Saturday, July 16, 2016

Children’s Books 3 complete children’s stories and 23 previews of our children books by Francois Bissonnette

I AM BACK!
I apologize for not being around for a while. As the school year was coming to an end I had to take some time off. I left school three weeks before it was over. This was very tough as I had wonderful sixth grade students this year. On May 23rd I had both of my knees completely replaced. That was followed by 3 and a half weeks in a nursing rehab facility. I underwent therapy three times a day. Finally I was allowed home. I do home therapy four days a week and go to my doctor for therapy three days a week. Unfortunately, I had a setback. The day I left the hospital and went to the rehab facility the nursing staff found a pressure wound on the back of my left leg. They have been treating it ever since. Then one week after getting home I was working out on my recumbent bike, I was having trouble getting my right foot to sit properly in the pedal stirrup and banged my right knee and incision on the display screen. I ripped a scab off of my incision. This is where the setback comes in. Now the wound doctor had another wound to take care of. Unfortunately, the wound on my knee has gotten deeper and larger. It is possible it may compromise my implant.  After debriding, taking a culture and x-rays I am playing the waiting game. If all comes back negative they may use a wound vacuum to heal the wound. The only problem with that process is that it may mean I can't go back to school the first week.

Now, I've gotten to a point where I've been able to read and begin to write reviews again. It has been a long time.  Here is my first review.

Genre: Children's Picture Book
Source: I received a copy to facilitate my review. The opinions expressed here are my own.

Francois Bissonnette has long been one of my favorite authors. In this book we get excerpts and previews of his many stories.
Wanoo the Sorcerer: Naloo's version. Naloo visits her friend Wanoo. The last time she had seen him he was trying to learn magic. He told her that after training with the Enchanter Tarzi, he learned he could become a great magician if he persevered.

The City of Cats. One day in the city of cats a new family moves in. The new family was a mother dog and her pups. Muffy the kitten became friends with the pup named Goldy. Muffy's mom learns of the friendship and forbids it because they were different. In this book we learn that sometimes being different is the best thing.

Alicia and the Wolf is a wonderfully twisted version of the Red Riding hood Story. In this version Red Riding hood is being followed by a robber and a white wolf saves her.  It was a short but delightful story.

There are so many previews in this e-book. Once you read it you will see why his stories are some of my favorites. His fairy tales are so wonderful I use them in my classroom when I teach a unit on traditional stories.  I do hope you will check this author out.

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Story Prompts that Work by Carly Berg


Genre: Writing
Source: I received a copy to facilitate my review. The opinions expressed here are my own.

This is a book of 52 writing prompts that can be used in a variety of ways. Some of them can be used for any age, while some are for the more mature audience.  I am going to talk about a couple of my favorites and how I, as a teacher, will use them with my students.

Prompt #3 – Unreliable Narrator  will work well in my classroom. We talk about unreliable narrators when we read a story about a dog who has been sold and really does not understand the true reason why he has been purchased. The situation of an unreliable narrator can make for a very humorous story as the students find out. I feel that I can help them better understand this by having them write a story with an unreliable narrator.

Prompt #6 – Choose a Story #1, #36, and #49  Is a great idea.  You have a first line, then choose a line from Setting, Main Character, and Situation.  The ones listed here may be a bit much for my middle school students but this is a wonderful idea and a wonderful way for me to come up with some writing prompts for them.

Prompt #18 – Twisted Fairy Tale #1 and #46  is something I do with the last unit I teach each year. We talk about fairy tales, fables, myths, legends and other traditional stories. They are required to take the story and tell it from another point of view, change the setting and time period. So they may take the story for Red Riding Hood and tell it from the Wolf’s perspective. It could be set in New York City in present time.

Prompt #19 – Objects  is one I will twist a little. Instead of going around the house and grabbing six objects that will become a list of words in a story. I would take objects and put them in a bag and have students pick from the bag to get their list of words.  This would be especially fun if we are studying a specific genre, for example ‘mysteries’ and they have to write a mystery story using those objects in their story.

Prompt #24 – A Picture is one I use every year. I find a variety of pictures and put them on my board and students may choose one or more to write about.


There are a lot of fun writing prompts here that can be done straight from the book, or you can put your own twist on them. One thing I really liked was that the author wrote example stories so you could get a better idea of what she was talking about. I can foresee this as creating hours and hours of fun writing.

