Blog Archives

Surprising Max

Christine Johansen’s Surprising Max is a gentle, reflective children’s book that follows Max, a young boy devoted to soccer and firmly uninterested in piano lessons. A bargain with his mother sets the story in motion. Max agrees to practice every day, despite the frustration that quickly follows. His lessons come with an unusual responsibility. He must water his piano teacher’s garden, home to a frail and wilted amaryllis. As days pass and practice continues, an unexpected transformation unfolds. The flower blooms. So does Max.

One of the book’s greatest strengths lies in its accessibility. The language remains clear and uncomplicated, making the story well-suited for early readers and read-aloud settings. The rhythm feels steady and reassuring. Nothing rushes. Young readers have space to absorb the narrative and reflect on each moment. Judith Gosse’s illustrations elevate this experience. Warm, expressive artwork fills every page, capturing Max’s emotions with clarity and charm. Even before a child can read the words, the story speaks through the images.

The central metaphor stands out with quiet power. The amaryllis becomes a visual reminder that growth requires patience and care. Progress appears slowly. Confidence develops the same way. As Max continues to practice, his abilities begin to surface. His self-belief strengthens. The parallel feels natural and meaningful. Children receive this message gently, without instruction or pressure. The story encourages openness to new challenges, even when discomfort comes first.

A thoughtful addition appears at the book’s conclusion. The inclusion of sheet music for Max’s recital piece, “Awaiting Amaryllis,” extends the story beyond the page. It invites interaction. It connects narrative to real music. For some children, it may even spark curiosity about learning an instrument of their own.

Surprising Max is a warm and purposeful read for children and families alike. It delivers a message about persistence, patience, and unexpected talent with sincerity and calm. The result feels comforting, relatable, and enduring, an experience young readers can truly understand and enjoy.

Pages: 37 | ASIN: B0BMSQN7V3

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Small-Town Scandals

Elaine Mary Griffin Author Interview

Shadows in the Pleasure Gardens follows an apprentice banker who witnesses a robbery and finds himself in the middle of a small-town scandal and shady racetrack dealings. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I was inspired a few summers ago, when I was working as a law clerk on the weekdays and a horse racing official on the weekends. Law clerking was dreary, dull work, but I enjoyed the racetrack, even though all the old-timers there implied it had a shady background. I find small-town scandals interesting because it’s personal to all the characters, rather than being something you have quickly heard and forgotten.  

I enjoyed your characters, especially Chester. What was your favorite character to write for and why?

I loved writing about Fisheye. It was fun for me to think of ridiculous ways a reactive horse might respond in different scenes. 

What scene in the book did you have the most fun writing?

I most enjoyed writing the scene where the Sheriff and Chester go to Judge Mason’s house after arresting the robbers. Judge Mason and Sheriff Hoogkirk are distinctive characters with strong personalities, and I enjoyed imagining their argument about the law. 

What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?

My next book is The Little Pilot, and I hope it will be available in 2027. I’m also hopeful that my novel set during the American Revolution will be available this year or next. 
 
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

As a crucial witness to the “biggest scandal” early-nineteenth-century Fairmount has seen, lives hang on the balance of Chester Carter’s true and complete testimony.

Chester is an unambitious — or independent- minded — apprentice to Mr. Tate of Tate’s Banking and Loans when he witnesses a bank robbery and finds himself serving as Sheriff Hoogkirk’s justice-seeking assistant. His newfound role in law enforcement introduces him to gambling, carousing, and horse racing at the town’s pleasure gardens, and he is drawn to its excitement at the expense of his courtship and professional career. When an acquaintance from the racetrack is implicated in the robberies, Chester worries he must choose between truth and justice.

Shadows in the Pleasure Gardens weaves together timeless themes, including the personal search for purpose and fulfillment, pressure to conform to societal expectations, corruption of the powerful, and how horses help us escape it all, if only for a bit.

Value in the Wisdom

Amelia South Author Interview

Within Think Like an Herbalist, readers find practical advice for a more grounded way of living, including remedies, prevention, and the steps to more responsible living. Why was this an important book for you to write?

I know I put this on the back cover, but it’s the honest truth- this is all the stuff I wish I had known about my own health and what to expect with my body when I was 20 years old. If I had been better prepared for the possibilities of various health problems and been more aware of how to PREVENT these things from happening, I feel like I would have been able to avoid many of the health problems I experienced over a 15-year period in my life. My hope is that this book will fall into the hands of other 20-somethings who will appreciate and find value in the wisdom I shared.

