Spotlight Book Tour -TO BE LOVED: AIN’T GONNA BE DENIED by Ronald D. Steele.


 

Join Us for This Tour from Feb 26 to Mar 8!

Book Details:

Book Title:  To Be Loved: Ain’t Gonna Be Denied by Ronald D. Steele
Category:  Adult Fiction (18+), 463 pages
Genre:  Memoir / Autobiography
Publisher:  Ronald D. Steele
Release date:   July 31st, 2023
Content Rating:  PG-13 + M


Book Description:

Born in poverty and violence, without love, the author goes to the streets to find love, becoming successful at everything he applies, even crime.

Convicted for a crime the victim said he did not commit, at 19, he was convicted and sentenced to 15 years for robbery. Determined to correct the injustice, the author turns to writing. Over 18 months and on the brink of suicide, the author’s letters led the sentencing judge to reduce the sentence by 10 years.

So begins the journey of a self-made man.

The author seeks counseling, which was a social taboo and a Godsend. The author confronts the past, determines his future, adopts positive thinking discipline, and uses the ex-con stigma to qualify for a college program. He graduates with a B.A. degree, pursues a career in public affairs in the federal government, serving seven cabinet secretaries, and serving as president of a writers guild, travels the world, sues the agency and local police, and retires at the top of the salary pyramid, a husband, father, and grandfather.

​The author illustrates the many life lessons he learns to steer readers from the pitfalls he faced.

Additionally, the author inspires readers to think positive, be true to their beliefs, and believe in themselves, even when family and friends may not, and, regardless of their past mistakes, have the attitude that you “ain’t gonna be denied.”

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Meet the Author:

Ronald D. Steele is a versatile talent, renowned as a writer, photographer, world traveler, and ardent tennis player. With a career spanning over two decades in federal government public affairs and information technology, Steele’s remarkable journey is a testament to his adaptability and dedication. As a freelance journalist, his work graced media outlets nationwide, and he made appearances on various television and radio stations.

Steele’s leadership as the president of the African American Writers Guild from 1989 to 1992 underscores his impact in the literary world. Born in Manhattan, he now calls Prince George’s County, Maryland home.


connect with author: website X ~ facebook instagram 






Book Tour & Giveaway – Hair On Fire by Larada Horner-Miller.



A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir


Nonfiction / Memoir

Date Published: 09-21-2023

Publisher: Horner Publishing Company



Brimming with heartfelt anecdotes, nostalgic escapades, and timeless humor, Hair on Fire is a Christmas memoir like no other. It will warm your heart, make you laugh uproariously, and transport you back to the most magical time of the year. So grab a hot cocoa and snuggle under a cozy blanket while Horner-Miller beguiles with her tales!



Chapter Twelve

A CHRISTMAS SAD AND PRECIOUS

It was in the late 1960s. Mom, Dad, my teenage brother, and I arrived in Poway, California for a special Christmas celebration. My sister’s husband had recently been diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver, and the future loomed bleak. This was only the second time we’d traversed to California for Christmas, and this trip had such a mixture of emotion. 

A couple years before, as newlyweds, my sister, her new husband, and his two children came to Colorado for a truly country Christmas with lots of snow. 

My new brother-in-law immediately started picking on me, and we bonded deeply even though he forced me to try cranberries—I had never tried this dish before. In reality, it wasn’t a dish—Mom opened cranberry sauce that slid out of the can whole—plop!—and served it. It always looked slimy to me. With his humor and persistent influence, I grew to love cranberries! 

Sunny California appeared gloomy and heavy. The festive atmosphere of Christmas felt tinged with a deep sadness and fear. My sister greeted us warmly, knitting like a crazy woman. She shared with me that all of their gifts this year were knitted. I thought it a wonderful idea, but shortly I learned finances drove her decision. 

I gasped silently at the man we saw on arrival, a shadow of the man we met a few short years ago. The disease had ravaged my brother-in-law’s body, and he had lost so much weight, his clothes hung loose and limp on his frame. 

But his spirit of love and laughter prevailed. Mom tried her hand at making homemade pie crusts, forgetting the effect of being at sea level on a recipe usually done at 6,100 feet above sea level. She grumbled about the gooey mess she kept trying to roll out, and my brother-in-law teased her unmercifully. As he ducked out of the kitchen with his latest quip, she slung the ball of dough at him, hitting him in the eye—a magnificent bullseye. Our laughter filled the kitchen with delight in the ridiculous. 

