Sunday, March 24, 2024

April's List

 April's List



This is a record: Done so early that I decided to put next month's list, a week before the month begins!

The blog did well this month. Everything was finished in record time with days to spare.

The Shards of Lafayette Drops of Glass: A Tale of Magic in the Great War by Kenneth A. Baldwin


The Twisted Road: A Barrister Perris Mystery Book 1 by A.B. Michaels


The Shabti by Megaera C. Lopez


Beautiful and Terrible Things by S.M. Stevens


The Girl in the Smart Uniform by Gill James*


The Pumpkin King and Other Tales of Terror Edited by R. David Fulcher


 The Peacock's Heritage: A Victorian Saga of Triumph Over Adversity by Sasha M. Stephens


A Dream Called Marilyn by Mercedes King


The Crew by Michael Mohr


Somewhere East of Me by Samuel Vincent O’Keefe


Gold Digger: The Remarkable Baby Doe Tabor by Rebecca Rosenberg


The Blind Faith: Book One of the Forge Trilogy (Shadows Guardians 1) by Russell Gaynor


In The House of a Demon (Memoir Series Book 1) by Tina Soctoy


Crochet Granny Squares for Beginners: Unlock Your Creativity With Step-by-step Instructions for Crocheting Beautiful Granny Squares by Dr. Anisah




 If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:


LinkedIn


Facebook


Twitter


Instagram


Threads


Mastodon  


Upwork


Reedsy Discovery 


LitPick


Email: juliesaraporter@gmail.com


Prices are as follows (subjected to change depending on size and scope of the project):


Beta Read: $35.00-50.00


Review: $35-50.00**


Copy/Content Edit: $75-300.00


Proofread: $75-300.00


Research & Citation: $100-400.00


Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$100-400.00


*These are books reviewed for LitPick and will not be featured on my blog, only on LitPick's site. 


**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, Coffee and Thorn Book Group, LitPicks, BookTasters, Reedsy Discovery, Voracious Readers, and other noted book groups 


Payments can be made to my PayPal account at juliesaraporter@gmail.com


Well that's it. Thanks and as always, Happy Reading.


The Daily Stoicism Bible: [4 in 1] The Highly Actionable Guide to Face the Uncertainties of Modern Life with Ancient Wisdom and Self-Control. Including Essential Stoic Practices and Exercises By Christopher H. White; Computer Networking Bible: [3 in 1] The Complete Crash Course to Effectively Design, Implement and Manage Networks. Including Sections on Security, Performance and Scalability By Rick C. Worley; Book-fluence: How to Write a Book to Position Yourself as a Leader in Your Industry by Nailah Harvey, M.A.Ed; Blackstone Griddle Cookbook for Beginners: Delicious, Healthy, Affordable, Flavorful Grill Recipes with Techniques and Tips for Beginners and Advanced Users with Pictures by Dr. Maria

 The Daily Stoicism Bible: [4 in 1] The Highly Actionable Guide to Face the Uncertainties of Modern Life with Ancient Wisdom and Self-Control. Including Essential Stoic Practices and Exercises By Christopher H. White; Computer Networking Bible: [3 in 1] The Complete Crash Course to Effectively Design, Implement and Manage Networks. Including Sections on Security, Performance and Scalability By Rick C. Worley; Book-fluence: How to Write a Book to Position Yourself as a Leader in Your Industry by Nailah Harvey, M.A.Ed; Blackstone Griddle Cookbook for Beginners: Delicious, Healthy, Affordable, Flavorful Grill Recipes with Techniques and Tips for Beginners and Advanced Users with Pictures by Dr Maria 










The Daily Stoicism Bible: [4 in 1] The Highly Actionable Guide to Face the Uncertainties of Modern Life with Ancient Wisdom and Self-Control. Including Essential Stoic Practices and Exercises

By Christopher H. White


Christopher White's 4-part series, The Daily Stoicism Bible, is a fascinating look on how Readers can practice the ancient Greek philosophy of Stoicism and implement it into their daily lives.


While many believe that Stoicism involves denying one’s emotions and behaving almost robotically, White challenges those assumptions. Instead it is defined as knowing and accepting things can change for better or for worse, that terrible things can happen, understanding and accepting when they do, and making steps to learn from and find solutions to those problems. It's  about understanding hardship, loss, and suffering from a distance and feeling but not being overwhelmed by them or allowing them to control one's life. 


One of the most interesting aspects to the book are the various practices that one could do to achieve a Stoic outlook on life. Procedures like journaling, meditating, and visualization help to clear the mind and prepare one to view difficulties and hardships with a focused and reasonable mind.


