2026

The Long Game by Mark Fleisher

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

In The Long Game Mark Fleisher serves up a quartet of stories involving murder, mayhem, courtroom drama, and old-fashioned detective work. His locations are diverse: Kentucky, New York City, Boston, and western Massachusetts. All are places he describes with pinpoint accuracy and replete with local flavor and local characters. His moments of serious dialogue crackle and sizzle. Yet Fleisher writes tenderly of relationships and sprinkles humor throughout the stories. The final paragraphs of each tale will keep the reader guessing where the main characters will next journey.

Format(s) for review: Paper Only
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 175 / 46,000

Helm & Horizon: Daily Leadership Principles for the Motivated Sailor by Steven-Paul Lapid, USN (Ret.)

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Lead with purpose... even when time is short.

Every day is an opportunity to lead. Helm & Horizon: Daily Leadership Principles for the Motivated Sailor is a 365-day leadership guide built for busy leaders who still take growth seriously, delivering practical wisdom drawn from classic leadership works, naval history, and real-world experience. Each concise, focused entry is crafted for leaders whose time is limited but whose commitment to growth is not.

Helm & Horizon integrates leadership wisdom from best-selling authors like Jocko Willink (Extreme Ownership), Stephen Covey (The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People), Ryan Holiday (The Obstacle Is the Way), L. David Marquet (Turn the Ship Around!), and Sun Tzu (The Art of War), alongside real-world naval case studies from iconic figures like Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, and Medal of Honor recipients like Chief Boatswain's Mate James E. Williams. From Viktor Frankl's exploration of finding meaning in suffering (Man’s Search for Meaning) to Angela Duckworth’s emphasis on grit (Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance), the book connects deeply personal growth lessons to universal leadership challenges.

Each of the 365 daily entries is designed to teach a leadership principle in a clear, concise manner, offering practical insights that can be immediately applied to everyday life. Read one page a day. Reflect on the principle. Take one concrete action. Over time, you’ll build the habits, character, and perspective of a leader people trust when it matters most. Helm & Horizon is a guide for anyone who wants to lead with purpose, vision, and discipline.

The leadership journey starts with you.

Lead with Purpose. Take the Helm. Keep Your Eyes on the Horizon.

Format(s) for review: Paper Only
Review genre: Nonfiction—How to/Business
Pages/Word count: 403 / 111,453

The Scout by Michael C. Dixon

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MWSA Review

In The Scout, author Michael Dixon has given us a fast-moving thriller loaded with action. Elijah Cane, Dixon’s protagonist, is a decorated soldier with a lot of combat experience. Selected to put together a perfect fighting team, he draws from a list of experienced combat troops. Each brings a unique capability. Cane and his troops are immediately challenged by an unknown enemy. Set in an environment more like science fiction than today’s world, Cane’s team suffers death and injury battling drones and entities they can’t identify. Victories are short-lived as they find out they are not just the hunters; they are the prey. The author admits to drawing heavily on AI which I believe compounded some grammatical errors and may have cut short character development. Most fans of military combat novels, especially those that border on science fiction, should enjoy this book.

Review by Bob Doerr
 

Author's Synopsis

Staff Sergeant Elijah Kane has spent his career operating in the shadows of modern warfare, where missions are classified, failures are buried, and the truth is often the first casualty. When a covert operation in Eastern Europe goes catastrophically wrong, one of his men disappears—officially listed as killed in action, unofficially erased.

Years later, fragments of that mission begin to surface. Conflicting intelligence, altered records, and quiet warnings suggest that the truth surrounding the operation was deliberately obscured. As Kane is drawn back into the orbit of black-budget programs and deniable task forces, he is forced to confront the possibility that loyalty and obedience may have been weaponized against him.

The Scout follows Kane as he navigates a world where accountability no longer exists, alliances are provisional, and survival often depends on knowing when not to ask questions. The novel explores the psychological toll of command, the cost of moral compromise, and the enduring bonds between soldiers long after the fighting ends.

