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Posts Tagged ‘Beaufort in the Press’

HIDDEN FALLS News!

Wednesday, July 29th, 2020

Hidden Falls Book Review on Rose City Reader

Kevin Myers’ new novel, Hidden Falls, follows protagonist Michael Quinn back to Massachusetts following the unexpected death of his father. Middle-aged, single, in a strained relationship with his own kid, and at the peak of a dead-end job in print journalism, Michael is on the brink of a classic mid-life crisis. What he gets instead is a real-life crisis when he discovers his father was involved with organized crime and Michael lands in the middle of a criminal conspiracy.

Although it starts with a bang, literally, the first chapter is just a teaser, before the story starts for real “a few weeks before.” Then the first quarter of the book is about Michael’s workaday life in Portland. He’s a columnist for the Portland Daily newspaper, waiting to be downsized out of a job in the next round of layoffs. He’s divorced, with a son just starting college, and is trying to navigate the stormy waters of middle-aged dating. One amusing subplot has Michael following the “Missed Connections” listings on Craigslist, convinced a younger co-worker is flirting with him.

Michael carries his everyday concerns with him to New Bedford when he returns for his father’s funeral. These concerns don’t go away – especially when his ex-wife, son, and potential girlfriend show up for the funeral – but Michael’s perception changes as he falls deeper into the realities of his family’s life in New Bedford. Those realities are exciting enough, with gamblers, gangsters, and crooked cops to spare. Tensions are high, tempers run hot, and Michael is right in the middle of it. It’s a good yarn.

To read the rest of the review, click here.

To learn more about Hidden Falls, click here.

To learn more about Kevin Myers, click here.

THE ADVENTURES OF BUBBA JONES #3 News!

Tuesday, July 28th, 2020

The Adventures of Bubba Jones #3 Named One of “Best Children’s Books for a Trip to Acadia National Park”

I read once that America’s culture is in its nature. And the National Parks are the highlight reel. I love National Parks. The parks themselves, the junior ranger program, the shops, the people that work there – it’s all the best of the best. If anyone asks me how they should spend a family vacation or what they should see while visiting the U.S., I’ll almost always say the National Parks. And while I have a post dedicated to children’s books about all of the parks, why not have a post for each one? Here it is: The best children’s books for a trip to Acadia National Park.

ABOUT ACADIA NATIONAL PARK

Acadia National Park is located on Mount Desert Island on the coast of Maine. The closest major airport is Bangor (BGR), though you can also find good prices to either Portland (PWM), or Manchester (MHT), NH.

You can travel there throughout the year, but you’ll want to travel between spring and fall for the most access. More roads are guaranteed to be open, the shuttle will be running, and ranger-led programs are held.

CHAPTER BOOKS SET IN ACADIA NATIONAL PARK FOR KIDS

The Adventures of Bubba Jones: Time Traveling Through Acadia National Park

by Jeff Alt (Author), Hannah Tuohy (Illustrator)

For kids ages 8 and up

This is book three in the Adventures of Bubba Jones series of National Park-themed chapter books for kids. This time, they’re at Acadia National Park. The characters are fiction, but the place and history are real. A fun read for kids who like to learn about the past of an important place.

To read the rest of the article from KidsTravelBooks, click here.

To learn more about The Adventures of Bubba Jones #3, click here.

To learn more about Jeff Alt, click here.

Get to Know A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION

Monday, July 6th, 2020

Hello, readers!

The first month of summer has officially come to a close, which means we’re that much closer to getting our hands on Book Four in the North of the Tension Line series by J.F. Riordan. A Small Earnest Question–which hits shelves on August 3rd–follows Washington Island’s beloved cast of characters as they prepare for another busy season on the island. Not without its share of small-town politics, unsolved mysteries, and, of course, goat yoga, A Small Earnest Question is another delightful addition to J.F. Riordan’s award-winning series.

Continue reading to learn more about A Small Earnest Question, read an excerpt from Chapter One, and pre-order your copy to start reading on August 3rd.

More About the Book:

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. 

