how often he stressed consistency and connection. That resonated with me personally because it reminded me of why authors want readers in the first place. Not for algorithms. Not for sales charts. For real people. When he talked about book clubs, giveaways, and community spaces, I felt a spark of excitement about reaching readers instead of fear about doing it wrong.

I think The Hands-On Author is a strong fit for writers who want guidance that feels both actionable and encouraging. If you are a new author who has no idea where to start, or an experienced one trying to rebuild your marketing foundation, this book will meet you where you are and give you a clear plan forward. It is also a good pick for anyone who wants a companion that talks to you like a person instead of a marketer. I would happily recommend it to authors who want to take control of their outreach and feel more confident doing it.

Pages: 210 | ASIN : B0G19B16ZL

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Changing Course Gracefully: A Strategic Guide to Building Foundational Self-Trust

What exactly is the PARQS Method? For readers unfamiliar with the concept, the acronym represents preferences, awareness, right action, questions, and self-acceptance. This book traces one woman’s lived experience applying the method as a practical framework for personal growth. Rather than drifting through life on autopilot, she learns to engage more intentionally with her choices. That shift unfolds alongside extensive travel, with journeys through Cambodia, Thailand, Russia, and other destinations serving as both backdrop and catalyst. Along the way, she enters into honest, often probing conversations with herself about what she truly wants. The insights that emerge are thoughtful, relatable, and potentially transformative for readers navigating similar questions.

Changing Course Gracefully: A Strategic Guide to Building Foundational Self-Trust by Elaina Kelly Smith is a work of nonfiction that comfortably resides within the self-help genre while also functioning as a reflective travel narrative. The blend feels organic rather than forced, grounding abstract ideas in lived experience.

Smith begins by acknowledging a sense of disconnection from her own agency. Life felt directed by habit rather than intention. Through the combined practices of travel and the PARQS Method, she gradually examines the gaps in her inner life. Each step invites deeper self-awareness. The goal is not radical upheaval, but clarity. Stress softens. Calm becomes accessible. Direction starts to feel earned rather than imposed.

Exposure to other cultures plays a meaningful role in this evolution. Observing how people live elsewhere sharpens Smith’s understanding of what aligns with her own values. She invites readers to undertake a similar process, offering a structured and approachable path for self-examination. While few will replicate her exact journey, the method she outlines is adaptable. Used thoughtfully, it can help readers clarify their own priorities and move toward a life that feels more authentic, grounded, and purposeful.

What ultimately distinguishes this book is the warmth of Smith’s voice. Her prose is clear without being clinical. She writes as a trusted companion rather than an authority figure. Anecdotes feel intimate. Reflections feel earned. The result is a guide that soothes as much as it instructs, offering readers not just a method, but a sense of reassurance along the way.

Pages: 129 | ASIN : B0G9D8MQL5

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Broken Alliance

Broken Alliance is a character-driven science fiction adventure that picks up right where Tracer leaves off. We follow Bex, Andre, Kat, and the rest of the Venture’s crew as they uncover a conspiracy tied to black-market thetic technology, corporate power grabs, and the lingering ghost of Sovereign. The stakes scale from street-level desperation to full political upheaval, with personal loyalty binding the whole thing together. By the time the dust settles, alliances shift, institutions crack, and the characters have to decide who they want to be in the systems they’ve helped reshape.

Author David Graham writes with a steady rhythm: some moments hit hard and fast, like the firefight in the Paramor or Bex racing across rooftops; others stretch out with quieter emotional beats, especially in the aftermath scenes near the end of the story. What I appreciated most is how the book doesn’t rush the characters’ inner shifts. Bex’s relationship with identity and agency, Andre’s weariness and stubborn hope, Kat’s complicated sense of duty, these all felt grounded. Even when the plot leaned into big sci-fi spectacle, the emotional center stayed human.

The author also makes some interesting choices about power structures and responsibility. The political hearings, the scramble over the Trelin Base project, and the moral ambiguity of the Alliance add a sharper edge to the adventure (the council scenes show this well). Sometimes the villains are overt, like Davenport, but more often the danger feels systemic, which makes the world feel authentic and messy. I liked that the story refuses a clean resolution. Even the epilogue acknowledges the work still ahead while nudging us toward future threads in the Settled Systems.