Grounded in realism and restraint, The Scout is a military thriller focused less on spectacle and more on consequence—examining what happens when duty collides with conscience, and when the truth refuses to stay buried.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 319 / 55,387

Bulls Amongst Men by C.S. Quinn

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MWSA Review

In Bulls Amongst Men, C.S. Quinn delivers a raw, visceral exploration of the veteran experience that is as harrowing as it is hopeful. The novella follows Michael, a decorated soldier returning to a civilian life that feels more treacherous than the front lines. Haunted by the suicide of a close friend, Michael and his former unit embark on a high-stakes tribute: participating in the running of the bulls in Pamplona.

Quinn’s prose is gritty and unflinching, masterfully paralleling the external chaos of the Spanish streets with the internal turmoil of PTSD and survivor’s guilt. The narrative shines in its portrayal of brotherhood, capturing the unique, jagged bond between those who have served. While the bull run provides a cinematic backdrop, the true heart of the story lies in Michael’s confrontation with his own identity. It is a poignant, fast-paced meditation on redemption and the grueling journey of finding a reason to keep moving forward.

Review by James Elsener

 

Author's Synopsis


Bulls Amongst Men is a literary novel that explores the quiet battles fought after war, following Michael, a former U.S. Army soldier struggling to adapt to civilian life after leaving the military. Though he survived combat, Michael finds himself overwhelmed by survivor’s guilt, fractured family relationships, and the persistent weight of memories he cannot escape.

When Michael learns that a fellow soldier from his unit has taken his own life, he reunites with his former brothers at the funeral. Bound by shared loss and unspoken pain, the men make a reckless decision to honor their fallen friend by traveling to Pamplona, Spain, to participate in the running of the bulls—an event as dangerous as it is symbolic. What begins as a tribute soon reveals itself as something more complex: a test of courage, masculinity, and the limits of endurance.

As Michael prepares for the journey, tensions with his father resurface, exposing generational misunderstandings about service, duty, and emotional restraint. In Pamplona, immersed in the chaos of the festival and the excess that surrounds it, Michael grapples with the moral implications of the event and his own motivations for running. A brief but meaningful connection with a woman forces him to confront the parts of himself he has numbed since the war.

The run itself becomes a crucible. As the bulls thunder through the narrow streets, Michael is pushed to confront whether his pursuit of danger is an act of remembrance, self-destruction, or a desperate attempt to feel alive again. His experience mirrors the life cycle of the Spanish fighting bull—revered, tested, and ultimately sacrificed—forcing him to reckon with what it truly means to survive.

Grounded in the realities of military service and veteran reintegration, Bulls Amongst Men examines grief, brotherhood, and the psychological cost of war long after the uniform is removed. It is a story about men who have learned how to endure violence but must relearn how to live with its aftermath.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Literary Fiction
Pages/Word count: 135 / 45,000

Images of America Grand County by Penny Rafferty Hamilton, Ph.D.

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MWSA Review

Images of America: Grand County follows the format of the Images of America series, which uses historical photographs to present the history of a specific geographic area. The images in this book are high resolution and provide the reader with a literal picture of the past.

The author does an excellent job of describing each image and providing historical context. The pictures are organized chronologically and described in a way that gives the reader an understanding of how Grand County evolved. The wealth of historical facts woven throughout the book takes the reader back in time, allowing them to imagine what it was like to live in that time and place.

The book includes images and history related to the Native Americans who inhabited the area before the European settlers came in the mid-1800s. There are pictures of the initial homesteads and stories of the founding families who braved the challenging conditions in Colorado’s north-central Rocky Mountains to build the communities in Grand County. It shows the many engineering feats required to tame the Grand River, renamed the Colorado River, and to travel through the Rocky Mountains. Grand County became home to some of the first national parks and developed into a popular tourist destination with ski resorts, dude ranches, hunting, fishing, and even yachting.

I especially appreciated learning about the roles women played in Grand County history, including as homesteaders, teachers, a physician, a postmaster, and members of The Women’s Land Army.

This book is a great introduction to what sounds like a hidden gem located northwest of Denver. I definitely plan to check it out if I find myself in that neck of the woods.

