Fascinating Authors

Book Review: Deadly Codes by JP O’Donnell

JP O’Donnell has provided a romp through a modern-day combined world of international and underworld intrigue that the reader will find difficult to put down.

Book Review: Running Away From Me by David Allan Reeves

Running Away From Me, although not a pleasant book, is an interesting read as it graphically presents the roller coaster ride of a drug addict as he pursues a gradual progression in his habit, and describes the dire results to the individual and his family.

Book review: H.E.A.V.E.N. by Nan Becklean

I believe Nan Becklean has set forth a most interesting look at a possible future scenario that our enlightened congress probably will wish to ponder.

Book review: Our Hart, Elegy for a Concubine by Lloyd Lofthouse

Lloyd Lofthouse has written a follow-up to his multiple award winning My Splendid Concubine, that would seem destined to follow its predecessor in acclaim.

Book Review: The Way of Forgiveness by D. Patrick Miller

D. Patrick Miller has written a simple text on forgiveness that includes many platitudes. However, it no doubt will find an interested audience among a number of readers.

Book Review: Celebrate Christmas & Celebrate You by Lynn Jericho

This is a book that will provide much to think about when celebrating this time of year that provides so much joy, and yet so much melancholia, for so many people.

Book Review: Site 39, Blue Orb by Otis V. Goodwin III

Book Review by John H. Manhold SITE 39, BLUE ORB by Otis V. Goodwin III ISBN 9781419699375, Paperback, 224 pages Mr. Goodwin, in his author’s forward, explains that he once had wished to write something in the nature of Tom Sawyer & Huckleberry Finn in Space or Through Space to Mars, type of books. It [...]

Book Review: The LIFEQUAKE Phenomenon by Toni Galardi, Ph.D.

I believe The LIFEQUAKE Phenomenon is a must read for anyone experiencing a lifetime change.

Book Review: The Youngest Son, Memoirs from the Motherland by Oreste LeRoy Salerni

Oreste LeRoy Salerni has provided in part a travelogue, and in part an abundance of stories and descriptions too numerous to mention, that contain interesting, and some very amusing, narratives of the contrasting way of life lived by today’s inhabitants of Italy and those of the United States.

Book Review: ISSA, The Greatest Story Never Told by Lois Drake

ISSA is an interestingly presented postulation on what easily could have occurred during those early ‘lost’ years of the life of Jesus of Nazareth. Arrival of this fascinating volume at this time of year might also be considered as most appropriate.