Blog Archives
Consistency is Key
Posted by Literary-Titan

The City of Arches follows a princess who discovers a letter containing the key to her mother’s hidden past and her connection to a powerful wizard. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I love the idea of family secrets being uncovered. For me, I loved going through boxes of old pictures that my grandparents kept and hearing about all the old stories. The real treasure for a family is always hidden in old documents and old photographs. From the beginning, I have had Learsi’s story mapped out in my mind, and to have her daughter discover it in her own words was a temptation too big to ignore.
How did you balance magic and its use throughout the story to keep it believable?
I think of it almost as a muscle. Like any talent or ability, it needs to be used, trained, and practised. And just like a physical ability, it can be strained, and it can be draining. Like anything, magic needs its limitations to be believable, and once I figured out how it worked in my world, consistency is key.
Which character in the novel do you feel you relate to more and why?
That’s a hard question. I wish I could say that I relate to the hero, but in reality, I’m probably more like Aud. She’s just this normal person who cares about her family. She’s thrust into this world of magic and mess and has to make the best of it. She’s at heart just a mom, and I guess that’s what I relate to.
Can you give us a glimpse inside Book 4 of The Sitnalta Series? Where will it take readers?
Book 4 is called The Hedgewitch’s Charm. It shows us a Colonodona that’s put at risk by a plague. A young hedgewitch named Gwendolyn thinks there’s more to it and fights to save the people alongside Ipsinki. I loved writing her, and her and Ipsinki’s dynamic, and I hope readers love it too.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
In the buried past, Kralc finds a ragged Learsi living on the streets after her home kingdom’s destruction and presents an offer: help him set things right with the mysterious City of Arches and he will give her back her family and birthright. With her parents murdered and her kingdom in ruins, she doesn’t know how he can achieve such a thing. All she knows is that she has nothing to lose.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Alisse Lee Goldenberg, 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, series, story, Teen & Young Adult Paranormal Romance, Teen & Young Adult Sword & Sorcery Fantasy, Teen & Young Adult Wizards & Witches Fantasy, The City of Arches, writer, writing
The Right Fit
Posted by Literary Titan

The Right Fit lays out a full roadmap for hiring, developing, and keeping great people. It walks through the entire employee journey with a calm, steady hand. It starts with understanding your culture, then moves into selection, onboarding, engagement, development, and long-term retention. The book blends practical advice, clear steps, and real stories, all while rooting everything in one theme. Success comes from treating people with intention and care. The message is simple but strong. If you want a thriving team, you must build the environment in which they can thrive.
The writing feels warm and direct, like a mentor talking to you over coffee. I loved how the author breaks down big ideas into small, doable actions. At times, the tone feels almost fatherly, full of calm encouragement, and I appreciated that. I also enjoyed the focus on culture and values. It reminded me how often organizations skip that part and head straight into hiring tactics. The book insists that you cannot choose the right person if you do not know who you are as an organization. That felt honest and grounded.
Some chapters hit me on a more emotional level, especially the parts on inclusion and employee wellness. There is a real sense of care in the writing. It is clear that the author believes deeply in people and wants workplaces to be better for them. That sincerity makes the book feel human. I will say there were moments when the structure felt dense, and I found myself wanting a little more storytelling to break up the instructional tone. Still, the ideas are solid, and the consistency of the message kept me hooked. The parts on career development, mentorship, and non-linear growth were especially refreshing. They made me reflect on my own path and the kinds of support that helped me.
I closed the book feeling hopeful. The Right Fit offers a positive vision of work that feels both reachable and worth striving for. I would recommend this book to new managers, HR professionals, and leaders who struggle with turnover or culture issues. It would also be great for small business owners who want to hire smarter and build stronger teams. The book gives them a clear and steady guide and reminds them that people are not just resources. They are the heartbeat of the whole operation.
PagesL 116 | ASIN: B0F8N7X9SM
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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, business, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Isaac Johnson, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, story, The Right Fit, writer, writing
What We Bury Doesn’t Disappear
Posted by Literary-Titan

From Wounds to Purpose is a spiritual guide that offers practical guidance and steady encouragement to turn suffering into strength. You write that pain is unavoidable, but our response to it is a defining choice. When did that idea become central to your work?
