STARRED Book Review: Bad Dreams by Jenny Noa
BAD DREAMS by Jenny Noa is a funny, sad, and uplifting memoir of chasing dreams, getting lost, and finding yourself in LA. Reviewed by Amy Brozio-Andrews.
BAD DREAMS by Jenny Noa is a funny, sad, and uplifting memoir of chasing dreams, getting lost, and finding yourself in LA. Reviewed by Amy Brozio-Andrews.
THE TEN THOUSAND THINGS by Debbi Flittner is a moving transformation of silence into memory and art. Reviewed by Lauren Hayataka.
SOMETIMES ORANGE IS ALMOST GOLD by Jim Antonini and Suzanne Reynolds is full of hilarious, warmhearted, bite-sized stories of a cult softball team from West Virginia.
A STELLAR SPY by Maya Darjani is an explosive sci-fi thriller where magic and technology collide with devastating consequences.
IT DICTIONARY by Adam Korga is like a laugh-out-loud group therapy session that offers technical and emotional support by decoding corporate-speak.
THE GREAT MEADOWS by Christopher Walsh is a deeply spiritual story of two men on different paths meeting at a crossroads. Reviewed by Peggy Kurkowski.
This can’t-miss sequel from R.H. Stevens puts the reader through a wormhole to a realm filled with intrigue, adventure, and action. A Sense for Memory (Part Two) reviewed by Kathy L. Brown.
UNFOLLOW ME by Kathryn Caraway is a powerful story of survival about a woman who escaped but still has to hide. Reviewed by Melissa Suggitt.
Wethersfield Road by Anna Binder Reardon is hopeful, introspective, and lyrical—a work of literary realism tinged with the grit of recovery.
Tour vans, Xeroxed demos, and a front-row seat to a vanishing scene. No Big Deal by Dean Brownrout (Guernica Editions)










