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The Haunting of Arran House
Posted by Literary Titan
In Scotland, where storms roll in fast and secrets run deep, widower Henry Laird is running out of time. With two young sons and their devoted nanny, he’ll do anything to keep them safe… and keep them fed. Then the phone rings. A solicitor. An inheritance. A three-story ancestral home on the Isle of Arran. A fresh start. But Arran House doesn’t want new beginnings. It wants blood. A vengeful spirit hunts them through shadowed halls, while another, a grieving woman, fights to protect them. As family truths surface, Henry must face what haunts Arran House… before it takes everything.
Available March 29th, 2026
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Paisley Olaka, paranormal, read, reader, reading, story, supernatural, suspense, The Haunting of Arran House, thriller, trailer, writer, writing
Too Complex: It’s a (Enter Difficulty Setting Here) Life
Posted by Literary Titan

Cody Redbond lives to game. Addiction defines him. His fixation centers on Fantasy Estate, an online battle royale that consumes his days and erases everything else. Hours disappear. Priorities collapse. The game becomes his only reality, while the world beyond his screen loses all appeal. Employment slips away. Social skills erode. Eventually, eviction follows. Even then, Cody refuses to move on. He is too deeply embedded in the digital realm to disengage on his own.
Enter leasing agent Mavirna Holmes and property manager Corey Dwellen. Their task is simple in theory and nightmarish in practice: reach Cody and reclaim the apartment. Doing so requires navigating a living space that has deteriorated into absolute chaos, a physical manifestation of Cody’s inward retreat.
Too Complex: It’s a (Enter Difficulty Setting Here) Life, by Anthony Moffett, is a compact and sharply comic work that blends prose with illustrations. It occupies a space somewhere between novella and graphic novel, using visuals to punctuate its humor and heighten its absurdity.
At its core, the book is an absurdist adventure tailored to video game enthusiasts, but its reach extends further. It functions as a satire of modern adulthood, skewering burnout, disconnection, and the quiet despair that drives escapism. As Cody’s story unfolds, sympathy becomes inevitable. He has not merely abandoned reality; he has replaced it with something brighter, louder, and more responsive. Ironically, the so-called real world offers little incentive to return. It appears dull, unforgiving, and deeply uninspiring by comparison.
This contrast captures the enduring appeal of video games. They promise immersion without consequence, excitement without monotony. When everyday life feels hollow or exhausting, fantasy becomes irresistible. Mavirna and Corey, the unfortunate duo assigned to retrieve Cody, find themselves on a quest of their own, one that mirrors the very games Cody adores. The ultimate irony lies in the aftermath of his obsession. The artificial world he clung to has reshaped reality itself, transforming his apartment into a grotesque, pest-ridden dungeon.
The result is a book that is unabashedly fun. It is silly, unhinged, and gleefully excessive. Beneath the humor, however, lies a pointed warning. Too Complex entertains first, but it also lingers, offering a sharp and thoughtful reflection on escapism, avoidance, and the cost of choosing fantasy over life. I highly recommend this humorous and highly relatable tale to gamers and non-gamers alike.
Pages: 73 | ASIN : B0BR4J3L9Y
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, Action & Adventure Short Stories, adventure, Anthony Moffett, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, General Humorous Fiction, goodreads, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, satire, short stories, story, Too Complex: It's a (Enter Difficulty Setting Here) Life, writer, writing
Chika’s Mysterious Phone
Posted by Literary Titan