By the time I turned the last page, I felt satisfied but also curious. The ending gives the characters a breather, a moment of found-family warmth, and a hint that their fight isn’t done. It’s a good tone to leave on: hopeful but honest. If you enjoy sci-fi that balances action with character, especially stories about crews who choose each other again and again even when the galaxy keeps breaking around them, this one will land well. Fans of The Expanse, Mass Effect, or any tight-knit-crew narrative will feel right at home.

Pages: 418 | ASIN : B0DYVSVTML

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Dollartorium

Ralph earns his living in a modest Kansas shop, frying corndogs that are undeniably good and reliably popular. The work keeps him afloat for a while. It offers routine, modest comfort, and a sense of pride. Eventually, though, the numbers stop working. Sales stall. Bills pile up. Stability slips away.

At that moment of strain, Ralph’s wife introduces him to “Dollartorium,” a tantalizing promise discovered through an infomercial. The course offers bold ideas and glossy solutions. At first, it feels like salvation. New business concepts suggest a way out, maybe even a breakthrough. Then the foundation collapses. What seemed like an opportunity quickly unravels, leaving Ralph to reckon with the fallout. With the help of his daughter, Stella, he is forced to retrace his steps and search for a more realistic way forward for his family.

Dollartorium, by Ron Pullins, is a work of fiction that probes capitalism, hustle culture, and the pressures these forces place on families. Humor runs throughout the novel, but it never fully softens the sharper insights beneath the surface. The comedy entertains; the implications linger.

Pullins shows a clear awareness of how precarious financial life has become for many people. Ralph’s anxiety feels earned. His frustration resonates. The sense that the system is tilted against ordinary workers gives the story its urgency. The Dollartorium scheme itself feels uncomfortably familiar, echoing countless real-world programs marketed to those already struggling. These promises prey on desperation, and Pullins does not shy away from exposing their ethical rot.

Stella emerges as the novel’s moral and intellectual anchor. She tempers Ralph’s desperation with reason and clarity. Her perspective restores balance and nudges the story toward resolution. Yet even as the family regains its footing, the larger problem remains unresolved. The system that cornered them still stands. Pullins underscores this truth with restraint, allowing the message to land without sermonizing.

The novel closes on a note that is satisfying, though far from idyllic. That choice feels intentional. Pullins has more to say than a neat ending would allow. Through his characters, he gives voice to frustrations that have become commonplace, about inequality, exploitation, and the illusion of easy fixes. The odds remain stacked against the little guy, and the allure of grand, risky schemes proves hard to resist. Dollartorium captures that tension with clarity, humor, and an undercurrent of quiet anger that makes it linger after the final page.

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Bloody Fates, Damned Choices

Daniel Grace Author Interview

In the Wake of Golgotha follows the reincarnations of Judas and Pilate through present-day New York as a crucifixion-obsessed killer forces them to confront guilt, justice, and whether any betrayal ever truly ends. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

‘The greatest story ever told’ is one full of hope, promise and redemption; however, it is also one of violence, betrayal, pain and punishment. It is this darker side of religion and history, one that too often gets glossed over and painted as mythology and ceremony that I felt was worth a second look. In the Wake of Golgotha is not a story about religion or the Bible, it is a story about bloody fates, damned choices and selfless second chances. It is a story about the death of legend – physically, practically, culturally & ideologically  – in both ancient times and in the modern era. If indeed there are two sides to every story, I thought it worthwhile to take a closer look at who was actually responsible for enabling the ‘greatest’ story, why they were chosen, and what price did they pay for their roles in man’s most significant ‘betrayal.’ 

How did you balance the procedural realism of crime and death-row law with the novel’s spiritual and mythic elements?

When we intellectually and culturally consider capital punishment, we inevitably think in terms of modern era morality and relative to the humanity (adjective, not noun) of crime and punishment. Historical capital punishment is deemed barbaric and neatly banished to museums and mythology. However, despite the cross dangling on billions of necklaces worldwide over the ages, we rarely truly consider the most (in)famous capital punishment: the tortuous and bloody crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Ironically, and fortunately, the cross has become a symbol of peace and harmony; yet as a vessel of crucifixion it was anything but. I wanted to place the act of this particularly painful path of execution in the context of crime and punishment, so believers and non-believers alike would consider the act, the sacrifice, and the men responsible for the ultimate death-row tale. Additionally, I wanted the little we know about the historical elements of the actual trial to be juxtaposed with contemporary criminal trial and death row procedure. While the processes vastly differ, the end result is unequivocally, and frankly unimaginably, the same. Blind faith is a pivotal concept (and trap door) in In the Wake of Golgotha – legally, spiritually and otherwise.

