A Weaponized Mind Blitz

A Weaponized Mind banner
A Weaponized Mind cover

 

The Mind Sleuth Series

Murder Mystery

Date Published: June 23, 2026

good reads button

Sometimes, Wilford DeBeer’s high-risk, high-reward financial plans
worked, and when they did, the clients of DeBeer Wealth Management lauded his
brilliance. Unfortunately, sometimes they didn’t, and people lost their
businesses, their retirements, and sometimes their lives. So, when Henry
Jansen, who was caddying a round of golf for DeBeer, pulled a gun and killed
him, the reason seemed obvious.

It wasn’t. Jansen had never been a DeBeer client.

Four days later, Jansen was identified as the shooter. But before the police
could locate and arrest him, he was found dead in an alley near downtown
Denver. At that point, suspicion pivoted to DeBeer’s many disgruntled
clients. One of them must have hired Jansen as their instrument of
retaliation, then killed him to cover their involvement.

This theory, too, led nowhere as the investigation stalled after three months.

Frustrated by the apparent lack of progress on the case, Lauren Beckwith,
Jansen’s cousin, hired Private Investigator Rebecca Marte to continue
the hunt. And while Rebecca apparently retrod much of the same ground as the
police detectives, she must have done something different, because before she
knew it, she was fighting for her life in a diabolical trap set by
Jansen’s killer.

About the Author

Bruce M. Perrin

 If you’re interested in what I’m like in something more detailed
than what will fit in this space, I’d say, buy any of my books. That
overly analytic guy (read geek) is me. OK, I’ve never saved the day like
the heroes in my books, but we think alike. I’m interested in technology
and psychology (my formal background) and enjoy writing about where they meet,
now and in the future. In addition to pounding the keyboard, I like to tinker
with home automation and I’m an avid hiker. When I’m not on the
trails, you’ll find me at home with my wife and our dog in Aurora, CO.
For a closer look at my writing life, book reviews, and progress on my
upcoming novels, please join me at brucemperrin.com.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Goodreads

Bluesky

Amazon

BookBub

Instagram

BookBuzz

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon

Books2Read

Kobo


Barnes & Noble

Apple

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

The Tales of Sidney and Jojo Blitz

 The Tales of Sidney and Jojo banner
 The Tales of Sidney and Jojo cover

 

Adventures in Thailand

 

Juvenile Fiction / Multicultural / Animals

 

Date Published: 06-23-2026

Publisher: Mission Point Press

Illustrated by: Megan Heller

 

good reads button

 

Sidney and JoJo are off to Thailand, where Mama lives.

Join them on an adventure to faraway lands-by crate, van, car, conveyor belt,
and airplane-as they discover the sights and sounds of a tropical new world.
Along the way, they meet friendly Thai people, encounter a wise dog, and gaze
in wonder at the golden Buddhas and temple cats standing guard. With a few
bumps in the road-marked by meows, tail twitches, and new surprises-they
journey onward until, at last, they arrive at their new home.

 
About the Author
Lauren Isaacson
Lauren Isaacson is an educator, business owner, and is excited to add
children’s book author to her repetoire. Inspired by the real-life
journey of her two adventurous cats during a move abroad, Lauren wrote this
story to share with her students and families around the world. She is the
founder of The Tutoring Hub: Tutoring & Advocacy, LLC, where she supports
students, families, and educators. As her students learned about her two cats
and their adventures, a desire grew to give them a story they could take home.
Lauren is excited to continue the adventures of The Tales of Sidney and JoJo.
You can contact Luaren at ljisaacson491@gmail.com.
Megan Heller is a Michigan-based contemporary artist who earned her BFA
in illustration from the College for Creative Studies. Her work blends
intricate detail with rich symbolism. Working primarily in mixed media, such
as watercolors and colored pencils, with just a dash of digital magic, her
pieces have been shown at Black Box Gallery’s Fantasy Exhibition in
Dearborn, the Midland Center for the Arts, as well as galleries and
exhibitions throughout Detroit and her hometown of Saginaw. This is her first
foray into children’s book illustration.