A Small Earnest Question is Book Four in the award-winning North of the Tension Line series, set on a remote island in the Great Lakes. Called a modern-day Jane Austen, author J.F. Riordan creates wry, engaging tales and vivid characters that celebrate the beauty and mysteries of everyday life.

An Excerpt from Chapter One of A Small Earnest Question:

It was early spring on Washington Island, which, as any Islander could attest, is frequently an exercise in disappointment. The grass had turned a vivid green, but there were still piles of snow in the parking lots, mountainous ice shoves along the shoreline, and the lake still resonated with the clunking sounds of breaking ice on the waves. The trees were tinged with the lavender of their buds, and the air had an extra sharpness from the melting snow. But the sun shone, and the warming fields gave off a rising mist that carried the scent of earth and moss and leaves.

Fiona Campbell was sitting with her friend, Elisabeth, on the hotel porch, drinking coffee and watching a noisy group of gulls fighting over something on the pier across the road. Elisabeth’s big dog, Rocco, lay nearby, mostly dozing, but with one eye open to keep watch on things. Fiona wrapped her sweater more tightly around herself in the chilly spring air and held her mug in both hands for warmth.

Elisabeth’s and Roger’s plans to re-open the hotel had not gone precisely as intended. News of the long vacant property’s purchase and subsequent renovations were quickly the buzz of the Island. Even after the construction and decorating work had been completed, Elisabeth had wanted to wait for the right moment—just in time for the beginning of the new tourist season—to celebrate with a grand opening.

But news spread quickly beyond the Island, and months before the building was ready, the calls had begun, asking to reserve the space for a wedding, an anniversary, or a reunion of a group of friends. Before long, Elisabeth had had to concede to demand. Without advertising of any kind, the hotel already had bookings far in advance, and rather than the fanfare of a grand occasion, it had opened with Elisabeth quietly unlocking the front door to admit a group of well-heeled car enthusiasts.

“It doesn’t feel right,” she said to Fiona, as one of the bigger gulls attempted to fly off with the object of the flock’s attentions. “A place like this needs a celebration, and an invitation to the Islanders, and…a party.”

Fiona smiled into her coffee. They had had this conversation before.

“So, have a party. It’s your hotel. Do what you like.”

“I’m afraid it will be disruptive to the guests.”

“The guests will love it. It will be part of their experience.” Elisabeth played with a strand of wavy hair as she stared at the screaming birds. After a long silence she spoke. “Roger wants to bartend.”

Fiona, whose thoughts had already drifted elsewhere, shifted her gaze to Elisabeth. Suddenly the obstacle was clear.

“Ah,” she said.

Click here to read the rest of the excerpt.

Click here to pre-order A Small Earnest Question.

Click here to check out the rest of the North of the Tension Line series.

HIDDEN FALLS News!

Monday, June 29th, 2020

Kevin T. Myers Interview on Rose City Reader

Kevin T. Myers has worked as a stand-up comic, comedy writer, journalist, editor, speechwriter, and media liaison, among other jobs. He grew up in Massachusetts and now lives in Portland, Oregon where he works at a spokesperson for Reed College. 

Myers’s new novel Hidden Falls launches July 15 from Beaufort Books. It is available for pre-order now.

Kevin talked with Rose City Reader about his new book, Hidden Falls, its New Bedford setting, and what books he likes to read:
How did you come to write Hidden Falls?

When I began Hidden Falls, I was emerging from a dark time when I was processing a lot of old trauma through my writing. I set out to write the book I wanted to read to help lift me out of that place. At the time, my guilty pleasure (read: obsession) was reading the missed connections classifieds. It was a carnival midway of ideas, emotions, magical thinking, hope, optimism, denial, and sometimes depravity. Mostly it was filled with romantic souls exposing their secret desires to the world in hope of finding a connection. So, I started to write a comedic love story whose protagonist was pursuing a relationship through an ad he found.

I don’t write following an outline, and somewhere along the way my protagonist, Michael Quinn, went lookin’ for trouble. The original story almost necessitated that Michael be an unreliable narrator. As I dug deeper into why he was so lacking in self-awareness, his backstory became more interesting to me than what I was writing. Had I not had that false start, I don’t think Michael would have been as interesting, and I don’t think the book would be as fun.

