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THE ADVENTURES OF BUBBA JONES News!

Wednesday, April 21st, 2021

The Adventures of Bubba Jones #4 was included in the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators’ recommended reading list of “Books that Celebrate the Earth

The fourth book in Jeff Alt’s award-winning series follows the beloved time-traveling siblings as they uncover amazing facts about the Grand Canyon while on a mission to solve a park mystery. They encounter all sorts of wild creatures and plants, meet the people involved in the establishment of the national park, learn about the Native Americans that call this land home, and unravel some of the park’s secrets.

To see the full list of recommended books, click here.

To learn more about The Adventures of Bubba Jones #4, click here.

To learn more about Jeff Alt, click here.

Foreword INDIES News!

Friday, March 19th, 2021

Two Beaufort titles were named finalists in the 2020 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards

On March 12th, 2021, Foreword Reviews released the list of finalists for their 2020 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards. The School Choice Roadmap by Andrew Campanella was nominated in the Nonfiction/Education category, and A Small Earnest Question is one of 13 finalists in the General Fiction category.

More than 2,000 entries spread across 55 genres were submitted for consideration, and we’re thrilled that both of these wonderful titles were recognized. The finalists were determined by Foreword’s editorial team. The winners will be announced on June 17, 2021.

To view the complete list of finalists, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.

To learn more about A Small Earnest Question, click here.

GET YOUR KIDS HIKING News!

Tuesday, March 9th, 2021

U.S. News: 20 Fun Things to Do in Your Free Time That Cost Nothing

Jeff Alt, author of Get Your Kids Hiking, A Walk for Sunshine, Four Boots One Journey, and the Adventures of Bubba Jones series, was quoted in the following excerpt from U.S. News.

Go on a Nature Hike

Get out of your home and into the great outdoors. Although some nature parks have admission fees, it’s often free. AllTrails.com is a good website to check out to find trails near you. And if you’re a camper, this may be an excellent time to plot a route and pitch a tent.

“Putting one foot in front of the other on a hike is one of the least expensive and healthiest forms of recreation there is. You can find a recreation area just about anywhere, and after you acquire the essentials, the gear will last a long time,” says Jeff Alt, a Cincinnati-based author of numerous hiking books, including “A Walk for Sunshine” and “Get Your Kids Hiking.”

“Much research has emerged about the mental health benefits of walking and immersion in nature. A walk in the woods keeps my body fit, enhances my positive thoughts, inspires my creativity and helps to de-stress me from the daily grind,” Alt says.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about Get Your Kids Hiking.

Click here to learn more about Jeff Alt.

A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION News!

Friday, January 22nd, 2021

The Midwest Book Review reviews J.F. Riordan’s A Small Earnest Question

Synopsis: It’s spring on Washington Island. Despite her concerns about Roger’s desire to bartend, Elisabeth is eager to plan a grand opening for their newly remodeled hotel, but she quickly realizes that she may also need to make accommodations for Roger’s proposed goat yoga classes. Bored and lonely, Oliver Robert joins bartender Eddie in forming a great books club at Nelsen’s, and Emily Martin, determined to make her mark on the community, forms a new Committee of the Concerned. When Emily decides that the Island needs a literary festival, complete with a famous author, she imprudently seeks out a notorious celebrity, hoping, as always, to enhance her own prestige. Real estate agent Marcie Landmeier confides that an unknown someone is buying up the Island’s shoreline, newly-appointed Fire Chief Jim Freeberg contends with a string of suspicious fires, and Pali and Ben have a spiritual encounter that will change them both. Meanwhile, drawn once more into local controversy, and awash in suspicion herself, Fiona Campbell must determine the answers to questions that will affect her future, and the future of the entire Island. 

Critique: Set on a remote island in the Great Lakes, “A Small Earnest Question” is Book Four in the outstanding North of the Tension Line series from novelist J. F. Riordan. A deftly crafted and engagingly entertaining story from beginning to end, “A Small Earnest Question” will be an immediate and enduringly popular addition to community library Contemporary American Literary Fiction collections. It should be noted for the personal reading lists of dedicated Riordan fans that “A Small Earnest Question” is also readily available in a digital book format (Kindle, $12.99).

Click here to view the review.

Click here to learn more about A Small Earnest Question.

Click here to learn more about J.F. Riordan.

A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION News!

