Title: Café Tempest: Adventures on a Small Greek Island
Author: Barbara Bonfigli
Author's Website: www.cafetempest.com
Genre: Fictional Memoir
ISBN: 978-0981645315
Publisher: Tell Me Press
Available From Amazon.com:
Reviewed by Michael Gelb, author of How to Think lIke Leonardo Da Vinci(excerpt from his review 4/30/2009 at www.michaelgelb.com
"...In CaféTempest, Barbara Bonfigli's fabulous first novel, we are invited to share a concentrated experience of food, spirit and love on an intimate Greek island.
"Your heart will race with the tempestuousness of love, your mouth will water from her savory descriptions of zucchini fritters and baklava (recipes included), and you'll discover a remarkable depth of spiritual wisdom, and humor! that shines through every page.
"Bonfigli plays with the best elements of Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat, Pray, Love) and Peter Mayle (A Year in Provence) and combines them with ingredients from Nikos Kazantzakis (Zorba the Greek) and Shakespeare (The Tempest) to bring us a uniquely sumptuous literary feast. Opa! --
To learn about Barbara Bonfigli and Café Tempest, feel free to visit any of these sites.
Barbara Bonfigli’s website – www.cafetempest.com
Order Café Tempest directly from the publisher - http://www.tellmepress.com/pub_ct.php
or from Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Café-Tempest-Adventures-Small-Island/dp/0981645313
To see the complete tour schedule visit http://virtualblogtour.blogspot.com/2009/05/cafe-tempest-by-barbara-bonfigli-summer.html
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Thursday, 9 July 2009
Tuesday, 7 July 2009
Audio Book Offers Riehl's Poetry from Former Book
Unknown
15:33
audio book, Edit O'Nuallain (reviewer), poetry, StoryCircleBookReviews (review site)
0
Title: Sightlines: A Family Love Story in Poetry and Music
Author: Janet Grace Riehl
Genre: poetry; audio book
ISBN: B0020SQFRC.
Originally published: Story Circle Book Reviews: Reviewing Books for, by, and about Women
Reviewed by Edith O'Nuallain
Sightlines: A Family Love Story in Poetry and Music by Janet Grace Riehl consists of 4 audio CDs, which combine the poems previously published in Riehl's book Sightlines: A Poet's Diary. This recorded version of Sightlines: A Poet's Diary (2006) expands on the original 90 poems by including brief clips of 40 songs played by her 93-year-old father and his Sunday Afternoon music group. The poems are further set in a wider context with her father's stories, and he reads the poems he wrote that open Sightlines, along with the lines of dialogue that appear in poems sprinkled throughout. In this unique offering, we glimpse the lives, past and present, of the poet and her family.
Together words and songs weave a magical tapestry of myriad threads, recounting family folklore in the warm timbres of Riehl's quiet-spoken voice, each story-poem set in the lively rhythms of fiddles, guitars and mandolins, music reminiscent of a bygone era. The sometimes slightly discordant notes of the violin merely add to the beauty of the tales told.
This series of poems and songs is a memoir. It is also a series of love poems, composed in memory and celebration of three people and two places Riehl loves. She traces the treasured reminiscences of a childhood shared with her two older siblings—her sister, Julia Ann, and her brother, Gary, tenderly watched over by loving parents. Her attentiveness to detail is evident in the images and words which reflect her considered awareness of who she is and where she comes from. Here is where Riehl composes the haunting and lyrical songs to her sister, tragically killed in an automobile accident, an experience so devastating that almost every succeeding poem is written in reference, either directly or obliquely, to it. The mother and father captured on her pages are our mothers and fathers, the love she expresses for them is the love we feel for our own.
One striking feature of Riehl's poetry is the unmistakable sense of presence that the author brings to her subject matter. Pick any poem from the book, and almost immediately the reader comes face to face, as it were, with the poet. She recounts, sometimes in devastating and searingly honest detail, her mother's progressive dance towards death. She is not afraid to open herself to the suffering of returning and re-living the death of her sister, a tragedy that changed everything. Riehl is a woman who has seen a lot, more in fact than many of us would wish to encounter. Yet her presence assures us that we too can survive the unthinkable; that we can live to tell the tale. And what is more, that in telling our stories we become more of who we are destined to be.
If we can locate the bravery within ourselves that Riehl points us towards, then we too may become in time as compassionate, caring, understanding and yes, even forgiving, as she. For indeed is this not what the best memoirs do? They do not point the finger of blame, but rather paint a picture of a wholly believable individual, someone who might have been our sister or brother or mother or father.
In the end it is the universality of her subject matter that renders her poetry so accessible. We read her poems not just to peep through a window into her life, but to lift the veil a little on our own, so that we may perhaps learn something about ourselves and our loved ones, even while we swim in the subterranean waters of her words.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: Janet Grace Riehl
Genre: poetry; audio book
ISBN: B0020SQFRC.
Originally published: Story Circle Book Reviews: Reviewing Books for, by, and about Women
Reviewed by Edith O'Nuallain
Sightlines: A Family Love Story in Poetry and Music by Janet Grace Riehl consists of 4 audio CDs, which combine the poems previously published in Riehl's book Sightlines: A Poet's Diary. This recorded version of Sightlines: A Poet's Diary (2006) expands on the original 90 poems by including brief clips of 40 songs played by her 93-year-old father and his Sunday Afternoon music group. The poems are further set in a wider context with her father's stories, and he reads the poems he wrote that open Sightlines, along with the lines of dialogue that appear in poems sprinkled throughout. In this unique offering, we glimpse the lives, past and present, of the poet and her family.
Together words and songs weave a magical tapestry of myriad threads, recounting family folklore in the warm timbres of Riehl's quiet-spoken voice, each story-poem set in the lively rhythms of fiddles, guitars and mandolins, music reminiscent of a bygone era. The sometimes slightly discordant notes of the violin merely add to the beauty of the tales told.
This series of poems and songs is a memoir. It is also a series of love poems, composed in memory and celebration of three people and two places Riehl loves. She traces the treasured reminiscences of a childhood shared with her two older siblings—her sister, Julia Ann, and her brother, Gary, tenderly watched over by loving parents. Her attentiveness to detail is evident in the images and words which reflect her considered awareness of who she is and where she comes from. Here is where Riehl composes the haunting and lyrical songs to her sister, tragically killed in an automobile accident, an experience so devastating that almost every succeeding poem is written in reference, either directly or obliquely, to it. The mother and father captured on her pages are our mothers and fathers, the love she expresses for them is the love we feel for our own.
One striking feature of Riehl's poetry is the unmistakable sense of presence that the author brings to her subject matter. Pick any poem from the book, and almost immediately the reader comes face to face, as it were, with the poet. She recounts, sometimes in devastating and searingly honest detail, her mother's progressive dance towards death. She is not afraid to open herself to the suffering of returning and re-living the death of her sister, a tragedy that changed everything. Riehl is a woman who has seen a lot, more in fact than many of us would wish to encounter. Yet her presence assures us that we too can survive the unthinkable; that we can live to tell the tale. And what is more, that in telling our stories we become more of who we are destined to be.
If we can locate the bravery within ourselves that Riehl points us towards, then we too may become in time as compassionate, caring, understanding and yes, even forgiving, as she. For indeed is this not what the best memoirs do? They do not point the finger of blame, but rather paint a picture of a wholly believable individual, someone who might have been our sister or brother or mother or father.
In the end it is the universality of her subject matter that renders her poetry so accessible. We read her poems not just to peep through a window into her life, but to lift the veil a little on our own, so that we may perhaps learn something about ourselves and our loved ones, even while we swim in the subterranean waters of her words.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Sunday, 5 July 2009
Tim Ferriss Offers How-To for Organizing Your Life
Title: 4-Hour Work Week
Author: Tim Ferriss
Author Site: www.fourhourworkweek.com
Reviewer Name: Matt Lehr
Reviewer Link to Review
Reviewed by Matt Lehr
In the past 4 months I have read nearly 2 books per week – each pertaining to Marketing, Goals, Motivation, Entrepreneurship, and Making Money. I recommend this strategy to any motivated individual and suggest that there is no better way to truly understand yourself and develop your own ideas than starting by reading and then transitioning to writing as well.
A great place to start for any entrepreneur: “The 4-Hour Work Week” – By Timothy Ferriss
The first time read though this book I must admit that I felt Tim was rough around the edges and subscribed to some philosophies I never could take on as my own. But after reading it twice through and a third go around on CD, I have changed my stance and believe that nearly every idea and concept he presents is doable and beneficial.
Here are the main points of my interpretation of Tim Ferriss’ work:
1) The Rat Race
Is this really your life? Working hard everyday and planning for a retirement 40 years down the road. Tim offers suggestions to shake it up do some unordinary things that will make all the difference in the world. Understanding that you have the freedom to do what you want to do and go where you want to go is the hardest step for most people. Determine why it is you want something and then start to figure out how you can make it happen. Do not be afraid to reject the norm and live life differently than the rest.
2) Understand your Time
Tim explains that the goal of the “New Rich” is not just to attain more money, but the most important treasure is time. After all, how can any of us fully enjoy the money you make if we don’t have time to enjoy it or people to experience it with. Find ways to work and make money but do not sacrifice the most important opportunity which is the time to do what you want in life. Strategy’s from the book include checking email very rarely and training clients, employees, and even your boss to not rely on you as a bottleneck
3) Automate Everything
Why do something yourself when you can pay someone else to do it for you? Find a way to make money that doesn’t need your constant maintenance. My understanding of this concept is the “business owner vs. the self employed.” Business owners sit back and let others run their company while they collect the pay check, meanwhile the self-employed put in their sweat equity on an hourly basis to earn the money. Both are considered entrepreneurs, but the self employed have only eliminated their boss, but still do all the work.
Tim explains that the goal is to move towards automation – Meaning whether or not someone is sitting on a beach or sleeping, money is being made either way. He explains to take “you” out of the equation and benefit from the goal which is not only more money but more time.
4) Outsource Everything
Having someone in India do your work for you is not something left to major Nike and Coca Cola type companies of the world. Using the internet, outsourcing is available at the click of a button and can be set up by using one email.
I took this one to heart and have not looked back. Mr. Ferriss was right on and once you learn to outsource effectively it changes everything. From paying per project or low hourly wages, having someone work while you sleep is priceless. I found the best site to use (that is not mentioned in the book) is www.odesk.com. This website makes it easier than finding new friends on Facebook – the difference being for 20 bucks this friend will do your research project – and do it well.
5) Get Away
The “4-Hour Work Week” subscribes to lifestyle design and world travel. Tim teaches you how to live abroad and do it both on a budget and while you manage your business. He includes success stories of others and offers up ways to cut loose and experience it all.
