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SWITCH and Blue Eagle: A Superhero Sidekick Novel
Posted by Literary Titan

Switch and Blue Eagle tells the story of Jack Dufraine, a teenage sidekick known as Switch, and his father David, the legendary superhero Blue Eagle. Together, they protect Herald City from villains like Blizz Kid, Queen Venus, and the eerie Poster Boy. Beneath the flashy battles and high-speed heroics lies a story about legacy, pressure, and the uneasy relationship between generations. Jack struggles to live up to his father’s impossible expectations while questioning the morality of their world, a world that seems to see justice in black and white. The novel blends comic-book action with genuine emotional conflict, making it more than a simple superhero tale.
Author Joseph Safdia’s writing is clear and visual, almost cinematic, and I could picture every fight scene as if it were on a big screen. But what really grabbed me wasn’t the action. It was Jack’s internal struggle. He wants to be a hero in his own way, to think rather than just punch. His dad, though, is stuck in an older mindset, all muscle and certainty. That tension hit home for me. It reminded me of those times when your elders just don’t get what the world feels like now. Safdia captures that gap perfectly. Still, the dialogue sometimes felt a bit heavy, almost like it came from a comic book bubble. It worked in places, but I wanted a bit more subtlety.
What stuck with me most were the small human moments. Jasper, one of the criminals, trying to save his family from the mob, it made me rethink the idea of “villains.” Safdia doesn’t just show the shiny side of heroism. He looks at the cracks in it. The book asks what makes someone good or bad, and whether society even gives people the same chances to choose. Those questions stayed with me. Sometimes leans into comic-style melodrama, but it’s sincere, and that sincerity carries it.
I’d recommend Switch and Blue Eagle to readers who love superhero stories but want something deeper than capes and catchphrases. It’s for those who like action that also makes you think, and who appreciate a bit of heart beneath the heroics. Teen readers will see themselves in Jack’s doubts, and adults might see a bit of their own reflection in Blue Eagle’s rigid worldview. It’s an entertaining, heartfelt story that mixes the thrill of superpowers with the pain of growing up.
Pages: 351 | ASIN: B0FS2718R1
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, science fiction, story, superhero, SWITCH and Blue Eagle: A Superhero Sidekick Novel, writer, writing, young adult
Sitnalta
Posted by Literary Titan

Sitnalta tells the story of a young princess trapped in a kingdom ruled by cruelty and fear. From her birth, Sitnalta’s life is shadowed by her father’s tyranny and the tragic death of her mother. As she grows up, she becomes restless, yearning for freedom beyond the walls of her father’s cold castle. The novel follows her journey from captivity to self-discovery, blending elements of fairy tale, adventure, and moral reflection. The book opens with heartbreak and ends with a quiet defiance that feels earned. It’s a story about courage, kindness, and the stubbornness it takes to be yourself when the world insists otherwise.
Reading Sitnalta pulled me in more deeply than I expected. The writing is vivid and easy to fall into. The author paints scenes with the kind of care that makes the air in the story feel real. The story moves between light and dark with an unhurried rhythm. I found myself frustrated at times, mostly because I cared so much. Sitnalta’s innocence, her stubborn streak, her quiet bravery, they resonated with me. Some of the dialogue feels old-fashioned, but that suits the fairy-tale tone. What surprised me most was how layered the “villain” felt. King Supmylo is monstrous, yes, but there’s something broken beneath his cruelty. That complexity made the story more relatable than I expected.
There’s sadness in nearly every chapter, but it’s the kind that lingers gently instead of crushing you. Sitnalta’s world feels unfair, and yet she carries herself with grace and wit. Her friendship with Najort, the kind-hearted troll, was my favorite part. It’s strange and tender, filled with quiet understanding. The writing in those scenes feels softer, almost glowing. I caught myself smiling at moments that shouldn’t have been happy but somehow were. The author doesn’t overcomplicate things. The prose feels clean and honest. You can sense that it was written with love, not just for the story but for what stories can do, for how they let us hope.
