Blog Archives
The Pain of the Past
Posted by Literary-Titan

Caroline’s Purpose follows a once-promising athlete and equestrian who, after an accident, struggles to navigate college, broken relationships, and haunting memories, while trying to find purpose in a life that feels hollow. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
My inspiration for the setup of my story was my own journey. I tried to be the best at different things, only to come out on the other side hollow and disappointed. I wanted to encourage readers that God always has the best purpose for our lives. We don’t have to rely on ourselves. We don’t have to strive to be the best at something for fulfillment or to find our identity or value. Our identity and value are found in who God made us to be. Caroline needed to discover that by losing the identities she had worked endlessly for. Her pain is relatable for anyone who has lost dreams or the identities they created for themselves. God uses our pain to bring us back to Him and the value He created us with
In many contemporary coming-of-age fiction novels, authors often add their own life experiences to the story. Are there any bits of you in this story?
There’s a whole lot of me in this story. I played softball in high school and was a pitcher. I chose not to play in college because I didn’t think I was good enough. I was offered an academic scholarship to the University of Arizona. I lived out my dreams of pitching for the U of A through Caroline. At U of A, I majored in Equine Science. A riding accident in middle school led me to playing softball. The Equine Program at the U of A was my return to the horse world, like it is for Caroline in the book. Luna, the weanling, is based on the weanling I was assigned in the weanling class. Her name is Goldee, and she is now my horse. Edison is based off of the real-life Edison I leased and then owned until he had to be put down two years ago. Edison is the horse who gave me my confidence back. He wasn’t abused, like the Edison in the novel, but he was a huge part of my healing and moving forward.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
The themes that were important for me to explore in this book were God’s purpose for each life and healing from the pain of the past. It is easy to get stuck in the pain, especially when multiple dreams have fallen apart. It is easy to feel like God has forgotten about us or doesn’t care about us. I wanted to create a story to show readers that God always loves and always cares and always has a purpose for us. I wanted to create characters that would show that healing is possible.
Will this novel be the start of a series, or are you working on a different story?
I am currently working on the sequel.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
When she meets Connor Taylor, Caroline finds that he is able to relate to her pain more than she would have thought possible.
With the help of Edison, an abused horse, Connor seeks to help Caroline learn to use her past as a stepping stone towards the future.
As her relationship with Connor grows, Caroline must make a choice to conquer her fear or to stay where she feels safe. Their relationship and her future hang in the balance.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Caroline's Purpose, ebook, Erica Zaborac, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, Teen & Young Adult Clean & Wholesome Romance, Teen & Young Adult Literature & Fiction, Teen and YA, wholesome romance, writer, writing, YA
The Circle of Life Continues
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Adventures of Troy Home Again follows a bald eagle who discovers companionship and sets out on new adventures with his partner by his side. What is your process for capturing the thoughts and feelings of animal characters?
We have two dogs and two cats. After a while, you really get to non-verbally communicate with them. As the fourth book of the Troy series, it’s been wonderful developing these characters over the years. Although they are animals, they certainly have their own distinct personalities.
Do you have a favorite scene in this story? One that was especially fun to write?
This book was so much fun to write and illustrate. I especially love the last page. Troy and Aliana in their nest, with their two little baby eagles about to hatch. The circle of life continues.
Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently writing?
I’m writing a psychological thriller that should be completed soon.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon
The book includes a glossary of “The 20 Words” at the back of each book that offers simple definitions of words highlighted throughout the story to help increase a young child’s vocabulary. Parents will enjoy reading these books to their toddlers. Elementary school children will love reading these heartwarming tales of friendship and adventure on their own.
Author and Illustrator, Hope Kelley, is Owner of ECBYbooks, a fully integrated online bookstore. She is also Producer, Director, and Writer for Hope Kelley Productions & South 16 Films. Ms.Kelley hosted and directed the tv program, SA Style, in San Antonio, Texas. She was awarded the honor of directing and producing a documentary, Project Hope, in Washington, D.C. Ms. Kelley is also a talented journalist, anchor, actor, and spokeswoman who has appeared in films, tv programs, and commercials. Ms. Kelley was awarded the UIL Scholarship in Music to the University of Texas at Austin. As a classical clarinetist, she has performed in symphony orchestras. Ms. Kelley graduated from the University of Texas at Austin earning a Degree in Broadcast Journalism. She began her broadcasting career as an Intern and Journalist for ABC Austin, and at the Dallas ABC News Bureau at the Capitol of Texas. As an artist and illustrator, you can find her work on her gallery at ECBYart.com.