You have to actually read or listen to the book to truly understand Tim’s off the wall approach and view of life. As I stated his methods are not for all. Yet I have accepted that following them in principle can work out great. Putting your own spin on his thoughts and ideas and applying it to your situation can be very beneficial. His book has been one of many that has empowered my journey. I recommend it as great pushing off point for the budding entrepreneur.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: Tim Ferriss
Author Site: www.fourhourworkweek.com
Reviewer Name: Matt Lehr
Reviewer Link to Review
Reviewed by Matt Lehr
In the past 4 months I have read nearly 2 books per week – each pertaining to Marketing, Goals, Motivation, Entrepreneurship, and Making Money. I recommend this strategy to any motivated individual and suggest that there is no better way to truly understand yourself and develop your own ideas than starting by reading and then transitioning to writing as well.
A great place to start for any entrepreneur: “The 4-Hour Work Week” – By Timothy Ferriss
The first time read though this book I must admit that I felt Tim was rough around the edges and subscribed to some philosophies I never could take on as my own. But after reading it twice through and a third go around on CD, I have changed my stance and believe that nearly every idea and concept he presents is doable and beneficial.
Here are the main points of my interpretation of Tim Ferriss’ work:
1) The Rat Race
Is this really your life? Working hard everyday and planning for a retirement 40 years down the road. Tim offers suggestions to shake it up do some unordinary things that will make all the difference in the world. Understanding that you have the freedom to do what you want to do and go where you want to go is the hardest step for most people. Determine why it is you want something and then start to figure out how you can make it happen. Do not be afraid to reject the norm and live life differently than the rest.
2) Understand your Time
Tim explains that the goal of the “New Rich” is not just to attain more money, but the most important treasure is time. After all, how can any of us fully enjoy the money you make if we don’t have time to enjoy it or people to experience it with. Find ways to work and make money but do not sacrifice the most important opportunity which is the time to do what you want in life. Strategy’s from the book include checking email very rarely and training clients, employees, and even your boss to not rely on you as a bottleneck
3) Automate Everything
Why do something yourself when you can pay someone else to do it for you? Find a way to make money that doesn’t need your constant maintenance. My understanding of this concept is the “business owner vs. the self employed.” Business owners sit back and let others run their company while they collect the pay check, meanwhile the self-employed put in their sweat equity on an hourly basis to earn the money. Both are considered entrepreneurs, but the self employed have only eliminated their boss, but still do all the work.
Tim explains that the goal is to move towards automation – Meaning whether or not someone is sitting on a beach or sleeping, money is being made either way. He explains to take “you” out of the equation and benefit from the goal which is not only more money but more time.
4) Outsource Everything
Having someone in India do your work for you is not something left to major Nike and Coca Cola type companies of the world. Using the internet, outsourcing is available at the click of a button and can be set up by using one email.
I took this one to heart and have not looked back. Mr. Ferriss was right on and once you learn to outsource effectively it changes everything. From paying per project or low hourly wages, having someone work while you sleep is priceless. I found the best site to use (that is not mentioned in the book) is www.odesk.com. This website makes it easier than finding new friends on Facebook – the difference being for 20 bucks this friend will do your research project – and do it well.
5) Get Away
The “4-Hour Work Week” subscribes to lifestyle design and world travel. Tim teaches you how to live abroad and do it both on a budget and while you manage your business. He includes success stories of others and offers up ways to cut loose and experience it all.
You have to actually read or listen to the book to truly understand Tim’s off the wall approach and view of life. As I stated his methods are not for all. Yet I have accepted that following them in principle can work out great. Putting your own spin on his thoughts and ideas and applying it to your situation can be very beneficial. His book has been one of many that has empowered my journey. I recommend it as great pushing off point for the budding entrepreneur.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Saturday, 4 July 2009
Stewart L. Utdall Pens Book on Environment
Unknown
01:16
Nonfiction: Environment, Nonfiction: Politics, Taylor Smith (reviewer), Taylors Book Thoughts (review site)
0
Title: The Quiet Crisis
Author: Stewart L. Udall
Categories: Environmentalism, Nonfiction
ISBN:B0011UH0S8
Reviewed by Taylor Smith
To my way of thinking one of the greatest tragedies of modern American politics has been the increasing polarization on a wide range of issues which focuses more on who is right rather than what is right and in the public interest. Nowhere is this truer than in the realm of environmental policies. We endlessly debate issues which have grave importance for the future only paying heed to the demagogy of the left or right and ignore the true moral, historical and scientific issues at hand.
The author of this book is Stewart L. Udall, a distant cousin a couple times removed from me on my father’s side. He was a Democrat (I know! I have relatives who are donkeys!), and JFK’s Secretary of the Interior. This book has had a profound impact on the way that many Americans think and feel about the environment. For this reason I am writing a review of it by itself rather than with a companion book like usual for my blog. I think it is important enough that it needs to be considered on its own.
The book chronicles the history of the United States from the perspective of the land. The first period is the era of contact between Native Americans and the European settlers and the contrast between their respective views of the land. To the Natives the land was something owned by everybody in the same way as the ocean, air, sky and stars were the property of no single individual. To the Europeans, however, land ownership was the entire basis of their society and, for the English especially, the entire reason for their being in America.
This land ownership, however, was fundamentally at odds with the Native concept (and indeed the older medieval concept of land ownership in Europe) which stressed the claim of future generations on the land and allowed for the use, but not abuse, of the resources available from the land. I could elaborate on the late medieval/early modern shift in concepts about ownership, but I will spare all of you this lesson for now!
This new concept of land ownership was coupled with a new idea arising from the sheer size and overwhelming wildness of the American continent which Udall calls the “myth of superabundance.” In short the idea is that there are so many buffalo, beaver and deer, so much fertile soil and forests and so many mineral deposits that conserving them was counterproductive and uncompetitive. The final critical element added to this mix was the rugged individualism which helped to create the essential elements of American democracy but also contributed to a lack of civic mindedness among some classes. Thus the few who made massive fortunes at the public expense were often seen as good examples rather than the pillagers of the future that they were.
Gradually some people began to see that this system was unsustainable and ethically lacking. Diverse characters like Davie Crockett, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Daniel Boone, and other began to see the effect on the land that our unthinking policies were having. Eventually as we began to have massive extinctions on our own soil (there were more than five billion passenger pigeons in the United States at the beginning of the nineteenth century, but shortly before the start of the twentieth century the last surviving member of the species died in a zoo in Ohio), and people like Audubon and other conservationists and scientists began to take action. Eventually people like Teddy Roosevelt were able to make political gains in breaking up the Iron Triangles (a political science term for the relationship between business, regulation agencies and congressional committees which all deal with a particular subject and often scratch each others backs) which had allowed so much of this legal pillaging to happen.
Now as a country we have made a good start, but there is still a lot to do. The balance between using resources and preserving land is a delicate one (one person quoted in the book says that the boundaries between the workshop and the temple of nature is inevitably going to be a contentious issue) and has not been fully resolved. However the scientists, politicians, farmers, hunters, activist, philanthropists, and voters of the last century have done some wonderful things to try and help preserve for us large areas of wilderness.
Now we have challenges involving overcrowding, littering, pollution, and a lack of planning- all brought on because we still lack a sense of reverence for nature and our environment. As the author put it:
"The quiet crisis demands a rethinking of land attitudes, deeper involvement by leaders of business and government, and methods of making conservation decisions which put a premium on foresight. With the acumen of our scientists we can achieve optimum development of resources that will let us pluck the fruits of science without harming the tree of life. Once we decide that our surroundings need not always be subordinated to payrolls and profits based on short-term considerations, there is hope that we can both reap the bounty of the land and preserve an inspiriting environment."
I wish that we would all take a step back and reevaluate our opinions and activities in light of an increased respect for the earth and for the future generations that are going to inherit it. Maybe this is all a little too utopian and impractical, but if we are only thinking about here and now how can we claim to be any better than the people who came before us? It is easy to be critical of the slaughter of the buffalo as a short-sighted policy, but are we any better? I’ll let you decide that for yourself.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: Stewart L. Udall
Categories: Environmentalism, Nonfiction
ISBN:B0011UH0S8
Reviewed by Taylor Smith
To my way of thinking one of the greatest tragedies of modern American politics has been the increasing polarization on a wide range of issues which focuses more on who is right rather than what is right and in the public interest. Nowhere is this truer than in the realm of environmental policies. We endlessly debate issues which have grave importance for the future only paying heed to the demagogy of the left or right and ignore the true moral, historical and scientific issues at hand.
The author of this book is Stewart L. Udall, a distant cousin a couple times removed from me on my father’s side. He was a Democrat (I know! I have relatives who are donkeys!), and JFK’s Secretary of the Interior. This book has had a profound impact on the way that many Americans think and feel about the environment. For this reason I am writing a review of it by itself rather than with a companion book like usual for my blog. I think it is important enough that it needs to be considered on its own.
The book chronicles the history of the United States from the perspective of the land. The first period is the era of contact between Native Americans and the European settlers and the contrast between their respective views of the land. To the Natives the land was something owned by everybody in the same way as the ocean, air, sky and stars were the property of no single individual. To the Europeans, however, land ownership was the entire basis of their society and, for the English especially, the entire reason for their being in America.
This land ownership, however, was fundamentally at odds with the Native concept (and indeed the older medieval concept of land ownership in Europe) which stressed the claim of future generations on the land and allowed for the use, but not abuse, of the resources available from the land. I could elaborate on the late medieval/early modern shift in concepts about ownership, but I will spare all of you this lesson for now!
This new concept of land ownership was coupled with a new idea arising from the sheer size and overwhelming wildness of the American continent which Udall calls the “myth of superabundance.” In short the idea is that there are so many buffalo, beaver and deer, so much fertile soil and forests and so many mineral deposits that conserving them was counterproductive and uncompetitive. The final critical element added to this mix was the rugged individualism which helped to create the essential elements of American democracy but also contributed to a lack of civic mindedness among some classes. Thus the few who made massive fortunes at the public expense were often seen as good examples rather than the pillagers of the future that they were.
Gradually some people began to see that this system was unsustainable and ethically lacking. Diverse characters like Davie Crockett, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Daniel Boone, and other began to see the effect on the land that our unthinking policies were having. Eventually as we began to have massive extinctions on our own soil (there were more than five billion passenger pigeons in the United States at the beginning of the nineteenth century, but shortly before the start of the twentieth century the last surviving member of the species died in a zoo in Ohio), and people like Audubon and other conservationists and scientists began to take action. Eventually people like Teddy Roosevelt were able to make political gains in breaking up the Iron Triangles (a political science term for the relationship between business, regulation agencies and congressional committees which all deal with a particular subject and often scratch each others backs) which had allowed so much of this legal pillaging to happen.