Christmas Eve morning came, and my brother-in-law slipped into Mom and Dad’s bedroom and whispered his plan for the day to Mom and me. “I’m going to go sell some wood so I can buy my loving wife some Christmas presents. Don’t let her know where I’ve gone. Can you help me wrap the presents when I get home?” 

Mom and I both choked back tears, nodding our heads. 

The impact of my brother-in-law’s health had destroyed their finances. He hadn’t worked his normal construction job in several months; my sister had a good job, but she was so busy and overwhelmed being a caregiver, too. Living in the wooded area of Poway, he cut wood whenever he could and sold it to make some extra money and to keep active—his current lack of working was not his nature. 

Christmas Eve day went by uneventfully except for my sister’s repeated refrain, “Where is my husband? What is he doing?” Her distress weighed on me, but I couldn’t ruin his surprise. She continued to knit, the needles rapidly moving in her nervous hands. 

Daylight slowly faded into darkness. Mom and I exchanged worried glances all day—Dad and Bub joined my sister in wondering about the whereabouts of my brother-in-law. 

Mom and I went to their bedroom to talk about what we should do—the pending darkness scared us. He had been gone for hours. What if something went wrong? Quietly my brother-in-law opened the door of my parent’s bedroom, a couple bags in hand. He looked exhausted but pleased with himself. 

We wrapped the small collection of gifts—all kitchen utensils for my sister. We placed the gifts under the tree, and my sister, contrite in her reaction to her husband’s day-long absence, held back tears and pain. 

I knew deep in my heart that this was the most precious exhibition of love I’d ever seen. His generosity and spirit graced the rest of that holiday. 

Sixty-some years ago, and it still brings a smile to my heart, yet a tear to my eyes, as I remember his mission of love and the true spirit of Christmas. 

Have you had a Christmas like this—both sweet and bittersweet at the same time? 

About the Author

Larada Horner-Miller is an award-winning poet, essayist, blogger and accomplished multi-genre author who holds a bachelor’s degree in English and a Master of Education Degree in Integrating Technology into the Classroom. She is the accomplished author of seven award-winning historical fiction, memoir, and poetry works plus three self-published cookbooks.

Her new release, Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir is available in paperback and e-book format.

Her sixth book, Coronavirus Reflections: Bitter or Better?, is available in paperback and four e-book formats. It won the 2023 New Mexico/Arizona Book Awards for the Self Help/Guides category and the 2022 New Mexico/Arizona Book Award for the Mind, Body and Spirit category. Larada offers the reader the opportunity to look back at 2020 and the global pandemic through her prose and poetry through reading, then reflecting and responding. She addresses all the emotions she felt during this overwhelming time and leads the reader through to a self-access: bitter or better?

Her fifth book is the authorized memoir and biography of world-renown square dance caller Marshall “Flip” Flippo. Just Another Square Dance Caller: Biography of Marshall Flippo is available now in hardback, paperback and four e-book formats. Recently Just Another Square Dance Caller won two awards: Book Excellence Awards Finalist and Silver award for eLit. Book Awards.

Larada and her husband, Lin, enjoy being nestled in the mountains above Albuquerque, New Mexico, near the village of Tijeras. She enjoys square dancing, traveling, knitting, and reading.

 

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Book Blitz & Giveaway – Hair On Fire by Larada Horner-Miller.

 

A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir


Nonfiction / Memoir

Date Published: 09-21-2023

Publisher: Horner Publishing Company


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Brimming with heartfelt anecdotes, nostalgic escapades, and timeless humor, Hair on Fire is a Christmas memoir like no other. It will warm your heart, make you laugh uproariously, and transport you back to the most magical time of the year. So grab a hot cocoa and snuggle under a cozy blanket while Horner-Miller beguiles with her tales!


About the Author

Larada Horner-Miller is an award-winning poet, essayist, blogger and accomplished multi-genre author who holds a bachelor’s degree in English and a Master of Education Degree in Integrating Technology into the Classroom. She is the accomplished author of seven award-winning historical fiction, memoir, and poetry works plus three self-published cookbooks.

Her new release, Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir is available in paperback and e-book format.

