The man in the alley and other stories of hope and the fallen

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: The man in the alley and other stories of hope and the fallen ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Branden B. Branden โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
“The man in the alley and other stories of hope and the fallen” by Branden B. Branden offers a compelling assortment of narratives.

In the story ‘Balance,’ a man is awakened by an eerie sound. He soon discovers the noise is emanating from his TV. Disbelieving his own senses, he suspects he is still dreaming. The TV persists in urging the man to turn it on and select a channel, but he remains unconvinced. Suddenly, he hears another voice, this time from a book. To find out which voice the man ultimately heeds or not, read the story.

‘The Evil Wife’ tells the tale of a woman exasperated with her spouse. She embarks on a road trip from Indiana to Florida and back. Upon reaching Florida and taking a break, she abandons her dim-witted husband there. With no money, he would soon be forced out of the hotel room. She believes she deserves a partner who meets her expectations. Read this story to find out how the woman’s trip would be. Will she meet a stranger?

This collection of stories is captivating, keeping me enthralled from start to finish. The prose is clear and accessible, making the narratives easy to follow. I relished each story and felt a deep sense of anticipation for more as I concluded the book. Branden’s skillful storytelling and intriguing plots make me eager to explore more of his work.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

With Wine Comes Wisdom

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: With Wine Comes Wisdom ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: J.E. Johnson โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
“With Wine Comes Wisdom” is an intriguing novel penned by the author J.E. Johnson. She is the first installment in the With Wine Series. The main characters of the story are Alex Kennedy and Roman King. Alex is an investment realtor working with an agency Johnson Realtors for almost five years now. Recently she closed on a 500-unit apartment complex and earned a seven figure commission.ย 

Roman King is a builder doing renovations on the apartment Alex sold to Stewart. Roman found Alex as the most beautiful woman and he was impressed that she wasn’t throwing herself on him like other women. Alex and Roman started seeing each other but are they destined to be together?

This is a gripping story that you would enjoy with a glass of wine. The author’s writing style is gripping and the language is easy to follow. The characters are well developed by the author and I loved Alex’s character the most. The story is unique. I strongly recommend it to my fellow readers.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author David Steinman

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

A1. Iโ€™m a citizen enforcer. As the chief officer of the Healthy Living Foundation (HLF), which has an extensive food and consumer product testing program, I take big corporations to court to make them comply with local, state, and federal laws and prevent them from hiding their chemical toxins from shoppers. The HLF has won important court cases against Herbal Essences, Pantene, Chicken of the Sea, Bumble Bee, Mrs. Meyers, and Walmart. We are taking on Justinโ€™s nut butters, Trader Joeโ€™s, Pepsico, California Olive Ranch, and several other corporations and brands in current legal proceedings. Our goal is to eliminate toxic chemicals from foods and consumer products and require labeling when they are present at levels that can cause cancer or reproductive harm.

I am also a journalist and author and have represented the public interest at the National Academy of Sciences.

As a parent, I myself have experienced the choices that every parent must makeโ€”the conflict between the chemically loaded stuff your kids want versus what is healthy for themโ€”or not knowing at all whatโ€™s in the products I bring into my home.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book Raising Healthy Kids?

A2. I wanted to share inspiring stories of parents and activists, despite all the headlines spewing doom and gloom, and make every reader a black belt in the chemical toxin jungle. I interweave my own toxic poisoning story with DDT, their stories, and 360 degree family protection plans in every chapter.

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

A3. Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring taught me how a single book can have an impact. I am humbly trying to follow in the footsteps of other writers who have made a difference telling inconvenient truths.

Q4. Whatโ€™s your favourite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

A4. In my book, I share the work that the HLF is doing in Cancer Alley in Louisiana, that 85 miles of the Mississippi River where there are some two hundred chemical plants packed in along its banks. The folks there have some of the highest cancer and disease rates in the nation. There are poisons in their air, water, and even the food they grow. Yet, the cultural richness of the Mississippi, this great mother river, always leaves me in awe and filled with hope and faith. Sharon C. Lavigne, who lives in St. James Parish and won the 2021 Goldman Environmental Prize for her work to stop the Formosa plastics plant from being built there, wrote the foreword for Raising Healthy Kids.