As stated in my book, my brother, Ronnie LaCombe, preached a Sermon, “We Serve A Stumbling God.” When he said, “I’m talking about the Almighty God that was manifested in the flesh. The God that stars and angels sang over his birthplace. They called his name Jesus. This was God’s eternal son.
He could change water into wine.
He could walk the turbulent waves of the deep like a pedestrian would walk across the street.
He could call the dead by name and they would be raised to life again.
He could touch the lame and they would walk.
He could give sight to the blind.
He could cleanse disease and demonic powers had to leave at his presence.
But listen to me, this visible image of this invisible God needed help to get his cross to the top of a hill.
Somebody had to help him carry his cross!”
As I listened to that sermon, tears flowing, I realized… That’s it!
That’s my ‘HOW’. That’s HOW I got through all those years!
And so my response is, that is when the ‘idea’ became not only the central to my life… but my work!
You encourage readers to turn toward their wounds rather than bury them. Why is that so difficult for many people?
Turning toward our wounds is difficult because it asks us to face what we’ve spent years trying to survive.
For many people, wounds are tied to pain, shame, fear, or loss—and the mind is wired to avoid what hurts. Burying pain can feel safer than reopening it. Avoidance becomes a form of protection:
If I don’t look at it, maybe it won’t hurt anymore. Unfortunately, what we bury doesn’t disappear—it simply goes underground and quietly shapes our thoughts, relationships, and choices.
Another reason it’s hard is that wounds often challenge the stories we tell ourselves. Facing them may mean admitting that something wasn’t okay, that we were hurt, abandoned, silenced, or misunderstood.
That truth can feel destabilizing, especially for people who learned early on to “be strong,” “move on,” or “not dwell on the past.”
There’s also fear of being overwhelmed. Many worry that if they turn toward their wounds, the pain will be too much—that they’ll fall apart or never recover.
What they don’t yet know is that unacknowledged pain has more power than pain that is lovingly faced.
This is the heart of From Wounds to Purpose: not asking readers to reopen wounds recklessly, but inviting them to gently, bravely, and truthfully turn toward what shaped them—so it no longer controls them.
How do you balance encouragement with honesty about how hard healing can be?
Balancing encouragement with honesty means refusing to sugarcoat the journey while never removing hope from it.
True encouragement doesn’t say, “This will be easy.”
It says, “This is hard—and you are not weak for finding it so.”
Healing asks people to sit with discomfort, grief, anger, and unanswered questions. Being honest about that difficulty builds trust. When we name the struggle, readers feel seen rather than pressured. They realize they’re not “failing” at healing—they’re experiencing it.
At the same time, honesty without hope can feel overwhelming. That’s why encouragement matters. Encouragement reminds readers that difficulty does not mean impossibility, and pain does not mean permanence.
We can say:
This will take time — without implying it will take forever.
You may feel undone at moments — without suggesting you’ll stay broken.
There will be setbacks — without denying real progress.
The balance comes from normalizing the mess while illuminating the meaning.
Honesty names the cost of healing.
Encouragement names the value of it.
What advice do you have for someone who feels resistant or stuck?
Here are several core pieces of advice from the heart of my book, offered without pressure and without judgment:
- Stop trying to force healing.
Healing does not respond well to demands. When we push ourselves with “I should be over this by now,” resistance grows stronger. The book invites readers to replace force with curiosity. Instead of asking, “What’s wrong with me?” ask, “What is this part of me protecting?” - Go smaller than you think you should.
Feeling stuck often comes from trying to take leaps when the nervous system only feels safe taking steps. The book encourages micro-movements. Progress measured in inches still moves you forward. - Honor resistance as a guardian, not an enemy.
Resistance usually formed during a time when it was necessary for survival. When resistance is respected rather than fought, it often softens on its own. - Separate your wound from your identity.