Her sixth book, Coronavirus Reflections: Bitter or Better?, is available in paperback and four e-book formats. It won the 2023 New Mexico/Arizona Book Awards for the Self Help/Guides category and the 2022 New Mexico/Arizona Book Award for the Mind, Body and Spirit category. Larada offers the reader the opportunity to look back at 2020 and the global pandemic through her prose and poetry through reading, then reflecting and responding. She addresses all the emotions she felt during this overwhelming time and leads the reader through to a self-access: bitter or better?

Her fifth book is the authorized memoir and biography of world-renown square dance caller Marshall “Flip” Flippo. Just Another Square Dance Caller: Biography of Marshall Flippo is available now in hardback, paperback and four e-book formats. Recently Just Another Square Dance Caller won two awards: Book Excellence Awards Finalist and Silver award for eLit. Book Awards.

Larada and her husband, Lin, enjoy being nestled in the mountains above Albuquerque, New Mexico, near the village of Tijeras. She enjoys square dancing, traveling, knitting, and reading.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Blog

Goodreads

Pinterest

Instagram

Youtube

 

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

 

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Book Tour, Excerpt & Giveaway – Our Song by Lynda Smith Hoggan.



Memoir

Date Published: 10-11-2022

Publisher: She Writes Press


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In 1972 rural Pennsylvania, the author, a white college student, fell head over heels in love with an African-American friend of a friend. With their schools hours apart, they forged an intimate connection such as neither had ever had through letters. But racist parents, a jealous friend, and their own mistakes caused them to lose each other. Forty years later, they might have another chance.

 



Excerpt…

On a cold January morning, I woke in his bed and knew that I could, I would, I had to make him love me.

My high school friend Hannah had introduced us the previous September. She’d invited me to a dance at their small private school, Moravian College, in our hometown of Bethlehem, PA. I had noticed that more than one friend wanted to introduce me to a “cool” black guy they knew. Probably because I was involved with Will, a black guy from Philly who was spending the year studying abroad. I wondered if Hannah was attracted to JT herself but was afraid to date someone black; most of the boys in our local pool were descended from white immigrants, especially German, “Pennsylvania Dutch.” Along with my friend Sharon, I was the one in our group who had started clubbing outside Philly, where we met guys from different backgrounds.

Yet I was curious about this Johnny Thomas, the Big Man on Campus. Outside the local area, few had heard of Moravian, but his skills on the basketball court were putting the school on a wider map. It wasn’t so much JT’s modest fame that intrigued me. It was the way Hannah spoke about him, like he was a religion that you’d want to convert to. Smart, funny, charming, handsome, and oh yeah, genuinely nice. He was the whole package, and maybe one that none of us, no matter whom we had dated, had yet to open.

My state college, Slippery Rock in western PA, was hours away, but I was home for the weekend. That Saturday night I got myself together to go to the Moravian dance. I washed and brushed my long dark hair, pulled on my one pair of bell-bottoms that weren’t patched and faded, and slipped into some faux Frye boots (I couldn’t afford the real ones). I was ready, but for what exactly? At the dance Hannah produced him rather ceremoniously: “Lynda, this is JT.” As if I had been waiting for him all my life. She was grinning and dimpling, clearly pleased, like she could take a giant bite out of him herself. She was right about him. Tall and rangy, big Afro, high cheekbones, expressive eyes. Dressed like a jock in a windbreaker, shirt, and pants. We made small talk, and he leaned over so I wouldn’t have to strain my neck looking up. I asked him if he wanted to dance, but he ruefully shook his head, “I might be the only black guy who doesn’t dance.”

Even if JT didn’t dance, his eyes did. They twinkled in a way that told me he knew exactly what was going on. I wasn’t sure what Hannah had told him about me. I wanted to be up front, so I managed to slip my upcoming holiday visit to my boyfriend in England into the conversation. We chatted a bit more, the dance ended, and we all said goodnight. The next day, on the bus back to my school, I wondered how Will, my boyfriend across the sea, was spending his Sunday at Durham University. Studying, probably, since he didn’t have the money to do much else. The realities of his life seemed very far away, so my thoughts soon turned back to JT. For some reason, a song from one of my roommate’s albums was stuck in my mind. Blood, Sweat & Tears, a song called “40,000 Headmen.” The song’s words didn’t speak to me, but the instrumental bridge was both haunting and hopeful. It stirred me, and without words I began to lay down my own story, like wondering whether I would ever see JT again. I found myself picturing JT’s dancing eyes, hearing that refrain repeat in my mind as the highway blew by.

