Review: Solitude by Sebastian JC

Synopsis:

A young girl lives her day-to-day life in a post-apocalyptic world, confined entirely within the crumbling remains of an old church—the last refuge for a small band of survivors. She is the only child among them, and the wasteland beyond remains a mystery, known only through her daydreams and fleeting glimpses through boarded-up windows and broken towers.
Her story begins with the unexpected death of a fellow survivor—the first loss she has ever known. As grief ripples through the group, their fragile sense of safety begins to fray. Through the girl’s eyes, we see the adults around her struggle to maintain a semblance of normal life and offer her something like a true childhood, even as the dangers of the outside world press ever closer.
Solitude is a novella about found family, survival, and loss, seen through the eyes of a young girl as she tries to understand and come to terms with a world that is ultimately too big, too dangerous, and too indifferent.

Favorite Lines:

“Her world was larger up here; there was more room for possibility and imagination.”

“It was the forever part that was hard to handle. the permanence of it. The idea that someone she had known her whole life, who was always there, was gone. It was hard to think about it. Maybe this is the weight that everyone was feeling all the time. The weight of people being gone, of their lives being different forever.”

“And then she noticed it. Illuminated perfectly in the twilight, the smallest bit of green. A green that she had only seen in books and old pictures.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Sebastian JC’s Solitude follows a young girl growing up in the ruins of a church after societal collapse, where a small group of survivors struggles to endure hunger, grief, and the dangers of the outside world. Told through her observant and reflective perspective, the novel highlights the fragile dynamics of a chosen family, the cycles of daily survival, and the weight of loss.

What surprised me most about Solitude is how intimate the story feels despite its post-apocalyptic setting. It would be easy for a novel like this to lean heavily on destruction and despair, but instead, JC builds the world around one young girl’s perspective, grounding the collapse of society in the quiet moments of her everyday life. From her perch in the ruined church steeple to her careful observations of the makeshift family she lives with, the novel is less about explosions and chaos and more about survival through relationships, memory, and the fragile bonds that hold people together.

The writing style is deliberate and unhurried, mirroring the rhythms of camp life. Long passages describe the girl’s walks through ruined hallways, her habit of counting steps, or the way dust filters through stained glass. This might sound slow, but it works; the detail makes you feel like you’re inhabiting her world, and it underscores how, in a life defined by scarcity, attention to small things is survival itself. You begin to see the church and its ruins as she does: not just broken stone and wood, but a place mapped in memory, danger, and imagination.

I also appreciated how the book weaves grief into its structure. The loss of Jav early on is not a plot twist but a weight that echoes through every chapter. Each character absorbs it differently—John through silence and illness, Sandra through relentless caretaking, and the girl through restless wandering and reflection. JC shows how in survival, grief is never private; it seeps into the entire group, shaping decisions, tensions, and fleeting moments of tenderness.

At times, the book risks feeling repetitive—another patrol, another climb, another whispered conversation in the ruins—but I came to see that repetition as intentional. The girl’s world is claustrophobic, defined by cycles of watchfulness and waiting. That narrow focus made the rare bursts of danger or connection stand out all the more. By the end, what lingered with me wasn’t the bleakness of the world outside but the fragile hope inside: the idea that even in ruin, meaning is built in relationships, in ritual, and in holding onto stories of who we are.

Summary:

Overall, Solitude blends post-apocalyptic tension with quiet, detailed storytelling. It becomes less about destruction and more about memory, resilience, and the search for belonging in a fractured world. If you like post-apocalyptical sci-fi and coming-of age stories, then this book could be for you. Happy reading!

Check out Solitude here!


Review: How Deep is the Wound by Antonieta Contreras

Synopsis:

Finally, a Clear Path Through the Confusion of Modern Trauma Language

If you’ve ever wondered whether your struggles “count” as trauma, felt overwhelmed by conflicting mental health advice, or questioned why some healing approaches work for others but not for you—this book offers the clarity you’ve been seeking. Today’s mental health conversations have reduced the rich complexity of human suffering into a single box labeled “trauma,” used for both devastating life-altering experiences and everyday disappointments—a confusion that serves no one well. This tendency leaves people either minimizing genuine injuries or pathologizing normal life challenges.

Antonieta Contreras introduces an approach that distinguishes different types of psychological wounds based on their actual depth and impact on your nervous system. Drawing from years of clinical practice, extensive research, and personal recovery, she provides the missing understanding to accurately assess your experiences and match them with effective strategies.

You’ll discover the differences between:

  • Emotional Pain: Hurts that sting but don’t fundamentally alter your system
  • Emotional Wounds: Deeper impacts that linger after the initial hurt
  • Traumatization: The active process of seeking safety
  • Trauma: Deep injuries that rewire how you perceive the world

Learn why using a hammer for surgery or a scalpel for construction both create problems—and how matching your healing approach to your actual wound depth accelerates recovery while preventing unnecessary suffering.

Discover how to honor your pain without being defined by it, moving from identity-based labels toward agency-focused growth that reclaims your power to heal and thrive. This book examines how your unique nervous system responds to overwhelm.

Real-World Applications

  • Assess childhood experiences accurately without minimizing or catastrophizing
  • Recognize trauma bonding and attachment wounds that keep you from living fully
  • Understand why some relationships feel impossible to leave
  • Navigate narcissistic abuse and emotional manipulation
  • Distinguish between healthy processing and rumination that reinforces pain
  • Build genuine resilience based on nervous system regulation

This book is for:

  • Anyone confused about whether their experiences constitute “trauma”
  • People who’ve tried multiple healing approaches without lasting results
  • Individuals stuck in cycles of pain, insecurity, lack of motivation or satisfaction, or relationship difficulties
  • Those seeking to understand childhood experiences and their adult impact
  • Anyone wanting to move beyond victim identity toward empowered recovery
  • Mental health professionals seeking more nuanced assessment tools and practical exercises for their clients

When you understand the actual depth of your wounds, you can choose interventions that match their severity. This prevents both under-treatment that leaves you unresolved and over-treatment that creates unnecessary pathology. You will spend less time on ineffective approaches and focus your energy on strategies that are effective for your specific situation.

This book avoids both toxic positivity and victim mentality, acknowledging real suffering while emphasizing human capacity for growth and adaptation. Learn to work with your nervous system’s intelligence rather than against it. You’ll finish with practical tools for regulation, boundaries, and building the safety your system needs to thrive.

Stop wondering if your pain is “enough” to deserve attention. Learn to honor your experiences and discover what it means to finally feel yourself again. Transform your relationship with your own story and step into the clarity, agency, and hope that effective healing provides.

Favorite Lines:

“Your pain isn’t as permanent as it feels, and your potential for transformation is greater than you’ve been told.”

“In truth, healing from trauma doesn’t erase your most significant traits; it simply gives you the freedom to choose how you’ll respond instead of being run by harmful reactions.”

“I believe healing ripples outward in ways we can barely imagine.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

What struck me first about How Deep is the Wound? is how directly it speaks to a cultural moment we’re living through. Everywhere you look—on social media, in everyday conversations, even among children—you hear the word “trauma” tossed around casually. Contreras doesn’t dismiss the pain behind those words, but she challenges the reflex to label every difficult experience as traumatic. That nuance is refreshing. Too often, books about emotional pain fall into one of two camps: either they minimize suffering or they overpathologize it. This book carves out a thoughtful middle space.

I appreciated how practical the writing felt without losing its warmth. Contreras weaves clinical knowledge with relatable metaphors—likening emotions to a child tugging at their mother’s arm until they escalate into a tantrum if ignored. She grounds her points in both neuroscience and lived experience, yet never drifts into inaccessible jargon. Reading it felt less like being lectured to and more like being accompanied by someone who has walked alongside many others on similar journeys.

Another strength is the book’s insistence on adaptation as a concept alongside resilience. That idea—that we aren’t just built to “bounce back” but to actively adjust and grow through challenges—stuck with me long after I put the book down. It reframes emotional pain not as proof of damage but as evidence that our systems are trying to reorganize and teach us something. In a world that rewards quick fixes and tidy labels, this felt like a radical but necessary reminder.

Of course, not every reader will agree with Contreras’s critique of “trauma culture.” Some might feel that drawing distinctions between trauma and emotional wounds risks invalidating their struggles. But I think that’s where the book’s heart really lies: in showing that recognizing the spectrum of emotional pain doesn’t diminish suffering—it clarifies it. For me, the takeaway was hopeful rather than minimizing: our wounds may run deep, but they are not all catastrophic, and understanding the difference is itself empowering.

Summary:

Overall, Antonieta Contreras’s How Deep is the Wound?  blends clinical expertise with accessible storytelling to help readers understand the spectrum of emotional pain—ranging from everyday struggles to deep trauma—and argues that distinguishing between them is key to healing. By challenging the overuse of trauma language while offering practical exercises and compassionate guidance, Contreras reframes pain as a sign of our innate adaptability rather than evidence of brokenness, ultimately encouraging readers to approach their wounds with clarity, agency, and hope.

Check out How Deep is the Wound? here!


 

Review: Finding Destiny by Aliyah Hastings

Synopsis:

The truth is hidden in plain sight, and the answers will cost her everything.

Tara has spent her life chasing the truth, the mystery of her father’s death, and the secrets buried with him. But when she is torn from her quiet existence and thrust into the heart of Velmora, a city consumed by a malevolent presence, she stumbles into something ancient.

What she thought was a simple pursuit of truth was only the beginning. Each revelation unveils a deeper layer of deceit. And when a sacred ceremony ends in bloodshed, Tara is forced to flee. But running is not enough. The Queen is rising, and her influence is rapidly expanding; even the heavens aren’t safe.

The world is teetering on the brink. What’s she going to do?

Favorite Lines:

“Another day dawned, indifferent to my feelings, a quiet statement.”

“Love makes you do weird things.”

“I didn’t heal, not yet. But I sat. I breathed. And for now, that was enough.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Aliyah Hastings’ Finding Destiny is a lush, imaginative coming-of-age tale wrapped in fantasy’s shimmer and shadow. From the very first pages, the novel strikes a balance between aching nostalgia and the thrill of stepping into an unknown world. It opens quietly, with a young woman caught between memory and longing, but soon tumbles into an adventure threaded with myth, family secrets, and a search for belonging.

What makes this story stand out is its lyrical detail. Hastings lingers on sensory moments—the warmth of sunlight breaking through curtains, the sting of stepping on a seashell, the whisper of air inside a cavern—as if reminding us that destiny isn’t just found in grand revelations but in the small textures of living. Each chapter feels both intimate and cinematic, pulling you from pink-painted bedrooms into cavernous secrets and chateaus that breathe menace.

The heart of the book, though, isn’t just fantasy spectacle—it’s vulnerability. The protagonist’s longing for connection, her memories of lost love, and her search for her place in a fractured world all carry an honesty that feels deeply human. Hastings doesn’t shy away from pain or disappointment, but she always threads hope through the narrative. When the heroine finally realizes that destiny is not about running away but stepping fully into herself, the moment lands with quiet, powerful clarity.

For readers who enjoy fantasy woven with emotion, Finding Destiny is both immersive and poignant. It’s a story about courage, grief, and the possibility of transformation—written with a voice that makes you pause and savor.

Summary:

Overall, Finding Destiny is a beautifully written fantasy about grief, self-discovery, and courage. Poetic detail and heartfelt emotion make this novel linger long after the last page. Happy reading!

Check out Finding Destiny here!


 

Review: Settle Down by Ritt Deitz

Synopsis:

A college kid endowed with hypnotic powers keeps telling himself there’s got to be more waiting for him after graduation than family in the neighborhood and an okay catering job. Maybe he just needs to get his story straight.

Kenny McLuher is far from his native Wisconsin, in his last year at the University of Virginia, majoring in history with no idea what he’s going to do with it. At his catering job, Kenny’s old Southern folktales keep putting his co-workers to sleep, and in Kenny’s dreams President Abraham Lincoln sure seems to be trying to tell him something.

Maybe the pieces will come back together after graduation when Kenny returns to Madison, where he can ask the big question: What is home, anyway?

Favorite Lines:

“Kenny looked out over the pool, unsure what he had expected from this little pilgrimage. His parents had come here once in college, and it had seemed important to them. Kenny had wanted it to mean something to him, too. Sure, the homeless guy would be memorable, and the Orion thing was weirdly coincidental. And there sat Lincoln, belonging to the ages. But when he imagined the president asking him What are you doing here?, Kenny couldn’t think of any answer at all.”

“We so badly want to stay, don’t we? We belong, we stay, we know. And yet things happen, and some of us leave. We just have to go.”

“It looked like a labor of love. Or boredom.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Ritt Deitz’s Settle Down  follows Kenny McLuher, a Wisconsin native in his final year at the University of Virginia, as he grapples with the age‑old question: What is home, anyway? Majoring in history with no clear path beyond graduation, Kenny drifts between lecture halls, late‑night catering shifts, and echoes of Southern folktales he shares—sometimes to the bemusement of his co‑workers. Through Kenny’s gentle humor and restless curiosity, Deitz captures that universal limbo of young adulthood, when every choice feels both urgent and uncertain.

The novel’s heart lies in Kenny’s evolving friendships—especially with Laurent, after a chance encounter by the Yahara River. Laurent’s quick wit and unexpected references to Civil War lore are Kenny’s first introduction to him but certainly not the last. Later in the story, Kenny ends up getting a job at Laurent’s small catering company, which plays a rather large part in Kenny’s life (at least the parts we see in this story). Kenny’s chance encounter with a cryptic stranger, hinting at Orion and otherworldly connections, infuses the story with a subtle magic that mirrors the way history itself can feel uncanny and alive.

Deitz’s writing style is unpretentious and warm, guiding us effortlessly between Kenny’s internal monologue and the vivid campus landscape. The University of Virginia emerges as more than a backdrop—it’s a place steeped in myth and memory, where colonial architecture meets the hum of modern student life. Deitz peppers the narrative with historical allusions—Abraham Lincoln’s unfinished stories, John Wilkes Booth’s shadow—and by doing so, reminds us that every brick and bust on Grounds carries a tale waiting to be rediscovered.

At its core, Settle Down  is a meditation on belonging. Kenny’s Wisconsin roots tug at him even as he finds unexpected comfort in Charlottesville. In Deitz’s hands, the search for “home” becomes both a physical journey—back and forth between Madison and UVA—and an emotional one, as Kenny learns that sometimes the place you’re meant to “settle down” in is less about geography and more about the people who listen when you tell them a story. 

Summary:

Overall, Settle Down is a warm, heartfelt coming-of-age tale about finding home in unexpected places. It’s a quietly triumphant debut that will resonate with anyone who’s ever wondered where they truly belong. Happy reading!

Check out Settle Down here!


 

Review: The Hidden Life by Robert Castle

Synopsis:

The police have just surrounded the hereditary mansion of Gladwynne Biddleton. He has just shot and wounded his security chief, Dominic Kittredge, and killed Dominic’s wife, Theresa. As he watches the siege unfold on TV, historical visions besiege Gladwynne’s mind. By turns he is a B-17 bombardier; an SS officer tasked with burning the bodies of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun; a fugitive pursued by the celebrated Nazi hunter, Simon Wiesenthal; and a co-conspirator in the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg.

Between the television coverage and the pageant in his head, Gladwynne becomes dissociated from what has just actually happened. Fixation on his immediate physical needs and with life in the mansion tend to conceal the enormity of his crime from him. He descends into a narrowing and harrowing spiral of isolation.

Why did he shoot his closest confidant, Dominic? We don’t quite know. But in Dominic’s thirty year diary of serving Gladwynne we begin to find clues. In this chronicle, Dominic recounts the “golden age” of their association, a time when the two men devised a mock nation with Gladwynne as its center. With Dominic’s encouragement, Gladwynne came gradually to conceive of his own physical person as a sovereign state, competing diplomatically with other world states, persistently resisting their efforts to deprive him of his sovereignty. Between the hostile international powers out to get him and the police now at his door, will Gladwynne’s confusion become total?

Favorite Lines:

“Why bug him? Why not let him alone to pursue what he wanted? Namely, let him READ”

“We labored and bled and often humiliated ourselves for the favor of indifferent masters. I would be no different and, simultaneously, completely different.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Robert Castle’s The Hidden Life is a layered, unsettling novel that fuses courtroom drama, family saga, and psychological study into a narrative that constantly blurs the line between fact and delusion. At its center is Tony (Gladwynne Biddleton IV), a wealthy recluse who retreats into his own sovereign “state” of paranoia, books, and war games—until reality collides with his obsessions in a violent and public way.

The novel begins almost cinematically, with Tony in the cockpit of a bomber, struggling to release his payload—a surreal yet fitting metaphor for the tension between his immense privilege and his inability to act decisively in the world. From there, Castle builds a portrait of a man trapped in the shadow of an old-money dynasty, defined as much by wealth as by decay and scandal. The Biddleton family history, interspersed through news reports and testimony, reads like an American gothic—money, influence, and corruption stitched together with a thread of impunity.

Yet Castle never lets this become just a social critique. At its heart, the novel is about Tony himself, a man both grotesque and oddly sympathetic. His enormous head, described in disturbing detail, sets him apart from childhood, but it’s his obsessive reading, note-taking, and self-imposed isolation that give him dimension. He isn’t simply “the strange kid” who became a killer; he’s someone who tried to find order in chaos through books, chess, and rituals, only to have those coping mechanisms twist into delusions of grandeur.

One of the novel’s strongest features is its structure. Castle moves between Tony’s interior monologues, television commentary, historical flashbacks, and courtroom testimony. This mosaic approach allows the reader to experience the siege at Wolf Chase from multiple angles: Tony as besieged sovereign, the police as hesitant aggressors, and the public as hungry spectators. The testimonies of Bernard Thierry and Dominic Kitteridge—loyal family lawyer and loyal family servant—are especially sharp, exposing the ways in which devotion and dependency warp when tied to immense power.

The Hidden Life is not a straightforward read. At times it feels disorienting, intentionally so—echoing Tony’s fractured sense of reality. But that’s what makes it effective. Castle asks us to consider uncomfortable questions: How much of identity is inherited versus chosen? What do loyalty and servitude look like in the shadow of power? And perhaps most chillingly—when a person hides from the world long enough, do they become hidden even from themselves?

Summary:

Overall, Robert Castle’s The Hidden Life is a dark, ambitious novel that intertwines wealth, madness, and loyalty into a portrait of a man unraveling. Both unsettling and absorbing, it’s a story that lingers long after the final page, not just for what it says about one family, but for what it suggests about the hidden lives we all construct. Happy reading!

Check out The Hidden Life here!


Review: The Boy with the Thorn in His Side by L.J. Robson

Synopsis:

For most of my life, I felt like something was wrong – like I was living with a shadow I couldn’t see, a weight I couldn’t name. My childhood was marked by fear, confusion, and memories that never quite fit together. I knew there were pieces missing, but I never expected the truth to be more terrifying than my worst nightmares.

This is my story. A journey through trauma, survival, and the battle to reclaim my own mind. It’s about the ghosts of the past that never stopped whispering, the questions no one wanted to answer, and the slow unravelling of a reality I had been forced to forget.

Told with raw honesty, The Boy with the Thorn in His Side is not just an account of what happened to me – it’s a testament to resilience, a fight for acceptance, and a message to anyone who has ever felt trapped by their own past.

Sometimes, the truth is the hardest thing to face. But in facing it, we find the strength to break free.

Favorite Lines:

“We were haunted by old ghosts that were just too painful to talk about. It was like an elephant in the room for years when we were together…”

“Like a new green leaf on a tree just gets used to its summer conditions, then it slowly starts to turn to brown with autumn.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Some memoirs feel like quiet confessions, whispered to the reader. The Boy with the Thorn in His Side is not one of those books. Instead, it’s raw, unflinching, and at times gut-punchingly vivid. Robson does not dress up the past or soften the edges—he walks you straight back into his childhood home, sits you down in the living room, and makes you face the darkness right along with him.

What struck me most was the honesty. There’s no attempt to make himself the “perfect survivor” or to tie everything up neatly with a bow. The narrative moves between moments of fragile hope and crushing despair, often with dreamlike sequences that blur memory and trauma. At times it’s unsettling, but that’s what makes it powerful.

Robson’s gift is in the way he captures both the innocence of childhood and the corrosive impact of abuse, poverty, and instability. You feel his joy at football matches and music just as strongly as his dread when violence creeps into the home. It reminded me that memoir doesn’t have to be polished—it has to be true. And this one is brutally, achingly true.

This isn’t a light read. There are nights, addictions, betrayals, and moments of unbearable tension. But there’s also resilience, the bonds of brothers trying to survive together, and the long, slow path of healing. By the end, you feel not only the weight of Robson’s scars but also the strength it takes to write them down.

For readers who appreciate memoirs that don’t hide from the hard stuff—this belongs on your list.

Summary:

Overall, The Boy with the Thorn in His Side is a raw, unfiltered memoir of trauma, resilience, and healing. L. J. Robson takes you into the shadows of his childhood home, unafraid to expose the scars of abuse and the chaos of survival. It’s heavy, often heartbreaking, but threaded with moments of hope and honesty. A difficult yet rewarding read.

Check out The Boy with the Thorn in His Side here!


Monthly Features – August 2025

Hunting the Red Fox by W. Kenneth Tyler, Jr.

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Synopsis: This is the story of Perry Barnes, a multi-talented man who made one bad teenage mistake in the weeks leading up to his high school graduation in 1942. On a lark he “borrowed” some jewelry that wasn’t technically his. The local judge took it personally and gave Perry the choice of an assignment to a newly formed Army special operations unit at the start of World War II or go to jail for 15 years. As a result he winds up being trained by the United States government in the skills and arts of sabotage, killing, self-preservation, espionage and ultimately how to be a first class jewel thief.

Along the way he finds himself in the movie business in the Hollywood of the 1950’s, then uses his immense physical skills in pursuit of excellence as a journeyman golfer on the PGA tour of that era with the likes of Ben Hogan, Jimmy Demaret and Arnold Palmer. Before the adventure is over Perry has stolen the world famous Mecklenburg Diamond from a known jewel thief, worth a fortune, with the intention of returning it to the authorities for love, of all things.

All the while he is befriended by the most bewildering array of characters, some real, some not, who add marvelous vignettes of clever humor, situational intrigue, and steamy romance as he earnestly pursues the one goal he covets most: finding true love, martial companionship and family.

Summary: Overall, Hunting the Red Fox blends memoir-style storytelling with novelistic suspense, leaving readers to weigh for themselves whether Perry Barnes was simply a man with colorful tales or a true “Red Fox” whose life was stranger than fiction. Readers who enjoy historical fiction thrillers full of suspense, espionage, and memoir-style narratives may enjoy this book. 

See the full review here: Hunting the Red Fox
Purchase here


 

Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea by Richard L. Levine

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Synopsis: When they met in the fourth grade, it was love at first sight for Mitchell Brody and Jessica Ramirez. He was the freckle-faced kid who stood up for her honor when he silenced the class bully who’d been teasing her because of her accent. She was the new kid whose family moved to San Juan Island, Washington, from San Juan, Puerto Rico, and whom Mitch had thought was the most beautiful girl in the world.

She was his salvation from a strict upbringing. He was her knight in shining armor who had always looked out for her. Through the many years of porch-swinging, cotton-candied summer nights, autumn harvest festivals, and hand-in-hand walks planning for the ideal life together, they were inseparable…until 9/11, when the real world interrupted their Rockwell-esque small town life, and Mitch had joined the Marine Corps.

This is not just the story of a wounded warrior finally coming home to search for the love, and the world he abandoned twenty years before. It is also the story of a man who is seeking forgiveness and a way to ease the pain caused by every bad decision he’d ever made. It’s the story of a woman who, with strength and determination, rose up from the ashes of a shattered dream; but who never gave up hope that her one true love would return to her. As she once told an old friend: “Even before we met all those years ago, we were destined to be together in this life, and we will be together again, because even today we’re connected in a way that’s very special, and he needs to know about it before one of us leaves this earth.”

Summary: Overall, Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea is a thoughtful, unhurried story about coming home and facing the past you can’t outrun. Richard I. Levine gives us a main character shaped by war, haunted by loss, and pulled back to the San Juan Islands to reckon with love, regret, and responsibility. It’s a novel about memory and forgiveness, written with the patience of the place it inhabits. For readers who appreciate reflective, character-driven fiction rooted in a strong sense of setting, this one lingers like salt air long after you’ve finished the last page. Be ready to cry and happy reading!

See the full review here: Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea
Purchase here


 

Review: Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea by Richard L. Levine

Synopsis:

When they met in the fourth grade, it was love at first sight for Mitchell Brody and Jessica Ramirez. He was the freckle-faced kid who stood up for her honor when he silenced the class bully who’d been teasing her because of her accent. She was the new kid whose family moved to San Juan Island, Washington, from San Juan, Puerto Rico, and whom Mitch had thought was the most beautiful girl in the world.

She was his salvation from a strict upbringing. He was her knight in shining armor who had always looked out for her. Through the many years of porch-swinging, cotton-candied summer nights, autumn harvest festivals, and hand-in-hand walks planning for the ideal life together, they were inseparable…until 9/11, when the real world interrupted their Rockwell-esque small town life, and Mitch had joined the Marine Corps.

This is not just the story of a wounded warrior finally coming home to search for the love, and the world he abandoned twenty years before. It is also the story of a man who is seeking forgiveness and a way to ease the pain caused by every bad decision he’d ever made. It’s the story of a woman who, with strength and determination, rose up from the ashes of a shattered dream; but who never gave up hope that her one true love would return to her. As she once told an old friend: “Even before we met all those years ago, we were destined to be together in this life, and we will be together again, because even today we’re connected in a way that’s very special, and he needs to know about it before one of us leaves this earth.”

Favorite Lines:

“To him, those shadows resembled a life slipping away—a life he felt no more able to grasp and hold on to no more than he could grab and hold on to any one of those shadows—and it abruptly reminded him of one of the last times he saw Alex.”

“I’m hoping if I tell that lie often enough, there’s a chance it could come true.” 

“Haven’t you ever been involved with someone so special that you couldn’t concentrate on anything, or you couldn’t catch your breath no matter how hard you’ve tried? Wasn’t there ever someone who made you feel that you wanted to spend your every waking moment with because maybe, just maybe, there wouldn’t be a tomorrow? That’s what it feels like to me when I’m with her. Sometimes I lie awake at night thinking that time really is running out. Apart from that, when we’re not together I feel lost, like I have no direction, no purpose for being. I feel like…as I once told Jess, like a sailboat that has no rudder or keel…completely at the mercy of the wind and the current.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

Richard I. Levine’s Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea is a quiet novel about coming home, but it’s also about what you carry with you when home isn’t the same place you left. Mitch Brody, a Marine pushed into medical retirement, returns to the San Juan Islands with more questions than answers. He wants to disappear into familiar places—the ferry crossings, the smell of salt air, the memory of an orchard long gone—but the past has other plans. 

What I loved about this book is how ordinary moments are weighted with history. A doctor’s waiting room, a cup of coffee in a ferry galley, a drive down a rural road—Levine makes them feel alive with tension, because Mitch isn’t just moving through space, he’s moving through memory. Ghosts linger here, and not just Alex, the friend whose absence still cuts at him. There’s Jess, the woman he left behind, and the version of himself he can’t quite reconcile.

The writing is unhurried, like the islands themselves. There’s room for silence, for reflection, for scenes to stretch out the way real conversations do. By the end, I found myself rereading the opening lines about ashes on the water, realizing how much weight they’d gathered along the way.

This isn’t a book that hurries to a resolution. It’s a book that asks you to sit with Mitch while he figures out whether forgiveness—his own and others’—is still possible. In the end, like driftwood, he’s shaped by the tides that brought him here, but still moving with them.

Summary:

Overall, Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea is a thoughtful, unhurried story about coming home and facing the past you can’t outrun. Richard I. Levine gives us a main character shaped by war, haunted by loss, and pulled back to the San Juan Islands to reckon with love, regret, and responsibility. It’s a novel about memory and forgiveness, written with the patience of the place it inhabits. For readers who appreciate reflective, character-driven fiction rooted in a strong sense of setting, this one lingers like salt air long after you’ve finished the last page. Be ready to cry and happy reading!

You can find the book trailer here.

Check out Like Driftwood on the Salish Sea here!


 

Review: Hunting the Red Fox by W. Kenneth Tyler Jr.

Synopsis:

This is the story of Perry Barnes, a multi-talented man who made one bad teenage mistake in the weeks leading up to his high school graduation in 1942. On a lark he “borrowed” some jewelry that wasn’t technically his. The local judge took it personally and gave Perry the choice of an assignment to a newly formed Army special operations unit at the start of World War II or go to jail for 15 years. As a result he winds up being trained by the United States government in the skills and arts of sabotage, killing, self-preservation, espionage and ultimately how to be a first class jewel thief.

Along the way he finds himself in the movie business in the Hollywood of the 1950’s, then uses his immense physical skills in pursuit of excellence as a journeyman golfer on the PGA tour of that era with the likes of Ben Hogan, Jimmy Demaret and Arnold Palmer. Before the adventure is over Perry has stolen the world famous Mecklenburg Diamond from a known jewel thief, worth a fortune, with the intention of returning it to the authorities for love, of all things.

All the while he is befriended by the most bewildering array of characters, some real, some not, who add marvelous vignettes of clever humor, situational intrigue, and steamy romance as he earnestly pursues the one goal he covets most: finding true love, martial companionship and family.

Favorite Lines:

“In short, he was both a Man’s Man and a Ladies Man in the old sense of those terms.”

“She was clearly befuddled and exasperated, which caused her face to display the most marvelous oxymoronic look of sensual wholesomeness. I think I was smitten.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.

W. Kenneth Tyler, Jr.’s Hunting the Red Fox is a story that doesn’t just entertain—it invites you to sit down at the table, pour a bourbon, and listen in as secrets are slowly, almost reluctantly, unveiled. What begins as a casual meeting between Roger Mace, an amateur writer and golf enthusiast, and the magnetic Perry Barnes, an aging Southern gentleman with a silky drawl, unfolds into a sweeping tale of love, regret, mischief, and the kind of life you almost can’t believe anyone actually lived.

Tyler has a gift for pacing. Just as you think you’ve settled into a charming yarn about golf in the 1950s, the ground shifts—suddenly you’re in the middle of jewel heists, military intrigue, and confessions that leave you wondering how much of Perry’s story is truth and how much is performance. And that’s the real hook: Perry himself. He’s equal parts con man and philosopher, hustler and gentleman, a character who charms both the reader and his would-be chronicler, Roger.

The book also strikes an interesting balance between humor and weight. One minute you’re laughing at Roger’s painfully awkward attempts at interviewing, and the next you’re drawn into Perry’s memories of loss, survival, and the choices that haunt him even at eighty-two. By the time the so-called “Red Fox” begins to reveal himself, you realize this isn’t just a story about golf or crime or even redemption—it’s about how an ordinary man’s life can intersect with history in the most unexpected ways.

It’s a long, winding tale, but Tyler knows how to keep you listening. Like Roger himself, you come away unsure whether Perry Barnes is telling you the whole truth, but convinced that you’ve been given a gift in hearing his story at all.

Summary:

Overall, Hunting the Red Fox blends memoir-style storytelling with novelistic suspense, leaving readers to weigh for themselves whether Perry Barnes was simply a man with colorful tales or a true “Red Fox” whose life was stranger than fiction. Readers who enjoy historical fiction thrillers full of suspense, espionage, and memoir-style narratives may enjoy this book. Happy reading!

Check out Hunting the Red Fox here!


 

Review: Blessings Abound: Awaken to the Gifts at Hand by Katherine Scherer and Eileen Bodoh

Synopsis:

Blessings truly abound.

With this book, Katherine Scherer and Eileen Bodoh serve as our guides to revealing them, glorifying them, and super-charging them. Drawing upon inner experiences and wisdom, from ancient and contemporary sources, including Native American lore and the Christian Bible, and from a diverse selection of many who have gone before such as Wordsworth, Thoreau, Whitman, Tagore, and others, the authors guide readers as they embark on a journey to discover and appreciate their own inner and outer blessings. With a connection to spirit and their personal divinity, Katherine and Eileen empower readers with the truth, magic, peace, and gratitude inherent in the words.

Discover blessings in human and divine love, in unassumed places, in the natural world, in music, and in our everyday lives. The power and awe of blessings comes forth in waves as the book allows us to realize the unlimited nature of all that we encounter, even aspects of our lives we may think of as painful or trite.

Favorite Lines:

“All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today.”

“Wear gratitude like a cloak and it will feed every corner of your life.”

“Good friends give us a sense of belonging and acceptance.”

“Happiness is a condition of mind not a result of circumstances.”

“People and things do not have the power to make us happy. Happiness is an inside job and each of us is responsible for our own happiness.”

My Opinion:

I received a copy of this book from the authors in exchange for my honest opinion.

From the very first pages of Blessings Abound, readers are invited into a gentle yet profound exploration of gratitude. Scherer and Bodoh structure the book around three clear categories—“Blessings Received,” “Blessings Taken for Granted,” and “Blessings Found in Disguise”—allowing each section to build upon the last as they guide us from noticing simple gifts to embracing life’s hidden lessons. The authors’ shared voice feels warm and companionable, as if sitting across from an old friend over tea, sharing stories meant to uplift and embolden.

The strength of Blessings Abound  lies in its blend of personal reflection and timeless wisdom. Throughout the chapters, the authors interweave spiritual insights, classical quotations, and relatable anecdotes—from the beat of our own hearts to the hush of dawn’s first light. This variety of entry points ensures that every reader, regardless of background or belief, can find a passage that resonates deeply. The writing style is unpretentious but never shallow; each short meditation invites pause and genuine self‑examination.

Equally compelling is the authors’ insistence that even adversity holds blessings in disguise. Rather than offering trite affirmation, they acknowledge life’s hardships—addiction, loss, fear—and then gently reframe them as portals to growth and empathy. This honest approach lends Blessings Abound  an authenticity too often missing from the self‑help genre. 

Visually, the book’s layout—complete with inspirational sidebars, poetic quotes, and an accessible table of contents—makes it easy to dip in for just a few minutes at breakfast or to linger over an entire section in the evening. Whether you’re seeking a daily boost of hope or a deeper map for personal reflection, the book’s modular format means you can follow its ordering or blaze your own trail through individual chapters.

Summary:

Overall, Blessings Abound  is a thoughtfully crafted invitation to rediscover gratitude in every facet of life. Divided into three thematic sections, it moves readers from recognizing everyday gifts to uncovering the silver linings in hardship. Grounded in both spiritual tradition and down‑to‑earth anecdotes, Scherer and Bodoh offer an honest, uplifting companion for anyone wishing to cultivate a more grateful, resilient heart. Whether read cover to cover or explored in short bursts, this book reminds us that blessings truly do abound—if only we awaken to receive them. Happy reading!

Check out Blessings Abound: Awaken to the Gifts at Hand here!