Balthazar’s violence is graphic and ritualized. What role did discomfort play in how you wanted readers to engage with questions of punishment and mercy?

Discomfort is paramount in In the Wake of Golgotha. It is a story about reassessing uncomfortable histories and uncomfortable choices, as well as questioning comfortable mythologies and comfortable beliefs. Religion, and Christianity in particular, essentially is a history of graphic ritualized violence. A bloody history that all too often gets glossed over because of its inherent ‘happy ending’, yet Christianity’s most pivotal chapter and moment is a graphic ritualized act of violence that occured on Calvary Hill, aka Golgotha. My suggestion is that if we are to embrace what happened on that hill, and the divine aftermath, then we must acknowledge the violence that had to occur to fulfill the prophecies and scripture, and acknowledge the men and souls that enabled His bloody fall and ultimate rise. In the Wake of Golgotha casts a shadow about the uncomfortable struggle between God and the Devil, and the impact this eternal confrontation has had on everybody stuck in the middle between them.

When writing scenes of quiet restraint versus lush excess, how conscious were you of pacing language itself to mirror the characters’ inner states?

In the Wake of Golgotha is intentionally paced like a fever dream. Religion (not faith) is a balance of quiet restraint and lush excess  – it is a tale of extremes from the lush Garden to the barren Desert. History’s, and literature’s for that matter, greatest and most tragic characters are journey’s into and about the extremes of a soul’s inner states. Ego & Id. Alpha & Omega. Darkness & Light. We all struggle with the shadow we cast in the pursuit of hope and joy while fleeing from regret and despair. Whether in ancient Jerusalem slipping from the pre-dawn stillness of Gethsemane into the gluttonous chaos of Herod’s Court and Temple and up the ragingly sorrowful Calvary Hill, or in modern-day New York stepping from the unnatural hush of an execution chamber into the timeless vacuum of a confessional booth and into the quietly colorful halls of an art gallery – the wildly diverse pacing of time and language relative to calm and chaos is meant to capture the wildly erratic climate of the characters inner states that are caught in a damned timeless maze of moral limbo.

Author Links: GoodReadsInstagramWebsite

There is no crime to fit this sentence; there is no sentence to fit this crime. Roman Prefect Pontius Pilate’s words are echoed by the zealot Judas Iscariot only hours before history takes a bloody turn on a cross atop Golgotha on Calvary Hill. Two thousand years later, these words are found scrawled in blood in New York next to three crucified men hanging on a basement wall.
Judas, now Jude Issachar, an enigmatic social worker and part-time professor, and Pontius, now Peter Pheiffer, an unsettled defense attorney at a ravenous global law firm, have lived many lifetimes since their original encounter. However, Jude is aware of his past and is cursed by the fateful lure of the noose and the tree. Peter is damned by a recurring ignorance, a cruel cyclical awakening that creeps up on him as he is compelled to defend a sociopath who crucified three men.
Condemned for their role in humankind’s darkest betrayal, they must reckon with their pasts-and their futures-after a fateful, bloody collision of violence and addiction two millennia after their sentence began brings these lost souls together once more.

Free and First: Unlocking Your Ultimate Life

Free and First is a deeply personal guide to self-discovery. Elizabeth Jane traces her journey from people pleasing and self-doubt to a fuller, freer life shaped by awareness, boundaries, and self-love. She weaves her childhood memories, her marriage, the collapse of that marriage, her travels, her art, and the spiritual teachings that lifted her along the way. The book unfolds through stories, poems, and reflections that show how putting yourself first can feel terrifying at first, yet life-saving in the end. The message is simple and strong. You can only live your ultimate life when you stop abandoning yourself and finally choose you.

As I read, I felt drawn into the honesty of her voice. She talks about fear, shame, exhaustion, and hope in ways that feel raw and real. Her descriptions of becoming invisible in her own marriage hit me hard. I could feel the weight of that silence building inside her. I admired the courage it took for her to pull apart the patterns she had carried since childhood and to name them without flinching. The poems sprinkled throughout the book gave me a quiet pause every time. They felt like little rest stops that softened the heavier moments and reminded me why the journey matters.

Her ideas about boundaries and self-worth resonated with me. Then it surprised me with a sharply clear insight that made me sit back for a moment. I liked that mix. I also appreciated how she used her art and travel as ways to reconnect with herself. There is something tender about someone discovering creativity for the first time in adulthood and letting it shake their life awake. I found myself smiling through those parts. It made the transformation feel less theoretical and more lived in.

