Spade Teaser

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(Savage Raptors MC)

Motorcycle Club Romance, Age Gap, Suspense

Date Published: May 22, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press

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When loyalty fractures, only the ruthless survive.

 

Lila — I walked into Savage Raptors territory with proof one of them is a
traitor. Stupid? Maybe. But numbers don’t lie — and someone inside
their club is selling intel. I won’t stay silent, even if it means
putting myself in the crosshairs. Spade doesn’t trust me. He watches me
like I’m the threat. But he’s wrong. The danger is already wearing
his patch.

Spade — Outsiders don’t accuse my brothers and live to tell about it.
Lila shows up with spreadsheets and nerve, claiming betrayal inside my club. I
bring her under my roof to prove her wrong. Instead, I find evidence
she’s right. Now I have a choice — protect my brotherhood at any
cost… or protect the woman who just became mine. If someone’s
playing both sides, I’ll end it. As for Lila? She’s mine. And once I
claim something, I don’t let it go.

A slow-burn MC romance with loyalty, betrayal, and a guaranteed HEA. No
cheating.


WARNING: Intended for readers 18+ years of age. This book contains mature
themes including motorcycle club–related criminal activity, violence,
strong language, and references to trauma. Reader discretion is advised.

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EXCERPT

 

Spade

It wasn’t often we held Church without every patched member present, but
all things considered, we were operating this one with a skeleton crew. Moving
with deliberate precision Atilla gathered the evidence spread across the
table. The room fell silent. Brothers shifted in their seats, tension thick
enough to cut. I kept my face blank, waiting. When Atilla finally looked up,
his eyes were cold steel, decision made. The verdict was coming, and every man
in the room knew it would change everything.

“The evidence is compelling.” Atilla’s voice filled the room
without raising above a conversational tone. Decades of authority behind it.
“We have a problem.”

Stinger slammed his fist on the table. “We can’t trust her! This
whole thing reeks.”

“Shut up.” Atilla didn’t even look at him. His focus
remained on the papers, then shifted to me. “Spade. She stays with you.
Under guard. Protected and watched. Twenty-four seven.”

I nodded once. No questions needed.

“You believe this shit?” General pushed away from the table, chair
scraping across the floor. “Some random Horsemen bitch walks in with
paperwork, and we’re supposed to –”

“Yes.” Atilla cut him off. “We are. Because these dates
match our failed runs. Every time.” He tapped the folder with one
finger. “You got a better explanation for how they knew about the
Colombian meet? That was Church business only.” Church business was
sacred. Patched members only.

“Could be coincidence,” Tinker offered, but his voice lacked
conviction.

“This many times?” Lila spoke for the first time, her voice steady
despite being surrounded by hostile men. “That’s one hell of a
statistical anomaly.”

Wildcard’s hand drifted toward his waistband. “You don’t
speak unless spoken to.”

I caught his eye, shook my head slightly. He backed down, but his face stayed
dark with anger.

Atilla stood, signaling the meeting’s end. “Spade has point on
this. Full authority. Anyone who gets in his way answers to me.” He
fixed each brother with a hard stare. “Until we know who’s clean
and who isn’t, information stays compartmentalized. Need to know
only.”

The implications hung heavy. Trust — our foundation — had just been
officially suspended.

“Move her now,” Atilla told me. “Take the back exit. Fewer
eyes.”

I rose, gesturing for Lila to follow. She gathered her remaining papers,
clutching the folder against her chest like armor. Smart. In this room,
information was her only protection.

The brothers parted as we moved toward the door, their faces a study in
conflicting emotions. Suspicion. Anger. Unease. Each one wondering if they
were under scrutiny. Each one wondering who among them couldn’t be
trusted.

“Keys.” I held my hand out to Wildcard, who’d driven her car
into the compound.

He slapped them into my palm with unnecessary force. “Watch your
back,” he muttered, low enough that only I could hear.

Warning? Or threat? Hard to tell. I filed it away for later analysis.

The back hallway was empty, dim emergency lights casting long shadows. Lila
kept pace beside me, not behind. Her gaze scanned everything — exit signs,
security cameras, door locks. Cataloging. Memorizing. I noticed but
didn’t comment.

“Where are we going?” she asked as we stepped into the cool night
air.

“My place. On the compound.”

My Harley waited in its usual spot, glossy black paint catching moonlight. I
handed her a helmet from the saddlebag, watching as she adjusted it with
practiced hands. Not her first time on a bike, then.

