Book review: Scribbles, Rhymes, and Lima Beans: Poems that grow on you by Rachael Waldburger

5 out of 5 stars

Scribbles, Rhymes, and Lima Beans by Rachael Waldburger is a poignant poetry collection that is divided into three parts. Per the author’s note at the beginning, Scribbles is about life and love; Rhymes is about writing, art, and inspiration; and Lima Beans is about growth and renewal. However, there is so much more to be found and recognized throughout this collection.

The poetry of Scribbles describes a nostalgic love the author has for her grandparents and a past crush, and the act of falling in love. In what becomes a theme tying together all three collections, Waldburger also gives us the first hint of divisiveness and dichotomy. Her first poem, The Wall, gives us a stark, yet short, literal description of the purpose of all walls—to bear the weight of division. The next few poems, “Lying on My Back in October,” “Raspberries,” “Running,” and “Old Crush,” seem to represent life and the wonder of love in its different forms and the hope it carries within. The following poems, “Argument,” “Realization,” “Wild-Grown,” and “Wolf” describe life and the lack of love and all that comes along with that emptiness. The rest of this section rotates between this dichotomy of what happens when love is present (and the idea of growth is introduced) and when love is absent due to ineptitude or just losing the very people we love dearly. Two of my favorite poems describing finding love in this section are “Knight Errant” and “Tilting at Windmills.”

The poetry of the second section, Rhymes, takes the themes Waldburger has introduced us to in Scribbles and expands on those while exploring writing, art, and inspiration. She deftly explores learning the rules of poetry and breaking them, rhyming (though most of the poems in this section do not adhere to conventional rhyming schemes), and the art of writing poetry. She tells (naming art pieces, constellations, and poets) and shows us what inspires her words and how those words find their way to the page. One of the most nostalgic poems for me in this section, “Poetry Purrs,” appears to show inspiration from E. E. Cummings and Carl Sandburg. This poem reminded me of the eighth grade when I began to fall in love with poetry. Carl Sandburg was my introduction, and suddenly I felt transported back to little cat feet.

Honestly, before reading the last section, I wasn’t sure about lima beans being about growth and renewal, other than I had to grow to like them as an adult. However, Waldburger, being the descriptive writer she is, shows us how to connect lima beans and growth in a comforting way. She transports us through the seasons of life, the plans we make while filled with uncertainty and hope, and plans realized as she becomes a mother. The poems in this section are longer and filled with more contemplative language than the previous two sections. She also continues the dichotomy of love that is present and love that is absent. And in the penultimate poem from which this collection is named, we find how lima beans and growth are connected. I will leave this discovery for you.

Overall, this poetry collection is well thought out. The overall theme that brings the collection together is not only evident in the poems themselves; my paperback edition has poems of differing points of view facing one other across the binding. There is a natural ebb and flow of life, love, and loss throughout that begs me to pick it up once again to see what I missed in the first read-through.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Glik’s Fables Vol. 1: The Isle of the Charred Maiden by H.D. Scott

4 out of 5 stars

Glik’s Fables Vol 1: Isle of the Charred Maiden by H.D. Scott is a page turner. There’s action, humor, adventure, humor, a fantasy setting, storytelling, and oh—did I mention humor? At times I had to stop my husband from doing whatever mundane task he was working on just to read him my newest favorite passage.

Glik’s Fables follows a type of antihero storyteller, a goblin. Unlike most goblins, Glik is fluent in multiple languages, has a quick mind and can learn quickly, knows how to communicate with different personality types, and has a pet rat named Tinky.

We follow along the adventures and misadventures of Glik and Tinky as they travel by sea and by land and meet humans, other goblins, orcs, a gnome, and a sundry of other folk who add to the fantasy setting. Honestly, I kept thinking, “What are they going to get into next?”

