Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Lovely picture book by KM Waldvogel



Whoo Whoo Who’s Out There
By KM Waldvogel, illustrated by Jayden Ellsworth
c. October 2021
Orange Hat Publishing
Children’s picture book, 24 pp.
 
$9.99 paperback
$14.99 hardcover
 
Buy on Amazon 
Barnes and Noble
 
About the Book
So many strange sights and sounds around Baby Owl! He frets about the scary world and wonders who will watch out for him. Mama Owl envelops him with love and helps him understand that as he grows, he will learn all about the world. She will be there to protect him until it is time for him to soar on his own.

A sweet story about parental love.
 
My Review
This picture book about baby and mama owl is absolutely delightful. Charmingly illustrated with bright, bold, colorful characters. Mama replies in sweet calm soothing responses to her owlet’s fears. Toddlers are sure to want to hear this story often.
 
Baby owl trembles at the new world around him: the flutter of wings, the snap of underbrush, the reflection of glowing eyes at the edge of the meadow. Each time baby wonders “Whoo’s out there!” Mama lets him know that he has nothing to fear. When at last he feels safe, he is able to look around and marvel.
 
Whoo Whoo Who’s Out There is a reassuring tale of a parent’s love and understanding, and helping a child grow into independence naturally. Excellent advice underneath a treasured storyline. Recommended as a great gift for parents and grandparents everywhere.
 
About the Author
K.M. Waldvogel is a former teacher who now enjoys writing for children. She is the author of the middle-grade narrative nonfiction book, Spies, Soldiers, Couriers, & Saboteurs: Women of the American Revolution. The book highlights little-known women who risked their lives to help the Patriots defeat the British. Her Halloween picture book, Three Little Ghosts, is written in rhyming text and is a light-hearted adventure of ghosts on Halloween night as they join trick-or-treaters. You can read more about Waldvogel at her website: www.kmwaldvogel.com. Follow her on Facebook @ author.KM.Waldvogel.


Saturday, September 18, 2021

Steve Wilton debut epic fantasy

 


Queen of Crows
SL Wilton
Fantasy, 366 pp
August, 2021, Atmosphere Press
$7.99 ebook
$18.99 print
Buy on 
Amazon 
Barnes and Noble
Kobo 
 

About the Book
In a world of strange magic, dangerous creatures, and villainous wyverns, an ousted young queen struggles to regain her throne.

Sophia Pendergast’s quest is complicated by deep-rooted misogyny embedded in her culture and religion. Her lover, a dashing young knight, offers her a life in obscure comfort, but she refuses to abandon her people to the usurper’s whims. To retake her throne and set prophecy on its path, she must embrace a long-denied secret and discover a prophecy’s hidden meaning.

In S. L. Wilton’s Queen of Crows, we discover simple truths may not exactly be simple. 

My Review:

Wilton has created a wonderful new realm of epic fantasy in his debut novel. Warriors and magic, when it works, and wondrous deeds of valor and sacrifice combine with wyverns and even a little romance to right the wrongs caused by all greedy throne-stealers.

Sophia is a spoiled young princess who thinks she has plenty of time to grow up and step into her father’s kingly slippers and, with his guidance, lead her people with justice and dignity. But stuff happens, and that time is now, and without her papa. Who can she trust?

 

Follow Sophia and her ragtag band of faithfuls, ousted and abandoned knights, and the downtrodden “crows,” commoners, as she learns how to fight for freedom and her rightful throne while having her eyes opened to the plight of everyday folks. “Why can’t the people rule themselves?” Sophia’s young ward asks at one point when Sophia tries to explain their quest. A thoughtful question indeed.

 

Told mostly through Sophia’s point of view but with a healthy sprinkling of other colorful characters, readers of fantasy slanted less toward magical creatures and more toward occasional magic and plenty of sword-fighting and things soldiers do will find much to love about Queen of Crows.

 
About the Author:
S.L. is a retired Non-Commissioned Officer in the U.S. Army. He and his wife live in rural central Wisconsin with their Chihuahua, Willie.


Friday, September 10, 2021

Wisconsin Writers Association Maria Alvarez Stroud and the immigrant experience

 

This review originally appeared here: https://wiwrite.org/book-reviews/10985425 

Brave Crossing: the Journey In-Between, by Maria Alvarez Stroud

Historical Fiction, 212 pp.
August 2021, Publisher: Little Creek Press
Reviewed by Keridak Silk
$9.99 ebook
$18.95 print

About the Book:
This coming-of-age saga is told through the eyes of Ricardo, a young Spanish-Filipino, as he voyages to America in 1916. He embarked on his journey thinking he was leaving behind war, rampant disease, unspeakable deaths, and family secrets only to find a country on the cusp of race riots, World War I, and a global pandemic. He learns that each of these events has the power to define who he is and who he will become.

To succeed, he'll need to face memories of his past life of privilege, grapple with his own culture, and come to peace with the loss of his parents. He'll also need to confront his many attackers. His future depends on it.

In her ambitious debut novel, Maria Alvarez Stroud explores a never-ending question: How welcoming is America to the immigrants who leave everything from their previous lives behind? Richly imagined and vividly rendered, BRAVE CROSSING-A Journey In-Between offers a moving portrait of one man's search for home.