Chika’s Mysterious Phone follows an eleven-year-old girl who receives a birthday phone from her grandmother in Japan and starts to wonder how voices and pictures travel through it. That simple question turns into a dreamlike journey inside the phone itself. Chika shrinks, meets living digits, an avatar version of herself, and faces digital dangers while trying to understand technology, imagination, and what feels real versus what feels imagined.
I found the writing playful, bold, and full of heart. The rhyme gives the story a steady beat that feels almost like a song read out loud. It felt like listening to a curious child who cannot stop thinking. I liked how the author talks directly to the reader. I smiled at the mix of wonder, humor, and gentle chaos.
The ideas in this book stuck with me more than I expected. I loved how it mixes technology with dreams and feelings. The phone is not just a gadget. It becomes a doorway into questions about the mind, the soul, and learning itself. I felt a little nostalgic while reading it. It reminded me of late-night thoughts as a kid, when big questions felt exciting rather than scary. Some explanations get heavy, yet the curiosity behind them feels honest and sweet.
I would recommend this book for curious kids who like thinking, asking questions, and imagining strange worlds. It also feels great for parents or teachers who enjoy reading aloud and talking about ideas afterward. This is not a fast bedtime book. It is better for children who like to stay in a story for a while rather than rush through it, and for adults who still like to wonder how things work and why we dream.
Pages: 76 | ISBN : 978-0645143041
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: Alexey Kudravtsev, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chapter Books, Chika's Mysterious Phone, childrens books, childrens chapter books, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Hugh Pittman, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Don’t Be a F*cking Idiot
Posted by Literary Titan

The book lays out a straight-talking guide for men who want to understand their own emotional messes and stop tanking their relationships. It mixes attachment theory, love languages, and daily rituals with stories that bounce between funny and painfully honest. Hill explains his ideas through wild metaphors like Golden Retrievers, Chihuahuas, and Cats, and he folds in pieces of his own journey through divorce, heartbreak, and personal rebuilding. The message is simple. If you want to be loved well, you’d better figure out your patterns and step up.
The writing hits fast. It rarely softens the blow, and that worked for me. It made the ideas feel human instead of clinical. I liked the mix of raw emotion and humor because it turned something heavy into something you could actually digest. I also appreciated that he doesn’t pretend to be perfect. He shows his avoidant streak, his panic, his screw ups. It made the whole thing feel more real. At times, the tone gets a little abrasive, but honestly, that seems to be the point. He wants men to wake up, not tiptoe.
The ideas themselves make sense, and the way he frames them kept me hooked. Attachment styles are usually presented in some dry classroom voice, yet here they’re brought to life through dogs and cats, storms and ships. The stories he shares about couples are goofy but strangely accurate. I’ve seen versions of those people in real life. His approach to rituals also hit home. The notion that small, repeated behaviors can shape a relationship for better or worse is something lots of books mention, but Hill says it in a way that sticks. Sometimes he leans into silliness, and sometimes he goes philosophical. The mix kept me guessing.
By the time I finished, I felt like the book works best for men who know they need to grow but don’t want to wade through academic sludge. It is for guys who can handle blunt honesty and want advice that feels lived in, not polished in a lab. If you want a kick in the ass wrapped in humor and heart, this is your book.
Pages: 53 | ASIN : B0G8RY5KTL
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Alpha Male Romance, author, blake hill, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Don't Be a F*cking Idiot, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, men's relationship guide, nonfiction, nook, novel, personal development, read, reader, reading, relationship guide, self help, story, success, Success eBooks, Success Self Help, writer, writing
Blue Jeans and Lavender Gowns
Posted by Literary Titan