Review by Eva Nevarez St John (January 2026)

 

Author's Synopsis


For thousands of years, Indigenous, nomadic tribes enjoyed natural hot springs and summer hunting. Spanish explorers, French fur trappers, and Mountain Men followed. In 1858, the gold rush brought rugged prospectors, creating towns named Coulter, Gaskill, Lulu City, and Teller.
Established in 1874, before Colorado became a state, Grand County is nestled in the north-central Rocky Mountains. Named for the Grand River (renamed the Colorado River), today Grand County encompasses 1,868 square miles, larger than Rhode Island. Homesteaders, loggers, merchants, and the Moffat Railroad built Arrow, Hideaway Park, Winter Park, Fraser, Tabernash, Granby, Grand Lake, Hot Sulphur Springs, Parshall, Kremmling, and Radium. Today, tourists flock to Rocky Mountain National Park, Arapaho National Forest, and award-winning dude ranches and resorts, to enjoy some of the world's most beautiful lakes, mountain ranges, and abundant wildlife. Written in an easy-to-read pictorial format with over 200 curated photographs, for readers interested in true stories of Western grit and courage.

Format(s) for review: Paper Only
Review genre: Nonfiction—History
Pages/Word count: 128 / 10,000

Welcome To The Jungle - A Sailor's Memoir of Service Aboard the USS Fresno (LST-1182) by H.J. Peterson II

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MWSA Review

This memoir begins with the author explaining why he joined the Navy in high school. He gives a detailed description of every step in the enlistment process, as well as every day he spent in boot camp and apprentice training in San Diego. It was there that he first experienced his favorite part of being in the Navy: liberty.

After apprentice training and leaving home, the author flew to meet up with his ship, the USS Fresno. It was participating in WestPac 1988 in the Philippines. He continues to describe every day in detail, with an emphasis on his favorite time: liberty. In less than a week, the ship headed out to sea, where they found themselves in the middle of a typhoon. From there they went to Guam, Pearl Harbor, and then to Long Beach. The USS Fresno remained in Long Beach from December 1988 through December 1989.

In January 1990, the USS Fresno deployed for the six-month WestPac 1990, and the author resumes his daily descriptions. Over the next several months, they went back and forth between Japan and the Philippines. Then they went to Hong Kong and Singapore. On their way from Singapore to Thailand they crossed the equator and the author participated in the Shellback Initiation, which sounds like an intense fraternity hazing ritual. From there it was back to the Philippines, Hawaii, and Long Beach. The author’s last day in the Navy was the day the USS Fresno docked in Long Beach.

The rest of the book covers the author’s time in college and the Naval Reserves, including two weeks back on the USS Fresno in Long Beach and a nightmare trip for training in Chicago in January. He finally completed all his Naval service in August 1995. There are four Epilogues with minimal information about what happened in the author’s life from the time he left the Navy until he published this book.

I would have liked to learn more about the author’s life after he finished his Navy service, especially how he overcame his addiction to alcohol.

Review by Eva Nevarez St John

 

Author's Synopsis

A 17-year-old kid from Wyoming joins the Navy to earn money for college and ends up gaining an education he didn’t expect. Welcome To The Jungle is a no-holds-barred coming-of-age tale of how a boy became a man in the U.S. Navy. Follow the author from his decision to join the Navy through boot camp and out to the fleet aboard the USS Fresno (LST-1182) and his adventures in the Western Pacific, and finally into the Navy Reserves. Read the real-life stories of what the Navy was like for an enlisted kid in the late 80's and early 90's. This collection of stories, memories, and journal entries documents a boy's transition into manhood and beyond. If you've ever wondered what being in the Navy was REALLY like, this book holds the answers.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 600 / 284,230

Fatal Second Helen: A Modern Veteran's Iliad by Josh Cannon

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MWSA Review

Mention The Iliad to people today, and the first thing that might come to mind to many is the 2004 movie Troy, while a few might say it was that boring book from high school. To Fatal Second Helen author and Marine veteran Josh Cannon, it was a way to square away many aspects of his service in Iraq during wartime by comparing and contrasting his experiences to the oldest war story and the oldest book in the history of Western Civilization.

Cannon, who served as an enlisted Arabic Cryptologic Linguist and deployed to Iraq twice (first with the invasion in 2003, and again in 2004), is eminently qualified to write this book. After his time with the Marines, he attended the University of Pittsburgh and then the University of Chicago, where he received his PhD, ultimately becoming the Director of Research, and an adjunct faculty member for the Classics Department and the Anthropology Department. He has also worked on numerous archaeological digs in Turkey, including ones that interacted with the location thought to be the site of Troy.

