You’re Welcome by A. J. Arentz is an Amazon Best Seller. This heartwarming, inspiring and laugh-out-loud story is inspired by true events, and narrated by our furry best friend. Ludo, a German Shepherd and Melody, a young high-spirited woman, find each other needing one another more than they know to make it through the perils life has in store for them! The pair forge an unbreakable relationship, and with it navigate hardship, depression and love! If you have ever loved a dog this book is a must-read! $0.99 on Kindle.
You’re Welcome: A Dog Lovers Novel
Playing Games With Boys
For readers who have ever had thoughts about the one who got away, author Charlotte Ross says, “I wrote this book for you.” Told through a sequence of stories, it’s a captivating look at how those we’ve loved, those we’ve shared time with, become a part of us. A poignant and ultimately uplifting novel about overcoming loss and recognizing love. $2.98 on Kindle.
The Fat Lady’s Low, Sad Song
Free: Hidden From Our Eyes – An Alternate History
Jane Digby’s Diary: A Rebel Heart
Free: Tasman Allan
Despite growing up without a mother, Tasman Allan has had an easy life. She loves her dad, her aunty, and her home. But suddenly everything changes. Her dad falls in love, her aunty moves away, and Tasman isn’t sure where she fits into this new life of her fathers.
When a not so familiar face from the past resurfaces, Tasman will be torn between the life she once knew and the life before her. Free on Kindle.
The Gentle Art Of Forgetting
A 30-year-old woman named Jane Dawn wakes up in a snow-covered hut with no memories. However, Jane suspects she may have been responsible for something terrible, in this genre-spanning tale of love, loss, memory, magic, and mortality. Reviewers have called it “beautiful” “intriguing” “compelling” and “moving”. $0.99 on Kindle.
Purple Hearted Man
Purple has a difficult job: He was placed here to take down the One-Eyed God. It’s his mission and he won’t fail. It’s a lonely road for someone like him—a healer—but he has help. The hippies are his friends: Chloe the yogi, Wheat the candlestick maker, and Berrydream, who is in retail. And he has his tribe: Charlotte, Stranger and Jackson. Eventually, the tigers that roam the city might become allies, too. Who can say, tigers are fickle?
The One-Eyed God is nefarious and powerful. His agents lurk everywhere and the aliens are certainly up to no good. Even the one called Sister can’t be trusted.
But the universe is wise and has given Purple skills. Getting control of his invisibility will help, but that only matters as long as molecular cohesion is maintained. Most of all, Purple has purpose and, of course, he has his broom. $0.99 on Kindle.
Jane Digby’s Diary
Free: Apart from War
Don’t Kill the Writer: Vol. I: A Poetry Collection
Forgotten Valor: A Novel of the Korean War
Forgotten Valor: A Novel of the Korean War is a visceral work of historical fiction covering the first three months of America’s forgotten war. If you like under-examined military history, gritty details, and soldiers’ perspectives, then you’ll love Richard Thomas Lane’s story of courage under fire. $2.99 on Kindle.
Mission 3-R
It’s 3am and the President of the United States has gathered top government officials at the Whitehouse to reveal some shocking and frightful news. Genesis, the most top secret and daring trillion-dollar time machine has disappeared; taken back in time through a brazen act of treason by rogue American soldiers. General Ben Jackson, the leader of this mission to Return, Redeem and Recast Africa’s destiny and prevent the slave trade from taking place, plans on ensuring his ancestors are well prepared for when the first colonist set foot on the dark continent. However, General Jackson quickly finds out that things are not as they should seem 400 years ago and is forced to navigate through a web of deceit, murder, lust, revenge and the extent to which the execution of good intentions can be subverted by the misuse and corrupting influence of absolute power. $3.99 on Kindle.
Free: Bowl of Fruit (1907)
The Cedar
From the end of the 17th century when a lone Frenchman homesteads in what would become South Carolina through the pinnacle of the Civil War, the Bodes family and those close to them endure hardship, triumph, scandal, and sometimes tragedy. They work to defend against enemies and establish alliances in the rapidly changing landscape of young America.
Over the years, the small homestead becomes a significant plantation known as The Cedar, frequented by traders and travelers. During an unseasonable storm in the South Carolina midlands in the early 19th century, an heiress who has lost everything seeks refuge at The Cedar and is determined to turn misfortune into opportunity and the saga of Vesper Bodes and young Elisabeth begins.