Monday, January 11th, 2021

A Small Earnest Question featured in Madison Magazine’s “2021 Reading List: Local books to add to your collection”

Every year we publish a list of books that have Wisconsin authors or connections. From “Wisconsin cocktails” to “Storied and Scandalous Wisconsin,” you might find an interesting read to add to your own 2021 reading list.

A Small Earnest Question” by J.F. Riordan
Book No. 4 in the North of the Tension Line series, “A Small Earnest Question” opens a window into the imagined everyday life of Washington Island residents in Door County. With a year-round population of 708, Washington Island certainly makes a fun backdrop for a story involving many interconnected characters, including Elisabeth, who’s eager to open a remodeled hotel; Roger, an aspiring bartender; Marcie, a real estate agent; and Emily, who wants to start a literary festival. You might just have to take a trip to Door County and let this small-town story suck you in. J.F. Riordan, who has been called a modern-day Jane Austen, lives in Wisconsin with her husband and three dogs. –AB

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to order A Small Earnest Question.

Click here to learn more about J.F. Riordan.

JENNIFER PHARR DAVIS News!

Monday, December 28th, 2020

Jennifer Pharr Davis, author of Becoming Odyssa and Called Again, Appointed to President’s Council for Sports, Fitness and Nutrition

For Immediate Release:

Jennifer Pharr Davis has been appointed to the Presidential Council for Sports, Fitness and Nutrition. A noted hiker, speaker, and author, Pharr Davis has hiked more than 14,000 miles on six different continents. In 2011 she set the overall record on the Appalachian Trail by completing the 2,189 mile footpath in 46 days. As a mother she has backpacked 700 miles in her second and third trimesters of pregnancy, hiked in all 50 states with her daughter, and walked across the state of North Carolina while nursing her newborn son. According to the White House Press Release, Pharr Davis was appointed to the position alongside several notable figures and sports personalities, including New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick, former Ohio State Head Football Coach Urban Meyer, and TV host Dr. Oz. The co-chairs of the council are beach volleyball Olympian Misty May-Treanor, New York Yankees Hall of Fame pitcher Mariano Rivera, and noted NFL running back Herschel Walker.

According to its website, the Council for Sports, Fitness and Nutrition website’s objective is to “increase sports participation among youth of all backgrounds and abilities and to promote healthy and active lifestyles for all Americans.” Appointments are for two years and include annual meetings in Washington, DC.

Pharr Davis is no stranger to getting people outside and on trails. In 2008, she founded Asheville, North Carolina-based Blue Ridge Hiking Company, a guided service with retail shop and bunkhouse that strives to “make the trails accessible and enjoyable to everyone at every phase of life.” In regards to her appointment, Pharr Davis said, “I am looking forward to representing Outdoor Recreation and Public Lands on a council that has traditionally been focused on mainstream sports. It’s time to take a hike, America!”

Click here to learn more about Jennifer Pharr Davis.

Click here to learn more about Becoming Odyssa and click here to learn more about Called Again.

BECOMING ODYSSA News!

Monday, December 14th, 2020

ENJOYING NATURE: 9 great books to get you though these crazy times

Winter is always a good time for reading. Actually, anytime is a good time for reading. It’s just that sitting in front of a fireplace on a cold winter day with a good book seems like the perfect place to be and thing to do.

I read 99% non-fiction, and I stumbled into some outstanding books that I know you will like. The reason I know you will like these books is because I passed them on to my wife, sister and friends, and they all loved them, too — so they come well recommended.

So here is a list of nine of the best books I read this summer, in no particular order.

Becoming Odyssa: Adventures on the Appalachian Trail by Jennifer Pharr Davis. I heard Jennifer speak at the Appalachian Trail Festival in Damascus, VA, a few years ago and bought this book from her there. My wife read it, but I never got around to it until this summer. It is an excellent account of Jennifer’s solo hike on the AT. This isn’t your typical AT book about what to wear, what to eat, etc. This is about one woman’s experiences — some funny, some sad, and some inspiring — as she hikes 2,190 miles alone. Everyone I passed this book on to (at least six) loved it. $8.78

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about Becoming Odyssa, click here.

To learn more about Jennifer Pharr Davis, click here.

A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION News!

Monday, December 14th, 2020

Rose City Reader: A Round-up of Reviews: Six Gift-Worthy Books Sure to Surprise

Who doesn’t like getting books for gifts? It’s my favorite part of holiday gift giving! I haven’t gotten as clever as Christie at Raising Whasians with her adorable Christmas Book Advent Tree, pictured above, but lots of books get unwrapped at my house Christmas morning. 

