Brown Girl

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Brown Girl 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Leilani Taneus-Miller ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
This novel gives Insight into all experiences big and small that chip away at a person’s sense of worth. 

I can really relate with the main character of the story, Shelly – being a brown kid in a white neighbourhood is not easy, not at the time the novel is set in  early 1980’s, not so far off the changes coming out of the civil rights movement where prejudice was as yet deeply rooted. 

Shelly is isolated at school and gets sent to the Headmaster’s office frequently – not for her wrongs but to keep her out of the way and in many cases to keep her out of harms way, away from the relentless preteens who bully her because she is black. It seems so unfair yet entirely believable. 

I was so surprised that the Headmaster of her school constantly turned a blind eye to the physical and emotional abuse being doled out on a daily basis by Shelly’s would-be peers and class teacher. The only way she can shut out all the sneers and insults is to retreat into her inner world of stories, books and fantasies about being in her ancestral homeland (which are fantastically written).

I kept wondering will she be successful in befriending any of her classmates? And hoping the kids in her school would go against the grain to be her friend.

I liked Shelly’s character so much and I also loved the character of Dolly in the story – they both handle life with intrigue and humour. And I couldn’t help but fall in love with Hetty just as much as Shelly does. 

Although Shelly sees herself as not brave, I found her incredibly courageous to carry on day in and day out, as if she is holding out for the other people in the novel to change. I found myself thinking that maybe she brings about their change with her patience and tenacity. 

This is an intriguing story that I couldn’t put down until I finished it. The title of the story couldn’t have been better than this as this is truly the story of a brown girl.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author Dima Dupéré

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

My name is Dima Dupéré. I live in Ottawa, Ontario (Canada). I am a social worker and teach therapeutic writing (journal writing with a deeper purpose).  I also write, draw, and am constantly creating something.  

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Watching from the Shore’’?  And how long did it take you to write it?

I started writing this story in 2010.  I wrote 11 chapters and then went to Grad school to complete a Masters in Social Work. In 2016, I picked up the story again while at a Novel Writing Marathon.  I rewrote it from the perspective of a different character, in an epistolary style.  I spent a lot of time trying to think about how I wanted to present it so that people would have the feeling of reading actual letters.  I hand wrote  letters thinking I could create a picture book. Then, in 2021, I had a heart attack and that slowed me down quite a bit.  I was able to proofread, make some changes and recently decided the best way to present this story is in an e-book because I can use different fonts for the different characters.  I love this story, especially since it had such a complicated ‘birth’.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

I love simple story lines written with emotion.  One of my favourite authors is Carol Shields who had a way of connecting deeply with me through her words.  I also love the poems of Mary Oliver.  Generally I tend to read a lot of memoirs.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

I love Newfoundland (Canada) in particular the small town of Woody Point. They have a spectacular Writers Festival each year that combines authors, musicians and nature.  It’s located in the middle of Gros Morne National Park, on Bonne Bay.  Being by the ocean is very healing to me, and the festival very inspiring.

Q5. Is there lots to do before you dive in and start writing a book?

I tend to sit with a story and think about it for a long time before actually writing. I will do some research if necessary to make sure my facts are accurate.  Once I have a sense of exactly where I will go then I start writing.  But often as I start writing the characters tell me where they want to go.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Watching from the Shore’?

See question 2

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your book?

My book is available on the book’s website (watchingfromtheshore dot com) and also at Kobo books. It can be found on OverDrive Library Network – which means you can request it at your library if it offers e-books.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Watching from the Shore’?

The title and the book cover have a direct connection with something that happens in the story.  Without saying too much, the last time Melanie and her brother were together as children they were watching their parents canoeing from the shore.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

This story though relatively short has a lot of twists and turns.  The format of letters makes it fast paced and different from a regular book.

Q10. Are there any secrets from the book (that aren’t in the blurb), you can share with your readers?

Part three will take the readers in an unexpected place.  I have to keep some secrets.

Surviving You

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Surviving You 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Mariah Johnson ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
Surviving You is an intriguing story written by the author Mariah Johnson. The story features an eight-year-old girl, Sophía Pérez. Sophía lives in a family of four. Her parents and her younger brother Elias are her world. At the age of eight years, she was stripped of her childhood.

Her mother grieves the loss of her husband and wasn’t herself. Sophía was given the responsibility to take care of her younger brother. Sophía also found her mother’s behavior strange. Ballet was not just the hobby of Sophía. She was quite serious about it. Read this book to know how Sophía will deal with things.

