Author: victor
On the Backs of Women: A Story About Family and Generations
Review by Tyler R. Tichelaar Novel About Five Generations of Women Reflects Patchwork of American History Linda Bakken’s new historical novel On the Backs of Women: A Story About Family and Generations offers a look into the lives of five generations of women in the United States between the American…
Long Exposure: My Life In and Beyond the Copper Country, by Joseph B. Kirkish
Complete Poems, 1965-2020, by Michael Butterworth,
Clutch (Collection for 2023), edited by Robert M. Zoschke
Twenty Stories by Jack Driscoll
Redead by Tim Gould
Architectural Missionary: Fred Charlton in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, 1887-1918 by Steven C. Brisson
The Wicked Sister by Karen Dionne
Reviewer: Sharon Brunner Karen Dionne’s “The Wicked Sister” is a novel filled with suspense and murder nestled in a wilderness setting with no phone service. The first chapter begins with Rachel envisioning a scene with her holding a rifle and killing someone she loved, and part of the story appears…
Digging Up the Truth and Other Big Bay Stories by Faye Bowers
The Wonderful Friendship by David Swindell
A Quiet Foghorn: more notes from a deaf gay life by Raymond Luczak
High on the Vine: Featuring Yooper Entrepreneurs Tami and Evi Maki By Terri Martin
Review by Victor R. Volkman Fans of Terri Martin’s serialized stories in UP Magazine, published monthly by Porcupine Press, will be thrilled to see a new novelization of them in the just-released book High on the Vine. This is her second humor anthology following Church Lady Chronicles: Devilish Encounters. Although…
The Dockporter by Dave McVeigh and Jim Bolone
Granite Oath by James M. Jackson
Book Reviewer: Sharon Brunner James M. Jackson painted a picture with “Granite Oath” of suspense and mystery about a missing woman, illicit drugs, prostitution and corrupt corporations. The location of the mishaps and tribulations occurred in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (U.P.) which began deep in the woods with an…
The Biting Cold by Matthew Hellman
Lightness of being (poems), by t. kilgore splake
Review by Mack Hassler I think there is no argument that our writers who set themselves up as our poets are the real forerunners in language development. Storytellers entertain us, historians order and give us useful general ideas, comic tone writers defend us against the many predators that lurk in…