TBR Saturday

So we often have friends releasing new books. And we love to recommend them. Here’s our book recommendations. We try to get it done every Saturday but we are busy so we may have missed a few.

  1. Escape The Dollhouse By William Phillips Years ago, a newborn was buried in the desert—only to be discovered alive by two construction workers. The shocking act became a whispered Beverly Hills urban legend, fading beneath Tinsel town gossip and Hollywood glitz. But behind the gilded gates of the Doll family’s mansion, that terrible secret is alive and festering. Stephen Doll is a powerful movie producer obsessed with maintaining his empire and perfect image. Katie, his wife, drowns her guilt in pills and high-society parties, hiding dark knowledge of what truly happened in that desert. Their children, Jake and Jessica, cling to illusions of a normal life—until masked intruders invade, forcing every lie, affair, and buried betrayal into the open. In a world where ambition trumps conscience, the price of Hollywood fame proves deadlier than any rumor. Sometimes, chasing perfection isn’t just dangerous—it’s the one thing that can destroy you.
  2. The Fly Caster Who Tried to Make Peace With the World By Randy Kadish Making peace with the world, sooner or later most of us have to. But how? For Ian Mac Bride, his way begins almost accidentally when, in 1909, he watches a fly-casting tournament in New York’s Central Park, and begins to dream of becoming a great fly caster. But soon Ian experiences personal tragedy, and then is appalled by the unexpected slaughter of World War I. He retreats into the world of fly fishing and fly casting, and meets unforgettable anglers like: Doc, a Civil War veteran, who tells how, after he enlisted in return for drinking money, he was unexpectedly changed by the horror of war; Izzy, a mysterious immigrant, who, in his way, teaches Ian perhaps the most important lesson of long-distance fly casting; and George M. L. La Branche who, though torn by self-doubt, writes the book that revolutionizes fly fishing. And so, these anglers help change Ian’s hopes and values. Though his father questions his courage, Ian decides to become a teacher instead of a lawyer, and moves near the beautiful Beaverkill River, the birthplace of fly fishing in America. But tragedy still follows him. Torn by grief, he curses the world and loses faith in it – until, almost by accident, he finds a way to come to terms. How? The answer will surprise you.
  3. Wasteland Warlords 1 By James Hunter & Eden Hudsen Twenty years ago, the Merge brought armies of monsters flooding into the West Coast. Dungeons popped up in shopping malls, airports, and Starbucks. Walls were built to contain the spread, but the promise of priceless loot dropped by the creatures inspired a new type of gold rush. Magical weapons, powerful gear, potions to cure every ill… If you survive long enough to kill the mob, whatever they drop belongs to you. Clay Jaeger has nothing left outside the walls. Civilization took everything he worked for, chewed it up, and spat it out. Now Clay, his wife Alex, and his beer-loving, chainsaw-toting brother Joe are going west to try their hand at monster killing. The loot from the low-level mobs is enticing, but it isn’t the real reason they risked the Infested Zone. They need to kill a Dungeon Lord. Only one in ten thousand hunters pull it off. The rest become fertilizer for the wasteland. But the few who beat the odds gain riches, glory, and most importantly, the Dungeon Lord’s magical powers. They have nothing left to lose, and everything to gain. If they survive.
  4. Malice in Wonderland #1: Alice the Assassin (Malice in Wonderland Series) By Lotus Rose You’ve been misled. Lewis Carroll didn’t reveal the whole story…Alice never left Wonderland. She’s trapped. She’s angry. And she wants revenge. If you’re a fan of twisted fairy tales, you’ll love this dark comedy series, brought to you by the author of Dorothy vs. Alice. The truth is not what you were led to believe. It wasn’t all “just a dream.” It’s a nightmare. A nightmare she can’t escape, where formerly pleasant characters throw her unhappy unbirthday parties to torment her, while others like to make her cry so they can lick her tears. But one day after years of this unpleasantness, she loses her heart. Literally. Well, technically somebody steals it. And she has to get it back. By any means necessary. And it’s a lot easier to be ruthless now that she’s heartless. Alice is fed up with all the losers of Wonderland, from the sadistic Queen of Hearts to the goofy Mad Hatter to the bloodthirsty Cheshire Cat. And she’s tired of being so sweet and innocent, with all her dimples. She used to be a preteen, but today is her 13th birthday, and she’ll be singing “unhappy birthday” loudly as she delivers violent justice! Yeah, she used to be so sweet you could die. Well, now they all shall die…literally. It may be 1865, but Alice is about to go medieval. She will have her heart returned to her even if she has to kill all the citizens of Wonderland one by one…
  5. Widow’s Point: The Complete Haunting By Richard Chizmar & W.H. Chizmar New York Times bestselling author Richard Chizmar, “one of horror’s indispensable writers” (Paste), and his son W.H. Chizmar, critically acclaimed author of Them (hailed by New York Times bestselling author Josh Malerman as “one of the best debuts I’ve ever read”) present a riveting found footage narrative about doomed thrill-seekers trapped in a haunted lighthouse. “This is a bad place. I don’t think people are meant to live here.”
    Longtime residents of Harper’s Cove believe that something is wrong with the Widow’s Point Lighthouse. Some say it’s cursed. Others claim it’s haunted. Originally built in 1838, three workers were killed during the lighthouse’s construction, including one who mysteriously plunged to his death from the catwalk. That tragic accident was never explained, and it was just the beginning of the terror. In the decades that followed, nearly two dozen additional deaths occurred in or around the lighthouse including cold-blooded murder, suicide, unexplained accidents and disappearances, the slaughter of an entire family, and the inexplicable death of a Hollywood starlet who was filming a movie on the grounds.
    The lighthouse was finally shuttered tight in 1988 and a security fence was erected around the property. No one has been inside since. Until now. Told across two harrowing incidents from 2017 and 2025, those who enter the Widow’s Point Lighthouse searching for supernatural proof and the next big thing find themselves cut off from the outside world. And although no one has recently stepped foot inside the structure, they are not alone. In this remarkable collaboration, father and son writing team, Richard and W.H. Chizmar combine forces to tell a terrifying ghost story that will make you think twice about what’s waiting for you in the dark.