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Three Oliver and Jumpy Stories by Werner Stejskal

Genre: Children's Picture Books
Source: I received a copy to facilitate my reviews. The opinions expressed here are my own.


Oliver and Jumpy Stories 40-42

Story 40: Elephant Heaven
In this story Oliver, Jumpy and Joey visit ghost castle. They find a group of elephants in a desert waiting for them to lead them to fertile ground. Oliver is up for the challenge. They encounter a grass fire and an avalanche. Will they find the land of plenty?

Story 41: Waking the Princess
In this story Oliver sets out on his own to break a curse. Years before a Princess was put to sleep until a cat Prince could wake her with a kiss. However, the cat prince would have to overcome three challenges. The challenges included a genie out of a bottle, a giant and a spider. Will he be able to wake the Princess?

Story 42: Space Ball
Jumpy and Joey were watching a star in the sky when suddenly it began to move. It became a fireball and landed in their lake. The next morning a spacecraft emerged from the lake. A creature came out. What do you think the creature wants?

Oliver and Jumpy Stories 43-45

Story 43: Flying Carpet
In this story a stork from Africa delivers a letter to Oliver. He is needed to rescue another princess. He and his friends travel to Africa where they are given a magic carpet to help them rescue the princess. They manage to do this, but the guards chase them. Can they evade the guards and take the Princess to her destination?

Story 44: Birthday Party
Oliver returned home from one of his adventures to a surprise birthday party. His friends had cake and presents for him. He felt their love.  What kind of presents do you think he got?

Story 45: Magic Berries
In this story the three friends visit Ghost Castle again and end up in a land where there were very large berries. Before anyone could stop him, Joey ate a handful. He began to shrink. He found another colored berry and ate it. It caused him to grow fat. He found a third berry and ate it and it caused him to grow tall again, but remain fat. They were told they had to find a wood fairy to help them. Will Joey be able to do what is needed to get back to his regular size?

Oliver and Jumpy Stories 46-48

Story 46: Saving Fairyland
Fairyland was under attack. Their food was being destroyed. The Fairy Queen asked Oliver and his friends to help save her land. With their magic wands they went to help.  Will they be able to save fairy land?

Story 47: Cat King
Oliver and his friends visit the Ghost Castle again for another adventure. They find themselves in a room with several statues. One of them looks just like him.  The statues come to life and declare him their returned king. They take him to meet his bride. They get married and begin to eat. There is one major problem. When Oliver eats anything with mice or birds in ti he begins to turn white. The other cats think he is an impostor.  What will happen to Oliver and his friends.?

Story 48: The Bee Gnomes
Oliver is not the neatest cat. Sometimes his home can be quite messy. One day he woke up and found his house had been tidied up.  This happened several mornings. He pretended to go to sleep one night and found out who was cleaning up his house.  The bee gnomes had a favor to ask of him. Would he be able to help them?

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Why "Teachers Write" Is So Important To Me

Every year since it began, I've joined Kate Messner for Teachers Write.  I do this for several reasons. First, I have the opportunity to write for me. Second, I have the opportunity to be led and guided my many of my favorite authors. Each of them have so many different styles and things to teach us. Most importantly for me, is that I learn so much to take back to the classroom to teach and encourage my own students on their writing journey. I have always hoped I was getting through.

Yesterday, ended my school year for me. I am having double knee surgery on Monday. This meant turning my classroom over to a sub for the last three and a half weeks of school. I've been trying to prepare my students, and myself, for the last month. I cry every year when they leave my classroom for the last time. Friday was an emotional roller coaster as I had former students coming and going as well as my sixth graders all day. But I have one student who is very quiet and has always had a beautiful writing style. She above all my students touched my heart in a way no other student every has. Below is her gift to me.  This is why I will always participate and encourage other to join Teachers Write.

