No Matter What Virtual Book Tour

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Young Adult / Coming of Age / Christian

Date Published: April 14, 2026

Publisher: Clay Bridges Press

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Most people don’t know quite what to make of Jay McGee. His
teammates call him “Mac Daddy” (’90s slang for a smooth-talking
ladies’ man). But Jay is nothing like that. In fact, he just doesn’t fit
neatly into any box—honors student, basketball player, church
kid—and he’s okay with that, as long as two people notice: Coach
Mays, the fiery perfectionist standing between Jay and his basketball dreams,
and Nicole Ellis, the cheerleader he’s secretly liked since sixth grade.

When Jay finally seizes a moment of boldness with Nicole, he steps into new
territory—only to discover her life is far more complicated than he ever
imagined. Maybe he should just focus on basketball. Except Coach Mays seems
blind to Jay’s potential, harping only on his flaws.

Caught between pressure, failure, and secrets no one talks about at Sunday
school, Jay is forced to wrestle with deeper questions—about who he is,
what he believes, and what it really means to be seen, to love, and to become
someone worth noticing . . . no matter what.

What makes it unique:

This book provides a practical way for teens to engage with difficult
questions and feel seen in the struggles they’re facing, while also
being educational and presenting hard truths everyone will have to wrestle
with. It helps the reader ask tough questions about who they are, who they
want to be, where they want to go in life, and who they want to bring along on
the journey.

The engaging characters and witty conversation pull in the reader and command
attention and focus. This is not a story that will be read and quickly
forgotten. Unlike generic “coming of age” books, No Matter What tackles the
struggles of adolescence with taste and decency, allowing the reader to think
and feel throughout the story without becoming unnecessarily uncomfortable or
awkward.

No Matter What paperback

EXCERPT

We threw out and discussed a few more names, but my mind started to wander back to who I really liked. I got quiet for a few moments, then looked at John and asked, “What do you think about… Nicole Ellis?”

“She was my neighbor when I was in kindergarten through third grade, so I used to know her really well,” John replied. “She moved to a new house with her mom after her parents got divorced and switched elementary schools. I haven’t been around her much since we’ve been going to the same school again.”

Now I had to decide whether to play her off as just another name or to reveal what I was really feeling. “Well,” I stammered, “I’ve had a lot of classes with her the last couple of years. I think she’s pretty, um…” I gulped. “Solid.”

John stared out the window as he spoke, using the same tone he had for the last few names we brought out. “Yeah, she’s smart. And I think every guy has liked her at some point. I think that she’s…”

Our eyes finally met and he stopped. Suddenly he knew that she wasn’t just another name I was tossing out. I was breaking out of theory and the hypothetical and getting real. I averted my eyes and chuckled nervously.

After a few moments of awkward silence, John grinned. “So Nicole Ellis, huh? How long has this been going on?”

“Um, to tell you the truth,” I confessed, “probably most of the last five years. Especially the last year or so, since we’ve been in classes so much together.” Even though we’d never opened up about this type of thing before, I was sort of embarrassed my best friend didn’t know about something that had been weighing so heavily on my heart for so long.

John didn’t seem offended, just thoughtful. “I hear she’s a good girl,” he said, finally nodding his head in approval. “Kat still knows her pretty well. I don’t think she’s a big partier. She’s dated a few different guys, but she hasn’t gotten too serious with any of them.”

A feeling of relief came over me. Relief from getting this out to someone other than just Roger, from having John’s endorsement, and, I had to admit, from hearing a report on what she was like outside of school, something I realized in that moment I knew nothing about.

Relief turned into an outpouring of words. The dam of privacy and pride had been breached, and I told John everything—the first meeting in the cafeteria line, the way her smile made me feel then and now, how she had been kind to me when I still had my glasses, and how laughing with her in class was the highlight of my day. (I stopped short of telling him about the Letter, though. I was still trying to convince myself that it never happened.)

As I finished with all this gushing, all John could do was smile, but he wasn’t making fun of me. “Wow, you’ve really got it bad,” he said, shaking his head. “I don’t know what to tell you.”

One thing that made John a good friend is that he would never leave me hanging. I had opened up my heart to him, and, as hard as it was for him, he wasn’t going to leave me out there alone in my vulnerability. His eyebrows suddenly lowered as he looked down, deep in thought.

“Do you remember Rachel Mathis?” he asked. Sure, I remembered Rachel. She started attending my old church, where John still went, right before my family switched.