   

The Peaceful River

A wonderful Piece of art by Stevie Elliott

Beautiful day at the Park

A gorgeous photo from Stevie Elliott

Trains

Photos by Pyle Hazard

Photo submissions

Pyle’s Hazard Morning 🌄 on the Farm

Jennifer Elliott Sunset at the “Old Times Graveyard”

Different times of day and at different places in life but both so lovely.

Mimosas in Bloom

Thanks to Joshua Elliott for sending us this lovely image of his Mimosa tree in bloom

poetry by Patricia Harris

This is from her upcoming book Ars Poetica

poetry by Friday

WILL THEY SEE

Will my kids read them
My stories
My poetry
The random collected quotes
That may help them later in life
I don’t know
I hope one day they will

Art from Day one

those who are paying attention know that we are running a MerMay challenge and we got our first contribution from the challenge. It even came with an explanation of what the artist was doing …

Day 1 of sea-worthy responses to prompts. Clams. I thought what if the clams in the linguine grew legs and attacked?


From Jessica Raney

NARCISSISTIC TERROR By Friday Vash

He was sweet in the beginning
Many times throughout the relationship, too
But more and more
He accused her of cheating
Of not loving him enough
Constant beradement
So much name calling
Taking all her money
Her confidence
Her self love
Everything he could take
Long fights until dawn
Outside the house
The best husband
The kindest
Who wouldn’t hurt a fly
One day he is so high
So drunk
He throws her against the wall
Straight out of a bathtub
She call the cops
He even tells them she deserved it
She made him do it
He is out of the house now
She can have peace?
No
Brace for the rest of her life
Because the injury was major
His friends constantly asking
Coming by for things she doesn’t have
Even cutting power lines to the house
Limping for rest of her days
Constant bullshit from all sides
Leaving town
Leaving her home is the only way for peace
For happiness
Why must people be this way?

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