One reason people feel stuck is because pain has quietly become part of who they believe they are. The book reminds readers: You are not your trauma, your past, or your coping strategies. - Allow meaning to come later.
The book is clear: purpose cannot be rushed. If someone is still in pain, they don’t need to “find the lesson” yet. Healing comes first; meaning follows. Trusting that timing removes pressure and reduces shame.
Above all, the book offers this reassurance: Being stuck does not mean you are broken. It often means you are standing at the threshold of change.
From Wounds to Purpose doesn’t ask readers to push through resistance—it invites them to listen to it, honor it, and gently move with it, trusting that even slow steps are still steps toward freedom.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
They’re proof of survival and strength.
This book is a healing companion for anyone who has lived through trauma, heartbreak, or brokenness. From Wounds to Purpose doesn’t just talk about pain—it shifts your perspective. Through honest reflections and Spirit-led encouragement, Sharon reminds you that your pain doesn’t have to be the end of your story. It can be the beginning of something greater.
This book offers honest, hope-filled, and deeply practical wisdom for anyone searching for meaning in their struggles.
More than a “self-help” book, this is a guide, a lifeline, and a reminder that your hardest seasons can birth your greatest calling.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Christian Faith, Christian inspirational, christianity, ebook, From Wounds to Purpose, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religion, Religious Faith, Sharon Lacombe Been, spiritual guide, story, writer, writing
Asterios and the Labyrinth
Posted by Literary Titan

Asterios and the Labyrinth follows Prince Asterios of Knossos as his father dies, political rivals rise against him, foreign powers threaten the island, and love pulls him in directions that the laws of his world barely allow. The story blends palace intrigue, war, prophecy, and a passionate bond between Asterios and the warrior Phaistos. The book moves from grief to revolt to full-scale devastation as Asterios tries to hold his kingdom together while fighting for the man he loves and the legacy he is sworn to protect.
The writing is lush and almost feverish in places, and that style suits the mythic setting. I liked how author Edmond Thornfield lets emotions lead the scenes instead of rushing through them. Asterios’s grief for his father, his fear of losing Phaistos, and the heavy burden of the crown get real space to breathe. I felt the weight he carries and the fire that keeps pushing him forward. The political maneuvering is sharp, too. You can almost feel the treachery when figures like Koronos appear, and those moments gave the story a dangerous edge that kept me hooked.
Thornfield uses myth as a stage to talk about loyalty, love, and identity in a way that feels timeless. The romance between Asterios and Phaistos is tender and fiery and written with such sincerity that I kept rooting for them even when the world around them fell apart. I also liked that the story never hides the cruelty of power. Rulers here bleed, mourn, and make choices that hurt. The rituals, the prophecies, and the glimpses of divine influence gave the book a strange beauty, and I often found myself pausing just to picture a scene more clearly. The battles feel brutal. The magic feels ancient. The love feels stubborn in the best way.
I walked away thinking this book is for readers who enjoy myth retellings that lean into emotion and drama. It is for anyone who wants an epic that is not afraid of intimacy, or a romance that stands tall inside a world full of knives. Asterios and the Labyrinth feels to me like The Song of Achilles collided with a palace-politics thriller, blending tender queer love with sweeping mythic stakes in a way that scratches the same emotional itch while carving out its own bold identity. If you like political intrigue, queer love stories woven into legendary pasts, or richly detailed worlds that feel almost operatic, this book will hit the spot.
Pages: 366 | ISBN: 6501697425
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Asterios and the Labyrinth, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Edmond Thornfield, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Deal Hunter
Posted by Literary Titan

Deal Hunter is a fast-moving sci-fi story that follows Princess Kainda, a young woman who gets blasted out of her controlled royal life and into the path of a rough salvage ship, the Deal Hunter. What begins as a simple rescue turns into a full transformation as Kainda learns the truth about the sabotage that nearly killed her, uncovers betrayal inside her own family, flees to survive, trains to fight, and gradually grows into a leader who challenges pirate clans and rigid political systems. The book winds through battles, bounty hunts, palace intrigue, and a rising sense that Kainda is meant for something far bigger than being a decorative royal figure.