A. W. Anthony’s Blue Jeans and Lavender Gowns follows Terry Deitz as he grows up in small–town Illinois during the 70s and 80s. The story tracks his friendships, his awkward steps toward romance, and his slow discovery of who he wants to be. The heart of the book sits in his connection with Debbie Douglas, a quiet farm girl who surprises him again and again. Much of the book lives inside everyday moments. School hallways. Study hall banter. Football games. Long drives on dark country roads. It all builds a picture of simple places where small choices shape a whole life.
I felt myself leaning in as I read because the writing has this easy, steady flow that feels honest. Sometimes it rambles the way teenagers talk, and sometimes it snaps into sharp little moments that hit harder than expected. The author keeps the language simple, but the emotions run deep. I appreciated how Anthony lets Terry speak for himself without polishing his thoughts. He admits fear. He overthinks things. He wants to do the right thing, then stumbles. That made him feel real to me. Debbie felt real, too. She works hard. She hides her nerves. She wants kindness more than anything. Watching them circle closer together gave me a warm, hopeful feeling.
The book looks at family pressure, faith, and the everyday pain that people try to hide. Some of the scenes surprised me with how tense or tender they got. I liked how the author handles faith with a light touch. The characters lean on God without turning the story into a sermon. It shows how young people try to make sense of love, fear, failure, and forgiveness. The dialogue sometimes made me laugh, and the charm of the book carried me through.
By the time I finished, I felt like I had spent time with people I might actually know. That is what made the story work for me. I would recommend Blue Jeans and Lavender Gowns to readers who enjoy wholesome romance, small–town nostalgia, and stories that unfold gently. Teens and adults who like clean Christian fiction would enjoy it most. If you want a book that feels warm and sincere, with characters that you’ll keep thinking about, this one is worth reading.
Pages: 271 | ASIN : B0FZ2V62J7
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A.W. Anthony, author, Finding Love in the Heartland, Blue Jeans and Lavender Gowns, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, christian romance, clean Christian romance, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, inspirational, inspirational religious fiction, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religious romance, romance, story, writer, writing
When East Meets West: An Integrative Guide to Self-Care
Posted by Literary Titan

When East Meets West is a warm and wide-ranging guide to self-care that blends Eastern and Western practices into an easygoing daily toolkit. Author Deborah Dolan Hunt walks readers through teas, essential oils, tinctures, foods, body-based therapies, mind-centered habits, and spiritual practices. She mixes personal stories with straightforward explanations. The book moves from herbal infusions and oils to yoga, meditation, hypnotherapy, and folk traditions. It also highlights the need for safety, moderation, and collaboration with a healthcare provider. The author urges readers to build a personal wellness plan that is realistic and kind.
I appreciated Hunt’s honest tone. The simple way Hunt describes her own anxiety and how meditation helped her made the material feel real. I liked how she shared moments of discovery, such as learning therapeutic touch or making her own tea blend. Her writing is plainspoken, almost conversational. It felt like sitting at a kitchen table with a friend who wants to help you feel better. The long lists of benefits were helpful, though I sometimes wished for clearer examples or stories to bring them to life. Still, the variety kept me turning pages because I never knew which soothing idea might show up next.
I found myself reacting emotionally to the mix of family warmth and practical advice. The book is full of heart. I smiled when she talked about her kids asking for her “magic” and felt moved when she described using energy work to help a friend’s dog. Some sections felt dense because of the many bullet points, yet the gentle spirit underneath held it together. I appreciated that she never positioned these methods as cures. She consistently framed them as supports. That made the book feel grounded and trustworthy.
I would recommend When East Meets West to anyone who wants a simple and friendly introduction to holistic wellness. People who enjoy herbal teas, gentle rituals, or calming daily routines will find a lot to try. Readers who feel overwhelmed by jargon-filled health books will, no doubt, enjoy the down-to-earth voice here. It is welcoming and steady. It would suit beginners, busy people who want small habits, and anyone curious about blending modern care with old traditions.
Pages: 144 | ASIN : B0G18V65H7
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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, chakras, Deborah Dolan Hunt, Deborah Dolan Hunt PhD RN, ebook, Energy Healing, goodreads, healing, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, When East Meets West: An Integrative Guide to Self-Care, writer, writing
Weeds To Wishes: Blossoming into the Leader You Are Meant to Be
Posted by Literary Titan