 

Contact Links

 

Goodreads

IG: @the.tutoring.hub, @teacher.lauren.ud

Facebook: Lauren Isaacson and The-Tutoring-Hub (page)

TikTok: @the.tutoring.hub_

Website

 

Purchase Today

 

https://mybook.to/TalesofSidneyandJojo

Amazon

Bookshop

 

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

Perilous Shores Blitz

Perilous Shores banner

Perilous Shores cover

 

Book 2 of The Sea Hawkes Chronicles

Historical Fiction/Nautical Fiction

Date Published: June 23, 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

good reads button

 

Vengeance is as dangerous to a cause as to the enemy.

The murder of his wife at the hands of British soldiers prompts American
privateer Captain Jonas Hawke’s vow to make Britain pay.

A grief-stricken Jonas strikes deep into the heart of the enemy, driven by his
personal vendetta. When he raids a port city, one of his men crosses an
unthinkable line, which forces Jonas to come to terms with the anguish that
distorts his definition of justice.

Concerned his wrath will bring irreparable harm to the cause for
America’s freedom, Jonas grapples with his role as a warrior and as a
man. When he learns the Royal Navy is hunting his ship, he fears his deadly
decisions may have cost him and his crew everything. It’s too late to
turn back. Instead, he must continue on and face the inevitable perils of war.


Perilous Shores
is a gripping, action-packed, and historically authentic tale
of revenge, survival, and one man’s relentless pursuit of his
country’s independence.

 

About the Author

Thomas M. Wing
Thomas M. Wing, a Naval Academy and Naval War College graduate, retired
after thirty-two years as a Navy Surface Warfare officer. A dedicated sailor
for half a century, he created the Continental Navy Foundation, served as its
executive director, and commanded its brigantine, Megan D.

Tom’s first novel, Against All Enemies, earned gold medals from the
Military Writers Society of America and Literary Titan. In Harm’s Way,
the first in the Sea Hawkes Chronicles series has also garnered several
awards.

He resides in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife and daughter and a cat and a
dog. Whatever free time he has is still spent on the water.

For more about the author and to follow his blog about nautical and naval
trivia, visit his website ThomasMWing.com.

 

Contact Links

 

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon

B&N

Apple Books

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

The Beauty of Individual Things Teaser

The Beauty of Individual Things banner
The Beauty of Individual Things cover

 

Historical Fiction / Jazz Age Romance

Date Published: 07-14-2026

Publisher: Mission Point Press

good reads button

The Beauty of Individual Things follows Margot Andrews, a young American
woman swept from New York high society into the dazzling yet fractured world
of 1920s London. When the transactional demands of privilege collide with
betrayal and violence, leaving her disillusioned and adrift, she escapes to
the freshwater shoreline of lost childhood summers.

With her past unrecoverable and her future uncertain, Margot searches for a
different life amid Detroit’s dynamic and monied Prohibition
era—with its yacht races, rumrunners, and industrial might. Set against
a city on the rise, she must navigate her family’s ruthless pursuit of
social standing, the magnetic pull of charismatic boat racer Ellis James, and
the relentless echoes of her past. The story explores the weight of loneliness
and the personal cost of love and reinvention as Margot decides whether to
remain a fragile ornament of her family’s design or forge an identity
that is beautiful, imperfect, and entirely her own.

Excerpt

No one tells a young woman that things usually happen because of money,
sex, or power. We learn it on our own. Polite girls go on to elegantly
suppress the notion, but most know it, and I was nothing if not polite. It was
different for Grace. She was a Maxwell. It wasn’t in their nature to
suppress things. They blew them up.

An early lesson remains etched in my mind. It was a summer day in 1913. The
Maxwells had secured a white clapboard weekly rental on the shores of Elk
Lake, tucked among the rolling farmland and evergreen forests of northern
Michigan.

The screen door slammed. I shaded my eyes as Uncle Fred crossed a narrow strip
of beach, wearing a faded black-and-white-striped bathing costume.

“You’ll burn, Fred,” Aunt Lou clucked from her canvas sling
chair under the shade of a lurid yellow umbrella.

Cousin Grace doubled over, shrieking with laughter. “You look like a
ghost,” she sputtered. I suppressed my giggles by intently staring at a
beached canoe.

