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Rewind to Us
Posted by Literary Titan

Rewind to Us follows Big, a burned-out K-pop idol desperate to escape a suffocating industry, and Kelly, an ordinary young woman who finds herself pulled into his world by chance and fate. Their connection grows into something real amid chaos, danger, and the strange appearance of supernatural “dealers” who trade in human desires. The story builds from a tense escape narrative into a romance, then finally into grief as Big’s life is cut short and Kelly must navigate the aftermath with those who loved him most. It is a blend of real-world pressure, fantasy elements, and emotional fallout, tied together by a central yearning for freedom and belonging.
I found myself swept up in Big’s restlessness. His unhappiness sits right under the surface, and the writing shows it in a simple, raw way that hit me harder than I expected. I could feel his exhaustion and the tiny sparks of hope that appear whenever Kelly enters his thoughts. I loved how the book lets their relationship grow slowly, almost shyly, in the middle of everything falling apart around them. At times, the dialogue feels blunt, which works because it mirrors how trapped Big is and how unsure Kelly is about her own life. The supernatural dealer concept surprised me. It comes in quietly, then starts echoing through the whole story until it becomes a major force. That little creature showing up at the end made me stop and think about the whole journey in a new light. It added a strange, eerie charm to the book.
There were points where the pacing jumped fast, especially when the story shifted locations or introduced new conflicts. Yet there is an honesty in the writing that kept me reading. Characters say exactly what they feel. Sometimes it is messy. Sometimes it is harsh. Sometimes it is sweet. I liked that because it gave the story a heartbeat.
Rewind to Us is a heartfelt story for readers who enjoy character-driven romance with a twist of the surreal. It is especially suited for fans of K-pop fiction, soft fantasy, and emotional journeys that do not shy away from pain or complicated endings. If you like stories about people trying to rewrite their lives and finding love in unexpected places, you’ll enjoy reading this book.
Pages: 230 | ASIN : B0FTDTGBGW
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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, celebrity romance, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, k-drama, k-pop, K-pop romance, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Rewind to Us, romance, romantasy, Shells Walter, story, supernatural, teen, writer, writing, YA Fiction, young adult
Sinful Oath: Book 1 On The Wings Of Angels Series
Posted by Literary Titan

Sinful Oath is a blend of historical fiction, Christian fiction, and historical mystery, set in 1618 London and centered on Elizabeth Bowmar, a young apprentice midwife with a fierce moral compass, and Alexander Berkley, a man tangled in his own duties, loyalties, and regrets. The book opens with Elizabeth reflecting on her past, her faith, and the weight of responsibility she carries, then pulls us into a widening web of injustice, danger, and compassion. Author KT McWilliams paints the world with gritty street life, tense family dynamics, and the looming shadow of Newgate Prison. By the time I settled in, I already felt the stakes tightening around both Elizabeth and Alexander in ways that promised more than simple historical drama.
I was surprised by how intimate the writing feels. Elizabeth’s voice in particular comes through full of honesty and vulnerability, especially in her private thoughts by the hearth as she burns her written worries, believing the smoke carries them to angels. Even with the book’s heavier themes like poverty, violence, faith, and control, the storytelling stays grounded in the everyday textures of life. I liked that the author doesn’t treat the period like a costume. It feels lived in. And even when characters lean into ideals or spiritual reflection, the language never pushes toward sermon; it reads instead like people trying to make sense of their choices, which made it easy to stay with them.
What I appreciated most was how McWilliams balances tenderness with hardship. The moments between Elizabeth and her father feel warm and steady, and they’re a strong counterweight to the scenes with her mother, whose sharpness cuts deeper than some of the book’s villains. Alexander’s chapters add another layer, especially when we see him navigating the dangerous corners of London and the people who operate in them. The tension between old loyalties and present conscience gives his storyline weight. Sometimes the book lingers on internal rumination a bit longer than I expected, but even then, it felt true to the characters’ emotional lives. I got the sense that both leads are standing at a threshold, stepping into versions of themselves they don’t fully understand yet.
I feel like Sinful Oath is less about a single mystery and more about courage, the quiet kind that comes from tending to others, and the louder kind that comes from facing what’s broken in a community or in oneself. If you enjoy historical fiction with strong moral undercurrents, detailed atmosphere, and characters who wrestle honestly with faith and justice, this book will be right up your alley. Readers who like a mix of Christian historical fiction and historical mystery will probably enjoy it most, especially if they’re drawn to stories that move with both heart and grit.