A Poem for Mrs. Stiles
One day I walked
into a room
labeled Language Arts
where I could learn
how to put pencil to paper
and unleash the magic.
The magic that waits
beneath the white,
so my messy scrawl
could burn through
the snow-colored shield.
The little candle
in my pencil
could melt through the paper.
And the worlds I’ve gone to
through thin black crevices
in the pages of books
are extraordinary.
And I loved Language Arts
through the first school.
Elementary school.
And it was almost as great
as the library
where I could travel through
little black lines
in otherwise blank walls,
into worlds of magic.
For those years
my candle burned
in the same little room



in the same little school.
Then,
A new, bigger school
where I could see the sky
through patches of blue
in the hallway.
In middle school 
where I headed
to Language Arts
my heart in my throat
because my teacher would be
an author,
who had wildfires in her pencil,
and knew how to
burn through the paper
and create portals
to other worlds,
where anything was possible.
And I only had my candle.
She welcomed us
I liked her
in moments.
I was glad
she was the one chose
to show us how to burn through
paper
with flaming pencils.
Mrs. Stiles
I look forward all day
to Language Arts
where anything
is possible.
And we can write

About spinning torrents of wind
and flames unquenchable.
Neat, orderly writing
Or wild, imagined tall tales.
Poetry
with rhyming sequences
and corresponding syllables.
Or free
like an eagle
flying into the flaming sunset.
You helped my candle
grow into a flame
dancing on a torch.
You’ve been a great teacher,
Thank you for showing me
how to put pencil to paper
and unleash the magic.
The magic that waits
beneath the white.
Now my messy scrawl
can burn through
the snow-colored shield.
Thank you.
I’ll see you next year.
Good-bye,
and good luck.

Madison B.

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Laura Sullivan: The Modern Romantic New Relaxing Classical Piano Music



Winds of Magic and Timeless were probably my favorites on this CD.  It is tough to choose as they are all so beautiful. I took this to school with me after I got it. My students know me well. When I am stressed I play music with no words. This year I’ve had to be very selective with what I usually play. I have a student on the Autism Spectrum with sensitivity issues. He sits right in front of my desk, so playing music can be very disrupting to him. I noticed something with this CD. I told him if it bothered him to let me know and I would move it, turn it down, or turn it off. He has a lot of tics when his senses are over stimulated. This is something he is working on. He was not having the best day with his tics. I noticed when I put the CD on they did not increase. When we came to the song Come Home his shoulders actually relaxed and the tics subsided for a while. I told his mom about this and the CD. They and his therapists are trying different things. If this will help him then I will provide them with a copy, just not this one. I am having surgery in a couple of days. This will accompany me to rehab as I know I will need the relaxation. I was trying to pick the best music to take and this is it. I grew up in a musical family. My father played 11 instruments and had a gospel quartet. From the time I was little until two days beforeh he entered the hospital and then passed away I sat with him as he played the piano for me. For this reason I have an affinity to music that has piano in it. I can say without a doubt that my father would have loved Laura Sullivan’s compositions. I look forward to more of her music in the future.

Friday, May 6, 2016

Indiana Belle by John A. Heldt



Genre: Adult, suspense
Source: I purchased a copy.

This is the third book in the American Journey series. This time the author takes us to the Roaring Twenties. You don’t have to read the first two books to read and enjoy this one. They read just like stand-alone books. In this book we are presented with a problem that any time traveler fears. What happens if something can and should be prevented in the past and you know it will change the future if you do anything to change it? This is this situation that faces our main character. Cameron Coelho is completing his dissertation on life and the social implications during the 1920s. He buys the journals of Candice Bell who is a reporter and is murdered. He gets to meet Candice and sparks begin to fly. But what happens when you fall in love with someone and you know the date and manner in which they will die?  Do you stop it knowing the possible consequences? 

In this book we not only get to relish the entire time travel experience, but we get to live vicariously through the author in the time of the 1920s.  I love that the author always spends so much time in research s that the reader feels they are a part of the time period. This one is a little different and has some wonderful twists. I highly recommend it and the rest of the series.


Thursday, May 5, 2016

Mercer Street by John A. Heldt



Genre: Adult, suspense
Source: I received a copy to facilitate my review. The opinions expressed here are my own.

My Thoughts:
Give me a good time travel book any day and let me live in my own fantasy world. John Heldt has created two wonderful worlds. First we are in present time where Susan Peterson’s husband has died while having an affair. To ease the pain she goes to California with her mother and her daughter. Things take a real quick turn when the three of them time travel back to 1938 after meeting a professor.  Susan’s mother gets to meet her parents and herself as an infant when they were new refugees.