Despite the heady subject and academic credentials of the author, it is quite an enjoyable and very insightful read. The author deftly highlights how, at the level of the individual warrior, most of the physical, emotional, and psychological elements of war and its aftermath, can be found in The Iliad, including possibly the first documented “blue falcon” in the history of military service.

This fine book will be of interest to veterans, students of military history and ancient times, and anyone who is seeking to understand the effects of war on those who have served.

Review by Terry Lloyd (January 2026)

Author's Synopsis

In the tradition of Jonathan Shay’s 'Achilles in Vietnam' (1994), Josh Cannon’s 'Fatal Second Helen: A Modern Veteran’s Iliad' brings to the audience a discussion of Homer’s Iliad that allows the ancient text to teach us about modern war. Cannon’s work differentiates itself from Shay’s by discussing the Iliad holistically. His book seeks to demystify the Iliad through connecting it to his military service via a presentation of his personal stories.

By sharing his story, Cannon’s book shares a new angle on an old tale. He makes the Iliad accessible to any audience and helps unearth a lesson that, despite being millennia old, still has much to teach us.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 178 / 50,000

Knowing My Father: The Collision of the OB Jennings and War Knight by Col. Joseph R. Tedeschi, US Army (Ret)

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Knowing My Father: The Collision of the O. B. Jennings and War Knight relates Joe's methodical search to know more about his long-lost father. In that search, Joe discovers the tragic story of the fiery collision of the US tanker O. B. Jennings and the British merchant ship War Knight during World War I as their convoy evaded German U-boats in the English Channel. A US Navy armed guard defending the O. B. Jennings, gunner's mate Michael Tedeschi was heroically rescued by the British Royal Navy escorts from the burning sea. Joe satisfies his search to know his father better and, at the same time, reveals and exposes one of the unfortunate naval disasters that occur in times of war. Knowing My Father serves as a companion to Joe Tedeschi's memoir, A Rock in the Clouds.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 128 / 28,160

Another Death at Antietam by Peter Adams Young

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MWSA Review

Peter Adams Young’s Another Death at Antietam weaves together four plotlines into a suspenseful tapestry of murder, human trafficking, illegal guns, and an unsanctioned militia. The blend of historical and well-researched facts with a modern-day “who-done-it” leads readers on a merry chase, wondering where they will end up.

Against the backdrop of one of America’s bloodiest battles at Antietam, Young draws the audience into its lingering echoes, its wounds still unhealed after more than a century. His band of characters is diverse, entertaining, well-developed, and credible.

The dialogue is especially well-crafted, sounding natural while revealing motivations, tensions, and personalities that deepen character development. The details of their exploits are vivid, and the language colorful.

Young presents a careful balance between history and mystery. Despite minor editing errors, the storyline is entertaining and thoughtful. Readers will glean tidbits and insights into a past that remains among the most painful in our nation’s history.

Review by Sandi Cathcart

 

Author's Synopsis

SEPTEMBER 1998

Compelling echoes of the Civil War resonate to the present day.

Five days before the 136th anniversary of the bloodiest day in American history, the body of a young man is found at the center of the Antietam National Cemetery. He is wearing the uniform of a Union Army private. Annie and Mike Davis are drawn into the leisurely official investigation into the mystery of the young man’s death, eventually encountering intertwined evidence of human trafficking, illegal arms smuggling, and a self-styled constitutional militia unit.

This is the second of the series of modern-day murder mysteries by award-winning author Peter Adams Young. The first of these, "Another Death at Gettysburg", is set in and around that historic battlefield.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 434 / 119,158

Lost in History by FE Taylor

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MWSA Review

F. E. Taylor waited 50 years to write about his Purple Heart experience in South Vietnam, claiming that it was his grandson’s playing soccer in Hanoi, Vietnam —he “played against the grandchildren of men I once faced in combat”—that inspired him. But his memoir, Lost in History, shows he’d been composing these pages in his mind his entire life.

Throughout his unexceptional childhood in the small-town American South, Taylor was a shrewd observer, inclined by nature to be skeptical of convention. He did well in school, graduating with a degree in forestry from Clemson University, married his high school sweetheart, and foresaw a professional career doing what he loved. Drafted into the Army and becoming a combat infantry soldier, he mentally recorded his military life as a radical departure from the civilian path he had imagined. The book was being written all along.