Uncle Fred hadn’t brought any alcohol on that vacation.

“It’s called drying out,” Grace had whispered one night
after we were tucked away in our shared bed. “The booze turns dusty and
blows away … or something.”

I never saw the dust, but for two or three rocky days Uncle Fred kept to his
room, scolding us through the door to lower our voices. Then one bright
morning, the dust cleared. All breakfast table chatter quieted as he stood at
the head of the table, bright-eyed and eager to lead us on bracing outdoor
excursions involving tree identification—white pine versus
red—campfires, and fish brought home on stringers. I felt sorry for the
fish, but they were delicious.

Now, after nodding in acceptance of his daughter’s ribbing, Uncle Fred
called to me, “Margot, I’ll see you at the end of the dock.”

I immediately stopped giggling. I had been forbidden from docks and floating
canoes because I didn’t know how to swim. At ten years old, I was
mortified by this humiliating precaution yet too frightened to do anything
constructive about it.

Aunt Lou had dismissed all petulant objections. “The water doesn’t
care, child. It’ll drown you all the same.”

 

About the Author

Karen Thomas Yoo

 Karen Thomas Yoo was born and raised in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. She graduated
from the University of Michigan and received an MBA from Duke University. When
she isn’t writing, she can usually be found in her garden or on a paddleboard
in Lake Michigan. A mother of three grown children, she lives in Grosse Pointe
with her husband. This is her first novel.

 

Contact Links

Website

Goodreads

Instagram

Facebook

 

Purchase Link

 

Amazon

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

Choppiness on High Seas Tour

Choppiness on High Seas banner

 

Choppiness on High Seas cover

 

Literary Fiction

Date Published: 11-01-2024

Publisher: Troubador

 

good reads button
Being born into poverty and hardship in 1930s London, Matthew’s
life was one of relentless struggle. One inadvertent act in defence of his
mother would haunt his conscience forever.

Matthew’s journey takes him from the poverty of a cold stone granary to
the opulence of Mayfair and Kensington Palace Gardens, where he starts a
family of his own. Despite working his way to the top of the business world,
he remains an outsider to London’s elite. He then realises that same
elite has an ugly underbelly. High society was a hot bed of depravity.

Will he correct society’s wrongs? Will the man who never succumbed to
expectations be able to challenge his own destiny or will he simply accept the
futility of it all?

Choppiness on High Seas paperback

EXCERPT

1930

Gail Stephens

 

Behold a filth hole of desolation! There was mud and blood on slippery, damp floors as an open gutter’s stench mixed with the strong fumes of ethanol and ammonia. Expectant mothers screamed and wretched in labour; the stocky midwives, thinking nothing of it, delivered one baby after the next, snipping at the umbilical cords before the placentas slopped out and splashed on the floor.

Gail Stephens was far too strong a woman to suffer a mishap in childbirth. She had earned this child even if it meant delivering him in a shelter for unmarried women. As soon as he was placed on her breast, she smiled. “You are my boy, Matthew. We will be each other’s strength from now on; do not worry about anything. Mummy will always be there.”

Next, the shelter put them in a maternity ward in an adjacent warehouse. There were two rows of beds on either side of the long corridor. The babies were placed in cots alongside their mothers as the midwives instructed the first-time mothers about nursing and feeding. Repeat mothers needed no such assistance and happily instructed their new sisters. Poverty may be a scourge, but motherhood ignored misery and united them all. Gail was not alone in having opted to keep the baby of a deserter. The sisterhood of bastard bearers did not believe in the stigma society callously applied to them.

The rest at the maternity ward did her good. Gail was a picture of health when she left the hospital and returned to her lodgings in the old stone house granary. She scrubbed herself with soap and water and dried her hair before the coal fire before choosing a clean dress with small floral patterns, its pleats pressed by the coal-heated iron firmly until crisp. She fed Matthew, cleaned him and put him back in a makeshift cot, where he quickly drifted into slumber.

Gail’s occupation was in keeping with her social status but was conducted in a parallel world. Gail cleaned the houses of wealthy London families. Her encounters with mahogany, marble, velvets and silks did not ignite envy; they only provided affirmation of her son’s destiny. “My son will live this life one day. I need to work hard to give him a good start. He must study so he can get an office job.” And work hard she did. The houses she cleaned were immaculate and often received the admiration of guests: “Please ask her if she has some free hours.”

