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Space to Heal
Posted by Literary-Titan

That Kind of Girl follows an anxious and overwhelmed physician who meets a stripper-slash-therapist whose fearless confidence leaves her to question if having it all is worth the price of losing herself in the process. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration for That Kind of Girl came from seeing the women around me trying to balance the chaos of demanding careers and motherhood. I started writing the book when I was a new mother trying to weave parenting into my life as a physician. I wanted to explore what it truly means to “have it all” and the toll it can take on a woman’s sense of self. The dynamic between the anxious physician and the fearless stripper-therapist is a way to highlight different approaches to confidence and self-acceptance. Ultimately, my hope is to inspire women to find something they love—something that grounds them and brings joy—amidst the overwhelming demands of their lives. It’s about rediscovering yourself when the world expects you to be everything to everyone.
Opal’s struggles with balancing a career, marriage, and family are relatable to many women today. Are there any emotions or memories from your own life that you put into your character’s life?
Absolutely. I often pull emotions from real life into my writing. I want the reader to experience the wide range of emotions they find on the page, often messy, but most of all the joy and levity that comes with not having to do this alone. One memory from my own life that made it into the book was writing a text message filled with four-letter words about my boss and accidentally sending it to my boss instead of my husband.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
One of the core themes I wanted to explore in That Kind of Girl is that a person is never just the sum of their past mistakes. We all carry regrets and moments we wish we could change, but those don’t define us. Redemption, I believe, truly begins with forgiving yourself—allowing space to heal and grow beyond what’s happened. Through the characters’ journeys, I wanted to highlight that self-forgiveness isn’t easy, but it’s essential for reclaiming your sense of worth and moving forward with courage and hope.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
Turbulent Skies is about a woman days away from her wedding when her fiancé has an accident that leaves him on life support. Things go from bad to worse when his ex shows up and reveals they never legally divorced, she has medical decision-making power, and she wants to pull the plug. The book is expected to hit shelves in 2026.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Instagram | Website | Amazon
Will she sacrifice herself to keep everyone she loves happy?
Doctor Opal Collins is anxious and overwhelmed. So when her husband threatens to leave her
unless she finds the time to add a baby to the chaos, she digs deep to impress her boss and earn a
sanity-saving promotion. And though she’s excited by the spark between them, she knows she
should be offended when her boss suggests she trade her body for the job.
Thrilled when she earns the coveted position after setting boundaries in their scandalous affair,
Opal’s complicated dual relationships have her humming with tension. But with the tangled web
of deceit and affection already woven, she fears there’s no way out without betraying her vow to
do no harm.
Has her people-pleasing persona destroyed her dreams, or can she cling to a vestige of self?
That Kind of Girl is a wickedly witty work of women’s fiction. If you like emotional tension,
laugh-out-loud humor, and beautifully crafted prose, then you’ll adore Jacey Bici’s unexpectedly
sweet journey.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, careers, ebook, fiction, forgiveness, goodreads, indie author, Jacey Bici, kindle, kobo, literature, motherhood, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, realistic fiction, story, That Kind of Girl, writer, writing
Bad Actor
Posted by Literary Titan

Bad Actor is a gritty and sharply observed noir that follows Ellis Dunaway, a washed-up TV writer turned private investigator, as he’s pulled back toward the fringes of Hollywood. The book blends a murder mystery involving the death of a high-profile agent, the troubles of fallen actor Urs Schreiber, and Ellis’s own struggles with sobriety, fading relevance, and financial strain. Vaughn sets the action against a vividly sketched Los Angeles, equal parts glitz, decay, and absurdity, while drawing the reader deep into Ellis’s sardonic inner world.
The writing had me hooked from page one. Vaughn’s voice is lean, smart, and sly, with a knack for tossing in lines that sting as much as they amuse. The dialogue crackles, bouncing between bone-dry humor and tense undercurrents. I loved how Ellis is flawed without being a cliché. He’s self-aware enough to see his own failings, but still likely to trip over them anyway. The mix of PI procedural detail, showbiz satire, and personal confessions makes the book feel like it’s living in multiple genres at once. And somehow, Vaughn keeps the balance.
Beneath the twists and snappy banter, there’s a steady hum of commentary on reinvention, ego, and the way Los Angeles eats its own. Vaughn doesn’t preach; he just lets his characters prove the point. I found myself laughing in one paragraph and then unexpectedly feeling the weight of Ellis’s loneliness in the next. The city in this book isn’t just a backdrop, it’s a character with its own moods, grudges, and jokes. It reminded me of walking through Hollywood after midnight: the beauty, the weirdness, the sense that anything could happen, good or bad.
Bad Actor delivers as both a mystery and a character study. It’s for readers who like their noir with bite, their comedy tinged with sadness, and their protagonists both frustrating and impossible to abandon. If you’re into Michael Connelly but wish Harry Bosch swore more, smoked more weed, and wandered into surreal Hollywood detours, this is your book. I’d hand it to anyone who loves a crime story that doesn’t just solve a case but also lays bare the person doing the solving.
Pages: 245 | ISBN: 979-8-9865319-3-9
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, author, Bad Actor, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Keith Edward Vaughn, kindle, kobo, literature, murder, mystery, noir, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
The Image Maker
Posted by Literary Titan