Placing that personal experience into the context of U.S. and world history, however, took years of reading and reflection as he returned to join a “generation of forest managers [who] achieved remarkable success, quadrupling the productivity of the southeastern forests in the U.S. … producing more timber than is harvested.” His depiction of specific events at home and overseas takes readers into his world, from finding himself in the Army’s melting pot of race, culture, and economic class to discovering the mix of peoples and pasts in Southeast Asia. The physical and psychological demands of war led him to discover his own bedrock beliefs.

Taylor concludes that American leaders at home—and some military leaders in the field—made errors in judgment that led to tragic human costs for his country and others. Taylor also connects some of those mistakes to disparities of status in America’s past that continue today. At the same time, he commends his fellow soldiers, “dust-off” helicopter pilots, medical staff, and Red Cross volunteers.

One of his most telling conclusions should not be “lost in history,” especially at this time of national debate: “As I’ve mentioned before, what makes America truly exceptional is not that we always get it right the first time, but that we have the capacity to reflect, learn, and rectify past mistakes, such as the legacy of slavery.”

He writes for his generation. I hope others will read.

Review by Michael Lund

 

Author's Synopsis

In the grand sweep of history, this memoir may seem as small and insignificant as an atom in a vast universe. Yet, for the combat infantryman whose story it tells, these experiences form a monumental part of his life. Unwittingly shaped into a warrior through the trials of childhood and adolescence, he is unexpectedly drafted into the Vietnam War, an event that changes his world forever.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Pages/Word count: 277 / 64,794

Soulless by Joseph Badal

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Soulless features Eddie Parnall and Tatiana Borodvic who were introduced in Joseph Badal's novel Justice, the third book in the Curtis Chronicles series. Parnall, a retired CIA agent, and Borodvic, a former Bulgarian Special Operator, join a high-octane cast of characters who starred in previous books in the Curtis Chronicles series. Joseph Badal introduces diabolical villains whom the reader will love to hate, while cheering on the good guys as they work to bring down evildoers. At a time when human trafficking has become a $150 billion-dollar annual business and a global catastrophe, SOULLESS offers a picture of the extent of this crime against humanity and puts the reader on a roller coaster ride of tension and suspense. The story is presented via well-drawn characters and dynamic dialogue that will entertain the most demanding thriller and mystery fans. Fans of Robert Ludlum, Robert Dugoni, and Brad Thor will love this story. Badal is a master at mystifying, misleading, surprising, and entertaining the reader.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 414 / 100,293

Beneath Texas Skies by Liz Beth Rose

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MWSA Review

Beneath Texas Skies introduces us to KC Gates, a young woman who bears the scars of her early years, when she experienced sexual abuse in her childhood home and she learned that no adult was going to rescue her. KC returns to her hometown, Singer, in West Texas, with a mission: to help children who may be experiencing abuse. She believes she can achieve this aspiration as a substitute teacher.

Always on edge and distrustful, she is ready to protect herself physically and emotionally. In her teaching role, she has ample opportunity to engage with students in many schools in Singer and neighboring towns. KC can recognize the behaviors abused children exhibit. She lived it. And she wants to be their safe space and the champion she never had.

Two local men suspected of committing child abuse are murdered. A deputy sheriff needs to solve the crimes, and as he digs into the murders, it seems KC—a woman he is beginning to love—may be involved. He knows her well enough to understand her distrust and defensiveness are rooted in the abuse she experienced. But though she maintains her innocence, evidence accumulates and points to the likelihood of her involvement in the murders. She lives under a cloud of suspicion.

Author Liz Beth Rose takes us behind the scenes for a glimpse of the psychological damage childhood abuse can cause throughout a victim’s life. It is told through the lens of a young, wary woman who wants to love, to trust, and to help other children. Some uneven prose is offset by realistic dialogue, the growing attraction between the deputy sheriff and KC, and an occasional sprinkling of humor. The author creates a believable small-town setting.

Filled with warmth and suspense, this romance/murder mystery keeps the reader fully engaged with twists, turns, and surprises. Does KC keep her heart closed? Does she learn to trust? Or is she a psychopath?