I’d recommend Sitnalta to anyone who loves stories about courage, compassion, and freedom. It’s not just a tale for young readers; it’s for anyone who’s ever felt trapped by the life they were born into. It’s a book that made me think about kindness in a world that often rewards cruelty, and about how sometimes, the bravest thing we can do is walk away and begin again.
Pages: 204 | ASIN : B0FWFBQMG3
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Alisse Lee Goldenberg, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, coming of age, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, magic, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Sitnalta, story, Sword & Sorcery, teen, writer, writing, young adult
The Hole in Your Life: Grief and Bereavement
Posted by Literary Titan

Dr. Bob Rich’s The Hole in Your Life is part memoir, part guidebook, and part quiet act of grace. It opens with a deeply personal account of his daughter Natalie’s final months, setting a tone that is both tender and raw. From there, Rich blends professional insight with lived experience, walking readers through grief’s unpredictable terrain. He writes about denial and despair, hope and healing, blending practical techniques, like scheduling grief time and mindfulness, with heartfelt stories from his counseling practice. The book never lectures. It feels like a hand on your shoulder, reminding you that pain is part of being alive, and healing, though never complete, is possible.
I found myself deeply moved by the book’s honesty. Rich doesn’t sugarcoat anything. He talks about loss as something brutal and transforming, a force that tears through you but can, somehow, make you more whole. His writing is simple and kind, with a quiet humor that lightens the heaviness. I liked how he tells real stories, of clients, friends, even himself, without turning them into neat lessons. It’s messy and human. Some parts made me tear up, others made me smile. There’s warmth in his words that feels genuine, like you’re listening to someone who’s been through hell and came back wiser, not just older.
Some sections sometimes read like therapy notes, but then I’d hit a line or story that stopped me cold and made me think about my own losses. Rich’s balance between intellect and compassion is rare. He talks about pain as a teacher, about finding meaning even when nothing makes sense. I felt comforted, not because the book promised easy answers, but because it didn’t try to.
The Hole in Your Life isn’t just for people drowning in grief. It’s for anyone who’s loved deeply and lost something they can’t get back. It’s for the quiet moments when you want to believe life can still hold beauty. I’d recommend it to therapists, caregivers, and anyone sitting in the dark looking for a light that doesn’t blind you with false hope, but steadies you with truth.
Pages: 109 | ASIN : B0FFZVVK6X
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Bob Rich, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, death and grief, ebook, emotions, goodreads, indie author, inspiratinoal, kindle, kobo, literature, Long-term relationships, marriage, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Self-Help, story, The Hole in Your Life: Grief and Bereavement, writer, writing
A Journey of Discovery
Posted by Literary_Titan

On a Sundown Sea follows a woman with the gifts of being a medium and clairvoyant who meets the leader of the American Theosophical Society, who guides her on a spiritual path that could make her mystical dreams a reality. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I grew up in Point Loma, near Madame Katherine Tingley’s Lomaland. Though she’s been gone nearly a century, stories of her remarkable life—and the extraordinary happenings on that hilltop—still echo throughout the region. I’ve long been fascinated by the mysteries surrounding her. Was she truly a medium and clairvoyant? How did she transform barren land into a flourishing Theosophical community with gardens, a school, and an arts colony? And did she really believe her husband had been reincarnated as a turtle?
Determined to uncover the truth, I spent five years researching and writing this biographical historical novel. While no full biography of Tingley exists, I immersed myself in her speeches, personal writings, and countless archival materials—newspaper articles, letters, photographs, court testimonies, ship logs, and passports. The Theosophists were prolific writers and publishers; Lomaland even had its own press that produced pamphlets and magazines. My greatest challenge was reconciling the many conflicting dates and facts I encountered.
To follow her journey, I traveled to her birthplace in Newburyport, Massachusetts, and to New York City, where her story first unfolds. And to better understand her esoteric world, I attended mediumship readings and worked with a shaman.