I got busy with classes. Partied as usual, celebrated my twentieth birthday. Made plans to visit Will in England at Christmas. A big deal because I’d never traveled farther than family car trips to visit relatives or drives with friends to the Jersey shore. I worked in the cafeteria to save money and borrowed the rest from Colleen, my best friend from high school. Then came the holiday break, and it was time to travel across the ocean to be with Will. The size and bustle of the Philly airport was overwhelming. The speed and noise of the flight’s takeoff was terrifying to me. Every time there was turbulence, my heart leapt and my palms started to sweat, as I knew there was nothing but the deep black sea beneath. After six hours of that, I was able to catch my breath once the plane landed. Then there was a new challenge, would Will be at the airport waiting for me? His university was a five-hour train trip away, and mail was sometimes slow. I wasn’t even sure whether he had received my travel plans. But there he was, sporting a happy grin.

We spent two weeks together that included my first exposure to a whole new world, the culture of Great Britain. To me, it seemed like I’d stepped into the Shakespeare I’d read in school. In local pubs, the young Brits were drawn to Will’s ’fro and army jacket. They were curious about America and liked to brag that their society didn’t have the racial prejudice problems we had. But when we hitch-hiked to visit Will’s friends in Birmingham 150 miles away, we spent much of the next eight hours standing in the rain with our thumbs out. Hitching was common to our youth culture, even worldwide, but it was still rare to see a black man and a white woman hitching a ride together. When it was time for Will and me to say good-bye, he looked devastated. I stood there feeling only slightly melancholy even though it would be another six months before we’d see each other again. My lack of sadness confused me, and during the flight back, I wondered for the first time whether I really loved Will. When I arrived home, my parents asked no questions about my trip. They didn’t approve of my black boyfriend.

I finished the semester and then went home again for winter break. During the day I hung out with my little sister Barbie, now seven and always ecstatic to have me there. I liked to buy things for her that matched the way I dressed, like a big, floppy suede hat—“hippie chick” clothes she called them. At night I got together with my local hometown girlfriends, usually Sharon or Hannah. Then on the weekend, my best friend, Colleen, was home from the University of Pittsburgh. On our last Saturday night before Colleen and I would head back to school, she and Hannah and I were going to hang out.

Hannah called and told me that she’d heard JT was arriving back at Moravian that day. The winter athletes came back early to start practice for the upcoming games, so she’d hatched a plan: “How about if we three girls go visit his dorm with some wine and a trivia game?” I’d met Hannah through Colleen during our senior year of high school. Both Colleen and I had left town to go to school, but Hannah had stayed in the area. She and I started hanging out more when I came home for holidays and summers. Still, Colleen was the one I considered my best friend. Back when I’d started tenth grade, lonely because my junior high best friend had moved away, Colleen had reached out to me. From that point on we talked on the phone every day and did everything together.

Hannah’s plan sounded fun, but I did wonder about the dynamics. Hannah was pushing me toward JT, but her crush seemed obvious. Did he feel that way about her? Why wouldn’t he—Hannah was petite with an hourglass figure, thick black hair, and an impish grin. And Colleen was cute with her red-gold hair, big blue eyes, and flirty demeanor. Why wasn’t Hannah pushing JT toward her? Maybe because, although U Pitt had plenty of men (that’s where I’d met Will), I’d never heard that any of Colleen’s dates was black.

And what about me? Was I just curious about JT, or would I actually cheat on Will? And because of something so shallow as JT’s minor stardom or extraordinary good looks? Or was there a deeper magnet pulling me to him? I found myself humming the melody of that BS&T instrumental, imagining those dancing eyes. Lastly, what did Johnny Thomas want? Hannah said that he wasn’t known to be dating anyone, but I was sure he had plenty of opportunities. I wondered what he’d thought of me at our first meeting. And was this just a cheerful last hurrah of a group of college kids before having to get serious about our studies again? Or was something more about to happen?

At around seven o’clock we knocked, and JT’s eyes widened when he opened the door. I realized that if athletics were his priority, he might actually send us away. But no, he invited us in. Was he flattered that three young women had so obviously schemed to waylay him for the night? Or was he just used to this kind of attention? If he was, he didn’t show it. He seemed humble, a happy smile playing about his mouth.