Some of the chapters emphasize visualizing the worst and asking questions about it. Much of the fear and anxiety stem from the unknown, the possibilities of what could happen. Questioning and visualizing bring those fears to life and breaks them down into parts that can be recognized and either dealt with and cannot. For example, one can't change the entire economy but can achieve the positive mindset to send their resume to potential employers, perform well at an interview, and become an ideal employee.

This series helps Readers practice Stoicism

so they can face what they can't change, work on what can, and recognize the difference.







Computer Networking Bible: [3 in 1] The Complete Crash Course to Effectively Design, Implement and Manage Networks. Including Sections on Security, Performance and Scalability

By Rick C. Worley


Rick C. Worley’s The Computer Networking Bible is an interesting 3-part series which invites Readers into the inner workings of a computer network.


The book splits into three books which focus on the fundamentals of a network, how a network is built and managed, and various advanced networking topics. It makes sometimes difficult and confusing terms clear and comprehensible. 


The terms are nearly and precisely defined so Readers who are new to networking can understand various models, standards, devices, topologies, protocols, and services. It's a crash course in learning what those terms mean and how they combine into a huge network.


The second and third books are more detailed in how networks are designed and  maintained and how they can be advanced with other tools. Readers are walked through implementing a network and applying security to keep it and users safe and protected from hackers and grifters. Other components are virtualization, automation, and performance optimization. They allow members to update the network and interact with each other.


Advanced topics include Cloud Computing, Software-Defined Networking, the Internet of Things, Applications, Services, Programming Languages, API, Monitoring Tools, and A

Analytics. These chapters help users update their network. 

This book is a basic course on how to create and update a network to become more advanced and interactive in an ever-changing, technological and interconnected world.




Book-fluence: How to Write a Book to Position Yourself as a Leader in Your Industry by Nailah Harvey, M.A.Ed


Nailah Harvey’s book Book-fluence is a helpful book on how anyone who is knowledgeable in their field could put their experience and advice into book format.


The book is efficiently organized as an acronym for WRITE: Work on your author mindset. Record your expertise. Identify your framework. Tailor your book. Expand your network.


It begins by asking the potential writer what they are great at, what they want to be known for, and what they should write their book about. This asks writers to think about themselves and what they want the main theme or topic of their book to be. 


There are also tips on exploring the market and where to look for publishers. Thinking about who to tailor the book to, the title, and content allow the focus to be narrowed into a digestible length for readers.


The final chapters deal with the aftermath of writing the book. Once the book is written, the chapters are laid out, and the tone and audience are selected, it's important to edit and proofread before sending it to publishers. Checking for spelling, grammar, and narrative helps sell the book to the publisher.

Marketing is also another step that this book addresses. Buying an ISBN number, using social media contacts, and interacting with potential buyers and readers are discussed.


Book-fluence is the book for when you want encouragement to use your expertise and guide others in book form.




Blackstone Griddle Cookbook for Beginners: Delicious, Healthy, Affordable, Flavorful Grill Recipes with Techniques and Tips for Beginners and Advanced Users with Pictures by Dr Maria 


It's the time when the weather's getting warmer and many are looking forward to picnics, barbecues, and any meal

over an outdoor open fire. If you are, then this book is for you.


This book contains mouth watering recipes for those who love their beef, game, and pork. There are varieties of ways that such meats can be prepared from chicken, bacon, burgers, and vegetable meals. What is particularly fascinating about this book are the various burgers and sandwiches that are offered. It brightens the options that are usually recognized in a typical barbecue.


The book is neatly divided into basic chapters for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It also identifies the foods that are considered the healthiest and most beneficial. There are also plenty of tips on how to season and savor the food to give the meal extra taste.


The Blackstone Griddle Cookbook for Beginners is one that will make any outdoor picnic and barbecue a wonderful experience. It will make such an outing memorable.








Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Echoes of Ballard House (Simone Doucet Book 3) by E. Denise Billups; Real Life Unsolved New Orleans Mystery Combines with Simone Doucet’s Dark Supernatural World

Echoes of Ballard House (Simone Doucet Book 3) by E. Denise Billups; Real Life Unsolved New Orleans Mystery Combines with Simone Doucet’s Dark Supernatural World

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews 


Spoilers: In the annals of unsolved mysteries, The Axeman of New Orleans is certainly a memorable and terrifying one. Between May 23, 1918-October 27, 1919, a serial killer stalked the streets of New Orleans brandishing their victims with an ax. There were twelve victims, most of them Italian immigrants or Italian-Americans, attributed to the Axeman. On March 13, 1919, a letter reportedly from the Axeman was published in several newspapers which promised more killings but had a unique request. Since the Axeman loved jazz music, on the following Tuesday night, they declared that they would spare any home that had jazz music playing from inside. Jazz musicians were hired and played in hundreds of homes that night. It appeared to work as there were no reported killings during that time. However, three subsequent killings later that year were attributed to the Axeman. The murders apparently stopped for unknown reasons after the final murder on October 27, 1919. The Axeman was never identified and no formal suspicions or arrests were made. To this day, the case remains unsolved. 