The story is written well. Losing a partner or a parent is the biggest tragedy of life that could happen to someone. Reading about Sophía’s family’s grief broke my heart while reading. I could relate to this story as my cousins lost their mother in seventh grade and have to take care of themselves at a very young age. Go for this book. I am sure you would love it. Great work by Mariah in this book.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Snatched: The Unforgettable Cruise

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Snatched: The Unforgettable Cruise 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Martin M. Nuza ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Snatched: The Unforgettable Cruise” written by the author Martin M Nuza is a crime novel. This novel is based on real events and crimes that happen on cruise ships.

The main character of the story is a young woman named Chloe. She went on a five day cruise with her best friend Alexis. Chloe’s father Ethan Moore is a police detective and he is 45 years old. When Chloe went on the cruise, his father was concerned for her. At the cruise, Chloe and Alexis were involved with strangers and had a great time. They didn’t have any idea about the monsters that were on the ship.

Read this story to know what will happen to Chloe on the cruise. Will she return safely to her father or will she never return? The story is fast paced. It kept me on the edge of my seat. Before reading this novel, I didn’t have any idea about the crimes that happened on the cruise. I am grateful to the author for this book and for increasing my awareness. I strongly recommend this book to all my fellow readers.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Long Enough to Love You

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Long Enough to Love You 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Kirsten Pursell ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Long Enough to Love You” by Kirsten Pursell is a romance book. The main character of the story is Jenn who is an empty nester. Jenn’s husband Mark supported her when she walked away from her career to be a stay-at-home mom. They both are good parents but Jenn feels unappreciated by her husband. She feels she is in a loveless marriage.

Jenn decided to be safe in a marriage instead of leaving her husband. I could relate Jenn’s character to some extent with my mom or most of the women who spend most of their life taking care of their kids. In her relationship, Jenn was starving for validation from her husband and when she didn’t receive any, she started having resentment. Jenn had even considered the pros and cons of getting separated from her husband.

Things took a turn when Jenn reconnected with her first love Tripp. He makes her feel loved, wanted, etc. Read the story to find out whether Jenn will choose to be safe or wanted. I enjoyed every bit of this story. It fits my reading taste. The writing style of the author is nice. This is a captivating story and I couldn’t put it down until I finished it.

Romance lovers should definitely read this one. You would be delighted to read this well written book. I am interested in reading more books by the author in the near future.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

More than Human

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: More than Human 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Paul Knight ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
More than Human is a fantasy book written by the author Paul Knight. The story features Professor Caine, Dr Abridge and Rutland. They have shared the news to the world about the ten superhumans. These superhumans are collectively known as The Guild.

The media is interested in knowing more about the superhumans. They asked Professor Caine if they are born or genetically altered but it’s too soon for the professor to share anything with the media.

Zethar and Raziel, the superhumans have high profile rescues and they have caught most of the attention from people. Read this story to know more about these superhumans.

The storyline is interesting and the pace of the story is fine. The world building is interesting. The way superhumans could touch even those from whom the cops are scared is amazing. This book will take you on the rollercoaster ride. Action lovers should go for it without any second thoughts.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Regent Alpha: Part One

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Regent Alpha: Part One 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Jakcub Anthonnie Young ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Regent Alpha: Part One” written by the author Jakcub Anthonnie Young is a paranormal fiction. The main character of the story is Jacqueline. She has always looked forward to college. When she was leaving home for college, she felt excited and scared at the same time.

At college, Jackie felt a headache, pain in her body. She felt hunger she couldn’t control. Her classmate Laird Hendrix tried to tell Jackie about why she is feeling like that. Hendrix had gone through something similar and so he could help Jackie. Will Jackie accept his help? It was interesting to see her whole life turning upside down in a moment.

If you enjoy reading stories involving fantasy, mystery, action, etc then go ahead with this one. The story is interesting and it kept me on the edge of my seat. I enjoyed the writing style of the author. I am really curious to read part two of the series as well.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 4.5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Prop and Friends: Prop and Oz the Osprey

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Prop and Friends: Prop and Oz the Osprey 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Emeka Enu ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
“Prop and Friends: Prop and Oz the Osprey” written by the author Emeka Enu is an interesting Children’s Book. The story features a single propeller plane Prop. He has always dreamed of being a different type of plane.