This book is heartfelt and encouraging. It is especially good for women who feel stretched thin or unseen, and for anyone who keeps putting others first until there is nothing left for themselves. If you want a book that feels like a warm conversation mixed with personal stories and simple tools, this will speak to you. It reminded me that choosing yourself is not selfish at all. It is the start of everything that follows.

Pages: 156 | ISBN : 1923250043

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A Princess on Her Own Terms

A Princess on Her Own Terms follows Princess Sapphire of Xionia, a sharp and stubborn young woman born into a world that worships perfection and tiny waists yet has no idea what to do with a girl who prefers books, good food, and swordplay. The story tracks her journey through tense family expectations, a disastrous ball, an unexpected connection with a prince, and a growing sense that she has every right to build a life on her own terms. It blends fairy tale settings with modern themes about self-worth and independence.

Reading this book made me root for Saphie from page one. Her voice feels real. It hits with honesty and humor, and it cuts through the sugary world around her. I found myself laughing at the chaos of her family and wincing at the cruel comments tossed her way. What surprised me most was how gently the author handles her emotions. The writing is simple in the best way, with scenes that move fast and feel warm. I never felt bogged down. I felt like I was being told a story over tea. I loved that. I also liked the way the author pokes fun at royal traditions that make no sense. It gave the book a playful charm.

Some ideas in the story hit me harder than I expected. Saphie’s refusal to shrink herself for anyone feels powerful. I could feel her frustration, her quiet bravery, and her strange mix of stubborn pride and vulnerable hope. Her relationship with her father made me smile. Her bond with her sister Emmie warmed me right through. Her scenes with Edward gave me that silly flutter in my chest. Not because they were overly romantic, but because they felt honest. The book never tries to make her perfect. It lets her be loud, messy, clever, hungry, bold, and soft all at once. I liked that a lot.

A Princess on Her Own Terms is sweet, funny, and surprisingly thoughtful. I would recommend it to readers who enjoy fairy tales, especially those who want a heroine who does not fit the usual mold. It is great for younger readers who need a reminder that they do not have to shrink to shine, and for adults who still believe stories can be gentle and brave at the same time. I think anyone who loves a good comfort read will enjoy this book.

Pages: 227 | ASIN : B0GCVNK65J

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The Guidance

The Guidance tells the story of three isolated tribes living on the lone world of Domhan. Each tribe grows in its own strange corner of the land, shaped by a mysterious universal force called the Guidance. The Harvest Tribe lives by farming rules set in the Book of the Blest. The Hunter Tribe learns to survive with spears and livestock. The Pharmacist Tribe crawls forward through intuition, experiments, and whatever scraps of nature it can gather. Their traditions shift. Their beliefs twist. Their lives unfold as the Guidance quietly watches. The book paints these three evolving cultures in slow, steady strokes, showing how tiny changes ripple across generations.

As I read, I felt myself pulled into the rhythm of the writing. It is calm, almost meditative. Sometimes the prose slows down, but I didn’t mind because the world had a kind of warm strangeness that kept me curious. I liked how the author reveals each tribe’s beliefs through their daily routines instead of long lectures. The scenes around harvest rituals, hunting decisions, and plant experiments had a subtle charm. I found myself smiling when small discoveries became big turning points for them. It made the world feel alive. I also liked how the book lets misunderstandings shape entire cultures. A single phrase or symbol grows into sacred truth.

There were moments when the writing made me pause in a good way. The shift from gratitude toward spirits to gratitude toward one God. The Hunter Tribe guessing that animals hold the divine. The Pharmacist Tribe stumbling into medicine and chemistry without knowing what those things are. These moments hit me with a sense of wonder. I also felt a kind of sadness. The tribes keep changing but never know why. They try their best with limited clues and plenty of hope. That hit close to home. The writing is simple, but it carries a quiet emotional punch.

The book is thought-provoking and rewards patient reading. I’d recommend The Guidance to anyone who enjoys calm, idea-driven fiction. It would be great for readers who like stories about worldbuilding, mythmaking, and how cultures grow from tiny seeds. It’s not a fast ride, but it is a meaningful one, and it leaves you thinking about how people learn, how they survive, and how they make sense of forces far bigger than themselves.

Pages: 187 | ASIN: B0DZGRM23J

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