Impulse Caught Teaser

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A Sticks & Stones Romance

Marisburg Chronicles 9

 
M/M Romance Suspense

Date Published: March 6, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press

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Riku takes charge in bed, but will he have any control over the
day-to-day decisions of a marriage?

 

Money and status differences challenge Riku and Theo to find a middle ground.
Their passion is white-hot, but their ideas of living comfortably are at odds.
As their wedding nears, driven forward by Theo’s parents’ sense of
guilt, Riku feels the old urge to run.

Riku refuses to give into this impulse at first, but as the comparison between
his emotional scars and the mountains of Theo’s familial expectations
grow, Riku fears running will be the only less-than-honorable course left to
him.

Theo isn’t blind to Riku’s struggles but he doesn’t
understand what’s wrong. Each time he reaches out, Riku reaches back,
yet they never quite connect. Will their need for each other overcome their
differences, or will their passion be subsumed by a wave of conflicting
desires?

Impulse Caught paperback

 

Excerpt

It was the day after the children had left for the summer. There would
be ESY, of course, extended school year, but Riku hadn’t been asked to
participate. He’d only been a teacher at the Colton school for the deaf
since January, so it made sense he wouldn’t be first pick for ESY. He
would have normally chewed over that until he was ill, but since Theo had gone
back to work in February, they were living relatively comfortably.
Riku’s student loans still put a squeeze on him, but he could manage
without panicking.

He was sorting through papers posted on the walls. Most of them had gone home
with their makers yesterday, but there were a few that hadn’t been
collected. These he grouped into a folder he marked “leftover
assignments” and stored for early September.

He glanced toward where Theo was wiping down desks, and Riku had to catch his
breath. His fiancé was dressed in casual clothes, but he looked like a
Greek statue come to life. Attired in a green T-shirt and jeans shorts, he
looked younger than he was because of the cutoffs, but not like jailbait. He
was thirty-two, having gained another year in mid-April. Unfortunately, Riku
had also aged a year, so they were still a decade apart.

The brush of Theo’s medium brown hair on his green-clad shoulders made
Riku think of a book he’d read in high school. It had been about a man
who could sing magic into the world. His hair had been red as his Irish
heritage, but the physical differences didn’t matter. Theo could
definitely have sung magic into Riku’s heart, or anywhere else he chose.
His broad shoulders stretched the T-shirt over his pectorals and his shorts
showed off his long, muscular legs.

If they weren’t at school, Riku would have suggested they quit working
and go goof off instead. Unfortunately, they weren’t in their rented
room in Marisburg.

Turning his attention back to his chosen task, he went to the bookshelf and
started organizing the books. Ninety percent of the books were in print, but
the remaining ones were in print and braille, for his students who, like Theo,
had Usher Syndrome or other hearing/vision challenges. He wasn’t the
braille teacher, could barely feel the dots under his fingers, truth be told.
Still, he liked the idea of providing all kinds of different access to
literature. Probably that was part of what made him an effective English
teacher.

With his back to Theo as he organized the books, he reflected that today most
likely wouldn’t see the two of them making love.

Half a year ago, Theo’s parents, courtesy of his father’s quick
tongue, had alienated themselves from their son. Mr. Billings had told Theo
that if he could prove himself self-sufficient for six months, he would be
welcomed back into the familial fold. Theo’s father had apologized, all
but falling over his words in an attempt to retreat from the ultimatum but
Theo had taken up the challenge.

Now it was the end of that six months. Theo hadn’t been out of
communication with his parents, but certain topics, like his relationship with
Riku, had been off-limits. As had his access to the family fortunes.

Theo had been, for the past six months, surviving on his own brilliant mind
and on his ability to work from anywhere. Today, though, Theo would be
reopening full communication with his parents.

Riku wasn’t sure if he should be dreading that time as much as he was.

It wasn’t that Theo hadn’t been talking to his parents. He just
hadn’t accepted any monetary handouts from them, and he’d refused
to discuss his relationship with Riku. It was easy to trust him, to believe he
had suspended those ties temporarily. Theo was prideful and wouldn’t
bend. Besides, the two of them had engaged in actual arguments about money,
like any other couple.

Riku found himself smiling. Those fights had always ended in makeup sex,
almost like they were a new kind of foreplay. He hadn’t always won the
arguments, like the one they’d had about moving out of his ex’s
house and into a rented room.

