Group 121-150

Perilous Shores by Thomas M. Wing

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Vengeance is as dangerous to a cause as to the enemy.

The murder of his wife at the hands of British soldiers prompts American privateer Captain Jonas Hawke’s vow to make Britain pay.

A grief-stricken Jonas strikes deep into the heart of the enemy, driven by his personal vendetta. When he raids a port city, one of his men crosses an unthinkable line, which forces Jonas to come to terms with the anguish that distorts his definition of justice.

Concerned his wrath will bring irreparable harm to the cause for America’s freedom, Jonas grapples with his role as a warrior and as a man. When he learns the Royal Navy is hunting his ship, he fears his deadly decisions may have cost him and his crew everything. It’s too late to turn back. Instead, he must continue on and face the inevitable perils of war.

Perilous Shores is a gripping, action-packed, and historically authentic tale of revenge, survival, and one man’s relentless pursuit of his country’s independence.

Format(s) for review: Kindle only
Review genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction
Pages/Word count: 388 / 95,000

The Invisible Veteran: Rediscovering Identity, Purpose, and Connection After Service by Kevin Kidder

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

The world is better with you in it—and it’s time for you to believe that again. 

Military retirement may be a momentous and honorable occasion, but many veterans experience a loss of identity when they hang up the uniform. Their sense of purpose falls away, and the sudden lack of structure doesn’t feel freeing—it feels confining. As they delve into the civilian world, they often begin to feel lost. Disconnected. Invisible.

Author Kevin Kidder knows exactly how that feels. That’s why he created The Invisible Veteran—to help others like him emerge from the void, reclaim their sense of self, and navigate their new reality with clarity and courage.

When Kevin officially closed the military chapter of his life, he thought the future was wide open and brighter than ever. But instead, he was faced with a divorce, a tough job market, and a slow descent into drinking and depression.

But Kevin eventually cut through the noise to discover that he wasn’t a failure. He just had to recalibrate his mind, which had been conditioned to define silence as strength. Breaking through the isolation, self-doubt, and mental fog with the help of his loved ones and faith, he was able to maintain a loving relationship with his kids, establish a new career for himself, find new love, and pursue his true purpose in life.

Describing Kevin’s hard-earned lessons on everything from relationships to mental health to leadership, and with reflection questions and calls to action woven throughout, The Invisible Veteran is a critical guide for any veteran who has ever wondered whether their story still matters. (It does!)

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 182 / 40,118

Reclaiming the Edge: Risk, Responsibility, and Modern Masculinity by Garrett Carr

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Reclaiming the Edge is a book for men who sense that something essential has been dulled, buried, or quietly trained out of them, and who want to do the work of getting it back.

Written by a former Air Force Direct Support Operator with ten years in special operations support, the book is not a war memoir and not a motivational manifesto. It's a practical, hard-edged look at what happens to men when the external structure that once gave their lives shape, whether military service, high-pressure work, or clear consequence, is no longer there.

The book moves through the realities most men recognize but rarely name. The vanishing that happens when the career field, the unit, and the mission all stop on the same day. The way comfort, sold as a reward, becomes the threat that quietly dulls capable men. The drift that doesn't look like a crisis but slowly empties a life of meaning. Anxiety as a misrouted nervous system looking for a worthy target. Betrayal and divorce as forced confrontations with reality. Fatherhood as the rebirth of risk and responsibility. Discipline over motivation. Skill over bravado. Competence over comfort.

Drawn from military service, building businesses in real estate and construction, surviving betrayal, raising sons, and rebuilding alignment between capacity and responsibility, the book is written for the everyday man who is capable of more and willing to do the work to get there.

This is not a book about becoming dominant. It is not about reclaiming masculinity through aggression or nostalgia. It is about competence, responsibility, and learning to carry weight without collapsing or going numb. If you sense that something in you is underutilized, this book is written for you.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Creative Nonfiction
Pages/Word count: 210 / 41,901

Inside Naval Aviation: A Memoir by David Maybury

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

This global adventure covers a twenty-year career in naval aviation.