Review by Patricia Walkow

 

Author's Synopsis

In a town filled with memories, can love heal the wounds of the past and offer a second chance at forever?

Haunted by the scars of childhood betrayal, KC Gates had learned one painful truth—crying for help meant nothing if no one cared enough to listen. When she once sought refuge in a teacher’s kindness, her plea was ignored, shattering her heart all over again. Determined to be the voice she never had, she became a teacher herself, vowing to stand as a fierce protector for victims of abuse.

Returning to her hometown in rural West Texas, KC embraced life as a traveling substitute teacher, moving from one classroom to another. But when two locals—both suspected child abusers—were murdered, the town turned its gaze on her. As evidence mounted, every step she took felt like a tightrope walk between justice and condemnation. Even the one man who had broken through her walls—the only man she dared to trust—began to doubt her.

But as the case against her began to unravel, the town’s Deputy Sheriff found himself at a crossroads: follow the case or follow his heart. Working to unmask the real killer, he saw past her defenses, past her pain, to the woman beneath the suspicion. And when the truth pointed to a long-buried secret, KC faced the hardest choice of all—let the past keep her heart closed or risk everything for love.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Romance
Pages/Word count: 206 / 58,210

Recycled Hearts by Liz Beth Rose

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MWSA Review

Recycled Hearts by Liz Beth Rose is this author’s debut novel. Ellie Pierson books a Mediterranean cruise to Croatia with three of her closest friends, hoping to purge the sadness and guilt regarding her late husband’s death in a cycling accident. An avid and devoted long-distance cyclist, Ellie is on the bike in the gym on the first day at sea when she has a close encounter with a handsome man she saw boarding the ship the day before. Jonathan Hughes introduces himself, and from that point on, he and Ellie spend more time together. They fall in lust and then fall in love. Ellie’s girlfriends also find shipboard romances, and at times, the story reads like a Spring Break adventure.

Meanwhile, someone has plans to stalk and hurt Ellie because they think she has information they need to claim embezzled money stolen from Jonathan’s shipping company. After an attempt on her life, Jonathan is solely focused on protecting the woman he has fallen for. In chapter fifteen, we discover who the evil culprits are, their motive, and what their final plan is to extract information from Ellie. However, Ellie and Jonathan have discovered what the bad guys want from her, and in doing so, thwart their plans to get their hands on the money. Furious at being discovered, the bad guy decides the best way out is to kidnap Ellie and demand a ransom. But he does not intend to let Ellie live.

This romance novel is slow to cycle, but it picks up enough speed to be a hot romance intertwined with mystery and intrigue. For mature audiences only.

Review by Nancy Panko

 

Author's Synopsis

Recycled Hearts will tug at your heartstrings and leave you breathless.

Experience the resounding power of love, destiny, and redemption as Ellie emerges from the shadows of a haunting accident, embracing an intoxicating second chance at romance. But as sparks fly and love blossoms, an enigmatic mystery killer lurks, threatening to unravel everything she holds dear.

Buckle up for an unforgettable adventure packed with riveting twists, everlasting hope, and unwavering determination. Recycled Hearts will ignite your spirit, reignite your passions, and remind you that in the face of tragedy, true strength and courage emerge. Prepare yourself for an emotional rollercoaster like no other as you join Ellie on her exhilarating and suspenseful journey.

Discover the transformative power of love, the irresistible allure of fate, and the enigmatic nature of second chances. Dive into the pages of Recycled Hearts and immerse yourself in the extraordinary life-altering odyssey of Ellie. Let her story inspire you, thrill you, and awaken you.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Romance
Pages/Word count: 202 / 53,466

A Gamble on Liberty by Robert W Smith

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MWSA Review

A Gamble on Liberty is a unique work of historical fiction set in the American Civil War era. The storyline avoids the popular broad sweep of regional campaigns and famous battles by focusing on a less well-known theater of the War—eastern Tennessee. In the months leading up to the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln, the state was deeply divided between pro-secessionists and pro-union sympathizers.

Plot dynamics are set in place when the state legislature votes to join the Confederacy. Immediately afterward, throughout the state, greedy individuals with scores to settle are suddenly in positions of political and military power. Unionist residents in the mountainous eastern counties find themselves the targets of revenge and retribution.

The appeal in this story lies in its two central characters—a young married couple who are actual historical figures. Robert L. Gamble, a pro-Union farmer and slave owner, ultimately decides to join the Union Army. His wife Permelia is left behind to defend the homestead and her extended family against an array of adversaries ranging from Confederate militia to corrupt officials and outlaws.

The narrative moves back and forth between Robert’s wartime actions and trials as a cavalry officer and Permelia’s challenges as a woman under attack on several fronts. The scope of the account highlights the personal tragedies of the region’s residents by relating factual events and figures interwoven with fictional characters and their conflicts.

This book will appeal to true devotees of Civil War history who are interested in the impact of the war on the civilian populace on both sides. Although the work does not contain any fresh material about major campaigns or battles of the Civil War, it brings to light compelling aspects of a lesser-known theater of the conflict and underscores the War’s devastating impact on the lives of its inhabitants, soldiers and civilians alike.

Review by Peter Adams Young

 

Author's Synopsis


Inspired by a true story, A Gamble on Liberty shadows the struggles of one East Tennessee couple, Captain Robert and Permelia Gamble, during the American Civil War as they grapple with two horrific conflicts simultaneously. Compelled by loyalty and circumstance, Robert enlists in the Union Army, forcing Permelia to lead the family and its two slaves in a defense of their property and lives from bushwhackers, deserters, and hostile neighbors during his frequent absences.

Desperate to help their families, Robert and his comrades shuffle tirelessly between battlefield and home to smite their common enemies, protect their people and deliver justice to their oppressors.

Fueled by a deep love for one another and a mutual sense of patriotism, Robert and Permelia endure tragedy, imprisonment, estrangement, and loss in their struggle against the forces of darkness, all while forced to struggle with the age-old question of human bondage. But theirs is also a story of their beloved Tennessee Valley, a place at war against itself. Although simple farmers, the Gambles and their two slaves rise to extraordinary heights in their resolve and capacity to persevere despite unspeakable suffering and loss. Now, bound by faith in Abraham Lincoln and driven by love of country, they risk all in a desperate gamble on liberty.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction
Pages/Word count: 285 / 80,386

Born in Blood by Megan Michelle

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MWSA Review Pending

 

Author's Synopsis

Desk duty was not what Rachel Ryker had in mind when she became the first female Navy SEAL, but if finding love with her former teammate, Christopher Williams, was the trade off, then fine. Adjusting to life in D.C. after being pulled from combat was difficult enough, but when Khalid Khan, a notorious Al-Qaeda leader, kidnaps the son of Rachel’s intelligence asset, she learns just how much harder it is to rescue a kid from a desk. She’ll need to get creative and learn to trust others to get the job done. Caught between duty and her thirst for revenge, Rachel must navigate a treacherous path to rescue the boy and uncover a dangerous conspiracy involving her old enemies. Can she save the child and bring justice to those who wronged her, or will her past catch up with her?

Christopher is adjusting to retirement, trying to find a new purpose since he chose Rachel over his career as a SEAL. The rules of engagement have changed. Rachel’s keeping secrets and chasing terrorists without him, keeping him in the dark. Respecting that boundary proves more than difficult for them both. When Rachel goes on a path Christopher can no longer follow, will their relationship be strong enough to survive, or did he give up everything for nothing?

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Literary Fiction
Pages/Word count: 447 / 135,635

Task Force Thunderbolt by Galen D. Peterson

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MWSA Review
Galen Peterson’s third Global Response Force book, Task Force Thunderbolt, picks up where Lighting Six left off, with the same likeable heroes and gritty combat that made that book so enjoyable.

Six months after Lightning Six, NATO is preparing its counterattack. Captain Trondfjell had led Lightning Troop through hell and now has them replenished and ready to do their part. However, on the eve before the battle, he is pulled up to staff and has to say goodbye to his comrades. Little does he know that fate and the enemy will come calling and have him back in combat sooner than expected. But this time, it’s more than just Lightning’s lives on the line. Will he come through yet again?

This book is written in the same style as the previous installment, is technically accurate, and does a decent job of capturing the camaraderie developed in combat. Fans of Tom Clancy, Dale Brown, or Harold Coyle will find much to enjoy here.

