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What Can Become Life Changing
Posted by Literary Titan

Not Just Another Brick in the Wall! follows two fifteen-year-old students, a boy and a girl (Sky McCray and Cali Snipe), who just started high school and who find out that an older high school girl was kidnapped, raped, and murdered at the school last year. Cali thinks she can help solve the case. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Cali Snipe and Sky McCray had experience being kidnapped (events that happened in the previous three novels in the series). In those stories, a local crime boss had hoped to sell them to sex traffickers for a large sum of money. Using their wits and sometimes with the help of teen friends they were always able to escape, but they are knowledgeable of what fates awaited them if their sale to traffickers had transpired. Consequently, once made aware of the kidnapping and murder of a classmate, they are determined to expose the guilty perpetrator.
Sky had always been the primary creator of the method(s) for his and Cali’s escapes in the past, so this time I wanted Cali to have the limelight in solving this new kidnapping dilemma.
As in the previous novels, friends become crucial, this time for Cali’s ability to gain insight on the criminal responsible for the crime. However, it is her own courage, ingenuity, and her determination that eventually solve the mystery and helps her bring the pedophile to justice.
Cali and Sky are your typical teenagers when not investigating crimes. Are there any emotions or memories from your own life that you put into your characters’ life?
One emotion would be the pleasure of sharing concerns and humor with close friends. Even sharing homework assignments can be bonding and enjoyable and often outrageously humorous.
One memory of my teen days was mine and my friends’ constant curiosity about our budding interest in sexuality and our confusion regarding our sexuality. Accurate information about relationships between males and females was not available to teens when I was in high school. Teens could not even take a book from the local library to read if it contained “adult” material.
I wanted to focus on both these issues for teens in my books. I wanted to highlight the joy of sharing daily experiences, mundane or otherwise, with friends. When we look back on our teen years as adults, we realize how precious and rewarding were those moments. I also wanted to include accurate and timely information on human sexuality that some of my teen readers might be seeking. I also hoped that some parent readers would realize the importance of offering tactful but accurate and enriching advice on sexual issues.
Do you think there’s a single moment in everyone’s life, maybe not as traumatic, that is life-changing?
Absolutely. Sometimes it can be a traumatic or dramatic event like a car or airplane crash or an unexpected health issue or the death of a close relative. Or it could be something as inconspicuous as something someone says to you like a teacher saying you will never learn to write well or solve math problems, or a friend saying to you that it was so out-of-character for you for the despicable way you treated another person. What is then lifechanging is not the event or what was said but how you respond to it. Your positive response to the event is what can become life changing.
What will the next book in that series be about and when will it be published?
The book is already written and published: Facing Revenge. Once again, as in most of the earlier books in the series, both Cali and Sky are instrumental in their own way in facing a challenge, a traumatic event, and finding a successful resolution. Assistance from friends is also crucial to their “survival”.
As in the earlier books, other events typical of teen life occur. Cali, Sky, and friends cope with typical teen situations with humor and with comradery.
Author Links: Amazon | GoodReads
Unfortunately, along with the excitement of adjusting to a new school environment, Cali and Sky discover that last year a student was abducted, raped, and murdered. The police investigation is at a standstill. Because of her history with kidnapping, Cali believes she might find some answers to the murder mystery. She drags Sky into her quest. Will Cali’s involvement in the murder open Cali to being a victim herself? Cali and Sky may be new to Parkington High, but they are not new to danger.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, Not Just Another Brick in the Wall, novel, read, reader, reading, Richard Read, story, thriller, writer, writing, young adult
Not Just Another Brick in the Wall
Posted by Literary Titan