She wore one of her two cardigans and grabbed her shawl before heading to Mr Burroughs’ house with Matthew wrapped in a blanket. Mrs Burroughs welcomed her, calling out to her husband. Mr Burroughs looked at mother and son. “What a beautiful baby. Should you be working so soon, Gail?”

“Thank you, Sir. I had an easy delivery and am well rested. I brought Matthew with me today, but from tomorrow, I will leave him at the infirmary’s baby centre.”

Mrs Burroughs smiled. “Gail, this is the first baby we have had in this house. Please bring him here as often as you can. If you cannot come to work one day, please do not worry. Your wages will be paid.”

“Oh, Madam, Sir, that is very kind indeed. Thank you. But I am a strong woman in good health.” Looking at Gail, one could hardly imagine the modesty she left back home every day; there was a sense of purpose about her, not the resignation of her peers.

The Burroughs had been a godsend after the tedious and unpleasant households she had worked for previously. Work was not difficult to find but was tricky to hold on to. A well-built, tall, handsome woman with an unblemished complexion and fine face did not go amiss on men. The emergence of a certain level of unease often made her leave the job herself. On other occasions, the lady of the house would ask her to leave. These were times when unmarried women with a child were presumed to be of questionable trait: prey for men, an unnecessary risk for their wives.

The wages were low, though. Wealthy people would spend vast amounts on indulgences but remained parsimonious regarding servants and cleaners.

There was little money, but Gail had her son christened at the local parish.

Matthew was moved to a charitable nursery at the age of eight months. The nursery had been set up by one of her clients. It was like a play school for children of working mothers until they were old enough to go to school. Many children had been put there to receive a meal at least once daily. They were laughing, smiling and crying, oblivious of their misery. A child needs love, company and the occasional scuffle. They partook in the one celebration the nursery could provide, a cake at birthdays, even though the cake distribution would be chaotic. The children did not know any other way. Good manners were not a natural trait amongst their lot. The child carers and teachers would adopt a stern stance and did not shy away from mentioning the dreaded punishment of no dinners. It had never been implemented, but the threat was formidable in its impact on the young cohort.

Along with the nursery’s other charges, Matthew grew from a baby to a toddler, from a toddler to a boy. Matthew stayed there until the age of six. Finances remained grim, but Gail was determined that her son learn manners and undergo full schooling, something she herself had been deprived of.

In the morass of their misery, the improbable education of Matthew Stephens took root.

Gail registered him at the local primary school. Schooling was not compulsory, certainly not for six-year-olds, but Gail believed education was the only way out of destitution. Moreover, all children at school were provided free school dinners, so there would be one less meal to worry about, just like when he was at the nursery. Matthew spent the next three years becoming a good student.

But then, war broke out. There was initially fear but shortly after, Britain’s pugnacity took root and the public believed that they would win, however difficult things got. The National Service Act conscripted citizens between 18 and 41 years of age. This initially created panic and hurt amongst families but soon a sense of truculent defiance to Hitler and duty to Britain came into play. Although single women were not exempt from conscription, women who had children living with them were exempted. Gail nevertheless wanted to play her due role and registered with the local makeshift hospital to offer cleaning services. 

In anticipation of a concerted air attack, the government evacuated children to rural areas in Operation Pied Piper. Matthew was separated from his mother. Gail did not resist as she wanted her son to be in a safer place. Matthew continued his schooling in the countryside and Gail continued to work. 

The authorities set up air raid shelters in London. Despite the evacuations and the numerous blackouts, a sense of normality prevailed. The people made it through the severe winter. There were no sirens as the air raid had yet to materialise. The summer was as pleasant and active as one could get during wartime. The British bulldog spirit remained unsubdued but it could not prevent the vast number of injured soldiers that came back. The community organised itself to provide support and assistance. There were soldiers from all over and new relationships were forged. Somehow, life continued. People would still go to their work and then gravitate in the evenings around pubs. 