This novel reminds us that historical fiction is not just a view into the past but, in many ways, a mirror to our present.

Keridak Silk’s review:
An absorbing tale from beginning to end. Brave Crossing begins in 1916. Stroud’s father Ricardo Alvarez stands on the ship’s deck regretting his impetuous decision to leave the Philippines. He is barely able to speak English and has no plan for where to live or what to do once he arrives. Ricardo is fortunate to befriend a Filipino couple on the months long voyage. They invite him to stay with them in Chicago.

Ricardo has an ongoing yearning to go back home. Especially when he is met with frigid Midwest winters and ongoing racial inequality because of his brown skin. Warm clothing gets him through the cold. But it’s his ability to reach out to others and his tenacity that help him persist. His fears, curiosity and determination are what keep this novel fresh.

Letters from family and friends make them feel like our own. Ricardo alters how he responds to each. Understanding what he hides, what he gets off his chest, who he asks advice from and who he shares memories with are part of the rhythm of this story. Gradually daring to ask questions about his buried memories, Ricardo re-discovers his family history and his passion. He frequently flaunts expectations prepared to fail but desiring success and acceptance. 

Stroud includes letters to institutions complaining, often demanding, that Ricardo be removed or thought lesser of simply because he wasn’t white. The responses are thought provoking.

Ricardo writes his sister, “Nena, who are these people who think you can treat someone like an animal?” Ricardo also reflects on his own biases. He wonders how often he unknowingly treated people differently. Questions that resonate today.

I enjoyed the historical aspects from Ricardo’s perspective. World War One, Prohibition, the Spanish Flu Pandemic, and the rise of the Klu Klux Klan. Even simple, first-time adventures such as using a phone, riding a train, or tasting German beer.

Bits of Filipino culture, food and language are brought in. One of my favorite quotes is: “Kapag tinapunan ka ng bato, tapunan mo tinapay. If someone throws stones at you throw back bread.” Readers who enjoy discovering another cultural viewpoint will find Brave Crossing fascinating. I did.

His journey takes him from naïve teenager to late twenties. Then we flash to the end of his life answering our questions. Is Ricardo destined to fail or achieve his dreams? Will he ever fit in?

Reviewer Keridak Silk is a Wisconsin/Florida author: A kaleidoscope of magic, myth and reality. Intuitive counselor, tarot reader, and hypnotist, Keridak’s nature makes her a perfect pantser. Stories surprise her as much as they will you. Her fiction and non-fiction cover multiple genres. Discover her published and upcoming creations on her website.

About the Author: 
More than anything, I'm an avid reader and love historical novels. I've done many things throughout my career, from being an executive director of a non-profit to leading a national organization serving public broadcasting stations across the country, and being a producer and community engagement leader in-between. Writing and public speaking have generally been a big part of everything I've done, and so has
listening. What I discovered throughout, is the power of stories. We all have them and by sharing them, others can gain new perspectives, about the world and themselves. When I'm not writing, I'm doing something outdoors; gardening, out on a hike, or on my bike, kayaking or horseback riding. I also love to travel internationally. I live in Madison, Wisconsin with my longtime husband and partner and travel out west to visit our kids as often as we can, always with notebook, computer and kindle in hand.

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

New Follow Me adventure with Amy Laundrie

 

Follow Me Into the Night
Amy Laundrie
Illustrated by Abira Dias

Released August 12, 2021
Pen It! Publications
36 pp
$3.99 ebook
$13.99 paperback
$21.99 hardcover
ISBN paperback: 978-1-63984-045-8
ISBN hardback: 978-1-63984-046-5

Buy on Amazon

About the Book: 
In this adventure story from the “Follow Me” series, Oliver and Paris follow a Luna moth at dusk and learn about nocturnal animals. With the porch light to guide them safely home, they continue hiking and discover raccoon kits playing hide-and-seek and an opossum with a slumber party on her back! They lose sight of Luna, but have fun stumbling on more surprises in Frog Swamp. When they return home, they discover the biggest surprise of all waiting at the light.

 Watch for other books in this series:
Follow Me Onto the Bog - due out later this year

My Review:
The Follow Me gang, Oliver and Paris, are back in this adventure of exploring the woods at night to learn about night critters. Colorful, bright illustrations bring this story to life in a way that even pre-readers will enjoy. Chasing a luna moth was never so fun as following these two kids on their night hike.

Included in the book are a number of special activities for kids and educators to download from the author’s website, including mazes and word searches and directions to create costumes to accompany a stage version of the story for young actors.

About the Author:
Amy Laundrie, a retired teacher and the author of nine other books, grew up playing “Ghost in the Graveyard,” an outdoor nighttime hide-and-seek game. She’s anticipating her upcoming “sleep out under the stars” night and hopes to see some of the nocturnal animals featured in this book—with the exception of the skunk. Check out the special night games and fun activities listed in the teacher section of her website at www.laundrie.com.



Monday, September 6, 2021

Witty short science fiction with Allison Wall

 

FOOTNOTES ON A SPACE OPERA: a musical first encounter short story
By Allison Wall, alumna of Novel-In-Progress Bookcamp & Writing Retreat, Inc.
 
