You Don't Have to Learn the Hard Way

You Don't Have to Learn the Hard Way: Making It in the Real World: A Guide for Graduates
Benbella Books, Hardcover, 283 pages, 1933771747

Chock-full of practical advice for teen and college age readers on everything from how to nail that first big job interview, avoid dangerous relationship mistakes and master the art of managing your finances, to circumventing the typical pitfalls of adjusting to the adult world, this valuable guidebook synthesizes a life's worth of wisdom into one engaging volume. The author, a self-made multimillionaire who did learn the hard way offers to young people what he wishes someone would have given him when he was starting out--a no-nonsense blueprint for personal and professional success. Told with self-deprecating humor and grace, this book is never preachy and features irresistible self-discovery quizzes that guide young readers to deeper self-understanding.

QUIZ: How Big a Risk-Taker are You?
by J.R. Parrish,

1) If I had enough money to live on for a year, right now, I'd . . .

a. Quit my job and take off for a year because I may never get that chance again.
b. Keep working and spend the extra cash on fun stuff.
c. Try to save most of it.

2) I would change jobs if . . .

a.I thought the new job would be something I would like to do more and would be much better at.
b. The new job title would sound cool to my friends, even though the money is no better.
c. The new place offered me more money, even if I didn't really like the job.


3) I envy people who are richer than I am and I want to be one of them one day.

a. Strongly agree.
b. Not sure.
c. Disagree.


4) I planned a great vacation and then find out I lost my job. I . . .

a. Go anyway because I figure I'll feel more like looking for a new job after I've had some fun.
b. Go on a vacation that doesn't cost as much but still will be fun.
c. Cancel the vacation plans and start job-hunting.

5) Here's how I feel about debt:

a. All my friends have some, for college loans and stuff, so it doesn't bother me.
b. I don't want to have credit card debt but I realize that sometimes that's what happens in life.
c. I don't like the idea of owing anybody anything.

6) If I see something I like, I . . .

a. Try to talk myself out of it because I often regret buying stuff afterward.
b. Shop around to see if other stores have the same thing for less.
c. Buy it -- it's not worth the time to come back later and it might be gone by then.

7) When I am facing a big money decision, I . . .

a. Do some research on the Internet, call friends, and even see what my parents or some other expert-types have to say.
b. Call my friends to see what they would do.
c. Flip a coin -- these things even out.

SCORE: Count up your points

1) a. 3; b. 2; c. 1
2) a. 1; b. 2; c. 3
3) a. 3; b. 2; c. 1
4) a. 3; b. 2; c. 1
5) a. 3; b. 2; c. 1
6) a. 1; b. 2; c. 3
7) a. 1; b. 2; c. 3

What your score means:

If you scored between 19 and 21 points, you are willing to take a lot of risks. Sometimes risks pay off -- but if you don't also start trying to weigh your choices more carefully, you could find yourself in financial trouble.

If you scored between 11 and 18 points, you seem able to balance some risk with common sense. That's just what you'll need to succeed in your career.

If you scored between 7 and 10 points, you don't seem comfortable taking a lot of risks. While you don't want to play it completely safe all of your life, you're probably on the right path to financial security.

The above is an excerpt from the book You Don't Have to Learn the Hard Way: Making it in the Real World: A Guide for Graduates by J.R. Parrish. The above excerpt is a digitally scanned reproduction of text from print. Although this excerpt has been proofread, occasional errors may appear due to the scanning process. Please refer to the finished book for accuracy.

Copyright © 2009 J.R. Parrish, author of You Don't Have to Learn the Hard Way: Making it in the Real World: A Guide for Graduates

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The Holy Bullet by Luís M. Rocha

Photobucket The Holy Bullet by Luís M. Rocha
416 p, Putnam, ISBN: 978-0-399-15600-7

This book is a thriller centered on a journalist who discovers that the 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II (by Mehmet Ali Agca) was actually part of an elaborate conspiracy, not a lone gunman scenario.

What makes this doubly fascinating is that Rocha bases the thriller on actual information he got in 2005 from a man who claims to have killed Pope John Paul I, and that elements of the conspiracy are real. I don’t know if you caught the first one, but it’s a sequel to the international bestseller, The Last Pope, and it ties the murder of John Paul I with John Paul II.

Synopsis:

May 1981, Vatican City: As twenty-thousand euphoric believers piled into St. Peter’s Square to await Pope John Paul II’s weekly general audience, a young man of twenty-three, his hands hidden in his jacket pockets despite the warm day, settled among the pilgrims near the barricades where the Pope would soon pass by. As the slow-moving jeep carrying the Bishop of Rome drew even with where he was standing, Mehmet Ali Ağca pulled a gun from his pocket and fired six times at point blank range before he was stopped by the people around him, and arrested by security forces. Although grievously wounded John Paul II survived the attack. (He would later ascribe his survival to miraculous intervention—a divine hand guiding the bullet so as to miss every major organ and artery.) Over the years the attack on the Pope has been the subject of intense speculation. Some believe it was the work of a crazed lone gunman. Others are convinced it was a conspiracy involving one or more foreign powers and their intelligence services. No one has even come close to explaining what really happened, why the Pope was targeted, or who was responsible. Until now.

Already an international bestseller, Luis M. Rocha’s THE HOLY BULLET (Putnam; August 20, 2009; $25.95), a stunning sequel to his 2008 sleeper hit The Last Pope, is a fast-paced historical thriller about the conspiracy surrounding the attempted assassination of John Paul II. Although a work of fiction, the story is based in part on information Rocha says he received in 2005 from a man who claimed to have killed John Paul II’s predecessor, and then backed up his claim with documentary proof. With unusual twists and turns right up until the end, the story alternates between past and present, fact and fiction, as it returns readers to the same captivating world of money, violence and Vatican conspiracies they encountered last year in Rocha’s critically acclaimed debut. Now international journalist Sarah Monteiro, the rogue priest Rafael Santini, the mysterious assassin JC, and a host of new and returning characters including a Muslim with visions of the Virgin Mary, and members of the world’s most powerful—and secretive—organizations, come together in another gripping thriller.

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Spotlight - Virtual Vice by Jason M. Kays

458 p, BookSurge Publishing, ISBN: 1439201315

Synopsis:

In Virtual Vice by Jason Kays, readers follow disillusioned entertainment attorney Ian McKenzie as his professional life takes a decided turn for the questionable when he is hired by the charismatic and dangerous Scott White to represent Scott’s interests in his cutting edge Internet startup, Metropoleis Multimedia. Unfortunately for Ian, Scott has more in common with Scarface’s Tony Montana than Apple’s Steve Jobs, and things go from questionable to deadly in no time flat. As Scott’s confidant and consigliore, Ian soon finds himself caught between the Feds, La Cosa Nostra, and the Cali Cartel in a fatal game of corporate winner-take-all.

Excerpt

La Cosa Nostra: crime pays

White continued in his drunken narrative and told McKenzie that it was after his sister’s murder that he had resolved to distance himself from the family. He had flown to Jamaica to spend a month with Lance Astor, a high school friend who had opened a successful bar on the island. It hadn’t taken long for Scott to realize that the bar was a front for laundering drug money. It took him even less time to decide he wanted in on the action. Astor started off the rookie on small runs, delivering packages of marijuana to the roughly two dozen men he had stationed on tourist beaches to sell the drug. Astor referred to these men as “kiosks”, because they were assets in identifying which hotels and clubs had the highest demand for drugs in a given week. The drug kingpin had strategically placed sources in these venues as well. Concierges, doormen, and bartenders doubled as drug dealers. During the 1970s, the demand for cocaine was on the rise. Astor had partnered with Ernesto Velez, a Colombian living near Santiago de Cali, to supply him with coke.

