Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Best of Books Bloghop. Non-Fiction Books I have read in 2013

A review of this year's reading.
This year was extremely busy, reading wise. According to my Goodreads list I have read 284 books in total. No wonder I am tired **smile**, but not tired enough to stop, nope not me.
This post is just about the non-fiction and inspiring stories I have read, which was not a lot mind you, but still they are books to remember.

The first book I really can recommend - well I can recommend all of the books I have read **smile** - was this wonderful bundle from the authors of Masterkoda. A group of people that does what they say, support. Support is one of the most fundamental things an author can have, in a very competitive world of books. No man is an island is a cliche but in the world of books this is very true about authors. Without it we will fail connecting with readers, in marketing and networking and just the general idea of support. Especially Indie authors find this true on a regular basis.  So, if you are an Indie author in desperate need to connect with other authors connect with them, become part of the group and you will experience the same as me.

Click on the link to like my review and go ahead and buy your copy. It is only 99 cents. 
A bargain for what you receive in inspiring words. 

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The next book I have read but will only future on Jan 6, 2014 on my blog is 
From the Abyss. Currently number two in the Fatherhood genre on Amazon.
Be sure to come back on that date, when I will have an Interview with the author John Emil Augustine.
(He is also part of Masterkoda) **wink-wink**

My review can be read on Amazon, and go ahead buy his book, which is only 99 cents and read about his story, you will not be disappointed.

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Choosing the road less Traveled is a story that will touch every person.
I was wondering what will be revealed in this autobiography of this person, the reason I love to read autobiographies is that you get an insight in to their life normally not seen by other people. As I open the first page I was immediately drawn into the life of Myckell Williams. 




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I received my very own print books from the author, which was no small thing, since I live in South Africa and the author in America. I was really blessed to getting to know this lady which brought us this Christian series. It has to be read in consecutive order. Although fiction I thought it good to place it here as well, since you need to know the Bible to understand and fully grasp the principles she is talking about.

Bella Maura



Justice Quinn



Mason Micheal


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The next book I can recommend is "In the name of the Son and daughter", not very well known I know but worthy to be mentioned and read. The purpose of this book is to provide better understanding and awareness of abuse and the effects on children. The information includes useful data pertaining to healing from abuse. To learn more click on the link.



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I will let the author speak on this book. But I was deeply touched, that's for sure. I can recommend this book to all readers, especially if you love children.

I Didn't Know - Identifying, Confronting & Overcoming Child Sexual Abuse - the title is indicative of the subject matter. In this book the author brings to the forefront the many faces of child sexual abuse; those of the victims and the abusers. Yvette Allen-Tatum boldly confronts her past of child sexual abuse to demonstrate that TRUE deliverance is possible. Yvette believes that we ALL (victims, abusers, enablers, nay-sayers, etc.) can OVERCOME the horrible effects of child sexual abuse.

This book proves that true healing is possible and necessary for us to become more than CONQUERORS through Christ Jesus. 



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After learning that her autistic daughter Megan had been abused at the hands of her own brother, Kate Rose spent years trying to cope with her family's tragedy. She nearly gave up hope when the justice system refused to protect her daughter and was exhausted at the long, drawn-out trial that seemed to go nowhere. 
This was a touching story of one mother's fight against a system that refused to believe her, saving her daughter from her own family.



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Powerful Prayer to protect and bless your family



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This book was recommended to me by a friend, and I thought it a good idea to add it here as well. It encourages, inspire and helps you to form a clear picture of your own personal struggles.

The Invitation



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And, I can not end this post without mentioning this book.
My grandson and daughter reviewed this book for me and it received lots of attention on this blog.



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For more books on other blog hoppers follow the link

                                      Best of Books

Monday, December 30, 2013

Remembering some of the memorable romance reads in 2013

Today on this post, I  am remembering some of the books I have read over the last year. I have always loved books. From an early age I could get lost in a book, keeping myself busy and forgetting the world out there. 
Becoming a blogger and reviewer was a natural extend to my reading and I have 
learned that my opinion matters. 
Not only that, this road has open doors for me in my own writing endeavors. The connections I am building through this is priceless, and I know I have said it before but I really love this journey. Appreciating the hard work creating a book, the time away from your family, long hours alone, just you and your computer, the hard work in editing and the tireless work to market it. It is fulfilling every creative part of me.
Thank you for every reader that supports us in buying and reviewing our books. We appreciate it more than you will know.
So, with all that said let me show you some of the books I have read that stayed with me for a long time.






