Short Science Fiction
19 pp.
Published September 6, 2021
Available on Amazon .99 
 
About the Story
When aliens land on Earth, opera—one of Western culture's greatest but most polarizing musical traditions—becomes our planet's greatest interstellar export.

Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy meets Arrival on the stage of the Metropolitan Opera.
Told from the distant future, this short story imagines a reality in which aliens are opera fans, the representative of the human race is a retired coloratura soprano, and classical music is the ticket to the stars. What could possibly go wrong?

Author and classically trained soprano Allison Wall fuses her love of opera with dry humor in this innovative story that will have readers laughing out loud.
 
My Review
Dry wit and clever contemplation combine to deliver an excellent little story about badly handled introductions and the poignant devastation of passing fancies.
 
Wall’s musicality renders her story of operatic domination in full, universal acclaim. A first-page footnote on the word Destiny: “humanity would rather not explain, we assign responsibility to Destiny rather than face complex or uncomfortable truths,” sets the tone and pace for this short and cautionary tale of fascination and determination to possess what one does not have.
 
Footnotes are the key to understanding much of what happens in this alien encounter adventure. Wall chose the terms to explore in footnotes of the text and worded their explanations in a rich and colorful manner while keeping perfect sotto voce as the unseen narrator until the end. Recommended for those who appreciate short stories, find opera colorful, and laugh at Murphy’s Law.
 
About the Author
Allison Wall is an American writer. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from Hamline University and has published short fiction and personal essays and book reviews.

Allison is trained as a classical singer and pianist, and she works as a music teacher, dissertation editor, and academic tutor.
In the general chaos of 2020, Allison found out she is neurodivergent (autism, ADHD). She is passionate about sharing her experiences, advocating for empathy, and contributing to a world in which neurodiversities are seen on an inclusive spectrum of brain differences, not pathologized as illnesses. To that end, she runs NEURODIVERSION, a monthly newsletter that centers neurodiverse news, research, and current events.
 
Connect with Allison on her website, or on Twitter, @awritingwall.


Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Light romance from Violet LeFleur

 


A Man with Class
Violet LeFleur
Romantic novella, May 2019
 
$2.99 Kindle
$6.99 paperback, 132 pp.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07RZM5NK2
 
About the Book:
Trina Baxter is a bartender and barista who has sworn off men to focus on her dream of running her own establishment. Little does she know that what begins as a spilled drink turns into a whirlwind romance with a very sexy college professor.

Devin Robinson is an English professor at the University of Chicago. When he discovers that he is in the running to become head of the department, he decides he needs a high profile, successful woman at his side. When he falls head over heels for Trina, Devin begins to question everything he knows about love.
 
My review:
Well-crafted short and breezy romance set in contemporary Chicago. Two people who are unlikely lovers meets over spilled drinks and friendly encouragement and hook up despite having little in common. Devin, an academic on track for university department chair, introduces barista barmaid Trina with plans of owning her own business someday to different foods and films while Trina shows Devin what a comfortable intact family could be.
 
Both have control issues and each have anxieties about their futures, though for different reasons. With their friends both rooting for and warning them about broken hearts, readers will cheer them on, hoping they can find a comfortable middle road as they teach each other about finding and keeping love.
 
Told in alternating viewpoints, this sweet short story will gift romance readers and nice entertaining bite of charm.
 
About the Author
Violet LeFleur is a music teacher by day, an author by night. When she is not writing romance novellas she enjoys making music, taking walks, and playing video games. A Man With Class is Violet's first novella, and she looks forward to writing many more. She lives with her husband and two beautiful cats.

Friday, July 30, 2021

New crime fiction series with a twist by Howard Seaborne

 


Divisible Man (7 book series)
by Howard Seaborne
crime mystery/spec fiction, 358 pp
Buy on Kindle $2.99 or paperback, $12.99
 
About the book:
The media calls it a "miracle" when air charter pilot Will Stewart survives an aircraft in-flight breakup, but Will's miracle pales beside the stunning aftereffect of the crash. Through trial and dangerous error, Will discovers he can make himself vanish, and in doing so, become immune to gravity. In partnership with his police officer wife, he finds himself at the epicenter of high adventure time after time.
While the series follows in sequence, each book in the series stands alone, launching the reader on a page-turning thrill ride to satisfying and startling conclusions.
 
My Review:
It’s true – the author doesn’t leave the reader hanging by his fingernails at the end of each book, but it’s fun to read them in order. And if you like deep character-led action with obvious spot-on descriptions of flight, you’ll love Seaborne’s Divisible Man series.

I met the author at a vendor fair, and after his wife (yes, great spokeslady!) sold me on reviewing the first book, I happily spent a few days flying around with a dreadfully romantic couple, Will and Andy Stewart, while they took down the bad guys. Will is the private pilot running charters out of small-town Wisconsin, and his wife Andrea is a cop on the ladder to detective whose well-heeled family through her under the bus when she chose a blue-collar life. Will and Andy promised trust in all things between them, but after Will wakes up in the hospital broken but alive for a reason that’s bizarre beyond belief, one disaster after another interrupts Will’s chances to confess to an incredible secret.
 