As a published Author and Illustrator, her books, The Adventures of Troy A New Home, The Adventures of Troy Rescuing Lily the Lamb, The Adventures of Troy the Bald Eagle, The Adventures of Troy Home Again, The G Sin, and her novel, Fire in Forgotten (Winner of the International Impact Book Award in Historical Fiction), are available in thousands of bookstores worldwide. Ms. Kelley also enjoys helping other writers achieve their goals as published authors. Learn more at HopeKelley.com
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: adventure, animal stories, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Children's books, ebook, goodreads, Hope Kelley, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, The Adventures of Troy Home Again, writer, writing
Exploring Fear
Posted by Literary_Titan

Fear Struck follows a crime writer who, while writing his latest murder mystery, has his door broken down by police and is arrested for a murder that looks like one of the scenes in his book. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
As a writer, I often feel like a conduit for someone else’s ideas, with words flowing so quickly that I sometimes wonder where they are coming from. This experience sparked a question for me: what if a writer suddenly became the instrument for someone else’s story in a very real and dangerous way? This personal connection to the story became the seed for Fear-Struck and its psychological thriller setup.
The truth is, many of my novels begin with a simple “what if.” Whispering Lessons is a good example. I asked myself, what if someone had secretly followed Jesse James and his gang, watched them bury their stolen treasure, and then dug it up after they rode away? Could that be why so many of those legendary treasures have never been found? Those two words, “what if,” open the door to endless possibilities, and they are often the starting point for my strongest storylines.
What are some things that you find interesting about the human condition that you think make for great fiction?
There are so many layers to the human condition that writers need to pay attention to, because those layers are what make fiction feel real. In Fear-Struck, I delved deep into the debilitating impact fear can have on a person. It doesn’t just consume the main character. The suspect gets overwhelmed by it, too. Even the people in the prison around him react out of fear.
Fear is universal. It shapes decisions, drives behavior, and sometimes clouds judgment. Our minds are incredibly powerful, and our thoughts can either protect us or harm us. In this story, fear becomes almost a character in its own right, influencing everyone in its path. That kind of emotional truth, rooted in what people really experience, is what makes fiction resonate.
When you first sat down to write this story, did you know where you were going, or did the twists come as you were writing?
For Fear-Struck, I actually did know the storyline before I began writing. That is unusual for me, as I am not usually a plotter, but in this case, I could clearly see the characters and the journey ahead of them. I knew the ending, and I knew how I wanted to move from the moment of the arrest all the way to the final reveal.
What mattered most to me was exploring fear, not just telling a crime story. I wanted to look at how fear shapes people from the inside out. The reviews have been incredible, and many readers mention how closely they connect with the characters and their reactions. I think that connection exists because fear is something we all face in one way or another. It is a profound human experience, and that truth comes through in the story.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
I am currently writing Book Two in the series. It starts as Kutter is still dealing with the emotional aftermath of what happened in Book One, where he was arrested for a murder that resembled a scene in his own book. These lingering effects push him into a situation unlike anything he has ever faced before. This new challenge forces him to grow in unexpected ways.
In this next installment, Kutter, the main character from Fear-Struck, finds himself sitting across from an unapologetic and prideful serial killer. His personal revulsion toward this man directly clashes with his responsibility to uncover the names of the victims. That internal battle is something many of us understand, because we all face moments where our emotions collide with what we know we must do.
I am thrilled to share that I am aiming to have the next book ready for readers in early 2026. I cannot wait to continue Kutter’s journey and share the next chapter with you all.
Author Interview: GoodReads | BlueSky | Facebook | Pinterest | Website
Detective Tweed believes Kutter’s pages hold the truth. Kutter swears he’s innocent. Yet with each revelation, a darker reality emerges—one bound to him by blood.
Relentless and chilling, Fear Struck will keep you guessing until the final, shocking twist.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, Fear Struck, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Kay A. Oliver, kindle, kobo, literature, murder, mystery, nook, novel, psychological thriller, read, reader, reading, serial killer, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
Navigating Memory Loss: Essential Questions and Answers on Alzheimer’s and Dementia
Posted by Literary Titan

Navigating Memory Loss lays out a clear and heartfelt guide to understanding dementia. It moves from the author’s personal story into practical explanations of different dementia types, then on to communication hurdles, safety issues, care strategies, and end-of-life planning. It also unpacks new treatments and ongoing research in a way that feels grounded and approachable. The book combines medical know-how with lived experience, and it makes complex ideas feel manageable.