This eerie New Orleans legend is featured prominently in E. Denise Billups’ third Simone Doucet Supernatural Mystery, Echoes of Ballard House. It effectively combines a real life murder mystery with Simone's dark interior world of ghosts, visions, and demonic forces that trap the unwary and angry.


Simone is house sitting in a spooky manor called Ballard House, for her friends. Gisele and Theo, while researching information on her ancestors, Antoine and Bleu (introduced and featured prominently in the previous book, Wicked Bleu). While looking after the place, she experiences psychic visions of a bloody murder and an angry spirit. Simone studies the history of the house and one previous owner, Jensen who sold the house to her friends under mysterious circumstances. These circumstances are tied to disturbing family secrets and a bloody murder that took place during the Axeman’s reign of terror. 


Between the two books in the Simone Doucet Series, Wicked Bleu has the stronger sense of characterization particularly dealing with the life, death, and afterlife of Bleu, a Storyville prostitute who had been victimized by racism, misogyny, and abuse and carried those scars beyond death. Echoes of Ballard House, however, is the better of the two in terms of shocks, scares, and the overall unease that comes with reading a horror book. 


The opening reveals that ominous dark psychic energy right away. An unidentified Narrator wanders through the house while jazz is played to appease the Axeman. This figure wanders through Ballard House filled with hate and revenge against their own family members. They want  to kill them and frame the serial murderer for it. There are dueling evils within the house as the Axeman takes life for unimaginable cravings to satisfy bloodlust and sadistic pleasure. But there is something just as bad if not worse about the other character who is plotting to do away with their own family members for personal reasons. The Axeman is killing people that they don’t know but this mysterious Narrator is inflicting the same horror on people that they do know and presumably once loved. One, the Axeman is inhuman, someone that most people can’t imagine what that feels like. Another, the Narrator, is all too human, someone that some might be afraid of becoming. One argument too many, one lost temper, one careless display of weaponry, or buried resentment that boils over. That person could be just as, if not far more, dangerous than any serial killer.


Suspense carries over into the present as the first few chapters explore Jensen, the previous Ballard House owner before Gisele and Theo. He inherited the house from his late aunt, but he learns that the house was obtained under false pretenses. Even though Jensen attempts to right this previous conflict and return the house to the rightful heirs, there is a dark undercurrent that will not be silenced, at times literally. Whispers come through the house about the owners and the crimes that occurred. There is also a startling revelation that causes Jensen to withdraw his ownership of Ballard House. It is a genuinely unexpected twist that provides a disturbing mental image for the Reader to mull over for a few days. 


By the time Simone house sits, Ballard House is completely festered with spirits that affect her physical and psychological well being. She suffers from vivid nightmares, chronic fatigue, migraines, and dizzy spells. In one harrowing chapter, she passes out and has a visualization in which she witnesses the murders in the prologue first hand. The mindset of a psychic can be a troubling one and this chapter is an example of that. 


Simone is on high alert for any dark presences almost to the point of paranoia. She becomes suspicious of the people that surround the house: a pool cleaner, a neighbor and Jensen who befriends the young psychic and may have romantic feelings towards her. Simone’s heightened suspicions also transfer towards Gisele and Theo, long time friends, with whom she never had conflict before. Her visions and fears affect her perceptions so much that she can’t tell friend from enemy. 


The supernatural world is a terrifying one as dark almost demonic presences are driven by rage, desire, insanity, and sins past. But what the Simone Doucet Series excels at is showing the real terror are the human beings that we encounter every day. The racist who dehumanizes those around them so they can justify their attacks.The misogynist who longs to own and use women for his sexual pleasure. The killer who murders without conscience. The family member whose anger towards their relatives turns into homicide. Those are the true terrors. Their actions cause the supernatural disruption proving that humans are more monstrous than any ghostly apparition can ever be.




 

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Surviving Gen X by Jo Szewczyk; Bizarre, Confusing, and Witty Mish-Mash of Getting Laid and Finding Love in 1990’s Las Vegas


 Surviving Gen X by Jo Szewczyk; Bizarre, Confusing, and Witty Mish-Mash of Getting Laid and Finding Love in 1990’s Las Vegas

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: It wouldn't surprise me if Jo Szewczyk’s Surviving Gen X existed in the same universe as Richard R. Becker’s Third Wheel. It almost could be a stealth sequel. Third Wheel was a seriocomic Crime Thriller about a geeky but troubled kid in 80’s Las Vegas encountering a bevy of eccentric criminals in an attempt to stave off boredom and get rich. Surviving Gen X is a seriocomic Literary Fiction about a disaffected 20 something in 90’s Las Vegas encountering a bevy of eccentric friends, acquaintances, and lovers in an attempt to stave off loneliness and get laid. Between the two books, there appears to be a natural progression of age and experience that develops within the protagonists the more they venture into Sin City at various points in their lives.


