


A'Dorian Reid, author of "The Nest"
Wrongfully convicted of a horrifically violent crime, Elliot is left to rot in prison—until a mysterious, elite family he’s never met reveals a shocking connection. Thrust into a world of power, manipulation, and buried secrets, he finds himself a pawn in a game he never agreed to play.
As society unravels around him, Elliot must confront the truth about his past and the people who claim him by blood. The Nest is a dark, gripping tale of survival, identity, and the fight to rise above betrayal in a world where nothing is what it seems.
Jemel Williams author of "Poems with No Glass Shield in Twenty Fifteen"
Poems With No Glass Shield In Twenty Fifteen features upbeat tempo literature that one's thoughts afloat. The style Jemel Williams emanates is from his educational background and his love for music. Poetry is not written to offend any sort of reader who wants to pick up the book, but it is written to show the reader there are more ways to write using the combination of fiction, non-fiction, literature, auto-biography and biography, etc...


Connie Zakowski, author of "Caterpillars to Moths: The Metamorphosis Stages"
Connie Zakowski has been studying and collecting insects for over 60 years. From her studies and rearing different species of insects, she has been compiling photographic material of her knowledge.
Caterpillars to Moths is the first book of the series. Connie believes the metamorphosis stages are so unique she wanted to share her information to others. She hopes the reader will find this as fascinating as she has, maybe in hopes of individuals witnessing these stages of life from their own eyes.
Connie wishes those who do this endeavor of raising caterpillar good luck at witnessing the four stages.
Jeffrey Snyder author of "Snyder's Baseball/Softball Scorebook"
The official game record is the holy grail of baseball/softball stats, meticulously chronicling every pitch, swing, and slick defensive move. During the heat of the game, it’s the go-to source to figure out who’s up next, count the pitcher’s throws, and track the case runners’ dance around the diamond. Post-game, it transforms into a number cruncher’s dream, spitting out player and team stats faster than a fastball.


C.L. Armerding, author of "Steampunk Edo"
Edo was a Japanese city that rose to power during a time of samurai and endless war. In an alternate timeline, Edo also had steam-based technology centuries ahead of its time. Samurai tamed the land with swords and firearms while flying machines ruled the skies. Yokai also were an everyday reality. Whether they were magical animals, spirits of nature, or fearsome creatures, yokai came in all forms, working their magic in the outer fringes of Edo. All of Edo’s people and yokai were under the thumb of a warlord named Tokugawa.
To a teenage girl named Yuzu, she lived far away on an island, only learning about Edo’s technology and yokai through stories. Then one day, a chance encounter made her the target of a shape-shifting fox named Tao, and she needed to escape to Edo. During her time there, Yuzu made friends with the yokai, but tensions escalated when Tokugawa made life worse for them. What began as an escape from Tao’s wrath became an even deadlier fight for survival. Yuzu’s only hope was to unite the various species of Edo to stop a war between machines and yokai.
Joe Wimberly author of "In Search of What is So"
In Search of What Is So is a heartfelt spiritual reflection inspired by the transformative power of Scripture. After reading the Bible in its entirety, author Joe Wimberly experienced a profound awakening, his eyes opened to a deeper spiritual truth and a renewed relationship with Jesus Christ. With urgency and compassion, he invites readers to consider the state of our world today and turn to the Gospel for guidance, healing, and salvation. Drawing on passages like Ephesians 6:2–3 and Micah 7:6, Wimberly challenges us to search for what is truly real, eternal, and divinely inspired.


Stephanie Collins, author of "Sarcasm is a Dragon's Best Friend"
Gemini, a young Ginger dragon, is the odd one out in his family. He’s given rules to follow that don’t apply to his siblings, and, when he breaks a rule, his mother punishes him. He fights back in defense, nearly killing her. His father exiles him from the nest, forcing him to fend for himself for the first time.
Not long after leaving the nest, Gemini crosses a witch, is cursed to live as a human, and in his wandering gets enslaved by guards from a kingdom notorious for their cruelty toward males.
Three years later, their queen, irritated by him, sells him to a neighboring kingdom where he’s trapped in a different form of service: kinghood. With enemies everywhere, all Gemini wants is to break his curse and regain his scales.
Randy L. Quinn author of "Garden of Eden"
Garden of Eden tells the story of Bryan Jennings, a high school history teacher who stumbles upon a talking house, a house that reveals hidden clues to the assassination of William McKinley. In the process of exploring the house, Bryan falls in love with Hannah Hobart, a young woman who grew up thinking the house was haunted. With the help of the house, Bryan and Hannah discover more secrets about their small town of Eden, New York.


Ernest McCarty Jr., author of "Paintings by Ernest McCarty Jr."
This book is a collection of 40 paintings, all expressions of the artist's flaws. Ernest McCarty Jr. considers art his form of therapy and has learned through his decades of painting that ‘perfection’, is the enemy of ‘good’.
Connor C. Quantrell, author of "Murder in the Making"
Murder in the Making is not meant to solve love’s mystery, nor to say that in reading this novel it will psyche you, the reader, into successfully dealing with disorders apparently sensitive to forces beyond the physical world. Not at all.
This novel’s contents is meant only for the reader to psychoanalyze the experience of the individuals in the story and dream analyze or imagine their associations to people dealing with disorders collectively in the real world, and realize the story’s content could assert equivalent circumstances as a prelude to the inevitable interaction between.

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