The book follows three men, John Mather, Charles Miller, and Patrick Boyle, whose lives intersect in the early days of the Pennsylvania oil boom. John is a restless photographer determined to capture the grit and grandeur of an industry in its infancy. Charles is a disciplined young soldier whose sense of duty shapes his choices in the Civil War era. Patrick is an impulsive dreamer from an Irish immigrant family, eager to escape the small-town life that feels too small for him. Their stories unfold against a vivid backdrop of muddy streets, booming derricks, political tension, and the ever-present lure of fortune. While grounded in historical fact, the novel moves with the ease of personal storytelling, never drowning in dry details.
I found the writing to be grounded and full of texture. Chris Flanders has a knack for painting a vivid picture without making it feel like a history lesson. The voices of the three men are distinct. John’s ambitious restlessness, Charles’s measured sense of order, and Patrick’s raw yearning. The pacing struck me as unhurried yet purposeful. Some passages lingered on small domestic or mechanical details, and instead of feeling tedious, they made the world feel lived-in. The narrative sometimes wandered, and I caught myself wanting certain plotlines to move faster. But when the moments landed, like a dramatic freshet scene or a tense exchange between characters, they landed hard.
The emotional heart of the book for me was less about oil or war and more about the push and pull between ambition and belonging. Each man is chasing something: security, glory, independence, but they’re also tethered to the people and places they can’t fully leave behind. I felt the quiet ache in John’s marriage, the wary pride Charles took in his promotion, and Patrick’s mix of fear and thrill as he signed enlistment papers. The dialogue read naturally, without feeling over-polished, and I appreciated that not every conflict had a neat resolution. Life in the 1860s oilfields was messy, and the book doesn’t shy away from that.
I’d recommend The Image Maker to readers who enjoy historical fiction that feels both relatable and vivid. If you like stories where real events breathe through the grit of everyday life, this will draw you in. History buffs will appreciate the accuracy, but even if you don’t usually reach for that genre, the characters are engaging enough to keep you turning pages.
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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, Chris Flanders, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Image Maker, writer
Girl Bait
Posted by Literary Titan

Girl Bait blends historical drama with a gritty present-day thriller. It opens in 1837, Alton, Illinois, where a young boy witnesses the violent death of abolitionist Elijah Lovejoy at the hands of a mob. This harrowing prologue sets a tone of danger and moral conflict that carries into the modern timeline, where paramedics, cops, and shadowy operatives are drawn into a tangled web of crime, exploitation, and survival. The narrative alternates between past and present, linking threads of courage, corruption, and human vulnerability across centuries.
I found the writing to be sharp and visual, with scenes that sometimes feel like a camera panning over raw, unvarnished reality. The pacing swings between fast and methodical, letting you breathe just long enough before the next burst of action. The historical passages have a somber weight to them, and they stick in the mind. The modern storyline is blunt, unapologetic, and often brutal, yet it’s grounded by moments of humanity like small gestures and flashes of conscience that make the darkness hit harder.
At times, the bluntness can be jarring. The violence is graphic, the language is rough, and the moral lines are deliberately blurred. Personally, I appreciated that the book doesn’t sand down the edges. Life in this world, whether in 1837 or in the back alleys of Oakland, isn’t tidy. Still, there were moments where the intensity made me pause, not because it was bad, but because it demanded space to digest. The character work is strong, especially in how Pruitt shows both flaws and virtues without telling you what to think.
Girl Bait is an intense and layered read for those who like their thrillers gritty and their history more than just a backdrop. It will appeal to readers who can handle graphic realism and who value moral complexity over neat resolutions. If you want a book that entertains while leaving you unsettled in all the right ways, this one delivers.
Pages: 345 | ASIN : B0F8H7GGJ6
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, BK Pruitt, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, espionage, fiction, Girl Bait, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, spies, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
The Domino Effect
Posted by Literary_Titan

