July 2009
You are browsing the archive for July 2009.
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 28, 2009
I do not remember the last time I read a comic book or graphic novel. I wasn’t much of a comic geek back in the day, although I did enjoy my Garfield and Far Side collections in between classes in junior high, and occasionally read Archie just because my best friend did. But when Ellen Lindner queried us with her graphic novel, Undertow, I jumped at the chance to read it because it was something different.
Posted in Cartoon, Mainstream/Nostalgia, Relationships/Women's Lit, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged 1950, cha cha, comic, coney island, ellen lindner, graphic novel, new york, undertow |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 25, 2009
Having used self-publishing to create a chapbook of my own poetry three years ago, I can appreciate any other poet who does the same. Poetry can be very personal, and often goes under appreciated in the publishing world. Many readers will admit they don’t understand poetry. So any poet choosing to put their words out there in front of others, whether it be at an open mic reading at a coffee house or in a small book on Amazon.com, is often revealing a lot about themselves as a person, their emotions, their feelings, their beliefs.
Posted in Poetry, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged candace gillespie, hardship, love poem, poem, poetic, poetic reflections, Poetry, relationship, romance, romantic poem |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 22, 2009
For years, I was a true crime buff. I still possess more useless knowledge about some of America’s infamous serial killers than I care to admit to. Give me a good “true” ghost story or A&E/ Travel Channel historical haunting feature or reality ghost hunting show and I’m glued to the television for hours. So, when Curt Rowlett approached us with his three books devoted to mysteries, murder, and the occult, I immediately wanted to read all of them!
Posted in Educational, History, Horror/Supernatural, Real Life Drama/Action, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged conspiracy theory, curt rowlett, edgar allan poe, ghost, manson, manson family, mary shelley, mystery, occult, serial killer, supernatural |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 19, 2009
Congrats to our reviewer Dan Marvin on being featured on Kentucky’s Fox 56 in a recent interview about his book, Briefs for the Reading Room.
Posted in Announcements, Dan Marvin, Dan's Briefs, Promotions, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged briefs for the reading room, Dan Marvin, fox 56 kentucky |
By LK Gardner-Griffie on July 18, 2009
When this particular book was posted on the Pick Me! tab of the LL Book Review, I knew, being the only woman regular reviewer selecting from the Pick Me! tab, if I didn’t review it, the book would be declined.
Posted in LK Gardner-Griffie, Relationships/Women's Lit | Tagged Birth, birth book, Birth in Suburbia, birth pain, BIRTH STORY, Caesarean section, Carol Falaki, childbirth, emergency section, home birth, induction of labour, labor, LABOUR, LK Gardner-Griffie, pregnancy, romance |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 14, 2009
If Tim LeHaye and Michael Crichton had ever gotten together to write a book, it would probably end up being something like Anthony Policastro’s Absence of Faith. It’s part medical mystery and part religious thriller all rolled up in a plot of Christianity, Unexplained Phenomenon, New Age Beliefs, and Satanic Occults. It’s a white-knuckle read that would probably drive a Baptist preacher to an early death, and probably have Stephen King saying, “Now why didn’t I think of that?”
Posted in Action/Adventure, Horror/Supernatural, Mystery/Suspense, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged absence of faith, anthony policastro, hell, lulu.com, medical mystery, medical thriller, outbreak, religion, religous mystery, satan, satanism, unexplained |
By Dan Marvin on July 10, 2009
I was excited to get my copy of Altered Life, a detective thriller from Keith Dixon. He was nice enough to send me a copy all the way across the pond and I dove into it the same day it arrived. The description on the Lulu page hooked me: ‘Altered Life transplants the attitude and pace of the American private eye story into a contemporary English setting.’
Posted in Action/Adventure, Dan Marvin, Mystery/Suspense | Tagged altered life, keith dixon, Lulu, lulu.com, mystery, POD, private eye story, thriller |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 6, 2009
I love an adventure story. I’m not talking about the jarring action packed adventure with lots of guns and running, destined for an R rating if it makes the big screen, but instead a personal kind of adventure for one person that ends up being a life changing personal journey for them. And that’s exactly what happened to Janis Letts.
Posted in Biography/Memoir, Shannon Yarbrough, Travel | Tagged australia, china, chinese, chinese culture, chinese teacher, english teacher, janis letts, Travel |
By LK Gardner-Griffie on July 3, 2009
The Simplest of Acts: And Other Stories is a short collection of short stories. In only 102 pages, Melanie Haney manages to take us into the hearts and lives of eleven separate individuals.
Posted in Anthology, LK Gardner-Griffie, Relationships/Women's Lit | Tagged book review, grief, LK Gardner-Griffie, loss, melanie haney, short story collection, the simplest of acts |
By Shannon Yarbrough on July 2, 2009
I posted about Amazon’s new improved Author Central pages this time last month. While setting up my own page, I decided to email Amazon and ask them about my Amazon Connect blog being removed from my book’s pages. I received a reply today:
Posted in Announcements, Marketing, Opinions, Shannon Yarbrough | Tagged amazon, amazon.com, author blog, author central, author connect |
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