Pages: 459 | ASIN : B0FPMT9YVC
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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, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, KT McWilliams, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religious fiction, Religious Mysteries, Sinful Oath: Book 1 On The Wings Of Angels Series, story, writer, writing
Life Lessons and Tales of Little MisFit: LIFE IS LIKE A FOUNTAIN – IT HAS UPS (Opportunities and Successes) AND DOWNS (Disappointments and Failures)
Posted by Literary Titan

Life Is Like a Fountain, the third installment in Dr. S. K. Grunin’s Life Lessons and Tales of Little Misfit series, is a warm and lively middle-grade memoir-style story that follows Ivy Sue Klutz, better known as Little MisFit, through the ups and downs of sixth, seventh, and eighth grade. The book blends personal storytelling, gentle humor, and clear life lessons as Ivy navigates new classrooms, shifting friendships, family moments on the farm, city adventures, and the kind of inner changes that come with growing up. Grunin frames the whole journey around a simple but effective idea: life is like a fountain with high arcs and sudden drops, and you learn to move with both.
Some of the moments are sweet, some are chaotic, and a few are downright painful, but the writing keeps everything light enough for young readers while still feeling honest. I liked that Grunin allowed Ivy to be imperfect. She gets jealous. She pushes boundaries. She gets hurt a lot. But she also pays attention to the world, whether she’s discovering biographies of Galileo and Madame Curie, exploring Chicago for the first time, or learning how disappointment can turn into confidence if you give it time. Those scenes from the farm mixed with the scenes of the city create a nice balance, almost like stepping between two different seasons in the same life.
I also appreciated the author’s choice to keep the lessons clear without making them heavy. The book’s genre sits somewhere between children’s fiction and inspirational coming-of-age, and it uses that space well. Ivy’s story isn’t polished into something unreal. She struggles with changing friendships, tough teachers, her own temper, and even major national events, like learning about President Kennedy’s assassination in class. There were times when the writing made me smile, especially during her mischievous moments, and other times when I felt that familiar pinch of remembering what it was like to be twelve and trying hard to seem brave.
Life Is Like a Fountain invites adults to read alongside kids, to share stories, and to talk about the things that shape us. I’d recommend this book most to young readers in upper elementary or middle school, as well as parents, grandparents, teachers, and mentors who want something heartfelt to read together. If you enjoy character-driven coming-of-age stories with gentle guidance woven in, Book 3 of the Little MisFit series is an easy and uplifting choice.
Pages: 81 : ASIN : B0DVC469KW
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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, Children's & Young Adult Writing Reference, Children's books, coming of age, Dr. S. K. Grunin, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Life Lessons and Tales of Little MisFit: LIFE IS LIKE A FOUNTAIN - IT HAS ITS UPS, literature, middle grade readers, middle school, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, series, story, writer, writing
Scaling Pyramids – Leadership Lessons from a Mid-Level Bureaucrat
Posted by Literary Titan

Scaling Pyramids is a direct and surprisingly warm look at what it means to lead from the middle of a large, often clunky system. The book moves through three layers of leadership. First, you lead yourself. Then you learn to lead others. Finally, you learn to lead the whole organization from wherever you stand. Stitt uses stories from his decades in federal service to bring these lessons to life. He mixes them with ideas from behavioral science and organizational psychology, and the result reads like a field guide for anyone trying to make a difference inside a bureaucracy. He shows how real leadership often happens far below the top, and how influence grows when you understand people, values, and the way systems move.
Author Christopher Stitt admits his flaws and doubts, and that made the book feel personal and real. His stories about learning who shaped him, figuring out his values, and dealing with the limits of his own energy made me pause more than once. I felt like I was sitting with someone who had lived through the hard parts and was not trying to sound perfect. Some chapters resonated with me more than I expected. The parts about self-care, migraines, and the quiet pressure of constant rotation in new jobs felt especially relatable. I kept thinking, this is the stuff most leadership books skip. Here, it becomes the center of the lesson.