Q5. What inspired you to write your book?

A5. I could see with parents and my own kids that they truly needed (and craved) guidance on how to live their own healthy lives in a toxic world.

Iโ€™ve met the parents of so many kids who have told me they donโ€™t know what to do or how to do it. When adults decide to have kids, no one ever tells them how to protect the fetus from chemical toxins, although these exposure may well be far more limiting and defining their childโ€™s health than even parental smoking. I wanted to write a book that would share heart-warming stores with life-changing lessons to make peopleโ€™s lives simpler and healthier.

Q6. How long did it take you to write Raising Healthy Kids?

A6. The HLF conducts extensive laboratory testing and investigations in the course of its legal actions, which required time to gather together. These findings have never been revealed to the public before now. For this reason, the process took about eighteen months.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your book?

A7. Raising Healthy Kids is available from your local independent bookseller or Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Target, and Walmart.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Raising Healthy Kids’?

A8. So much fun! I went online and shared with friends and readers that I was trying to determine the best color for the hardcover editionโ€™s book jacket. Barbie, the movie, was the rage so I even offered an electric pink version together with orange, blue, yellow, and green. Green was the overwhelming favorite, though every color received support.

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

A9. I have a sense of urgency that parents cannot afford to wait. So the story moves rapidly and entertains. I know that parents are busy. I also know they must have the information I present. Just one tip I give, if you miss it (like testing your childโ€™s preschool tap water), could change your life or prevent a tragic poisoning, and itโ€™s happening everywhere, in our homes. This is such a necessary read, I wanted to make it for everyone. That gave me a sense of mission, faith, and hope.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice youโ€™ve been given about writing?

A10. I have always loved the work of John Steinbeck who is from Salinas, California, one of the places in California that I visited in order to share an extraordinary, perhaps even miraculous, story about how a group of teens is healing and transforming an entire town. โ€œI write because I like to write,โ€ he once said. โ€œI find joy in the texture and tone and rhythm of words. It is a satisfaction like that which follows good and shared love.โ€

Buy Raising Healthy Kids Protecting Children on Amazon

Scandalous Hoe Fiction

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: Scandalous Hoe Fiction ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Ashley M. Hardy โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
“Scandalous Hoe Fiction” penned by the author Ashley M. Hardy is a gripping read. The story features a few women and their lives filled with drugs, abuse, alcohol, relationships, jealousy, possessiveness, etc. Kendra has a boyfriend named Parks. She is having a party at short notice with her regulars. Juanita told her that her girlfriend has brought a gang of associates and they are looking for entertainment.ย 

When Kay received the message about a party at Kendra’s home, she reached there. Candace was waiting for Kay at her home. When Kay showed up, she raised her gun. Kay tried relaxing her but Candace knew that she might be with Kendra. When Kay told her that she was with Kendra, Candace’s pride was hurt. Read this story to meet other characters: Friday, Banks, Drea, Harriet, etc. 

Those who are party animals would definitely enjoy this story. The language used in the book is mature and therefore I recommend this book to adult readers only. Jealousy in relationships is very common and can turn you into a bad person. One could relate to a few moments. Go ahead with this book without any second thoughts.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 4/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

Sasquatch

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: Sasquatch ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Roxanne Seubert โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
Sasquatch penned by the author Roxanne Seubert is an interesting story for middle grade readers. The story features Connor and his sister Penny. He has a golden retriever puppy named Dax. Connor loves going on campouts with his dad. It has been at least eight years since he began coming to Money Creek campground.

When Connor, Penny and their dad went for the camping this time, Connor noticed that Dax was missing. They began searching for him but couldn’t find him anywhere. According to Penny, a giant bear-like creature was coming to her, when Dax chased the creature and they both went far away. Meanwhile their dad was warned by the Ranger about a wild animal disturbing many campsites.