The writing is simple, steady, and open in a way that feels like the author is sitting beside you. I appreciated how she explained science without drowning the reader in big terms. Her honesty hits hard at times. When she describes the slow changes in her mother or the fear families feel as reality shifts, I found myself pausing and taking a breath. The book has a calm tone, yet the emotional weight underneath is unmistakable. I liked that she doesn’t pretend there are easy answers. Instead, she talks in a straight line about what actually helps and what does not.
The sections on anosognosia and differing realities stayed with me the most. They made me rethink how communication breaks down, not because someone is being stubborn, but because their brain no longer gives them the tools to understand. That idea alone softened some of my own assumptions. The pieces on care planning also stirred a lot of feelings. The frank discussion about feeding, autonomy, and the way a person might slowly be kept alive without truly living made me uncomfortable and moved me at the same time. Still, the writing never feels grim. It feels like someone offering a light so you can keep walking.
This book is a solid choice for anyone who loves someone with dementia, anyone worried about their own risk, or anyone who wants to understand how memory changes shape a life. It works well for caregivers who need guidance, families who need language for hard conversations, and even clinicians looking for a more humane perspective. I’d recommend it to people who want facts and also want comfort. It reads like a companion for a long and complicated road.
Pages: 83 | ASIN : B0G16QR467
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: alzheimer, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Catherine Madison, dementia, ebook, goodreads, indie author, internal medicine, kindle, kobo, literature, Medical Books, medical neuropsychology, Navigating Memory Loss, Neurology, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Hypocrisy
Posted by Literary Titan

The novel Hypocrisy drops you right into a wild mix of government secrets, alien power plays, and strange visions that blur the line between what is real and what is imagined. The story opens with Ché Anaconda, a UAP hunter who lives knee deep in lies and threats. From there, the book cuts across galaxies, following Alen Innocent, Honor, Charisma, and a cast of beings who shift forms, twist timelines, and chase after knowledge that could change everything. The plot swings fast, with violence, politics, and cosmic mysteries all happening at once, and it creates this feeling that the universe is breaking open in every direction.
The writing has this bold energy that keeps the scenes jumping. The author clearly loves big ideas. I could feel that passion on almost every page. Scenes would explode out of nowhere. But then I would get pulled back in by some strange image, like blood on a bedsheet turning into a vision. The book has a way of surprising you right when you start to doubt it, and that made the experience weirdly addictive. It felt like watching someone open doors faster than you can peek inside them.
This whole concept of powerful beings feeling lost, insecure, or tired struck me more than I expected. I liked how the book kept poking at the idea that knowledge can be both a gift and a curse. There is something human in the middle of all the chaos. Some moments made me feel a real ache, especially scenes that touch on memory and trauma. Other times, I felt thrown off by the heavy social commentary. Even so, those rough edges gave it a raw emotion that stuck with me.
I think Hypocrisy is perfect for readers who enjoy fast, unpredictable sci-fi with big stakes and messy characters who feel alive. It will hit the sweet spot for people who like their stories loud, strange, and full of cosmic drama, and who don’t mind a little narrative chaos in the mix. If you like to dive into a universe that punches first and explains later, you’ll have a good time.
Pages: 378 | ASIN : B0FV55K9F8
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A.J. Thibault, action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, goodreads, Hypocrisy, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, science fiction, scifi, story, writer, writing
Cheated By The System
Posted by Literary Titan
Just Another Statistic is a gripping memoir tracing your disorienting descent into autoimmune illness and misdiagnosis as you fight to make sense of a body and a healthcare system that keeps failing. Why was this an important book for you to write?
I felt cheated by the system. The doctors colluded despite overwhelming evidence. Experts defended their colleagues by glossing over facts. One doctor was brave enough to stand up against his colleagues, which gave me hope. But when the barrister pulled out the day before trial, it was devastating – I couldn’t afford to continue, and accountability became impossible.
Writing this book became essential because the story needed to be told, but not just mine. Thousands of patients – particularly those with autoimmune conditions – go through this same pattern of dismissal and misdiagnosis. They’re told their symptoms aren’t real, that they’re anxious, that test results matter more than their lived experience. I wanted to create an unflinching record that validates that experience and shows what happens when the medical system fails someone systematically – not through one dramatic error, but through countless small dismissals that compound into something life-threatening. If the legal system wouldn’t hold anyone accountable, at least the written record would exist.
