Kate Padilla

Kate Padilla

Kate Padilla is an author, poet and artist. Her book, Apples Rot on the Ground (May 2020), is a collection of gut-wrenching poems detailing the racism and bigotry that existed for Hispanic families in early New Mexico & Wyoming.
The Last Nude by Ellis Avery

The Last Nude by Ellis Avery

The Last Nude is a brilliant story harmonized with Author Ellis Avery’s remarkable ability to fabricate stimulating scenes and captivating characters. Avery weaves this sensual drama around the true historical life of Polish art deco artist Tamara de Lempicka and her fictional muse and model, Rafaela Fano.

Dangerous Ambition by Susan Hertog

Dangerous Ambition by Susan Hertog

Susan Hertog’s biographies of two powerful and successful women, Rebecca West and Dorothy Thompson, Dangerous Ambition, brings to mind Malcolm Gladwell’s current book, Outliers: The Story of Success, in which he claims the fortunate succeed because of ability, opportunity and hard work.

Survivors by James Wesley, Rawles

Survivors by James Wesley, Rawles

I began reading James Wesley, Rawles’s novel, The Survivors, just as the “Occupy” movement gained momentum amid continued economic uncertainty. It’s a story of a fictional global economic collapse, filtered by Rawles’s experience as a former U.S. Army intelligence officer.

The Iliad translated by Stephen Mitchell

The Iliad translated by Stephen Mitchell

Stephen Mitchell’s translation of Homer’s epic, The Iliad, is accessible with modern language, yet faithful to Homer’s rhythmic style as it was extemporaneously performed nearly 3,000 years ago in Greece, “a contemporary poem in the parallel universe of the English language.”

Stories for Nighttime and Some for the Day by Ben Loory

Stories for Nighttime and Some for the Day by Ben Loory

A journey into Ben Loory’s unearthly imagination, “Stories for Nighttime and Some for The Day, ” is startling. Loory fabricates an outlandish abnormal world in 39 compressed short stories, fables and parables with themes that are familiar, stark and sometimes humorous which Loory says are laced with fear and desire.

The Cookbook Collector by Allegra Goodman

The Cookbook Collector by Allegra Goodman

Allegra Goodman’s extensive writing about modern technology overshadows the intriguing plot in “The Cookbook Collector,” in which an autodidact purchases a rare collection of cookbooks with secret notes, drawings and poetry tucked between the pages.

The Girl in the Blue Beret by Bobbie Ann Mason

The Girl in the Blue Beret by Bobbie Ann Mason

Author Bobbie Ann Mason’s book about World War II would seem passé, but unexpectedly this novel based on true events is timely and provocative. Commercial pilot Marshall Stone returns to France after his retirement in search of the people who rescued him from the Nazis when his B-17 fighter bomber crashed. After the war he didn’t think much about the incident, rather he returned to marry his sweetheart and have children.

Exiles by Cary Groner

Exiles by Cary Groner

Escaping a troubled marriage, Peter, a cardiologist, and his seventeen-year-old daughter, Alex, toss a dart on a map that hits Nepal. Cary Groner has skillfully plotted a cliffhanger novel laced with human intrigue.

Waiting for Spring by R.J. Keller

Waiting for Spring by R.J. Keller

R.J. Keller in her first novel, Waiting for Spring, transcends the life of Tess Dyer, who blames herself for her recent divorce. She refused to have a child and then had an affair. She wants out of town. In interior monologue she declares, “I might be Brookfield’s town whore, but I could sure scrub the hell out of a toilet.”