Connor and Penny are finding excuses to stay at the campsite and to keep looking for Dax but the dangerous creature could be there and their dad wants them to go home with him. Read this story to find out more about this strange creature.

This is a great story for middle grade readers. The language used in the book is smooth and I enjoyed every bit of this story. The story is so gripping that I couldn’t put this book away without finishing it. Roxanne should write more middle grade stories.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

Cloud Warriors

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: Cloud Warriors ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Rob Jung โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
“Cloud Warriors” by Rob Jung is a gripping paranormal thriller centered around Professor Terry Castro. Castro, leading four students from Berrie University’s summer anthropology program, ventures into the Peruvian Amazon unaware of the local inhabitants’ hostility.

The narrative takes a dire turn when Castro is struck by a poisoned dart, leading to his urgent hospitalization in Peru and subsequent transfer to the United States. The medical team at UCSF struggles to identify the poison without a sample to analyze. Castro falls into a coma during surgery, leaving the team desperate for answers. Enter Carrie Watters, a psychic medium with the extraordinary ability to communicate with late-stage Alzheimer’s patients. Her unique skills become crucial in understanding Castro’s thoughts and potentially finding an antidote.

This novel is a standout, brimming with suspense and consistently maintaining a brisk pace. The story captivates from start to finish, with an impressive backdrop and a fitting title. The cover art is striking, perfectly complementing the narrative. “Cloud Warriors” is an enthralling read that will leave you eager for more of Jung’s works.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

Interview with author Lynn Slaughter

Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself?

I live with my husband in Kentucky and am the proud mom of two grown sons and grandmother to five amazing grandchildren. I spent most of my professional life as a dancer and dance educator, while also moonlighting as a freelancer, mainly writing for regional parenting magazines about the challenges of parenting adolescents.

I honestly never thought I possessed the fiction gene! However, when age and injury led to my retirement from dance, I got an idea for a young adult novel about an aspiring ballet dancer with major friend and family problems. That project became my first published novel, WHILE I DANCED. Working on the novel hooked me on writing fiction, and I returned to school to earn my MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Seton Hill University. Iโ€™ve just kept going ever since.

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book, โ€œMissed Cueโ€?

Iโ€™d never attempted to expand a short story into a novel, which is what I did with Missed Cue, so that was a bit of a challenge. I also needed to do quite a bit of research on criminal investigations, because Iโ€™d never written a police procedural before.

This was also my first novel for adults, and I needed to think through the developmental challenges experienced by adults, which are obviously different than the challenges the protagonists in my young adult novels contend with.

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

I owe my focus on developing my characters prior to plotting to Elizabeth Georgeโ€™s excellent craft books, WRITE AWAY and MASTERING THE PROCESS: FROM IDEA TO NOVEL. Young adult authors, such as Judy Blume, Chris Crutcher, Sarah Dessen, and Gayle Forman, have also greatly inspired me. Their characters are so memorable as they struggle with coming-of-age issues.

Q4. Whatโ€™s your favorite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

I love visiting New York City, as well as Denver, Colorado, because thatโ€™s where my grandchildren reside. Also, since I grew up in the Northeast near the ocean, anywhere near the ocean feels like home to me.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book โ€œMissed Cueโ€?

I call โ€œMissed Cueโ€ my โ€œaccidental novel.โ€ Since I had a background in the performing arts, a mystery writing friend challenged me to write a short story for Malice Domesticโ€™s anthology, Murder Most Theatrical. After the story appeared, I felt I was not really done with it. The confines of short fiction meant that I couldnโ€™t delve into character development as much as I wanted to, particularly with respect to the police detective, Caitlin Oโ€™Connor. So, I decided to expand the story into a novel. I ended up liking Caitlin so much that Iโ€™m currently working on a sequel in which she tackles a new case.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book โ€œMissed Cueโ€?

About a year.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

Amazon
Barnes & Noble
iBooks
Kobo
Smashwords

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title โ€œMissed Cueโ€?