What are some things that you find interesting about the human condition that you think make for great fiction?
A novelist’s job is to place obstacles between the protagonist and their deepest desire—and Katherine’s childhood vision of building a white city had no shortage of them. Every compelling story thrives on conflict, and characters become truly memorable when they reveal their touchstones, quirks, humor, and emotions. I also believe love, in one form or another, should always be present—it adds depth, humanity, and hope to even the most challenging journeys.
What experience in your life has had the biggest impact on your writing?
After a twenty-year career as a public-school educator, I found myself drawn to writing. I began attending a weekly drop-in group, where the facilitator gave prompts and set a timer to get us started. Writing in community helped me keep my pen moving, even on days when I wanted to stop. Initially, I thought I’d write children’s books or a memoir about my time in the classroom—but that wasn’t what unfolded at all.
Instead, characters began appearing on the page seemingly out of nowhere, and I just kept following them. I’m an intuitive writer, composing all my first drafts by hand in a journal. When I started, I never imagined I would create the Anne McFarland Series, let alone On a Sundown Sea: A Novel of Madame Tingley and the Origins of Lomaland. It’s been a journey of discovery, both of the stories themselves and of who I am as a writer.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
I’d love to publish a collection of my nature poetry, as well as a personal development book inspired by my philosophy and blog, Crealivity. At the same time, I’m resisting the pull of a first chapter that has jumped onto the page for a fourth novel in the Anne McFarland Series. Over the past ten years, I’ve sent four novels and hundreds of poems out into the world, but right now my focus is on promoting On a Sundown Sea. I’ve many local events planned here in San Diego first, and then I’m taking the book on tour to other parts of the country.
Author Links: GoodReads | Instagram | Facebook | Website
In 1888, Katherine Tingley, a medium and clairvoyant, continues to have a childhood vision of a white city on a sundown sea. While serving the poor at her Do-Good Mission on Manhattan’s East Side, she encounters William Q. Judge, a mesmerist and leader of the American Theosophical Society. He recognizes her potential, convinces her to become his student, and guides her on a spiritual path that could make her mystical dream become a reality.
After Judge’s passing, Katherine assumes leadership of the Society and embarks on a world crusade to spread brotherhood, learn from ancient cultures, and search for a Himalayan Mahatma. In 1900, she moves the Theosophical headquarters to San Diego. Here, she sets out to establish Lomaland—a sacred space of learning, artistry, and divine harmony, built on a barren peninsula yet brimming with hidden potential. As people from around the world converge to share in her vision, they form a community united in purpose to spread enlightenment. However, betrayals, lies, and libels accumulate until a monumental court case ultimately decides her future and the fate of the white city on a sundown sea.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, biographical fiction, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, Jill G. Hall, kindle, kobo, literature, metaphysical fiction, nook, novel, On A Sundown Sea, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing.
Adrenaline Rush: Pain Games
Posted by Literary Titan

Pain Games follows Katelyn Ann Molsin, a soldier whose journey from enlistment through boot camp to deployment in Iraq captures the brutality, the absurdity, and the dark humor of military life. It starts with her raw initiation at Fort Leonard Wood, then dives deep into the reality of operating with a Female Engagement Team, where she works alongside Special Forces to gather intel in war zones. Through high-stakes missions, cultural clashes, and moments of biting wit, the story paints a picture of someone forged in chaos and driven by grit, yet haunted by personal demons and complicated relationships.
I found myself pulled into the writing almost immediately. The voice is sharp, irreverent, and brutally honest. Author Bevin Goldsmith doesn’t sugarcoat the military experience, nor does she drown it in jargon that would bore a civilian reader. The details are vivid, sometimes uncomfortably so, but they give a real sense of what it means to “embrace the suck.” I loved the rhythm of the narration. It swings from gut-punch descriptions of combat to sarcastic banter that made me laugh out loud. At times, the humor felt like a survival tool, a way of cutting through the suffocating tension, and I appreciated that balance.