The sections on leading others also stuck with me. He talks about employees as snowflakes because no two motivations match. It sounds simple, yet the way he explains it made me nod more than once. His stories about managing discipline, building alliances, and using awards with purpose made me reflect on how often leaders get these things wrong. The tone is patient. The advice is practical. I could feel his years of trial and error behind the guidance. At times, I laughed, especially when he drew leadership ideas from Dungeons and Dragons. Other times, I felt the weight of what it means to lead in an environment where rules, hierarchy, and personalities collide.
This is not a book about heroic leaders with big titles. It is for people who grind through the middle. People who want to contribute even when they feel unseen. People who want to influence without losing themselves. I would recommend Scaling Pyramids to early-career professionals, mid-level managers, public servants, and anyone who has ever wondered how to lead when they are not in charge. The book has heart. It has clarity. It has enough grit to feel lived in. And it reminds us that leadership begins long before anyone calls you a leader.
Pages: 177 | ASIN : B0FCD28TQ3
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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, Christopher Stitt, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, leadership, Leadership & Motivation, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Public Affairs & Administration, read, reader, reading, Scaling Pyramids - Leadership Lessons from a Mid-Level Bureaucrat, self help, story, writer, writing
Rainbow Gold: Building a Business That’s Both the Journey and the Destination
Posted by Literary Titan

Rainbow Gold tells the story of an entrepreneur who learns, often the hard way, that business is really about people and purpose. The book follows David Hampson from his early struggles owning a restaurant in Cape Town to building a flourishing aviation insurance group in New England. The narrative blends personal loss, gritty lessons, and the slow shaping of a philosophy centered on long-term thinking, responsibility, and the butterfly effect of small but meaningful choices. It reads like a roadmap for building a business that gives back and grows people rather than one designed for quick exits and flashy valuations.
As I read, I found myself pulled into the raw honesty of Hampson’s voice. He doesn’t puff out his chest or pretend every move was a stroke of genius. He shares the messy parts. The moments he panicked. The moments he learned the hard way that trusting the wrong person can empty your stockroom or sink your cash flow. The chapters about the tragic accident involving his restaurant staff hit me hard. I could feel the weight he carried as he tried to care for his team while holding a broken business together. Those scenes made me pause more than once. They also made me appreciate how sincerely he views business as a human endeavor, not a numbers game. His focus on relationships, service, and showing up for people comes through clearly.
I also found myself energized by the parts where he reflects on decisive choices. His take on the fear that keeps people frozen felt familiar to me. The book urges readers to pick a road and walk it with conviction, even if it bends or darkens. That theme threads through his years in South Africa and later through his aviation career. I enjoyed how he mixes practical stories like fighting with VAT filings or chasing down a credit card machine with larger ideas about passion, equity, mentorship, and building a legacy. The writing feels close and direct, like sitting across from someone who has lived a lot and is finally ready to tell you the truth about what it cost. I appreciated that.
I walked away feeling inspired. Hampson writes with humility, and that makes the book accessible even when the subject matter gets heavy. I would recommend Rainbow Gold to new entrepreneurs who feel overwhelmed, small business owners who want to build something that lasts, and anyone who is tired of the startup world’s obsession with speed and exits. The book speaks to people who want a business with a heart. It’s a good read for those who want to build something slow, steady, and worthwhile.
Pages: 317 | ASIN : B0FWSZTMHP
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, business, Business Mentoring & Coaching, David B. Hampson, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Rainbow Gold: Building a Business That's Both the Journey and the Destination, read, reader, reading, self help, small business, starting a business, story, trailer, writer, writing
Meaningful Work
Posted by Literary-Titan

Emetophobia & Me follows your transformation from a childhood shaped by fear to an adulthood grounded in courage, compassion, and the radical act of choosing to live fully even when anxiety whispers otherwise. Why was this an important book for you to write?
What a great question. It brought up quite a lot for me. I will try to summarise it. Having battled crippling anxiety throughout most of my childhood and adult life, I wanted nothing more than to help others who were suffering too. When I saw someone suffering with anxiety and/or emetophobia and heard them speak of their experience in ways I deeply resonated with, my heart would literally hurt. For many years, I would just listen and try to offer any understanding and …. well, just love really. It felt like a lifeline for me to have someone who would just listen and remind me that I was not alone. So when I decided to write this little book, it was really to create a lifeline for those who feel lost and to remind them that they were safe. There is hope, and they are deeply loved.