How did you decide what parts of your medical journey to include, especially when so much of it was confusing or frightening in the moment?
I documented everything during my illness in real-time – the confusion, the symptoms being dismissed, the mounting evidence that was ignored. I stopped writing when I ended up back in hospital, and in some ways that natural endpoint made sense. Those initial years were the most significant – this is what fundamentally changed my life. An earlier diagnosis could have prevented so much of the damage that followed.
I also included everything that showed the pattern of medical failure. It wasn’t just about my journey – I wanted readers who might be experiencing something similar to recognise the warning signs. The moments where symptoms get overlooked, where you’re sent home when you should be admitted, where doctors prioritise their assumptions over clinical evidence. The confusion and fear weren’t just backdrop; they were part of the story. Cognitive fog isn’t a neat narrative device – it’s disorienting and repetitive, and I kept that messiness intentional because that’s how chronic illness actually feels: non-linear, scattered, exhausting.
Were there specific memories or scenes that you found emotionally hardest to write, particularly those involving cognitive fog or hospital stays?
Writing about it now has been harder than I expected. Reliving the experience and the frustration – knowing the doctors involved faced no accountability – still makes me furious. I was too ill to fight the case on my own. If I had to do it today, I’d go to court and represent myself. But they took advantage of my illness and lack of funds, and I agreed not to pursue the matter further.
However, I never agreed not to write about it. They probably didn’t worry about that anyway – my life expectancy was supposed to be short. The hospital stays were brutal to revisit – particularly the moments of desperate, uncontrolled pain. I remember begging to be hit over the head with a hammer because the pain was so overwhelming. Writing about that level of suffering, and knowing it was preventable with proper diagnosis, was excruciating. The cognitive fog sections were also difficult because I had to authentically capture what it feels like when your mind stops working properly. You can’t think your way out of not being able to think. And documenting that failed legal battle – the negligence I couldn’t afford to hold anyone accountable for – that was enraging to put on the page.
What do you hope medical professionals take away from your account of being repeatedly dismissed or misread by the healthcare system?
I hope they learn to have a sense of responsibility. Not all doctors are ‘good’, and when they’re asked to review a patient, they need to see them as a blank slate and make up their own minds. Don’t follow like a herd of sheep – it makes second opinions pointless. I was reviewed by twelve different doctors, and the pattern of collusion was unmistakable. Ultimately, I hope they’ll learn the signs of lupus, check results properly, and actually pursue concerning findings instead of dismissing them.
But I’m always left questioning the financial incentives at play. I was in a private hospital where doctors had a blank cheque. Some would pop into my room, nod for two minutes, and charge £100 for the privilege. The longer I stayed misdiagnosed, the more money was made. Perhaps people think I’m paranoid, but the medical notes – and the ones that went missing – tell their own story. When accountability is impossible and financial incentives align with prolonged treatment rather than accurate diagnosis, patients are left vulnerable. That’s the uncomfortable truth no one wants to acknowledge.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
At twenty-nine, a successful currency trader’s life was derailed by mysterious symptoms that baffled doctors for eighteen critical months. Misdiagnosed with tuberculosis, he endured toxic treatments for a disease he didn’t have while lupus systematically attacked his brain, kidneys, and joints. He nearly died multiple times—not from his illness, but from the medications meant to cure him.
Just Another Statistic: Battling Invisible Autoimmune Illness and Visible Medical Failure is a raw, unfiltered memoir written during active illness. Unlike most medical memoirs crafted from the safety of recovery, this account preserves the authentic voice of a mind under attack—the obsessive thoughts, fragmented reasoning, and cognitive chaos that lupus inflicted on the author’s brain.
The repetitive sections and circular thinking aren’t poor editing; they’re genuine symptoms documented as they happened. This book offers something most medical literature cannot: real-time insight into how autoimmune disease fundamentally alters consciousness and thought processes.
From the butterfly rash that doctors dismissed to the blood tests that were ignored, from seizures in hospital corridors to the desperate fight for proper diagnosis, this memoir exposes the human cost of medical arrogance and the life-saving importance of patient advocacy.