Within a few years, White had become part of Astor’s inner circle of trusted runners. He convinced his friend that he should try his hand at export to the U.S., volunteering to spearhead the risky expansion of the business. Scott had picked up some basic piloting skills during his work for Astor. The plane of choice for transport to the U.S. was the powerful Beech Duke. The twin-engine aircraft had ample capacity to accommodate a large payload. Fast and capable of long-distance flights at high altitudes, it was unlikely to be as easily detected by either the DEA or the Coast Guard. White used an abandoned grass airfield in rural Northern Maine to fly in the marijuana. He then drove the bales to distribution centers in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. White used his mother’s house near Westbrook, Maine, to stash the drugs while he confirmed transfer points. The marijuana was of premium quality – far superior to what could be obtained in the U.S. domestic market. It was a hit with the Eastern Seaboard states’ rich preparatory and Ivy League college students.

White was tight with his money and managed to sock away a tidy sum for investment back into his thriving business. After five years of building his distribution network in the U.S., he felt he had maximized his revenue to expense ratio. Expanding operations further would result in overhead that would disproportionately diminish his profits. White was not particularly intelligent, sophisticated, diplomatic, or skilled, but he did have the ability to apply himself 110 per cent to a given endeavor, to the exclusion of all else. It was this freakish idiot savant myopia – and selfishness – that allowed him to succeed despite his undisputed shortcomings. By studying the business paradigm of his mentor, Lance Astor, White came to the realization that at this juncture, he would only be able to grow his business through the diversification of product.

With the advent of Studio 54 drug chic during the mid-70s through the 1980s, cocaine was becoming the drug of choice with the celebrity set and amongst the upwardly mobile. Demand was such that the price point of the drug was at a premium. White knew that the profit margin in cocaine trafficking was far greater than in the selling of marijuana. The risks in selling and distributing the drug were also significantly higher. White wasn’t dissuaded by the enhanced risks. Astor was content with his share of his friend’s U.S. marijuana trade. He wasn’t interested in expanding his cocaine distribution to America. So White had Astor’s blessings when he met with Ernesto Velez to propose an association.

Velez held a prominent rank within the Cali cartel. He counted Gilberto Rodríguez Orejuela amongst his good friends. Velez’s estate sat upon a 100-acre natural game reserve on the Pacific Ocean, just outside the city of Buenaventura. He retained an army of men, many of whom were soldiers belonging to Colombia’s military, to guard his compound. White was stopped at the ornate wrought-iron gate to the house, where security swept his Mercedes for car bombs. He made his way up the winding drive, flanked by mahogany, oak, walnut, and pine trees, to the sprawling colonial-style mansion. Velez’s barrister met White at the door to escort him to the library. Two large men in dress khakis and berets stood guard with machine guns on either side of the doors leading to the lavishly appointed library. White was patted down for weapons before being granted entry. As the massive twelve-foot-high doors swung open, he stepped into the large room. The hand-painted domed ceiling and furnishings were done in the baroque style. The lithe, strikingly handsome Velez approached to greet White. Dressed in a conservative, three-button Saville Row suit and Hermès tie, the man was as impeccably appointed as the room they were meeting in.

Velez had an authoritative and deliberate manner about him. He greeted his visitor in a resonant voice, overlaid with a cigar-and-whisky patina, as he motioned him to join him for coffee on the adjoining veranda. Velez got right down to business. The drug lord stated quite clearly that he had distribution already established in New York and California; thus, he wouldn’t stand to benefit from White’s Rhode Island and Massachusetts network. Velez had a virtual air force of cargo and jet airplanes at his disposal, piloted by military veterans. White’s shuttle service would, therefore, not add value to the kingpin’s operation. Given the situation, he began to wonder how it was that he had merited an hour of the overlord’s time. Velez suggested that White might be of assistance in the Pacific Northwest.

Vancouver was a prosperous city with a quiet influx of moneyed Hong Kong resident aliens. It had a demographic profile of the young and the rich, with a propensity for hedonism. Seattle fit a similar profile. The latter had experienced a severe economic downturn during the 1970s, but as the 1980s approached, its economy was on the upswing. And like Vancouver, Seattle was a young city with a healthy appetite for recreational drugs. High-potency marijuana from British Columbia, Canada, “B.C. bud”, had long been a staple among Seattle’s collegiate and bohemian set. Heroin was firmly entrenched as a counter-culture drug.

Due to the heavy drug traffic coming from our neighbor to the North, bringing in drugs across the Canadian-U.S. border was becoming more and more difficult as Customs agents on both sides ramped up their efforts. Given this trend, Velez thought it best to map out new routes of entry along the Washington State coastline, most of which was lightly policed by the U.S. Coast Guard. White had an advantage in this respect: he had worked summers in his youth on a crabbing boat off the Washington and Alaskan coasts. He had a good working knowledge of all major and minor ports and those places along the coastline where a plane or boat could enter undetected. Velez unilaterally set the terms of the arrangement: there was to be no negotiation. The drug lord would receive sixty-five per cent of any profit. He would supply the aircraft and men to get the drugs to the U.S., but White would be required to cover all other costs from his thirty-five per cent. Velez would retain a Seattle area accounting firm of his choice to audit White’s books quarterly.

The Colombian stressed that while his reputation globally was that of a fair and honest man, if one of the random audits showed a discrepancy, he was not a forgiving man. A slight smile crossed Ernesto Velez’s face. White looked out over the expansive estate and formal French gardens. Red deer, pumas, and jaguars appeared to peacefully co-exist there. The drug lord directed his attention to a clearing, fifty yards from where they stood. White watched as a local boy, no older than fifteen, was fed alive to crocodiles by two of Velez’s guards. The drug lord charged that the child, employed as a local mule, had been caught with a kilo of stolen cocaine – Velez’s cocaine. He reiterated that he was a fair, but unsentimental – and unforgiving – man. He stated that he would show mercy in the execution of the boy’s younger sister and parents: they would be shot dead in their sleep, painlessly and unceremoniously. The two men closed the deal with a handshake. White returned to Washington State to begin work on establishing a new network on the West Coast.

He hired off-season fishermen to pilot the drug boats, as they knew the waters and shoreline better than the DEA and Coast Guard. Velez was spot on in his forecast of market trends in the Pacific Northwest. Cocaine’s popularity in Seattle and Vancouver would quadruple in the 1980s during the Reaganomics “me generation”. White’s overall markets were modest in terms of volume of product moved in the larger California and East Coast metropolitan areas, but as the forerunner in virgin geographic territory, his relative market share was formidable. Velez was pleased with the progress; within six years, White was the primary conduit for uncut cocaine in Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia.

White maintained a low profile, but didn’t shy away from using the party circuit to promote his product. Seattle had a surplus of clubs catering to the twenty-something set, but did not offer many venues where doctors and lawyers could be in their element. Given that the latter demographic had the most discretionary income, White went to work, creating a playground for the young professionals. He purchased six spacious houseboats and the private Lake Union pier to which they were moored. He used the party boats to move his product, and the investment proved a smashing success. It was through this facet of his business that White became acquainted with Harold Cracker.

