Blog Archives

Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Silver Book Award

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

Crimson Hearts by Susan Reed-Flores

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Scam at Higgins Canyon Road

Scam at Higgins Canyon is a fast-paced thriller set in modern-day San Francisco, where Jack Rhodes, a forensic data analyst with a past riddled with personal tragedy, is drawn into an investigation that blurs the lines between conspiracy theory and criminal fact. After being approached by Tommy Griggs, a former military man grieving the suspicious death of a close friend, Jack finds himself navigating murky dealings involving construction companies, veterans, shady bar staff, and a patchwork of old friendships and new threats. The story unfolds with scenes ranging from dive bar brawls and emotional reckonings to intricate digital sleuthing and philosophical musings about loyalty, justice, and memory.

Mackay’s voice is dry, often funny, sometimes poetic, and surprisingly introspective. He doesn’t just tell a story, he sits with it. The dialogue is snappy and real. The prose veers between gritty and lyrical, painting San Francisco with a worn, lived-in brush that feels nostalgic and alive at once. The characters are layered, flawed, often a bit lost, and it works. Jack isn’t your typical hard-boiled hero. He’s sharp and measured, but there’s a sadness beneath all that quiet competence. And the side characters from the chaotic Madam Li to the old army guys drowning their grief in tequila feel like people you’ve met in a bar at 1 a.m.

The plot feels realistic. There’s no grand twist, no explosive climax, just the slow, methodical piecing together of something quietly wrong. And that’s where Mackay leans into an idea I appreciated: that real scams, real deaths, real betrayals, don’t need Hollywood endings. They just need someone to pay attention. It made me think more than it thrilled me, which, to be honest, I didn’t expect, and ended up liking.

Mackay’s writing style reminded me of early Michael Connelly mixed with the gritty introspection of Raymond Chandler and the modern, character-driven pacing of Tana French. If you like character-driven mysteries with heart and grit, stories that hang out in the gray areas and don’t rush the truth, then Scam at Higgins Canyon is a gem. It’s a book for people who don’t mind sitting with uncertainty, who appreciate when a mystery’s biggest revelation isn’t about a killer but about the world we live in.

Pages: 341 | ASIN : B0DTFLZMNC

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Do We Really Trust God?

G.S. Gerry Author Interview

Trust on Trial explores the complexity of human faith, betrayal, and redemption by staging a trial where “Earnest Trust” is accused of fraud, betrayal, and breach of contract. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Honestly, it started with a question that hit me in the gut: We all have trust issues and how often does our trust issues impact our ability to trust God? Do we really trust God…or just say we do? From there, the courtroom idea took shape. I imagined Trust not as a concept, but as a character. Tired, beat up, misunderstood; and then put him on the trial of his life. Because let’s face it: we all have trust issues. Not just with people. With God. And until we drag those doubts into the light and interrogate them, we’re stuck spiraling and repeating the same cycle of misplaced trust.

The legal drama was the perfect lens. It’s structured, intense, and emotionally charged; almost like spiritual wrestling. It gave me the space to let readers become jurors in their own faith journey. And it gave Trust a voice we rarely give him.

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

Oh, we’re going deep. This book is about more than just faith; it’s about what happens when faith fractures. Themes like betrayal, disappointment with God, spiritual deconstruction, and church hurt are front and center. But more than that, I wanted to explore redemption. Not the clean, polished kind, but the messy, bloody, uncomfortable kind where people have to face their own reflections in the courtroom mirror. I also wanted to tear into the myth that doubt means failure. Because sometimes, doubt is just the doorway to deeper trust.

I find that, while writing, you sometimes ask questions and have the characters answer them. Do you find that to be true? What questions did you ask yourself while writing this story?

Absolutely. The entire book is one giant interrogation—of Trust, of faith, of myself. Every character is either asking or answering hard questions we usually avoid and lock away in the recesses of our minds.

Questions like:

What does it mean to trust when nothing makes sense?

Is God still good when the world isn’t?

Can I forgive the people who shattered my trust; and still trust again?

Am I holding onto control instead of trusting in the God I say I believe in?

So yes, the characters were answering questions I didn’t always have the courage to say out loud. That’s what made the courtroom setting so powerful. It gave me permission to go there.

What were some goals you set for yourself as a writer in this book?

I had two goals, and neither involved playing it safe.

Tell the truth, even if it’s ugly. I didn’t want to sanitize doubt or pain. I wanted readers to feel seen in their mess, not shamed by it. I wanted them to be confronted head on with the various ways they have had their trust broken in their lifetimes and examine if they have been misplacing their trust.  

Start a conversation that keeps echoing after the last page.
I wanted readers to walk away wrestling with their own verdict. This isn’t a book that gives you answers on a silver platter. It asks you to decide. To confront your trust issues and look at broken trust, trust itself, and faith through a fresh, unfiltered lens.

My mission has always been to blend chaos with meaning, comedy with conviction, and absurdity with truth. Trust on Trial is all of that…and then some.

Author Website

TRUST ON TRIAL. YOU ARE THE JURY.

