This powerful memoir provides rare details about the realities of life in the former Soviet Union. Born in Moscow in 1941, a mere eight days after Germany declared war on the USSR, Janna Sosensky seems destined to face difficult times... Read More
At the beginning of "Team Charlie", the title character embarks on a journey of self-discovery as he attempts to uncover who he was before the many voices in his head took over his life. Readers will be more than a little curious about... Read More
Loving Andrew: A Fifty-Two-Year Story of Down Syndrome shares Romy Wyllie’s account of what life was like raising her afflicted son. She contrasts her experience of raising Andrew in the 1960s and 1970s with two other families who also... Read More
Dear Reader, Sid Straw, barely recovered after a break-up, moves from Baltimore to Southern California to take a mid-level computer sales job from which he is promptly fired. Along the way he is publicly defamed, defrauded, embarrassed,... Read More
Palestinian Mahmoud Darwish’s eloquent poem “I Come From There” can evoke emotions ranging from sympathy to rage. Arthur Neslen’s latest book is certain to do the same. A British journalist, Neslen “grew up the child of... Read More
If only Specialist Kate Brady had the benefit of the Army’s new “resilience” program, she might have been better equipped to handle combat stress more cheerfully and avoid all those hidden “thinking traps,” like jumping to... Read More
Richard R. Troxell brings new life to discussions of wage labor and unemployment in America in "Looking Up at the Bottom Line". A longtime anti-poverty activist who has lived through the marginalization familiar to war veterans (in his... Read More
In "Till the Eagle Screams", author Paul Rawlings takes the reader on a wild ride based on a series of “what ifs” that seem to have special significance in today’s political climate. Sheriff Mike Bonner has a quiet life as the head... Read More