Scott’s character and setting developments are wonderful and help bring the novel to life. I would like to see a little more scene development in a couple of instances toward the end. That being said, I hope there is a Vol 2 very soon.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Airmail: A Story of War in Poems by Kathleen Patrick

4 out of 5 stars

Airmail: A Story of War in Poems by Kathleen Patrick is a heart-wrenching collection of poems that is split into three essential parts: Leaving, Airmail, and Surviving. Patrick has managed to bring together stories of her seven uncles and other family members during a time that split families and a nation. These are stories of memories and experiences of those who went to war and those who stayed behind and the frustrations that both groups felt.

The first and third parts are collections of poems of varying lengths and topics, all filled with real emotion. The second part, Airmail, is a collage of voices from different times and places. This part has a different informational flow while remaining integral to the telling of Patrick’s story.

I recommend this collection of poetry for those who had someone close to them fight in the Vietnam War. Not everyone had seven uncles, sons, brothers who fought during the same time period. The collection brings together varying viewpoints of the seven men and their family members who supported them by sending letters full of questions, hope, and hometown news.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review (extra post for spooky season!): The Hidden Secrets of NOLA by: Laura Daleo, Rhonda Bobbitt, Fern Miller, Preston Allen, and Savanna Loy

This is a wonderfully spirited collection of short stories that highlight different aspects of New Orleans and the different populations which are drawn to the city’s mysteries. Each story is a tribute each author’s imagination. I received an ARC and am so glad I did!

My Name is Death by Laura Daleo
What does Death do on a vacation? In this supernatural story, he visits his favorite places in New Orleans—a city known for its joie de vivre—and encounters a young soul who needs the help and understanding only Death can provide. Annalise, a 17-year-old girl who has been sick her whole life escapes the hospital from where she is staying and searches out life’s experiences that she has been unable to take part in up to this point. Death’s and Annalise’s serious conversations and interactions are imaginatively woven with the more vivacious aspects of modern-day New Orleans.

The Ghost of Toulouse Street by Rhonda Bobbitt
As Rose’s 25th birthday arrives, she has the feeling that she is being watched. Rose reaches out to her sister Lydia and tries to convince her that she has seen the same man in various places throughout the city. Lydia remains dubious while Rose explains the strange happenings that have occurred at her work and other locales. Merrick has his own mystery to solve and a curse to vanquish and believes he has found the answer with Rose. Rose, Merrick, and the supporting cast of intriguing characters weave in and around 1969 New Orleans in this paranormal thriller.

Bidding Up Knox by Fern Miller
This page turner of a second-chance romance takes place in modern-day New Orleans and showcases Kara and Knox. Kara’s caring personality drives her to work for a non-profit organization, and Knox’s father presses him to work in the family industry and to make as much money as possible. Kara and Knox once had a budding romance that left Kara with more questions than answers. When they meet again at an auction that Kara’s organization puts together, Kara wonders if she’ll ever receive the answers that have eluded her for years. Will Kara and Knox be able to reconcile their obvious differences to try again at love? Or will the same issues drive them apart once again? Read along as the descriptions of love and the hustle-and-bustle of New Orleans keep you reading.

Crossed at the Cafe by Preston Allen
Modeste’s life is one of intrigue, voodoo, and witchcraft. She is a voodoo priestess who helps her father with the family store. While ordering a coffee in an unassuming cafe, she has a chance encounter with someone who will greatly influence her life. Modeste, her father, and a family friend try to unravel the mystery of the woman from the cafe, and the readers are taken on an adventure that lends itself well to the magical-realism setting. The characters leap off the page and entwine the reader in a wonderful description of the magical side of New Orleans.

Borrowed Bayou by Savanna Loy
Estelle’s story is one that traces back throughout the ages and evolutions of New Orleans. This sci-fi romance tells of a cursed family who runs a cafe and airboat tour business in the bayou country. Estelle and her close-knit family have sacrificed to ensure the safety of New Orleans over the course of 100 years. Their sacrifices have been many, and each family member has grown weary of their role. One day, handsome Thiago walks into the cafe and catches Estelle’s eye, heart, and soul. But how will Thiago react when the terrible secrets that the Dupont family have managed to keep hidden away all this time are revealed? This story is full of rich descriptions and engaging characters that have the reader engrossed until the very end.

