Blog Archives

New Dreams and Career Possibilities

Vicki Scott Burns Author Interview

Charli’s Pawsome Park follows a curious girl who meets a landscape architect and wonders if she could design her own dog park, so with the help of her friends, she does, but not without some challenges. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

I taught 2nd and 3rd Grade, and I well remember the perpetual question of “WHY do we need to learn this?” With this series, I’m showing kids the why behind STEM activities and education. I want them to see that STEM can be fun and practically applied. Hopefully, this will open their eyes to new dreams and career possibilities.

Is there anything about Charli that came from yourself or your life experiences? 

Like Charli, I’ve always loved school and learning new things. But when I was a child, girls were not really encouraged to pursue STEM fields. I want to help change that narrative so that my own granddaughters and their peers know that they can choose any educational and career paths they desire.

What was one scene in the novel that you felt captured the morals and message you were trying to deliver to readers?

Chapter 3 shows Charli and Molly brainstorming ideas for the dorsal device. This scene introduces the themes that are more deeply explored in the rest of the book: leadership, teamwork, overcoming adversity, empathy, and female empowerment. 

Can you tell us more about what’s in store for Charli and the direction of the next book? 

Charli’s Dorsal Device: An Engineering Adventure is Book in this series. In it, Charli owns her engineering company and designs a GPS tracking device for a dolphin.

 
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website

Peaches and Jake Celebrate Christmas

Peaches and Jake Celebrate Christmas is a sweet little story about two rescue pups waking up on Christmas morning to discover the surprises Santa left them under the tree. They each get giant bones and then two toys, a moose for Jake and a fox for Peaches, and the rest of the day unfolds with the dogs learning what to do with their gifts. Jake destroys his moose with pure joy, Peaches figures out that Foxie makes a perfect nap buddy, and their mom watches over the whole thing with so much love. It feels like flipping through a family photo album where every picture tells its own tiny story.

There is a softness to the writing that feels like someone talking to me from their couch with their dogs at their feet. The real photos of Peaches and Jake add charm because they are so expressive. I kept giggling at Peaches trying to figure out Foxie. And the whole saga of Moosie slowly losing limbs and stuffing had me cracking up. There is something sweet about how Jake loves that toy even when it becomes a little fabric scrap. It says a lot about how dogs attach meaning to things and how we do the same sometimes without even realizing it.

I also liked how the book shows the two dogs having such different personalities. Jake barrels into Christmas like it is the best day of the year. Peaches moves carefully and watches everyone else first. It reminded me of how different pets can be, even when they grow up in the same home. The photos on almost every page make it easy to stay engaged. Honestly, it felt a little like being invited into the author’s living room to watch a memory replay itself.

I think this picture book is perfect for young kids who like animals and for grown-ups who just want something soft and happy to read. It is especially lovely for dog lovers or anyone who enjoys holiday stories that feel real and cozy. If you want a children’s book that brings a smile without trying too hard, this one is a great choice. It is playful, sweet, and full of genuine affection, and that makes it a wonderful holiday read for families.

Pages: 48 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DFDWN1SN

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Chasing Permanence: How Businesses on Our High Streets Can Adapt and Thrive

Chasing Permanence explores why some High Street businesses fade while others seem to hold on with surprising strength. Author Steven N. Adjei blends research, interviews, personal history, and real-world case studies to show how companies can adapt and thrive even as the world around them shifts. He lays out seven mindsets, five determinants, and a set of strategies that give owners and leaders a clearer way to build resilience and community in a time when storefronts close by the thousands. The book reads like a roadmap for anyone who wants to understand not just how businesses survive, but how they can shape their own future even when conditions look bleak.

Adjei writes with a kind of grounded warmth that makes the research feel personal. His stories about his mother working at Selfridges and his own early days on the High Street pulled me in right away. Those scenes made the later arguments hit harder, because they show the emotional cost behind the statistics. At times, the writing surprised me with its honesty. I found myself nodding along when he talked about the hollow excuses we make about market forces and how easy it is to blame the world instead of looking at what a business can actually change. I liked that he didn’t shy away from calling out lazy thinking. It made the whole message feel more alive and a bit braver.

I also found myself wrestling with some of the ideas. Adjei argues that businesses need to embrace collaboration, community, and what he calls Permanence, but he never paints it as a simple formula. The mix of mindset, strategy, and realism made me stop more than once and think about how often we expect business success to come from some magic trick. There were moments when I wished he had expanded on certain examples, especially when he talked about towns that felt like ghosts. Still, the rhythm of the book kept pulling me forward. His insistence that companies can shape their own destiny felt hopeful without drifting into fantasy.