On September 7, 1940, came the Blitz. The City of London as well as the broader London Civil Defence Area were attacked. The ground shook and buildings crumbled. Fires broke out and the din of air raid warnings and fire engine sirens settled wistfully in everyone’s ears. The government enforced a blackout. Darkness only amplified the firing from the anti-aircraft guns.

The Spitfires and Hurricanes engaged to defend their motherland and roared into whatever the Luftwaffe could throw at them. The German bombers dropped not only bombs but also incendiary devices. London was alight and during almost three months of unrelenting bombing, the Docklands were pulverised and Gail’s accommodation was destroyed. She was quickly rehoused by the still functional social services. Despite immeasurable damage, the unrelenting fortitude of Londoners kept the wheels of business and efficiency turning. Many London landmarks survived although St. Paul’s cathedral suffered considerable damage. The surviving symbols of Britain and London lifted the spirits and fed the sentiment of invincibility. Unlike London, other cities fared worse.

The Tube sheltered thousands until May 1941 by when the Royal Air Force had won the battle of Britain. 

After eight months away from each other, Matthew and Gail were reunited. 

Matthew’s schooling in a quickly constructed local school was relaunched.

The war had brought forward latent generosity and support for the less fortunate from across the social spectrum. Gail’s employers provided the clothes, shoes and satchel. Although they had previously been demanding in their expectations of her work and had been stingy when discussing wages, they felt sorry for a woman trying to raise a child alone in such times. She enjoyed the empathy of her clients as she was diligent in her work. As she had to go to work every morning, Matthew would have to make his way to school on his own. Some sacrifices had to be made in the upbringing of her son. The street was narrow, and being shoved and pushed aside was routine for him. He did not mind and took all this in his stride. He emitted a glow of quiet confidence, a characteristic rare in his world. He had not felt the absence of a father and was connected to his mother’s maxim: “Get a good education, work hard and prosper.”

Before he set off each morning, Matthew washed his face with a clean, wet rag and combed his hair back tight with a side parting. A deceptively proud proponent, his poise and straight-backed confidence stood out from the world around him. He was not treated like a street urchin but someone better than his surroundings.

The years at school and at home in Gail’s company forged a rounded youngster. By the time he was twelve, Gail no longer looked at him as a child. He was a young man who would make his way in this world, fending for himself a lot better than she had for herself. He would be educated, broaden his horizons, and grab the opportunities encountered. And then one day, he would meet a nice girl, marry her and set up their home.

Undoubtedly, there would be difficulties, but he would get through them. He was her son!

Gail refused to identify Matthew’s father: “No one who abandoned us can be called your father. I know it was thirteen years ago, but I remember his departure as if it were yesterday. I do not want to be secretive. I just do not want you to have any notion that you ever had a father.” 

The stevedore who seduced Gail had left on a ship for America a few days after he learnt she was with child. Gail had loved him and was hoping that they would get married. There was hurt and bitterness, but Gail decided to go ahead with what was hers. Stevedore or no stevedore, her son would be hers. Domestic turmoil would be absent. But adversity would stay.

His birthday called for an extravagant meal of roast beef and gravy and a glass of ale. A celebration at the Stephens household was exceptional, but this was a special landmark for a proud mother and her young man. The fact that she was running a fever could not detract from marking her son’s day.

The following morning, Gail still felt weak and asked Matthew to get some provisions from Mr Strike, the grocer. “Tell him that I am not feeling well, and I will pay him later. And please put that hammer away. I forgot it next to the cooker; it should be on the shelf next to the street door so we can find it when needed.”

Matthew did her bidding. Mr Strike gave over the provisions and gave him a small paper chit with the list of items shown with the total price. Matthew returned, put the things in their place and cooked soup for his mother.

“Thank you, Son. I am feeling a lot better than this morning. So, I can clear up while you do your schoolwork.”

“No, Mother, it is all right. I did my work at school yesterday.”

There was a knock on the door. Mother and son looked at each other questioningly. “Who is it?”

“It’s the grocer.”

Matthew opened the door to Mr Strike and another man who worked in his shop.

“Mr Strike?”

He moved towards Gail. “Your son said you were not well, so I thought I would look you up. You are in bed; how convenient.”

“If it is about the money, I can pay you tomorrow. My wages are due.”