With alarming reality, Seaborne describes the current plague of sex and drug trafficking, pedophilia and porn in Wisconsin. Readers will wade through a lot of descriptive language and some minor repetitiveness as Will tries to make sense of what happened to him and what it means, and how he can use this crazy new gift. Will and Andy, and friends are well-developed, comfortable characters. Seaborne’s fun turn of phrase even makes cliché cops and villains interesting to read about. Andy and Will’s relationship is rich and nuanced. I fell in love with them and yes, bought the next book in the series. While the story arc concluded, the author cleverly left us wondering what actually did happen to make Will vanish. I aim to find out. Brutality and graphic violence and some language are not prolonged or overly described, but an organic part of the story.
 
About the Author:
Howard Seaborne began writing novels at age ten and flying airplanes at age sixteen. He is a former flight instructor and charter pilot. Today he flies a Beechcraft Bonanza, a Beechcraft Baron and a Rotorway experimental helicopter that he built in his garage. He lives with his wife and writes and flies during all four seasons in Wisconsin.

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Next Open Mic at WWA Zoom Thursday August 5 Register soon

It's that time again!

Join us on August 5th at 7PM to support Wisconsin Writers and hear some great new works. 
Plus a mini craft chat.

Want to read your work? Email hello@wiwrite.org. 
There are only 10 spaces available, first come first serve.


Thursday, August 05, 2021
7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Location: Zoom

Sunday, July 25, 2021

Poetry from RB Simon

 This review originally appeared at Wisconsin Writers Association.


The Good Truth by RB Simon, Madison

Poetry, 40 pp

July 2, 2021, Finishing Line Press, KY

Paperback, $18.80

Buy on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Good-Truth-R-B-Simon/dp/1646625382/


About the Book:

In her debut collection, poet R.B. Simon paints a compelling canvas of identity one poem at a time. With evocative, lyrical language, these poems of loss, identity, and ultimately recovery, show that the complex fabric of our lives often weaves together something more beautiful than we could foresee. The Good Truth offers an accessible and poignant look at the forging of a woman through hardship and alienation, and her quiet, forceful return to the home of herself. The Good Truth is that each one of can join her on the journey.

 

My Review:

Simon’s opening biographical poem “Heritage” sets the table for the reader. With its starkness of the opening line and lyricism of internal time and space as its own dimension, we are drawn deeply into our own childhood angst, sharing our trauma with the poet, no matter who we are or how we existed. Any author of any genre who can pull us into her world is an artist. Simon’s art exposes the grit, love, and wonder of who and why she is, and begs us, her readers, to do the same.

 

“who are you, little i?” spoke to me through the questions of “who are you” from those outside, to the poignant self-wonderment of “who can you become?” Everyone who has hidden under the blanket or in a closet with a flashlight and read till your eyes bled knows how to escape into anyone else’s world but your own.

 

The 23 poems of The Good Truth are written in prose style, some speak in syncopation and several undulate across the page as they weave tales of discovery, humiliation, joy, resignation, despair, and acceptance. Phrases like “stacked facial muscles into a good morning” from “anything to keep you happy” and “the sound of infinity” from “Retreat” make me sigh in contemplation and revelation. The poem “Indelible” makes me want to make sure my loved ones are safe especially from themselves so that I will never have to feel like a “posthumous voyeur.”

 

Poetry is an intimate revelation, and Simon carefully peels back layers of the soul to share flashes of her world. Just the right size to breathe in a few poems at a time and contemplate. Lovingly laid out and finely written. Recommended for poetry aficionados.

 

About the Author:

R.B. Simon is a queer artist and writer of African and European-American descent. She endeavors to create poetry centered in the mosaic of identity, the experiences that make us who we are in totality. Having battled mental health issues, substance use disorder, and trauma throughout her life, she is now in recovery and studying to become an Art Therapist, supporting others on the same journey. She has been published in multiple print and online journals including The Green Light Literary Journal, Blue Literary Journal, Electric Moon, and Literary Mama. The Good Truth is her first book. Ms. Simon is currently living in Madison, WI with her partner, daughter, and four unruly little dogs. Website.





Wednesday, June 30, 2021

WWA Book Review of Hannah's Voice

 


Note: This review originally appeared at Wisconsin Writers Association 

Hannah's Voice by Robb Grindstaff

Coming of age, 191 Pages

Evolved Publishing, 2013, 2020 (2nd ed.)

Reviewed by Gloria Johntel


$4.99

Buy on Amazon

 

Hannah’s Voice is a poignant coming of age tale about a girl who was forcibly ripped away from her home and her mother when she was a small child. The story follows her through to adulthood as she seeks answers to this tumultuous beginning and searches for her lost mother. Robb Grindstaff writes a surprisingly strong female protagonist with plenty of complexity, tenacity, and faith in God and family, without being overly political or religious, despite the religious and political roots of the story. Throughout, the author does a good job of examining different sides and all the grey areas and taking a neutral stance in between the political and religious upheaval that surrounds the protagonist for the duration of the book.

From an early point in this story, Hannah is forced to deal with death and suspicion. As a six-year-old, she has to deal with the recent death of her father, and as the beginning unfolds, she is closely related to the deaths of her classmate and her father’s best friend. She is also forced to deal with her mother’s faulty memory and aggravating repetition. The loss of these things that are dear to her and the accusations against her involving the classmate’s death play a part in her decision to stop speaking. Through the exchanges with her teacher, the principal, the school counselor, and her Sunday school instructor, Hannah begins to feel bullied and misunderstood.