I found myself rooting for Kainda almost immediately. Her frustration with being treated like a pretty tool instead of a person felt sharp and honest. When the explosion sends her spinning into space, her fear is captured with blunt simplicity, and I felt it right in my chest. The dynamic with the Deal Hunter and its robots really pulled me in. The ship becomes more than a tool. It acts almost like a guardian and a reluctant mentor. Watching Kainda stumble through her first moments onboard, half frozen and confused, reminded me how quickly our lives can flip. I liked how the writing sits in those little moments of uncertainty and lets them breathe.
As the book ramps up, the emotional stakes climb right with the action. I enjoyed the mix of tense scenes and Kainda’s stubborn spark as she pushes back against every limit others try to place on her. There were times I wanted to shake some sense into the people around her because their condescension felt so real. I also appreciated how the author keeps returning to the theme of control. Kainda wrestles with the family that smothers her, the pirates who want her dead, and even her own role as a princess. Watching her claim her power bit by bit was satisfying. Some sections move fast, and the pacing jumps, but the heart behind the scenes carries the story. The book has this gritty charm that made me lean in instead of pull back.
Deal Hunter feels like a story for readers who enjoy scrappy heroes, found family energy, political messes, and the thrill of saying to hell with expectations. If you like sci-fi that mixes action with character-driven growth, this book will be a fun ride. I would especially recommend it to anyone who loves seeing a character climb out of the box the world put them in and build something entirely new.
Pages: 245 | ASIN: B0CGHLQX36
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, B.D. Murphy, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Deal Hunter, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, science fiction, scifi, story, writer, writing, young adult
Pause, Reflect, and Reconnect
Posted by Literary-Titan

In Weeds to Wishes, you share your own journey as an educator and the valuable lessons you learned through listening, encouraging others, and even hardships. Why was this an important book for you to write?
Weeds to Wishes was an important book for me to write because it grew out of a deep desire to help others through the lessons I’ve learned along my own journey. There were times in my life when everything felt very heavy.
I felt like I had accumulated so many “weeds” throughout life… the expectations, noise, pressure, and self-doubt, that I had lost touch with who I truly was. I wasn’t allowing myself the quiet moments I needed to pause, reflect, and reconnect with myself. Writing became therapeutic for me, allowing me to release what no longer served me. It allowed me time to shut out the noise, sit with my thoughts, and dig deep within my soul.
Through writing, I learned that I needed to release the “junk” that was weighing me down in order to make room for the treasures and a new beginning. Weeds to Wishes became a way for me to shed, heal, and trust God’s plan and purpose for my life. My hope is to share this with others who may feel the need to do the same.
I appreciated the candid nature with which you share your story. What was the most difficult thing for you to write about?
Thank you. The most difficult thing for me to write about was losing my father and how his death changed my life in so many ways I never expected. I wasn’t ready, but truthfully, I don’t think anyone ever is. He was the glue that held our family together and the strong presence in my life that I leaned on.
Writing about his loss required me to sit with grief that I had often pushed aside in order to keep moving forward, especially since I didn’t know how to deal with it for many years. It forced me to acknowledge how his absence shaped the way I lead, treat others, love, and carry responsibility. Including that part of my story felt vulnerable, but it was necessary for me to move on and become the woman my father would be so proud of. Sharing it was both painful and healing, and it reminded me that some of our greatest growth comes from our hardest moments… our weeds.
Did you learn anything about yourself while writing Weeds to Wishes?
While writing Weeds To Wishes, I learned that I can do anything I set my mind to, even during the tough times. I learned that I needed the tough times (the weeds) to help strengthen me and create the person I was always intended to be. Without the “tough stuff,” I couldn’t have written the book and, in turn, couldn’t help others along the way.
What is one thing you hope readers take away from your experiences?