Now as a country we have made a good start, but there is still a lot to do. The balance between using resources and preserving land is a delicate one (one person quoted in the book says that the boundaries between the workshop and the temple of nature is inevitably going to be a contentious issue) and has not been fully resolved. However the scientists, politicians, farmers, hunters, activist, philanthropists, and voters of the last century have done some wonderful things to try and help preserve for us large areas of wilderness.
Now we have challenges involving overcrowding, littering, pollution, and a lack of planning- all brought on because we still lack a sense of reverence for nature and our environment. As the author put it:
"The quiet crisis demands a rethinking of land attitudes, deeper involvement by leaders of business and government, and methods of making conservation decisions which put a premium on foresight. With the acumen of our scientists we can achieve optimum development of resources that will let us pluck the fruits of science without harming the tree of life. Once we decide that our surroundings need not always be subordinated to payrolls and profits based on short-term considerations, there is hope that we can both reap the bounty of the land and preserve an inspiriting environment."
I wish that we would all take a step back and reevaluate our opinions and activities in light of an increased respect for the earth and for the future generations that are going to inherit it. Maybe this is all a little too utopian and impractical, but if we are only thinking about here and now how can we claim to be any better than the people who came before us? It is easy to be critical of the slaughter of the buffalo as a short-sighted policy, but are we any better? I’ll let you decide that for yourself.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Dave and Lillian Brummet Give Marketing Tips to Authors
Title: Purple Snowflake Marketing - How to Make Your Book Stand Out in a Crowd
Edition: Two
Authors: Dave & Lillian Brummet
Available: www.booklocker.com
Authors' Web site: www.brummet.ca
Purple Snowflake Marketing - How to Make Your Book Stand Out in a Crowd is a reference guide for self-marketing authors who want to be noticed in a snowstorm of writers. With nineteen chapters and twenty-five appendices, this e-book is a means for authors to design an effective marketing plan and utilize frugal promotional tools with the click of their mouse. The e-book also offers over 900 resources that will accelerate your marketing efforts far beyond your peers. As a reassuring marketing plan guide, it contains ample advice for avoiding pit-falls and setting a pace for marketing endeavors.
This e-book was originally released in June 2007 and since then has made the recommended reading lists of more than a dozen writing courses. Authors of most genres will find this inspiring book an essential component for marketing their book.
Announcements and details will soon be available later today at: www.brummet.ca/purple.html
The authors donate 30% of the royalties they receive from book sale to SPCA, the Canadian Wildlife Federation and the Seeds of Diversity Organization. Purchase it for only $10 at http://www.booklocker.com/books/4120.html
Book Review By Donna Sundblad
Dave and Lillian Brummet's Purple Snowflake Marketing gets an A+ as a guide to help new authors get their books into the hands of reviewers, booksellers and ultimately readers. This how-to book doesn't just pump you up with a lot of motivational rhetoric, but supplies authors and small presses with practical, low-budget marketing tools including hundreds of promotional links. Their advice doesn't just expose authors to opportunities; it also helps steer them away from pit-falls in the publishing industry.
This book is filled advice on marketing your book, beginning with the day you sign the contract, paints a realistic outlook on what a new or relatively unknown author can expect and how to employ research and preparation to make a memorable first impression. Written in an easy-to-read electronic format, the text is broken into useful categories punctuated with headings that aid readers when in-finding specific topics. Purple Snowflake Marketing fills a vacuum in the area of marketing planning for new authors with proven and practical information developed as Dave and Lillian Brummet promoted their other books. The information provided helps authors see beyond book signings and getting their books stocked on bookstore shelves.
Specifics include how to get book reviews, disciplines like follow-up, and tips for internet marketing. Learn how to target your audience with "Purple Snowflake" techniques which require thinking outside the box. These techniques provide insight into direct marketing, underground marketing, backdoor marketing and online marketing along with frugal advertising tips that fit any budget.
I was also pleasantly surprised to see tips for how to avoid feeling frustrated and overwhelmed. Answers to questions common to new authors provide guidance regarding copyright information for North America and definitions of commonly used but often confused terms used within the industry.
When it come to getting your book into bookstores, Purple Snowflake Marketing offers fresh ideas and a realistic view with statistics to assist in making informed decisions as you put together a marketing plan. If you're ready to market you book, advice about how to get beyond feeling shy when talking about and promoting your book will get you started as you learn how to get beyond bookstore managers who say "no" to see your book on a variety of bookstore shelves. This book is a must-have for every new author's bookshelf.
~ Reviewed by author Donna Sundblad, senior editor of E-Press Publishing Company
~ Dave & Lillian Brummet are also uthors of: Trash Talk - Learn how you can impact the planet -Towards Understanding - a collection of 120 poems on society, the environment & overcoming trauma.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Edition: Two
Authors: Dave & Lillian Brummet
Available: www.booklocker.com
Authors' Web site: www.brummet.ca
Purple Snowflake Marketing - How to Make Your Book Stand Out in a Crowd is a reference guide for self-marketing authors who want to be noticed in a snowstorm of writers. With nineteen chapters and twenty-five appendices, this e-book is a means for authors to design an effective marketing plan and utilize frugal promotional tools with the click of their mouse. The e-book also offers over 900 resources that will accelerate your marketing efforts far beyond your peers. As a reassuring marketing plan guide, it contains ample advice for avoiding pit-falls and setting a pace for marketing endeavors.
This e-book was originally released in June 2007 and since then has made the recommended reading lists of more than a dozen writing courses. Authors of most genres will find this inspiring book an essential component for marketing their book.
Announcements and details will soon be available later today at: www.brummet.ca/purple.html
The authors donate 30% of the royalties they receive from book sale to SPCA, the Canadian Wildlife Federation and the Seeds of Diversity Organization. Purchase it for only $10 at http://www.booklocker.com/books/4120.html
Book Review By Donna Sundblad
Dave and Lillian Brummet's Purple Snowflake Marketing gets an A+ as a guide to help new authors get their books into the hands of reviewers, booksellers and ultimately readers. This how-to book doesn't just pump you up with a lot of motivational rhetoric, but supplies authors and small presses with practical, low-budget marketing tools including hundreds of promotional links. Their advice doesn't just expose authors to opportunities; it also helps steer them away from pit-falls in the publishing industry.
This book is filled advice on marketing your book, beginning with the day you sign the contract, paints a realistic outlook on what a new or relatively unknown author can expect and how to employ research and preparation to make a memorable first impression. Written in an easy-to-read electronic format, the text is broken into useful categories punctuated with headings that aid readers when in-finding specific topics. Purple Snowflake Marketing fills a vacuum in the area of marketing planning for new authors with proven and practical information developed as Dave and Lillian Brummet promoted their other books. The information provided helps authors see beyond book signings and getting their books stocked on bookstore shelves.
Specifics include how to get book reviews, disciplines like follow-up, and tips for internet marketing. Learn how to target your audience with "Purple Snowflake" techniques which require thinking outside the box. These techniques provide insight into direct marketing, underground marketing, backdoor marketing and online marketing along with frugal advertising tips that fit any budget.
I was also pleasantly surprised to see tips for how to avoid feeling frustrated and overwhelmed. Answers to questions common to new authors provide guidance regarding copyright information for North America and definitions of commonly used but often confused terms used within the industry.
When it come to getting your book into bookstores, Purple Snowflake Marketing offers fresh ideas and a realistic view with statistics to assist in making informed decisions as you put together a marketing plan. If you're ready to market you book, advice about how to get beyond feeling shy when talking about and promoting your book will get you started as you learn how to get beyond bookstore managers who say "no" to see your book on a variety of bookstore shelves. This book is a must-have for every new author's bookshelf.
~ Reviewed by author Donna Sundblad, senior editor of E-Press Publishing Company
~ Dave & Lillian Brummet are also uthors of: Trash Talk - Learn how you can impact the planet -Towards Understanding - a collection of 120 poems on society, the environment & overcoming trauma.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Saturday, 27 June 2009
A Well-Researched Book for Those Interested in India and Education
Common School System: Examining the First Initiative in IndiaKhagendra Kumar
ISBN: 81-7714-327-1
By Dr K. Kiran, lecturer, Dept. of Political Science, M.A.M. College, Naugachia, T.M.Bhagalpur University, Bhagalpur (Bihar)(INDIA)
In the book under review ‘Common School System: Examining First Initiative in India’, the author has tried to examine the recommendations of the first ever Common School System Commission of the country instituted by the Government of Bihar.
In the comprehensive preface the author has explained the reason for taking the task of examining the report of the Common School System Commission. The Education Commission of India recommended the establishment of a Common School System in the country way back in 1966. It was also endorsed by National Education Policy 1986 and Programme of Action 1992. While reviewing the implementation of this policy, the Ramamurti Committee (1990) considered the development of Common School System (CSS) to be a “very vital component of the overall strategy for securing equity and social justice in education. Over two thousand non-government organizations which have joined hands to promote the National Alliance for the Fundamental Right to Education (NAFRE) launched a public campaign demanding the implementation of a Common School System in India. \
The Government of Bihar has shown the strong desire to provide equitable quality education to all the children of the state. Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of the state said “In my encounter with the public everywhere of the state, I found a ubiquitous desire among the people, particularly the poorest to send their children to a good school”. He further said “I have no option but to respond to the yearning of the people…” He announced his government’s intension to establish a Common School System (CSS) in Bihar on the 22nd July, 2006. Finally the Common School System Commission (CSSC) was constituted on the 8th August, 2006. The CSSC submitted its report on the 8th June, 2007
The Commission termed the intention of the Chief Minister to establish the CSS in Bihar as a development of historic significance for Bihar and possibly for the rest of the country as well.
The author says “In spite of my deep concern for the CSS and support for its early implementation, I strongly feel that the report of the CSSC needs to be examined and necessary changes should be considered before its implementation. The reason is very plain and simple. There appears to be contradictions between discussions made by the Commission on various issues and the Commission’s recommendations related to them at various places of the report. Its discussion is also loaded towards bureaucracy and elites of the society but in a subtle way…The PRI and urban bodies have hardly a place in the legal frame of the CSS…That is why I have taken the task of examining the CSSC report which is the first initiative in India towards the implementation of the CSS.”
The book has twelve chapters. In the first chapter of the book, present status of school education and teacher education has been described. The report is based on latest available data. In the second chapter the author has looked into the CSSC’s concept and rationale of CSS and identified some views of the Commission which explain some of the past events erroneously, perhaps due to poor understanding of the social and political situations of the state. The author has also identified some vital areas where many actions of the state justified by the Commission are not in consonance of its concepts and rationale of the CSS.
