Sautee Shadows by Denise Weimer

Click to Buy SAUTEE SHADOWS Written by Denise Weimer  Reviewed by Paul H. Yarbrough      Billed on the cover as Book One of the Georgia Gold Trilogy, Sautee Shadows is a historical novel about the South during the mid-1800s.      Weimer’s Georgia roots give her credibility as to understanding what Southern life was all about […]

Felicia S. W. Thomas’ Debut Novel a Delight for All Ages

80 Proof Lives by Felicia S. W. Thomas Review by Donna Meredith   Click to Buy        80 Proof Lives, by Felicia S. W. Thomas, is set in the small town of Quincy, Florida, where there’s nothing for a teenage girl to do but “fight, drink, have babies, or some combination of the three.” […]

Mama’s Comfort Food, by Rhett DeVane

Mama’s Comfort Food By Rhett DeVane Reviewed by Peggy Kassees Click to Buy      “The secret to outliving cancer is positive living . . . I didn’t mean to think positive; I meant to live in a positive way.”  That’s an excerpt from Mama’s Comfort Food, by Rhett DeVane. Smooth as whipped butter, sweet as […]

Southern Comfort, by Fern Michaels

Southern Comfort By Fern Michaels Reviewed by Philip K. Jason   Click to Buy      Fern Michaels is a writing machine. Best known for the Sisterhood and Godmothers series, she has over 75 million books in print and is still going strong. Though she grew up in Hastings, Pennsylvania, Ms. Michaels moved to South Carolina […]

Daughter of Lachish, by Tim Frank

DAUGHTER OF LACHISH by Tim Frank Reviewed by Patricia O’Sullivan  Click to Buy     Itur-Ea is a soldier in the Assyrian army who specializes in operating siege machines.  He worships the goddess Ishtar and follows his king, Sennacherib without question. Rivkah is a young woman from Lachish, one of many walled cities in Judah the […]

May Read of the Month, Purple Jesus by Ron Cooper

Click to Buy   Ron Cooper serves up dark humor, deep philosophy, and quirky characters in Purple Jesus Review by Donna Meredith      Many novelists flounder when it comes to creating characters who talk and think differently. Not so, Ron Cooper, a professor of Humanities at the College of Central Florida. Every voice that speaks […]