What feels important to me is that, even when I am gone, my books might still bring comfort to others. That feels like meaningful work to me.
What was the hardest memory to revisit while writing Emetophobia & Me, and how did you care for yourself during that process?
Writing the book really did bring up some old feelings and fears, but it was therapeutic in a way too. I think the hardest part to revisit was those times, as a child, where I felt so unsafe. I had the phobia, anxiety, and panic ( I had no idea they had names then), there was violence at home, and my sister was diagnosed with cancer.
I felt so sad for that frightened little girl, who tried tirelessly to control what was never in her control. I guess that is why I turned inward more and more, to try and control myself. To try and keep myself safe with rituals, behaviour, and fear.
Was there a specific moment when your relationship with fear shifted from something to avoid to something you could coexist with?
You know, I wish there was a light bulb moment when it all changed. We are all looking for the magical quick fix, right? But, actually, it was a slow process. A process of seeing, then not seeing, then seeing more. The real change came from being open to being wrong …. about who I thought I was, my beliefs, and my misunderstanding about fear.
Being open. Being prepared to change your mind. Being aware that there is a lot you don’t know yet, is huge.
What do you hope readers who don’t struggle with phobias take away about empathy and the lived experience of anxiety?
It has always been important to me that loved ones and family members have some understanding about anxiety and Phobias. The one thing a sufferer needs is understanding. Followed by time and love. Just listen, not always to fix, but just to hear. Often, we sufferers of anxiety feel unheard, and that increases fear and insecurity.
The answer to everything always is love.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Instagram | Finding Peace | Website | Books.By | Amazon
She could control everything—
except her own fear.
From the outside, Jess Smith looked fine. A wife, a mother, a woman doing her best to hold it all together. But behind every smile hid a secret terror—an obsessive fear of vomiting so intense it ruled her every decision. Every meal was measured. Every outing calculated. Every day, a battle with her own mind.
Until the fear began to consume her life completely.
In this raw and beautifully written memoir about emetophobia, anxiety and panic attacks, Jess takes readers inside the hidden world of a phobia few dare to talk about. Her story unfolds like a psychological thriller—every symptom, every panic episode, every desperate attempt to stay “safe” pulling her further from the life she longed to live.
But when she finally hit breaking point, something miraculous happened.
She stopped running.
She turned inward.
And she began the journey home—to herself.
Part memoir, part self-help guide for anxiety and recovery, Emetophobia and Me will make you feel every heartbeat of fear—and every breath of freedom that follows.
If you’ve ever lived your life controlled by fear—whether of panic, sickness, or simply losing control—this story will hold your hand through the darkness and show you that healing isn’t about fixing yourself.
It’s about finally allowing yourself to be free.
A powerful, honest, and inspiring read for anyone navigating anxiety, emetophobia, panic disorder, or trauma recovery.
You are not afraid of what you think you are.
It’s time to see the truth — and take your life back.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Anxieties & Phobias, anxiety, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Eating Disorders, ebook, Emetophobia and me, goodreads, indie author, Jess Smith, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, Self-Help for Eating Disorders & Body Image Issues, story, writer, writing
Major Transformations
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Cycle of Completion follows a young man with physical challenges in a sealed-off section of utopia who is thrust into leadership by the city residents who believe he can lead them out of these dark times. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Great question- The actual story was a dream that I had, but it was just the ending. When they are giving the scepter to David, thinking he is going to be the next king, but it really ends up being Elijah. Everything else ends up being good ideas that I blended into the story.
David’s transformation from a hesitant leader to a symbol of hope in your story was inspiring as he leaned on his faith to guide him. Were you able to achieve everything you wanted with the characters in the novel?
Yes, but it just wasn’t David’s alteration; Elijah, Abdul, and Abaddon all had major transformations as well. Is that not reality, one event can change so many people. Think about 9/11.
Was it important for you to deliver a moral to readers, or was it circumstantial to deliver an effective novel?
My gift is to entertain, crafting a story that can not only keep your interest, but also make these compelling characters, is my destiny. However, to bring the message of God to the masses, to scream out Jesus saves to the readers. That, my friend, is priceless!
What is the next book that you are working on, and when can your fans expect it to be out?
I am currently working on a book called Marcus Douglas Presents the Bruising of the Victor. It is a Spiritual Action Mystery, both highly entertaining and dually emotional.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Amazon
With the city foundering, critical systems grinding to a halt, and food stores dwindling, they find hope in young David Shakir, whose grandfather founded this great haven. But will that burden crush the young boy whose spent his life thought sickly and weak, confined to his wheelchair?
The city looks to David and his closeness to God for leadership and his armor bearer, Elijah Ruiz. Can they be able to lead them out of these dark times, or will the looming threat within the sealed off Locality Seven consume them all?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, christian fantasy, Christian Futuristic Fiction, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Marcus Douglas, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Cycle of Completion, writer, writing
Embrace the Ups and Downs
Posted by Literary-Titan

Dorm to Doorstep is a candid, big-sister-style guide that blends personal stories, tough truths, and practical advice to help young women navigate confidence, safety, relationships, and self-discovery as they enter adulthood. Why was this an important book for you to write?
As my daughter was approaching the end of her high school years, I observed the juxtaposition between the time in a young woman’s life when she is exerting her independence, crossed with really needing advice, and the last person she wanted to hear from is MOM. So, I packaged “evergreen” motherly advice into a fun, humor-filled yet sometimes serious book that attracts the reader with a structure resembling social media – colorful, short snippets and stories – a book that they can pick up for the AHA of the day, put down, and pick up again at their leisure.
Your book emphasizes personal choice. What experiences most shaped your belief that “you control you?”
Every day when we wake up, we can control one thing – us. Things will happen, people will say things, and we will make mistakes. How we perceive and interpret these things will drive our reactions and our learning.
I experienced some rough times as an adolescent and young adult. Circumstances I could not control. For many years, I sometimes chose to let insecurities and fear drive my decision-making. One thing that always kept me going, however, and led to real change was accepting that I am not a victim of anything that comes my way. I am in control of what I do about it. This is transformative when facing a challenge; I like to say you do you and I’ll do me, respectfully. I control the direction that I go, and my path is my own. My favorite thought each day is “Go out and make it a great day!” And, as you noticed, that is a consistent theme in Dorm to Doorstep. I believe the earlier young people feel empowered to forge their path, look at things in a proactive way, and control their emotions, the more successful they will be in facing adversity and achieving their goals.
If a reader could walk away remembering only one piece of advice from the book, what would you want it to be?
It is the first page of Dorm to Doorstep: Life is a journey; there is not one path. Embrace the ups and downs. And, I try to be a cheerleader in the journey by sharing tips, tidbits, and tales to help the journey be smoother, humor-filled, and fun.
How do you hope parents or mentors use this book when supporting the young women in their lives?
I view the book as a platform for discussion; to provoke honesty and sharing of personal stories to make connections and build relationships. If I were to visualize this, it would be a Mom and daughter having a fun conversation sparked from one of the pages in which they share their own thoughts and experiences as a way to bond and grow together.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Instagram | TikTok | Amazon
Are you ready for your own PERSONAL CHEERLEADER?
Are you ready to HAVE FUN?
Dorm to Doorstep is a fun, engaging, coming of age/adulting guide written just for you, the young woman heading out on her own! Organized in layers, just like your favorite ice cream sundae:
Glow Up, Girl: Personal Growth & Insights
Glam Bam, Thank You Ma’am (the sauce): Fashion, Beauty & Wellness
Laced with Grace (the whipped cream): Relationships & Demeanor
Gather Round with Goodness (the cherry on top): Tips & Tidbits for Daily Living
Author Hilary Afshary dives into life lessons in full, living color. Every page is bright, just like your future, with colored sprinkles of learning scattered throughout. Oh, and watch for RED moments-cold, hard truths that pop up when you need a reality check.
Dorm to Doorstep can be read page to page or casually open for the AHA of the day; picked up again and put down at leisure.
Every word comes from the author’s place of truth from her own life and raising a daughter. Thoughtful, respectful, and real-words that wink and say Trust me, You WANT to read this. Words that cause pause, stories that stick and moments that will leave you smiling- or even laughing out loud.
Dorm to Doorstep is the perfect gift for a birthday, holiday, graduation, care package, college send off or just because…it is your manual for adulting 101 and living life away from home.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: advice, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dorm to Doorstep, ebook, goodreads, Hilary Afshary, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, self-discovery, story, Teen & Young Adult Books, Teen and YA, writer, writing, YA