Weeds to Wishes follows Sheryl Brown’s journey as a teacher and principal who learns to lead through listening, healing, encouraging others, and growing through hardship. The book moves through eight “keys” to leadership that blend personal stories, school memories, emotional turning points, and practical activities that teams can use to connect and communicate. The mix of stories and reflections creates a guide that shows how leadership rises from real life and not from titles or rules.
While reading this book, I felt pulled in by the author’s warmth and honesty. The stories hit hard because they feel like moments pulled straight from a life lived fully in service to others. I kept thinking about the scene with the bomb threat evacuation and how she steadied herself in chaos. I could almost feel the cold air and the fear and the fierce need to protect people. Her writing style is simple and easy to fall into. There were times I stopped and thought, wow, she really went through that, yet she still chooses hope. I liked that. Her voice feels like someone sitting with you at a table, talking softly, telling you the truth. It got to me more than I expected.
The ideas in the book made me think about leadership in a more human way. She focuses on trust, grace, listening, and being present. Those are not flashy things. They are small habits that change everything over time. I caught myself reflecting on my own tendencies to jump to solutions instead of hearing what people are really saying. Her chapter on “Whispering” resonated with me because it showed how leadership grows in quiet rooms, on long car rides, and in moments when your heart is breaking but you still choose to show up. I loved the activities she built into each chapter. They felt practical and playful, which made the leadership lessons feel less heavy and more doable.
I would recommend Weeds to Wishes to new leaders, veteran educators, and anyone who wants to lead with more heart and less noise. The book is especially good for people who are burned out or doubting their path. It feels like a gentle hand on your shoulder, reminding you that you are allowed to grow, stumble, try again, and still make a difference.
Pages: 203 | ASIN : B0G1CSM2GG
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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, education, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, leadership, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, Personal Transformation Self-Help, read, reader, reading, self help, Sheryl Brown, story, Success Self-Help, Weeds To Wishes Blossoming into the Leader You Are Meant to Be, writer, writing
Wooden Dolls Game
Posted by Literary Titan

Wooden Dolls Game, written by Ivonne Hoyos, follows Mary Jane Crowell through a life shaped by family tension, a volatile sister, and a strange set of wooden dolls that lets her rewind time. The story begins with two little girls picking paint colors for their new bedrooms and unfolds into a tale about resentment, trauma, fate, and the high cost of trying to fix what cannot stay fixed. What starts as a simple childhood conflict grows into a sweeping journey through teenhood and adulthood, where Mary Jane desperately tries to undo tragic events using the dolls, and where every attempt triggers new ripples of chaos. It is a story about family wounds that never quite heal and the limits of love when time itself becomes a battleground.
The writing is direct and emotional in a way that sneaks up on you, and I found myself caring a lot about what happened. Scenes between the sisters made my chest tighten. Some moments felt painfully real, like the time Antonia destroys Mary Jane’s room in a wild burst of envy or the school fight that spirals into tragedy. The author captures the feeling of walking on eggshells around someone you love yet fear. I felt myself bracing every time Antonia entered a scene. The pacing moves fast, and sometimes the dialogue feels raw, but honestly, that worked for me because the characters live in a constant state of imbalance. Their world is never calm.
As the story leaned more into the supernatural element of rewinding time, I felt a mix of fascination and frustration, which I think is exactly what the book wanted me to feel. Every attempt to rewrite the past leads Mary Jane deeper into emotional exhaustion. I kept rooting for her and kept dreading what might go wrong next. The idea that fixing one tragedy only opens the door to another stayed with me. It made me think about how people carry their pain and how trying to rearrange life into something perfect can end up breaking everything. Even when the plot went dark, I stayed hooked because the emotional truth behind the events felt honest.
Wooden Dolls Game is a story for readers who enjoy family drama with sharp edges and for anyone who can handle a bit of heartbreak mixed with hope. If you like stories about sisters, trauma, time loops, and choices that echo forever, you’ll enjoy this book. For readers who enjoy a tense and emotional journey, Wooden Dolls Game is more than worth your time.
Pages: 353 | ASIN : B0CDJ8T2NX
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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, drama, ebook, family, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Ivonne Hoyos, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, time travel, trauma, Wooden Dolls Game, writer, writing