One snaggle with choosing books for gifts is worrying if the person has already read the book! Here are some ideas for recently published books that have flown under the radar. There’s probably someone on your list who would enjoy one of these:

A Small Earnest Question by J. F. Riordan. This is the fourth book in Riordan’s North of the Tension Line series set on Washington Island, a remote island in the Great Lakes. Fiona Campbell is the main character at the center or an eclectic mix of locals, visitors, pets, and even goats for the goat yoga classes. This fourth book involves the grand opening of a remodeled hotel and the island’s first literary festival, but the point of the series is to wallow in the charm.

This one is perfect for all the pumpkin spice latte lovers on your list. Riordan brings readers up to speed enough to enjoy this as a stand-alone, or splurge on the set of four.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about A Small Earnest Question, click here.

To learn more about J.F. Riordan, click here.

AS I SAW IT News!

Monday, November 30th, 2020

Marvin Scott Celebrates his 40th Anniversary at PIX11 News

When we say New York’s Very Own, there is one journalist who defines those words: Marvin Scott.

For 40 years, Marvin has been a reporter and anchor at PIX11 News. He’s covered more than 15,000 stories.

Marvin started his career 60 years ago, in the same building PIX11 News studios are located in today. He was a teenager selling a photo of a fire in the Bronx to the Daily News. That was just the beginning of a career that led to 11 Emmys and induction into the New York State Broadcasters Hall of Fame.

But it’s his five visits to Iraq and Afghanistan to be with local soldiers at Christmas that have touched him deeply.

Three years ago, Marvin published a book in “As I Saw It: A Reporter’s Intrepid Journey,” where Marvin reflected on the stories that have stuck with him personally.

With a street sign named after him, this kid from the Bronx is a storyteller who continues to share the stories that shape our city and our lives.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about Marvin Scott.

Click here to learn more about As I Saw It: A Reporter’s Intrepid Journey

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Friday, October 9th, 2020

Six Bridges Book Festival: Virginia Walden Ford

Virginia Walden Ford is one of the few people who actually knows the answer to the question, “What actress would play you in the Hollywood version of your life?”

Ford made national news in the 1990s as leader of a grassroots effort to broaden school choice for public school students in Washington DC. That struggle has now been featured in the film Miss Virginia, which was released in October 2019 and stars Uzo Aduba in the title role.

For those who want to know the full story with all the details and complexity that won’t fit in the two-hour film version, Ford has now released her memoir, School Choice: A Legacy to Keep. Most fascinating, especially for Arkansans, is the major role that Ford’s youth in Little Rock played in the formation of this strong woman’s character

Born in 1951 as Virginia Fowler, the real “Miss Virginia” grew up in the thick of the intense civil rights struggle that followed the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School. A cross burned on her family’s lawn in 1967 when her father, William Harry Fowler, was selected as the first black administrator for the Little Rock School District. Both Fowler and his wife, Marion Johnson Fowler, had graduated from Philander Smith College and earned masters’ degrees from the University of Arkansas. The Fowler family was deeply invested in education and in the Little Rock community, frequently hosting many of the people whose names have now gone down in history for civil rights activism such as Thurgood Marshall and Daisy Gatson Bates. But most importantly, as Ford now testifies, growing up in her family taught her to raise her voice on behalf of others.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about Virginia Walden Ford.

Click here to learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep.

A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION News!

Monday, October 5th, 2020

Madison Magazine: Fall reading recommendations from three local bookstores

As the leaves begin to turn and aggressive marketing campaigns for pumpkin spice-everything crop up around Madison, it’s once again time to find that new fall companion: a good book. This autumn, let local novels be your guide to the wonderful worlds created by Wisconsin writers, many of whom have new and recently released reads just in time for the fall season. 

Here are the latest recommendations from experts at the three local bookstores: A Room of One’s Own in downtown Madison, It’s More Than Mystery to Me on Monroe Street and Arcadia Books in Spring Green. Whether you’re looking for a collection of poems, essays, a new children’s book or a relaxed novel — these three stores have something to offer for every reading level. While looking for that new literary adventure, Charlotte Colaluca of Mystery to Me reminds readers to not just read local, but to shop local, too. 