Assignments included NASA, flying Intruder attack jets from aircraft carriers, Naval Test Pilot School, experimental flight test of the F/A-18 Super Hornet aircraft and overseas aircraft maintenance after 11 September 2001.

The memoir is an incredible journey that shares the excitement of military flying, focuses on the excellence of others and honors the memory of many friends lost to accidents along the way.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 371 / 106,982

Leadership is Tough by Mary Kelly and Peter Stark

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Leadership has never been more difficult than it is today. Leaders are navigating economic uncertainty, workforce shortages, artificial intelligence, political division, rapid technological change, customer demands, shrinking attention spans, burnout, and constant disruption—all while being expected to produce better results with fewer resources. The pressure is relentless. The pace is exhausting. And the margin for error has never been smaller.

In Leadership is Tough: What Great Leaders Do Differently, Mary Kelly and Peter Stark reveal why leadership has become so challenging—and, more importantly, what exceptional leaders do to thrive despite the pressure.

Drawing from decades of real-world leadership experience in military commands, global organizations, executive coaching, economics, and business strategy, this practical and highly actionable book delivers the tools leaders need to make better decisions, build stronger teams, and lead effectively during times of uncertainty and change.

Unlike theoretical leadership books filled with vague inspiration, Leadership is Tough focuses on the real-world decisions leaders face every day:

How do you make difficult decisions when there is no perfect answer?
How do you build trust in a skeptical workplace?
How do you retain talented people who are burned out or disengaged?
How do you maintain accountability without destroying morale?
How do you lead multiple generations with different expectations and communication styles?
How do you stay focused when everything feels urgent?
How do you prepare your organization for the future while managing today’s chaos?

The authors argue that leadership is not becoming easier—it is becoming more complex. Great leaders understand that leadership is no longer about authority, titles, or control. It is about clarity, discipline, relationships, adaptability, and decision-making under pressure.

At the heart of the book is the idea that leadership is a skill set, not a personality trait. Great leaders are not born with magical abilities. They develop habits, systems, and behaviors that allow them to lead consistently, even during difficult times. The book provides practical frameworks and tools leaders can immediately apply to improve communication, productivity, strategic thinking, accountability, and team performance.

One of the central themes of Leadership is Tough is that leaders must learn to operate effectively in uncertainty. The economic environment, labor market, customer expectations, and technology landscape are changing too quickly for leaders to rely on outdated management approaches. The authors explain how successful leaders stay agile, assess risk, communicate clearly, and make confident decisions even when information is incomplete.

The book also explores the growing leadership crisis facing organizations today. As experienced leaders retire in record numbers, many organizations lack the bench strength and succession planning necessary to sustain long-term success. The authors provide practical guidance for developing future leaders, mentoring high-potential employees, and creating cultures that encourage growth and accountability.

Another major focus of the book is trust. In an era of skepticism and constant distraction, trust has become one of the most valuable—and fragile—assets a leader can possess. The authors explain how trust is built through consistency, transparency, communication, and behavior rather than slogans or motivational speeches. Readers will learn how to strengthen workplace relationships, create healthier cultures, and foster stronger collaboration across teams.

The book also addresses productivity and personal leadership. Leaders today are overwhelmed by competing priorities, nonstop communication, and constant interruptions. Leadership is Tough offers practical methods to improve focus, reduce procrastination, prioritize effectively, and lead with greater intentionality. The authors emphasize that leaders who cannot manage themselves effectively struggle to lead others effectively.

Throughout the book, the authors blend compelling stories, economic insights, military leadership lessons, executive coaching experiences, and practical business examples to illustrate what works—and what fails—in leadership. Readers gain both strategic perspective and tactical tools they can implement immediately.

The tone of the book is direct, practical, encouraging, and realistic. The authors do not pretend leadership is easy. In fact, they argue the opposite: leadership is difficult because people, organizations, and circumstances are complicated. However, they also believe that leadership can be learned, improved, and strengthened through discipline, self-awareness, preparation, and action.

