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...
Jul 4, 2023 | Book of the Month, Book Reviews
As far as Edward D. Hess is concerned, success begins with yourself. It begins with understanding where you fit in an advanced matrix of external and internal factors, and from that where you can go. Left, right, up or down. In the pages of his new book, Own Your Work...
May 14, 2023 | Book Reviews
“I like flying first class, granddad!” a young boy quips to his grandfather in the first panels of a graphic novel. “Enjoy it,” the grandfather says, “We’ll be landing soon.” Later, after discourse with a woman sitting across from them, the boy then asks the following...
May 14, 2023 | Book Reviews
In the tradition of noted modern poetry voices, the likes of a Peter Filkins coming to mind, E. Barrett La Mont has this wondrous ability to make the everyday exceptional. Anne Sexton is another contemporary name that comes to mind – complimenting referentially...