“When you spend money at any local business, that money goes right back into your community and that money starts to work for you,” Colaluca says. “I think it’s an act of humanitarianism at this point if you shop local instead of shopping from Amazon, because when you send money that goes to the richest man on earth, that money doesn’t come back to you. It goes into his pocket.” 

For the reader looking for something a little less intense than grandiose questions on living and dying, “A Small Earnest Question” offers a wry tale full of vivid characters living on Door County’s own Washington Island. Author J. F. Riordan, who resides on the island, has been called a “modern day Jane Austin” for her book, and visited Mystery to Me for a virtual event this month. Colaluca says this book is perfect for anyone looking for a relaxing read. 

“[Riordan is] so excellent as far as writing about that place, and it’s not a very high-stakes drama … It‘s like a nice break from the world we currently live in.” 

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about A Small Earnest Question.

Click here to learn more about J.F. Riordan.

NORTH OF THE TENSION LINE News!

Thursday, October 1st, 2020

NORTH OF THE TENSION LINE: AN INTERVIEW WITH J. F. RIORDAN

We’ll hazard a guess that, at least once in your life, you’ve fantasized about packing up your life and moving to (what feels like) a different world—an idyllic small town, a bustling metropolis, a remote windswept isle… In J. F. Riordan’s sparkling North of the Tension line series, a writer does just that, moving from Chicago to a sparsely populated island in Door County, Wisconsin. Her ensuing small-town adventures are presented with enormous heart throughout this delightful series. Today in the Bluestocking Salon, Bas Bleu sat down (virtually, no masks required!) with novelist J. F. Riordan to learn more about why she chose Door County as her setting, how opera helped shape her novelist’s voice, and what effects the COVID-19 pandemic has had on her writing.

Bas Bleu: Tell us a little bit about yourself and your journey to becoming a writer.

J. F. Riordan: In one way or another I have always been a writer. I can remember at the age of seven or so, walking home on a summer evening, keeping myself company by making up a story. But my writing self has always been entwined with a musical self, and it confused me for quite a while. I spent my young life studying music, and had a career as an opera singer. It was an unhappy time, but it seems to have resolved itself: rhythm, the sound and feeling of words, and the movement of phrases are a very big part of my writing.

I didn’t start writing seriously for myself until quite late. I had a stressful day job, and writing was something that was personal and private, and helped me preserve a sense of purpose—not to mention a little sanity. The first novel took about seven years to write, partly because of the job, and partly because there was no pressure to finish. I had no idea whether anyone would want it. Since North of the Tension Line came out in 2014, I have published five books: four novels, and a book of essays, Reflections on a Life in Exile. It has all come as a bit of a surprise.

BB: Door County, and especially Washington Island, makes such an interesting and atmospheric setting for your series. What is your relationship to the area, and why did you decide to set the books there?

JFR: I have been going to Door County for decades, and it was probably thirty years ago when I decided to take the ferry to Washington Island just to see what was there. From the first moment I set foot on the ferry it was if a spell was cast on me. I can remember standing at the railing, looking out at the water and thinking what it would be like to come there every summer, with all the days spread out before you like a blank sheet of paper. There’s a magic in the island: as if you have fallen off the edge of the earth, and all that’s left is the essence of what matters. In my books I try to capture that mystical, almost magical reality.

I have always wanted to live there, in that sense of deep authenticity, but it wasn’t practical, so writing about being on the island was the next best thing.

Click here to read the rest of the interview.

Click here to learn more about North of the Tension Line.

Click here to read more about J.F. Riordan.

THE ADVENTURES OF BUBBA JONES #4 News!

Thursday, September 17th, 2020

Midwest Book Review: Environmental Shelf

Tommy “Bubba Jones” and his sister, Jenny “Hug-a-Bug,” uncover amazing facts about the Grand Canyon while on a mission to solve a park mystery. This is no ordinary brother and sister duo; they are part of a legendary time travel family with a mission to preserve and protect our national parks and have developed a reputation for solving mysteries. As they time travel back hundreds, thousands, and millions of years, they not only learn about the past, but also experience it. They encounter all sorts wild creatures and plants, meet the people involved in the establishment of the national park, learn about the Native Americans that call this land home, and unravel some of the park’s secrets.

The fourth book of this award-winning national park series by author/storyteller Jeff Alt, “The Adventures of Bubba Jones: Grand Canyon National Park” is an inherently fun and impressively informative read and one that is especially and unreservedly recommended for family, elementary school, middle school, and community library collections for young readers ages 8-12. It should be noted for personal reading lists that “The Adventures of Bubba Jones: Grand Canyon National Park” is also readily available in a digital book format (Kindle, $4.99).