In the third chapter, the CSSC report on school administration and management under CSS has been examined. The Commission has recommended two bills for management of schools for consideration by the Bihar Legislature. The first bill, Bihar Primary and Middle School Education Committee Bill, 2007 is meant for constituting school education committee in the primary and middle schools of Bihar and the second bill, Bihar Secondary Education Committee Bill, 2007 for constituting school education committee in the secondary schools of Bihar. The author has tried to reveal the loaded arguments of the Commission in favour of bureaucrats and against the legislators in respect of the management of Rajkiya and Rajkiyakrit schools. He has also tried to visualize the Commission’s theoretical position regarding the vital role of Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) in the school management and its position in the recommended bills where PRIs role appears to have been diluted.
In the next chapter, the author has examined the CSSC report on teachers. Enumerations for creating conditions for optimum performance of teachers of the CSS and norms relating to pay and allowances of teachers suggested by the CSSC were examined taking justification of the Commission regarding some of the practical conditions of the newly appointed teachers. The author says, “The Commission describing the norm said that the pay and allowance of teachers should match their qualification and professional responsibility. There is no denial that professional responsibility of a teacher is very high, perhaps highest. Describing the essential criteria for fixation of salary and allowances of school teachers the Commission says that pay and allowances of school teachers should be fixed at a level high enough to enable them to live a life of dignity. But the Commission in its discussion on concepts, rationale and content of CSS in chapter three of the report justified the appointment of large number of school teachers on a very low salary, even lower than a fourth grade employee. School teachers from primary to senior secondary get consolidated meager monthly salary of rupees 4000 to7000. It is ironical that this salary structure has been adjudged as reasonable salary by the Commission. It appears that the Commission which talks of the abdication of conscience of the society in general lost its own conscience and could not speak against the wrong decision of the Government that constituted it.”
In the chapter five, the author has examined the CSSC report on the teacher education in the Common School System and in the chapter six, the CSSC position on different types of schools in the CSS has been examined. The author has found some of the views put by the Commission need to be reconsidered as they are not in consonance with constitutional rights of the people.
In the chapter seven, the author has tried to look into the curriculum and pedagogy for the CSS. A brief summary of National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 and draft Bihar Curriculum Framework (BCF) 2006 has been presented. A critical review of draft BCF has also been presented.
In the chapter nine, the author has tried to summarize and examine the financial implications of CSS suggested in the CSSC report.
In the last three chapters the author has suggested his own plans for the development of DIETs in Bihar, On-service training program of untrained serving teachers and development of Education Faculties in the universities of Bihar.
The book critically examines the report of the CSSC and raised many important issues which must be addressed before its implementation. The presentation of the CSSC’s theoretical positions, recommendations and their examination has been done so well that the book becomes very interesting and readable even for common readers. One can get holistic picture of the CSS. The author is bold enough in putting his views straight. This is the first and only book of its kind on the CSS, an issue of great public importance.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
ISBN: 81-7714-327-1
By Dr K. Kiran, lecturer, Dept. of Political Science, M.A.M. College, Naugachia, T.M.Bhagalpur University, Bhagalpur (Bihar)(INDIA)
In the book under review ‘Common School System: Examining First Initiative in India’, the author has tried to examine the recommendations of the first ever Common School System Commission of the country instituted by the Government of Bihar.
In the comprehensive preface the author has explained the reason for taking the task of examining the report of the Common School System Commission. The Education Commission of India recommended the establishment of a Common School System in the country way back in 1966. It was also endorsed by National Education Policy 1986 and Programme of Action 1992. While reviewing the implementation of this policy, the Ramamurti Committee (1990) considered the development of Common School System (CSS) to be a “very vital component of the overall strategy for securing equity and social justice in education. Over two thousand non-government organizations which have joined hands to promote the National Alliance for the Fundamental Right to Education (NAFRE) launched a public campaign demanding the implementation of a Common School System in India. \
The Government of Bihar has shown the strong desire to provide equitable quality education to all the children of the state. Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of the state said “In my encounter with the public everywhere of the state, I found a ubiquitous desire among the people, particularly the poorest to send their children to a good school”. He further said “I have no option but to respond to the yearning of the people…” He announced his government’s intension to establish a Common School System (CSS) in Bihar on the 22nd July, 2006. Finally the Common School System Commission (CSSC) was constituted on the 8th August, 2006. The CSSC submitted its report on the 8th June, 2007
The Commission termed the intention of the Chief Minister to establish the CSS in Bihar as a development of historic significance for Bihar and possibly for the rest of the country as well.
The author says “In spite of my deep concern for the CSS and support for its early implementation, I strongly feel that the report of the CSSC needs to be examined and necessary changes should be considered before its implementation. The reason is very plain and simple. There appears to be contradictions between discussions made by the Commission on various issues and the Commission’s recommendations related to them at various places of the report. Its discussion is also loaded towards bureaucracy and elites of the society but in a subtle way…The PRI and urban bodies have hardly a place in the legal frame of the CSS…That is why I have taken the task of examining the CSSC report which is the first initiative in India towards the implementation of the CSS.”
The book has twelve chapters. In the first chapter of the book, present status of school education and teacher education has been described. The report is based on latest available data. In the second chapter the author has looked into the CSSC’s concept and rationale of CSS and identified some views of the Commission which explain some of the past events erroneously, perhaps due to poor understanding of the social and political situations of the state. The author has also identified some vital areas where many actions of the state justified by the Commission are not in consonance of its concepts and rationale of the CSS.
In the third chapter, the CSSC report on school administration and management under CSS has been examined. The Commission has recommended two bills for management of schools for consideration by the Bihar Legislature. The first bill, Bihar Primary and Middle School Education Committee Bill, 2007 is meant for constituting school education committee in the primary and middle schools of Bihar and the second bill, Bihar Secondary Education Committee Bill, 2007 for constituting school education committee in the secondary schools of Bihar. The author has tried to reveal the loaded arguments of the Commission in favour of bureaucrats and against the legislators in respect of the management of Rajkiya and Rajkiyakrit schools. He has also tried to visualize the Commission’s theoretical position regarding the vital role of Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) in the school management and its position in the recommended bills where PRIs role appears to have been diluted.
In the next chapter, the author has examined the CSSC report on teachers. Enumerations for creating conditions for optimum performance of teachers of the CSS and norms relating to pay and allowances of teachers suggested by the CSSC were examined taking justification of the Commission regarding some of the practical conditions of the newly appointed teachers. The author says, “The Commission describing the norm said that the pay and allowance of teachers should match their qualification and professional responsibility. There is no denial that professional responsibility of a teacher is very high, perhaps highest. Describing the essential criteria for fixation of salary and allowances of school teachers the Commission says that pay and allowances of school teachers should be fixed at a level high enough to enable them to live a life of dignity. But the Commission in its discussion on concepts, rationale and content of CSS in chapter three of the report justified the appointment of large number of school teachers on a very low salary, even lower than a fourth grade employee. School teachers from primary to senior secondary get consolidated meager monthly salary of rupees 4000 to7000. It is ironical that this salary structure has been adjudged as reasonable salary by the Commission. It appears that the Commission which talks of the abdication of conscience of the society in general lost its own conscience and could not speak against the wrong decision of the Government that constituted it.”
In the chapter five, the author has examined the CSSC report on the teacher education in the Common School System and in the chapter six, the CSSC position on different types of schools in the CSS has been examined. The author has found some of the views put by the Commission need to be reconsidered as they are not in consonance with constitutional rights of the people.
In the chapter seven, the author has tried to look into the curriculum and pedagogy for the CSS. A brief summary of National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 and draft Bihar Curriculum Framework (BCF) 2006 has been presented. A critical review of draft BCF has also been presented.
In the chapter nine, the author has tried to summarize and examine the financial implications of CSS suggested in the CSSC report.
In the last three chapters the author has suggested his own plans for the development of DIETs in Bihar, On-service training program of untrained serving teachers and development of Education Faculties in the universities of Bihar.
The book critically examines the report of the CSSC and raised many important issues which must be addressed before its implementation. The presentation of the CSSC’s theoretical positions, recommendations and their examination has been done so well that the book becomes very interesting and readable even for common readers. One can get holistic picture of the CSS. The author is bold enough in putting his views straight. This is the first and only book of its kind on the CSS, an issue of great public importance.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Sunday, 21 June 2009
Taking Tips for Success from Churchill
Churchill’s Secret Skills
Binden Shovel
ISBN: 9780955817816
Review by Lisa from Anglo Addict
All's Fair in Business and War
The book Churchill's Secret Skills by Binden Shovel has a unique point of view: it takes examples of Churchill's expertise in leading Britain through the horrors of World War II, and applies them to the modern business world. In addition to providing real-world examples of business situations, the book is also a wealth of information about how Churchill skillfully dealt with very difficult people and problems. The subtitle of the book, "Keeping the Nazis off the beaches required more than fine speeches" is a humorous indication of the way the book delves behind the public persona of Churchill and examines his more subtle skills.
The chapter titles of the book indicate some of the advice that can be gleaned from observing Churchill's actions: The Weapon of Courtesy and Consideration; Tell it Like it is, Nicely!; Success is Hidden in Details; Focus on the Payoff and Put on a Show are some of the 21 chapters in the book.
The author, Binden Shovel, spent a great deal of time reading and analyzing Churchill's writings. Some of Churchill's memos and letters are included to help to illustrate particular points. The author also has a great deal of experience in the business world, and has dealt with superiors and subordinates who provide ample material for both what to do and what NOT to do!
Anyone who enjoys World War II and history will get a kick out of reading this book, and people who work in the modern business world can also pick up lots of useful tips and examples for becoming more effective in the workplace.
Final Verdict for Churchill's Secret Skills: Four Gherkins out of Five, for being a modern business novel with interesting historical roots!
Purchase it on Amazon.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Binden Shovel
ISBN: 9780955817816
Review by Lisa from Anglo Addict
All's Fair in Business and War
The book Churchill's Secret Skills by Binden Shovel has a unique point of view: it takes examples of Churchill's expertise in leading Britain through the horrors of World War II, and applies them to the modern business world. In addition to providing real-world examples of business situations, the book is also a wealth of information about how Churchill skillfully dealt with very difficult people and problems. The subtitle of the book, "Keeping the Nazis off the beaches required more than fine speeches" is a humorous indication of the way the book delves behind the public persona of Churchill and examines his more subtle skills.
The chapter titles of the book indicate some of the advice that can be gleaned from observing Churchill's actions: The Weapon of Courtesy and Consideration; Tell it Like it is, Nicely!; Success is Hidden in Details; Focus on the Payoff and Put on a Show are some of the 21 chapters in the book.
The author, Binden Shovel, spent a great deal of time reading and analyzing Churchill's writings. Some of Churchill's memos and letters are included to help to illustrate particular points. The author also has a great deal of experience in the business world, and has dealt with superiors and subordinates who provide ample material for both what to do and what NOT to do!