When I started reading Not Just Another Brick in the Wall!, I expected a typical high school drama. You know the type: sports, crushes, maybe a few fights in the hallway. But this book surprised me. It’s more layered than that. It’s about a group of teens trying to hold on to friendship while life starts showing its teeth. Cali Snipe, the main character, is just beginning ninth grade, nervous and curious and trying to stay grounded while the world around her keeps changing. There’s romance, a bit of danger, even a thread of mystery that creeps in when you least expect it. The story shifts between lighthearted teen moments and dark undercurrents that make you stop and think.
What really stood out to me was how the book captures the in-between. Those moments when you’re not quite a kid anymore but not yet an adult. The writing feels like memory. It’s full of chatter, inside jokes, awkward pauses, and those tiny details that make teenage life feel real. I could see my own high school self in the mix, nervous before the first day, wondering who to sit with at lunch, pretending not to care when I cared too much. The book nails that feeling. Sometimes it wanders, sometimes it circles back, but that’s exactly how being young feels.
I also liked that the story isn’t afraid to show adults in gray shades. The teachers and parents aren’t just background noise. Some are kind, some are creepy, and some are both. That part hit me harder than I thought it would. It reminded me that growing up means realizing not everyone who’s supposed to protect you always does. I won’t spoil the darker turns, but the tension builds quietly and sticks with you after the last page. It’s the kind of discomfort that makes you think about how fragile trust can be.
In some ways, Not Just Another Brick in the Wall! reminds me of the emotional honesty in Judy Blume’s coming-of-age novels and the raw realism of S. E. Hinton’s The Outsiders. It has that same heartbeat of youth and rebellion, but with a modern voice that feels closer to Laurie Halse Anderson or Sarah Dessen, writers who don’t flinch from showing how messy growing up really is. Like those authors, author Richard Read doesn’t just tell a story about teenagers; he lets them stumble, speak, and learn in their own rhythm. The book fits comfortably beside classics about adolescence and identity, yet it still stands apart with its mix of small-town grit and genuine warmth.
Pages: 236 | ASIN : B0DNXYKZKX
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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, coming of age, contemporary romance, ebook, ficiton, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, middle grade fiction, nook, Not Just Another Brick in the Wall, novel, read, reader, reading, story, teen, writer, writing, young adult
Not Just Another Brick in the Wall
Posted by Literary Titan

Not Just Another Brick in the Wall! follows Calista “Cali” Snipe and Skyler “Sky” McCray through their first year at Parkington High, surrounded by a colorful circle of friends. It’s a story about growing up, testing limits, and figuring out identity during those shaky teenage years. The novel captures the texture of adolescence. The gossip, the awkward humor, the risky choices, the first brush with adult problems. There’s a lot of talk about friendship, loyalty, dating, and the lines between fun and danger. It’s a coming-of-age story that takes its time, mixing the sweetness of young love with the unease of real-world threats like drugs, death, and betrayal.
I found myself pulled in by how honestly it portrays teenage life. The writing feels raw and unfiltered, almost like eavesdropping on a bunch of high schoolers figuring things out as they go. Sometimes the dialogue rambles, but that’s part of the charm. It’s messy in the same way real conversations are. I liked that the author doesn’t talk down to teens. He lets them be confused, hormonal, funny, and scared all at once. Some scenes take their time to develop, and the number of characters can be overwhelming. Yet, beneath the chatter, there’s something genuine and kindhearted. The story cares about its kids, even when they don’t always make the right choices.
What struck me most was how the book balances innocence and tension. One minute it’s light and full of laughs, the next it dives into darker corners like grief, pressure, and manipulation. It doesn’t shy away from uncomfortable truths. I caught myself feeling protective of the characters, even the ones making mistakes. The counselor subplot gave me chills, not because it was overtly sinister at first, but because of how quietly it built up. The book made me remember what it felt like to be young, to think I knew everything, and still feel lost. That nostalgia hits hard.
Not Just Another Brick in the Wall! is an emotional and honest portrayal of adolescence. I’d recommend it to readers who like realistic teen fiction that doesn’t whitewash life. It’s heartfelt and worth reading together. For anyone who remembers high school as both the best and worst of times, this book will feel all too familiar.
Pages: 234 | ASIN: B0DNZ1LCCF
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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, Not Just Another Brick in the Wall, novel, read, reader, reading, Richard Read, story, writer, writing