Susan and her daughter each fall for a different man. The problem is they must be careful not to change things that will alter their future. This means they will be forced to make some very tough decisions. That is okay because the author has given us three very independent and tough women. This has everything I could want. Time travel, history and some romance that is not all mushy.  The amount of research that went into this novel is what makes it so authentic and believable. I enjoyed the first book in this series. I highly recommend it to you.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

The Burning by D.E.L. Connor


Genre: Young Adult, Fantasy
Source: I purchased it

This is the third book in this wonderful series. The characters in this series are connected to animal spirits. For those who love to read Native American stories, then this is the series for you. These teens have done battle before.  They have been fighting the evil spirit of Machayiwiwi, who was at one time a very powerful medicine man. The teens are guided and helped through visions given them by ancient chiefs.

This book is full of real life. Each of the teens deal with personal things in their own life. There are so many things happening that any reader will find something t identify with. There are many teens who deal with divorced or alcoholic parents. These teens deal with their feelings of love and jealousy. This author really knows how to keep the story real, but include the elements of magic in just the right does.


This book doesn’t have teens just jumping in trying to fight the evil. You see them actually live their life and get involved in things that aren’t always right or best for them. In other words it is todays reality.   If you haven’t read the other two books in the series you need to do just that. Make sure you have plenty of tissues handy. The author doesn’t sugar coat her plot. People die and teens must deal with it. Pull up a chair and prepare to read a book you can’t put down. Join Emme, Ollie, Charlie, Bets and their friends for an adventure you won’t soon forget.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Keegan's Point by H.D. Smith



Genre: Middle Grade, Mystery
Source: I received a copy to facilitate my review. The opinions expressed here are my own.

How bad can one day in your life be? For Charlie Parker the answer would be, pretty bad. His day starts with the knowledge he has to give an oral report during his fourth period class. It’s not that he’s not prepared. He is overly prepared. His report is on Keegan’s Point.  Charlie has had a fascination with Markus Keegan, a billionaire who owned his own island. Keegan was found dead in his mansion with several passports that had his picture and a lot of different names. His body and the passports were removed and everything else was left as it was. Charlie would love nothing more than the opportunity to   visit the island and explore its mysteries. He probably knows more than anyone else in his town about the reclusive billionaire. As prepared as he is to give his report, his fear of public speaking causes him to pass out in class. This in turn prompts his teacher to change the order in which people give their reports.  This would be good for Charlie, except it puts him in the cross hairs of the school bully.

Charlie’s bad day isn’t over. After being the punching bag for the bully his friends ask him about their camping trip. His mom wants a second adult to go along. This means Charlie will have to lie to his mom.
When he meets his mom at her diner he tells her that he won’t have to give his report for several days because his teacher changed the order. He doesn’t want to tell her anything more than he has to.
While in the diner, three visitors overhear Charlie talking about Keegan.  Charlie is kidnapped by them and taken to the island. This would make his bad day complete except a part of him is thrilled that he is going to finally see the inside of the mansion. Will he be able to help his kidnappers? What happens when one of the bad guys turns out to be a good, bad guy?  Will the mystery of Keegan’s Island ever be solved? 


This is a fantastic book.  I will say that it is a great book for the reluctant reader no matter what their gender. It is also a great book for anyone who loves mysteries and a quick read. The action keeps coming and there are plenty of twists and turns. A book I was very pleased to put on my shelves.

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Channing Whitaker Interview and Book Review


I am thrilled to have had the opportunity to interview Channing Whitaker, author of " Until the Sun Rises - One Night in Drake Mansion". What follows is that interview and a review of his wonderful book.

Tell us a bit about yourself.
I grew up in a rural Iowa town and went on to study cinema in college where I focused on screenwriting. Aside from writing my recent novel, I’ve written several screenplays, including a recently released feature, horror/mystery called “KILD TV,” as well as over 50 short comedy sketches. I’ve written both in prose and for the screen, but I believe I’ve always essentially wanted to be a storyteller. As a child I thought I wanted to make cartoons, but that was probably the most prevalent story form I was being exposed to at the time. As I got older my ambition changed to making movies and later to writing novels. With each incarnation the ambition always remained some form of storytelling. Now, I’m continuing to work as both a novelist and a screenwriter. I’m married, have a three-year-old son, and an energetic husky who joined our family while we lived in Alaska for nearly three years.