This Book Excerpt is part of the book's virtual tour, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.
Like it?! Buy it!

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The Shortest Distance Between Two Women by Kris Radish

Bestselling author Kris Radish has established herself as a favorite among readers, book clubs and independent booksellers across the country because of the exuberant way in which she celebrates empowerment, passion and friendshipwith an infectious, larger-than-life sense of humor and a genuine fondness for both her characters and her fans.  As she writes, “[I] seriously believe that all the characters in my books are real”; and with almost a million copies of her novels in print, she has created an unusual community around what she terms “true fiction.”
Radish’s new novel, The Shortest Distance Between Two Women (Bantam Trade Paper Original; August 18, 2009), is the perfect end-of-summer read.  Replete with long-buried family secrets, a rich suburban landscape, and a cast of surprising supporting characters, The Shortest Distance Between Two Women teases out the astonishing paths that love can take - and lead us down.

Synopsis :  
Photobucket
After all these years is there any way you would see me again? When Emma Lauryn Gilford heard the voice on her answering machine, she thought, How dare he? She’s put a lot of distance between herself and Samuel, filling her life with work and family, lavishing her attention on her lovely nieces and a garden that’s the pride of Higgins, South Carolina. So why does his voice still have the power to make her heart skip? Why can’t she stop thinking about this man she’d forgotten so long ago?

Emma has always been the dependable daughter, the mediator of the controlled chaos always surrounding her high-strung sisters and her widowed mother, Higgins’s own senior citizen seductress. But with the annual Gilford family reunion just around the corner, at least two of her sisters approaching meltdown, and her favorite teenage niece taking sanctuary in her home, Emma’s concrete wall of self-denial is showing cracks. And on the other side is a life she can’t put off living a moment longer.
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Sound of Water by Sanjay Bahadur

Sound of Water ~ Sanjay Bahadur
240 pp, Atria Books, ISBN: 978-1-4165-8569-5

In 2006, within a span of five months, three mining disasters in the U. S. claimed 19 lives. The Sago Mine in West Virginia, Alma Mine No. 1, also in West Virginia, and the Darby No. 1 Mine in Kentucky are widely remembered for the extensive news coverage they received and the probing questions that followed regarding industry safety standards. But in 2001, halfway around the world in India, an equally tragic event unfolded at the Bagdihi colliery. Dozens of miners were killed and injured with charges of negligence, indifference, and conspiracy waged against the managers of the operation. While some of the victims’ family members and advocates staged protests and demanded answers about why this incident happened, other survivors committed suicide and suffered permanent mental trauma.

Sanjay Bahadur, who served as a director in the Indian Ministry of Coal from 2000 to 2004, had an insider’s view of the tragedy at Bagdihi and uses his experience as the inspiration for his masterful debut novel, THE SOUND OF WATER (Atria Books; On-sale June 30, 2009; ISBN: 978-1-4165-8569-5; $16.00). With a fast-paced and intriguing narrative, Bahadur provides a heart-wrenching account of a mining disaster from the perspectives of an aging worker, the administration, and the worker’s family. As it interweaves themes of fear, death, greed, and apathy, THE SOUND OF WATER is as much an exposé about mining conditions and exploitative corporate managers, union leaders, and bureaucrats as it is about familial relationships.

Raimoti is an older, experienced miner condemned to work in Mine Number 3 with a small group of much younger “trouble makers” who laugh off his wisdom. His years in the mine tell him that this team has been instructed to dig too close to a dammed up lake and that each time his axe gouges out another section of coal, he inches closer and closer to death. In the pitch-black silence of the mine, it is the sound of water that “spells doom for a miner,” and Raimoti strains to hear the trickling that will alert him to the presence of “The Beast,” that will eventually consume him. He attempts to warn a supervisor about the precariousness of the situation but is ignored. Raimoti is anxious to speak to the manager, the disillusioned engineer Bibhash Mukherjee, but Bibhash is fighting his own personal demons. He despises his job, longs for the life he once had in the city, and finds comfort and oblivion in bottles of rum. Although Bibhash possesses glimmers of compassion, he basically resigns himself to the fact that the dregs of society who slave in the mines afford him the middle-class life he has. Bibhash’s boss, the dishonest and cowardly Pandeyji, panders to the bureaucrats like Karna, who represent the ministry and make infrequent and brief visits to the mine before returning to their offices to file rudimentary reports that do nothing to improve conditions for the miners. Because of this apathy, the expendable miners—Arif, Narasingh, Lakhan, and Sagan—perish in Mine Number 3, as well as Bibhash, who saves the life of Birsa, one of the trapped miners, but becomes a scapegoat for the insensitive establishment. The only miner’s fate we don’t know is that of Raimoti who falls through a hole in the mine’s wall—has he survived?

Perhaps more enigmatic and disturbing than the cynicism of the political and corporate characters is the callousness of Dolly, Raimoti’s sister-in-law, who eagerly awaits confirmation of Raimoti’s death in order to claim the compensation given to next of kin, despite the fact Raimoti has four daughters. Never letting sentimentality or ethics stand in their way, Dolly and her co-opted husband and Raimoti’s brother Madho, together with their teenage children, have an alcohol-fueled celebration when they learn of the payments they will receive and make no attempts to contact Raimoti’s daughters about the tragedy. Only the youngest of Madho’s daughters mourns the death of her family member.

With brutal honesty, THE SOUND OF WATER forces the reader into the harsh depths of Mine Number 3 where, along with the murky water, hopelessness and despair rise. Within the juxtaposition of life and death, Sanjay Bahadur presents a riveting indictment of India’s mining industry and reveals the spiritual convictions that are often necessary to overcome insurmountable odds.

Sanjay Bahadur was a director of the Indian Ministry of Coal from 2000 to 2004 and observed the Bagdihi disaster close-up. Today, he works in Goa where he is Additional Commissioner of Income Tax. He is at work on his second novel which will be set during the Great Indian Revolt of 1857.

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Spotlight - Fear the Worst by Linwood Barclay

Fear the Worst ~ Linwood Barclay
416 p, Bantam, ISBN: 0553807161

About the Book: 

Your daughter doesn’t come home one night from her summer job.

You go there looking for her. No one’s seen her. But it’s worse than that.

No one’s ever seen her. So where has she been going every day? And where is she now?

In Linwood Barclay’s riveting new thriller, an ordinary man’s desperate search for his daughter leads him into a dark world of corruption, exploitation, and murder. Tim Blake is about to learn that the people you think you know best are the ones harboring the biggest secrets.

Tim is an average guy. He sells cars. He has an ex-wife. She’s moved in with a man whose moody son spends more time online than he should. His girlfriend is turning out to be a bit of a flake. It’s not a life without hassles, but nothing will prepare Tim for the nightmare that’s about to begin.

Sydney vanishes into thin air. At the hotel where she supposedly worked, no one has ever heard of her. Even her closest friends seem to be at a loss. Now, as the days pass without word, Tim must face the fact that not only is Sydney missing, but that the daughter he’s loved and thought he knew is a virtual stranger.

As he retraces Sydney’s steps, Tim discovers that the suburban Connecticut town he always thought of as idyllic is anything but. What he doesn’t know is that his every move is being watched. There are others who want to find Syd as much as Tim does.

But they’re not planning a Welcome Home party.

The closer Tim comes to the truth, the closer he comes to every parent’s worst nightmare—and the kind of evil only a parent’s love has a chance in hell of stopping.

Excerpt

Chapter One

"We've also been looking at the Mazda," the woman said. "And we took a—Dell, what was it called? The other one we took out for a test drive?"

Her husband said, "A Subaru."

"That's right," the woman said. "A Subaru."

The woman, whose name was Lorna, and her husband, whose name was Dell, were sitting across the desk from me in the showroom of Riverside Honda. This was the third time they'd been in to see me since I'd come back to work. There comes a point, even when you're dealing with the worst crisis of your life, when you find yourself not knowing what else to do but fall back into your routine.

Lorna had on the desk, in addition to the folder on the Accord, which was what Lorna and Dell had been talking to me about, folders on the Toyota Camry, the Mazda 6, the Subaru Legacy, the Chevrolet Malibu, the Ford Taurus, the Dodge Avenger, and half a dozen others at the bottom of the stack that I couldn't see.

"I notice that the Taurus has 263 horsepower with its standard engine, but the Accord only has 177 horsepower," Lorna said.

"I think you'll see," I said, working hard to stay focused, "that the Taurus engine with that horsepower rating is a V6, while the Accord is a four-cylinder. You'll find it still gives you plenty of pickup, but uses way less gas."

"Oh," Lorna said, nodding. "What are the cylinders, exactly? I know you told me before, but I don't think I remember."

Dell shook his head slowly from side to side. That was pretty much all Dell did during these visits. He sat there and let Lorna ask all the questions, do all the talking, unless he was asked something specific, and even then he usually just grunted. He appeared to be losing the will to live. I guessed he'd been sitting across the desk of at least a dozen sales associates between Bridgeport and New Haven over the last few weeks. I could see it in his face, that he didn't give a shit what kind of car they got, just so long as they got something.

But Lorna believed they must be responsible shoppers, and that meant checking out every car in the class they were looking at, comparing specs, studying warranties. All of which was a good thing, to a point, but now Lorna had so much information that she didn't know what to do with it. Lorna thought all this research would help them make an informed decision, but instead it had made it impossible for her to make one at all.

They were in their mid-forties. He was a shoe salesman in the Connecticut Post Mall, and she was a fourth-grade teacher. This was standard teacher behavior. Research your topic, consider all the options, go home and make a chart, car names across the top, features down the side, make check marks in the little boxes.

Lorna asked about the Accord's rear legroom compared to the Malibu, which might have been an issue if they had kids, or if she'd given any indication they had any friends. By the time she was on to the Accord's trunk space versus the Mazda 6, I really wasn't listening. Finally, I held up a hand.

"What car do you like?" I asked Lorna.

"Like?" she said.

My computer monitor was positioned between us, and the whole time Lorna was talking I was moving the mouse around, tapping the keyboard. Lorna assumed I was on the Honda website, calling up data so I could answer her questions.

I wasn't. I was on findsydneyblake.com. I was looking to see whether there'd been any recent hits on the site, whether anyone had emailed me. One of Sydney's friends, a computer whiz—actually, any of Syd's friends was a computer whiz compared to me—by the name of Jeff Bluestein had helped me put together the website, which had all the basic information.

There was a full description of Syd. Age: 17. Date of birth: April 15, 1992. Weight: approximately 115 pounds. Eye color: Blue. Hair: Blonde. Height: 5 feet 3 inches.

Date of disappearance: June 29, 2009.

Last seen: Leaving for work from our address on Hill Street. Might have been spotted in the vicinity of the Just Inn Time hotel, in Milford, Connecticut.

There was also a description of Syd's silver Civic, complete with license plate number.

Visitors to the website, which Jeff had linked to other sites about runaways and missing teens, were encouraged to call police, or get in touch with me, Tim Blake, directly. I'd gone through as many photos as I could find of Syd, hit up her friends for pictures they had as well, including ones they'd posted on their various Internet sites like Facebook, and plastered them all over findsydneyblake.com. I had hundreds of pictures of Syd, going back through all her seventeen years, but I'd only posted ones from the last six months or so.

Wherever Syd might be, it wasn't with extended family. Susanne's and my parents were dead, neither of us had siblings, and what few relatives we had—an aunt here, an uncle there—we'd put on alert.

"Of course," said Lorna, "we're well aware of the excellent repair records that the Hondas have, and good resale value."

I'd had two emails the day before, but not about Sydney. They were from other parents. One was from a father in Providence, telling me that his son Kenneth had been missing for a year now, and there wasn't a moment when he didn't think about him, wonder where he was, whether he was dead or alive, whether it was something he'd done, as a father, that had driven Kenneth away, or whether his son had met up with the wrong kind of people, that maybe they had—

It wasn't helpful.

The second was from a woman outside Albany who'd stumbled onto the site and told me she was praying for my daughter and for me, that I should put my faith in God if I wanted Sydney to come home safely, that it would be through God that I'd find the strength to get through this.
I deleted both emails without replying.

"But the Toyotas have good resale value as well," Lorna said. "I was looking in Consumer Reports, where they have these little charts with all the red dots on them? Have you noticed those? Well, there are lots of red dots if the cars have good repair records, but if the cars don't have good repair records there are lots of black dots, so you can tell at a glance whether it's a good car or not by how many red or black dots are on the chart? Have you seen those?"

I checked to see whether there were any messages now. The thing was, I had already checked for messages three times since Lorna and Dell had sat down across from me. When I was at my desk, I checked about every three minutes. At least twice a day I phoned Milford police detective Kip Jennings—I'd never met a Kip before, and hadn't expected that when I finally did it would be a woman—to see what progress she was making. She'd been assigned Sydney's case, although I was starting to think "assigned" was defined as "the detective who has the case in the back of his or her desk drawer."

In the time that Lorna had been going on about Consumer Reports recommendations, a message had dropped into my inbox. I clicked on it and learned that there was a problem with my Citibank account and if I didn't immediately confirm all my personal financial details it would be suspended, which was kind of curious considering that I did not have a Citibank account and never had.
"Jesus Christ," I said aloud. The site had only been up for nearly three weeks—Jeff got it up and running within days of Syd's disappearance—and already the spammers had found it.

"Excuse me?" Lorna said.

I glanced at her. "I'm sorry," I said. "Just something on my screen there. You were saying, about the red dots."

"Were you even listening to me?" she asked.

"Absolutely," I said.

"Have you been looking at some dirty website all this time?" she said, and her husband's eyebrows went up. If there was porn on my screen, he wanted a peek.

"They don't allow that when we're with customers," I said earnestly.

"I just don't want us to make a mistake," Lorna said. "We usually keep our cars for seven to ten years, and that's a long time to have a car if it turns out to be a lemon."

"Honda doesn't make lemons," I assured her.

I needed to sell a car. I hadn't made a sale since Syd went missing. The first week, I didn't come into work. It wasn't like I was home, sick with worry. I was out eighteen hours a day, driving the streets, hitting every mall and plaza and drop-in shelter in Milford and Stratford. Before long, I'd broadened the search to include Bridgeport and New Haven. I showed Syd's picture to anyone who'd look at it. I called every friend I could ever recall her mentioning.

I went back to the Just Inn Time, trying to figure out where the hell Syd was actually going every day when I'd believed she was heading into the hotel.

I'd had very little sleep in the twenty-four days since I'd last seen her.

"You know what I think we're going to do?" Lorna said, scooping the pamphlets off the desk and shoving them into her oversized purse. "I think we should take one more look at the Nissan."

"Why don't you do that?" I said. "They make a very good car."

I got to my feet as Lorna and Dell stood. Just then, my phone rang. I glanced at it, recognized the number on the call display, let it go to message, although this particular caller might not choose to leave yet another one.

"Oh," said Lorna, putting something she'd been holding in her hand onto my desk. It was a set of car keys. "When we were sitting in that Civic over there"—she pointed across the showroom—"I noticed someone had left these in the cup holder."

She did this every time she came. She'd get in a car, discover the keys, scoop them up and deliver them to me. I'd given up explaining to her it was a fire safety thing, that we left the keys in the showroom cars so that if there was a fire, we could get them out in a hurry, time permitting.

"How thoughtful," I said. "I'll put these away someplace safe."

"You wouldn't want anyone driving a car right out of the showroom, now would you?" She laughed.
Dell looked as though he'd be happy if the huge Odyssey minivan in the center of the floor ran him over.

"Well, we might be back," Lorna said.

"I've no doubt," I said. I wasn't in a hurry to deal with her again, so I said, "Just to be sure, you might want to check out the Mitsubishi dealer. And have you seen the new Saturns?"

"No," Lorna said, suddenly alarmed that she might have overlooked something. "That first one—what was it?"

"Mitsubishi."

Dell was giving me dagger eyes. I didn't care. Let Lorna torment some other salespeople for a while. Under normal conditions, I'd have tolerated her indecision. But I hadn't been myself since Syd went missing.

A few seconds after they'd left the showroom, my desk phone trilled. No reason to get excited. It was an inside line.

I picked up. "Tim here."

"Got a second?"

"Sure," I said, and replaced the receiver.

I walked over to the other side of the showroom, winding my way through a display that included a Civic, the Odyssey, a Pilot, and a boxy green Element with the suicide rear doors.

I'd been summoned to the office of Laura Cantrell, sales manager. Mid-forties with the body of a twenty-five-year-old, twice married, single for four years, brown hair, white teeth, very red lips. She drove a silver S2000, the limited-production two-seater Honda sports car that we sold, maybe, a dozen of a year.

"Hey, Tim, sit down," she said, not getting up from behind her desk. Since she had an actual office, and not a cubicle like the lowly sales staff, I was able to close her door as she'd asked.

I sat down without saying anything. I wasn't much into small talk these days.

"So how's it going?" Laura asked.

I nodded. "Okay."

She nodded her head in the direction of the parking lot, where Lorna and Dell were at this moment getting into their eight-year-old Buick. "Still can't make up their minds?"

"No," I said. "You know the story about the donkey standing between two bales of hay that starves because he can't decide which one to eat first?"

Laura wasn't interested in fables. "We have a good product. Why can't you close this one?"

"They'll be back," I said resignedly.

Laura leaned back in her swivel chair, folded her arms below her breasts. "So, Tim, any news?"
I knew she was asking about Syd. "No," I said.

She shook her head sympathetically. "God, it must be rough."

"It's hard," I said.

"Did I ever tell you I was a runaway myself once?" she asked.

"Yes," I said.

"I was sixteen, and my parents were ragging on me about everything. School, my boyfriends, staying out late, you name it, they had a list. So I thought, screw it, I'm outta here, and I took off with this boy named Martin, hitched around the country, saw America, you know?"

"Your parents must have been worried sick."

Laura Cantrell offered up a "who cares" shrug.

"The point is," she said, "I was fine. I just needed to find out who I was. Get out from under their thumb. Be my own self. Fly solo, you know? At the end of the day, that's what matters. Independence."

I didn't say anything.

"Look," she said, leaning forward now, resting her elbows on the desk. I got a whiff of perfume. Expensive, I bet. "Everyone around here is pulling for you. We really are. We can't imagine what it's like, going through what you're going through. Unimaginable. We all want Cindy to come home today."

"Sydney," I said.

"But the thing is, you have to go on, right? You can't worry about what you don't know. Chances are, your daughter's fine. Safe and sound. If you're lucky, she's taken along a boyfriend like I did. I know that might not be what you want to hear, but the fact is, if she's got a young man with her, already she's a hell of a lot safer. And don't even worry about the sex thing. Girls today, they're much savvier about that stuff. They know the score, they know everything about birth control. A hell of a lot more than we did in our day. Well, I was pretty knowledgeable, but most of them, they didn't have a clue."

This Book Excerpt is part of the book's virtual tour, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.
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Article - Ten Trivia Facts You Probably Used to Know

Ten Trivia Facts You Probably Used to Know
By Caroline Taggart,
Author of I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot From
Read more about the book here.
You know how it is -- the kids come home from school full of enthusiasm for a new subject, ask you to explain something, and you think, "Oh, yes, I used to know that." When I started to write a book on things you'd forgotten from your schooldays, I realised that I half-knew lots of stuff. I'd heard of phrases and clauses, but did I know the difference between them? I had a vague idea about photosynthesis -- it's to do with how plants grow, isn't it? But doesn't being green come into it somewhere? And then there was the War of 1812 -- what was that all about?

So there are three Top Trivia Questions to start with; I'll answer them and then I'll give you seven more. That way, even if you can't answer the kids' questions, you can quickly change the subject and throw in some knowledge of your own.