Some of Prop’s best friends are military planes and he also wishes to be a military plane. One day, Prop’s boss called him to his office and told him that he was sending him on an important mission. Oz, the Osprey was captured without its will. Will Prop be able to rescue him?

This is a well written book that teaches kids about different types of planes. The illustrations are beautiful and kids would have a great time reading this book. The glossary given at the end would be helpful for kids. Parents should definitely add this book to their children’s bookshelf. An insightful read!

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author Leilani Taneus-Miller

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.

I am a writer, teacher and mother who lives in Edinburgh with my children, husband, cats and dog. Born into a Haitian family, I grew up in New York, however I have lived in the UK for twenty years. I have always been an avid daydreamer and reader. I studied at University of Virginia, American University, Maryvale Institute and London Steiner House. Brown Girl is my first novel.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Brown Girl”?

I wrote the book in three months, during the first lockdown between March and June 2020. I was furloughed from my job and all my kids were home learning with their respective school. It was a real full house – Seven people, plus dog and cat in a 1970’s townhouse. Creative writing has always been a solace to me, something I turn to for expressing my secret feelings and innermost thoughts. I tend to gravitate to painting with words. But then I wanted my writing to speak to the anger and frustration that swirled around (not just in my head but in my gut) about my experience of being black and often the only black one. And this absolutely coincided with the George Floyd drama and the Black Lives Matter movement gripping public interest. W.E.B. Du Bois noted that amongst the most corrosive effects of racism was its tendency to make its victims see themselves through the eyes of people who hold them in contempt. So the first major challenge was freeing my voice to speak up (granted on the page), which was a big thing for me as I’d been trained to ignore racism – “don’t let that bother you, just move on and prove them wrong by doing great things”. Well-meaning statements like these are intended to soothe and empower, but they neither mend a broken spirit or broken bones, and they certainly don’t bring folks like Stephen Lawrence back to life. But it really is impossible for your whole being to ignore the repetitive verbal and physical abuse that is doled out to you because you are black, just as it is complicit to ignore it happening to anyone – that is ignorance. So there are two things that my novel challenges racism and ignorance, written from a young teen’s perspective, in her “I” to get the fullness of her expression, the fullness of her hurt and the fullness of her confusion.After writing the first draft, there was a lot of editing work to be done, which overall took over 2 years, as I had to fit this around working as a teacher and family life. But every time I picked it up, I still loved my main character and could still feel her telling me what she was thinking, what she would do and wouldn’t, I had to keep going. Plus, I absolutely enjoy the feeling of writing – being utterly immersed in a writing a story is like being underwater but being able to breath normally.

Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

Any writing that gives you a deep inside view into a person’s real body, real mind and real emotion. Writing that has a historical perspective even if the recent past. Writing that isn’t afraid to be brash or unmannered. I love Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s blunt storytelling depicting an otherwise uninvestigated culture, the poetic prose of Elif Shafak, the transcendent quality of Jeanette Winterson to inhabit reality, fable and fairytale unapologetically, the relentless honesty of Jamaica Kincaid and Kazuo Ishiguro’s preoccupation with memories and consciousness. I can’t stop thinking about the humorous portrayal of a hard-knock life in Charles Dickens’ ‘David Copperfield’ or the cruel reality set to words in Tracy Chevalier’s ‘the Last Runaway’ about being born into slavery in America. I am floored by Dillibe Onyeama’s brave retelling of the sadistic racist encounters he experienced in his 1972 novel ‘Nigger at Eton’ restyled to ‘A Black Boy at Eton’ by Penguin Books in 2022. Yet to say these writers informed my writing style seems too bold a claim.

Q4. What’s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

I do feel, mostly, that I have three countries. In USA my favourite spot is somewhere along the southern coast of Long Island, a plain of soft sand, chalky cliffs, tufted with tall wild grasses awaiting the inevitable plunge of erosion. If that spot is still there and I don’t know its name. In Haiti, my favourite spot is shared between the view when perched on that grey rock in Labadee – its bright blue sea and its salted sea spray christening me – and the sight of the purple hills drifting in and out of the vetiver-charcoal scented mist on the way up the ‘monde’ to Fermathe.In UK, it’s the cascades of lush green, swathes of purple heather, giving way to white sands and a pale turquoise sea at Claigan in the Isle of Skye.

Q5. Is there lots to do before you dive in and start writing a book?