I hope readers take away that showing up and truly listening matter more than having all the answers. Some of the most meaningful growth in my life came from the hardest moments, the ones I never would have chosen, but that shaped me and strengthened me. I want readers to see that even in the tough times, something good can come from it (a blessing in disguise) when we stay open, present, and willing to learn. In the end, it really does come down to mindset and choosing to see challenges not as endings, but as opportunities for growth and purpose.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
Have you ever felt that quiet tug — the one that whispers, “You’re meant for more” — yet doubt and fear keep you from stepping forward?
Leadership can feel exhilarating… and absolutely terrifying all at once.
Maybe you’re stepping into leadership for the first time and wondering if you’re really ready.
Maybe you’ve been leading for years but feel tired, unseen, or unsure if you can keep going.
Maybe you’re asking yourself, “Can I really make a difference?”
You’re not alone.
In Weeds to Wishes, author and educator Sheryl Brown opens her heart and her 34-year leadership journey — sharing raw, honest stories of courage, missteps, and growth. Through laughter, tears, and lessons learned, she shows you how to turn life’s weeds — the struggles, doubts, and hard seasons — into wishes that bloom into strength, confidence, and purpose.
Part memoir, part how-to guide, this book offers eight keys to becoming the leader you were meant to be, paired with reflective activities and quick reference points to guide you through your own leadership journey.
You’ll discover:
How to rise from burnout with renewed purpose
How to find your voice, even when it trembles
How to transform obstacles into opportunities
And how to lead with heart, courage, and resilience
Because your challenges become your victories.
Your lessons become your strength.
And your courage? It’s just fear with the bravery to keep going.
It’s time to take the leap — to stand tall, rooted and radiant — and finally become the leader you were always meant to be.
Buy the book now!
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoirs, nonfiction, nook, novel, Personal Transformation Self-Help, read, reader, reading, self help, Sheryl Brown, story, Success Self-Help, Weeds to Wishes, writer, writing
Believe in Exceptions
Posted by Literary-Titan

In Wooden Dolls Game, readers follow a woman through a lifetime of dysfunction and chaos as she tries to undo past traumas via a set of curious wooden dolls. Where did the idea for this novel come from?
The main idea came from the extraordinary concept of rewinding time in order to fix mistakes from the past. I then combined that idea with several personal inspirations. One of them was meeting two little sisters during an acting course. I also worked at a company where I met a man who was my trainer at that time, and I was fascinated by how optimistic he was about life. The curious thing is that everything seemed to work exactly as he predicted. He became my inspiration for the character of Jhonatan. Finally, the story was also influenced by one of my favorite movies, The Butterfly Effect. During the pandemic, I had the time to work on this story daily, blending all of these elements together.
How did you navigate crafting the tumultuous relationship between Mary Jane and her sister?
When I was a girl, I had the chance to grow up with my stepsister. She was more intrepid, even though we were close in age. As a teenager, she was often getting into trouble, while I was the one who stayed at home. She was my main inspiration for the character of Antonia.
Is there any moral or idea that you hope readers take away from the story?
My premise is that people do not change the behavior they are naturally born with. What people carry deep in their hearts is what it truly is. That said, I do believe in exceptions and even in miracles.
Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?
I am not sure how soon, but my next goal is to write a five-book series. The series is called Allies of the Stars. I am just starting this project, and while I already have the general ideas for all five books and their stories, I am still developing each one. As with all my stories, it will be a quotidian story with a touch of fantasy.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
In a moment that shapes their lives forever, five-year-old twin sisters Mary Jane and Antonia find themselves embroiled in a rivalry over the simple act of choosing a bedroom in their new home. From that one event, their sisterly bond is broken. As MJ forges a life-long kinship with Olivia, the girl next door, Antonia’s jealousy continues to fester.
Amidst the twists and turns of fate, Mary Jane is presented with a peculiar gift from a local fair—a set of mysterious wooden dolls imbued with magical powers. But as MJ discovers the dolls’ ability to transport her through time, fear leads her to hide them away, burying the magic they hold.
As the years pass and the sisters drift further apart, Antonia’s jealously for Mary Jane deepens. And, as her hatred intensifies for her sister, it sparks a life-changing tragedy, forcing Mary Jane to confront her past and the dormant magic of the forgotten dolls.
