Sunday, January 27, 2019

Nickolas Butler and the Hearts of Men Review


The Hearts of Men

I read this for bookclub.

About the Book
Camp Chippewa, 1962. Nelson Doughty, age thirteen, social outcast and overachiever, is the Bugler, sounding the reveille proudly each morning. Yet this particular summer marks the beginning of an uncertain and tenuous friendship with a popular boy named Jonathan.


Over the years, Nelson, irrevocably scarred from the Vietnam War, becomes Scoutmaster of Camp Chippewa, while Jonathan marries, divorces, and turns his father’s business into a highly profitable company. And when something unthinkable happens at a camp get-together with Nelson as Scoutmaster and Jonathan’s teenage grandson and daughter-in-law as campers, the aftermath demonstrates the depths—and the limits—of Nelson’s selflessness and bravery.

The Hearts of Men is a sweeping, panoramic novel about the slippery definitions of good and evil, family and fidelity, the challenges and rewards of lifelong friendships, the bounds of morality—and redemption.


My Review
Back and forth story about how some are born and grown to be good, courteous, responsible leaders, and others...not so much.

Set in Wisconsin at a Scout camp, the author explores a lonely young man, nicknamed the Bugler, from a dysfunctional 1960s family who grows up quickly when his father does a runner. The book is set in parts in different generations. Bugler's only "friend" is Jonathan and his only role model is aged scout camp director, Wilbur. While we have plenty of reason to suspect Jonathan's friendship, Wilbur's tutelage has a purpose all along: to guide and groom the young man into leading subsequent generations of young men to be good, courteous, and responsible. To be prepared.

Section two opens with Jonathan's family, and section three, again with Jonathan's family's next generation. The author gives us characters, invests the reader with them, then drops them, or portrays them through the eyes of others. He taunts the reader with secrets about the characters's lives and reveals some of them herky-jerky style, through flashbacks and introspection.

The setting is its own character, the camp and the wildlife, the lake, all show the effects of mankind's invasion. Not all who aspire to Scouting's honors are good; certainly not all who achieve them, and there's even a kind of righteous attempt to shelter Jonathan's daughter-in-law, who brings her son to camp, when the men attempt to run her off. Bugler can't be Wilbur, never tries to, and finally, when his true heart is opened, the results are triumphant and far-reaching.

Told through both multiple perspective and omniscience, in mostly present tense, the pace is slow and purposeful in each segment, generously describing setting and action with lyrical, long passages interspersed with language of events and culture meant to contrast and compare. The generational jumps are dizzying.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Children's author Lisl Detlefsen wins AFBF Book of the Year


Acclaimed Wisconsin children’s author Lisl Detlefsen has received the American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture’s “Book of the Year” award!

And that was before its publication.

Right This Very Minute is the first book published by Feeding Minds Press.

About the Book
What's that you say? You're hungry? Right this very minute? Then you need a farmer. You have the stories of so many right here on your table! Award winners Lisl H. Detlefsen and Renee Kurilla's delicious celebration of food and farming is sure to inspire readers of all ages to learn more about where their food comes from - right this very minute!

February 2019
Children’s literature
Hardcover
$17.99
Buy on 

About the Author
An image posted by the author.Lisl H. Detlefsen lives on a cranberry marsh near Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin, with her husband and two young sons. She writes while she watches wildlife wander past her office window. Her favorite part of the year is when it's time for harvest.

Feeding Minds Press is a project of the American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture. The mission of the Foundation is to build awareness and understanding of agriculture through education.

The goal of Feeding Minds Press is to publish accurate and engaging books about agriculture that connect readers to where their food comes from and to who grows it.

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

Mollys War



Adventure, Scifi/Fantasy
Novella, second in a series
Molly's War
Johnny Augustine

$9.99 eBook
$13.94 paperback
buy on Amazon


This is a fast-paced heart-racing story with loads of action from start to finish. Jake O’Nell’s sixteen-year-old cousin, Molly, along with her family, find themselves in a mess of trouble far from their Wisconsin Dairy farm while on a visit to their grandfather’s ranch on an island nation off the coast of Australia that turns their lives upside down and inside out, with plenty of tears of both joy and sorrow along the way. So travel along with Molly Haze as she finds herself in the middle of Molly’s War.

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Romance Writers of Wisconsin conference

Coming up in April, 4-7, 2019
Annual Romance Writers Conference
The Write Touch Conference: Daring & Decadent Storytelling



Mark your calendars for the 2019 Write Touch Conference April 5-7, 2019 at the Milwaukee Hyatt in beautiful downtown Milwaukee. The conference will feature Maya Rodale as keynote speaker, and Lisa Cron as one of the headliners. 

Registration is now open. Click the Conference tab above for more information.