To save on money, he’d wanted to stay “just a little longer”
despite the fact that they’d been sleeping on an air mattress in his
ex’s living room. The word “uncomfortable” didn’t
begin to define that situation but it had felt safe because Riku had been able
to pay bills without worrying where he would rest at night.

Theo had ultimately been the hero of that fight because he’d shown Riku
how selfish he was being. His lover had managed it without making Riku feel
bad, which was almost a miracle.

So, why was he so tangled up about bringing the Billings parents back into the
picture? They’d apologized for calling him Theo’s Asian fetish,
which was apparently the worst offense in their eyes. Shouldn’t he
forgive them?

No, he thought. There’s an essential disconnect between how I view the
world and how they do. We can’t resolve that.

Hands closed on his shoulders, and he realized he’d been standing still
instead of cleaning. He relaxed into the familiar touch of Theo’s
skilled fingers as Theo began massaging his shoulders and that spot where he
carried ninety percent of his tension, which was at the base of his skull. He
must have been unmoving for quite a while because Theo, partially deaf and
visually impaired as well, sometimes missed things that happened around him.
He’d noticed today, though.

Riku turned and Theo dropped one hand into Riku’s palm. He signed,
“What’s wrong?”

“I’m borrowing trouble,” he said and signed. He caught the
light playing over Theo’s hair and reached up to touch a lock that had
fallen in front of Theo’s eyes. “You’re gorgeous, you know
that?”

“Thank you.” He laughed. “I do know, but I also am aware
that you’re avoiding talking about whatever’s bothering you.
What’s wrong?”

Riku shook his head, remembered Theo might not be able to see that, and
answered, “I don’t want to talk about it here.”

“Maybe we should go home, and we should resume this cleaning
tomorrow?”

He didn’t want to go back to the rented room and face Theo’s
parents. “I’d better finish up here or it’s going to drag on
all summer.”

“By yourself?”

“You can go back if you want,” Riku offered.

“Why don’t I stay with you, keep you out of your head?”

Riku hugged him, feeling the warmth of Theo’s skin on his forehead as he
leaned against him. “I love you. Thank you for understanding how much I
need you to be with me right now.”

Theo kissed him, angling his head so their noses didn’t bump. “I
love you.” He smacked Riku’s hip lightly. “Now. Let’s
get cleaning. I don’t just love you.” He signed into Riku’s
hand. “I crave your touch.”

“And my mouth, I hope,” Riku signed back. “I’ve wanted
to taste you for days.”

 

About the Author

Emily Carrington is a multipublished author of male/male and transgender
women’s speculative fiction. Seeking a world made of equality, she
created SearchLight to live out her dreams. But even SearchLight has its
problems, and Emily is looking forward to working all of these out with a host
of characters from dragons and genies to psychic vampires. And in the
contemporary world she’s named “Sticks & Stones,” Emily
has vowed to create small towns where prejudice is challenged by a passionate
quest for equality. Find her on Facebook at Shapeshifter Central or on her
website.

Author’s Website

Emily on Facebook

Emily on Twitter

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

Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15

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Ashlight Dominion: Fear of Breath Blitz

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Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, Dystopian

Date Published: February 3, 2026

J. Trevino Kelley

In a world where poisoned air has stolen breath itself, survival is no
longer a solitary act, it is a covenant. From the ashes of collapse rises New
Umoja, a fragile but unbroken community bound together by the Mesh, a living
network of memory and thought. At its heart is a struggle: who gets to
breathe, who belongs, and how hope endures when systems are built to
suffocate. Ashlight Dominion follows those who refuse to vanish, weaving
stories of resilience, betrayal, and rebirth into a tapestry of survival. This
debut novel by J. Trevino Kelley is both mythic and immediate, exploring how
history, power, and identity shape the fight to endure and remain true. With
prose that burns and breathes, it asks: What does it mean to rise from ash,
not untouched, but unbroken?

About the Author

J. Trevino Kelley

 J. Trevino Kelley is a writer and strategist with a lifelong interest in
systems, power, and human behavior. A husband and father of four, raised by a
single mother as one of seven children, he draws from lived experience,
leadership work, and a deep curiosity about how societies respond to
disruption. His speculative fiction explores survival, identity, and the
consequences of rebuilding the world after collapse. Ashlight Dominion is his
debut novel.

 

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Just Look at Those Boots Teaser

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Children’s Western

Date Published: 02-26-2026

Publisher: Solander Press

 

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A.J. is so excited about his new cowboy boots. He wears them on the
first day of the school year. Mom said it was for only one day and then back
to his regular boots or sneakers. During recess, A.J. plays in an exciting
game of kickball. His boots get very messy during the game.

When he gets home, Jon, the farm hand, see the boots and tells him to clean
them up then get into his work boots. Jon tells him to give Lady Star a ride
because she’s waited all day for him.

On the ride, A.J. heads to the shallow pond out in one field. While A.J.
daydreams, Lady Star sees the pond and decides to get there fast. A.J. loses
control of Lady Star and finds himself thrown into the pond. Daydreaming on
the ride means A.J. has additional chores when he returns to the barn.

In this second book, Sherry Roberts continues to tell stories inspired
by her father’s childhood during the 1930s and 1940s in Northeast
Oklahoma. For those who enjoy stores of the American West, as well as history,
Just Look At Those Boots, is a must-read. 
 
 
Excerpt
 
“Hi, Benji. Ready for a new school year?” I ask as I sit beside him on the bus.
“I like summer better.” He shrugs as he lets me know his feelings. It’s the first day, and Benji looks like he just got out of bed. Of course, Benji always looks like he just got out of bed. His hair is going every which way, and his shirt is wrinkled like he slept in it. He probably did. “Why are you late?”
“Been one of those mornings when everything was going wrong. Sadie made a mess while I was milking her, and I had to change clothes.
Then Jon saw me daydreaming as I was walking to the bus. Of course, Lady Star was at the rails with him. I had to go over to give her a nose rub. So, yeah, I guess I was daydreaming a bit.” I shrug my shoulders.
 Benji laughs. “You’re always daydreaming. What was it about this time?”
“I was thinking about the first day of school. I want it to be a good year. Also, I was looking at my new boots.”
“Wow, I didn’t notice. Those are great. When did you get them? Won’t they hurt if you wear them all day? You haven’t really worn them in yet.”
Benji talks like this. He asks questions but forgets to give you time to answer any of them.
“Benji, stop.”
Benji takes a breath. I look at my boots again. “I got them on Saturday. I wore them all Saturday and Sunday while working around the farm.
They don’t hurt. They’re still stiff but it’ll get better. I like wearing them, and Mom said it was okay to wear them today but maybe not every day.”

 

About the Author

 Sherry Roberts

 Sherry Roberts is an award-winning children’s book author. She holds a
Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Louisville. She has
written multiple award-winning fiction picture books such as ‘Twas the
Night Before Christmas…A First for Gus, Hello, Can I Bug You?, Gabriel
and the Special Memorial Day, What’s Wrong with Barnaby, and The Best
Reading Buddy. She also has written two non-fiction award-winning picture
books, Sonnet, Sonnet, What’s in Your Bonnet? and A Visit Through the
Wetlands. These two were illustrated with her photography. Sherry’s
newest picture book, Amica Helps Zoe, was featured in Kirkus e-newsletter June
2025 as Indie Pick and received a Get It: Recommend review.

As a former middle school teacher, Dr. Roberts decided to write her first
middle-grade novel (ages 8-13). Her debut novel, The Galaxy According to CeCe,
is the first book in a three-book series. It was officially released on
February 24, 2024. Book two, The Galaxy According to Cece: The Mysterious Dr.
Pruitt, was released August 2024. Book three, The Galaxy According to Cece:
The Stars Align, released February 2025.

Sherry’s next venture is a chapter book series (ages 6-8). The first
book, Just Call Me Pardner, was released August 1, 2025. The series is about a
young boy in the 1930s on a small farm in Northeastern Oklahoma and is
inspired by stories of her father’s childhood in the 1930s. Book 2, Just
Look at Those Boots, launches in early 2026, with Book 3, Just Don’t
Give a Girl a Frog, launching in November 2026.

Dr. Roberts has also written many articles that appear in various academic
journals, along with three textbooks. Personal Financial Literacy is in its
fourth edition (Pearson). She is an associate professor of Marketing in Jones
College of Business at Middle Tennessee State University.

 

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Connecting Goals to Impacts and Outcomes Blitz

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Harnessing Structured Conversations for Customer-Driven Value Delivery

Non-Fiction (Business, Strategy, Product Management, Agile)

Date Published: January 26, 2026

 

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You’ve been in that Agile planning session.

Everyone agrees on goals like “improve customer experience” or
“increase engagement.” The roadmap looks aligned. The OKRs are
approved. But when the sprint ends, no one can clearly explain what success
actually means—or why customers should care.

Months later, your product team ships a feature. Customers don’t use it.
Stakeholders ask uncomfortable questions. Someone says, “I thought we
were building something different.”

This isn’t a delivery problem. It’s a conversation problem.

Across Agile teams, product management organizations, and enterprise
transformations, teams work hard, follow the process, and deliver on
time—yet still struggle to create real customer and business value. The
gap isn’t execution. It’s how goals, assumptions, and decisions
are discussed.

Structured Conversations is a practical toolkit for closing that gap.

This book shows product leaders, Agile coaches, and delivery teams how to use
clear language and visual thinking to align strategy, product decisions, and
day‑to‑day work around measurable outcomes.

In this book, you’ll learn how to:

* Write clear, outcome‑focused goals using VERB + NOUN syntax that eliminate
ambiguity

* Connect customer needs to business impact using Empathy Mapping, Customer
Journey Mapping, and Impact Mapping

* Align product roadmaps and delivery plans with OKRs that drive
accountability and learning

* Validate assumptions early using Hypothesis‑Driven Development and Example
Mapping

* Facilitate cross‑functional Agile conversations where disagreements become
productive

* Turn vague requirements into clear, executable user stories that teams
interpret the same way

Drawing on experience across startups, financial services, and large‑scale
Agile transformations, Structured Conversations bridges the gap between
product strategy and value delivery with techniques that work in real‑world
environments.

The approaches are modular. Start with the technique that addresses your
biggest challenge today. Each chapter includes step‑by‑step guidance, real
examples, and “Try This Right Now” exercises you can apply
immediately.

Whether you work in product management, Agile delivery, or organizational
change, this book helps you turn good intentions into measurable outcomes.

 

 

About the Authors

Claude Hanhart is a Product Strategist and Agile Coach with 10+ years of
leadership experience in driving groundbreaking product strategies and agile
transformations. His approach centers on fostering innovation rooted in
business objectives, customer experience, and market leadership through tools
such as Generative AI, OKRs, and Behavior-Driven Development (BDD).

Claude’s unique academic background – with an MA in Ancient Near Eastern
Archaeology and Languages from the University of Berne in Switzerland and an
MA in Geography from the University of Minnesota – brings an interdisciplinary
perspective to modern product challenges. His multilingual abilities in
German, Swiss German, and French have proven invaluable in international
collaborations.

Structured Conversations represents Claude’s commitment to bridging strategic
thinking with practical implementation. Currently based in New Jersey with his
wife, Claude finds that their three energetic dogs serve as daily reminders
about the importance of clear communication and patient guidance – principles
that translate beautifully into his professional coaching work.

Rachel is a seasoned business‑strategy professional whose career has been
built around turning complex challenges into clear, actionable solutions. With
a track record of guiding organizations toward measurable impact, she blends
rigorous, data‑driven analysis with a human‑centric mindset – always asking
how people, processes, and technology can work together more effectively. Her
practical, results‑focused approach has helped teams align goals, streamline
actions, and translate those actions into lasting outcomes.

Structured Conversations marks Rachel’s first full‑length publication, and she
feels especially honored to have been invited by Claude to co‑create this
work. Rachel lives in North Carolina with her husband and their four
rambunctious cats. When she isn’t untangling business puzzles, you’ll find her
exploring the local arts scene, hiking and mountain biking, or enjoying a
quiet evening of reading with her feline companions.

 

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I Made It Home Blitz

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Children’s Book

Date Published: December 6, 2025

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I Made It Home is a heartwarming story that captures the essence of
courage, kindness, and friends who flutter into our lives when we need them
most. When a change of plans leaves young Aubrey finding her own way home, she
embarks on an unexpected adventure with her cheerful companions, a butterfly,
a bluebird, and a ladybug. Sometimes the smallest friends lead us the
furthest. Along the way, she and a frightened little boy learn valuable
lessons about courage, friendship, and the magic of kindness. This enchanting
tale will delight readers of all ages and remind them that every kind gesture
brings us closer to where we belong.

 

About the Author

Debra I. Thomas

 Debra I. Thomas shares her excitement about her children’s picture books,
hoping they will inspire joy and adventure in young readers. She is also
working on more imaginative stories that reflect her love for children and
pets, inviting readers to explore the magic of storytelling together.

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