Review by Rob Ballister
 

Author's Synopsis

After six months stagnation on the Ukrainian battlefield, NATO’s counteroffensive looms. Captain Logan Trondfjell and the armored warriors of Lightning Troop will guard the right flank. On the eve of battle, Logan moves up to squadron staff, pulling him farther from his old battle buddy, Sergeant First Class Running Bear. Opposite no-mans-land, Russian divisions mass to crush the counteroffensive. Behind the Russian divisions, a top-secret prisoner of war camp contains Americans the Russians would rather kill than return. Only a daring raid by Captain Sam Gentry’s U.S. Rangers can rescue their fate. As Russian President Voroshilov’s war climaxes, a blizzard isolates all and stirs the swirling chaos.

Format(s) for review: Paper or Kindle
Review genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller/Crime
Pages/Word count: 312 / 92,000

Both Sides of the Pond, My Family's War: 1933-1946 by Barbara Kent Lawrence

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MWSA Review

Author Barbara Kent Lawrence weaves a rich tapestry of the lives of her British mother and uncle from 1933 to 1946, before, during, and just after World War II.

The London siblings are in their early twenties when war is imminent, and then a reality. Barbara Green (Stage name: Barbara Greene) is a successful young actress, and Kent Green is an accountant. Before the war begins, Barbara meets Joseph Kennedy, Jr., son of the U.S. Ambassador to England, Joseph Kennedy, Sr. They develop a relationship, and as the war rages, Ambassador Kennedy facilitates Barbara's passage to the United States to escape the hostilities and shield her from a German victory over her country, if England is defeated.

In the early years of the war and despite their burgeoning careers, Kent and Barbara heed the call to national service. Barbara, finding it difficult to find acting work, joins the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) and is trained to care for sick and injured patients. Kent enlists in the Army Service Corps (RASC), and, as an officer, manages the procurement and distribution of supplies to front-line troops.

Through letters written by Barbara, Kent, their mother Muriel, and others, we learn how people coped with loneliness, injury, and grief, as friends, families, and places are devastated. One can easily sense the loving relationship between Kent and Barbara, and see how they mature.

The author creates vivid images of Barbara’s voyage to the United States, the passengers’ fears of German U-boat attacks on their ship, and trepidations about starting life in America. As the war rages in England and the rest of Europe, America offers a place of peace, opportunity, and solace for Barbara, until Pearl Harbor is attacked and America joins the conflagration.

Alternating between Barbara’s war on the west side of the Atlantic, and Kent’s on the east side, we see these siblings find love, lose love and loved ones, face fear, and survive. Besides the engaging prose and realistic dialog, photos, charts, letters, diary entries, diagrams, and documents support the story’s events and human drama within the historical context of the time. The book is well-researched, easy to read, and includes all the necessary references, attributions, and notes.

The author identifies the story as “historical fiction,” and it falls well into the parameters of creative nonfiction—a true story created in the style of fiction and told against the backdrop of a specific period in time.

War stories are very personal. This is such a story, and it offers insight into how two young people navigated difficult years that altered the trajectories of the lives they thought they would live. It is a worthy read, written beautifully. Don't miss it.

Review by Patricia Walkow

 

Author's Synopsis

In January of 1939 when Barbara Greene, a beautiful and successful young British actress, who was serving as a Voluntary Aide Detachment nurse, met Joe Kennedy Jr., son of the American Ambassador, she could not have expected that their relationship would lead to her emigrating to America sponsored by Ambassador and Mrs. Kennedy. Nor could her brother, Kent, have foreseen his bitter retreat from Dunkirk when he left England in January 1940 to fight in France, or his subsequent service in Cornwall, North Africa, Sicily, and Burma. Their stories portray the war on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, and on the home and battle fronts.

Evan Thomas, author of two best-selling books notes "Barbara Lawrence has given us an intimate, harrowing, and vivid portrait of two young people engulfed by a world war... For anyone who wants to know what it is really like to have your world turned upside down, read this book and be shocked, thrilled and moved." Based on a true story, "Both Sides of the Pond, My Family's War -1933-1943" is deeply researched and powerful.

Format(s) for review: Paper Only
Review genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction
Pages/Word count: 393 / 122,776