Ultimately, Leadership is Tough: What Great Leaders Do Differently is a roadmap for leaders who want to become more effective in a rapidly changing world. Whether leading a corporation, small business, nonprofit organization, government agency, military unit, or team, readers will discover practical strategies to:

lead with greater confidence,
communicate more effectively,
strengthen trust and accountability,
navigate change and uncertainty,
develop future leaders,
improve team performance,
and make better decisions under pressure.

This book is for leaders who understand that leadership is not about power—it is about responsibility. It is for leaders who want to build stronger organizations, develop better people, and create meaningful results during challenging times.

Because leadership is tough. But great leaders rise to the challenge.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—How to/Business
Pages/Word count: 322 / 89,699

Samson and the Charleston Spy by Paul A. Barra

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

The protagonist of SAMSON AND THE CHARLESTON SPY may be the definitive underrepresented voice in middle-grade fiction today: he's a boy and a Southerner, confronting the Civil War from the Confederate perspective.

When Samson Collier and three sixth-grade friends witness the bombardment of Ft Sumter offshore from their homes, they decide that the Yankee soldiers at the fort must have been forewarned about the attack, since no one was killed although the structure appeared to be wrecked. They set off to find the spy who told secrets.

During their escapades, they confront slavery (one of the four is the son of a freedman), nativism (another of them is the daughter of a prominent Catholic family), zealotry (a man forming a brigade to fight the North appropriates Sam's beloved horse) and evil (they are attacked by a highwayman in The Devil's Hole). Eventually, the children discover a shocking plan to undermine their homeland.

The book is an historically accurate and action-packed adventure/mystery.

Format(s) for review: Kindle Only
Review genre: Children & Young Adult—Middle Grade Chapter Book
Pages/Word count: 162 / 40,000

ISSUED, stories of service (vol 4) by editor, Rosemarie Dombrowski et al.

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

ISSUED: stories of service is an annual, anthology-style publication dedicated to showcasing the voices of veterans, active-duty, and family members through poetry, narrative, and interviews. From active duty to combat, reintegration to remembrance, ISSUED highlights the humanity of military-affiliated writers, and encourages reflection and healing within our military communities.
ISSUED is sponsored by the Office of Veteran and Military Academic Engagement at Arizona State University.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Other—Anthology/Collection
Pages/Word count: 128 / 28,188

The Tide Waits for No Woman by Richard K Perkins

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Newlywed Abby Anderson is unsure whether to call herself a widow. In July of 1860, as the nation teeters on the brink of war, word comes that her merchant captain husband, Clifford, has been lost to the Graveyard of the Atlantic. Rejecting social expectations regarding proper mourning, Abby agrees to assist in an Underground Railroad operation out of her hometown of Woolwich, Maine. But an early October winter storm catches Abby and the fugitive slave family she's smuggling, and they find themselves snowed in with Bill Boudreaux, an Acadian trapper and farmer, and two Abenaki teenagers in the remote Maine wilderness.
The unlikely companions must work together to ensure their survival through the long, harsh winter and find themselves growing closer, creating an unexpected family few societies would approve of-and leaving Abbey with what feels like an impossible choice. When spring comes, she will continue her quest to see the fugitive family safely to Canada. And then, she must decide where she truly belongs.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction
Pages/Word count: 351 / 88,753

Purple Rose: The Stars Carry Her Name - Letters from Me to Her by James V The Poet

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Purple Rose: The Stars Carry Her Name — Letters from Me to Her is a collection of 33 love letters written in Raleigh, North Carolina, to a woman living there.

James V The Poet writes in heavy metaphor and soliloquy, painting a world of cathedrals, demons, angels, stars, and memories reflected in mirrors. His muse becomes something beyond ordinary beauty—an angelic and almost divine presence he calls his Purple Rose.

Before they sadly parted ways, only a handful of these letters were ever sent. James V believes the door to her has closed in this lifetime, but not beyond it. He published these letters so that, in the next lifetime, she will know how deeply she was—and still is—loved.

With no prior knowledge of the language, James V also hand-translated several poems into Tagalog, one language tied to her heritage, as an act of devotion and a reflection of his belief that love is willing to learn the language of the heart in every form it can.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Poetry—Poetry Book
Pages/Word count: 76 / 7,672