And if I may, I know I am bias but every opportunity must be used, right **wink wink**


This is just a handful of the books I have read, some I received from the authors, some I have received as a promotional gift and some are freebies on Amazon. It does not matter how you obtained the book, just as long as you buy, download, read and leave a review. We love to hear back from you, the reader. Thanks for taking the time to stop here at Aspired Writer and all the positive comments. Without it, it will not be worth the effort or time.
A Prosperous 2014 for you and yours, may you too realize your dreams in this coming year and eat the fruit of your handiwork.


Thursday, December 26, 2013

5 Star Review for 'Bad Elephant Far Stream' by Samuel Hawley Plus Giveaway


ABOUT THE BOOK
Bad Elephant Far Stream is an elephant’s life story, told from her own perspective, through her own eyes. Inspired by the life of a real elephant known as Topsy, it follows Far Stream from her birth and capture in the wild in Ceylon in the late 1860s, through her transportation to America and thirty years with the circus, which ultimately led to her being labeled as “bad.” It’s an unusual and uncompromising novel that explores the questions: What is it like to be an elephant trained for human amusement? What does such a creature think? What does it feel? What does it yearn for? Bad Elephant Far Stream takes the reader on a voyage of discovery to find out.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Samuel Hawley was born and grew up in South Korea, the son of missionary parents. After earning BA and MA degrees in history from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, he returned to East Asia for two decades to teach, first in Japan and then Korea, retiring in 2007 as an associate professor of English at Yonsei University in Seoul. It was in Japan that Hawley started writing for magazines and newspapers on topics ranging from travel and Japanese fashion to sumo wrestling and fishing at downtown tsuribori. By the late 1990s he had turned his attention to books, notably The Imjin War(Institute of East Asian Studies Press, UC Berkeley, 2005), a 700-page account of Japan’s sixteenth-century invasion of Korea and attempted conquest of China. Hawley switched his focus to popular nonfiction after returning to Canada in 2007. His first work in this new vein was Speed Duel: The Inside Story of the Land Speed Record in the Sixties (Firefly, 2010), which received starred reviews in both Publishers Weekly and Library Journal. He followed this with I Just Ran: Percy Williams, World’s Fastest Human (Ronsdale, 2011), named one of the five “Best Sports Books of 2011” by the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). In 2013, Hawley decided to go “indie." He parted ways with his agent and formed his own imprint, Conquistador Press, to publish his first novel, Bad Elephant Far Stream.

Bad Elephant Far Stream (historical fiction) by Samuel Hawley
263 pages
Conquistador Press (November 2013)
$15.95 (paperback); $7.99 (eBook)
ISBN 978-0-9920786-0-7




A Note From the Author

Bad Elephant Far Stream is a work of fiction. A real elephant, however, inspired the story. Her name was Topsy, an Asian elephant, trained to perform in the circus, origins unknown. She had a crooked tail, broken at a young age by hard treatment, reportedly by Adam Forepaugh Jr.; she performed in the Forepaugh Circus for many years as part of the dancing quadrille ; she killed a man named Jesse Blount in 1902 and attacked another named Louis Dondero. And she was euthanized at Coney Island on January 4, 1903, the event immortalized in the Edison film “Electrocution of an Elephant.” You can watch the flickering footage on YouTube. I tried to incorporate as much as I could discover about the real Topsy into this story. Unfortunately, only tantalizing hints exist about her in the historical record prior to her widely publicized killing of Blount. In writing Bad Elephant Far Stream I therefore drew upon the experiences of other elephants as well— Topsy’s contemporaries with other shows— to flesh out the story. Most of the episodes depicted here are therefore largely true. They actually happened—but not necessarily to Topsy. In gathering information, I searched through scores of newspapers of the day, from the Atlanta Constitution and Albany Evening Journal to the Washington Post and Wichita Daily Eagle. I accessed these through Stauffer Library at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario (special thanks to the inter-library loan staff), and through a number of on-line newspaper archives, notably www.newspaperarchive.com ; the Library of Congress’s http:// chroniclingamerica.loc.gov and the individual state listings at http:// www.xooxleanswers.com/ free-newspaper-archives/ us-state-and-local-newspaper-archives/ . Of these state newspaper archives, the one for New York at www.fultonhistory.com deserves special mention. The site is strangely quirky— and massive. A second major source was the Forepaugh Circus route books. These are detailed accounts for each year’s happenings that were published at the end of each season: a list of employees, the line-up of acts , the route taken, a daily journal, miscellaneous articles and snippets— usually a total of more than 100 pages. By far the best collection of these route books is housed in the Parkinson Library at the Circus World Museum in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Circus World Museum Assistant Director Rob Richard kindly provided me with material from the Forepaugh route books for the years 1878, 1880, 1883, 1889, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1896, 1898, 1900 and 1902. I found the daily journal portion , a major part of each book, to be especially useful . It was here that I read of such events as Topsy’s running in an elephant race as depicted in chapter 13 (she lost her footing and tumbled head over heels on at least two occasions, once in St . Louis , Missouri on May 24, 1893 and again in Marion , Kansas on August 30 of the same year, “turning a complete and artistic somersault”); the train derailment in chapter 14 (derailments and serious accidents occurred almost every season; the one in which the Forepaugh elephant car tumbled down an embankment occurred en route to Bluefield, Virginia on September 25, 1898); the tent blow-down in chapter 17 (Sioux City, Iowa, June 24, 1898); together with numerous other incidents and a wealth of descriptive detail. Third, there is the elephant database at www.elephant.se, essential for tracking elephants with nineteenth-century circuses to the extent that information exists. Also noteworthy is second-generation elephant trainer William “Buckles” Woodcock’s circus history website, http:// bucklesw.blogspot.com . I should perhaps mention here that I diverged from the database’s record on Adam Forepaugh’s elephant Romeo, the one whose death is depicted in chapter 5. He was one of several circus elephants at the time named Romeo and thus they are easily confused. The account I found most convincing— that an elephant named “Canda” was brought from Ceylon in 1851 and renamed “Canada” and later “Romeo”— is that forwarded by Stewart Craven, at one time Romeo’s trainer.

Another valuable source of information that went into the writing of this book was the Circus Historical Society’s on-line library at www.circushistory.org . This website contains listings of every stop in every town for many of the major circuses for most seasons. It also has a virtual library of books and articles written by or concerning old-time circus impresarios , performers and trainers: Richard Conover’s The Great Forepaugh Show, 1864-1894; Stuart Thayer’s 
American Circus Anthology; Charles Day’s book Ink From a Circus Press Agent and weekly column “The Circus in the Days of Old”; W.C. Thompson’s On the Road with a Circus ; Louis Cooke’s weekly newspaper series “Reminiscences of a Showman”; Tony Parker’s On the Road With a Wagon Show and a good deal more.


5 Star Review

I received the book from the author for an honest review.

This book was well researched, well written and compelling. It is gripping, heart felt, and filled with compassion as you read this unique story from the elephant 'Far Stream's point of view. Starting from her capture in 1871, in the forests of India to her death in 1903, you will read about this intelligent creature, subdued to entertain people. She received cruelty at the hands of some spectators and some handlers, not willing to learn from her. Her reluctance to accept any changes, especially when she was older. 
They were always pressured to learn new tricks to entertain the crowds. 
The author gave us a glimpse into the circus world from that period, with its high demands for perfection, pushing the animals to comply to their rules and ways. Always on the road, touring from town to town. With dangerous places, derailed trains and bulls that became mad, placing them all in danger. You learn about their executions, strangulation and many more ways they were kept in control.
What touched me most was her constant longing for a past she could not remember, her heart-break when she realized that her family was gone and the joy when she was once again reunited by her sister. Always craving for freedom, never accepting her captured life, even if she did want to please the people that came in her life. Her different names as she grew into a matriarch of the group, not her flesh and blood but yet taking the role very seriously. 
The abuse that many of her fellow elephants endured, all to tame them, subdue them to fit in a man made world. Each elephant had their own unique character, their own troubles and seeing it from their perspective gives you a new found respect for these giants that walks the earth.
A wonderful historical fiction that I can recommend to all readers.

Giveaway

An eBook copy of Bad Elephant Far Stream.


Book Review: Jim’s Pterodactyl is an intriguing novel by Andrew R. Williams.

Amazon / Goodreads   / LibraryThing / Reedsy  Book Blurb: In this egg-straordinary tale,  Jim Godwin  has an unexpected delivery that ta...