The setting of New Bedford, Massachusetts, is key to the story because the location shaped the personalities of many of the characters. Why did you choose New Bedford?

Well, nobody had ever written a decent book connected with New Bedford. I was going to begin with the line, “Call me Michael.” Kidding. The story of Hidden Falls was invented whole cloth. It is also deeply rooted in the milieu of New England’s lower middle class, where I was raised. As I get older, I find myself becoming more appreciative of what I think was a pretty unique upbringing. In the first draft, Michael was from my hometown of Peabody, Massachusetts, but when the story started taking on elements of crime, I decided to change it to New Bedford. Not because of how it would reflect on the city, but because illegal gambling was so prevalent in Peabody that I didn’t want people to mistake the book for a memoir.

I chose New Bedford because I think it is the archetype of the kind of New England town I wanted to write about. The once great centers of now dead American industries. At one time, Peabody was to leather tanning what New Bedford was to whaling. The towns’ high school teams are named the Tanners and Whalers. We took great pride in an era and trade we never knew. It’s part of our heritage. The people from my hometown have a special bond that’s not easily explained. There’s also a connection to sports, professional and otherwise, that a lot of people who have never been exposed to that environment don’t understand. I wanted to explore those themes and I thought New Bedford was a great place to do that.

To read the rest of the interview, click here.

To learn more about author Kevin T. Myers, click here.

To learn more about Hidden Falls, click here.

SUCCESS FREAK News!

Monday, June 22nd, 2020

Success Freak by Bruno Gralpois awarded 2019 Foreword INDIES Bronze Award for Career (Adult Nonfiction)

Congratulations to author Bruno Gralpois! His book, Success Freak: Kick Ass in Life in 7 Days, won the 2019 Foreword INDIES Bronze award in the Career (Adult Nonfiction) category. More than 2,100 entries were considered for 55 categories.

To see the full list of winners, click here.

To learn more about Success Freakclick here.

To learn more about Bruno Gralpois, click here.

A SMALL EARNEST QUESTION News!

Tuesday, June 9th, 2020

Authors Answer: A Conversation with J.F. Riordan

J.F. Riordan has worked in opera, in the classroom, and in philanthropy, but her first love is writing. 

Ms. Riordan has been called “a latter-day Jane Austen”. Her mesmerizing literary fiction makes the Great Lakes region one of the characters in this continuing series. The North of the Tension Line books (North of the Tension LineThe Audacity of GoatsRobert’s Rules; and A Small Earnest Question-due out in Summer 2020) represent a sensibility that is distinctively Midwestern, even though the small-town politics and gossip will be universally familiar. Riordan celebrates the well-lived life of the ordinary man and woman with meticulously drawn characters and intriguing plots that magnify the beauty and mystery lingering near the surface of everyday life.

She is also the author of a book of essays, Reflections on a Life in Exile.

Do you collect anything? If so, what, why, and for how long?

I have a highly curated collection of dogs, which I have been working on for many years. As is so often true for connoisseurs, it is only finite resources that prevent me from adding to it regularly. The nature of the collection has evolved to suit the place we live: it’s a large wooded property, and there are quite aggressive coyotes, so little dogs are out of the question. We currently have two German Shepherds—one still a puppy—and a fifteen-year-old Indiana Spotted Dog named Pete. He is the heart of the collection for the moment, but I know that will not be for much longer. Sadly, the content of the collection can change suddenly, and tragically, as happened this past December when we lost our beloved Moses. Despite their heartbreaking inevitabilities, however, they are a particularly rewarding collection, since, unlike fine china or figurines, they never need dusting. They keep me company when I write, and amuse, pester, and distract me the rest of the time. They are also highly useful aids to procrastination, which is essential to the writing process.

Not all books are for all readers… when you start a book and you just don’t like it, how long do you read until you bail?

There are too many great books to bother reading something you don’t enjoy, and not everything is for everybody, so I’m a big believer in tossing a book aside and moving on. There are some books which are an insult to your intelligence, and you can usually tell those immediately. For everything else, I will try for a chapter or so, but if the style is too violent, disgusting, or at all sadistic, I’m out. I can’t pretend that I’m a patient reader.