He put on a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album, Hannah and I poured the wine into plastic cups, and Colleen pulled out a joint. Amidst the talking, laughing, and self-conscious jockeying for our social positions, I saw JT’s eyes keep dancing back to me. Soon it became clear: JT was mine, at least as far as that night was concerned. Nervous, I used my fallback strategy: project an air of quiet mystery, a good hiding place for my shyness. I could still flirt with my eyes and smile.

We played the trivia game. Whereas I was drawing questions with answers like “Mesopotamia” (answers I didn’t usually know), JT kept getting the vocabulary questions that I would have done well on. But JT was also good with language. “What’s a four-syllable word beginning with T?” “Tantalizing,” said JT, smiling at me. I leaned forward just enough to tantalize with a bit of cleavage. A little while later he drew the card again: “What’s a four-syllable word beginning with T?” It seemed even funnier stoned, and we girls all just fell out laughing. JT didn’t miss a beat. “Titillating,” he said, his eyes locked on mine. I titillated back with my mysterious smile.

Hannah sent me an approving look and private wink. Colleen watched him, her eyes bright with admiration. But seeing his attention like a beacon on me, she stood back.

I’d just about given up any hope of shining in this game, when suddenly a gift appeared in the form of sexual perversion. “Name a famous doctor starting with K.” Confident because I’d learned it in a psych class, I gave my answer, “Krafft-Ebing.” The others just stared. I explained that he was a psychiatrist who’d written the first reference book about sexual psychopaths, but they had never heard of him. “You made that up,” said Colleen, poking my shoulder. Hannah and JT agreed, and they all denied me the points. I grumbled but conceded, hoping that JT might at least suspect I had a vast array of intriguing sexual knowledge, which I most certainly did not.

At one point when we sat quietly after the game, JT put on a Blood, Sweat & Tears album. I was taken aback when “40,000 Headmen” began to play. As the instrumental bridge swelled to a beautiful crescendo, JT’s eyes again met mine. I knew he couldn’t know that the song had previously made me think of him, but I saw that he was just as moved as I was by the ways that music could touch us.

It was getting late. As we girls were leaving, JT gently pulled me back inside. “You don’t go back to school till Monday, right?” he asked. “Yeah, right.” He casually took my hand and looked down at his fingers playing with mine. “I have practice during the day tomorrow. Do you wanna come up later and hang out?” My heart clashed like the school marching band, but outwardly I played it cool. “Yeah, sure, why not? I’ll see you then.”

I caught up with the girls, who managed to hold it in until we were out of earshot. “What did he say?” “What does he want?” They both spoke at once, and I laughed. “Oh, just to see me tomorrow,” I said innocently, pretending it wasn’t the most important event of the night, the most thrilling thing that had happened to me in ages. But I couldn’t pretend for long; he probably heard our screams echoing down the hall.

About the Author

Lynda Smith Hoggan is Professor Emeritus of health and human sexuality at Mt. San Antonio College in Southern California. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times,  Westwind UCLA Journal of the Arts, Cultural Daily, and more. This is her first book.

 

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RABT Book Tours & PR

Book Spotlight & Giveaway – Standing Strong by Tina Brandau.

 


Book Details:
Book Title:  Standing Strong: The Real Life Story of Overcoming Adversity and Becoming Unstoppable in Life and Business by Tina Brandau
CategoryAdult Non-Fiction (18+), 154 pages
GenreMemoir / Self-Help / Inspirational
Publisher: Red Sky Publishing
Publication Date: May 3, 2022
Content Rating: G: no bad language no sex etc
Book Description:

Is it possible to stand strong regardless of what life throws at you?

Standing Strong is a vulnerable, candid, and dramatic look into a forty-year-old woman’s journey when she found herself in the midst of a long healing process after a sudden and unimaginable accident. The doctors said she would never again function beyond that of a young child. Tina shares the story, the steps she took, and the life lessons she learned, including the unique view of the world she experienced along the way. No one gets out of this life unscathed, everyone faces stresses, challenges, setbacks, and adversity. Can you stand strong regardless of what life throws at you? Yes! Let Tina Brandau share with you the system, principles, and practices she used to help you see that anything is possible.