Surviving Gen X doesn’t have much in the way of plot. It focuses on an unnamed Narrator who goes from one misadventure to another. He encounters little people, runaway Mormons, glam rock tribute bands, persistent exes, violent crooks,gamblers, apartment crashers who never leave, bartenders with suspect mob ties. BDSM club goers, homicidal religious types, addicts, prostitutes, and many other colorful locals and tourists that Las Vegas has to offer. 


The book bounces around in an excitable stream of conscious manner which is less concerned with what happens than how these incidents are seen through the Narrator’s eyes. He is a sarcastic jaded character who is filled with dry one liners. (At a costume party someone mistakes his Willy Wonka costume for Prince. He sarcastically tells the Reader, “My name is not Prince and I am not funky.”) He observes everything with a wry detachment that alternates between bemused excitement and world weariness at the shenanigans in which he falls into. 


The Narrator isn’t exactly the warmest of souls. He is quite often shallow and careless in his feelings towards others particularly in his romantic relationships. He cares more about getting some than getting into a relationship. When he finds someone that he actually does care about, he pursues her behaving like a stalker instead of someone who is truly considerate about what she wants and how he is making life difficult for her. 


Nonetheless, he does show genuine understanding and concern towards others. After a very weird night, he meets Gene, a French little person. The two bond while they are in jail and escape together. The two become friends united in their pursuit of women and potential happiness. The Narrator and Gene assist each other in their romantic troubles and usually find themselves in various hapless situations but emerge with their friendship intact.


The Narrator also has a potentially developing relationship with Annie, an unhappily married Mormon woman. His pursuit of her is problematic but it is born out of genuine concern especially when he encounters her abusive religious husband. There is a genuine concern for her welfare and even if the Narrator is not always wise in his gestures towards her, he does care about her beyond a one night stand. The Narrator’s relationships with Gene and Annie veer towards heart in a novel that is more concerned with showing the surface of life in Las Vegas and little of the substance.


Actually the most important character is not Gene, Annie, or even the Narrator. It is Las Vegas itself. It is shown in all of its facets. There are various chapters like one set at the Fetish and Fantasy Ball, an elaborate masquerade in which one's darkest sexual desires are filled, which show the city in all of its licentious weirdness. It is seen as vibrant, loud, obnoxious, intoxicating, iconoclastic, lascivious, tacky, exciting, and hypnotic. It is the type of city where it’s easy to find a good time but not easy to find a peace of mind.


That’s what the setting does to the characters. They are aware of the shallowness and fall into it. They can’t find anything meaningful so they drink, party, have sex, and live for the moment. It is not the cry of free spirits. It is the cry of desperate souls who are drowning in the ennui of their excitement. They have given up on looking for any meaning. They just want to have a good time even when they are sick of it. 


That’s what the Narrator wants to find: some meaning in his life. Something beyond the surface shallow world that surrounds him. But finding unhappiness in his pursuits causes him to withdraw even more into that shallowness. Ironically the title is called Surviving Gen X because that’s all that he is doing. He is surviving, but not growing, developing, or really living.

Saturday, March 9, 2024

Deliveries by Paul Smyth; Over Long But Adventurous Flight Plan

Deliveries by Paul Smyth; Over Long But Adventurous Flight Plan

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Paul Smyth’s Deliveries  is a suspense thriller that can get long and tedious but once it gets going, can be pretty suspenseful and thrilling.

Cargo pilot Paul Jackson accepts an assignment to deliver some cargo to his friend, resort owner, Jack Ward. With his co-pilot, Dave McMurray, Paul takes his Cessna 185F to the air in what should be a typical delivery flight. Unfortunately, inclement weather and a dwindling fuel line make the flight anything but typical. Worse, Paul displays some symptoms of poor health while he is in the air. Some news from Paul’s wife, Diane, makes the situation clearer: Paul should not be flying. He is ill and is currently on what is supposed to be his last flight. However, if they don’t land the plane soon, it really will be their last flight. 

The plot summary makes the book sound more exciting than it really is. For a novel about flying, the book ironically takes a while to get off the ground. Each plot point takes forever to develop before it actually does.

Paul exhibits a few warning symptoms in the air. Then ten chapters later, Diane gets a phone call about a changed appointment. She panics over it for several more pages before she learns what his condition is and what the ramifications are for him while flying. Then she tells his colleagues many, many pages later. It doesn’t build suspense or emotional conflict so much as the characters just repeat the same conversation about Paul’s condition and that he shouldn’t be in the air, etc. After a while the feeling is like, “We got it the first time. Can we move on now?”