“Hold tight,” I instructed, swinging my leg over the seat.
“And keep that folder secure.”

She slid on behind me, zipped her precious evidence into her jacket, then put
her arms around my waist. Her grip was firm but not desperate. The engine
roared to life beneath us, vibrating through my bones the way it always did.
Familiar. Grounding.

We pulled away from the clubhouse, headlight cutting through darkness. The
compound spread before us — twenty acres of Savage Raptors territory. My home
for twenty years. Now potentially compromised.

I took the long route deliberately, giving her the tour she hadn’t asked
for. Security checkpoint at the main gate — two armed brothers nodding as we
passed. Motion sensors along the perimeter fence, red lights blinking in
sequence. Camera poles at strategic intersections, covering approach angles
and blind spots. The garage where we kept our vehicles — always guarded,
always locked.

In my side mirror, I watched her head turn, taking in each detail. Not casual
observation. Assessment. She was mapping our security, finding the gaps.
Professional habit or something more?

Brothers stopped to watch us pass, hands resting casually near weapons. Word
had spread already. The Horsemen’s accountant. The potential trap. The
security risk. Comments followed in our wake.

“Who’s the bitch?”

“President’s orders.”

“Fucking VP’s gone soft.”

I ignored them. Petty bullshit wasn’t my concern. Finding our leak was.

We passed the shop where club business happened away from prying eyes. The
mess hall where brothers ate together. The row of cabins where Prospects lived
during initiation. All the while, her grip remained steady, her body angled to
see everything we passed.

My house sat apart from the others — VP privilege and personal preference.
Single story, secure, isolated. I cut the engine in the driveway, silence
rushing in to fill the void.

“This is it?” she asked, removing the helmet.

“Home, sweet home.” I swung off the bike, taking the helmet from
her hands. “For both of us now.”

She stood, pulled the folder out of her jacket, and clutching it tightly
against her chest. Never letting go of it. Smart woman.

The security light above my porch caught her face at an angle, highlighting
the bruise on her jaw. In the harsh white glow, it looked worse than before —
blue-black center fading to sickly yellow at the edges. The kind of hit meant
to hurt, not just intimidate.

“How did you get into the compound in the first place?” I asked.

“I threatened to rip off the Prospect’s balls if he didn’t
let me through.”

I stared her down, knowing that hadn’t been enough to get her through
the gate.

She sighed. “I told him I had intel his President would want and that
the club was in jeopardy. Then I leaned out the window a little, giving him a
glimpse down my shirt. It’s amazing how many doors open when you show a
guy your boobs.”

Well, fuck. She had a point. Most men wouldn’t see her as a threat. And
our Prospects did tend to think with their dicks. Especially the younger ones.

“They really did try to kill you,” I said, not a question.

Her gaze met mine, unflinching. “Yes. And they’ll try again when
they realize what I took.”

“Good thing you’ve got the Savage Raptors watching your back
now.” I unlocked my front door, punching in the security code.

“Is it?” She stepped past me into the house. “Guess that
depends on which one is selling you out.”

I couldn’t argue with that logic. We both knew the enemy could already
be inside these walls. Could be any face we passed tonight. Could be someone
I’d called brother for years.

 

About the Author

Harley Wylde is an accomplished author known for her captivating MC Romances.
With an unwavering commitment to sensual storytelling, Wylde immerses her
readers in an exciting world of fierce men and irresistible women. Her works
exude passion, danger, and gritty realism, while still managing to end on a
satisfying note each time.

When not crafting her tales, Wylde spends her time brainstorming new
plotlines, indulging in a hot cup of Starbucks, or delving into a good book.
She has a particular affinity for supernatural horror literature and movies.
Visit Wylde’s website to learn more about her works and upcoming events, and
don’t forget to sign up for her newsletter to receive exclusive discounts and
other exciting perks.

Author on Facebook, Instagram, & TikTok: @harleywylde

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

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Who Will Name the Bees? Virtual Book Tour

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Memoir

Date Published: April 22nd

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 

When memory fades, what remains?

 

Sarah Vosburgh has often felt misunderstood by her mother, a woman who lived a
quintessential suburban life. But when her mother is diagnosed with
Alzheimer’s, Sarah’s world unravels, and she must confront a
disease that will only worsen. As roles reverse between mother and daughter,
Sarah faces the guilt of making decisions she hopes are the right ones while
also carrying the grief of losing her mom bit by bit everyday. She navigates a
labyrinth of health services amid the heartbreaking, and at times darkly
humorous, realities of caregiving.