The book cover was designed by Caroline Andrus, the principal designer for my publisher, Melange Books. I presented her with a few ideas, and she came up with something even better!

The title comes from the inciting incident. A revered ballerina misses her cue to awaken in Act Three of Romeo and Juliet. It turns out that she has died onstage and in fact has been murdered.

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

I have mostly written stand-alone books, so my characters and their issues are ever-changing. Recently, for the first time, I have been working on a sequel to one of my novels, MISSED CUE. In the sequel, Iโ€™ve been trying to keep things fresh by having my major characters continue to evolve and grow both personally and professionally. And of course, a case in an entirely different setting with a new cast of characters connected to the investigation helps keep things fresh.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice youโ€™ve been given about writing?

The only way to get better at writing is to write regularly and continuously work to improve and grow in your craft. Fundamentally, there are no shortcuts. I also love the oft-repeated advice that โ€œYou canโ€™t fix a blank page.โ€

Buy Missed Cue on Amazon

Interview will author Elliott B. Martin

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

A1. Hello. My name is Elliott. I am a physician, a psychiatrist, a child psychiatrist, an addictions psychiatrist. I am the Director of Medical Psychiatry at a smaller community general hospital affiliated with a much larger Boston academic center. I am board-certified in general psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, and addiction medicine. I am also an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine. I am also a forensics psychiatrist for the Boston Public Defenders’ Office, and I am the consulting psychiatrist for the Judge Rotenberg Center, a specialized educational center for kids and adults with severe developmental and/or intellectual disabilities. That said, a little less recently I have been a failed critical theorist โ€“ like some of you, I dropped out of graduate school, in my case, a doctoral program, and worse, immediately after passing my doctoral exams. (My graduate field was not in any science, by the way, nor was it psychology, but rather, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures.) I have also been a former high school teacher (I taught Latin and Greek) โ€“ I remember the awful conversation with my boss six months into my last teaching contract when I told him I was going to be quitting in order to attend medical school. He asked me where my sense of honor was. (I could only look at him and shrug. I console myself now in that at least I looked at him.) I have been an adjunct faculty college instructor. Enough said about that. Going way the fโ€”k back, I am a former housepainter, bouncer (or โ€˜door-manโ€™, depending on the cover charge), and ice cream slinger. I am a former security guard, a former secret shopper. I am a former line cook, airport courtesy van driver, and mover (not as in paired with โ€˜shakerโ€™, but literally, a house mover). I am a failed poet and questionable writer. Yet these former identities are often somehow more real to me than my current professional life. Perhaps because I have been down and out. Because I have struggled from the bus station to the bus station. Because I can honestly answer โ€˜yesโ€™ when my patients throw quasi-rhetorical questions at me, โ€œDo you have any idea what itโ€™s like, Doc?โ€

That said, despite multiple board certifications, and equivocal academic credentials, what I mostly do is specialize in crisis intervention. In sitting, or standing, face-to-face with those in the midst of struggle. โ€˜Hanging withโ€™ them, as we used to say. I do my best to staunch the mental bleeding, to suture the emotional wounds, to stop up the incontinence of anguish. There are no real protocols or algorithms for what I do. Much of it, if not all of it at times, is based on instinct, impression, and feel. I size up the exam room and go from there. I have an advantage, I must confess, in that I work from a general hospital setting. I have backup, security, and a ready array of drugs and restraints at my back. And perhaps most importantly, I have the hidden office space to which to escape, to allow me to sit back, to take a deep breath, and to reflect. To write..

Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age”?