The book made me look at High Streets with fresh eyes. It reminded me just how much these places mean to people and how much potential sits in the hands of owners, staff, and communities who care enough to adapt. I would recommend Chasing Permanence to entrepreneurs, local leaders, and anyone who wants to understand why some businesses hold their ground while others disappear. It’s practical, heartfelt, and surprisingly moving. And it’s a great fit for readers who want guidance, but also want a story that speaks to real human experience as much as business theory.

Pages: 391 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F4R8G9BC

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The Coming Disruption: How AI First Will Force Organizations to Change Everything or Face Destruction

The Coming Disruption is a blunt, high-energy warning shot aimed at anyone working inside an organization that hopes to survive the AI era. Author Fred Voccola lays out a simple message. AI is not a future trend. AI is a meteor already hitting the atmosphere, and every business, institution, and worker must adapt fast or get wiped out. He explains how AI multiplies productivity at a pace that makes earlier revolutions look sleepy, and he pushes the idea that becoming “AI First” means rebuilding the entire structure of an organization from top to bottom. The book blends history, economic analysis, and practical guidance, and it uses a vivid, almost urgent storytelling style to keep you moving through concepts that could reshape every part of modern work.

Voccola writes with a mix of confidence and impatience. Sometimes I nodded because the urgency made sense. Other times, I felt a little overwhelmed because the pace is relentless. Still, his arguments are sound. The idea that AI requires zero infrastructure change right now, and that the only barrier is leadership willingness, really resonated with me. I liked how he compared past transformations to the present because it made the speed of what’s coming feel real. I occasionally wished he explored a few examples more deeply.

What I liked most was his emphasis on internal AI. Not the headline-grabbing model wars. Not AGI speculation. The boring stuff inside every company that nobody glamorizes. I appreciated that focus. It made the book feel grounded. I kept thinking about how many organizations cling to outdated structures because they’re afraid to rip up the old playbook. His frustration with bureaucracy is loud and clear, and I found myself agreeing more often than not. His call to eliminate the “organizational deep state” is sharp, but it definitely made me think about how much waste we accept as normal. The book made me look at leadership, communication, and speed through a different lens.

I’d recommend The Coming Disruption to executives, founders, managers, and anyone who feels responsible for guiding others through change. It’s also a useful read for students and curious workers who want to understand the forces reshaping their careers. If you want a wake-up call that pushes you to think bigger, move faster, and challenge the comfort of slow adaptation, this book delivers.

Pages: 295 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0G2CNYPN6

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Think Like an Herbalist

Think Like an Herbalist is part handbook, part pep talk, and part field guide to a more grounded way of living. The author walks through the basics of bodily systems, gut health, diet choices, vitamins, lifestyle, foraging, herbal remedies, and mindset. She mixes practical steps with personal stories and folds them into a larger message about taking responsibility for your health. The book is split into prevention and remedies, and she uses the house metaphor again and again. Build the foundation first. Add the herbal siding later. It all feels direct, simple, and very relatable.

As I read, I found myself pulled in by her voice. It’s blunt. It’s funny. It’s very real. She shifts from nutrition advice to honest stories about HPV scares, gut issues, farm work, and motherhood, and she does it without softening anything. That raw tone hit me. When she talks about people wanting an herb to fix a deep problem, I caught myself nodding hard. I have been that person. I liked how she refused the easy path. Her focus on mindset surprised me most of all. She treats it like the missing puzzle piece, and I felt that in my chest while reading.

I also loved the practical sections. The lists of wild plants made me want to walk outside and start spotting things in the grass. The food explanations are plain and simple. No fancy science words. Just straight talk about fiber and color and what actually helps a body feel alive. She writes with strong opinions about diet, wheat, dairy, and medical culture, and sometimes I wanted more nuance. Still, her confidence brings a spark to the pages. The passion behind her advice is obvious. She really cares about people learning how to help themselves, and that energy carries the book.

I walked away feeling hopeful. I would recommend this book to people who want to take their health into their own hands and don’t mind a straight-shooting guide who tells stories along with solutions. It’s great for beginners, for curious foragers, for folks tired of feeling stuck, and for anyone who wants a warm shove toward better habits. It’s not a medical text. It’s a conversation, and a pretty lively one at that.