Anyone who enjoys World War II and history will get a kick out of reading this book, and people who work in the modern business world can also pick up lots of useful tips and examples for becoming more effective in the workplace.
Final Verdict for Churchill's Secret Skills: Four Gherkins out of Five, for being a modern business novel with interesting historical roots!
Purchase it on Amazon.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Saturday, 20 June 2009
Frank Finley reviews John Dewar's Hospital Soup...
Title: Hospital Soup by the River: Collected Letters
Author: John Dewar
Link to Book: http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/hospital-soup-by-the-river/7106189Genre: Nonfiction
Reviewer: Frank Finley (with book jacket review), Sussex, England
Hospital Soup by the River brings together a collection of highly amusing letters written to friends, chronicling the journey from a cancer diagnosis to post bone marrow transplant. The letters reveal the author's yearnings to return to a world he hopes is only temporarily lost: the world of fishing his beloved River Cairn and the natural world itself. If you like to laugh, like to fish and wish to hear of a dreaded medical condition being scythed down to size, then you will be captivated by this bizarre and wonderful collection."
So says the book jacket review and it says it very well. This is a very special book, by an author who writes with highly individual and exceptional talent. John Dewar clearly knows intimately, and in this book expresses with great depth and in large measure, much concerning life's rich drama and insecurity. This book positively exudes love, joy, and pain but especially humour. There are lots of "can't put down" books and this is another. The difference is this one is truly extraordinary. Thank you Mr. Dewar for a roller-coaster read...you made me laugh out loud when I really shouldn't have!
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: John Dewar
Link to Book: http://www.lulu.com/content/paperback-book/hospital-soup-by-the-river/7106189Genre: Nonfiction
Reviewer: Frank Finley (with book jacket review), Sussex, England
Hospital Soup by the River brings together a collection of highly amusing letters written to friends, chronicling the journey from a cancer diagnosis to post bone marrow transplant. The letters reveal the author's yearnings to return to a world he hopes is only temporarily lost: the world of fishing his beloved River Cairn and the natural world itself. If you like to laugh, like to fish and wish to hear of a dreaded medical condition being scythed down to size, then you will be captivated by this bizarre and wonderful collection."
So says the book jacket review and it says it very well. This is a very special book, by an author who writes with highly individual and exceptional talent. John Dewar clearly knows intimately, and in this book expresses with great depth and in large measure, much concerning life's rich drama and insecurity. This book positively exudes love, joy, and pain but especially humour. There are lots of "can't put down" books and this is another. The difference is this one is truly extraordinary. Thank you Mr. Dewar for a roller-coaster read...you made me laugh out loud when I really shouldn't have!
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Friday, 19 June 2009
Rita Hestand Reviews Cargile Mystery
Title: The Cry of the Cuckoos
Author: John Wayne Cargile
Author's Website: http:// www.thecryofthecuckoos.com
Genre: Mystery
ISBN: 978-1-60693-526-2
Reviewer: Rita Hestand
From Amazon.com
Reviewed by Rita Hestand (author)
Sometimes finding the truth opens up a can of worms that can't be disposed of. Retired news reporter Donald Drummond, and his retired teacher wife, Anne, begin to unravel a family mystery that leads to death and intrigue. Trying to discover his father's killers, Donald is whisked into the confidence of the FBI and faced with insurmountable truths.
Donald is forced to deal with his father's underhanded business with the Society of Southern Patriots, and an unmasking of his own identity that he must come to grips with.
After sixty one years, Donald meets his real mother. And his mother is a suspect in his father's death. His father was poisoned. However, as Donald works closely with the authorities, he unravels one bad soap opera after another, how much can one man stand to know about his heritage? And can he live with the knowing?
John Wayne Cargile takes us on a journey that starts with much intrigue and ends with bold characterization of family life sometimes better left unsaid. Even when all is well, it isn't.
What an emotional jaunt Mr. Cargile leads us on, spilling forth with page turner characters and strong plotting that keeps one on the edge of his seat to finish this book. I enjoyed it no end.
Mr. Cargile has my undying admiration for writing a book that has no holes barred. Equal in emotion and plotting to a William Faulkner book, this one is a real keeper and one you won't forget for some time! Thanks for the enjoyable read.....
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: John Wayne Cargile
Author's Website: http:// www.thecryofthecuckoos.com
Genre: Mystery
ISBN: 978-1-60693-526-2
Reviewer: Rita Hestand
From Amazon.com
Reviewed by Rita Hestand (author)
Sometimes finding the truth opens up a can of worms that can't be disposed of. Retired news reporter Donald Drummond, and his retired teacher wife, Anne, begin to unravel a family mystery that leads to death and intrigue. Trying to discover his father's killers, Donald is whisked into the confidence of the FBI and faced with insurmountable truths.
Donald is forced to deal with his father's underhanded business with the Society of Southern Patriots, and an unmasking of his own identity that he must come to grips with.
After sixty one years, Donald meets his real mother. And his mother is a suspect in his father's death. His father was poisoned. However, as Donald works closely with the authorities, he unravels one bad soap opera after another, how much can one man stand to know about his heritage? And can he live with the knowing?
John Wayne Cargile takes us on a journey that starts with much intrigue and ends with bold characterization of family life sometimes better left unsaid. Even when all is well, it isn't.
What an emotional jaunt Mr. Cargile leads us on, spilling forth with page turner characters and strong plotting that keeps one on the edge of his seat to finish this book. I enjoyed it no end.
Mr. Cargile has my undying admiration for writing a book that has no holes barred. Equal in emotion and plotting to a William Faulkner book, this one is a real keeper and one you won't forget for some time! Thanks for the enjoyable read.....
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Thursday, 18 June 2009
Julianne Moore Pens the Perfect Book, Perfect Ending
Title: Freckleface Strawberry and Dodgeball Bully
Author: Julianne Moore
Illustrator: LeUyen Pham
ISBN 9781599903163
Publisher: Bloomsbury Children's Books
Reviewed by Carolyn Howard-Johnson
When I first heard about this book, my first thought was that freckle-faced kids need a book of their own because of the discrimination that goes around playgrounds. Race is not the whole issue. There is a panoply of physical traits kids can get teased for. Too white. Too fat. Too dark. Too skinny. When I was in high schoold, for heaven's sake, students call one of my friends Blue-Lips Burton.
My second thought was that the issue of bullies in school is finally getting the attention it deserves and this little children's book is perfectly timed.
And the third? It was that this book was probably based on a real-life event suffered by Julianne Moore as a child. Of course, she got the ultimate victory, exquisite, fragile and brilliant Julianne Moore of acting fame.
What I didn't expect was the ending! You will find it a surprise,too. It is perfect. Absolutely perfect.
Technorati Tags:
julianne moore, leuyen pham, bloomsbury chidren's books, bloomsbury usa, blog tour, carolyn howard-johnson, the new book review, bullying, freckles, freckle face, dodgeball, freckleface strawberry and the dodgeball bully,
Add to: | Technorati | Digg | del.icio.us | Yahoo | BlinkList | Spurl | reddit | Furl |
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Tuesday, 16 June 2009
Memoir in Poetry by Prominent Dancer and Author
Unknown
01:00
Albany Records (audio publishers), Blog Tour, Carnegie-Mellon University Press, Nonfiction: Memoir
0
Title: My Life As a Doll
Author: Elizabeth Kirschner
Genre: Memoir
Synopsis:
My Life as a Doll, is a survivor's tale, a memoir in verse about child abuse, madness and recovery. It is one long poem broken into four sections. The first, Cuckoo, focuses on childhood and the severe violence of a mother brought upon a daughter. The next one, An Itty Bitty Ditty, chronicles a disturbing adolescence and the following is about life in a psych ward as an adult mother and wife. The closing sequence, O Healing Go Deep, details bouts of madness and the profound desire to heal.
About the Author:
Elizabeth Kirschner has published three books of poetry, Twenty Colors, Postal Routes and Slow Risen Among the Smoke Trees all by Carnegie-Mellon University Press. In addition, she has a CD released by Albany Records with her own poetry set to Robert Schumann's Dichterliebe. Now titled The Dichterliebe in Four Seasons, it premiered in Vienna in the fall of 2005, followed by an American debut in Boston featuring soprano Jean Danton accompanied by pianist Thomas Stumpf. She collaborates with many composers and has taught at Boston College since 1990. Kirschner also studies ballet with Boston Ballet.
Author's Websites:
Elizabeth Kirschner’s website: http://www.elizabethkirschner.com
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Author: Elizabeth Kirschner
Genre: Memoir
Synopsis:
My Life as a Doll, is a survivor's tale, a memoir in verse about child abuse, madness and recovery. It is one long poem broken into four sections. The first, Cuckoo, focuses on childhood and the severe violence of a mother brought upon a daughter. The next one, An Itty Bitty Ditty, chronicles a disturbing adolescence and the following is about life in a psych ward as an adult mother and wife. The closing sequence, O Healing Go Deep, details bouts of madness and the profound desire to heal.
About the Author:
Elizabeth Kirschner has published three books of poetry, Twenty Colors, Postal Routes and Slow Risen Among the Smoke Trees all by Carnegie-Mellon University Press. In addition, she has a CD released by Albany Records with her own poetry set to Robert Schumann's Dichterliebe. Now titled The Dichterliebe in Four Seasons, it premiered in Vienna in the fall of 2005, followed by an American debut in Boston featuring soprano Jean Danton accompanied by pianist Thomas Stumpf. She collaborates with many composers and has taught at Boston College since 1990. Kirschner also studies ballet with Boston Ballet.
Author's Websites:
Elizabeth Kirschner’s website: http://www.elizabethkirschner.com
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Tuesday, 9 June 2009
Dog Lovers Alert: You Gotta Meet "Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog"
TITLE: Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog
AUTHOR: Barbara Gail Techel
AUTHOR'S WEBSITE: http://www.joyfulpaws.com
GENRE/CATEGORY: Nonfiction - Children's
ISBN #: 978-0-9800052-0-2
NAME OF REVIEWER: Dr. Alicia DiFabio
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: Welcome to My Planet
Reviewed by Dr. Alicia DiFabio for WelcomeToMyPlanet4 blog
So Much More Than A Children's Book: One Small Dog Teaches One Big Lesson About Facing Disability
I read to my children every night. They usually get hooked on one particular book for months. Their newest obsession is a book that I enjoy reading just as much as they enjoy hearing it: Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog.
This true story is narrated by a heroine so lovable and relatable to children - a little "wiener dog" named Frankie. Her story is told in her own "voice" through her owner and book's author, Barbara Gail Techel. Frankie is a little dog who is loved dearly and enjoying a happy life until one day a spinal injury leaves her hind legs paralyzed. At this point, the story could become a tragedy; but it doesn't. It shines as a story of love, hope and over- coming challenges.
Frankie's spinal injury necessitates her learning how to use a special doggy wheelchair and her life moves forward just as full and rich as it ever was before. In fact, even richer, because now little Frankie and Barbara enjoy meeting, educating, spreading awareness, acceptance and encouragement to children and adults everywhere who are facing all types of difficult situations. Frankie and Barbara not only get through the challenges life gave them, but use their experience to reach out to the world and help others. The message is not one of "being dealt the cards you are given," but of the joy and empowerment that life gifts to you, even in the most challenging of times.
What I like about this book is that it captures children of all ages and can be used to convey positive messages about disabling conditions. The book's life lesson is so multifaceted that it can meet any child, at any age, where they are in their development. The story, for instance, can be summarized for younger children as they connect with the brightly colored pictures. For older children, you can read the length of the story verbatim, and it is even a perfect book for young readers to enjoy reading aloud on their own.
If you're interested in a visually appealing, inspirational, and educational book for your kids, nieces, nephews, religious group, daycare or school, I highly recommend the multi-award winning Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog as a great learning tool, conversation starter about disabilities, and just a plain, nice enjoyable read for anyone who loves animals.
To learn more about Frankie's amazing life and dedication to raising awareness in the community about disabilities, visit her blog, http://www.joyfulpaws.com.
Buy.
Reviewed by Alicia DiFabio,Welcome To My Planet and New Jersey Moms
http://welcometomyplanet4.blogspot.com
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
AUTHOR: Barbara Gail Techel
AUTHOR'S WEBSITE: http://www.joyfulpaws.com
GENRE/CATEGORY: Nonfiction - Children's
ISBN #: 978-0-9800052-0-2
NAME OF REVIEWER: Dr. Alicia DiFabio
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: Welcome to My Planet
Reviewed by Dr. Alicia DiFabio for WelcomeToMyPlanet4 blog
So Much More Than A Children's Book: One Small Dog Teaches One Big Lesson About Facing Disability
I read to my children every night. They usually get hooked on one particular book for months. Their newest obsession is a book that I enjoy reading just as much as they enjoy hearing it: Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog.
This true story is narrated by a heroine so lovable and relatable to children - a little "wiener dog" named Frankie. Her story is told in her own "voice" through her owner and book's author, Barbara Gail Techel. Frankie is a little dog who is loved dearly and enjoying a happy life until one day a spinal injury leaves her hind legs paralyzed. At this point, the story could become a tragedy; but it doesn't. It shines as a story of love, hope and over- coming challenges.
Frankie's spinal injury necessitates her learning how to use a special doggy wheelchair and her life moves forward just as full and rich as it ever was before. In fact, even richer, because now little Frankie and Barbara enjoy meeting, educating, spreading awareness, acceptance and encouragement to children and adults everywhere who are facing all types of difficult situations. Frankie and Barbara not only get through the challenges life gave them, but use their experience to reach out to the world and help others. The message is not one of "being dealt the cards you are given," but of the joy and empowerment that life gifts to you, even in the most challenging of times.
What I like about this book is that it captures children of all ages and can be used to convey positive messages about disabling conditions. The book's life lesson is so multifaceted that it can meet any child, at any age, where they are in their development. The story, for instance, can be summarized for younger children as they connect with the brightly colored pictures. For older children, you can read the length of the story verbatim, and it is even a perfect book for young readers to enjoy reading aloud on their own.
If you're interested in a visually appealing, inspirational, and educational book for your kids, nieces, nephews, religious group, daycare or school, I highly recommend the multi-award winning Frankie The Walk 'N Roll Dog as a great learning tool, conversation starter about disabilities, and just a plain, nice enjoyable read for anyone who loves animals.
To learn more about Frankie's amazing life and dedication to raising awareness in the community about disabilities, visit her blog, http://www.joyfulpaws.com.
Buy.
Reviewed by Alicia DiFabio,Welcome To My Planet and New Jersey Moms
http://welcometomyplanet4.blogspot.com
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Monday, 8 June 2009
Leslie Lehr Explores Life After Divorce
Wife Goes Onby Leslie Lehr
http://www.wife-goes-on.com
Fiction
ISBN: 0758222416
Publisher: Kensington
Wife Goes On is the story of four women who become friends unintentionally and help one another during their divorces. It is the story of true friendship. Leslie Lehr shows that there is life after divorce and you do get a second chance at starting over. Wife Goes On will make you laugh and cry. It is funny and sexy. It is a lighthearted look at a serious subject. I think anyone who has ever been a in relationship will walk away with something positive from of this book.
Reviewed by Debby Block
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
http://www.wife-goes-on.com
Fiction
ISBN: 0758222416
Publisher: Kensington
Wife Goes On is the story of four women who become friends unintentionally and help one another during their divorces. It is the story of true friendship. Leslie Lehr shows that there is life after divorce and you do get a second chance at starting over. Wife Goes On will make you laugh and cry. It is funny and sexy. It is a lighthearted look at a serious subject. I think anyone who has ever been a in relationship will walk away with something positive from of this book.
Reviewed by Debby Block
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Sunday, 7 June 2009
Kathy Stemke Releases Book To Educate with Love
Unknown
01:00
Action Alley Education (publisher), Blog Tour, Fiction: Children's, Nonfiction: Children's
0

“MOVING THROUGH ALL SEVEN DAYS”
By Kathy Ann Stemke
Publisher: Action Alley Education
Action Alley Education is close to publishing, "Moving Through All Seven Days." This book inspires movement as children learn about the days of the week. The lyrical rhymes also teach them how to spell each day! The activities at the end of the book are designed to reinforce the concepts as well as give impetus to movement exploration.
Teachers, parents and kids will love this book for it's fun and colorful rhymes as well as the many great activity suggestions. Teachers will appreciate the resource pages that can be copied and used year after year. The book includes an 18 page action rhyme with colorful illustrations of the seven days of the week. There are 14 pages of activities that will help children learn how to spell the days of the week. Included in these pages are phonics practice activities and a coloring book of the seven days.
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Saturday, 6 June 2009
Rita Schiano's New Fiction Based on Real Life
Painting The Invisible Man
by Rita Schiano
Http://www.paintingtheinvisibleman.com
Fiction
ISBN: 0979534704
Reviewed by: BookFinds.com
What is often talked about in fiction writing is that every novel has pieces of the author’s life hidden in the details. In Rita Schiano’s emotionally riveting novel, Painting the Invisible Man, there is no hiding the parallels between Rita’s life and that of her main character, Anna Matteo.
Schiano explores what happens when Anna begins to learn the truth about her father through his brutal dealth. Rita Schiano learned the truth about her own father through his brutal death. And yet it is with this honesty and quiet depiction of reality that Schiano creates memorable characters and beautiful prose. Schiano explores the emotional ties that bind us to our family and our history. She shows that it is our past that gives birth to our dreams and it is our future that gives us hope.
Rita Schiano’s Painting the Invisible Man explores truth through the veil of fiction and highlights these truths with honesty and emotional intensity. A beautiful poetic read!
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
by Rita Schiano
Http://www.paintingtheinvisibleman.com
Fiction
ISBN: 0979534704
Reviewed by: BookFinds.com
What is often talked about in fiction writing is that every novel has pieces of the author’s life hidden in the details. In Rita Schiano’s emotionally riveting novel, Painting the Invisible Man, there is no hiding the parallels between Rita’s life and that of her main character, Anna Matteo.
Schiano explores what happens when Anna begins to learn the truth about her father through his brutal dealth. Rita Schiano learned the truth about her own father through his brutal death. And yet it is with this honesty and quiet depiction of reality that Schiano creates memorable characters and beautiful prose. Schiano explores the emotional ties that bind us to our family and our history. She shows that it is our past that gives birth to our dreams and it is our future that gives us hope.
Rita Schiano’s Painting the Invisible Man explores truth through the veil of fiction and highlights these truths with honesty and emotional intensity. A beautiful poetic read!
-----
The New Book Review is blogged by Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally series of books for writers. It is a free service offered to those who want to encourage the reading of books they love. That includes authors who want to share their favorite reviews, reviewers who'd like to see their reviews get more exposure, and readers who want to shout out praise of books they've loved. Please see submission guidelines on the left of this page. Reviews and essays are indexed by author names, reviewer names, and review sites. Writers will find the index handy for gleaning the names of small publishers. Find other writer-related blogs at Sharing with Writers and The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor.
Popular Posts
-
Title: Wondertown Author: Mac Fallows Authors website: www.wondertownproject.com Genre: Fantasy General: eBook with 12 embedded songs...
-
Imagining the Future: Ruminations on Fathers and Other Masculine Apparitions Series: Celebration Series By Magdalena Ball and Carolyn Howard...
-
Title: The Mother-in-Law’s Manual: Proven Strategies for Creating Healthy Relationships with Married Children Author: Susan Abel Lieberman ,...
-
Title: The Otherworld Author: Margo Martin Benning Publisher: Advocate House, An imprint...
-
Title: Busy Dizzy Author: Dr. Orly Katz http:// www.SimplyMeModel.com Category: children's book ASIN: B00HALMR6C Amazon link Revi...
-
Title "...Like Footprints in the Wind: A Generation Lost" Author: Pamela Atherstone Author Link: http:/...
-
Title: Saving The Innocents Author: Randall Kenneth Drake Author’s Web site : http://rkdrake.com Genre/category: Mystery/Suspense/Action ISB...
-
TITLE Instant Whips And Dream Toppings. SUBTITLE: A true-life dom rom com AUTHOR Jacky Donovan GENRE Memoir / romance / erotica / hu...
-
Shadowed, by Ken Hughes Author's Web site: www.kenhughesauthor.com Genre: paranormal thriller Print ISBN: 978-0-9850484-0-2 E-book ISBN...
-
TITLE Ascending Spiral AUTHOR Bob Rich GENRE Metaphysical fiction ISBN 978-1-61599-186-0 (paper); 978-1-61599-187-7 (e) Reviewed by Magda...