Click here to read the rest of the review.

Click here to learn more about The Adventures of Bubba Jones #4.

Click here to learn more about Jeff Alt.

THE JACK PATTERSON SERIES News!

Wednesday, September 9th, 2020

Arkansas Review: Delta Themes in the Legal Thriller Fiction of Arkansas Native Webb Hubbell

To the ears of those who followed politics in the late 1990s, the name Webb Hubbell has a familiar ring. Many remember Hubbell as an associate of Bill and Hillary Clinton who forged a friendship with the Clintons in Little Rock when Bill Clinton was governor of Arkansas, and who later rose to the position of the Associate Attorney General of the United States under the Clinton presidential administration. Others may remember the name Webb Hubbell from the subsequent Whitewater Scandal, in which Hubbell was caught up, leading ultimately to his conviction and an eighteen-month incarceration at a federal prison in Maryland. Still others might recall Hubbell as the author of the autobiographical expose of the Clinton circle titled Friends in High Places (1997), a conversational and controversial memoir of Hubbell’s interaction with the Clintons from early days when all three were lawyers in Little Rock during the early ’70s, to their roles in high political stakes while in Washington, DC, during the late ’90s.


Yet the Webb Hubbell of the 2000s is something quite other. Since 2014, Hubbell has emerged on the American literary landscape as an acclaimed novelist in the legal thriller genre. Hubbell is now the author of five bestsellers: When Men Betray (2014), Ginger Snaps (2015), A Game of Inches (2016), Eighteenth Green (2018), and East End (2019), all published by New York City-based Beaufort Books, an independent publisher. Several of Hubbell’s novels are set either wholly or partially in central Arkansas and the capital city of Little Rock, firmly rooting Hubbell’s claim to literary fame in fiction of the Mississippi Delta. All five Hubbell novels have received high marks from celebrities, politicians, and writers, including former US president Bill Clinton, Harry Thomason of Designing Women and Evening Shade fame, writer and actor Peter Coyote, and DC lobbyist Jack Abramoff. More icing on the cake: When Men Betray was rated a finalist in the 2014 Forward Review competition, Ginger Snaps captured the Gold Medal IPPY Award in 2016, and Eighteenth Green scored the same in the 2018 Forward Review Indies Book of the Year prize. The news has gotten around in Hubbell’s hometown of Little Rock, where the Central Arkansas Library System stocks a substantial collection of Hubbell’s fiction. His titles are always off the shelf and in the hands of readers. Hubbell, it might be said, appears to be on a bona fide literary roll.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about the Jack Patterson Series.

Click here to learn more about Webb Hubbell.

THE ADVENTURES OF BUBBA JONES #4 News!

Wednesday, September 9th, 2020

The Arizona Daily Sun Review: Through the ages and for all ages: Time traveling Bubba Jones series arrives at Grand Canyon

Did you know that there are 92 mammals, 447 types of birds, 22 species of bats and 58 reptiles in Grand Canyon? Or that Kaibab is a Paiute word meaning “mountain turned upside down” and what the tribe calls the Grand Canyon? Or that Phantom Ranch used to have a swimming pool?

These facts are just a handful in The Adventures of Bubba Jones 4: Time Travelling Through Grand Canyon National Park, the newest in award-winning author Jeff Alt’s national park series. From thousands of feet of rock layers to the Civilian Conservation Corps-installed phone line at the bottom of the canyon, Bubba Jones makes learning engaging and immersive. And, though it’s marketed for ages 8-12, like the best children’s literature, this storyhas something for all ages.

The Adventures of Bubba Jones starts on the roaring Colorado River. Here Bubba’s grandpa “Papa” Lewis, dad Clark and sister Hug-a-Bug encounter geologist and explorer John Wesley Powell as an experienced Papa Lewis ferries their wooden boat through dangerous rapids.

What makes this impossible sighting possible is that young Bubba can time travel.  In fact, what sets the entire Bubba Jones series apart is that he and his family can hop through history at a whim. What better educational tool than a little magic that makes young readers feel as if they are actually present for historical moments, important figures more than just a name on a textbook page.  

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about The Adventures of Bubba Jones #4.

Click here to learn more about Jeff Alt.