There are the white lies and midnight phone calls, the misbuttoned blouses,
and the second slice of chocolate pie that tastes just as good as it did the
first time. And then there’s the quiet awe at the persistence of
connection even when language falters and names are forgotten.

Told in finely wrought prose and lyrical fragments of memory, Who Will
Name the Bees?
is a daughter’s unflinching love letter to the flawed, fierce,
and unforgettable woman who raised her.

 

Memoir paperback

EXCERPT

“I want to be in the delivery room when the baby is born,” my mother said at Sunday brunch in the seventh month of my first pregnancy. Not “Would you like me to be?” or “Can I be helpful?” Nope, just a demand. She had a baby once in the fifties in a state of medically induced unconsciousness, so of course, she knew best. She’d been full of “helpful little tips” all along, but this was a new level of invasion. Mostly I said, “Oh, thank you” and moved on, careful not to roll my eyes in her line of sight.

“Your grandmother was there to greet you when you were born. She was the first to hold you. I want to be the first to hold my grandbaby. It’s a family tradition.”

Fucking presumptuous. “We will make sure you are there too,” I acquiesced reluctantly. How could I leave my poor widowed mother out of this? We were all she had left.

“We?” she asked. “Too? He’s not going to be there, is he? Why? He’ll never think of you the same again if he sees all that.” She gulps her coffee as though she’s had nothing to drink in weeks. “Besides, you won’t hold her right away; you’ll be knocked out for several hours. I will take care of the baby while you come to and make yourself presentable. That’s what your grandmother did for me.”

My grandam was a delivery room nurse in a time when women were put under, anesthetized during labor. While I was sure mid-1990s delivery room staff were used to take-charge grandparents, they’d not met my mother. I did not want them distracted with the occupation of Ms. I-Know-How-This-Should-Be-Done or worse, having to ask her demanding self to leave.

“Mom, Brodie’s going to be there because he’s the dad, and my husband and birth coach. They are not going to put me out.”

“Birth coach?” she scoffed. “Honestly. How ridiculous. The doctor takes care of all that.”

I should have told her she was the ridiculous one.

“You need to take advantage of modern medicine,” she continued, barely coming up for air. “There is no reason to be so barbaric and endure all that pain.”

Oh boy. She was just clueless. She had been rolled into the delivery room straight from church, coiffed, in her Sunday best with stilettos and gloves, and given medication to induce full-on, put-you-out anesthesia. She woke up shaved, stitched, clean, and fresh with a baby in the nursery. When she was released from the hospital, she dropped me off at Gramma’s for a few hours, likewise accessorized, having set her hair the night before, in a shirtwaist dress with the belt on its tightest notch (because she “kept her figure” with a net weight loss) so she could go check the sales at Lord & Taylor.

“Mom, it’s how most babies are born these days,” I explain. “It’s considered healthy for baby and mom.”

“Who is this doctor you have? You should ask him about having you put out. Then you don’t have to be embarrassed when they shave you, and you won’t feel it when they sew you back up.”

I didn’t even know what to say. I didn’t want to argue about shaved nether regions, anesthesiology, and episiotomies with my mother, now or in labor. Or ever.

“Mom, I’m going on the advice of my doctor, Amy. I would love to have you there, but you’ll need to be supportive.” By now my chest was hard and tight, my breathing shallow. I felt my head swim from lack of oxygen.

“Of course, you have a woman doctor. That’s what this is all about.”

Are you fucking kidding me? I wanted to say, but she was my mom. I tried to be gentle.

“Mom, after making her and carrying her and birthing her, it is her father and I who will hold her first. We will happily hand her over to you after I nurse her.”

“Why are you shutting me out? This is my grandchild . . . Wait! Nurse her? You’re doing that too? This woman doctor is making you one of those militants. They can give you pills to dry up your milk. You don’t have to go through all of that. You don’t want to get saggy breasts! It’s so primitive.”

I focused on the tinkling and hum of the café, using it as a kind of ostinato to calm my breathing.

“Mom, if you would like to be in the delivery room, I’m happy to make it happen. Would you like us to call you when we leave for the hospital or when delivery is closer?”