Once it finally does, there are genuine moments of suspense. Paul and Dave are hanging on for dear life in the air and the turbulent weather adds to the overall effect of feeling trapped in a large cylinder in high altitude. It takes a long time for a crash or a landing to occur to the point where the suspense can either be gripping or repetitive. Oddly enough in this case it does both. It's repeated often but the Reader is at the edge of their seat while simultaneously rolling their eyes.

The stress by the people on the ground is also keenly felt. In an almost cathartic moment, Diane lets Paul's colleagues have it because of her worry and frustration. Her characterization is not particularly compelling and at times, she comes across as shrill and whiny. However, in this incident, she isn't wrong in her accusations and her outburst is completely justifiable.


Deliveries is like one of those long layover flights. It takes awhile to get you where you need to go, but once it actually gets moving you may like parts of the journey.

 

Razor Country by Nicholas Wagner; The Headmasters by Mark Morton; Blackstone Griddle Cookbook/Traeger Grill & Smoker Cookbook: Mouthwatering, Delicious, Healthy and Affordable Recipes with Images and Expert Tips for Griddling, Grilling, and Smoking Success by Dr. Jina;

 Razor Country by Nicholas Wagner; The Headmasters by Mark Morton; Blackstone Griddle Cookbook/Traeger Grill & Smoker Cookbook: Mouthwatering, Delicious, Healthy and Affordable Recipes with Images and Expert Tips for Griddling, Grilling, and Smoking Success by Dr. Jina

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Razor Country by Nicholas Wagner

Spoilers: Razor Country anthology is a tribute to the hard boiled detective genre of the 1920’s-50’s where protagonists walk a thin line between cop and criminal and violence runs rampant. The book could end with the mystery being solved and the detective triumphing over their enemies, but it could just as easily end with death and loss. 


Colm Steiner is a private investigator and sometimes assassin who travels from one country to another within the British Empire during the mid-19-teens to the 20’s. He is hired by various clients to find someone or something and is promised money and expenses for payment. He does some interrogation and investigation techniques which often involve him roughing up a few witnesses, bribing a few others, and/or sneaking into forbidden areas to find results. Most of the time he finds what he is looking for. While there are a few complete successes, most of them end with him taking a vow of silence finding his target is in a better place than where they previously were or ends in violence with Steiner or others shedding blood and killing clients, targets, witnesses, and those in their way.


Razor Country never forgets what it is or where its roots lie. It could easily have fit in during the time period that it portrays. Steiner may have been written a whole century behind but he definitely fits in with characters like Dashiell Hammet’s Sam Spade, Raymond Chandler’s Phillip Marlowe, or Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer. Like them, Steiner recognizes the dark graphic bloody world around him and acts just as, sometimes darker, more graphic, and bloodier than they are. 


I would love to say that because it is set in different countries along the former British Empire, it would be an engaging travelog but it not surprisingly isn't. Nicholas Wagner wanted to show the worst in each country and he did not skimp on the dark details of corruption, slavery, racism, domestic and child abuse, and every other evil imagined in each country. It's like a World Tour sponsored by Hell. 


Because the book is arranged in short story format, it doesn’t lend itself to much character development. Some plot points carry over between chapters such as ending on a cliffhanger and one chapter's previous antagonists come back for revenge in other chapters. Steiner gains and loses a few friends and lovers along the way either through death or separation. Even a segue where Steiner takes a break from his investigator career to fight during WWI leaves him battle scarred and more taciturn than before.


Mostly Steiner stays the same dour sardonic character throughout the book. In this context, Steiner is an archetype that fits perfectly within his genre. Within the framework of the noir genre, it works. Someone with such wanderlust and cynicism who has seen much suffering and has his own brand of injustice is bound to be maladjusted. 


The stories kind of blend in together for this reason. They are so intrinsic within the noir hard-boiled detective genre that you don't expect characters to fall outside of it. You don't expect things to change much for them because when they do, some things are bound to happen that stifles it. Steiner is the type to never marry or settle down because he can't imagine a world that would let him. He would always be looking for another case to solve and enemy to beat.


There is no world in which Colm Steiner can exist except the dark corrupt world in which he investigates, fights against, and is still a part of.



The Headmasters by Mark Morton

(Note this is just a brief summary and review. The entire review is on LitPick’s site. A link is provided above).

Spoilers: The Headmasters is a provocative and intelligent Science Fiction novel that challenges its readers to think about oppression and domination, what it means to truly resist, and what motivates one to fight against a tyrannical system even when the citizens don't know that they are being tyrannized.