Finding Sutton’s Choice follows a young writer who confronts old memories when she returns home to face her father’s declining health and deal with the family’s struggling newspaper. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I’ve witnessed so many loved ones impacted by Alzheimer’s disease—beloved mentors, friends, friends’ parents or spouses, and even one of my own family members who has shown early signs of dementia. As I researched the topic, it became more and more important to weave a plot that unobtrusively but positively raises awareness of the disease and provides caregivers with a relatable story. As a past journalist of a family-owned Pittsburgh publication, I was drawn to the idea of incorporating a community newspaper. Setting the story in Lakeside Chautauqua, the very real place where I live, also allowed me to offer a snapshot of a closeknit, small Ohio town, not unlike the farming community where I grew up in Coshocton County, Ohio.
Which character in the novel do you feel you relate to more and why?
I have all the feels for Charlotte, as complicated (and sometimes annoying) as she may be. She’s a very, very distant version of myself… an insecure, immature, dutiful but damaged, sometimes angry, and inherently messy version. But aren’t we all a little messy when we’re 10? 20? Older? It takes time to work out the kinks. Charlotte holds onto old hurts far too long, but for good reason. As is seen through her memories, her childhood was complex. I can relate to that. I killed some personal demons in the writing of this book, and, like Charlotte, I’ve grown into a more self-aware human during the process.
Now, if you were to ask me what character I aspire to be, that would be The Surly Sturgeon’s barkeeper, Bea, who is a Boss Lady and completely unconcerned with what others may think. My new motto? Be like Bea.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
Finding Sutton’s Choice explores complicated parent-child relationships, failing mental health, forgiveness, and the domino effect family choices have on who we become.
I am fascinated by how our perceptions of the past can shade and shape our future. Note that I say “perceptions.” Our personal histories are only as factual and reliable as our memories of those moments in time. And, though we are a product of our past, our future is what we make it. We can choose a new path to produce different outcomes. As my character Chuck Sutton would say, “It’s the final inning that really matters.”
Can we look forward to more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?
In the past six years, I’ve completed multiple first drafts during National Novel Writing Month in November. Though I’ve got a healthy stack of potential projects, I’m currently editing a sequel to Finding Sutton’s Choice. The follow-up, tentatively titled Sutton’s Second Chance, is set 15 years in the future. You can expect a few of the same quirky characters and many new ones, all living their best (but equally messy) lives in the little Lake Erie town of Lakeside, Ohio. Additionally, I’ve been working on personal essays about my lake life. I hope to bundle them for future publication.
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | BlueSky | Instagram | Website | LinkedIn
Chuck Sutton-newspaper editor, retired baseball player, and the town’s most beloved celebrity-is thought to have Alzheimer’s disease. The community newspaper is also on the verge of closure, and a childhood friend holds a decade-long grudge. Despite all this, there is Lakeside. The quaint waterfront community, flush with ivy-covered cottages and vintage charm, hasn’t changed even as everything else in Charlotte’s life has shifted. She intends to stay only long enough to get her father’s affairs in order.
But, to reconcile her past and unearth family secrets, Charlotte must reconnect with Chuck through his Alzheimer’s diagnosis and reevaluate her own misconceptions about growing up in the small Ohio town that still holds her heart.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: alzheimers, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Brenda Haas, dementia, ebook, family, fatherhood, fiction, Finding Sutton's Choice, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
The Eye of Ebon
Posted by Literary Titan

The Eye of Ebon is a dark and sweeping fantasy tale that pulls you into a world of bitter winters, brutal enemies, and an undercurrent of ancient legend. At its heart is the harrowing survival of Samiare, a young girl torn from her family and brutalized by the monstrous Groll, only to be delivered a mysterious, almost divine sword that grants her both vengeance and solace. Parallel to her journey is Ruegette, a seasoned warrior from Tierinor, whose sense of duty and stubborn compassion push her to uncover the deeper plot behind the Groll’s presence in the frozen wastes of Norvaine. As the story winds through raids, rescues, and ruin-haunted mountain passes, the narrative threads begin to knot around an ancient key, the Eye of Ebon, and the shadowy forces moving to claim it.
The writing balances vivid brutality with strange beauty, and I felt the weight of every snow-laden step and every wound described. The prose has a rhythm that shifts between crisp action and almost lyrical inner monologue. There are moments of raw violence that left me tense, and others of quiet humanity that kept me thinking about them throughout the day. I found myself caring for Samiare in a way that made me want to step into the page and shield her from the world. Ruegette’s arc resonated differently, more as an exploration of loyalty and the uncomfortable truth that sometimes doing the right thing means walking straight into danger.
There are sections where the descriptions stretch on and slow the urgency, and times when dialogue feels formal. But then the story delivers these sudden jolts, like discoveries in ruined halls, treacherous turns in battle, confessions under the shadow of firelight, that pull you right back in. The mix of political intrigue, mythic history, and personal survival works because it keeps the stakes layered. It’s never just about the fight in front of you, it’s about the web it’s tangled in.
The Eye of Ebon left me with that rare mix of satisfaction and unease. It closes enough loops to feel whole, yet you can sense the larger saga looming beyond the final page. I’d recommend this to readers who like their fantasy sharp-edged and emotionally charged, and for readers who want not just the clash of swords, but the ache of the people wielding them.
Pages: 247 | ASIN : B0DB1F14HD
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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, epic fantasy, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, P. Pherson Green, read, reader, reading, story, sword and sorcery, The Eye of Ebon, writer, writing
Shadows of Truth: A Jake Scott Mystery
Posted by Literary Titan