How long did it take to research and put this book together? 

It took about two months for me to write it and another 4 months of editing, proofreading, and citing my research.

What is one misconception you believe many people have regarding healthy living? 

So many people think that they just need a magic herb to solve their problems! I hate to break it to you, but that simply doesn’t exist. What you put into your body day after day (food, supplements, etc.) matters more than just about anything else. Herbs are fantastic and very helpful, but they’re not the only answer. It took ME several years to learn and accept that, so I hope you can learn from my own mistakes.

What do you hope readers take away from Think Like an Herbalist?
 
I hope they have an a-ha moment about their own bodies. Even people who have studied herbalism and nutrition have read my book and said “Huh, I never thought of that!” at some part of my book. The more I can open someone’s eyes to new possibilities, the more I feel like I’ve succeeded.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Amazon

If you’ve ever felt confused by conflicting health advice, frustrated by supplements that don’t work, or disconnected from what your body is actually asking for, this book was written for you.

Think Like an Herbalist is not a typical herbalism book. Instead of memorizing plant lists or following rigid protocols, this book teaches you how to understand your body in plain language—so you can finally make sense of symptoms, cravings, digestion issues, hormone shifts, and energy crashes.

Written by practicing herbalist and foraging instructor Amelia South, this book draws on years of hands-on experience with herbal medicine, gut health, whole foods, and wild plants. Complex topics like digestion, inflammation, detoxification, and hormonal balance are broken down into concepts that everyday people can actually understand and apply.

Readers consistently say this is the book where things finally “click.” Instead of guessing what supplement to take next, you’ll learn how to read your body’s signals and respond with food, herbs, and simple lifestyle shifts that support real healing. This empowering approach helps you move away from symptom-chasing and toward long-term wellness.

Inside, you’ll discover:
How to understand digestion, gut health, and inflammation without medical jargon
Why many modern diets and health trends leave people feeling worse
How herbal medicine works with the body rather than against it
The role of whole foods, traditional nourishment, and wild plants in healing
How to build confidence in your own intuition and body awareness
This book is ideal for beginners to herbalism, women navigating hormone changes, and anyone seeking a more natural, sustainable approach to health. Whether you’re dealing with gut issues, fatigue, skin problems, or simply want to feel at home in your body again, Think Like an Herbalist offers clarity, encouragement, and a grounded path forward.
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Love Yourself

Indra Rinzler Author Interview

Indra’s Net offers readers a spiritual guide that blends personal experiences and grounded spiritual lessons within a Tarot-inspired structure. Why was this an important book for you to write?

For my own growth.

Is there anything you now wish you had included in Indra’s Net? Any additional anecdotes or bits of wisdom?

No.

What is one thing you hope readers take away from your book? 

Love yourself.

Can we look forward to more releases from you soon? What are you currently working on?

Ideas, but nothing definite.
 
Author Links:
GoodReads | Facebook | Website

Literary Titan Gold Book Award

Adult Nonfiction Book of the Year, 
San Francisco Writer’s Conference

FOR THOSE WHO SEEK ANSWERS, UNDERSTANDING, INSPIRATION, & INNER PEACE

Indra’s Net is a collection of themes about learning to live an awakened life and opening one’s mind and heart to the Self. It is for those who seek answers, understanding, inspiration, and inner peace. It discusses topics such as vulnerability, codependence, arrogance, impermanence, gratitude, and failure, and contains wisdom and teachings from many paths.

This book can be used as daily inspiration, a tool for self-improvement, a spiritual lesson plan, and a source of divination. Full of helpful techniques, hints, humor, and love, all oriented towards making sense of our human experiences and discovering a cosmic home here on Earth, it is a how to do and how to be manual.

The format mirrors a traditional Tarot card deck, although it offers a new take on both Tarot meanings and spiritual discovery outside of Tarot readings. The book can be used as a modern guide to reading and understanding Tarot card meanings.

In the two-thousand-year-old tradition of Indra’s Net, each perfect faceted jewel reflects every other jewel and is reflected by that jewel. It’s an image of interdependence, in that everything is connected to everything else. Indra’s Net is not a poetic or a philosophical idea, it’s the way life functions.

Indra’s Net is a product of author Indra Rinzler’s 50+ years of living on the spiritual path, assembled from decades of study, wisdom paths, practices, experiences, and revelations.