My dogs can also be highly critical, and, in their youthful enthusiasms, will occasionally shred an author. 

I recently read Frances Burney’s Evelina, and found the beginning rather rough going—probably because of the eighteenth-century mannered writing style— but I stuck it out and became engrossed in it, while cheerfully—and with no compunction whatever—skipping certain annoying dialogues. There is only one book—years ago—that I can remember literally throwing across the room because it was so badly written, but I can’t remember what it was or why I threw it. I’m pretty sure it was written by a friend, so perhaps that’s for the best.

To read the rest of the interview, click here.

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

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

SUCCESS FREAK News!

Wednesday, May 27th, 2020

Success Freak named 2019 Foreword INDIES Finalist

Success Freak: Kick Ass in Life in 7 Days, by Bruno Gralpois, was named a 2019 Foreword INDIES finalist in the Career (Adult Nonfiction) category.

To learn more about the nomination, click here.

To learn more about Success Freak, click here.

To learn more about Bruno Gralpois, click here.

BECOMING ODYSSA News!

Friday, May 8th, 2020

Positive Forward Motion: New Biopic from Beaufort Author Jennifer Pharr Davis

Jennifer Pharr Davis, author of Becoming Odyssa and Called Again, was featured in a new biopic that shares some of the highs and lows Jennifer has experienced as a record-breaking hiker, business owner, public figure, and a mother.

To watch the 15-minute biopic, click here.

To learn more about Jennifer Pharr Davis, click here.

THE LORD IS MY STRENGTH News!

Thursday, May 7th, 2020

The Lord is My Strength Wins Independent Publisher Book Award

The Lord is My Strength by Eric Kampmann was awarded a 2020 Silver Independent Publisher Book Award in the Inspirational/Spiritual category.

To learn more about the award and see the full list of winners, click here.

To learn more about The Lord is My Strength, click here.

To learn more about Eric Kampmann, click here.

SUCCESS FREAK News!

Tuesday, December 10th, 2019

6 Books That Will Help You Focus on Your Personal Growth

 Success Freak: Kick Ass in Life in 7 Days

By Bruno Gralpois

How do you begin to turn your life around in a week? Bruno Gralpois breaks it down by offering one new skill to learn for seven days: creating your own measurement for success, ways to think and act differently, how to learn from failure, ways to balance reflection and productivity, ways to manage your time, why resilience is important, and how to live with purpose and passion.

It won’t be easy, Gralpois warns, but if you use these skills and commit to them, they can help you achieve more. But that’s not the finish line; success takes work.

“To profoundly change our lives, we must do more than repaint the car or change the battery,” Gralpois writes. “We may need to change our means of transportation or change the destination altogether.” (November; Beaufort Books; $18)

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about Success Freak, click here.

To learn more about Bruno Gralpois, click here.

RED HOTEL News!

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Wide Range Of Reading Ideas To Get In Gear For The Holidays

“Red Hotel” by Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman (Beaufort Books)

“Red Hotel” is an incredibly timely globe-trotting thriller that is fiction on the edge of reality. A Tokyo hotel is bombed and dozens are killed and injured, so why is one man walking away from the massacre with a smile on his face? Former Army intelligence officer Dan Reilly, now international hotel executive, is on the case.

As Reilly utilizes all the contacts he can to get to the bottom of the disaster, he learns he isn’t just looking for one person but an entire organization that he never suspected. This discovery leads him to more calculated acts of terror around the globe and a much more internationally connected web of corruption than he was prepared for.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about RED Hotel, click here.

To learn more about Gary Grossman, click here, and to learn more about Ed Fuller, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Virginia Walden Ford’s New Memoir, “School Choice: A Legacy to Keep,” Shares the True Story of a Courageous Education Reform Pioneer

Virginia Walden Ford, who was recently portrayed by Uzo Aduba in the film, “Miss Virginia,” tells the behind-the-scenes true story of her childhood in the segregated south and her fight to bring school choice to our nation’s capital, in her new memoir, “School Choice: A Legacy to Keep.”

