Oct 13, 2023 | Book Reviews
Tears Become Rain: Stories of Healing and Transformation Inspired by Thich Nhat Hahn is a new anthology on navigating grief, compiled by authors and editors Jeanine Cogan and Mary Hillebrand. Part of how the duo’s intentions are clear not just by objective and guided,...
Oct 4, 2023 | Book Reviews
“Work in the 21st century is fast, often remote, continuously changing, technology-driven, and involves working with stakeholders who you most likely do not know. It is the requirement for autonomous work and decision making that makes your mindset so important. This...
Aug 21, 2023 | Book Reviews
Dr. Melissa M. Monroe is strong. This much I know. I don’t presume to know anything else about her life, or the cataclysmic sense of loss when it comes to her young daughter Alice’s untimely passing. But she is strong, and that strength shows itself in the complete...
Jul 19, 2023 | Book Reviews
A Harvard Law School professor, a veteran graphic novelist, and a veteran graphic novel illustrator walk into a room. While a potentially inauspicious union, Alan Jenkins, Gan Golan, and William Rosado prove to be just the opposite of elitist assumptions and concoct...
Jul 9, 2023 | Book Reviews
If I were to summarize Theodore Orenstein’s new book in a nutshell – it’s Believing in a Contemporary Way. The title is indicative of this, simply put the decidedly plainspoken Awaken Your Soul: How to Find Your Inner Spirit and Life’s Purpose. In the pages of Awaken...
Jul 4, 2023 | Book Reviews
Gary Stein’s nonfiction book has all of the signs of a crime-thriller. Maybe even verging on neo-noir, regardless of its source material being one hundred percent true. In the pages of Justice for Sale: Graft, Greed, and a Crooked Federal Judge in 1930s Gotham, he...