How we view life is our choice. This book is meant to encourage one to choose from a higher wisdom and connection to the truest Self. That which we wish to understand and become, transforms us in the very process of seeking. As we open to awareness, we awaken to the significance of all dimensions of reality.

Emotions as the Catalyst

Author Interview
Alexander Paterson Brown Author Interview

Seasons of Life and Love takes readers on a journey through themes of loss, regret, longing, and joy in a collection of poems centered on the complexities of human emotion. Can you share a bit about your writing process?

I never force my thoughts or words. Something very simple may trigger a thought: a sunset, a breeze, a cloud, a flower. A single flash from a firefly at evening. Then I form an idea in my mind and begin a mental journey.

How do I feel when I look at that sunset? What has my day been like? Do I have any regrets? I put myself in the picture. I ask myself: What simple thought do I want to express? If I can answer that question, then I proceed slowly. I write from developing emotions and elaborate point by point and try end the final stanza with a powerful thought, to let it linger in the reader’s mind.
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When I begin to write poetry, I have one rule in mind. Use simple words, paint clear mental pictures, and write so that the reader can easily grasp the message. If my words strike a common chord with the reader’s feelings, then he/she can figuratively “own” it and call it to mind at will. Powerful thoughts can be expressed with simple words. I want the poem to reflect upon the reader, not upon the poet. Words can last forever; poets do not.

Did you write these poems with a specific audience in mind, or was it a more personal endeavor?

It began as a personal experience. When I experienced personal tragedy, I went for long walks. I noticed that the weather resembled my life. It was sunny one day, stormy the next, life-threatening occasionally, and afterward, peacefully calm. I had no audience, I wasn’t writing a novel, I was describing my feelings as they related to the weather.

Sometimes I just wrote about the weather. Nature is a very moving experience if one stops to sense its changes. I wrote about losing love, and finding love; and the doubt that comes to mind, questioning the wisdom of signing up for more pain; and that overwhelming sense of euphoria one experiences when the universe aligns with your heart. But it can also be temporary, and when that came, I wrote about that, too. Not all poems were about me, though. Sometimes I would use a personal feeling and generalize a poem, using my emotions as the catalyst. For example, the poem “Jewels,” a romantic poem about a lover returning home in the early morning hours after visiting his love, was developed around the idea of a modern-day Romeo and Juliet.

I rarely write with a specific audience in mind. I write to express inner feelings. If they find an audience (and who hasn’t lost love?) then, that is my audience. I don’t want my poems to be or sound contrived. They must be genuine. If I sense I am slipping into contrivance, I stop and discard the poem. Do I know what I will write about next? No. I have no idea. If asked to write about a certain subject, I cannot. I can only describe what I feel.

Do you have a favorite poem in the book, and if so, why does it hold special meaning for you?

Do I have a favorite poem? I have many. They must all reach the same standard. “A Ray of Sun” – This was one of my first poems written after losing my family. I was walking a path that took me across a floating bridge over a stretch of water. The day had been cloudy, reflecting my disposition. Midway across the bridge, the sun broke through the cloud, low in the sky. The effect caused me to stop and feel better. It inspired hope. It was the first time I linked the weather to my emotions. Hence: “I knew if I could wait, if I could hang on long enough, I’d see the sun appear.”

“Everything is Beautiful” – this poem was inspired when I visited a retirement home. As I walked along the
hallway, I saw old men and women sitting alone in their rooms with the doors open, virtually abandoned
in a retirement home at the end of their lives. I asked myself: What do they feel inside, and what are their
dreams? I felt sad that someone should end their days like this.

“Hooked” – I love this poem because it is short and sweet and expresses in two stanzas how I felt when I fell in love.

“I Thought of You” – This poem describes perfectly how I felt when I had lost love. Because love lingers long after The Departed have departed.

“Jewels” – I have always loved this poem for the word pictures it elicits and the power of love to push one to great lengths and dangers to experience it.

“Love Whom You Wish” – This is a cautionary poem directed to the one who is leaving the relationship. I love the last stanza. It encapsulates the warning of the one abandoned.

“The Cost of Love” – This poem perfectly reflected my feelings when my relationship crumbled, and it juxtaposes the value each placed on the relationship.

“The Flood” – I wrote this poem with a smile on my face. I was reflecting upon the wonderful experience I had and the intensity of the relationship.

“The Fool” – I think this is one of my most lingering poems. How many have lost love, only to long for its return and be viewed as a fool for remembering it the rest of his/her life?