Mr Strike’s companion stayed by the door behind Matthew, who was facing his mother. But Alan Strike walked to the bed and stretched his hand to Gail’s forehead. This was strange, but she was lying under a quilt. She felt his palm on her forehead.

“You do not seem to have a fever anymore, so you will be fine. You have such a beautiful complexion.” His hand moved down the side of her face.

Gail snatched her face away, but Mr Strike’s hand kept moving down her shoulder under the quilt till it reached her breast. Gail kicked her quilt away and jumped up. Matthew tried to move towards her but was restricted by the man behind him. He was stuck in a firm arm hold across his shoulder, tightened around his throat.

Alan Strike put all his weight on Gail and, grabbing both of her wrists, pinned her down on the bed while wedging his torso into position between her legs. Gail screamed. Matthew stamped his heel onto the man’s foot, who momentarily loosened his grip. Matthew bit his hand hard and was let loose. He grabbed the hammer from the shelf and raced towards the bed. He swung the hammer onto Mr Strike’s head. Blood spurted out immediately. He turned towards the door, but the other man was gone.

Gail screamed again. The man who had collapsed on top of her had moved. Matthew darted back and swung the hammer again and yet again. This time, a wallop of blood-drenched brain appeared through the broken skull. Seeing his crushed head and the pool of blood spread on the bedsheet, Gail pushed him back and realised that her assailant was dead. Matthew was crying. Gail took him in her arms and then moved to look at him. “Do not cry. You did well, Son. You saved my honour. There is no greater act.”

Matthew could not speak and looked back at her in shock and fear, the hammer still in his hand.

Gail got to work. She and her son wrapped the body in the sheet, washed the hammer, and sat the body against the door. They then cleaned themselves to remove the bloodstains and put on fresh clothes. As night fell, Matthew went to the coal merchant and returned with an empty wheel cart with empty gunny sacks. Once they ensured no one was within earshot, under the cover of darkness, they heaped the body onto the cart, covering it with gunny sacks and wheeled it to a maintenance hole covering the drain pit. They removed the gunny bags, put them aside, opened the manhole cover, and, with considerable effort, pushed the body through the opening and let it go, hearing a splash. They put the sacks back in the cart and wheeled it back to their house.

Once back in their room, she said, “Son, this will never be mentioned to anyone. We will both die with this. That man was a monster and needed someone to finish him.”

“Did I not murder him, Mother?”

“No, Matthew, you do not murder monsters; you slay them.”

“But what about the other man?”

“He will not say anything. If the people around here learn that he was part of an attack on a mother and her son, they will lynch him. We may be poor here, but we value each other.”

Gail was right. The shop did not open the next morning or any other morning. The other man disappeared as well. A few days later, the sewage collectors found a body. When they identified the body, the neighbourhood quickly assumed that the missing shop hand had had something to do with this. They used to argue all the time. Someone had even seen the two men in each other’s arms.

“Good riddance to filth. We do not like their sort over here in any case.”

Life was cheap in this part of town, and the police were extremely willing to accept a plausible motivation. The case was opened, shut, and filed into the archives within the week.

 

About the Author
Arvind Wadhera
Arvind is French and British with roots in India. He lives and works in
Brussels.

Arvind has three adult children, who all live away from Belgium. He reads
literary fiction and was motivated to write after reading three key books: The
Portrait of Dorian Gray, Thérèse Raquin, 1984 and East of Eden.
He is fascinated by the co-existence of good and evil. In his first book,
Emma’s Equilibrium, he relates the story of an Olympic winner who suffers hurt
along the way. Choppiness on High Seas charts the life of Matthew from his
ignominious birth to his passing away in peace after having become one of the
weathiest persons in the world.

Arvind loves languages and can speak French, Spanish, Dutch, German, Italian,
Hindi, Punjabi and Gujarati. He is a stroke survivor and rides, jogs and does
yoga.

He is a strong believer in the duality of fortune and misfortune. He is deeply
spiritual.

Arvind finds writing challenging and frustrating and editing particularly
painful. He, however, believes that writing can be therapeutic and gratifying.

 

Contact Links

 

Website

Twitter

Goodreads

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS