Book Review: Reforming the Potter’s Clay
July 26, 2018 by admin
Filed under Book and Movie Reviews
By Hope Chastain
Once again tackling the tough subjects, in Reforming the Potter’s Clay, Donald James Parker takes on Harry Potter and the occult. Are the books as innocent as they seem, or do they pose a darker threat: making magic seem normal and desirable?
Artist Spotlight: Brian Dixen Band
July 26, 2018 by admin
Filed under Music, Music Interviews
By Randy L. Henderson
Music in its purest form should be inspirational, exciting and life changing. I really believe that today’s independent music is poised to experience growth in spite of the challenges the music industry faces. Throughout history, heartfelt music didn’t depend on external sources to fuel it. Creativity and improvisation can only be produced by inspiration and the soul of an artist or a band.
Book Review: The Duchess and the Dragon
July 25, 2018 by admin
Filed under Book and Movie Reviews
By Michelle Sutton
The Duchess and the Dragon tells the epic story of two unlikely soul mates in the early 1800’s Regency Era who live worlds apart but soon meet and turn each other's world upside down.
Jamie Carie knows how to pull a reader into a story. The inheritance scandal and Drake’s fight for his life and near-tragic sea journey really grab you. That was all great stuff, if not too descriptive. Some details even turned my stomach. Then the romance begins, and my first thought was that it reminded me of a Harlequin historical romance.
Artist Spotlight: Cloudchase
July 25, 2018 by admin
Filed under Music Reviews
By Randy L. Henderson
What is Cloudchase? We’re a modern/alternative rock band from Nashville, TN. Why Cloudchase? We’re all about chasing and getting after what we’ve been made for: dreams, relationships and things bigger and better than us…including great music. Quotes from the website: cloudchase.com.
Book Review: On Sparrow Hill
July 25, 2018 by admin
Filed under Book and Movie Reviews
By Donald James Parker
Book written by Maureen Lang
Are you the kind of reader who requires compelling action in a book to pull you along to the end? If so, this probably isn't the kind of literature you want to purchase. I can say with only a modicum of reservation that the majority of men wouldn't like this or be able to finish it. I might have been tempted to halt in midstream, but I had committed to reviewing this book. Is this an indictment of the writing? Not at all. The intended audience for this work is anyone who might deal with disabled people (which potentially is all of us at some point in our lives). A secondary group of people who would embrace it are the incurable romanticists who can't resist the ebbs and flows of a male/female relationship. This book can be considered a romance, but goes far beyond the confines of that pigeon-hole.