“What do you mean, closer?”

“It’s my first baby and it may take a while for things to move along. We can play Monopoly.” This was her favorite game; she was absolutely cutthroat.

“Well, I don’t want to be waiting around all day being frivolous; I’m busy. They can give you medicine so it’s quick. Why are you insisting on being so crass, so philistine?!”

I tried for slower, deeper breaths. Not easy, especially with a baby in there. “We’ll call you when it’s imminent, Ma.”

Her next words, all quickly pressed and run together as if they were one, carried panic behind her annoyance. “Never mind, this is ridiculous. You haven’t listened to anything I’ve told you. You’ll never get your body back. No one knew I was pregnant until eight months because I wore a girdle.”

A bite of over-easy egg mid-swallow threatened to stick as the rush of anxiety brought on by my mother’s judgement layered over my relentless morning sickness and shallow breathing. Her eyes were bulging and pointedly staring. Silence. Swallow.

I sipped tea and attempted another nibble of dry toast to push the egg down. But my mother wasn’t finished. “You’re already so big, you’ll never have a flat stomach again, you won’t look good in clothes, and your vagina will be loose. Do it the way I did, and you won’t feel a thing. When they sew you up, it’ll be tighter than a virgin.” Wound up, and almost yelling now, she said, “Why won’t you take advantage of modern medicine? We live in the twentieth century. You should not be having a baby like a Neanderthal woman!”

About the Author

It was never in Sarah Vosburgh’s plan to be an author or to write a
memoir. As a busy mom, wife, and psychologist, she always saw her life as full
(sometimes overfull). But in the dark of night, memories knocked on her brain,
compelling her to commit them first to paper, then to bits and bytes.
Sarah
is a member of the International Memoir Writers Association and San Diego
Writers, Ink. Her work has been published in A Year in Ink and numerous
volumes of Shaking the Tree: brazen. short. memoir. A native New Englander,
she now lives in San Diego with her husband, her daughter, her granddog, and a
most extraordinary feline.

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Welcome to the Wonderful World of Not Giving a F*ck Blitz

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Nonfiction / Self-Help

Publication Date: October 9, 2025

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What happens when life strips away everything you thought defined you?

In Welcome to the Wonderful World of Not Giving A Fck*, Oliver Turner delivers
a bold, brutally honest, and deeply motivational guide to self-love,
spirituality, resilience, and personal empowerment. This Amazon Bestselling
book is a fresh and unapologetic take on personal growth for readers who are
tired of living for everyone else’s approval.

Blending humor, raw truth, and hard-earned wisdom, Oliver Turner shares the
mindset shifts that helped him survive life-threatening health battles,
devastating personal loss, emotional isolation, and years of rebuilding from
the ground up. Faced with emergency surgery, homelessness, broken
relationships, and severe physical injuries, Turner discovered one
life-changing truth: sometimes the greatest freedom comes from letting go of
fear, guilt, overthinking, and the need to please others.

This concise yet powerful read is packed with real-life insight, motivational
encouragement, and practical perspective for anyone struggling with anxiety,
burnout, self-doubt, toxic expectations, or feeling stuck in life. Through
relatable storytelling and sharp, no-nonsense advice, readers are challenged
to stop apologizing for wanting more and start creating a life rooted in
confidence, peace, purpose, and financial independence.

Whether you are rebuilding after hardship, searching for personal freedom, or
simply ready to stop caring about things that drain your energy, this book
serves as a reminder that your life belongs to you — not to the opinions
of others.

Perfect for fans of motivational self-help books, mindset transformation,
spiritual growth, emotional healing, confidence building, and personal
development, Welcome to the Wonderful World of Not Giving A Fck* is an
empowering wake-up call for dreamers, overthinkers, creatives, entrepreneurs,
and anyone ready to reclaim their voice.

If you are ready to stop surviving and start living boldly, this book is for
you.

 

In This Inspirational Self-Help Book, You’ll Discover:

 

● How to let go of people-pleasing and fear of judgment

● Powerful lessons in resilience, healing, and self-trust

● A fresh perspective on confidence, spirituality, and personal freedom

● How to protect your peace and focus on what truly matters

● Motivation to rebuild your life after hardship or failure

● Encouragement to pursue purpose, joy, and financial independence

 

Start your journey toward self-love, empowerment, and unapologetic
living today.

