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We’re All In This Together
Posted by Literary_Titan

The Ties That Bind follows a teenage girl who, after surviving her initial encounter with the enemy, is now honing her powers and preparing to unite the other six Human-Borns. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I’ve always loved stories about teamwork and teens needing to learn how to work together despite differences. The anime, Digimon Adventure, proved to be a huge influence on my young mind, and upon recently rewatching it, I realized that it likely was the root of my inspiration for there to be a team of chosen ones, and that there would be tensions between the individuals. I’m someone who adores traveling, and that also played a big part in me wanting to turn this story into a global event, with each of the kids coming from different backgrounds, family structures, ethnic groups, and financial situations. I wanted to provide a sort of “we’re all in this together” idea, that no matter who you are or where you come from, you, too, could have been a Human-Born.
What character did you enjoy writing for? Was there one that was more challenging to write for?
I really enjoyed writing Jen in this book. Her struggles and growth were things that took me a while to convey well to the reader so that she came across fully believable in her reactions (I wrote the first draft of Ties back in 2011), but once I really focused on the trauma she’d been through and how she was feeling about it all, I was able to show my readers exactly where she is, and give her a cast that supported her growth and development (especially Tyron. Some of my favorite scenes in this book are the mentor/mentee scenes between Jen & Ty).
The hardest character to write for me was Lexa, and likely will be for a while. She’s so counter to my personality, and she thinks in such a selfish, brash way that I can understand but at the same time, I don’t understand because it’s not at all how I’d react to situations and people. I love her though, because there’s so much potential for growth in her. Naturally, my villains are hard to write (especially Cregorous), but Lexa proved difficult for me, because she’s supposed to be a good guy, and her way of seeing the world and even her motivations aren’t at all like the others’.
Are you a fan of the Young Adult and Coming-Of-Age genres? What books do you think most influenced your work?
It’s hard to say what books influenced my stories, especially in the YA and Coming-of-Age genres, because truthfully, I haven’t read many of them. My biggest influences, book-wise, came from the likes of Tolkien and Lewis, but when I was younger, I greatly enjoyed Orsen Scott Card’s books and I know I destroyed a copy of Where the Red Fern Grows. While I have read both Harry Potter and Percy Jackson, I never fell in love with them the way others did. I could appreciate the worldbuilding, and enjoyed aspects of the lore in both series, but I found more I didn’t like about them than things I did. So maybe they did influence me, but in a way that made me say, “I want my mentor character to never be compared to this character.” Or, “I want my characters and plot to be stronger than this.”
What will the next book in that series be about, and when will it be published?
Book 3, The Reflection of the Raidin, is available now! It launched June 25, 2024, and is all about the fact that the Human-Borns are now on the world of Tilion and are trying to figure out how to end the war with Caliga. (They don’t figure it out, because there’s still two books left in the series). Reflection is the book that shifts the series out of Young Adult and into New Adult, as the characters are growing, their situations are changing, the stakes are getting raised, and the themes discussed are deeper than your average upper YA reader might be ready to tackle.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Book Review
Seven teenagers rose to fight.
The world survived.
Now Jen Monroe is tasked with finding the six other Human-Borns. Still reeling from her traumatic encounter with the monstrous Cregorous, she faces cultural barriers, personality clashes, and a worldwide trek to find those destined to help her. But threats sleep in the shadows, and the humans were not blind to what they witnessed seven teenagers accomplish.
Meanwhile, the very enemy the Human-Borns are fated to encounter lies in wait.
He is patient. He is cunning. He is ruthless.
Soon, these seven teenagers find themselves in a battle they never expected. But in their drive to save those they care about, what might be lost in the process?
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, paranormal, read, reader, reading, story, Susan L. Markloff, Teen & Young Adult Fantasy, Teen & Young Adult Paranormal & Urban Fantasy, Teen and YA, the ties that bind, writer, writing
The Ties That Bind
Posted by Literary Titan

The Ties That Bind, the second chapter in Susan L. Markloff’s Human-Born Era series, plunges readers back into the extraordinary saga of Jen Monroe and her fellow Human-Borns. This novel continues their epic struggle against the dark forces of Cregorous. A gripping YA fantasy, this installment brims with action, character growth, and masterful world-building, solidifying its place in the genre. The story picks up swiftly from where the first book left off. Jen, having survived her initial encounter with Cregorous, is now honing her powers and preparing to unite the other six Human-Borns. These teenagers, each wielding incredible abilities, must come together to confront their terrifying common enemy. Their journey demands not just facing external dangers but also wrestling with internal conflicts and the pressures of leading dual lives.
Markloff’s world-building stands out. Having established the foundation in the first book, she now enriches the world with intricate details that fantasy enthusiasts will relish. Her skill in blending the familiar with the fantastical breathes fresh life into a crowded genre. The world she creates feels vivid and layered, especially for a YA novel. The setting, a mix of the realistic and the supernatural, captivates the reader, making it easy to lose oneself in the story.
Not only does the world the author has created shine—but the characters do, too. Jen, our protagonist, is exceptionally well-crafted. Her authenticity and relatability draw readers in, even as the story delves into the strange and the surreal. Though the other Human-Borns don’t receive as much focus, each one emerges with a distinct personality and background. The interactions between the characters are often highlighted, with Markloff excelling at capturing the nuances of teenage banter. The chemistry between characters like Skylar and Takeo infuses the story with humor and warmth, raising the stakes when danger looms. Cregorous, the ever-present villain, remains a formidable and well-developed threat. At times, the amount of characters in the story can feel overwhelming, but the glossary at the back proves invaluable. The plot itself strikes a balance between intense, fast-paced action and slower, introspective moments. Without giving anything away, the climax delivers excitement and leaves readers eagerly anticipating the next installment.
The Ties That Bind is a stellar entry in YA fantasy, leaving me eager for what comes next. Susan Markloff delivers a thoroughly enjoyable experience.
Pages: 708 | ASIN : B0BR58QY1J
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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, contemporary fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, paranormal, read, reader, reading, story, Susan L. Markloff, Teen & Young Adult Fantasy, Teen & Young Adult Paranormal & Urban Fantasy, Teen and YA, the ties that bind, writer, writing
The Ties That Bind
Posted by Literary Titan

