| Winner of both an SCBWI Spark Award and a Literary Classics "Best Books" Lumin Award for nonfiction, The Men Who Made the Yankees tells the often overlooked history of the New York Yankees from their arrival in upper Manhattan as the Hilltop Highlanders in 1903 to their first World Series title in 1923. Available in hardcover, paperback, and ebook. Ask your local bookstore to order a copy, or click HERE to order online.
|
| Winner of several independent literary awards, Dog Eared tells two stories: first, my year-long journey navigating the self-publishing world, and, second, reflections on my life as a published author. Holly Brady, Director of the Stanford Publishing Course, calls it "A quirky, informative, and highly absorbing journey into the world of self-publishing, as told by a master storyteller." Ask your local bookstore to order a copy, or click HERE to order online.
|
| An American Book Festival's "Best Book" finalist and a Reader Views Bronze Award Winner, Circles, Lines, and Squiggles: Astrology for the Curious-Minded is my deep dive into the mysterious world of astrology. Using my natal chart as a reference point, I try to solve the riddle of why an astrologer told me that I had all of the writer's destiny marks except one—contact with publishers. Ask your local bookstore to order a copy, or click HERE to order online.
|
| From Lectern to Laboratory addresses how antebellum colleges in the northeast struggled to include science and technology into their liberal arts curricula. Included in this sweeping history are the origins of the lyceum movement, the importance of West Point's engineering program, the rise of polytechnic schools, the internal struggles at Harvard and Yale, and the creation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Ask your local bookstore to order a copy, or click HERE to order online.
|
|
|