 

 

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About the Author

Oliver Turner
Oliver Turner is a writer, creative entrepreneur, motivational voice,
and the Amazon Bestselling author of Welcome to the Wonderful World of Not
Giving A Fck*, a bold and empowering book focused on self-love, spirituality,
resilience, and personal growth. Known for his raw honesty, sharp humor, and
unapologetic perspective on life, Oliver inspires readers to break free from
fear, self-doubt, and the pressure of living according to other people’s
expectations.

Drawing from real-life experiences filled with adversity, healing, and
transformation, Oliver Turner’s work resonates with readers searching
for confidence, emotional freedom, and a renewed sense of purpose. After
surviving a life-threatening medical crisis, enduring homelessness,
devastating personal loss, severe physical injuries, and years of emotional
rebuilding, Oliver turned his pain into purpose by sharing the mindset and
spiritual lessons that helped him keep moving forward.

His writing blends motivational storytelling, practical wisdom, spiritual
insight, and modern self-empowerment strategies to encourage readers to stop
overthinking, trust themselves, and live more authentically. Through his
relatable voice and candid approach, Oliver challenges people to reclaim their
energy, protect their peace, and pursue lives rooted in confidence,
creativity, healing, and financial independence.

Beyond writing, Oliver Turner is involved in creative business ventures,
digital platforms, and entertainment projects designed to inspire
transformation and authentic living. His mission is simple: help people let go
of fear, embrace who they truly are, and move boldly toward the life they
deserve.

Whether speaking through his books, creative projects, or personal message of
resilience, Oliver Turner continues to connect with audiences looking for
motivation, healing, self-discovery, and the courage to finally put themselves
first.

 

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King of the Prairie Teaser

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Frontier & Pioneer Western Fiction; US Historical Fiction;
Action/Adventure

Date Published: March 20, 2026

 

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With all the swagger of a classic western, a legendary buffalo claims his
rightful place among the genre’s most iconic heroes.

Meet Rathuun. Born in an idyllic canyon, tragedy strikes on his first day. A
grizzly bear scatters the herd, devours his twin, and leaves him to shiver and
die. But the buffalo calf with a white spot on his chin survives.

The plains are changing fast. Wagons roll west in endless streams. Telegraph
wires stretch across the horizon. Locomotives scream down polished rails,
slicing through the earth. Extinction

seems imminent when everyone wants to kill the biggest buffalo on the prairie.
Native people shoot arrows and drive herds over cliffs. Hide hunters slaughter
millions. An obsessed buffalo assassin is determined to wipe them all out and
change the world forever. There’s an army of barking rifles, and they’re all
pointed at Rathuun.

Will the hunters take Rathuun’s head and leave his carcass to rot on the
prairie?

 

This sweeping epic thunders across the American West, taking listeners
to unforgettable western landmarks. If you like classic westerns, thrilling
action, and high-stakes historical adventures, grab your copy by the horns.

 

Welcome to the prairie!

 

Excerpt

Rathuun heard a fierce roar that rattled between his ears.

He had just finished nursing for the first time since he was born a
thrum, hours earlier. His mother’s warm breath had tickled his flank
just moments ago.

It was a peaceful morning on the prairie, but in a flash, everything had
changed.

The thunderous roar boomed again. The entire brum was on the move.

In his haste to lead his followers away from danger, Drumm sounded the
alarm and leapt forward. The old bull crashed into Rathuun, sending the thrum
sprawling.

Rathuun’s legs wobbled as he tried to stand. It was a miracle that
the collision hadn’t broken him. There was an instinctive pull to follow
the brum, and it was centered beneath his chin, between his front legs.

He blinked rapidly, whipping his head from side to side, searching for
his mother. Moments ago, she had been beside him. “Hathah!” he
bleated, searching for the young cow who was his whole world.

But he knew she was gone. Gone with all the others. Why had she left him
behind?

He shivered at the realization that he was all alone. His heart throbbed
against his ribs. It was a struggle to make sense of what had happened.

Everything turned upside down and sideways. The panicked brum quickly
vanished as the plains swallowed the pounding hooves and flashing tails,
leaving nothing but a faint echo of their distant bellows.

It was eerily silent in the wake of the wild scatter of the
buffalos’ frenzied exodus. Rathuun took a tentative step forward, not
knowing what to do or which way to go.

Dust choked the air. His third, translucent eyelid swept sideways across
his eye, clearing away the grit kicked up by the fleeing brum. He stood, dazed
and completely alone.