What if Trust were dragged into court, charged with fraud, betrayal, and breach of contract? What if your own experiences with broken promises, lost faith, and second chances became the evidence? Trust on Trial isn’t just a book. It’s a courtroom battle for the ages, where Trust himself is on trial and readers hold the power to decide his fate. Through witness testimonies from history, the Bible, and real life, this gripping narrative challenges everything you believe about Trust, faith, and redemption. Can Trust be restored, or is he beyond saving?
As the prosecution and defense build their cases, readers will wrestle with questions like:
•Can Trust ever be fully rebuilt after betrayal?
•Is Trust dangerous, or is he necessary?
•What does it mean to put Trust in something greater than yourself?
The evidence is presented. The testimonies are compelling. Your verdict will define what Trust means in your life. Step into the courtroom, examine the evidence, and render your verdict. The stakes have never been higher.

Impulsive and Reckless

Lisa Towles Author Interview

Switch follows a former CIA operative turned private investigator, who’s recovering from a hit-and-run attack that lands her in the middle of an investigation laced with mystery, betrayal, and emotional landmines. How did you balance the action scenes with the story elements and still keep a fast pace in the story?

I wrote it like a reader – expecting the peril and drama to flow and ebb in a certain rhythm. For a main character who’s often impulsive and reckless, sometimes the adrenaline feels nonstop and I think that’s something she struggles with in the story and also in this series.

What was one of the most complex parts of Switch for you to write?

The quantum computing details were very tricky because the technology is constantly and rapidly evolving. This is an area of technology I’ve been following for some time so I had some frame of reference, but I needed to help my characters understand it so their conversations about it would feel authentic.

When can readers expect to see Switch available to purchase?

September 30, 2025 it will be available on Amazon, B&N, and from all book retailers.

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

Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

Finding Manhood in Scotland by Victor Atyas
Viper Island by Cameron K. Moore
The Ballad of Midnight and McRae by Jess Lederman

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Silver Book Award

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Thrilling and Unpredictable

C.J. Caughman Author Interview

Native Arcana follows a Cherokee marshal who has survived multiple traumas throughout her life as she plunges headfirst into the mystery behind a series of occult murders. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Anyone familiar with Eastern Oklahoma knows it has a deep undercurrent of mystery and strange folklore, which made it the perfect backdrop for Native Arcana. The initial idea came to me back in college while brainstorming with a writing partner, but it ended up sitting on the shelf for years. It wasn’t until I met my wife that the story truly came to life. She’s a proud Cherokee woman who grew up in and around Tahlequah, and when I shared the concept with her, she immediately connected with it. She began contributing her own insights, cultural knowledge, and ideas, which really shaped the story’s themes. Many of Nita’s mannerisms and experiences are drawn directly from her life.

As for the occult elements—Oklahoma has a strange history that includes everything from the OKC bombing to isolated incidents of cult-like behavior. With enough research, you start to notice peculiar threads connecting some of these events, often rooted in fear, hate, or darkness. I felt like the only kind of character who could face down that kind of evil was someone like Nita: someone who has endured trauma without losing herself to it, someone who turns pain into purpose and strength. She’s the kind of person who helps others not despite her suffering, but because of it.

What do you find is the most difficult thing about writing a thriller?

For me, the biggest challenge was keeping the story grounded in reality while also exploring some of the mystical elements that naturally arise in a story like Native Arcana. Balancing believable law enforcement procedures with moments of the supernatural was tricky. I wanted the narrative to remain thrilling and unpredictable without veering too far from authenticity. Hopefully, I found that balance—but ultimately, that’s for the readers to decide.

Which of your characters do you feel you relate to most and why?

All the characters carry pieces of me, especially Nita and Blake. But if I had to choose, Nita feels the most personal. She’s a reflection of the strong women who shaped my life—most importantly my wife, my mother, and my sister, but I’d be remiss not to mention my aunts and cousins as well. I often say I was raised by strong women, and that gave me a deep respect for their resilience, complexity, and quiet strength. Writing Nita was my way of honoring them—of capturing their spirit and putting that strength on the page.

Can fans look forward to a follow-up to Native Arcana? What are you currently working on?

While Native Arcana stands strong as a standalone novel with a complete arc for Nita and the supporting characters, I’m definitely exploring where her journey might lead next. As a Cherokee Marshal, there’s no shortage of strange, dark corners of the world she could uncover. I’m currently developing ideas that would push her into new mysteries and challenges—ones that test her resolve and reveal even more layers of who she is.

In addition to that, I’m working on a couple of other projects, most notably The Drums of Secession, Book II in the Cannon Fire Plot series. It’s the sequel to The Wages of Kin and continues the saga of the Battier family as they fight back against a tyrannical regime in a fantasy world inspired by colonial America. The series explores revolution, loyalty, and identity in a richly imagined world filled with complex characters and high-stakes conflict.

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

Native Arcana is a thrilling crime story in the heart of mysterious eastern Oklahoma. For as long as she can remember, Nita Ross has seen the world through the eyes of someone who can sense its evil. She thought she knew violence, trauma, and evil in all its many forms, but she didn’t know the half of it until a charismatic and enigmatic ‘preacher’ came into town.

Before that, Nita was an everyday Cherokee Marshal, working Cherokee Nation and policing its laws. However, a desire to live a stable life was always out of reach. She is a survivor of many traumatic events: The Oklahoma City Bombing, a shootout, and most recently, the death of her husband. In the aftermath of the latter, she struggles to mother her autistic stepson as the violent incidents around her begin to mount.

A series of occult murders involving an Amish girl, a ranch hand to a multi-millionaire, and demonic iconography leads to a task force to hunt down the culprit of these heinous acts – including OSBI and Nita’s old friend and Thorpe Ranch owner, Blake Edwards. But, with her persistence and unique capabilities, Nita soon realizes she may be the only person equipped to uncover this mystery.