What are some surprising facts about you that most people don’t know?
Besides studying cinema and screenwriting in college, I also earned my degree in mathematics. Whenever I mention this, it seems to surprise a lot of people, as though they can’t imagine being able to balance both a creative field such as fiction writing with such a logical field as mathematics. For me the reality is quite the opposite. It takes a great deal of imagination to conceptualize abstract mathematics and to create new solutions to previously unsolved problems. Whereas writing fiction, especially in the mystery genre as my recent novel  is, requires a good head for logic. The writer must introduce a series of facts throughout the story which support the story’s eventual conclusion. If the story logic doesn’t hold up, the mystery falls apart.

Additionally, people are usually surprised by the fact I am dyslexic. Dyslexia admittedly impairs my ability to write in the purely technical and grammatical sense, and I think a lot of non-writers think it would be prohibitive. However, dyslexia doesn’t affect the ability to invent and compose the details of a story, thus it really isn’t prohibitive for writing fiction, it just means I need an eagle-eyed grammar editor before anything I write goes to print.

Tell us about your writing routine or habits.
I used to be very disciplined in setting the number of hours a day I expected myself to write and sticking to it. However, now with a novel published and a feature film out trying to build an audience, I’m learning there are a great number of writing related demands, each calling for my time, which aren’t the actual writing. In one sense, it’s great readers who are interested in what I have to say, in interviewing me, hearing my blogged thoughts on other subjects, and in meeting me in person at signings, but it does make sticking to a strict writing schedule more difficult.

Aside from time management, in story management I’m a dedicated outliner. I’ve read and have spoken with other authors who find outlining stories too constraining, but I find it quite helpful to lay out a road map for a story. The danger I suppose is once you start writing, if your characters and the situation seem to be flowing in a different direction than your outline, then sticking with the outline can make the story seem forced. To avoid it, you have to be willing to throw the outline out if you come to such a crossroads, like re-routing around a road closure. I outline before writing, but by the time the story is finished, I’ve probably rewritten the outline ten times along the way.

What impact has writing had on your life?
For me, developing my storytelling skills, my creativity, and my methods for flushing out a story or character has really changed the way I think about everything. Things which happen to me in life are now seen through the lens of potential plot points. When I meet people, I imagine what life events have shaped them bringing them to this moment. It’s good because when I get a flat tire I can shake off the stress by inventing a story around the event, and who knows, maybe I’ll use it in a book some day. On the other hand, it probably makes it more likely my mind will wander in less stimulating life moments, which I’ll admit isn’t ideal for the people around me.

Tell us about your latest work and what motivated you to write it.
My recent novel is called Until the Sun Rises - One Night in Drake Mansion. In the novel, there are 7 of 21 chapters which take place 80 years in the past, taken from one character’s journal. In the first of those past chapters, there is a very creepy, dark, midnight magic show which sets up an important element of the mystery. This magic show scene was actually the very first seed of this story I had. I really enjoyed how visceral and eerie it was and wanted to use it in a larger story. What would become the entire novel really grew from taking the scene and building a story and characters around it, to make it significant with heightened tension.

This being said, once I had created the scenario of investigating a supposedly haunted house, which is part of the larger story, then having also added a paranormal skeptic into the situation, the story became much more personal to me. I tried to think of other stories which flirted with the paranormal and had skeptic characters and found in most cases the skeptic is present simply to be proven wrong. It then became an objective in my story to give the skeptic character strength, as well as true and balanced presence in the story, not to make him an unwitting fool. I believe I did so, and in the process created not only a very satisfying story, but one much more interesting and complex than simple ghosts chasing people around, as one might expect from a haunted house story. And, in the process, also one truly unique in its handling of the paranormal-skeptic aspect.

What made you decide to write in this genre?
I’ve written in several genres including comedy, drama, horror, science fiction, and mystery. I’m really a believer in creating stories I would want to read or watch myself. So in this case, I didn’t pick the genre per se. I had an idea for a story, flushed it out into something I personally would enjoy reading, and it just so happened to be a mystery.