  1. Language: What's the difference between a clause and a phrase? These are the building blocks of a sentence. The difference is that a clause contains a subject and a verb. It often stands alone as a simple sentence (He loves dogs), but may also be part of a longer sentence (He loves dogs, but he doesn't own one). A phrase is a group of words in a sentence that does not contain a subject and a verb (In the afternoon, he took his mother's dog for a walk).
  2. Biology: What is photosynthesis? It is -- as we suspected -- to do with how plants grow. It's the process by which they convert carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates, using the energy they absorb from light by means of a green pigment called chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is stored mainly in the leaves and is the reason most plants are green. Photosynthesis releases oxygen into the atmosphere, enabling the rest of us to breathe.
  3. History: The war of 1812, between the U.S. and Britain, actually lasted nearly three years, from 1812 to 1815. Britain was already at war with France (under Napoleon) and the U.S. sided with the French. American ships, trying to break a blockade that would prevent supplies from reaching France, were being seized by the British, who then coerced American seamen into the Royal Navy. On top of that, the U.S. was disputing British control of territories in Canada; New England's support for Britain complicated the issue further. This war -- the last time the U.S. and Britain fought on opposing sides -- ended in stalemate when the British defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo and subsequently lifted their blockade.
  4. Literature: Where does the expression 'It just growed' come from? It's a misquotation from Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-96), a fiercely anti-slavery novel published in 1852, when this was the political hot potato in America. The most famous character is the slave girl Topsy, who didn't know where she came from (i.e. didn't realise that God had made her) and said, 'I s'pect I growed.'
  5. Math: who was that Pythagoras guy anyway? He was a Greek mathematician and philosopher who lived in the 6th century BC. His theorem (the word comes from the same root as "theory" but means something that can be proved) states that in a right-angled triangle "the square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides." The hypotenuse is the longest side of the triangle, opposite the right angle. This theorem really really matters to mathematicians, because it is fundamental to calculations used in architecture, engineering, astronomy, navigation and the like.
  6. Geography: which were the original 13 states of the Union? In alphabetical order: Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Virginia. Delaware was the first to ratify the new constitution and is nicknamed "The First State" to this day.
  7. Chemistry: what's the Periodic Table of Elements? It's a way of setting out the names of all the known chemical elements so that the vertical columns contain groups or families with similar properties. It was devised in the 19th century by a Russian chemist called Mendeleev and has been in use ever since. An element, by the way, is a substance that cannot be decomposed into a simpler substance by a chemical process. Groups of elements come together to form compounds. So, for example, a combination of the element hydrogen (H) and the element oxygen (O) can form the compound water (H2O).
  8. Physics: what are conduction, convection and radiation? These are the ways in which heat is transferred from one "body" (that is, "thing") to another. Put simply, conduction means that a cool thing -- whether solid, liquid, or gas -- is warmed up by coming into contact with a hot thing. Convection occurs in liquids and gases and is the basis of the principle that hot air rises. A hot liquid or gas is generally less dense than a cool one; as the hot particles rise, cooler ones rush in underneath to take their place. The hot particles, having risen, cool and come down again, and so on. Radiation involves the energy that all objects emit. It is the only one of the three methods that works in a vacuum and is how the sun's rays manage to warm the Earth from so far away.
  9. Art: who was Jackson Pollock? He was what is called an Abstract Expressionist and he believed that the act of painting was more important than the finished product. His paintings are therefore highly colourful, often huge, and (like his life) chaotic to the point of frenzy. He died in a motor accident in 1956, aged only 44.
  10. Music: why should I care about Johann Sebastian Bach? He was incredibly important in the development of classical music: without him, some say, there might have been no Haydn, no Mozart, and no Beethoven. He wrote mostly organ music, church music, and orchestral music; his most famous works include the Brandenburg Concertos, the St. Matthew PassionThe Well-Tempered Clavier, and Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring. He had many children, including the composers Carl Philip Emmanuel and Johann Christian.

©2009 Caroline Taggart, author of I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot From School

Author BioCaroline Taggart, author of I Used to Know That: Stuff You Forgot From School, has been an editor of non-fiction books for nearly 30 years and has covered nearly every subject from natural history and business to gardening and astronomy. She has written several books and was the editor of Writer's Market UK 2009.

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Spotlight - Shadow of Betrayal by Brett Battles

Shadow of Betrayal ~ Brett Battles
400 pp, Delacorte Press, ISBN: 038534158X

Synopsis:

The meeting place was carefully chosen: an abandoned church in rural Ireland just after dark. For Jonathan Quinn—a freelance operative and professional “cleaner”—the job was only to observe. If his cleanup skills were needed, it would mean things had gone horribly wrong. But an assassin hidden in a tree assured just that. And suddenly Quinn had four dead bodies to dispose of and one astounding clue—to a mystery that is about to spin wildly out of control.

Three jobs, no questions. That was the deal Quinn had struck with his client at the Office. Unfortunately for him, Ireland was just the first. Now Quinn, along with his colleague and girlfriend—the lethal Orlando—has a new assignment touched off by the killings in Ireland. Their quarry is a U.N. aide worker named Marion Dupuis who has suddenly disappeared from her assignment in war-torn Africa. When Quinn finally catches a glimpse of her, she quickly flees, frantic and scared. And not alone.

For Quinn the assignment has now changed. Find Marion Dupuis, and the child she is protecting, and keep them from harm. If it were only that easy. Soon Quinn and Orlando find themselves in a bunker in the California hills, where Quinn will unearth a horrifying plot that is about to reach stage critical for a gathering of world leaders—and an act of terror more cunning, and more insidious, than anyone can guess.

Fast, smart, sleek, and stunning, Shadow of Betrayal ~ Brett Battles is vintage Brett Battles: a gritty, gripping masterpiece of suspense, a thriller that makes the pulse pound—and stirs the heart as well.

Excerpt:

Quinn could see them now. There were two of them, crouched low and half-hidden by the thick brush. As Quinn and Nate watched, one of the men sprinted forward, stopping only when he reached the outside of the church wall. He then moved down the wall until he came to what had once been a doorway, and peered inside.

"Are we going to play games, or are we going to meet?" It was Otero. He was still standing in the middle of the church, not concealing his presence. When there was no response, he said, "Two minutes and we're leaving."

The man who had been looking into the church from the doorway glanced back at his partner and waved for him to come over.

"Quinn," Nate said.

"What?"

"I thought they were only allowed one companion."

Quinn shot Nate a glance, then looked at a monitor Nate was pointing at. It was the one covering the north approach to the church, the way Otero and Ownby had come.

"I don't see anything," Quinn said.

"In the tree," Nate said. He leaned forward and touched the screen.

For half a second, Quinn still didn't see anything, then a slight movement revealed the form of a man lying prone on one of the branches, facing toward the church.

A quick glance at a monitor that gave a broader view of that side of the church confirmed Quinn's suspicion that the man was high enough to see through the missing roof into the abandoned structure.

Quinn pushed the mic button again. "Peter, we have a problem."

"What?"

"Check the feed to camera six. In the tree, near the top of the image."

There was a pause.

"Do you see him?" Quinn asked.

"Yes."

"Is he one of yours?"

"I played by the rules. Only two," Peter said. "He must be one of theirs."

Quinn wasn't convinced of that, but there was no time to argue the point. On another monitor the two newcomers stepped through the doorway, entered the church, and walked a couple paces before stopping. They looked nervous, like this was the first time they had ever done anything like this.

"You need to abort right now," Quinn said.

"We need that information," Peter said.

"Peter," Quinn said, "if you don't abort, you might not get anything."

At the church Otero said, "You guys are going to have to come a little closer."

The taller of the two men shook his head. "We are fine here. I think you have something to show us."

Otero smiled, then tossed a coin in the air so that it landed a foot in front of his counterparts.

"Your turn," Otero said.

The tall man tossed his own coin toward Otero. This was the prearranged recognition signal. Otero had been carrying a fifty-yen Japanese coin, and the informant a 1998 Canadian half-dollar.

"Peter!" Quinn said.

"The meet's already started," Peter said. "They won't answer their phones until they're back in their car."

"They might not even make it back to their car," Quinn said, then let go of the button.

"We can start the van," Nate suggested. "That should throw everyone into a panic. We could even fire off a shot."

It was an excellent idea, Quinn thought. He relayed it to Peter.

There was a pause, then Peter said, "Do it."

Quinn pulled his SIG Sauer P226 out of the holster under his left arm as Nate moved toward the back door to open it.

Several rapid flashes from one of the monitors caught Quinn's eye. It was the one showing the close-up of the man in the tree. He glanced at the view of the church. Otero, Ownby, and the man who had been talking for the other party were all on the ground and not moving.

The final man had just exited the church and was making a run for it. Then there was another flash. The man jerked to the left, his momentum dropping him into a bush at the side of the trail. Like the others, he didn't get up.

"Stop," Quinn said to Nate.

The door was already half opened.

"Close it. Quietly."

Nate shut the door as Quinn sat back down.

Quinn pushed the button. "Your op is blown."

"I can fucking see that," Peter said. "Goddammit! You need to keep whoever that is from getting to the bodies. One of those guys is carrying something we need."