But as she seeks to use the power held within the curious toys, can Mary Jane mend the shattered pieces of the past to reshape the future? Or are some destinies bound by forces beyond her control?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, family, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Ivonne Hoyos, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, relationships, story, trauma, Wooden Dolls Game, writer, writing
Unconditional Love
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Sound of Violet, 10th Anniversary Edition follows a young programmer with autism and a woman caught in a web of exploitation as their worlds collide in a way that offers them both hope. Where did the idea behind this novel come from?
The inspiration for The Sound of Violet came from a conversation with a friend about the challenges of dating in Los Angeles when I was single. I was often naïve and overly trusting, and I built those qualities into Shawn’s character. I was intrigued by the idea of him unknowingly starting a relationship with a woman being trafficked.
Initially, I created Violet as the typical “empowered prostitute” you see portrayed in movies. But as I researched and talked to organizations that fight trafficking, I discovered a devastating reality: women in prostitution are most often victims of trafficking. This realization dramatically changed how I portrayed Violet, altered the entire story, and ignited a passion in me to spread awareness about this critical issue. What began as a story about my awkward dating life evolved into something much deeper—a tale about unconditional love, redemption, and the courage it takes to truly see and fight for another person.
What were the morals you were trying to capture while creating your characters?
At the heart of the story is the idea that everyone needs to be seen and cherished. I wanted to create characters who challenge us to see past surface appearances and stereotypes. Shawn’s autism and synesthesia give him a unique way of experiencing the world as he sees beauty that others miss. Violet’s story confronts the reality that trafficking victims aren’t the “empowered” figures often portrayed in media, but people trapped in exploitation who deserve dignity, rescue, and hope.
The novel explores themes of unconditional acceptance, the transformative power of love, and the courage to fight for another person. It also emphasizes that everyone, regardless of how society labels them, has inherent worth and the capacity for redemption and healing.
Where did you get the inspiration for Shawn’s traits and dialogue?
I built my own naivety and overly trusting nature into Shawn’s character. His literal interpretation of language and difficulty reading social cues comes from extensive research into autism and from personal relationships, as well as working with autistic individuals during the production of the film adaptation. On set, one of our key autistic crew members regularly consulted with our lead actor and helped fuel how he portrayed Shawn.
Shawn’s synesthesia, experiencing colors as sounds, adds a unique sensory dimension to his character. This trait allows readers to experience the world through his distinctive perspective, turning everyday moments into rich, sensory ones. His dialogue reflects his direct, factual communication style and his genuine, unguarded approach to relationships.
What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?
As both an author and filmmaker, I’m juggling two creative projects simultaneously. On the film side, I’m developing my next motion picture, aiming to go into production this year. At the same time, I’m writing my next novel, which is a fantasy story that takes me into entirely new genre territory. It’s exciting to explore a different creative landscape while still focusing on the same core themes that drive all my work: authentic characters, meaningful relationships, and stories that make a genuine difference in people’s lives.
For readers who want to follow along with these projects and get updates on when the fantasy novel will be available, they can sign up at forms.sendpulse.com/319b8ea6a1. I send occasional updates about what I’m working on, including behind-the-scenes glimpses of both the writing and filmmaking processes.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon
Shawn dreams of finding a lifelong relationship, but only finds frustration-until he meets Violet, a beautiful, mysterious woman who sees past his autism to the man within. From the moment their eyes first lock, something sparks.
But behind Violet’s quiet smile lies a world of pain. Trapped in a life of exploitation, she’s learned that closeness brings danger. Yet, something about Shawn feels different. Safe. Real. Worth risking everything.
As their bond deepens, they must defy impossible odds and find the courage to fight for each other, no matter the cost. Because only love has the power to heal their deepest wounds and break them free from their past.
This inspirational contemporary romance-now a motion picture-returns as a newly revised 10th Anniversary Edition, with expanded storytelling and greater emotional depth.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Allen Wolf, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary romance fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, romantic comedy, story, The Sound of Violet 10th Anniversary Edition, writer, writing