What is the single most useful thing you have learned and how has it helped you as a writer.
My father is a retired psychology professor who also saw clients one day a week throughout his career. Though he wasn’t a writer, I feel he has influenced my writing style as much as anything. I learned a great deal about people, behaviors, and motives from him, and while I don’t have an advanced degree in psychology, I believe I absorbed a fascination with personality and a way to think about personality critically. As a result I psychoanalyze all the characters I create, making them nuanced, complicated, and particularly lifelike.

Additionally, as a clinician my father at times dealt with what society would fairly unanimously consider bad people, but as an instructor he would teach one had to find good attributes and common ground with this type of patient. If you only sat in judgment you couldn’t expect to help treat the patient, thus a therapist had to find good, find humanity, even just a little bit, in some of the worst people. This notion stuck with me in my writing in terms of good and bad characters. Often in stories you need truly bad people for antagonists but in life, even an outwardly evil appearing person would likely have some redeeming attributes, and granting your antagonists some small likable qualities makes them all the more believable. Similarly protagonists, no matter how heroic, are far more lifelike if they’re granted flaws by their creators. These notions influence every character I create.

What are the most challenging and most rewarding aspects of writing?
For me, up until my first novel was recently published, the wherewithal to keep inching forward without recognition was the most challenging part. Most of us have heard stories of acclaimed authors who endured hundreds of rejection letters before finally getting their big break. That one “yes,” and the rest is history. But there is truth to this anecdote. Writing is a long process, and I don’t believe many of us are born exceptional at it. We have to get better, and the only way to improve is by writing and writing. Unfortunately, there aren’t many small victories between being unknown and being published. Once more, even when you’ve truly written something good, there is still a lot of work to be done in finding the audience for the piece. It’s easy for me to imagine aspiring writers falling victim to the prolonged discouragement which almost inevitably comes before the success.

On the other hand, nothing is more rewarding than the connection my work can have with readers. Of course many readers compliment the journey the primary story takes them on, but I’ve had moments where someone who has read my novel contacts me to say how some small attribute of the book really connected with them personally, likely due to some real life experience they’ve had. To me, the detail which struck them might have been completely tangential to the focus of the book. They’re thinking of it in a way I hadn’t even considered, or focusing on something much less relevant than my original intention. Yet, it tells me not only have I constructed a pretty good main story, I’ve done such a good job paying attention to all the smallest details of the story and characters - every nook and cranny of the material is believable. Readers connecting with my material in such a way is unbeatable.

What advice would you have for writers hoping to follow in your footsteps?
Since I’ve been out promoting my novel, I have met a number of people who either have an idea for a book or are aspiring writers. If I can only impart one notion to them, it is to be prepared for the sheer amount of labor writing takes. In this sense, I don’t think writing a novel is too different than acting in movies or playing professional sports. When you see an actor on a movie screen for two hours, and think you’d like to do that, you should understand they spent hundreds of hours shooting, and hundreds more preparing for the role before it was whittled down to the finished product. For every hour a pro athlete spends on the field in front of the TV cameras, how many hours did they have to spend honing their skills off camera? When you read a great book and think you want to create something similar, you should know the 10 or so hours of reading you just enjoyed likely took the writer a couple thousand hours to shape.

What are you currently working on?
At the moment I’m working on a follow up to Until the Sun Rises - One Night in Drake Mansion, which will take two of the characters from the first novel into a new mystery. I haven’t settled on the title yet, but rather than being primarily set in Iowa as the first novel, it will be set in Alaska, and rather than a mystery surrounding a supposedly haunted house, as the first, the new novel’s mystery will have a cryptid animal theme.

Where can people contact you?

I can be contacted through my website, www.channingwhitaker.com, as well as through my Facebook page www.facebook.com/authorchanningwhitaker.

Review
A wealthy family disappears after they visit a traveling magician. For years people keep dying in the house. Finally it is boarded up.  You know that if the story ended here it would be boring. That is one thing this author is not. Let’s bring in a game show where 5 contestants have to spend the night in the house for a chance to win a million dollars. We’ve all seen shows that have some twisted plot like this. Notice I said some twisted plot.  This isn’t a typical ghost story where the evil entity wipes almost everyone out.  The mystery that starts the story is nicely wrapped up. Another unique factor was the author’s inclusion of journal entries.  The characters and the setting are well developed. There is something that will grab hold of every reader and keep them reading until the end and then leave them wanting more. I know for a fact that I will definitely be looking for more from this author.