On the flip side, the book made me feel uneasy, which I think is part of its point. The moral gray areas, the way trauma shapes behavior, and the constant clash between personal vulnerability and professional toughness left me unsettled, but in a thought-provoking way. I didn’t always like Katelyn. She can be harsh, even reckless. But I believed her, and I cared what happened to her. The relationships, especially with her comrades and with Alex, are messy and real. There were times I wanted to shake her for her choices, but then I’d catch myself realizing that was exactly the kind of complexity that made her human.
This book left me both drained and energized. Drained because of the heavy truths about war and the toll it takes, energized because of the sheer drive and fire in the protagonist’s voice. I’d recommend Adrenaline Rush: Pain Games to anyone who enjoys gritty military fiction, especially readers who appreciate flawed but fierce characters. It’s for people who want to feel the weight of combat, the sting of loss, and the rush of adrenaline right alongside the people who live it.
Pages: 141 | ASIN : B0CTHTDBQ7
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Adrenaline Rush: Pain Games, author, Bevin Goldsmith, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, writer, writing
Childhood’s Hour: The Lost Desert
Posted by Literary Titan

The Lost Desert unfolds like a fever dream. It tells the story of a man named Loste who escapes from a strange mist called the Fray and wanders into a dazzling desert of blue glass. He meets Nadhez, a wild, furred man who travels with a fierce, intelligent creature named Chihiti. The story drifts between hallucination and revelation, full of alien landscapes, glowing moons, and fragments of scripture that hint at a shattered world. Every page glimmers with dense imagery, where survival feels like both punishment and rebirth. It’s a story about memory, loneliness, and the fragile border between madness and faith.
I’ll be honest, this book messed with my head in a good way. Glass writes with the kind of poetic precision that makes you reread sentences just to taste them again. The prose is thick and alive, like breathing through incense smoke. At times I felt lost, much like Loste himself, drifting through scenes that seemed too vivid to be real. Yet, that confusion felt intentional. It put me right inside the character’s fractured mind. The dialogue between Loste and Nadhez was raw and strange but full of quiet heart. There’s something relatable in the way they stumble toward trust, both suspicious and starved for connection. And the imagery, my god, the imagery lingers. Every creature, every shimmer of sand feels carved from light and sorrow.
But this book isn’t easy. It asks patience. It doesn’t care if you understand everything. There were moments where I felt overwhelmed by the world-building, where the sacred words and mythic passages blurred into noise. Still, I never wanted to stop. The rhythm of the writing hooked me. It’s haunting and weirdly beautiful, like a dream you can’t shake off even when you wake. I felt equal parts awe and unease, that quiet tension between wonder and dread. It reminded me how fragile sanity can be when beauty becomes too much to bear.
I’d recommend The Lost Desert to readers who crave atmosphere more than clarity. If you like stories that make you feel rather than explain, that drown you in imagery and leave you gasping for air, this one’s for you. It’s not a comfort read. It’s a plunge into the surreal, but it rewards anyone willing to surrender to it. Lovers of dark fantasy, strange worlds, and lyrical writing will find something unforgettable here.
Pages: 550
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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, Childhood's Hour: The Lost Desert, E.E. Glass, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
The Countess and the Spatula
Posted by Literary Titan

The Countess and the Spatula is a whimsical, oddball fairy tale that tumbles through aristocratic kitchens, magic-laced crumpets, and absurd courtship. The story follows Fredegonde, Countess of Bellise, a disheveled noblewoman who finds solace in baking after her husband’s death. Her peaceful life of flour and philosophy is upended by Claudio Arrigoni, a melodramatic opera singer who won’t stop proposing marriage. Between the countess’s eccentric habits, a meddlesome staff, a scheming neighbor, and the mysterious “Spatula of Power,” the book becomes a delicious blend of satire, fantasy, and farce.