Maple is a member of Blue Ring, a community in what was once Canada after an unexplained global event that left those in Blue Ring among the many survivors. Those in the Blue Ring survived by coupling themselves with those called the Headmasters. They are parasitic aliens fused onto the bodies of humans controlling their thoughts and actions. 

 Maple begins to share memories and consciousness with the former host body, a woman named Zara, whom Maple had a previous connection with. Some of her memories include life before the Headmaster’s arrival along with knowledge and information that had been repressed and banned. The more that Maple learns from Zara, the more that she questions the world around her. 

The description of humans and Headmasters grafted together is deliberately painful and traumatic. The physical and psychological torture of one living being joined with and controlling the other is present. Maple describes it as a continuous feeling that something is watching and monitoring them. If they act contrary to the Headmaster’s commands, they receive electric shocks. However, there are times, such as when the Headmasters shut off during a procedure called the “slackening,” and places where the Headmaster’s hold is weakened, like the Deep (in reality what remains of a Deepak Chopra Center), so they are vulnerable. 

What is particularly interesting and upsetting about this parasitic life is that the human characters make little move to protest or take advantage of the Headmaster’s vulnerabilities. True, the shocks are torturous, but there is another subtle reason about why they don’t rebel. They lost the desire to do so. They willingly surrender to a life of apathy and ignorance to creatures that exploit them. There are vague glimpses of rebellion and they aren’t revealed until almost halfway through the book. 

Maple herself does not desire to rebel until halfway through the book. In fact her character meanders a bit, providing exposition to the reader until she takes action against her oppressors. When she takes a proactive stance first within the community and then when she is in exile and encounters survivors, does Maple come into her own as a fully fleshed protagonist and heroine. 

What helps ignite Maple’s characterization is the awareness of a passage of time within the narrative. Most of the dystopian events often occur over the course of a few months or a year or two from inciting incidents to the denouement. 

What makes the Headmasters different from them is approximately seven years go by from when Maple is joined to her Headmaster to the end. This gives Maple an evolution that comes with age and experience but also emphasizes how slow moving changing from small acts of rebellion to a full scale revolution can be.

 Maple has to go through that long growth and development before she is able to have the confidence and strength to learn how to manually shut off her Headmaster permanently, walk away from Blue Ring, and lead the community and outsiders in a new world that will emerge and not make the mistakes of the old world that became subservient. 




This is a two part cookbook with double the amount of delicious recipes.

The recipes vary not only as breakfast, lunch, and dinner meals but elaborate on what one could cook on a grill, smoker, or griddle. Such recipes as “Sausage and Cheese Breakfast Sandwiches,” “BBQ Bacon Cheeseburger,” “Grilled Veggie Stir Fry,” “Traeger Grilled French Toast,” “Cherrywood Smoked Salmon BLT,” and “Smoked Garlic and Rosemary Lamb Shanks” are rather interesting ideas to spice up any meal.

Since cooking with outdoor equipment can be unpredictable, the book offers tips on maintaining such equipment and keeping safe while cooking. This book also offers tips on how to infuse flavors like selecting marinating sauce, seasonings, and wood pellets. There are also tips on gentle and low and slow grilling to achieve the perfect sear and infuse rich smoky flavors.
This is a good book for the eager outdoor chef. 




Friday, March 1, 2024

March's List

 March's List









Not a bad start for 2024. I am definitely happy that I finished my 2023 projects. This is the first list of completely new assignments.


Journey of Souls by Rebecca Warner


Razor Country by Nicholas Wagner

The Blackstone Griddle Cookbook/Traeger Grill &Smoker Cookbook by Dr Jina

The Headmasters by Mark Morton*


Surviving Gen X by Jo Szewczyk


Echoes of Ballard House (Simone Doucet Book 3) by E. Denise Billups


Deliveries by Paul Smyth


I will also do beta reads and book reviews for the following:

The Computer Networking Bible 2024 3-in-1 by Ron C. Worley

The Daily Stoicism Bible 2024 4-in-1 by Christopher H. White



If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:


LinkedIn


Facebook


Twitter


Instagram


Threads


Mastodon  


Upwork


Reedsy Discovery 


LitPick


Email: juliesaraporter@gmail.com


Prices are as follows (subjected to change depending on size and scope of the project):


Beta Read: $25-35.00


Review: $35-50.00**


Copy/Content Edit: $75-300.00


Proofread: $75-300.00


Research & Citation: $100-400.00


Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$100-400.00


*These are books reviewed for LitPick and will be featured my blog as a brief summary and review. The main review will be on LitPick's site. A link will be provided.