​Become unstoppable . . . and stand strong!
BUY THE BOOK:
Amazon

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Meet the Author:

Tina Brandau is the premier life, leadership, and business “Success Coach.” She is an author, international speaker, coach, and founder of Success Coaching Solutions as well as a business executive of thirty years, wife, mom, lifelong learner, and serial entrepreneur. She believes the biggest challenge in life is to become all that you have the possibility of becoming.

For Free Tools visit www.livestandingstrong.com

connect with the author: website goodreads



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Book Tour & Giveaway – Two Floors Above Grief by Kevin O’Connor.


 

Book Details:

​Book Title:  Two Floors Above Grief: A Memoir of Two Families in the Unique Place We Called Home by Kevin M. O’Connor
Category:  Adult Non-Fiction (18+),  318 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction, Memoir
Publisher:  18th Floor Publishing
Release date:  November  2022
Content Rating:  PG for two languages use and use of F-word.   
Book Description:

As a child in the 1950s, Kevin O’Connor knew his house was different than those of his friends. A stately, three-story, nineteenth century Victorian. His bed tucked next to a stage in a former ballroom. His uncle and aunt lived with their three daughters on the floor below. A large electric organ stood stately in a corner of the first-floor mortuary business. Stacked caskets and an embalming room filled the basement.

Nobody had a house like his.

​Set from the 1920s to ‘80s, Two Floors Above Grief is full of fascinating details and anecdotes about his upbringing as a funeral home child, brought to vivid life through a compelling collection of letters written by various family members who lived and worked together at the O’Connor Funeral Home in Elgin, Illinois. Blending the twenty-four-hour business of death and its constantly ringing phone with joy experienced through music, radios, pets, backyard basketball games, co-parenting, faith, and celebrations, O’Connor offers a reflective tale affirming the love of family and embracing life.


Meet the Author:

Kevin O’Connor enjoys chronicling the stories of families and friends through tracing genealogical histories and writing. His prior writing includes a dissertation, personal letters, articles, anthologies, and presentations delivered at conferences, seminars, and webinars. He brings people together personally and professionally. Collaborating with friends and relatives, he plans family and class reunions.

He sings and performs in theaters and is active with SMART Ride, a bicycling group that rides annually from Miami to Key West, raising funds for HIV awareness, treatment, and education. Kevin was an elementary teacher, principal, professor, and curriculum coordinator in California, Illinois, and Florida from 1973 to 2020. He authored content and provided training in areas including support for substitute teachers, LGBTQ advocacy, and Sexual Health/Family Life.

Kevin resides in Ft. Lauderdale with his husband, Leon. Their family includes five sons and seven granddaughters.

connect with the author: website facebook ~ instagram linkedin ~ goodreads 

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Book Tour and Giveaway – Skinny Dipping in a Dirty Pond by Lis Anna-Langston.

 

Literary Fiction / Memoir

Release Date: October 1, 2022

Publisher: Mapleton Press


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A young girl in a small southern town in the 80’s enlists the help of an unlikely group of friends and family to help her survive an unconventional, sometimes abusive childhood. Often left in the care of a paranoid schizophrenic uncle who lives downstairs and a psychotic uncle upstairs, the narrator stacks up a few heartbreaking observations. When her mother abandons her in favor of her addictions, the girl goes to live with her grandmother but finds happiness cut short when her grandmother dies. Her uncle believes the voices in his head have trapped his mother in a basement across town and as he slowly looses grip on reality, he also looses his ability to take care of her. Taken to a Group Home to live until a case worker can find her a place to go, her mom’s ex shows up and is forced to make a choice.


Praise for Skinny Dipping in a Dirty Pond:


One child’s vulnerability and resilience to forces beyond her control make a raw and colorful splash in this tenderhearted memoir.

-RECOMMENDED by the US Review


“Skinny Dipping in a Dirty Pond is highly recommended for fiction readers looking for coming-of-age and family narratives that are anything but ordinary and predictable. Its lively tone packs a punch.”

– D. Donovan, Midwest Book Review


… I have to tell you that as I enjoyed this great book, I realized no 9 year old could have the thoughts or quick comebacks that Cotton does. Any kid that had to go through what Cotton did would become old way before their time. But in truth, this is mostly a story of Cotton telling about her life but living in the moment. Does that sound nuts? Well, whatever the technique, it worked. It made a story so very poignant that it touched my heart. Lis-Anna Langston created a character you will fall in love with and a book you’ll be sad is over when you turn the last page.