A must-read for fans of Civil War era historical fiction and southern literature! $0.99 on Kindle.
Pianist in a Bordello
Finn Again
Finn McCarthy is half Irish, half English, and fully fantastic.
When a world at war beckons, Finn answers the call, but there are some casualties even a soldier can’t prepare for. To heal his wounds he must banish his demons, a journey that leads him to a sleepy fishing village where the mysteries of his Celtic roots take hold. He begins to accept his past, only to discover that his greatest battle might take everything he’s got left. $0.99 on Kindle.
Free: The Road Home
1891—Living separately for three years, fourteen-year-old twins, Katherine and Tommy Arthur have done their best to make each boarding house feel like home. But unrest grows as they are driven to questionable actions just to survive. Meanwhile, their desperate mother is confronted with breaking yet another promise to her children. Then a miracle descends. Hope rises on a cold, rainy night and changes everything. If Jeanie could just get word to Katherine and Tommy, she knows she can set their lives right again. Agitators, angels, and dangerous “saviors” illuminate the Arthurs’ unmatched determination and smarts.
1905—Though she tries to forget the awful years that hurt so much, the memories still haunt Katherine. Now, tearful mourners at her mother’s funeral force her to revisit a time in her life that both harmed and saved her in the most unexpected ways. Tommy grieves his mother’s passing as well. He too is thrust backward, compelled to rediscover the events in his life that shaped the man he has become. Will he commit to reconstructing his broken life? The Arthurs come to understand that forgiveness is the only way back to hope, the only way to find all that was good in the misfortune that transformed their lives forever. Free on Kindle.
Living in the Middle
Rejected by his race. Hunted by the Klan. Yet, standing up to hatred is what he’s compelled to do.
New York, Early 1900s: Jimmy Montgomery comes from old New York money and grows up among the Manhattan elite. At the age of eighteen, Jimmy discovers he’s been living a lie. He follows his roots back to Tulsa, Oklahoma to answer the burning questions in his life. Who is he? What is he? Where does he belong? He finds love and friendship along the way, but full acceptance from either the White or the Black world eludes him. When trouble pits the White population of Tulsa against the Black community of Greenwood, Jimmy must finally make a choice—he can no longer live in the middle. His decision will alter the course of his life and those he’d come to love. What will he decide? Pick up a copy to find out.
LIVING IN THE MIDDLE is a powerful African American historical novel based on the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. If you like passionate heroes, no-holds-barred history, high-stakes emotional tension, then you’ll love A. Robert Allen’s eye-opening story.
LIVING IN THE MIDDLE is a stand-alone story connected by theme to the other volumes in A. Robert Allen’s Slavery and Beyond series.
$0.99 on Kindle.
To Leave a Memory
“A warm coming together…colorful dialogue…” — Kirkus Reviews.
If you enjoy films like “On Golden Pond,” you’ll love this tender portrait of a quirky professor, his psychic wife and their troubled daughter, who come together to forgive and rediscover how to love. You’ll laugh, cry, and cheer as each character becomes like your own family. Grab a tissue before the poignant, surprise ending. $0.99 on Kindle.
The Hypnotist’s Assistant
Free: Mister Drainpipe
Homeless, alone, haunted by the shadows of the past, Mister Drainpipe is a beggar cast adrift on the streets of Addis Ababa. He ekes out life inside a concrete drain, atop a pile of rubbish. His fragile world is about to implode. A man who has lost everything can still lose his soul. Free on Kindle.
The Winter Sisters: A Novel
Folklore, medicine, and superstition in the Georgia mountains. Dr. Waycross knows bleeding and blistering, the best scientific medicine of 1822. He arrives in the Georgia mountains to bring his modern methods to the superstitious masses. The local healers, the Winter sisters, claim to treat yellow fever, consumption, and the hell-roarin’ trots just as well as he can. Some folks call the sisters herb women; some call them witches. Waycross calls them quacks. But when the threat of rabies – incurable and fatal – comes to town, Dr. Waycross and the Winter sisters must combine their science and superstition in a desperate search for a remedy. Can they find a miracle cure, or has the age of miracles passed? $0.99 on Kindle.