Essential reading for anyone with chronic illness, their loved ones, medical professionals seeking to understand patient experience, or anyone who simply wants to survive their next medical encounter. A stark warning about what happens when the system fails—and a testament to human resilience in the face of institutional indifference.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Axel Reid, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Just Another Statistic, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
The Beast Keepers
Posted by Literary Titan

The Beast Keepers tells the story of Jonathan St. Roche, a young veterinarian who takes a job in rural Ohio and discovers that his new patients include mythological creatures hiding in plain sight. The book follows Jonathan as he learns to care for flying monkeys, unicorns, gryphons, and even a pregnant Pegasus, all while untangling his own past and falling into a quiet, hopeful romance. The story blends warm small-town life with danger, mystery, and a deep sense of wonder as Jonathan faces ethical choices and moments of real heartbreak, including an emotional situation with a basilisk.
I loved the way the author mixed everyday farm routines with bizarre surprises. One moment I was listening to a farmer brag about his border collies, and the next, there was a Pegasus unfurling honey-scented wings that glowed in the sun. The writing has this gentle rhythm to it. It pulls you into the fields and barns without feeling forced. Sometimes the book drifts into long conversations, but I liked that. It made the place feel authentic. Even when a scene turned tense, like when the team hunted the dangerous basilisk in the woods, there was still this grounded sense of companionship and purpose.
I also grew surprisingly attached to the characters. Jonathan’s mix of idealism and exhaustion felt honest. His reactions made sense. He stumbled, tried again, cared too much, and sometimes cried when he had to do the hard thing for the right reason. I liked DeeDee too. Their story is gentle and sweet, and the moment they finally kissed made me grin because it felt earned and warm and a little awkward in the best way. What surprised me most was how the book handled the mythical creatures. They are wondrous, but they are not props. They have needs, instincts, dangers, and sometimes tragic flaws. The book treats them with respect, and that gave the story emotional weight that stayed with me.
When I finished the last page, I felt good, and a bit wistful, and honestly kind of sad to leave the world behind. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves gentle fantasy with real emotional stakes, especially readers who enjoy animal stories, cozy rural settings, and small-town friendships. It is also a great pick for people who want fantasy that feels new but still comforting.
Pages: 323 | ASIN : B0CBQKPVZY
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: animal care and pets, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Julie Fudge Smith, kindle, kobo, literature, mythical creatures, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, teen, The Beast Keepers, writer, writing, YA Fiction, young adult
The Ordinary Adventures of Somerset Soames von Hesse
Posted by Literary Titan

The book traces the early life of Somerset Soames von Hesse, the youngest son in a missionary family that moves across continents. It follows the family from the United States to Egypt and Lebanon, then later to Colorado and beyond. The story blends personal memory with cultural snapshots. Each chapter unfolds against real historical moments, creating a timeline of growing up inside a strict religious framework while navigating friendships, dangers, family conflicts, school life, and a constant, restless search for belonging. It reads like a memoir wrapped inside a family saga, with Somerset watching the world while trying to figure out his place in it.
I found myself pulled in by the emotional honesty. The writing sometimes feels plainspoken, almost conversational, and that worked for me. It made the moments of fear, frustration, and longing hit harder. I felt a pang when little Wilfred nearly died after drinking kerosene, and the family’s panic filled the pages in a way that made me sit up straight. The author shows these moments without dressing them up. I liked that. At times, the prose wanders, but the wandering feels true to memory. I could almost hear someone telling me the story over a kitchen table. It made the world feel lived-in and messy and real.
Other times, I found myself laughing a little under my breath. Somerset’s charm, even as a tiny kid, is delightful. He’s wide-eyed, always scheming, always trying to impress girls, and it’s just so relatable. The book captures that childlike longing to be noticed, to matter, to be special. I felt protective of him. The chaotic moves, the strict expectations, and the way the adults often seem wrapped up in their own missions, while the kids try to make sense of everything around them. It stirred something in me. I kept thinking about how heavy the world can feel when you’re small and everyone else is busy doing “important things.”
By the end, I felt warm toward the story even when I was frustrated with some of the adults. I’d recommend this book to readers who enjoy memoir-style storytelling, especially people interested in missionary life, cross-cultural childhoods, or family histories full of both tenderness and hardship. It’s also a good pick for anyone who likes a slow, reflective read and doesn’t mind scenes that unfold more like memory than plot.
Pages: 462 | ASIN : B0FMSC22T8
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, autofiction, biographical fiction, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Family Life Fiction, fiction, goodreads, Historical Biographical Fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Marvin Brauer, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, siblings, story, The Ordinary Adventures of Somerset Soames von Hesse, writer, writing