**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, Coffee and Thorn Book Group, LitPicks, BookTasters, Reedsy Discovery, and other noted book groups 


Payments can be made to my PayPal account at juliesaraporter@gmail.com


Well that's it. Thanks and as always, Happy Reading.



Journey of Souls by Rebecca Warner; Composite of Medieval Historical Fiction and Dark Fantasy

 



Journey of Souls by Rebecca Warner; Complex and Compelling Composite of Medieval Historical Fiction and Dark Fantasy


Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews 


This review is also on Reedsy Discovery 

Spoilers: Rebecca Warner’s Journey of Souls is a composite of Medieval History and Fantasy that works-for the most part.

It captures a widening schism between religions, politics, class, race, spouses, and parents and children. Within these divisions in the political, religious, and social spheres, there comes division in the supernatural sphere. This is where corrupt people use magic to meet their needs and in reaction, that magic itself becomes corrupt. Both the summoner and the spirits that are summoned fall into envy, rage, revenge, and insanity.


After her son and daughter die, the Countess of Mirefoix (only known as the Lady)  in the Pyrenees Mountains decides to use a spell that restores a person’s soul and mind into another's body. She uses some unfortunate “volunteers” (young people that are recruited to serve or kidnapped and taken to Mirefoix) for their body needs. While she thinks at first that she is unsuccessful, spirits do actually enter the bodies of the donors. 

One of them is Christine, a modern woman from the 21st century who ends up inside the body of the Lady's niece. While Christine adjusts to Medieval life, she becomes involved in a triangle with Garsenda, the Lady’s daughter, and Bon, a loyal soldier with a secret connection to the Mirefoix Family. Meanwhile, the Lady  is becoming unhinged, paranoid , and more obsessed with practicing magic to achieve her ends. 


Journey of Souls draws fantasy and reality in equal measures creating a novel that works for Readers who like Dark Fantasies and for those who like more realistic Historical Fiction. The book is awash in historic detail. The Count of Mirefoix is coming home from the Third Crusades to a wife who doesn't love him and vice versa. He is a verbally, physically, and sexually abusive monster who cares more about the estate that he inherited by marriage (Mirefoix is actually the Lady’s by blood) than he does about his wife. 

The Count does little to care for the people that reside on the lands the way the Lady and her daughters do. He cares about his family lineage. After his legitimate son, Jehan, dies he decides to name his possible illegitimate son, Bon, to inherit rather than his daughters who have already been named as heiresses after Jehan. He is so intertwined with the idea of primogeniture, that his heir must be a son, that he ignores that he has two able bodied, intelligent, strong willed daughters that can inherit the land. He also ignores that Bon is romantically involved with Garsenda, then Christine and is so loyal that he would give up his claim in a heartbeat if they asked him to.


One of the most realistic moments is when the Lady grieves for her lost children. She holds out vague hope when a messenger reports that “Jehan” survived, but that hope is dashed when she sees a blacksmith with the same name and realizes that her son has died. When she and the Count fight, he collapses and succumbs to his pain. While she doesn’t miss her unloving husband, it is a reminder of how much the Lady can lose in such a brief time. 

As she is reeling from those losses, the Lady nurses her sickly daughter, Alienor with the fervent determination of one who has already lost one child and a husband. When she too dies,  she realizes that she is left alone with Garsenda, a daughter who doesn’t get along with her mother and believes that she murdered her father, the parent that she preferred. It is a lot to take and the Lady’s anguish is understandable. It also reminds us of how life in the Medieval era was very short and often ended in violent unpleasant death either from illness or in battle. 


Religion is intrinsic in the Medieval way of life and the Readers are beginning to experience what happens when religions and religious sects collide and challenge each other. The Count returns from the Crusades, bragging about how he and the soldiers fought against the Muslims whom they saw as “barbaric  i!%$#ls.” Then he brags that they took jewels, ancient books, and other valuables  of the people that they conquered (making one wonder who the real barbarians actually were). He uses the magic that Muslim caliphs practice to transfer his soul into a young body. Then after he dies, the Lady is willing to use it herself on her own children. For a seemingly religious Catholic family, they don’t mind co opting others’ abilities for their own benefit, even if they claim to be morally against it. Religious hypocrisy: not just a modern thing!


There are also divisions within the Christian religion itself. This comes about because of the war between the Catholics and the Cathars. Catharism was a sect with Gnostic philosophies such as the existence of two deities: God of Heaven and God of the Earth, a personal relationship with the Spirit, and that one can achieve spiritual and knowledge enlightenment, or  become a “Cathar Perfect,” through mystical means, most notably reincarnation. This schism would later be echoed in European history in the struggle between the Catholic and Protestant churches.