Reading this story felt like stepping into a dream where logic takes the day off. The writing dances between the silly and the profound, and I loved that contrast. Elizabeth Austin writes with the kind of precision that makes nonsense sound perfectly reasonable. I laughed at the countess’s solemn devotion to crumpets and her tendency to quote Aristotle at moments of chaos. Still, beneath the humor runs a tender current: the loneliness of aging, the need for purpose, and the comfort of small rituals. I found myself rooting for this scatterbrained heroine who keeps her dignity even when the world tilts toward absurdity.
The book lingers over conversations and kitchen scenes. Yet I can’t really complain, because those detours, the gossiping servants, the absurd dialogue, the odd bits of theology, create the book’s strange magic. It’s like sitting by a fire while someone spins a story that refuses to behave. The language sparkles without showing off, and every page smells faintly of butter and mischief. I liked how the story never tried to be grand or sentimental. It’s clever without being cold, and funny without cruelty.
I’d recommend The Countess and the Spatula to readers who like their humor dry and their fairy tales a little crooked. It’s perfect for anyone who enjoys P. G. Wodehouse, G. K. Chesterton, or a bit of magical realism with a side of tea. This isn’t a book for those who want action or romance that makes sense; it’s for people who like to watch chaos unfold politely. I finished it smiling, craving crumpets, and oddly comforted by the idea that common sense might just be the most magical thing of all.
Pages: 361 | ASIN : B0FPDNFGH4
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary fantasy, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, paranormal, read, reader, reading, satrie, story, The Countess and the Spatula, urban fiction, writer, writing
IN THE WRATH OF LEGENDS
Posted by Literary Titan

David Buzan’s In the Wrath of Legends is a sweeping historical thriller that fuses mythology, frontier violence, and spiritual depth into a relentless narrative. The story picks up in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, following Chenoa Winterhawk, a fierce, complex Nez Perce woman, caught between two worlds. As she navigates the tensions between Native traditions and the encroaching modern age, she becomes entangled in a web of military secrets, supernatural terrors, and personal reckonings. From the haunted mines of Oregon to the skies above the Blue Mountains, Buzan crafts a story where the past refuses to stay buried, and every legend hides a truth too monstrous to ignore.
The writing is vivid and poetic, often leaning into raw, sensory detail that grips your imagination and refuses to let go. Buzan doesn’t just write scenes; he paints them. The dialogue snaps with tension, and the pacing, alternating between explosive action and quiet, meditative passages, keeps the heart engaged and the mind uneasy. I was struck by how seamlessly he weaves indigenous spirituality and historical realism together. It’s not a romanticized view of history, but a hard look at betrayal, survival, and the thin line between faith and fury. At times, the prose feels almost cinematic, but what gives it weight are the moral undercurrents. This isn’t just a story about monsters; it’s a story about what people become when they’re forced to face them.
Emotionally, the book hit me harder than I expected. Chenoa’s journey is one of constant loss and rediscovery, and I found myself rooting for her even when the darkness seemed too heavy to fight. The monsters in the story, both human and otherwise, serve as mirrors, showing what happens when hope falters. I felt anger, awe, and even sorrow while turning the pages. Buzan writes with a kind of unfiltered honesty that sometimes cuts close to the bone. He doesn’t shield the reader from violence or grief, yet every brutal moment seems to serve a deeper truth about resilience and spirit.
In the Wrath of Legends is for anyone who wants to understand how myth and history can intertwine to reveal the soul of a people. It’s perfect for readers who love stories with grit, mystery, and heart, people who crave character-driven tales set against a backdrop of real pain and impossible beauty. If you want a book that challenges your emotions while thrilling your imagination, this one deserves your time and then some.
Pages: 298 | ASIN: B0FWS1BD91
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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, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, historical thriller, IN THE WRATH OF LEGENDS, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing











