Buy this book on Amazon The tides of turbulence in teens “She has this air about her like she knows she’s special, and maybe it’s because she resembles famous literary read more
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Recipe for a Perfect Wife by Karma Brown
Buy this book on Amazon Far from the modern wife . . . or is it? “ . . . the hardest question we have to ask read more
The Magnolia Sisters by Michelle Major
Finding Family and Romance in a Quaint Town Avery Keller is a woman scorned by love and a father she never knew, shows up in the read more
Eating the Sun by Ella Frances Sanders
Satisfy the craving to buy the book. A Feast of Celestial Information What starts as an examination of the sun and its role, becomes an entertaining and informative contemplation on read more
The Hole by Hye-Young Pyun
Bury the hatchet and buy the book. Digging yourself into a hole for life. “Life itself was merely an accumulation of failures, and those failures never made life read more
Sugar Crush by Richard P. Jacoby and Raquel Baldelomar
Crushing sweet self-destruction “We love sugar; a spoonful of it makes anything go down.” ~Sugar Crush This no-nonsense book busts myths about the true causes of many diseases with its read more
The Sanatorium by Sarah Pearse
Buy this book on Amazon.com Head games in a hotel that was once an Alpine sanatorium. “Digging up the past, especially with this place, you’ll send yourself mad. read more
One Charmed Christmas by Sheila Roberts
A truly charming Weihnachtsmarkt for romance for lovers of travel. “German pastries are the best, trust me. Just think Amsterdam, Heidelberg, men in lederhosen.” A European river cruise at Christmastime read more
Confucius Jane by Katie Lynch – a review
A romance and relationship between two very different women blossoms in NYC Chinatown. “Jane felt Chinatown encircle her, simultaneously embracing and threatening. Tiny stores were crammed next to and read more
Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz – a review
A delicious mystery within a mystery. “Everything in life has a pattern and a coincidence is simply the moment when that pattern becomes briefly visible.” ― Anthony Horowitz, Moonflower Murders read more