Opening R. B. Seals’s poetry collection, "Point of Reference", is like taking a peak into someone’s diary. These lyrical poems offer the reader thought-provoking metaphors about the realities of the world, from a brief encounter with... Read More
"The Software Society" by William Meisel is a unique look at how computer programs have changed life in ways that are both technological and sociological. The first part of the book looks at software and society from a cultural... Read More
Readers who love nothing more than laughing and groaning over clever wordplay may find something to like in Animal Pursuits: A Frivolous Frolic Through the Puntastic Province of Animals. With his first novel, retired Australian... Read More
In God’s Prosperity, Michaela Cooke seeks to augment readers’ understanding of what God’s provision looks like and how to attain it. While like-minded readers will agree with some of the author’s interpretations, her many bold... Read More
“Intelligent evolution” is Robert Greenough’s take on how the world and its inhabitants came into being. “This is not a scientific textbook,” admits Greenough of his single-volume survey of the world from before the Big Bang to... Read More
With her optimistic self-help book, Abundance is Your Birthright: Claim It, psychotherapist Roni Bissett reaches out to a wider audience with what she believes is a step-by-step process for creating the ideal life. The book is a... Read More
The United States has made a mineral discovery that means energy independence for the country, but the resource is in danger of being hijacked by the Centurions, a cabal within the government. The premise of Gary L. Lucas’s Code Name... Read More
Though most readers might associate Indian summer with a warm autumn, it also means a flourishing time occurring toward the end of something. The title of this wonderfully written, character-rich book refers to the introspection of... Read More