Pages: 302 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FMYXKRSN

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A Bold Bargain

A Bold Bargain follows Jack Blaine, an eighteen-year-old conservation agent in 1950s Missouri who keeps stumbling into danger, mystery, and unexpected connections. The story moves between tense encounters with poachers, the quiet bond between a boy and a half-wolf pup, and Jack’s growing involvement with vulnerable people near the Sac River. The book blends rugged outdoor life with soft moments of compassion, and it ties everything together with a thread of personal history that Jack can’t quite outrun.

Jack’s mix of grit and gentleness lands with a real thump in the chest, and the writing makes his inner world feel close enough to touch. The scenes along the river pulled me in fast. The pacing shifts from calm to sharp in a blink, and that rhythm kept me turning pages even when I told myself I should stop. The dialogue feels natural, plain spoken, and warm. I liked how it brought out the heart of the community around him. No big speeches. Just people trying to make sense of life as it comes.

I also felt a tug of emotion watching how Jack steps into other people’s pain without hesitation. His encounters with Mrs. Fletcher and the French family hit me harder than I expected. The writing paints poverty, loneliness, and aging with a simple brush, and it still lands heavy. Nothing feels overplayed. I appreciated how the book lets kindness show up quietly, almost shyly. At the same time, I wanted just a touch more complexity in a few side characters. Still, the sincerity in the storytelling made me forgive that pretty quickly. I could tell the author cares deeply about these people and this place, and that care shines through.

A Bold Bargain is a book for readers who enjoy heartfelt stories set against open sky and rough country roads. If you like character-driven tales with danger, tenderness, and a little old-fashioned grit, this one will be perfect for you. In many ways, A Bold Bargain reminded me of Where the Crawdads Sing, because both stories mix raw nature, quiet resilience, and the fierce pull of human connection into something that stays with you.

Pages: 346 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FD7VSY68

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Peaches and the 19 Cobras

Peaches and the 19 Cobras tells the story of Peaches and Jake, two sweet rescue dogs who misunderstand COVID-19 as “19 cobras” and spend the pandemic doing everything they can to protect their mom. The book moves through their daily adventures from quarantine in Florida to summers in Maine. There are masks and costumes, funny misunderstandings, shiny Christmas trees, and a whole lot of love. The dogs tell the story in their own voices, so the whole thing feels warm and comforting.

As I read it, I kept catching myself smiling. The writing feels like someone chatting with me in their kitchen. It’s simple in a good way and full of genuine emotion. The idea of hearing the pandemic through the ears of two confused and devoted dogs was surprisingly emotional. It reminded me of how strange that time was and how pets kind of carried so many of us through it. Some moments even made my eyes sting a little because the mix of humor and fear from that year still sits in my chest. Seeing the dogs try to make sense of everything made the whole memory softer for me.

I also loved how the book leans into joy. There are photos everywhere, and they’re adorable. The stories jump from masks that never stay on to gigantic Christmas trees to lobster dinners in Maine. It felt chaotic in a charming way. Like watching someone you love tell a story while getting distracted every few sentences. I honestly laughed out loud when the dogs kept ditching their masks or when Peaches tried to look fierce with her tiny warrior stance. The whole thing just felt honest. Not polished in a stiff way. More like real life with all the messiness and sweetness mixed together.

Peaches and the 19 Cobras is great for kids who want a gentle way to understand a heavy moment in history and for adults who want a soft, funny reminder of how we made it through. Anyone who loves animals or who leaned on a pet during the pandemic will feel this one. It’s light and goofy and unexpectedly touching. I’d happily pass it along to families, teachers, grandparents, and anyone who just needs a picture book that feels kind.

Pages: 88 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DDW3GM88

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Virgil

If you are reading this, then it is already too late. You’ve been drawn in… to a world filled with things you can’t escape. Darkness, evil, treachery and betrayals of the worst kind lay within these pages. I’d tell you to put the book down, run while you are still safe, your mind unscathed, your world unshattered… but it would be futile. You want to know what happens—the depths of depravity and destruction which one man’s world could hold.

Just what, exactly, happened to him?

I know you want to find out. If I were you the intrigue would suck me in too, but know this: There is no turning back. Once the shadows inside these pages consume you—well, even I dare not say… If there is even one ounce of willpower in you, consider for a second not taking this journey; don’t swim in the black cave that is my mind—don’t… I’m wasting my time. Now, I know you feel you must enter. It would be a crime not to. But if you do, remember I did warn you—but you didn’t listen.

TRIGGER WARNING This book contains themes of mental and sexual abuse, psychological abuse, and possibly other triggering topics. It is intended for adult audiences. If these things make you uncomfortable or will cause you trauma in any way this story is not safe for you.