“The soccer player? Does she still go to Memorial Baptist?” Rachel was about an inch shorter than John, well-built and athletic, with light brown hair in tight curls cut just above her shoulders.  I thought she was cute when I met her, but I hadn’t gotten a chance to get to know her.

“Yeah, she still goes most of the time.” John was back to mumbling through his teeth. “I tutored her in math a little bit last spring. She had a boyfriend at the time, and it kind of pissed him off. Nothing was going on, but it did help me to get to know her better.”

“So are you telling me you like her?” 

John let out an exasperated sigh, fighting to open up and admit to me—and maybe to himself—for the first time that he really did like someone. “I mean, yeah, I guess. She works hard, stays in shape, gets good grades, and we go to church together. She smiles at me a lot, but it never seems like she’s smiling about how quiet I am or anything. And, uh…” (for some reason this last part seemed to pain him to most to say out loud) “I like her hair.”

I couldn’t help but laugh. Then he started laughing, too. It was the kind of cathartic laugh that only two best friends who understood the unspoken context around a situation could have. We were awkward and we were clueless, but we knew we were safe with each other.

 

 

About the Author
Stephen Suffron
Stephen Suffron is a dad and longtime pastor, currently serving at First
Baptist Church in Denison, Texas. He loves telling stories that connect people
across generations through humor and biblical truth. No Matter What began as a
short story for a college class and was later expanded into a novel to help
guide his own teenagers through high school. Steve and his wife have been
married for more than twenty years and are raising four children together.

 

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IYSH Blitz

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Fiction

Date Published: 04-17-2025

 

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In 1940, Leo Butlion, a young Jew studying to be a medical doctor in
Koblenz, Germany, has his future plans disrupted when Nazi forces destroy his
family and their business. His heroic escape and commitment to survive drive
him to overcome the greatest test man could ever encounter. Ivy Jacobson, a
deformed yet highly talented fashion designer, works in a textile factory in
Liege, Belgium that is ransacked by Nazi invaders. She escapes their brutality
and meets Leo. Leo explains the Hebrew word IYSH which means “champion” and
together they agree to persevere and champion the cause no matter how
difficult it becomes. Their heroism and tenacity unfold in dramatic fashion as
they are captured, separated and sent to concentration camps where their
future survival is unclear. The story develops from WWII until the Yom Kippur
War in 1973 which takes place in Israel.

About the Author

 Greg Price

 Greg Price is a writer, human resource expert and an ordained minister. He has
traveled extensively throughout the world and shares his experiences by
translating them into literary characters who inspire and motivate the reader.
Greg immigrated to the United States from south Africa and currently lives
with his wife in Mississippi.

 

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Miro Blitz

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Literary Fiction, Cat Fiction

Date Published: May 22, 2026

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A deeply moving novel told through the eyes of a cat named Miro, who
begins life in the fragile warmth of his mother’s embrace, only to be
swept into a world shaped by separation, survival, love, and loss.

From one cramped apartment to another unfamiliar home, Miro is carried through
the unpredictable hands of fate, drifting between tenderness and cruelty,
safety and fear. Through the eyes of a growing cat trying to understand the
strange creatures who control his world, he learns—step by painful
step—what it means to trust, to survive, and to search for belonging in
a world that rarely explains itself, and even more rarely shows mercy.

As he grows, Miro observes the humans around him with startling sensitivity:
their loneliness, contradictions, tenderness, and hidden darkness. Through his
innocent yet deeply perceptive voice, ordinary moments become profound
meditations on fear, attachment, identity, and the search for home.

Both heartbreaking and tender, Miro: Embracing the Unknown is not merely the
story of a cat—it is the story of any soul trying to find warmth and
meaning in an uncertain world.

 

 

About the Author

Enas Nour

Enas Nour is a physician and writer based in Germany, where she combines
her medical career with a lifelong passion for literature and creative
expression. Drawn to storytelling from an early age, she explores themes of
human emotion, resilience, and connection through compelling and
thought-provoking narratives. Her writing is marked by empathy, insight, and
vivid detail, creating immersive stories that resonate deeply with readers and
reflect the complexities of the human experience.