Barry Finlay’s Shadows of Truth follows Jake Scott, his partner Dani, and her daughter Emilie on what is supposed to be a relaxing Alaskan cruise. But almost from the moment they set sail, the trip takes a darker turn. When a fellow passenger is found dead on the balcony next door, Dani, head of Ottawa’s Homicide Division, can’t shake her suspicion that it was no accident. As the ship glides through breathtaking scenery, Dani quietly investigates, unearthing unsettling connections and running into resistance from the ship’s crew. What begins as a holiday turns into a slow-burning mystery at sea, blending moments of lighthearted travelogue with the tension of an unfolding crime.
I loved how immersive the cruise setting felt. Finlay paints it with vivid detail, from the ship’s bustling dining halls and over-the-top entertainment to the quiet, salty nights on the balcony. The dialogue feels natural. Jake’s dry humor made me grin more than once, and Dani’s calm competence grounded the story. At the same time, I found the pacing deliberately unhurried, which matched the cruise setting. The murder mystery simmers beneath layers of shipboard life, and that contrast works, though it sometimes feels like the crime takes a back seat to the vacation.
What really hooked me was Dani herself. She’s methodical, perceptive, and quietly relentless, even when others want her to let it go. I felt her frustration when leads went cold or when official channels seemed more interested in avoiding bad publicity than finding the truth. Jake, on the other hand, is endearingly out of his element, torn between wanting to support Dani and just wanting to enjoy the trip. Their dynamic felt genuine, equal parts affection, exasperation, and mutual respect. The mystery is clever in how it teases possible motives and suspects without dumping everything at once.
Shadows of Truth is a solid and atmospheric mystery with characters who feel like people you might actually meet on a cruise. It’s perfect for readers who enjoy slower-paced, character-driven mysteries where the setting is as much a part of the story as the plot. If you like your crime fiction laced with travel, humor, and the occasional glass of wine on a moonlit deck, this is a trip worth taking.
Pages: 269 | ASIN : B0FLWN2XCD
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Separate Worlds, Rising Shadows
Posted by Literary Titan

The story follows Tiberius Xander, a brilliant but disillusioned man whose life changes after an encounter with two mysterious visitors. They gift him advanced knowledge, gravity manipulation, fusion power, shielding, and cellular regeneration, on the condition that it is never used for war. The book charts his decades-long journey as he transforms human technology, builds vast space habitats, and reshapes civilisation’s future. It blends personal drama, scientific speculation, and political intrigue, from tense family estrangements to the audacious creation of a Federation of Free Planets. Along the way, we see the social, economic, and moral ripples of progress that push humanity toward the stars.
I found the writing direct and vivid, often reading like a conversation with a friend. The technical descriptions are plentiful and grounded, yet they’re delivered with a sort of casual confidence that makes the ideas feel within reach. There’s a sense of play here, too. Flying cars and space quidditch mix with Nobel Prize speeches and geopolitical manoeuvring. At times, the story lingered on details or tangents that could have been trimmed, but I didn’t mind much because the world-building was so thorough. The voice has personality. It’s sharp, wry, sometimes blunt to the point of ruffling feathers, and that makes the story feel more authentic.
Emotionally, I liked how the book balanced grand ambition with personal vulnerability. Tiberius isn’t painted as a flawless hero. His strained relationships and stubborn pride are as central as his genius. The moments with his granddaughter are warm and grounding, a reminder of the human stakes beneath all the metal and math. I occasionally wished for more tension or uncertainty in the later sections. Tiberius often seems so far ahead of everyone else that obstacles feel like bumps in the road rather than genuine threats. But maybe that’s part of the charm. It’s a story about relentless forward motion, about what happens when someone with power and conscience refuses to be stopped.
I’d recommend Separate Worlds, Rising Shadows to readers who love big-picture science fiction with a heavy dose of speculative engineering and political thought. It’s for anyone who enjoys mixing practical “how it works” science with visionary “what if” scenarios, and who doesn’t mind a protagonist with strong opinions and an even stronger will.
Pages: 278 | ASIN : B0FK4RXSJ8
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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, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fiction, Separate Worlds Rising Shadows, space opera, story, Terence S. McNamara, writer, writing