How has this poetry book changed you as a writer, or what did you learn about yourself through writing it?

I have hundreds of poems. This is my first published book of poetry. Most of my poems are written in the same style. I have been able to express more clearly my feelings of finding love, basking in love, and losing love. Those are experiences shared by many. I found I was able to describe succinctly my feelings without becoming philosophical. I have simply described human nature.

But life is more than just love. We can find delight in living a day, watching a sunset, experiencing a rainstorm, and seeing the seasons change. I think my poetry has made me more keenly aware of the simple things that life has to offer and that are occurring around us all the time. Often, we overlook them. Don’t. They have been here longer than we. They comfort us. Stop and take note of the emotional treasures they bestow.

Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon

Experience the ebb and flow of passion, the shifting hues of life, through a poetic journey. Discover love’s magic, its loss, and the transformative power of time in these verses.

A collection of poems about finding love, losing love, the change of seasons, and moments in the day. In short – it’s about life and love.

Intricate Mysteries

Denise Huddle Author Interview

Stolen Secrets follows a determined ranch manager with a deep-seated distrust of oil companies who reluctantly forms a partnership with a former special ops man when vandalism and murder show up on her doorstep. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The book is a fictionalized mash-up of three separate situations that occurred in different parts of the state in different decades.

Down in South Texas in the late 1990s, I had the privilege of taking a lease from a severed mineral owner (only in this case, a very nice person). The surface owner and ranch manager was a super- smart, capable woman who was an ardent environmentalist and totally hated oil companies. She was not a happy rancher when I came along. She has since passed away, but I was lucky to have known both her and the person I took the lease from.

I spent a lot of time in West Texas in Menard County, Texas, where the annual festival is Jim Bowie Days. Everyone in the two counties in every direction has heard about the lost silver mine. I loved the story.

The terrible corruption comes from Duval County in deep South Texas, where George Parr, and later his son, Archer Parr, and Archer’s one-time henchman, Clinton Manges, ruled the county with horrendous corruption from the 1940s through the 1980s. George and, later, Archer were called the Dukes of Duval. Archer went to prison and then committed suicide. Clinton died penniless in a nursing home in San Antonio. One of my closest colleagues worked for the Trustee as the land manager for the Manges Liquidating Trust when the ranch was forced into bankruptcy and liquidated to pay Manges’s creditors.

I enjoyed the romantic enemies-to-lovers relationship between Sarah and Ethan. How did their relationship develop while you were writing it? Did you have an idea of where you wanted to take it, or was it organic?

I am not a pantser. I can’t imagine how mysteries can be written without clue maps, chapter outlines, scene details, etc. Every aspect of the story is planned to the nth detail before I ever start writing. I have a fantastic editor who helps me box the entire outline into shape, scene by scene, before I even write the first sentence.

How did you balance the action scenes with the story elements and still keep a fast pace in the story?

Pacing is not my strong suit. I rely on my editor, Laura Barth, to crack the whip on me for pacing. She’s a task master on story structure and keeping things moving. I tend to meandering wordiness without adult supervision.

When will Book Two be available? Can you give us an idea of where that book will take readers?

The whole trilogy is out. All three books are standalones featuring women in science, heroes who think they’re cool, and intricate mysteries inspired by events in my career or experiences of my colleagues. They can be read in any order. They are all enemies-to-lovers stories.

Book 2, Burning Secrets, is the story of a chemical engineer working to shut down a polluting paper mill in East Texas. To save the town, she is forced into an uneasy alliance with the undercover PI hired by the mill’s lawyer to stop her.

Book 3, Buried Secrets, is set in my hometown of San Antonio. It is the story of a straight- laced architect/city historic preservationist dealing with the discovery of old (and new) skeletons during excavation for new construction in the historic King William area of town. To identify the victims, she is forced to work with a disgraced homicide detective whose career is hanging on by a thread.

All three books are available individually on Amazon and as a box set.

The hero and the Deputy Chief of Police in Buried Secrets carry over to the new Iris Raines mystery series, and both appear in the series debut novel, Hell to Pay.


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

Her brother is missing. Her ranch is burning.
And the only man who can save her…is the one she swore she’d never trust.

🔥 Enemies-to-Lovers

🔥 Forced Trust
🔥 Romantic Suspense

When West Texas rancher Sarah Chandler finds herself battling an oilfield fire and the sudden disappearance of her brother, the last person she wants by her side is Ethan Tanner—a former special ops soldier turned oil company man with secrets of his own.