Follow on Facebook
Blog Archive
Labels
- 3rs book reviews
- 4rv publishing
- A Book Review Blog
- A.J. Albany
- Abingen Press
- About Nursing (Magazine)
- About Teens (Reviews)
- Action Alley Education (publisher)
- Adams Media (Publisher)
- Aggie Villaneuva (reviewer)
- Albany Records (audio publishers)
- alexa wolf
- Alexis James (reviewer)
- all book reviews
- All Things That Matter Press
- Allbooks Reviews
- Allison King (reviewer)
- Allison Vaughn (reviewer)
- Allison's Attic (review site)
- allyn evans
- alma bond
- Alternative-Read (Reviews)
- Amazon Kindle
- amazon rankings
- amazon reviews
- amazon shorts
- amber quill press
- amos lassen
- amy s. kwei
- angela watkins
- Anglo Addict (review site)
- angus munro
- ann rittenberg
- Anna Jedrziewski
- anne fadiman
- apex reviews
- App for all readers
- April M. Hanson (reviewer)
- arelene uslander
- Arlette Gaffrey
- artemesia publishing
- Aspirations Media Inc (publishers)
- Asylett Press
- audio book
- Author Opportunities
- authors coalition
- award-winner
- award-winning book
- b. lynn goodwin
- Baker Books (publishers)
- Barack Obama
- barbara bergin
- Barosum Books (publisher)
- barrie reviews
- Bear Manor Media (publisher)
- Behler Publications
- Beirut Daily Star
- ben baker
- Berkeley Publishing (Imprint)
- Berkley Trade (publisher)
- Best Books List
- beverly hills library
- biblioophiles retreat (reviews)
- bill boudreaux
- billie a williams
- Black Leaf Publishing
- Blog Award
- blog entires
- Blog Tour
- BlogCritics (reviewer)
- Bloomsbury Children's Books
- Blue Fair Books (publisher)
- blurbs
- Bob Medak (reviewer)
- bob williams
- book expo america
- book fairs
- Book Launch
- book launches
- book mark
- book marketing
- Book Pleasures (review site)
- book promotion
- book proposals
- book publicity
- book review
- book review journal
- book reviewing
- Book Reviews Galore (review blog)
- book signings
- book tour
- book tours
- Bookfinds.com (reviewer)
- Booklocker (Publisher)
- Bookstove (review site)
- Booksurge (Publishers)
- borders personal publishing
- Boynton Cook Books
- brandon wilson
- brenda edde
- brenda warneka
- brian weiss
- Bridge the Gap (publisher)
- Broadway Books Press
- bruce henricksen
- c.s.lewis
- Caffeinated Book Reviewer (Reviewer)
- cake decorating
- California Writers' Club
- Call for Reviews: The New Book Review
- camille claudel
- Carnegie-Mellon University Press
- Carol Hoenig (reviewer)
- carol schneider
- carole mcdonnell
- Caroline Myss (reviewer)
- carolyn howard-johnson
- carrie lynn lyons
- Casperian Books (Publisher)
- cassie smith
- Cate Garrison (reviewer)
- Cebilingual Books (Publisher)
- celebration series
- chapbooks
- charlene ruesch
- cheryl ellis
- Cheryl Kae Tardif
- cheryl swanson
- Children: Health
- Children's Picture Book
- Children)
- chistopher vogler
- chisty tillery french
- chris meeks
- chrissy dionne
- christian book reviews
- christine alexanians
- Christmas Books
- christopher turner
- christy french
- Christy Tillery French (reviewer)
- clive ashenden
- coffee time romance
- cold tree press
- complete writers journal
- Compulsive Reader Reviews
- connie gotsch
- Connie Gotsch (reviewer)
- Contest
- correspondence courses
- corrie woods
- cozy mystery
- craig relyea
- Crest Publications
- Crps-Rsd-a-Better-Life.blogspot.com (Review Blog)
- Cune Press
- cynthia brian
- dan brown
- dana lynn smith
- danalee buhler
- Dark Diva Reviews
- david balducci
- David Brailovsky
- david grambs
- David Henderson
- david wolman
- Deb Hockenberry (reviewer)
- Deborah Hockenberry (reviewer)
- Debra Gaynor
- dee dee myers
- dennis aubuchon
- Denver Post (Reviews)
- deon sanders
- diana raab
- Diane Ward (Reviewer)
- diaries
- dictionaries
- divided families
- dj lyons
- don kaul
- donald james parker
- donna eggert (reviewer)
- Donna M. McDine (reviewer)
- Donna Sundblad (reviewer)
- doreen virtue
- dotty walters
- double dragon press
- Dr. Alicia DiFabio (reviewer)
- dr. dan skelton
- dr. joe capista
- dr. karen sherman
- dr. pat adelekan
- dr. tami brady
- Dragon's Bear Publishing LLC
- drollerie press
- Duffie Bart
- e-book
- e-books
- E-press-Online Inc (publisher)
- Earl Ofari Hutchinson
- earth day
- ebook
- Echelon Press (Imprint)
- Edit O'Nuallain (reviewer)
- editing
- Educational
- efraim m. padro
- eleanor coppola
- elena dorothy bowman
- emily moore
- endorsements
- epress-online (publisher)
- Epstein LaRue
- Eric Jones (reviewer)
- erica stux
- erin jade
- Erin O'Riordan (reviewer)
- Erma Bombeck
- Essay: Book Promotion
- Essay: Carolyn's Top 10 Books for Writers
- essays on literature
- estavan vega
- eternal press
- eTreasures Publishing
- everett beal
- evie sears
- Feathered Quill Book Reviews
- Fiction
- Fiction:
- Fiction: Action
- Fiction: Adventure
- Fiction: Animals
- Fiction: anthology
- Fiction: Bilingual
- Fiction: California
- Fiction: Chapter Books
- Fiction: Chicklit
- Fiction: Childen's Picture Book
- Fiction: Children
- Fiction: Children's
- Fiction: Children's Fantasy
- Fiction: Children's Historical
- Fiction: Children's Self-Help
- Fiction: Christian
- Fiction: Coming of Age
- Fiction: Contemporary
- Fiction: Contemporary Romance
- Fiction: Cozy Mystery
- Fiction: Crime
- Fiction: culture
- Fiction: Detective Fiction: Mystery
- Fiction: Erotica
- Fiction: Family Saga
- Fiction: Fan
- Fiction: Fantasy
- Fiction: Fantasy Fiction: Mystery
- Fiction: Gay/Lesbian
- Fiction: Green
- Fiction: Historical
- Fiction: Historical Romance
- Fiction: Holiday
- Fiction: Horror
- Fiction: Humor
- Fiction: Inspiration
- Fiction: Juvenile
- Fiction: Legal
- Fiction: Literary
- Fiction: Mainstream
- Fiction: Metaphysical
- Fiction: Middle Grade
- Fiction: Military
- Fiction: Mystery
- Fiction: Mythology Based
- Fiction: Native American
- Fiction: Noir Fiction: Fantasy
- Fiction: Paranormal
- Fiction: Parent Help
- Fiction: Politics
- Fiction: Preteens
- Fiction: Psychological Thriller
- Fiction: Regional
- Fiction: Romance
- Fiction: Romance Paranormal
- Fiction: Romantic Comedy
- fiction: Romantic Suspense
- Fiction: Satire
- Fiction: Sci Fi
- Fiction: Sci-Fi
- Fiction: Science Fiction
- Fiction: Science Fiction/
- Fiction: Science Fiction/Fantasy
- Fiction: Short Stories
- Fiction: Short Story Collection
- Fiction: Sociological
- Fiction: Spiritual
- Fiction: Sports
- Fiction: Supernatural
- Fiction: Suspense
- Fiction: Thriller
- Fiction: Tolerance
- Fiction: Translation
- Fiction: Tween Fantasy
- Fiction: Urban Fantasy
- Fiction: Western
- Fiction: Women's
- Fiction: YA
- Fiction: Young Adult
- Fictional Memoir
- Folk Tales
- Foreword Reviews
- Fran Lewis (reviewer)
- frances lynn
- francine silverman
- frank creed
- frank finley (reviewer)
- free book events
- Free Books
- Front Street (Reviews)
- G. L. Helm
- Gayle Trent
- gene garrison
- george w. bush
- geralyn beauchamp
- Geri Ahearn (reviewer)
- getting book reviews
- getting reviews
- Gilgamesh (link)
- Glenda A Bixler
- Golden Ass (link)
- Golden Perils Press
- gordon durich
- Grasping for the Wind (Reviews)
- great first impression book proposal
- Great Little Last-Minute Editing Tips for Writers
- guardian angel publishing
- Guest Blog
- guest post
- guy t. viskniski
- gwen austin
- hani bathis
- Happily Ever After (review site)
- Harmony (publisher)
- harry potter
- heather froeschal
- Hebrew Bible (link)
- heidi martinuzzi
- Heinemann (Publisher)
- Henry Shreve
- holiday Gifts
- Holiday Poetry
- Holiday Reading
- Holly Connors (reviewer)
- Hopewell Publications
- howard hopkins
- Huffington Post (review publisher)
- Humor
- Iliad (link)
- Independent Press (Reviews)
- Independent Publisher (reviews)
- Indian
- Indie authors
- Infinity Publishing
- interpreting reviews
- interviews
- irene tsai
- irene watson
- It Books (publisher)
- iUniverse (Publishers)
- j.d. vine publications
- j.k.rowling
- j.m. sample
- jacque graham (reviewer)
- jada press
- james a cox
- James Cann
- james joyce
- jamieson wolf
- janet elaine smith
- janet goliger
- janet m. perry
- jared d. vineyard
- jean campion
- jeannette walls
- jeffrey st. clair
- jeisea
- Jennifer Poulter (reviewer)
- jewish novel
- jigwaw press
- jill lublin
- Jim Cox Editor
- jim hightower
- jo beverley
- joanne hirase-stacey (reviewer)
- john bell
- john f. nienstedt
- john kane
- John Milton (link)
- john ottinger
- john robinson
- john rosenman
- jon f. baxley
- journaling
- joyce anthony
- joyce faulkner
- joyce handzo
- Joyce White (reviewer)
- judi silva (reviewer)
- judith woolcock colombo
- julia hayden
- julie lessman
- june casagrande
- K. J. Johnson (reviewer)
- karen h. sherman
- karen lawrence
- karina fabian
- karole edwards
- kathe gogolewski
- kathleen gage
- Kathy Quan
- Katie Hines (reviewer)
- Keepers Press (audio book publisher)
- Kelly Klepfer (reviewer)
- Kensington (Publisher)
- kevin gerard
- kevin scott collier (illustrator)
- kimberly richards
- kindle
- kindle select
- Kirkus (Review Journal)
- kitty burns florey
- KSJE (Writers' Programming)
- Kunati
- L. Boyer (reviewer)
- l. levy
- la times festival of books
- Lady Book Notes (Reviews)
- laila lalami
- latonya franklin
- laura caldwell
- laura whitcomb
- laurel johnson
- lea schizas
