
About the book, The Rise of the Mad March Genre: New Adult / Coming of Age / Friendship Publisher: Stoney Creek Publishing Pages: 374 Publication Date: May 9, 2025 This one is for all the rock bands who never headlined the big stage, who never needed protection getting to the limo, who never made any money, who […]

About the Book, The Calendar Genre: Science Fiction Pages: 302 Publication Date: April 3, 2025 Scroll down for Giveaway Long-range monitors detect a massive rock plunging through space on a path toward Earth. Will it miss our planet, deliver a glancing blow, or destroy Mankind? And how will people react to an uncertain future? […]

About the book, Houston Skyline: Selected Poems Houston Skyline by Carol A. Taylor is a collection of poetry inspired by a life filled with change and growth. From her humble beginnings in rural Texas, where her family lived simply, to her career in the high-rises of the business world, and later to her years as […]

Author Skip Rhudy shows off his adeptness at writing believable dialogue for young adults, without it sounding stagey or stupid.

About the Book, A Madness Unmade Publisher : E.K. Larson-Burnett (March 3, 2025) Language : English Paperback : 334 pages Laurel Rumbroom is the sole living resident of the Underhallow, where dead moths have been showing up at the gates in neatly wrapped packages. Since the institution of the […]
I enjoyed these two posts. Most people don’t realize it because their vision is so channeled, but in the city we live in the wilderness. The birds and other animals put up with our presence just the way the different animals ignore each other on the veldt in Africa. A little while ago I came across a coyote wandering across the main drag in my area, and this is not a suburb. Raccoons and skunks wander around, and lets not forget the animals we ebotistically refer to as ‘our’ pets. They are as natural and wild as the raccoons, with their own territories and needs that must be fulfilled.
Fraid I just have to put up with common or garden bats, I have a loft full.
When I first read this post I saw Grackles as Grockles which is a derogatory term for the influx of city folk holidaying here in the summer.
Night flappers seemed to fit ;)