But when a murderer strikes on her land, Sarah and Ethan are forced into a dangerous partnership. Every step closer to the truth puts them deeper in the killer’s crosshairs—and every stolen glance ignites a passion neither can resist.

As the fires close in and the killer circles closer, will Sarah and Ethan uncover the truth before it consumes them both?

Love edge-of-your-seat suspense, enemies-to-lovers tension, and the rugged grit of Texas? Stolen Secrets delivers heart-pounding danger, fiery romance, and a story you won’t forget.

Dive into Stolen Secrets, Book 1 of the Deadly Secrets Texas Trilogy today—and discover a complete, standalone romantic suspense series you won’t want to put down.

🏆Award-Winning Finalist — Next Best Read Writing Contest, June 2025
🏆Gold Book Award — Literary Titan Book Award for Fiction, December 2025

Promise of Mercy

Promise of Mercy pushes the Dreamscape Warriors saga into darker, sharper territory as the long-idle Utopian Founders wake after six centuries and move to seize power by force. Their plot spirals outward fast. Liam O’Connor is kidnapped and flung through an ancient portal into the unknown, the Temple priestesses are drugged and held hostage, and the O’Connor children are thrust into a frantic rescue operation that tears across worlds. The book mixes political upheaval, telepathic warfare, and tight family bonds in a story that never stops moving.

While reading, I found myself pulled in by the heart of the book, which is not the action, but the relationships. Springs writes family moments with a warmth that caught me off guard. A quiet conversation between Liam and Deirdre over pastries feels as gripping as any firefight. Even scenes of chaos keep circling back to loyalty, fear, duty, and love. I liked how the story makes room for softness inside a hard universe. The writing itself is straightforward, sometimes almost plain, but the plainness works. It lets the emotions land without dressing them up.

I also caught myself getting fired up during the more intense chapters. The Founders’ arrogance, their cold talk of “genetic purity,” and their plan to eliminate Liam or “correct” his children stirred real anger in me. On the flip side, the fight inside the Temple hooked me completely. Seeing Bayvin take a hit, Aisling and Deirdre charging in, Celinia steadying herself even while drugged, and the arch priestess trying to hold everything together made the stakes feel personal. The author writes these scenes with a quick rhythm that kept me flipping pages and muttering under my breath. The book might lean heavily on lore sometimes, but even then, I didn’t mind. It felt like being swept into a world that genuinely believes in its own history.

By the end, I walked away feeling surprisingly moved. This is a story where the characters’ courage matters more than their weapons, and where mercy is treated as a kind of power. The book would be a great fit for readers who enjoy sci-fi adventures with real heart, for fans of military space opera with family drama baked in, and for anyone who likes telepaths, portals, and rebellions, all mixed with warmth and humor. If that sounds like your style, Promise of Mercy delivers.

Pages: 446 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DBBBNN5P

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Saturdays With Gramps

Saturday With Gramps follows Sam, a boy who spends every Saturday wrapped in the cozy routines he shares with his grandfather. They eat Grampscakes, play chess, watch for cardinals, and just enjoy being together. Then Gramps grows tired, and Sam learns he has died. With his mom’s help, Sam starts to understand how love sticks around even when someone is gone, and he finds small ways to keep Gramps close.

This is a very emotional children’s book. The writing feels gentle, simple, and totally honest. I liked how nothing was rushed. Gramps grows tired slowly, and Sam notices it in those tiny everyday ways that feel so real. The moment his mom explains what happened is soft but clear, and I appreciated that. It does not sugarcoat the truth, and it also does not overwhelm. The whole thing felt like being spoken to kindly. I also loved the little details. The root beer, the petunias, the cardinal. They made the story feel warm and lived-in.

This whole picture of grief as something you move through by remembering what you shared felt calming. I found myself smiling at the thought of those Grampscakes and the way love turns into traditions you carry forward. It reminded me of how small rituals can feel huge when someone is gone. The message that love never dies felt simple in the best way. It stayed with me after I finished the last page.

I’d totally recommend Saturdays With Gramps for kids who are dealing with loss, and for the grown-ups trying to help them through it. The story is gentle, the pictures are bright and comforting, and the message feels steady and warm. It is a great read for families, counselors, teachers, or anyone who wants to help a child understand grief without making it scary.

Pages: 31 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FFNC6BDF

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