– Our Town Book Reviews



About the Author

Lis Anna-Langston was raised along the winding current of the Mississippi River on a steady diet of dog-eared books. She attended a Creative and Performing Arts School from middle school until graduation and went on to study Literature at Webster University. Her two novels, Gobbledy and Tupelo Honey have won the Parents’ Choice Gold, Moonbeam Book Award, Independent Press Award, Benjamin Franklin Book Award and NYC Big Book Awards. Twice nominated for the Pushcart award and Finalist in the Brighthorse Book Prize, William Faulkner Fiction Contest and Thomas Wolfe Fiction Award, her work has been published in The Literary Review, Emerson Review, The Merrimack Review, Emrys Journal, The MacGuffin, Sand Hill Review and dozens of other literary journals. She draws badly, sings loudly, loves ketchup, starry skies & stories with happy aliens.


You can find her in the wilds of South Carolina plucking stories out of thin air.


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Books A Million

 

 

 

Book Tour – Midpoint: A Memoir by Patricia Angeles.

 

Nonfiction/Memoir

Date Published: 10-22-2022

 

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Midpoint: A Memoir is an immigrant woman’s story of perseverance and building a legacy future generations can be proud of.

Patricia Angeles is at the midpoint of the average human lifespan. Decades of experience, mistakes, love, and loss have led her to contemplate what anyone might when they’ve lived half their life. “What kind of legacy am I leaving behind? What do I want my friends and family to remember after I’m gone? What are the biggest life lessons I can impart while I’m still here?”

Through this collection of personal stories, Patricia attempts to assess her answers to these questions, and perhaps encourage others to do the same. Spanning from her childhood in Manila to her immigration and life in Los Angeles, these stories touch on her youth, her acclimation to American culture, her remarkable career in the world of banking, her thoughts on motherhood, the important people who made her who she is today, and major events that forever changed the trajectory of her life.

A raw, honest, poignant, and at times funny read, Patricia aims to inspire her readers to pursue happiness against all odds and to not settle for a life of mediocrity. Through the power of story, this book ultimately asks: What are we but the accumulation of our experiences?

Excerpt: Part 1: Manila 1984 –2005 As the last of the American Independence Day fireworks fizzled out during the summer of ‘84, a different type of celebration was happening at the maternity ward of Torrance Memorial Hospital: my birth as a tiny five-pound baby. Remarkably small, I was told that my dad was initially terrified to pick me up and carry me in his arms. I was their first child after all, and having me on the cusp of their teenage years meant that as new and inexperienced parents, there was a huge learning curve to traverse. Shortly after my birth, my parents decided to move back home to Manila. There were some business dealings to tend to and they agreed it would be best to raise me there. I was the first grandchild, and everyone in the family took turns caring for me as my parents mapped out their future. My mom would eventually decide to go back to school to finish her last year of college, but my dad headed straight for the workforce, relinquish-ing his remaining years in optometry school. When I was a few weeks old, my mom noticed that I was crying excessively despite being fed and lulled to sleep. I would wake up in the middle of the night, wailing nonstop for no reason. Helpless, my parents took me to my pediatrician, who performed extensive tests until I was diagnosed with a congenital heart defect. There was a small yet dangerously positioned hole in my heart. They were advised that the only treatment was by way of surgery. My paternal grandmother, or Lollie, as I would later call her, was a devout Christian. Instinctively, she turned to her faith, the one thing she knew she could count on. She mercilessly stormed the heavens with prayers, believing in her heart that it would make a difference. During a checkup leading to the already scheduled surgery, the doctors, in sheer disbelief, confirmed that the hole had closed by itself. Without any material medical explanation, it was nothing short of a miracle. This became my favorite bedtime story as I was growing up, trumping every fable and fairy tale my parents ever read to me.  


About the Author

Patricia Angeles is a tenured and award-winning banking professional with an MBA degree in international studies from the University of La Verne. She grew up in Manila, Philippines and moved to sunny Southern California in 2005. She currently resides in Los Angeles with her husband, and three daughters. When not writing or reading, she enjoys spending time with her family and traveling with them to new places.

 

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