Or so he thought. The silence quickly gave way to horrible sounds.

Rathuun turned his head. Twenty feet away, something moved. A dark,
hulking monster hunched over something. Rathuun’s blood pounded with
fear. There was a heavy thump in his chest. Then he saw the creature.

It was a rumbler.

 

 

About the Author
David Fitz-Gerald
David Fitz-Gerald writes frontier and pioneer western fiction from the
wilds of western Vermont—about as far west as you can get without
slipping into New York.

Though he’s never wrangled beeves to market, Dave was a top hand on his
grandfather’s dude ranch in the Adirondack Mountains… before he
turned ten. He’s lived most of his life on dirt roads. Whenever he gets
the chance, he travels west to recharge his spirit on the windswept prairies.

He’s an Adirondack 46’er which means that he’s hiked to the
top of every mountain in the park. In 2018, Dave completed the 1960s fitness
craze by hiking 50 miles in one day. That’s one heck of a long walk, but
not nearly as grueling as the iconic trails that he chases in his fiction.

Even after all these years, Dave still has his head in the clouds like Ken
from MY FRIEND FLICKA, and a quiet, self-reliant spirit like Sam from THE
TRUMPET OF THE SWAN. That blend of wonder, heart, and spirit runs through the
characters he portrays. His editor states he is “exceptionally good at
creating real moments between characters”—and readers seem to
agree.

Dave’s breakthrough series, Ghosts Along the Oregon Trail won
Chanticleer’s Grand Prize for Book Series. He’s now the author of
nearly twenty novels and counting, and as long as there’s coffee in the
kitchen, Dave will be plotting one adventurous story after another.

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The Secret of the Smiling Rock Man Blitz

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Short Story Collection / Fiction

 

Date Published: 05-15-2026

Publisher: RMK Publications

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In his first collection of short stories Joe Cappello presents an array
of characters whom he describes as having “rocks in their heads.”
Instead of accepting the hand life has dealt them, they pursue more outlandish
solutions to its problems. The reader witnesses firsthand the zany antics
these characters employ to cope with the situations they encounter in each
story: Mortality…daring to know death’s secret and determined to
face it without fear and dread; Workplace… seeking an environment that
is based on teamwork and respect, rather than fear and intimidation;
Family…taking extraordinary steps to unite an estranged family and to
bring another closer together; Language…re-establishing the sacred role
of words in our lives as a unifier of people and a conveyor of truth. All told
with a healthy dose of humor and a belief that life can be joyful, hopeful and
a down-right hoot.

About the Author

Joe Cappello
Joe Cappello’s creative life began when he accepted a minor
speaking role in a play, walked on stage for the first time, and came to the
terrifying realization that, “Oh, no, they sold tickets!”

Fortunately, he overcame his initial stage fright and began accepting roles in
community theatre, the parts of Oscar Madison in “The Odd Couple”
and Ivan Lomov in “The Proposal” among his favorites. He studied
acting in New York City and performed in a couple of Off-Off Broadway
productions including Sam Shepherd’s “Buried Child,” where
he played the crotchety, whiney patriarch, Dodge (a part for which his wife
felt he was uniquely suited).

He wrote and produced plays for children, awarding roles to his sons and other
kids in his neighborhood (earning the gratitude of their parents who
considered rehearsals free babysitting). He started writing adult plays and
received a number of accolades including an honorable mention in the 2020
Bridge Award contest sponsored by Arts in the Armed Forces (AIAF) for his
full-length play, “The Stars of Orion” and selection as the winner
of the 2022 Susan Hansell Drama Award for his one act play,
“Monarch.”

But the logistics of staging plays proved too time consuming. In his early
30’s he started writing short stories and flash fiction pieces and submitting
them for publication. Many of the stories presented in this collection have
been published in online magazines and anthologies, and some have achieved
recognition, most notably, “The Secret of the Smiling Rock Man,”
First Place, National Federation of Press Women’s Communications Contest
(2022); “They Only Showed Elvis from the Waist Up,” First Place,
Southwest Writers Writing Contest (2023); and “Running Errands,”
Finalist, Hemingway Shorts Competition, sponsored by the Ernest Hemingway
Foundation of Oak Park (2023).

Joe invites you to read more of his work and follow his
anything-but-straight-line career at joecappelloauthor.com.

 

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