Research on the place where the novel is set, the political and social environment of the time and interviewing people who lived in the setting at the time to get a real sense of place and belonging. Making up the characters, giving them a personality, a physique, idiosyncrasies, catch phrases, psychological faults. Outlining the plot, as in the sequence of everything that will happen cover to cover. Breathing life into it, so it becomes an amalgamation of actual and imaginary experience.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Brown Girl’?

Three month of writing – one spring season (March 2020-June 2020). It took much longer to edit, over two years. Initially, I challenged myself to write 500-1000 words per day, but after a few weeks I stopped looking at the word count and just did what I wanted.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

In bookshops, both small and large. If they don’t have it, just ask for it at the till because then they might decide to stock it. Online, including Amazon, Blackwells, Barnes & Nobles, Telegraph and Waterstones.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Brown Girl’?

The title has to do with the protagonist Shelly’s rainy-day activity of fisting up a pile of earth to construct a brown girl which she then places in a hodge podge house made of broken sticks and pelts with mud balls. Shelly tells it best on page 91: “I gather my materials: leaves, sticks and bark. Her home must be made entirely of brown. Then I make a small figure by squeezing mud in both fists, then joining them at the tip and there she is – brown girl. A creature made from two fistfuls of wet earth. I extend my finger through the wooden bars of brown girl’s house to check its depth, then I carefully place her within. I used to only have time to make five decent mud balls of ammunition, but this year my motor skills are doing me justice. I can make a pyramid of 12 well-rounded mud balls before the buzzer sounds within my ears. Then I am pelting Brown Girl with the ammo, until she is drowned by the very earth that has birthed her. House still intact. I am getting too good at this. The bell, the one out there, has not yet rung, and brown girl is completely immersed in a sea of brown. She is beyond recognition. I have won.”So, I suppose it’s about being born on an earth that doesn’t want you to exist, which is very much like being born a black slave all those years slavery was the done thing and the aftermath of that – having to convince the world to stop seeing black people through the imperial prism of the racial stereotypes that have been nurtured to justify the slave trade. By contrast, the cover is redemptive as it depicts, Haiti – the land of Shelly’s ancestors. Although the bowl she carries is grey and empty, lacking colour, she with her mother’s favourite flower emboldened on her cheek, walks barefooted on stones, moving forward comfortably on the earth that carved her, supported by the backdrop of greenish purple hills and blue sky which for me represents hope.

Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?

I can’t control when I get to write, being busy as a mom, wife and schoolteacher (on the rare occasion that I get desk space in natural light, I soak in gratitude and dive deep in my story-making). But I can control what I write. Ultimately, I keep things fresh by not cheating myself out of writing what I want to write. I take inspiration from what I truly see – observing nature, plants, animals and people. Remind myself that my thoughts matter because they are potentially spiritual beings. And by connecting with my characters – I once read and sort of ascribe to the idea that your characters are ghosts from the past using you to tell their story.

Q10. Are there any secrets from the book (that aren’t in the blurb), you can share with your readers?

Dolly is a plastic doll. Don’t tell Shelly!Thanks!

https://www.austinmacauley.com/book/brown-girl

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/68001101-brown-girl?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=4H84A5PW70&rank=1

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Brown-Girl-Leilani-Taneus-Miller/dp/139847391X/ref=sr_1_3?crid=2GTIIKSV6IHAI&keywords=taneus&qid=1673216488&sprefix=taneu%2Caps%2C200&sr=8-3

https://www.facebook.com/ltaneusmiller

Taming the Dragon

𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸: Taming the Dragon 📚
𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿: Gary Tubbs ✍️
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🚀 𝐑𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰:
I love reading memoirs. Recently I got my hands on Gary Tubbs’ memoir “Taming the Dragon”. It is a book about one man’s journey through life as he faces discrimination and his own demons. The story is about the author Gary. Growing up, he always craved for his father’s approval. No matter what Gary does, his father doesn’t appreciate him. Gary even thought that he wasn’t the son his dad had dreamed of.

During his school years, he spent time with his friends and had different experiences with boys or girls. He spent his school years in self-doubt. Read this story to know what happens to him as he goes through a heart-wrenching divorce. It was interesting to read about Gary’s self-awakening. Read the book yourself to know how he accepted himself as perfectly imperfect and good enough.

I enjoyed this book so much that I couldn’t put it down until I finished it. I appreciate the honesty of the author in this book. It is an insightful read. Gary’s journey is inspiring. Those who are having a difficult time accepting themselves should definitely get their hands on this book.

  • 𝗠𝘆 𝗥𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴: 5/5

★ Book Is Available On Amazon

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