Book review: Exposed: Nevertheless She Persisted by Alicia Curry

4 out of 5 stars

Mother. Educator. Counselor. Daughter. Sister. Aunt. Friend. Coworker. All of these help define Alicia Curry. But they do not tell her complete story. While she is one or more of these to each person in her life, the most important description in Exposed: Nevertheless She Persisted is survivor. Curry bravely tells her story of enduring workplace harassment and toxic workplace behavior and the years it took to fight back against a system that protects the abuser.

Curry starts the memoir describing the toll the loss of two of her brothers and other family members had begun to take on her. What Curry does well throughout is describe how not only one aspect of self is affected by loss, but many if not all are affected. The loss of Curry’s brothers affected her as a sister, daughter, aunt, friend, mother, etc. Grief affects even someone who can compartmentalize most things and move on with their plans.

Curry carefully planned what career path she wanted to take and how it would take her to an administrative position within the school district. She worked hard for her career to provide for her daughter, to help serve the student population, to be a supportive family member. Then Curry starts receiving abusive behavior from someone she once trusted and from multiple people who would shape the course of her career.

Exposed is more than a simple retelling of a fight against an abuser, the systems that protected him (in multiple states), and the compounded affect it has on someone who was already fighting to find new routines after familial loss. Curry draws in the reader with her beautiful descriptions of the people who supported her throughout and with the description of her faith journey. Exposed is a story of strength and inspiration.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Olawu by P.J. Leigh

5 out of 5 stars

Olawu by P.J. Leigh is a powerful story of growth, bravery, courage, love, and healing in pre-colonial Africa. This historical fiction follows titular character Olawu’s life as she travels through three cities: Kanakam, where girls and women are not allowed to learn to read or write or trade at the square; Borimbe, where girls and women are allowed a little more freedom to wander about within the city and are allowed to learn to read and write, but are not allowed to leave the city without a male escort without fear of being beaten; and Oloko Ekhaya, where women and men are treated as equals in every way.

As Olawu travels through these three cities, we are also introduced to two tribes: the Dikebe and the Oloko. Olawu’s experiences and discoveries as a healer help educate her and those around her throughout her interactions with both tribes. We follow as Olawu works to better her understanding of what healing can truly mean in every sense of the word as she navigates a time of war, hardship, and hatred.

For all those who ask, “Can one person really make a change in the world around them?”, this novel delivers a resounding yes. Leigh takes us on a journey of emotions through her descriptive language and fantastic character development. This inspirational novel should be a part of recommended reading for young adults and adults alike.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Mystery of L’Inconnu by Dan Grylles

4 out of 5 stars

Mystery and crime readers who have wished for a return to Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle style novels, you have caught a lucky break. Mystery of L’Inconnu by Dan Grylles is a well-researched, well-developed novel about tragedy on the high seas and how Lt. Detective Remington Ferguson and his team attempt to unravel the mysteries surrounding the ill-fated cruise.

From Grylles’ introduction of characters (you must include the yacht as one of those characters) to his character and setting developments, the reader will be reminded of the intelligent writing of the aforementioned staple crime writers. Grylles adds his own touch of technological panache that brings the mystery and crime genre into the 21st century.

L’Inconnu is a luxury yacht from the Royal Knight Cruise Line, which caters to the very wealthy who might like to purchase their own luxury yacht. The esteemed guests are invited to enjoy a five-day trip showcasing the possible life aboard a yacht that leaves its passengers wanting for nothing. Each crew member is selected by Royal Knight Cruise Line for their singular expertise to enhance the passengers’ experiences from cuisine to marine life to social excursions.

Throughout the four parts of the novel (The Discovery, The Deception, The Detection, and The Disclosure), the reader learns about what it takes to run and maintain a yacht such as L’Inconnu as secrets about its crew and its guests are unraveled. Nothing is what it seems as what starts off as a sales pitch for a beautiful yacht turns into a nightmarish fight for survival for all involved. The guests and crew start turning against one another, and what is left for Lt. Detective Remy to figure out once the yacht is discovered will take all the expertise of his crime scene team and help from the US Coast Guard.