"Don't know if you noticed," Quinn said, "but your men are probably dead. That guy in the tree's got a silenced rifle, and I'm not really interested in walking into his range."

"Do what you were going to do before! Scare him off. He's not going to want to get caught."

Quinn took a deep breath, then nodded at Nate to open the door again. He checked monitor six. The assassin was holding his position, waiting to see if anyone else was going to show up.

Quinn pulled one of the remote communication sets from a bag near the recorders. He slipped the receiver over his ear, then climbed out of the van.

"Talk me in," he said to Nate.

"You're going to try to take him out?" Nate asked, surprised.

Quinn shook his head. "I'm just going to convince him to go someplace else."

"You want your suppressor?" Nate asked.

Quinn paused for a second. If things went as planned, he'd need the noise of the shot to scare the guy off. But if things got off track?

"Toss it to me," he said.

Nate disappeared for a second, then stepped back into the doorway and threw a dark cylinder to Quinn.

Quinn stuffed it in the front pocket of his jacket as best he could. Once it was secure, he nodded back at the van. "Talk me in. You're my eyes, so try not to get me killed."

This Book Excerpt is part of the book's virtual tour, courtesy Pump Up Your Book Promotion.

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Visual Bookshelf Contest

I scream, you scream, we all scream for literary ice cream flavors on Facebook! Creative names for book-inspired Ben & Jerry’s ice cream flavors are popping up on Facebook, after a New Jersey librarian created a campaign to name a new library-themed B&J flavor.

LivingSocial’s popular Visual Bookshelf community – where millions of readers gather to share favorite books – posed the question to its 26,000 Facebook fans. Here’s a “taste” of some of the most clever (and funny!) responses:

·         Munch a Goo About Nothing
·         The Best of Limes, the Worst of Limes
·         Gone with the Mint
·         A Strawberry Named Desire
·         The Orient Espresso
·         Last of the Macaroons
·         To Kill a Mocha-curd
·         Kit Kat in the Hat

In the spirit of summer, book-lovers everywhere are invited to submit creative ideas (at Visual Bookshelf), or submit votes here: http://apps.facebook.com/livingsocial/micro/polls/989474/answer.

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Nibble & Kuhn by David Schmahmann

Nibble & KuhnDerek Dover has it all.

Derek's up for partner at Nibble & Kuhn just as that most proper of Boston law firms comically tries to `rebrand' itself for the Google era. Pompous and arbitrary, the ruling junta of partners saddles him with a high visibility lawsuit just weeks before trial. The diligent young attorney arranges things so that Maria Parma, a new associate in the firm for whom he's fallen hard, also gets named to the case. Maria, in turn, can't keep her hands off Derek, but it's complicated because she's engaged to someone else.

As Derek prepares his case on behalf of seven young victims of an industrial polluter, his anxieties about his career and his torments over Maria's mixed messages only increase. Have his eccentric WASP superiors handed him a `toxic' case to ruin his chances of becoming a partner? How can he get his opponents to settle - an outcome the presiding judge all but demands - unless his unorthodox `expert witnesses' perform with enough gravitas to match that of the other side with its Harvard Medical School scientist? Will Nibble & Kuhn survive the partners' spectacularly bad business judgments? Does it even matter to Derek, given that his looming fiasco of a trial and his indiscretions with Maria seem set to sink any chance he ever had at partnership?

Ultimately, Derek sets into motion a line of inquiry that spins events entirely out of the control of the judge, jury, and any and all attorneys.

Nibble & Kuhn
  • Hardcover: 279 pages
  • Publisher: Academy Chicago Publishers (November 2009)
  • ISBN-10: 0897335929
Disclosure - This product was received for review/feature consideration.
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Article - Childhood Nightmare or Past Life Memory?

Childhood Nightmare or Past Life Memory?
by Andrea Leininger,
Co-Author of Soul Survivor: The Reincarnation of a World War II Fighter Pilot

Bringing a baby into your family is a joyful experience, filled with hope and promise for a bright and happy future. That first year is filled with learning about all your child’s developmental milestones, and having those twinges of concern when your child doesn’t reach all of them according to the time frames established in the books and websites you spend hours poring over. Yet while the child development resources teach us about what to look for in our children’s physical, emotional, and mental growth, as well as the red flags indicating when there may be cause for concern, there is one area I have never seen addressed in the countless resources I’ve studied, and that is how to determine if your child might be experiencing a Past Life Memory.

Of the endless things we worry about encountering when we have a new baby, this is surely an issue that wouldn’t even cross our minds unless we had experienced it before. Autism, Down’s Syndrome, Deafness? All common concerns among new parents. But a Past Life Memory? It never occurred to me. That is, until my son turned two and started having nightmares and talking about the life of a man who died in a burning plane.

My book, Soul Survivor – The Reincarnation of a World War II fighter pilot, chronicles the events my family experienced when my then two-year old son James began experiencing a past life memory. I remember the frustration I felt at the time as I tried to research what it was my son was experiencing, and how to help him. Most of the books I read about reincarnation were dry and clinical, and offered me little assistance in dealing with my son. Fortunately, I was given Carol Bowman’s wonderful book Children’s Past Lives, and I finally received the guidance I’d been searching for.

Having lived through this experience and hearing from countless parents whose children have similar stories, I believe that Past Life Memory in children is a fairly common occurrence. Many parents, unaware of the issue of Past Life Memory, may attribute their child’s fears or comments to ordinary factors or an over-active imagination. While in many instances that may be true, knowing what signs and behaviors to look for is crucial in evaluating your own child’s situation and helping them deal with this little-known phenomenon.

If you’re reading this, chances are you suspect your child may be experiencing a Past Life Memory and are looking for guidance. I’ve compiled the following list of behaviors that may indicate this is what you’re dealing with. Please read it carefully and check which items apply to your situation:

1.    Vivid, recurring dreams or nightmares.

2.    Unexplained fears or phobias.

3.    Unusual talent or giftedness.

4.    Knowledge of items, machinery, or processes from another era that they would have no way of knowing.

5.    Talking openly about life in a different time.

6.    Speaking in a foreign language or with a foreign accent they have not been exposed to.

7.    Looking for an item or person they are convinced they had or knew, but you know that item or person never existed.

8.    Repeatedly drawing a recurring scene, event, people, or items that are not a part of their daily life and which they could not be aware of.

9.    Spontaneously reading or writing.

10.    Suddenly speaking with much more clarity and a broader vocabulary than used on a daily basis.

If your child has experienced any of these behaviors, you may be dealing with a Past Life Memory. If so, I would advise you to take the matter seriously, and start keeping a detailed journal of events and statements as they occur. More than likely your child will make these statements randomly using a matter-of-fact tone, and more often than not, there will be something that triggers the statement. Your child may or may not be open to discussing the comment once it’s made, but remaining calm and keeping the tone conversational will go a long way towards getting your child engaged in conversation with you.

When you ask questions, ask only open-ended questions that don’t provide any information. For example, your daughter is watching you peel potatoes, and suddenly says “Mommy, when I lived before, I was a boy and we used to grow potatoes on a farm.” Say “That’s interesting! Where was your potato farm?” rather than “Was your potato farm in Idaho or in Ireland?” That way you can be certain your child is coming up with the details themselves, and isn’t just repeating what you said.