In Journey of Souls, the Cathars are at first seen as a religious sect that is outside the fringes of society and is gaining popularity. They are at first seen as weird, bizarre, and potentially a threat to the Catholic status quo. The outlook changes when the Lady, after a series of misfortunes including death, insanity, and despair converts to Catharism in a final attempt to save her soul. The fact that one of the main characters, inarguably the central character, becomes a Cathar shows how vast this religion has spread and becomes centralized. It foreshadows the eventual destruction of Catharism by the Catholic Church, and the subsequent trials against heresy such as the Inquisition and the Witch Trials. With powerful people converting to religions that challenged the Catholic authority, the church leaders recognized a threat to their leadership.


There are plenty of  other details about Medieval life that spill into the book. One of the most intriguing is that the Count and the Lady are never addressed by their first names. Even the narrative never refers to them by name, just by title. This suggests the remoteness of nobility that even their closest friends and family refer to them by title rather than name. 


Another interesting detail is how many misconceptions about the Medieval era are challenged. As if in anticipation of Readers’ complaining about “wokeness,” Warner wrote a detailed essay with citations and references in the last few pages of the book that challenges those ideas suggesting that European history was more diverse and multifaceted than many believed. Among them are the presence of people who aren’t White and Christian in Medieval France. There are dark skinned characters who emigrated from African and Middle Eastern countries. Some retained their Muslim beliefs and previous customs while others assimilated into the European culture around them. Bon himself is half-Chinese and was trained by a mentor who taught him about Buddhism, Eastern philosophies, and fighting techniques.


The power of women in the novel counters the common belief that women were usually thought of as subservient to their husbands. As mentioned earlier, the Lady holds more authority over Mirefoix rather than the Count and is able to make political and military decisions over her people. Her daughter, Garsenda also has a strong sense of leadership in particular when she is forced into hiding, taking the lead within her small group to ensure their survival. Christine quickly adjusts to her new 12-13th century life and commandeers various situations by coming up with various plans and making some tough decisions. In fact, the presence of women in authority is so prevalent that the Count is made to look like a fool for insisting on primogeniture rather than it being seen as the standard of the day.


Besides History, the other aspect of the book that captivates is the Fantasy. As the Lady becomes involved in casting spells, she encounters the jinni, Arabian spirits of great power and mischievous nature but can be subservient to the humans who control them. They are also known as genies. The jinn originally serve her needs but they also display some dangerous undertones. The Lady falls into madness and avarice (particularly when she learns that the jinni and the souls bleed rubies). It is possible that the creatures are driving her insane but it is just as possible that her madness was already within herself and she is bringing out the darker aspects of these beings rather than the other way around. 


The spell calls forth various souls like Blodeweth, a priestess whose entrapment in another woman's body makes her bloodthirsty and vengeance seeking and Corvinus, a conniving slave turned nobleman who finds himself inhabiting the body of a raven and is forced to serve as the Lady’s spy. The more that they work for the Lady, the more unhinged that they become until their rage and paranoia results in them turning on each other. 


Then there’s Christine. It’s kind of strange for a spirit from the future to inhabit a body in the past. But a few things allow that concept to squeak by in this context. Among them is that it plays into the Catharist view of reincarnation. A spirit who lived in a future time and place alludes to the belief that the soul lives on throughout time in the past and the future. 


The other meaning behind Christine’s presence in the past could also play into a Medieval concept of disorder being passed from one sphere to another. From the moment that the Lady casts the soul transference spell, what was seen as a world of human dissension throws the supernatural into the struggles. It is similar to a concept that actually was believed in the Medieval Era and was often echoed in later literary works such as Shakespeare and Marlowe’s plays. Trouble in the natural physical world, in politics, society, status, spills into the supernatural world. For example the murder of Hamlet’s father leads to the presence of the ghost and the uncertainty of Hamlet’s sanity. So the disorder among the realms could also factor into the disorder of time and space that even those spheres are affected by the Lady’s actions. Christine’s presence could be another symptom of the disruption rather than a random occurrence caused by a spell being used in the wrong way and accidentally punching a hole into the future. 


While it is easy to say that the presence of the supernatural, the jinn, the resurrected souls, Christine’s time travel, are caused by dark demonic forces, the truth is there was a dark undercurrent before the Lady cast her first spell. Before the Count even picked up the spells and found a caliph who would assist him. It is there in the first few pages in a Count who bragged about destroying a whole culture while playing lip service to his own religion. It is there when a Lady whose hatred for her husband, grief at her children’s death, and desire to hold on and control everything she has overpower her reason, love for her remaining family, her role as a Countess, and her own health and sanity. It is there in a feudal system that has fallen to corruption, self-righteousness, and bigotry with the desire to destroy or deride anything that does not fit the status quo. 


This is the imbalance that causes the subsequent disintegration between the natural and supernatural world, human and jinni, living and dead, past and future, fantasy and reality.