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Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury

Review: Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury

Description (from Amazon.com) Ray Bradbury’s moving recollection of a vanished golden era remains one of his most enchanting novels. Dandelion Wine stands out in the Bradbury literary canon as the author’s most deeply personal work, a semi-autobiographical recollection of a magical small-town summer in 1928. Twelve-year-old Douglas Spaulding knows Green Town, Illinois, is as vast and deep…
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How a Little Boy Gave Me a Reason

I originally wrote part of this post just before I turned 40. However, I sometimes need to be reminded why I’m here. It happens every once in a while: you bury yourself in the business aspect of writing, looking at numbers, trying to forecast the way the readership blows, but when all is said and…
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A Poem: Cloud 9

This poem is one I wrote in 1988 or 1989. It is, most definitely, “Crane-ish.” I love this poem, and I hate it at the same time. I guess that’s art, is it not? Despite its rather positive message buried in negativity, I use this particular poem as a reminder of horrible people who promise…
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A Poem: Glass Bottom

I’ve been on a few glass-bottom boats in my day, but I’m not 100% sure why I wrote this poem. I remember sitting in a dorm room in Alaska in 1992 and hammering this out on a $1500 laptop with a massive hard drive attached to a dot-matrix printer five times the size. Oh, to…
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Review: Out of Oz by Gregory Maguire

Description (from Amazon.com) Bestselling author Gregory Maguire’s remarkable series, The Wicked Years, comes full circle with this, his fourth and final excursion across a darker, richer, more complex landscape of “the magical land of Oz.” Out of Oz brilliantly reimagines L. Frank Baum’s world over the rainbow as wracked with social unrest—placing Glinda the good witch under…
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Review: The Devil Colony by James Rollins

Description (from Amazon.com) From New York Times bestselling author James Rollins comes a novel of boundless imagination and meticulous research, a book that dares to answer a frightening question at the heart of America: Could the founding of the United States be based on a fundamental lie? The shocking truth lies hidden within the ruins of an…
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Review: Death Match by Lincoln Child

Description (from Amazon.com) Lewis and Lindsay Thorpe were the perfect couple: young, attractive, and ideally matched. But the veil of perfection can mask many blemishes. When the Thorpes are found dead in their tasteful Flagstaff living room (having committed double suicide), alarms go off in the towering Manhattan offices of Eden Incorporated, the high-tech matchmaking…
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Review: Mama by Robin Morris

Description (from Amazon.com) As the Conover family drives from L.A. to Chicago strange things begin to happen. Nine year old Michael sees a face form in the window of the family car. Two creepy children stare at fourteen year old Alison at a motel. A car follows the family for many miles, then hits their…
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Review: Creepers by David Morrell

Description (from Amazon.com) On a cold October night, five people gather in a run-down motel on the New Jersey shore and begin preparations to break in to the Paragon Hotel. Built in the glory days of Asbury Park by a reclusive millionaire, the magnificent structure—which foreshadowed the beauties of art-deco architecture—is now boarded up and…
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What Works for Independent Authors? Guest Post by Scott Bury

This guest post by Scott Bury examines the “Independent Author” label and what’s worked for him.