The feelings of being misunderstood and unheard are powerful ones and feelings that many people can relate to. One thing about Hannah’s voluntary muteness that was bothersome throughout the book was that no one seemed to have bothered to teach her sign language, and even when she has a deaf roommate, even though the roommate can read lips and speak, no sign language is used and is hardly even mentioned.

Although Hannah takes it to a new level, the psychological impact of grief and trauma are discussed reasonably in this novel. Her silence invokes the attention of two different groups of people: the radical religious nutcases and the radical political ones. While these two communities clash heads over the reason Hannah doesn’t speak, Hannah takes solace in the comfort of her friends, and they heroically defend her right to live her life as she pleases.

Overall, Grindstaff does a fantastic job with inclusivity and the importance of family and diversity. He captures the emotional turmoil of the foster system and being bounced from one family to the next, all the while clinging to the hope that Hannah’s mother is out there somewhere, waiting for that joyous reunion.


About the author
Robb Grindstaff is a southern contemporary writer, an award-winning novelist and short-story author who pens stories you can’t put down filled with three-dimensional characters you’ll never forget. He is also a fiction editor and writing coach. Visit the writing page to learn more about his books, his editing page if you’re seeking professional assistance with your writing, and his blog for writing tips and techniques.

Reviewer Gloria Johntel lives in southern Wisconsin and is an aspiring writer. She loves to read books of all kinds. She has been writing novels since high school. She enjoys talking to authors about their publishing journeys as one day she hopes to publish some of her vast collection of novels.





Friday, June 18, 2021

New historical fiction from Jane Yunker

 I'm pleased to welcome back Janet Kay reviewing Jane Yunker's newest historic fiction. This review originally appeared on Wisconsin Writers Association book review forum.



Alice, The Betrayal, Jane Yunker
Historical Romance, 280 pages
Published: May 3, 2021
Publisher: Self-published
https://wiwrite.org/book-reviews/10637512 posted June 14, 2021
 
Buy on Amazon Barnes and Noble
Ebook $3.99; print $12.99
 
About the Book:

It's 1918, and Alice, Betty, and Lizzie have been best friends for as long as they can remember. But everything changes when one goes on a campaign to lure away the fiancé of another. How can they remain friends when one betrays another? Harry Barnes returns from France with half his face damaged and his nights haunted by the friends he lost on the battlefield. How can anyone love the monster he has become? Alice Armstrong wanted nothing more than to be Harry's wife. But when he returns from the Front wounded and angry, he repeatedly pushes her away. How can she convince him their love is all that matters? Harry's brother Jack has secretly loved Alice since they were children. When Harry is caught spending time with Betty, Jack sees his chance and declares his love. How can he make Alice see that he's the one who can make her truly happy? When one brother offers the dreams of the past, while the other promises all the possibilities of the future, how does a girl choose? 

Janet Kay’s Review:
The author takes us back in time to the year 1918, to a devastating time in our history as our country was being ravaged by the Spanish flu pandemic. A time that those of us who survived the Covid-19 pandemic, or lost loves ones to it, can all relate to.
The tranquil rural community of Pine Lake in Northwest Wisconsin anxiously awaited the safe return of their brave soldiers who were away fighting for their country in World War I. That included Alice Armstrong and her “best friends forever,” Lizzie and Betty.
Alice could hardly wait to become Harry’s wife. They planned to wed immediately after his return. But Harry came home severely disfigured, missing one eye, haunted by nightmares of bomb raids, friends dying, and untold horrors of war. Angry, explosive and psychologically damaged, he couldn’t believe that Alice would still want to marry a man as disfigured as he was.
The pandemic hit Pine Lake just as a weary Harry arrived back home. Alice caught the flu but survived. Her parents did not. With everyone locked down in their own homes, Alice and Harry could not spend any time together. She had to rely on Harry’s brother, Jack, to help her through her grieving process and tend to the farm chores that her father would have done – if he had survived. Jack had been her father’s right hand man for years.
But Jack was secretly in love with Alice. He had been since they were children growing up together. It angered him greatly to see the way his brother now treated the woman they both loved. Harry began to drink heavily and was prone to outbursts of anger and violence. Surely, Alice deserved better than that. Surely, he, Jack, could make her happier than Harry ever could. He finally declared his love for her and did his best to claim her as his wife.
Alice struggled with her conflicting emotions. She loved them both in different ways. Harry represented the past, their many dreams of a life together. But he had changed and seemed to be on a self-destructive track that she was unable to help him out of. Jack offered a lifestyle on the farm she loved along with permission to pursue the nursing field she felt strongly called to after assisting the local doctor throughout the pandemic.
Which one will she choose? Or, will the choice be made for her? As she struggles with this decision, one of her “best friends forever” betrays her by making a devious play for Harry. The outcome will change all of their future lives.
Jane Yunker has written an intriguing novel, beautifully written, with very well-developed characters. She captures the historical essence of what it was like to live through those times as well as the family dynamics and conflicts that resulted. I highly recommend Alice, The Betrayal. 


About the Author:
Married with two adult children, Jane Yunker is a poet and fiction writer living in northwest Wisconsin along the beautiful and inspirational St Croix River. In her spare time, Jane enjoys cross-stitch, jigsaw puzzles, golf, and walking the trails around her home. And, of course, reading. Books are her passion and it has been her dream for as long as she can remember to write some of her own. Mary Bishop is her first, and will not be her last. Find her blog at: https://janeyunkerauthor.com

Reviewer Janet Kay (Jan Jenson) lives and writes on another pristine lake in Northwest Wisconsin. She is the author of four psychological suspense/wilderness adventure novels with a supernatural twist. Her latest, Rainy Lake Rendezvous, was endorsed by New York Times bestselling author William Kent Krueger. Check out her website at www.novelsbyjanetkay.com

 

 

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Get Out and GREET AUTHORS July authorfest Lake Geneva

 Lake Geneva Welcomes Authors back in person for Beachfront Authorfest




Michelle Caffrey writes: "Marketing and promoting ourselves is often a struggle for many authors who generally spend a lot of time alone with our stories. You’ve been attending a special Book Festival in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin."

Tell us how you learned about this festival?

I learned of Beachfront Authorfest in Lake Geneva from a friend at the library. I find festivals by following the libraries in my area on their websites and Facebook pages. Now I am on their email list for upcoming events.

Pre-pandemic, I went in to local bookstores and libraries and donated copies of my books, and asked if I might make presentations and signings. I’ve done several.

What’s your strategy for talking to festival attendees?

Always have large stacks of books and have a copy upside down so they can read the back. I say “hi” but try not to be pushy with a hard sell. I suggest having a short “elevator speech” prepared. Mine is “The book is about my friend’s dog who was lost in Yellowstone for 44 days.” If they respond, I tell them a little more. Otherwise, if they move on I wish them a nice day.

I also believe in props. I have a life-sized stuffed “Jadette” who draws considerable attention. At one event, Cookies with Santa, a toddler dog-napped Jade’s body double. We all had quite the chuckle…and I did sell all of the books I brought.

                                         

What is your favorite aspect of participating in Authorfest?

Where to begin? I love the location, with beautiful Geneva Lake in view. There’s lots of foot traffic, and people are there to have fun and usually in a good mood. Meeting other authors and fans is great…as long as they don’t dog-nap Jadette.


Tell us where and when we can find you at the festival.

Under a big blue canopy with a "Bring Jade Home" banner and a large stuffed black and white dog.

The Friends of the Lake Geneva Library and Breadloaf Books invite area authors to Beachside Authorfest 2021!

 Saturday, July 10, 2021
10:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Surrounding the Lake Geneva Public Library
918 W Main Street, Lake Geneva, WI
RAIN OR SHINE!

Click here for more info and the sign up form.

About Michelle Caffrey:
After years in the software industry, my husband Paul and I abandoned our successful careers and

bought a converted 1906 Dutch barge, Imagine. We established a boat charter business, Barge and Breakfast, and cruised the European waterways for ten adventure-filled years. I wrote and indie published Just Imagine: A New Life on an Old Boat, the true story of our first-year adventures—and misadventures—as we journeyed from Holland to Burgundy, France.

I’ve written two of my three-novel Dairyland Series. I recently completed Sconnie, which was a finalist in the RWA SWFL Joyce Henderson contest in the Romantic Suspense category.

Bring Jade Home: The True Story of a Dog Lost in Yellowstone, published by Farcountry Press, was my first narrative non-fiction book. My picture book, Jade—Lost in Yellowstone, received the Creative Child Magazine 2020 Book of the Year Award and is the recipient of The Dog Writer’s Association First Place Award for Children’s Early Reader 2020. I recently completed a young reader chapter book for the 8-12-year-old reading level in the series.

I am a member of RWA, the Wisconsin Writer’s Association, former attendee of the Writer’s Institute of the UW, and take part annually in Lake Geneva Library’s Authorfest by the Beach.

My husband Paul and I currently live in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. When not on the water, I enjoy reading and am addicted to knitting. Both of us love to cook, especially French food.
 

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Wisconsin Women Leaders Kick off June 9

To find more information and register for the event, click on the link.

 Wisconsin Women Leaders Schedule

YEARLY KICKOFF MEETING 

06/09/2021
2 pm - 4:30 pm (also recorded for watching later)

2:00 pm - Welcome and Introduction.
by Moderator, Wisconsin Women Leaders.

2:05 pm - Keynote: Become The Leader You Envision.
by Lynnea Katz-Petted, CEO, Revitalize Milwaukee.

2:35 pm - Panel: Building Your Value.
by Tracy Pelt, Director at National Geographic; Sandra Mason, Director at Association of Equipment Manufacturers, Nancy Schmidt, CEO at AIA.

3:05 pm - Keynote: Reviving/Fast-Tracking Your Career.
by Selina Garcia, Assistant Vice President, Johnson iFnancial Grp.

3:35 pm - Panel: Transitioning into the New Normal: Your Team After COVID.
by JoLyn Zamora MS, Executive Director and Children's WI, Sarah Rewasiewicz, Director at Association of Equipment Manufacturers ,and more panelists to be added.

4:05 pm - Keynote: Managing Work/Life Balance In The New Normal.
by Sandra Mason, Director at Association of Equipment Manufacturers.

4:30 pm - Conclusion and Upcoming Monthly Speakers Schedule (Included).
by Moderator, Wisconsin Women Leaders.

B. FUTURE MONTHLY WEB DATES.
Please mark these future monthly web dates from 2-3 pm for an hour each (again all recorded for you to watch at your convenience as well):
- 06/09/2021, Jul.12, Aug.9, Sep.16, Oct.11, Nov.15, Dec.6, 2021.
(featuring top women leaders from Southwest Airlines, Symantec, Vanderbilt, Cox, Microsoft, and many more).

C. ONLINE RESOURCES.
You will find past meetings recorded (also completion certificates if you track your development hours), upcoming dates, key articles, book summaries, mentoring resources and more by logging in and your registration includes a full year's access.

As you can tell, our leadership committee has been working very hard to transform this temporary safety disruption into a great year-long experience with a series of inspiring and educational women’s leadership topics and success stories. Together we will get past this dark hour in history and rebuild an even greater future.


ONLINE RESOURCES.
You will find past meetings recorded (also completion certificates if you track your development hours), upcoming dates, key articles, book summaries, mentoring resources and more by logging in and your registration includes a full year's access.


The registration is fee-based.
**NOTE: I'm just passing this information to you...

Saturday, May 15, 2021

On Finding Independence with Steve Salmon


I Found Love, Steve Salmon
Biography/Memoir, 204 pp
December 2020, CK Books
https://wiwrite.org/book-reviews/10509742
 
Paperback, $13 Buy on:
About the Book

Does having a disability mean you're unloveable?

After forty-seven years living with his mother, Steven, a man with severe Cerebral palsy, creates a new life for himself.  He falls in love with a stripper but searches for a girlfriend, wanting love. Steven lives in a group home being told by staff, “No one cares about you.” He meets new friends, who show him he is loved. I Found Love portrays a man who becomes independent and doesn’t let his disability define his abilities.

My review

Nonfiction writer and novelist Steve Salmon’s frank memoir about figuring out independent life is often humorous, filled with angst and frustration, and yet hopeful. Steve could be anyman, but he happens to have severe cerebral palsy. “My mother’s death in 2015 forced me to leave my home,” Steve writes candidly. “In one day, due to her death, I was thrust into the company of strangers. I…cannot live alone due to my disability.”

After being in the care of a loving, if cautious, parent, all of his life, Steve learns that independence has both up and downsides. “Going out by myself to the bar, the strip club, or anywhere when I lived with Mom was not possible”: but “I don’t miss not being able to do these tasks on my own since I never had the ability.” What bugs him, Steve writes, is not necessarily being dependent, but how the paid staff at his group home make him feel “like I’m a burden. My mother never did that.”

Steve is a college graduate and a working author. He dreams of finding a life partner who sees him “for who I am and not the body I present.” He knows people with cerebral palsy who have married and have a family, so he knows it’s not beyond his reach. Limitations in being able to get out and look for a special love make finding one all the more of a struggle. Steve enjoys going out to be with people, but shares his frustrations in communication and the misunderstanding others often have in thinking he’s cognitively impaired when he most certainly is not. Still, “Being independent sometimes require my determination and the help of kind strangers.”

He is successful enough in his authorial career to have acquired an agent, and has published his work. Writing, however, takes more dedication than the average writer, since he must use special, expensive equipment, and often needs the help of staff. He’s thankful for the encouragement of his friends and writing partners, and his agent. He also recognizes that sometimes his love of the Packers football games is more of a priority than “finding a girlfriend.”

Steve holds no punches when sharing about his life and his challenges. Although the government seems to take two or ten steps backward for every positive thing that happens (taking away subsidized public door-to-door transport for the differently abled in Madison and then charging a healthy rate many cannot afford, and we won’t even get onto the black hole that is Medicaid), he says, “Laughter helps me to forget the pain of waiting.” Steve didn’t take the transportation fiasco lying down, either. He made appeals in Madison’s media, unfortunately to no avail.

It’s not easy being independent. Steve admits to bouts of despair. “I planned my own funeral,” he shares. “ I chose my urn, wrote my obituary, named my agents of my last rites, picked out songs, planned the menu, and paid for the memorial service. My tombstone will say: ‘Steven Salmon author, Packer fan.’ My trust fund paid for the eight-thousand-dollar funeral. It costs a lot of money to die.”

Steve continues to figure out life and love. He’s working steadily to meet his life goals, one of which is to be a “New York author!” I’m excited to see how far his journey goes. Due to adult content, this story is not recommended for younger readers, but he has other current and future books that discuss what it’s like living with cerebral palsy.

About the Author

In January 2017, my book was released It’s A New Life, Mom Is Gone. There are podcasts and radio
interviews on my website.  A couple feature articles has been written about me, including the Wisconsin State Journal. I have a Bachelor of Science in English and a writing minor from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Also, I have a Liberal Arts degree from Madison College. I write a newsletter for Integrity Residential Services. There are over twenty-four million hits on my website. Currently, I’m writing my tenth manuscript. To learn more about me visit www.stevenbsalmon.com 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

New Biography of a formative naturalist

 

The Birdman of Koskonong: The life of naturalist Thure Kumlien
Martha Bergland
© April 20, 2021 by Wisconsin Historical Society Press
304 pp
Biography

ISBN 978-0870-209529
Print $20
Ebook $11.99

Buy
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About the Book: Thure Kumlien was one of Wisconsin’s earliest Swedish settlers and an accomplished ornithologist, botanist, and naturalist in the mid-1800s, though his name is not well known today. He settled on the shore of Lake Koshkonong in 1843 and soon began sending bird specimens to museums and collectors in Europe and the eastern United States, including the Smithsonian. Later, he prepared natural history exhibits for the newly established University of Wisconsin and became the first curator and third employee of the new Milwaukee Public Museum. 

For all of his achievements, Kumlien never gained the widespread notoriety of Wisconsin naturalists John Muir, Increase Lapham, or Aldo Leopold. Kumlien did his work behind the scenes, content to spend his days in the marshes and swamps rather than in the public eye. He once wrote that he was not “cut out for pretensions and show in the world.” Yet, his detailed observations of Wisconsin’s natural world—including the impact of early agriculture on the environment—were hugely important to the fields of ornithology and botany. As this carefully researched and lovingly rendered biography proves, Thure Kumlien deserves to be remembered as one of Wisconsin’s most influential naturalists. 

My Review:

A poignant, heart-felt prologue featuring the recollections of Thure (TOO reh) Kumlien’s (koom-LEEN) young friend Edward Lee Greene opens this outstanding biographical account of scarcely known Swedish-American naturalist. In Wisconsin’s early European settlement period, mid to late nineteenth century, several personalities took a dedicated interest in identifying and recording Wisconsin’s unique natural features, including flora and fauna. One particular plant, the elusive Linnea borealis, was a cherished signal of what once flourished in the state, and could so easily be lost. This life-long memory sets the tone for Bergland’s biographical account.

Kumlien might not have been the most famous, but the dedication of this farmer educator naturalist to documenting and sharing Wisconsin’s wildlife enriched museums and scientific collections around the world, including the Milwaukee Public Museum, one of my favorite places. “The specimens that men such as Kumlien gathered in the 1840 are even more valuable today than they were then—something these naturalists at least partially understood but probably not the extent that we do now,” for the vast data they reveal about birds and environment. They provide resources for the study of “the effects of industrial pollution, climate change, and genetics.”

Using several samples of Kumlien’s letters and artwork of birds, nests, feathers, and flora, the biography is richly embellished with his own few words, historical photographs and accounts from family members and friends. Details, such as newspaper advertising text for ship passengers emigrating to America, and brief articles about departures and the ports of call enliven the story. Careful attention to fact, such as what was inscribed on tombstones, and not only the date of the Kumlien’s wedding but the future of the Justice of the Peace who married them show the depth of Bergland’s research.

After establishing Kumlien’s well-to-do upbringing in Sweden and the development of his passion for ornithology through the first third of the book, the author divides the chapters into short segments of years from Kumlien’s emigration, marriage, and settlement in Wisconsin in 1843. The sight of Milwaukee, the rawness of the young city being cut from wilderness on the shores of Lake Michigan, may have influenced Kumlien of the need to preserve aspects of nature which could quickly be destroyed. The early section of the book is richly documented through a surviving diary of the era. Kumlien was a gentleman scholar from Sweden, highly educated but not learned about pioneer living. Early struggles and losses dominate Thure and Christina Kumlien’s life at Lake Koshkonong where they lived in a poorly constructed shanty for the first six years of their marriage. Of Kumlien’s introduction to American ornithology, he sold six bushels of potatoes and fees for appraising neighboring property he purchased to pay for a $3 copy of Wilson’s Ornithology, being unable to afford works by Audubon. To earn cash, he used his taxidermy skills and sold mounted birds to friends, neighbors, collectors, and museums. He also collected samples of native flora and seed, small mammals, and insects which he carefully preserved, identified and shipped to universities and museums around the world.

In 1850, as a result of a Janesville Gazette article about Kumlien, he was introduced by letter to Thomas Mayo Brewer of the Boston Society of Natural History. Kumlien began to supply nests, eggs, and bird skins as well as detailed descriptions to Brewer and a large number of other collectors. These years of collecting, observing, identifying were intense times for American ornithologists as they classified and corrected each other and themselves, and occasionally Audubon, when errors were noted. Eventually Kumlien secured a teaching position at a nearby school after the Civil War. The Kumleins had four surviving children and took up various interests, such as tobacco farming, art, and career government offices in fisheries, besides the constant collection, preservation, and sale of various species of wildlife. Kumlien worked on and off during his final years as a conservator and enthusiastic guide at the Milwaukee Public Museum. 

Complementing the biography with art from Thure’s great-great-grandson, Bergland’s text is written in a friendly style, including the reader in exploration, discoveries and excitement, tragedy, and joy of life in a new country. Kumlien may never take his rightful place next to Increase Lapham or Aldo Leopold, but I am grateful to have gotten to know him better through this biography. 

About the Author: Martha Bergland is the coauthor, with Paul G. Hayes, of Studying Wisconsin—a Society Press biography on famed Wisconsin naturalist Increase Lapham, which won the Milwaukee County Historical Society’s Gambrinus Prize. She taught for many years at Milwaukee Area Technical College, and lives in Glendale, Wisc