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (PRWEB) November 21, 2019

Every child in the U.S. deserves the opportunity to receive a quality education, but those opportunities are not equally distributed among young people in our country. That inequality is something that Virginia Walden Ford discovered as a child growing up in the segregated south, and then spent most of her adult life trying to change. In School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, a memoir published today by Beaufort Books, Walden Ford shares the improbable true story of how her childhood experiences prepared her for a life of school choice advocacy.

A decade after the “Little Rock Nine” desegregated Little Rock Central High School, Walden Ford was part of the second wave of black students to enroll in the school. As a teenager, she watched in horror as faceless bigots burned a cross at her home, protesting her father’s appointment to serve as the first black administrator of Little Rock’s school system.

Then, years later, Walden Ford drew on those experiences –– along with the lessons taught to her by her parents and grandparents –– when she rallied parents to protest Washington, D.C.’s broken education system and demand greater school choices for their own children.

In the process, she and other low-income parents steadily built community support for their efforts but faced sustained criticism from school choice opponents. Aligned with an unlikely set of allies in the U.S. Congress, they eventually won the fight to create the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program in 2004. Since its inception, the program has provided scholarships so that more than 10,000 children could attend the private schools of their parents’ choice.

Earlier this year, Walden Ford’s story was told on the big screen in the feature film, Miss Virginia, in which Emmy-winning actress Uzo Aduba portrays Virginia. The film also stars Matthew Modine, Niles Fitch, and Vanessa Williams.

Walden Ford’s new memoir expands on the lessons instilled by her parents, who served as public school teachers and administrators. The book also explores how she learned the values of courage and tenacity by listening to stories of her ancestors, including her great-great grandfather, who was a slave.

“I was raised to believe that education is a right but one that we have to keep fighting for, even 60 years after desegregation,” Walden Ford said. “I will never stop fighting for children and to give them a better chance at life. This book is part of that legacy.”

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

To learn more about Virginia Walden Ford, click here.

RED HOTEL News!

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

RED Hotel featured on Eagle & Times “Wide Range Of Reading Ideas To Get In Gear For The Holidays”

“Red Hotel” is an incredibly timely globe-trotting thriller that is fiction on the edge of reality. A Tokyo hotel is bombed and dozens are killed and injured, so why is one man walking away from the massacre with a smile on his face? Former Army intelligence officer Dan Reilly, now international hotel executive, is on the case.

As Reilly utilizes all the contacts he can to get to the bottom of the disaster, he learns he isn’t just looking for one person but an entire organization that he never suspected. This discovery leads him to more calculated acts of terror around the globe and a much more internationally connected web of corruption than he was prepared for. Purchase at https://amzn.to/2nYUh3m.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about RED Hotel.

Click here to learn more about Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

Clarion Reviews evaluates The School Choice Roadmap: 7 Steps to Finding the Right School for Your Child

Clarion Rating: 4 out of 5

With a convincing platform that’s based on helping children thrive, The School Choice Roadmap is a fair-minded resource.

A reassuring guide for parents, Andrew Campanella’s The School Choice Roadmap is all about navigating the sometimes overwhelming decisions around K-12 enrollment.

Its outlook positive, the book emphasizes the idea that school choice is personal, not political. It sidesteps the public versus private school debate, suggesting that parents research the options that are available where they live. What matters, it asserts, is what’s best for each individual student; it argues that parents are the experts when it comes to knowing their kids.

Presented in two parts, the book first forwards an objective overview of six types of schools: traditional public, public charter, public magnet, online public, private, and home. It argues the potential benefits of each, discussing the facts in a friendly way that’s appreciative of how busy parents are. This section will be helpful for cutting through school mission statements and numerical ratings to evaluate the key features which are relevant to a family’s circumstances. Its information sticks to standard definitions. In its second portion, the book outlines seven steps toward choosing a school.

Click here to read the rest of the review.

Click here to learn more about The School Choice Roadmap.

Click here to learn more about Andrew Campanella.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Tuesday, November 19th, 2019

The School Choice Roadmap named “Best Parenting Book” for 2020 by the National Parenting Product Awards

The School Choice Roadmap by Andrew Campanella was among the six products chosen for the 2020 National Parenting Product Awards.

To learn more about the award, click here.

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

To learn more about Andrew Campanella, click here.