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Navigate Cancer Virtual Book Tour

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Coaching for Resilience

Leadership / Self-Help / Health / Business

Date Published: April 29. 2026

Publisher: Serapis Bey Publishing, Arizona, USA

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This empowering book launches the new Cancer Compass; an essential
self-leadership resource for people facing cancer. It extends its reach to
caregivers, healthcare professionals, and organisations committed to offering
meaningful support to anyone in their workforce dealing with cancer. It
encourages us to see cancer not solely as a medical challenge, but as a
profound moment to honour the resilience of our human spirit, embrace growth,
and reclaim control of our lives for a brighter future.

Teresa Ferreiro-Vilariño challenges her readers to shift their perspective, prioritising personal empowerment, connection and purposeful living. Her insights about resilience coaching and each person’s human potential are uplifting. Her book is deeply rooted in practical application, including thoughtful exercises and tools that prompt us to access our inner resources, engage in self-discovery and cultivate our secure bases. These unique gifts guide us to align our decisions with our values and goals, helping us chart a path forward with choice, clarity and confidence.

Navigate Cancer hardback

EXCERPT

Foreward

It is both an honour and a privilege to introduce Teresa Ferreiro-Vilariño’s remarkable book, Navigate Cancer: Coaching for Resilience. My connection with Teresa began at IMD (International Institute for Management Development), where her transformative coaching work has left a lasting impact on our leadership programs. Over the years, I have observed her unparalleled ability to guide leaders through some of their most daunting challenges. Teresa’s wisdom and sincere empathy have enriched us all. It is also the foundation for this inspiring book.

Teresa builds on core concepts central to my own work—like the power of ‘secure bases,’ those relationships or guiding values that anchor us in times of adversity. She emphasises the importance of making deliberate choices and explores how grief, while deeply painful, can act as a catalyst for healing and growth. It is profoundly moving to see how she has refined these ideas into a framework uniquely suited for navigating the complexities of life with cancer. Through meticulous research and firsthand experience, Teresa has crafted a pioneering framework that empowers individuals to approach their circumstances with courage, dignity, and purpose.

At the heart of this book is a transformative message: while cancer presents undeniable hardship, it also opens the door to meaningful personal growth. Teresa challenges readers to shift their perspective, viewing cancer not as an enemy to conquer but as a journey—one that prioritizes empowerment, connection, and purposeful living. Her reflections on resilience and human potential are uplifting and deeply rooted in practical application.

What truly sets this book apart is its hands-on and reflective content. Teresa offers thoughtful exercises and tools that prompt readers to access their inner resources, engage in self-discovery, and cultivate secure bases. These tools guide individuals in aligning their decisions with their values and goals, helping them chart a path forward with clarity and confidence. While the principles in this book foster resilience in leaders in all contexts, I am inspired by how Teresa has adapted them to support self-leadership for people facing cancer.

Her insights are grounded in rigorous academic work, drawing from her doctoral research on coaching and personal empowerment. At the same time, the inclusion of personal stories gives the book a warmth and relatability that makes its lessons accessible to all. This seamless integration of theory and real-life experience ensures the book’s credibility while making its message profoundly human.

While this book is an essential resource for people facing cancer, it extends its reach to caregivers, healthcare professionals, and organisations committed to offering meaningful support to anyone dealing with cancer. It encourages us to see cancer not solely as a medical challenge but as a profound moment to honour the resilience of the human spirit, embrace growth, and reclaim control over our lives.

Reflecting on Teresa’s personal journey of facing cancer and the work we’ve shared, I am moved by her unwavering commitment to empowering other people. Her rare ability to combine compassion with actionable strategies. She has a deep understanding of self-leadership and leading others that make her coaching uniquely transformative. With this book, she offers a roadmap for confronting life’s formidable challenges with inspiration, grace, and hope.

Whether you are a leader, a caregiver, or a person touched by cancer, this book reminds us that resilience, determination, and purpose lie within each of us. No one needs to be a hostage to a cancer diagnosis. This is a must-read book. Read it fully, engage deeply, and let Teresa’s wisdom inspire your journey to recover the full joy of life.

Professor George Kohlrieser, distinguished professor of leadership and organisational behaviour at IMD Business School, Switzerland

About the Author

Teresa Ferreiro-Vilariño
Teresa Ferreiro-Vilariño is the Founder and CEO of Kimberlite
(https://www.kimberlite.es), an innovative organisation dedicated to providing
comprehensive support to people navigating cancer—particularly within
corporate settings—through professional coaching. A Master Certified
Coach (MCC) accredited by the International Coaching Federation (ICF)
, Teresa
brings more than 20 years of experience working with leaders and organisations
worldwide.

At the age of 36, a breast cancer diagnosis marked a turning point in her
life, redirecting her focus toward empowering people living with cancer. In
the years that followed, she authored her first book, I Have Breast
Cancer–What Now?
, recognised for its inspirational and practical
guidance, embraced motherhood, and founded a charitable initiative supporting
young women navigating motherhood after cancer
. She later earned a PhD focused
on applying professional coaching methodologies to the specific needs of
people facing serious health challenges
. In recognition of her commitment to
patient advocacy, she was honoured with the European Patient Champion Award by
EyeforPharma in 2019.

Teresa is also an executive coach and coaches across multiple programs at IMD
Business School
in Lausanne, Switzerland, including the flagship
High-Performance Leadership (HPL) Program, supporting leaders in developing
resilience, clarity, and sustainable performance.

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Snow Place Like Home Week Blast

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Snow Globe Shop Mystery, Book 5

 

Traditional Mystery/Amateur Sleuth, Small Town Fiction, Snow Globe Shop,
Minnesota Mystery

 

Date Published: 01-09-2026

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The past collides with the present for Camryn Brooks on one cold winter
evening. A man’s body is found in the passenger seat of a car, parked in
her driveway. Camryn is chilled to the bone when she learns his identity: her
old nemesis, the one whose actions ruined her career and tarnished her stellar
reputation in Washington D.C.

Early Reviews

 

“Camryn Brooks soon discovers, like snowflakes, no two suspects are
alike . . . a captivating cozy read.” Mary Seifert
 

 

“A cozy snow day read with wonderful characters and intriguing clues to
a twisty mystery.” Alicia Kozak

 

 

 

“It pulls you right in. An ideal cozy mystery with just enough police
procedural to keep you hooked.” Timya Owens

 

 

 

“So many twists and turns, it leaves you thinking, ‘There’s snow place
like home!'” Michelle Hess

 

 

 

“Mystery readers will appreciate the subtle clues sprinkled throughout
and an unexpected twist at the end. A great read from a great author.”
Natalie Fowler

 

 

 

“Set against a frigid Minnesota winter, Snow Place Like Home shows that
friendship and forgiveness can go a long way in chasing the chill of murder
away.” Thekla Madsen

 

 

 
Excerpt

I yawned on my way to the living room, stretched out on the couch,
pulled a comforter over my body, and opened a book I’d been reading. I
was involved in the novel’s complex plot when my cell phone buzzed. I
reached over and plucked it from the coffee table. My best friend Alice
“Pinky” Nelson’s name appeared on the screen.

I smiled and pushed the accept button. “Hey, Pink—”

She cut me off. “Ahhhh. Cami, you need to come out here. Now.” She
spoke with a hushed intensity. Was she hurt, in trouble?

My heart sank as I dropped the book, threw back the comforter, and jumped off
the couch. “Come out where? Where are you, Pinky?”

“Kitchen . . . window. . . yours. . . look . . . out.” It took me
a second to process her words, comprehend what she meant. She was in my
backyard
? Had she tripped and fallen?

I crossed the ten feet in a flash, slid my feet into boots by the back entry,
cast all apprehension aside, and pushed open the door. The early evening sky
was cloaked in darkness, and with the help of an alley’s street lamp, I
spotted a vehicle I didn’t recognize parked by my garage. What in the
world?

Pinky’s car sat next to it. I flipped on the outside house light and saw
Pinky sitting in her car. When I went down the steps and moved toward her, she
jumped out from her driver’s seat and pointed at the other vehicle.
“I think he might be dead.”

My heart sank even lower as I glanced at a bulky form in the other
vehicle’s passenger seat. I was unable to move, frozen to my spot on the
snow-covered lawn. Pinky closed the gap between us and threw her arms around
me. We turned our heads in sync toward the vehicle occupied by an
unknown—dead or alive–person.

 

About the Author

Christine Husom
Christine Husom is a bestselling author from Buffalo. She writes the
Winnebago County Mysteries and the Snow Globe Shop Mysteries. Christine has
stories in six anthologies, wrote a collaborative novel with eight other
authors, and co-edited A Festival of Crime for Nodin Press. She trained with
the St. Paul Police Department and served with the Wright County Sheriff’s
Office. She’s a member of Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime,
active with the Twin Cities chapter. She loves meeting readers at events.

 

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