While a lengthy read, the story is intriguing enough to keep your attention and wanting for a little more at the end. I look forward to reading the next book in the series.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Stories of a Harlem Resident by Javier Sarmiento Jr.

4 out of 5 stars

Stories of a Harlem Resident by Javier Sarmiento Jr. is a short yet powerful collection of poetry that gives us a look at everyday life in Harlem through the lens of poetic and descriptive language. The author uses his poetry to show his inspirational vision of making the world a better place, making his community stronger, and helping the world to understand a viewpoint they may not have seen before.

Sarmiento Jr.’s vision and passion for social justice shine throughout, especially with “Journeyman” and “The Blue Men.” He teaches us how to be kind, to listen to one another, and to make better informed choices, all while giving us descriptive snapshots of the struggles he has experienced.

I would have loved to see a few more poems further illustrating his vision of what helping one another looks like for him. His eagerness to impact the world is palpable, and I can’t wait to see what this author has in store for his readers. His gift of perception and description will continue to develop and aid his unique poetic voice.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.

Book review: Death Date: Book One of the Rageblight Duology by B.Y. Simpson

4 out of 5 stars

Death Date by B.Y. Simpson is a rapid-fire page turner of a YA dystopian novel. The character and world development are intricate and lend to a fascinating story. I received an ARC, and pretty soon, you’ll be able to order it for yourself and dive in.

Nova James is brought up in a world where you receive your death date on your 18th birthday. Any of your previous actions up until that birthday can have an adverse or positive effect on the date’s proximity. As Nova’s 18th birthday approaches, the structured world she’s known and strived to understand her whole life changes, and chaos ensues. The novel follows Nova’s dangerous journey to find answers against all odds. Along the way, she suffers loss, makes new allies, explores her world, and finds that she is much stronger than she ever imagined.

What would you do to try to save the world if you only had some of the answers, and having those answers wasn’t always the blessing you thought it would be? Would you push forward or accept your fate? Death Date shows us the heroine’s struggle as she deals with just those questions. Death Date ends on a cliffhanger, leaving the reader itching to know how the rest of Nova’s journey will continue.

Book review: The Doll by Laura Daleo

Laura Daleo’s science fiction novel The Doll grabbed my attention at the beginning and didn’t let go until the end. For a shorter work of fiction, Daleo packs in love lost and love found, AI, moral dilemmas, and liberty, plus much more.

Daleo approaches a subject that is especially topical at the moment (artificial intelligence or AI) and gives it a spin. While the AI in this novel is more advanced than what we currently are working with, there could be a time when sentient AI could become reality. And Daleo brings up some moral questions that we should ask ourselves before we get to that point. These questions make us delve deeper than just “Why create AI?” and “Should we create AI?”, though these questions are important as well.

Interwoven with the moral dilemmas of sentient AI are the topics of loss and grief on multiple levels. Loss of friendships and love are front and center; however, we are confronted with the possible loss of liberty and autonomy as well.

Jeremy Dillon is mourning the loss of his fiancée Jenna when he is approached by someone who knows The Dollmaker and is promised a way to lighten his misery. Jeremy calls the number on the card given to him and starts on an adventure that will take him and us readers through all the emotions of a roller coaster ride: excitement, fear, judging our decisions that lead us to a certain point, etc.

Jeremy makes new friends along the way, finding someone new for whom he could very possibly have feelings. While Carly is like Jenna in many ways, she is her own person. Her reactions to certain situations intrigue Jeremy and present him with a new way of looking at the world. Carly’s and Jeremy’s exploits with the government and the private sector keep the reader intrigued and questioning whether they would make the same decisions. Daleo presents us with possible answers from more than one point of view and presents us with what the power of choice really mean for both human and AI.

The novel works hard to deliver so much in a small amount of pages. I wish the ending was given a few more chapters to really connect with the characters and their decisions. Also, Jeremy’s friends provide an interesting backdrop and insight into his life with Jenna before she dies. There were a few moments with those friends that could have been explored further. There are some editorial errors, but they did not distract from the powerful storyline.

I received a complimentary copy from the author. This review is honest and voluntary.