A2. The biggest challenge was presenting evidence, in a convincing way, that runs contrary to the accepted narrative of the moment. So much of how we think of mental illness is dictated by outdated manuals, outdated research methodologies, outdated party lines. So much is now dictated and manipulated as well by Big Pharma, Big Insura, and Big Academia, obviously the major players with major financial stakes in the game. And increasingly, mental illness is dictated, and created and nurtured, by mass and social media. The challenges have been to find effective methods of classifying and describing these newer illnesses, all the while drawing appropriate critical attention to our crumbling foundations, all the while walking a political tightrope. For psychiatry, more than the rest of medicine, has become a victim of the neo-Holy War politics here in the post-pandemic spirit of regressive self-loathing. The newer generation of practitioners, in fact, is doing its best to make the field fit a predetermined agenda/dogma of what โ€˜theyโ€™ want โ€˜itโ€™ to be, i.e. life as it never was, or is, or should be. Unfortunately, as usually happens, reality keeps getting in the way. It is what it is, as the unassailable logic would have it, and perhaps the most challenging piece of all is that everybody knows a little bit about mental illness; rewriting these conceptions, demonstrating misconceptions, tearing down, at times, these deeply held edifices. though necessary, have been exceedingly difficult.

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

A3. This is an interesting question for a physician. Medical school was pure torture in that it did not allow much time for reading. I remember wanting nothing more than to read actual real books. Bound, paper books, with actual ideas and thoughts. With unapologetically critical philosophies. Literature, that is. So, what did I read? I read crazy stuff. I read Hamsun and Dostoyevsky. I read Laurence Durrell and John Fante. I read Bowles and Frisch. I read Anthony Burgess and Henry Miller. I read Nabokov and Katzantzakis. I read Yukio Mishima. I read Jean Genet and Jeanette Winterson. I read Kurt Vonnegut. (And shhhh, don’t tellโ€ฆbut I may be the only psychiatrist in history to have read all the novels and short stories of the Marquis de Sade.) I read chapters here and there of the Beat boys. I read Epicurus and Lucretius. Of philosophy, I read Spinoza and Bayle. I read William Godwin and Thomas Paine. I read Diderot, Helvetius, and dโ€™Holbach. I read Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. I read Marx and Gramschi. I actually read Freud, the philosopher and sociologist, and a chapter or two of Bergson and Heidegger. I read the novels of Sartre and Camus. When I went into medicine and psychiatry I devoured all of Adornoโ€™s and Horkheimerโ€™s, all of Foucaultโ€™s and the other anti-humanistsโ€™ near-pathologic hatred of the field. And now that I am a full-fledged doctor? Along with my germ-infested collection of white coats, I have tossed most of the medical โ€˜literatureโ€™ aside once again in favor of the real thing. I continue to read the post-structuralists, the post-dialectics, the postmodernistas. Indeed, Iโ€™ve always been at least a generation, or more, behind, and so my bizarre doctor-training went on, and goes on. Textbook in one hand, โ€˜the Otherโ€™ in the other.

Q4. Whatโ€™s your favorite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?

A4. I live in America. In Massachusetts. (The first state to legalize slavery, in 1641, and the last state to adopt universal male suffrage, in 1856.) My favorite spot to visit, however, is a place called Palace Playland in a town called Old Orchard Beach on the southern coast of Maine. Palace Playland is an old-fashioned, honkytonk amusement park right on the beach, complete with boardwalk and arcades, that reminds me, with nearly overwhelming nostalgia at times, of the New Jersey shore of my youth. My daughter loves it, too. There’s a Dairy Queen right across the street.

Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age’?

A5. The inspiration for the book was my own frustration, at times despair, as a doctor, as a psychiatrist, as I navigated my way through these major systems, Big Pharma, Big Insura, Big Academia, and saw with increasing clarity just how naked these Emperors are, just how inadequate the current standards and dogma are in our new digital era, yet how rigid and inflexible these have all become. We are in an age less of true psychopathologies and more of techno-psychopathologies that mutate so quickly, that are unlike anything else that has come before. Something had to be written.

Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age’?

A6. Overall, probably two years or so. It was actually ready for publication in March of 2020. But then the pandemic hit, and illustrative of the points I make in the book, things changed so much and so fast, that I had to substantially revise the work, including the lengthy appendix describing the pandemic experience from a mental health perspective.

Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?