- lennox raphael
- lenora smalley
- leora krygier
- leslie heidle
- lettetia
- Levant Distributor
- lewis carroll
- Liberal Opinion Week
- Library Journal (Reviews)
- linda ballou
- linda merlino
- linda weaver clarke
- Linda Wisniewski
- Lindsay Digneo (reviewer)
- Lisa E. Ruedemann
- literary journals
- liz cosline
- Long Tail Publishing
- loren gruber
- lori e scott
- lost hills books
- LoverRomanceandMore (review site)
- loving healing press
- luann morgan (reviewer)
- Lucky Press LLC
- Lulu (Reviews)
- Lulu Press
- Luxury Ready (reviewer)
- lynn truss
- Lynne Welch (reviewer)
- Lyrical Press
- m.l.bushman
- MaAnna Stephenson
- magdalena ball
- main street rag (publisher)
- margaret cole
- margaret fieland
- margot e finke
- Marianne Paul (reviewer)
- marie campbell
- Marie-Thérèse Browne
- mark chitty
- mark steisel
- marquette books
- marsha mott jordan
- marshall trimble
- martha ronk
- Mary Aycock
- Mary Benn
- mary cunningham
- Mary Therese Burns-DeFrancesco (reviewer)
- Maryanne Raphael
- Matt Lehr (reviewer)
- may lattanzio
- mayra calvani
- mayyanne raphael
- mcgraw hill
- media releases
- melissa meeks
- melissa meeks (reviewer)
- melynda gascoyne
- michael levy
- Michael mathew
- michell e. sutton
- Michelle Dunn (reviewer)
- michelle hufford
- midwest book review
- military writers society of america
- mindy Philips lawrence
- Mindy Philips Lawrence (publisher)
- Morgan James Publishing
- morgan st. james
- mother daughter club radio
- Mother's Day
- Mother's Day Reading
- msnbc
- mundania press
- Murder Takes the Cake
- Myrmidon Books (Publisher)
- myrna lou goldbaum
- MyShelf Top 10 Reads
- NAL/Penguin (publisher)
- nance rosen
- Nannette Croce (reviewer)
- new orleans times-picayune
- New York Book Cafe (review site)
- nicole williams
- nightengale press
- nikki leigh
- nina osier
- nolend p. dougan (reviewer)
- Nonfcition: Humor
- Nonfcition: Sci-Fi
- Nonficition
- Nonficition: Workbook
- Nonfiction
- nonfiction business
- Nonfiction:
- Nonfiction: Abuse
- Nonfiction: America
- Nonfiction: Animals
- Nonfiction: Anthology
- Nonfiction: Archaeology
- Nonfiction: Arts
- Nonfiction: Autobiography
- Nonfiction: Beauty
- Nonfiction: Biography
- Nonfiction: Book Marketing
- Nonfiction: Business
- Nonfiction: Businesss
- Nonfiction: Celebrity
- Nonfiction: Chicklit
- Nonfiction: Children's
- nonfiction: Christian
- Nonfiction: Cooking
- Nonfiction: Craft
- Nonfiction: Creative Nonfiction
- Nonfiction: Culture
- Nonfiction: Diet
- Nonfiction: Economics
- Nonfiction: Editing
- Nonfiction: Education
- Nonfiction: Emigrants
- nonfiction: entrepreneur
- Nonfiction: Environment
- Nonfiction: Essay: Endorsement
- Nonfiction: Essays
- Nonfiction: Family
- Nonfiction: Feminist
- Nonfiction: Finance
- Nonfiction: Food
- Nonfiction: Gay/Lesbian
- Nonfiction: Grammar
- Nonfiction: Healing
- Nonfiction: Health and Fitness
- Nonfiction: History
- Nonfiction: History/Military
- Nonfiction: How-To
- Nonfiction: Humor
- Nonfiction: Inspiration
- Nonfiction: Investments
- Nonfiction: Language
- Nonfiction: Legal
- Nonfiction: LGBT
- Nonfiction: Literary
- Nonfiction: Literary Criticism
- Nonfiction: Management
- Nonfiction: Marketing
- nonfiction: Meditation
- Nonfiction: Memoir
- Nonfiction: Military
- Nonfiction: Motivational
- Nonfiction: Narrative
- Nonfiction: New Age
- nonfiction: Outdoor
- Nonfiction: Parenting
- Nonfiction: Philosophy
- Nonfiction: Photography
- Nonfiction: Political
- Nonfiction: Politics
- Nonfiction: Professional
- Nonfiction: Professional/Acting
- Nonfiction: Professional/Nursing
- Nonfiction: Professional/Writers
- nonfiction: psychic
- Nonfiction: Psychology
- Nonfiction: Publishing
- Nonfiction: Publishing/Reading Trends
- Nonfiction: Reference
- Nonfiction: Relationships
- Nonfiction: Religion
- Nonfiction: Religion and Science
- Nonfiction: Retailing
- Nonfiction: Retirement
- Nonfiction: Romance
- Nonfiction: Science
- Nonfiction: Self-Help
- Nonfiction: Sex
- Nonfiction: Short Stories
- Nonfiction: Social Networks
- Nonfiction: Sociological
- Nonfiction: Spanish
- Nonfiction: Speaking
- Nonfiction: Spiritual
- Nonfiction: Spirituality
- Nonfiction: Stocks
- Nonfiction: Teachers Texts
- Nonfiction: Tech
- Nonfiction: Teens
- Nonfiction: Transcendental
- Nonfiction: Travel
- Nonfiction: Western
- Nonfiction: Women's
- Nonfiction: Writers
- Nonfiction: Young Adult
- Nonfiction: Young Adult Nonfiction: How-To
- nonfiction:children's
- Nonfiction:Professional/Marketing
- Norm Goldman (reviewer)
- Odyssey (link)
- olivera baumgartner
- Olivera Bumgartner (reviewer)
- outskirts press
- pam kelly
- Parent's Choice (reviews)
- pat mccain
- Pattie Caprio (Illustrator)
- Paul T. Vogel (reviewer)
- paul wagner
- penguin press
- Pentales (Reviews)
- Perigree Trade (publisher)
- permalinks
- peter baird
- phyllice bradner
- Picture Book: Children
- piers anthony
- Piers Watson (reviewer)
- pipers ash ltd (publisher)
- pitches
- Pneuma Springs Publishing
- poetru
- poetry
- Poetry Christmas
- poetry marketing
- Poetry Nature
- Poetry Nostalgic
- poetry promotion
- poetry reading
- Poetry Science
- Poetry: Children's
- Poetry: Earth Day
- Poetry: Environment
- Poetry: Feminist
- Poetry: Love
- Poetry: Seniors
- Poetry: Spituality
- Poetry: Women's
- Point of Life (Publisher)
- polish heritage
- Pretty-Scary Reviews
- promoting your reviews
- promotoing the review of your book
- publish america
- publishing trends
- Pulp Fiction Reviews
- query letters
- Quest Books (Publisher)
- Quill Dippper (Reviews)
- quote
- r. thomas berner
- raff ellis
- rainbow reviews
- Raja Krishnan (reviewer)
- Raja N. Krishnan (reviewer)
- Random House Publishing Group
- ravenhawk books
- Reader Views (Reviews)
- Readers Favorite (Review Site)
- reading
- reading lists
- rebecca jones
- Rebeccas Reads (Reviews)
- Red Engine Press
- regina huelman
- Revell Press
- review sites
- Review Your Book (review site)
- reviews
- Rhonda Carver (reviewer)
- richard bangs
- richard blake
- rick r reed
- rita hestand (reviewer)
- Riverheron Publishing
- Robert Frost
- Robert Medak (reviewer)
- Robert Nott (reviewer)
- robert relyea
- robert Schwartz
- robert w. kelleman
- roberta summers
- Rocky Mountain News (Review)
- Romance Junkies (Reviews)
- romance junkies reviews
- Romance: Contemporary
- Romance: Histroical
- Romancing the Book (review site)
- romantic times
- ron berry
- Ron Fortier (reviewer)
- ron richards
- Rusty Beans (reviewer)
- ruth hartman
- ruth montgormery
- s.k.hamilton
- sabra brown steinsiek
- San Francisco Bay Press
- Sany Lender (reviewer)
- sarah moore (reviewer)
- sarah wilborn
- Scarletta Press
- scoliosis
- scott shuker
- Scribner (Publisher)
- seasonal books
- Shakespeare (link)
- shannon yarbrough
- sharon lee willing
- Sheaf House Publishers
- shel horowitz
- Shire Press
- shirley johnson
- Signet (Publishers)
- silverjack publishing
- Slipdown Mountain Publications (Publisher)
- Something Hot Communication (publisher)
- speaking
- spinetinglers publishing
- Spirit Connection
- Stacey Bucholz
- Standard Publishing
- star publish
- StarPublish
- Stephanie Boyd (reviewer)
- SterlingHouse Publisher
- StoryCircleBookReviews (review site)
- Sumerside Press
- Summer Reads
- sunstone press
- susan larson
- Susan Marya Baronof (reviewer)
- susan tberghien
- suzanne lummis
- suzette jamison
- Sword of the Spirit Publishing
- Tales2Inspire Reviews
- talk radio
- Tara Hopkins (reviewer)
- tats publishing
- Taylor Smith (reviewer)
- Taylors Book Thoughts (review site)
- tcm reviews
- Tell Me Press
- Terence Ward (reviewer)
- Terrace Books (publisher)
- terri marie
- Terry Whalin
- texana publishing
- The Beacon Bridge (publisher)
- The Book Pedler (Reviews)
- the frugal book promoter
- the frugal editor
- The Kids Book Connection (reviews)
- The Reading Tub (Reviews
- the romance reader
- The Romance Studio (Reviews)
- The Smoking Poety (Reviews)
- ThinkaHa Books (reviewer)
- Thorndike (publisher)
- Three Rivers Press
- tim lasiuta
- Tim Miller (reviewer)
- tina avon
- Tina Carlson (reviewer)
- toby frost
- toby press
- todd fonseca
- tolerance
- tony hillerman
- Total Recall Publications
- traci-jane
- tradeshows
- Translations
- Treble Heart BooksReview
- Tri-Studio (Reviews)
- Tribute Books (publisher)
- Twilight Times (Publisher)
- Tyndale House (publishers)
- UCLA Writers' Program
- usiku (Poet)
- using reviews
- v.i. naipaul
- Valentine's Poetry
- Valentine's Reading
- valerie connelly
- velda brotherton
- Vicki Thomas
- Victor J. Banis (reviewer)
- Virtual Bookworm (Publisher)
- Visual Impressions Publishing
- Vivek Chaturvedi (Reviewer)
- Vixen's Daily Reads
- walter brasch
- War
- warren thurston
- wendy cleveland
- Wesley Britton (reviewer)
- Wesley Britton (Reviewer)
- western reflections publishing
- whisky creek press
- Wildside Press
- Will Gabbett (reviewer)
- william cooper
- winton churchill
- Woman in the Moon (Publisher)
- Women's Day
- Write Words (Publisher)
- Writer's Digest Books
- Writers Cafe Press
- writers conferences
- Writers' Education
- Writing
- writing reviews
- Xulon Press
- yvonne perry
- zinta aistars
- zogby
- Zonderkids (publisher)
- zumaya publications
Powered by Blogger.