The Ties That Bind (Book One in the Family Ties series) by Jansen Schmidt is a thrilling romance novel that follows a woman on a journey that leads her to discover family, love, and self-acceptance. Shiloh Ferguson has a notorious reputation for getting into trouble with the law. She returns to her hometown of Twisted Fork, Arizona after leaving ten years ago. With a thief on the loose, and very few people willing to give her a chance at building a new name for herself, she finds herself having multiple encounters with a cop, Luke Wainwright, who used to bail her out of trouble a decade ago. Following the funeral of her estranged father, and the emotional tug-of-war with her sisters, Shiloh is reminded yet again why coming back home was not a good idea. After getting an inheritance she didn’t know about, Shiloh is torn between saving the livelihoods of the people of Twisted Fork whom she believed hated her, or escaping the decade-long traumatic events the town kept reminding her of. But, a love she felt inadequate to receive found her, further conflicting her.
Author Jansen Schmidt has taken the everyday lives of regular people and gave them a unique allure that is bound to keep readers glued to the pages of this exhilarating love story. She skillfully balances seductive romance with action-packed scenes. This is the main reason why I kept coming back to this book time and time again. The sweet emotionality of some scenes juxtaposed with the suspenseful action made for a unique read.
The Ties That Bind takes readers through the emotional spectrum – anger, fear, frustration, joy, understanding, and excitement. It circles around some heavy subject matter such as abandonment and loss, but it’s all handled with an authenticity that feels genuine and thoughtful. The development of well-rounded characters, beyond the hero and heroine, with their own motives jolts you back to reality and casts out the typical utopian universe that is characteristic of most romance novels. Also, the perceptive and positive manner in which Schmidt handled the subject of mental illness and tending to people with special needs is also quite insightful, even instructive.
Letting go of certain trauma is never as easy. By artfully telling the story of Luke Wainwright and Shiloh Ferguson, Schmidt entertains while offering a way to find love and acceptance of self and others, even healing from your trauma like the heroine.
Pages: 390 | ASIN: B0B761X8K7
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime fiction, ebook, goodreads, Jansen Schmidt, kindle, kobo, literature, love story, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, suspense, the ties that bind, thriller, womens fiction, writer, writing
The Ties That Bind – Book Trailer
Posted by Literary Titan
Shiloh Ferguson returns to Twisted Fork, Arizona with one mission: bury her estranged father and get out of town as fast as possible. But nothing goes according to plan from the moment she crosses the state line. While her childhood home is as forlorn as she remembers, the arrival of Deputy Luke Wainwright is nothing at all like her teenage memory.
Luke Wainwright is doing his best as a single parent to provide a stable home for his special needs daughter. While patrolling the outskirts of town, he sees an unfamiliar car in the driveway of the recently uninhabited Ferguson Ranch. Expecting to thwart a robbery in progress, he enters the home and runs smack dab into a grown-up version of the adolescent rebel he’d unwittingly admired ten years earlier.
Before Shiloh can escape Twisted Fork, a shocking revelation about her father and a horrifying family secret come to light. An unexpected inheritance and a growing attraction to Luke, leave Shiloh emotionally conflicted about her family, her future, and whether or not to honor a dead man’s bequest.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Family Ties, goodreads, Jansen Schmidt, kindle, kobo, literature, love story, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, the ties that bind, western, womens fiction, writer, writing
The Ties That Bind: From Slavery To Freedom
Posted by Literary Titan
William Bowie a slave and skilled carpenter along with his family were freed by the will of Roderick McGregor of Prince George County Maryland in the year 1858. Fifty- Five years later in 1913, his grandson William Augus Bowie and John Whitelaw Lewis co-founded the Industrial Savings Bank in Washington DC and together they would make important and lasting contributions to the African-American community of Washington. Thomas and John Vreeland Jackson were manumitted by Richard Vreeland in 1828 in Bergen County NJ. Oystermen by trade they would go on to become two of the first black property owners in Bergen County and conductors of the Underground Railroad who helped thousands of slaves to escape to freedom. In 1823, Joseph VanArsdale was freed by the will of Abraham VanArsdalen in Somerset County, New Jersey. Joseph would become one of the earliest black property owners in Princeton, New Jersey. This is their story in Slavery and Freedom.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: 1850, african american, alibris, america, author, author life, authors, bank, bergen county, black, black literature, book, book club, book geek, book lover, Book Trailers, bookaholic, bookbaby, bookblogger, bookbub, bookhaul, bookhub, bookish, bookreads, books of instagram, booksbooksbooks, bookshelf, bookstagram, bookstagramer, bookwitty, bookworks, bookworm, ebook, freedom, from slavery to freedom, goodreads, ilovebooks, indiebooks, kindle, kobo, land owner, literature, new jersey, nonfiction, nook, novel, publishing, read, reader, reading, shelfari, slave, smashwords, story, the ties that bind, trailer, underground railroad, washington, writer, writer community, writing, youtube