A7. It’s available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other major book retailers. It’s also available directly through the publisher, Cambridge Scholars Press.

Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age’?

A8. The book cover design was meant to create an image that combined the connotations of the title and the subtitle. The title is ‘Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age’. The subtitle is ‘Ghosts in the Machine’, meant to reflect both the virtual milieu in which most of us now live and the mental consequences of such. I wasn’t sure, in fact, which should be the title and which should be the subtitle. I had a great book designer, Kerry Cronin, who created a wonderful design that leaves it ambiguous while also capturing the tension of negotiating our digital times.

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

A9. I like to write in spurts. I grow stale quickly if I sit for more than an hour or two. By writing in shorter bursts I can quickly review the previous day’s work, fix it, and move on. For readers, I like to mix up topics, I keep the chapters broken into manageable sections, I try to use humor as best I can (for better or for worse), and I try to be as straightforward and honest as I can with my writing. I refer to outside sources frequently, ranging from Ancient Near Eastern texts to the latest Taylor Swift lyrics. I cite movies and television, as well as books and other media.

Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice youโ€™ve been given about writing?

A10. Rewrite. Writing is rewriting. Over and over till it’s right. The first draft is a great template, but the real writing occurs with the revisions. The next great bit of advice I have been given is to read your work out loud to yourself. This really helps you hear if you are making sense, if you are logical, if the words flow.

Buy Elliott Martin’s book on Amazon

Missed Cue

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: Missed Cue ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Lynn Slaughter โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
Missed Cue penned by the author Lynn Slaughter is a murder mystery. The main character of the story is Lieutenant Caitlin Oโ€™Connor. She is a homicide detective and is working on the case of a deceased woman named Lydia along with her partner Sergeant Stan Bisso.

Lydia Miseau was in perfect health but she died onstage and everyone was shocked by her sudden demise. People who knew Lydia appreciated her for her dancing skills, kindness and mentorship. Lydia had no enemies. In the initial investigation, the detectives didn’t find anything that would have caused her death. Lydia was six weeks pregnant when she died. Lydia as a principal dancer was insured by the company and she was insured for ten million.

Cait is having troubles in her personal life too. She falls for the wrong guys and therefore she has started seeing a therapist. Read this story to find out where the investigation would lead Cait.

Cait is an inspiring character. I love reading stories with female protagonists. The plot is gripping and it keeps me on the edge of my seat. Lynn has done impressive work in this book. I am definitely interested in reviewing more books by her in the near future.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

Keys to Healthy Communication

๐—•๐—ผ๐—ผ๐—ธ: Keys to Healthy Communication ๐Ÿ“š
๐—”๐˜‚๐˜๐—ต๐—ผ๐—ฟ: Bobby Patton โœ๏ธ
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๐Ÿš€ ๐‘๐ž๐ฏ๐ข๐ž๐ฐ:
“Keys to Healthy Communication: Authenticity, Empathy, and Empowerment,” authored by Bobby Patton, Rusalyn Andrews, and Jennifer Daily, offers valuable insights into enhancing health and well-being through effective communication.

The authors highlight the significant impact of different communication styles on our lives, emphasizing that while some interactions can be uplifting, others can be detrimental. They align with the World Health Organization’s definition of health, which encompasses complete physical, mental, and social well-being, not merely the absence of disease.

Readers will gain a deeper understanding of authenticity, empathy, and empowerment through this book. The authors stress the importance of being mindful of our words and ensuring our responses are constructive, as once spoken, words cannot be retracted.

This book is a compelling and thought-provoking read. The “Just Between Us” section, in particular, enhances self-awareness. Highly recommended for leaders, this book provides crucial lessons for effective leadership. I wish I had discovered it earlier in my leadership journey, as it would have helped me manage my emotions and words better. Nonetheless, I have learned immensely and feel more prepared to lead again. I am deeply grateful to the authors for this enlightening work.

  • ๐— ๐˜† ๐—ฅ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ป๐—ด: 5/5

โ˜… Book Is Available On Amazon

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