Unfortunately, very little is known about the phenomenon of  past life memory in children, but if parents keep an open mind, listen to their children, and start chronicling these events as they occur, we may soon have a much broader understanding about the eternal journey of the human spirit.  
©2009 Andrea Leininger, coauthor of Soul Survivor: The Reincarnation of a World War II Fighter Pilot

Author Bios
Bruce and Andrea Leininger live with their son, James, now eleven years old, in Louisiana. You can visit their Web site at http://www.soulsurvivor-book.com. Ken Gross is a novelist and nonfiction writer who lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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The Black Male Handbook: A Blueprint for Life

The Black Male Handbook: A Blueprint for Life
Edited by Kevin Powell; 1-4165-9224-5; 224pp

In order to become the architects of our own lives, we must create a blueprint. A plan.  Most architects, when designing their structure use a pencil for their blueprints. Why do they use a pencil? So they can erase and make modifications. None of us are perfect, but we are here for divine reasons – so there are no mistakes to erase. 

--Hill Harper, actor, CSI: NY, and New York Times bestselling author, Letters to A Young Brother

Excerpted from the foreword of THE BLACK MALE HANDBOOK

Kevin Powell, known for his powerful written voice and community activism, has long been an advocate of positive Black male development.  In 2004, he organized the 10-city national State of Black Men tour, which were widely attended and critically acclaimed. In June 2007 Kevin produced Black and Male in America, a 3-day national conference attended by 3000 men and boys. The critical follow-up to that conference are monthly Black male empowerment workshops. And Powell has consistently written about Black male issues in his previous books. Now, the writer/activist and 2008 Democratic candidate for the U.S. Congress (in New York City) is set to publish what will be the ground-breaking life survival guide for Black boys and men who aim to be leaders and mentors in their communities, families, and careers.  THE BLACK MALE HANDBOOK: A Blueprint for Life (Atria Books; ISBN: 1-4165-9224-5) is edited by Kevin Powell with a foreword by actor and author Hill Harper, and topical essay contributions by such esteemed Black men as TV political correspondent Jeff Johnson; writer and award-winning documentary filmmaker Byron Hurt; and author/educator Dr. William Jelani Cobb.

Bad news surrounding the fate of Black boys and men is frequently reported in the media.  They’re not graduating from high school.  The numbers of Black men dying as a result of violence perpetuated by another Black male continues to increase in alarming numbers.  The consistently growing numbers of Black children being born to single mother households is at a crisis level in the Black community.  Everyone is offering the reports, but no one seems to be offering any answers or, more importantly, guidance and solutions. THE BLACK MALE HANDBOOK offers a collection of intimate, deeply personal and prescriptive essays by influential Black men on surviving, living and winning.

Essay highlights from THE BLACK MALE HANDBOOK:

  • Lasana Omar Hotep’s essay on Creating a Spiritual Foundation – Lasana, educator/consultant, writes about his own spiritual journey which greatly contributed to his growth, which had less to do with organized religion and became more about spiritual empowerment.  He writes, “Of all the tools we have to repair our communities and ourselves, spirituality is the most powerful.  Commitment to spiritual growth creates a firm foundation to build upon.”  He offers several steps Black males can – and must –take to improve their lives, by addressing the following:  Stop thinking of divinity as limited to the confines of a building; stop building their faith on fear of damnation; and stop seeking personal salvation above the good of the whole.
  • Jeff Johnson’s essay on Developing Political Awareness – Jeff, a TV political correspondent, re-defines what being the “best” really means by what he writes as blowing up the mindsets which further the ideas that mediocre and average are acceptable; that we are competing against one another to do things that in many cases we need to be working together to do; that it’s acceptable to use the term “nigger” as a term of endearment. Instead, Black men and Black boys must educate themselves “to engineer and erect institutions”, “create sophisticated strategies” and “learn to turn tragedy into triumph”.  He offers a six-step blueprint to embrace being what he terms the B.E.S.T.
  • Byron Hurt’s essay on Redefining Black Manhood – A former college quarterback turned anti-sexist activist, writer and award-winning documentary filmmaker, Byron describes how he evolved to become a leading advocate of the prevention of violence against women.  He writes honestly about how, during an interview for a job with the gender violence MVP Program, he became fearful of how he would be perceived for taking such a job by his former teammates, frat brothers, and male family members.  Yet, he writes that it was one of the best decisions he made in that he has expanded his awareness of social justice to include gender, racial and class oppression.  Further, he has challenged his own attitudes about women and is more open to receiving constructive criticism from women about his own behavior. Byron outlines five steps he took on his own journey to help him become more aware about race, class and gender issues.
  • Ryan Mack’s essay on Starting a Plan for Economic Empowerment – Ryan, president of Optimum Capital Management and former Wall Street equity trader, offers one of the most practical chapters in the book, which entails important, accessible wealth building and financial management advice.  From defining key financial terms such as stocks and bonds to a section on home ownership and improving one’s FICO score to steps for eliminating credit card debt, Ryan lays out a very doable, step-by-step plan of action to achieving one’s financial goals.  He also writes an impressive section on entrepreneurship, which in today’s job market is essential.
  • Kendrick B. Nathaniel's essay on Taking Care of Your Physical Health – Kendrick, a seasoned mentor/life coach and certified fitness professional, implores Black men to understand that physical well-being is the most important gift they possess.  He offers important, yet practical steps to getting on the road to improved and optimal physical health, such as drinking more water, eating methodically, eliminating fast food, incorporating more fiber into one’s diet, getting the proper amount of sleep and increasing one’s exercise with as little or as much as taking the stairs instead of the elevator and walking rather than driving.
  • Andraé L. Brown’s (Ph.D.) essay on Moving Toward Mental Wellness – Andraé, an assistant professor at Hunter College of the City University of New York, wrote a very moving essay beginning with a personal recollection about his father’s suffering a fourth heart attack in ten years and how despite it all, his father always managed to recover. He writes, “My father’s fight was not against flesh and blood but against the dark forces of the world. New combatants emerged daily, whether racism, sexism, corruption, police brutality…and he battled them all with great vigilance.”  This led to Andraé’s belief that there is a direct correlation between mental health, physical health and oppression.  As such, he has devoted his life’s work to helping others develop and maintain top mental health.  In this essay, he explores Black males and therapy, how to recognize everyday trauma, as well as the legacy and impact of violence and homophobia. He also offers an extensive list of strategies for maintaining mental wellness.
  • Kevin Powell’s essay on Ending Violence Against Women and Girls – Kevin Powell’s very personal and poignant essay, which details his own brief history of violence against a former girlfriend and real stories about women whose lives tragically ended due to violent acts by men in their lives, goes to the heart of healing Black male/female relationships.  Simply put, the violence women and girls suffer at the hands of men and boys must end.  To that mission, Kevin, now a pro-feminist and anti-sexist male, prescribes his “Seven Steps to Ending Violence Against Women and Girls”, rules which the author admittedly created and followed for himself and has recommended to countless men and boys for over a decade.
  • Dr. William Jelani Cobb’s essay titled “I Am A Man” – William’s essay, also stirring and intimate, describes his attempt to save his nephew’s life.  His nephew was going in the direction of far too many Black men – hitting his girlfriend, erratic and violent behavior toward others, drinking to excess.  During a three-hour visit, William, Associate Professor of History at Spelman College, spoke candidly with his nephew, putting the concept of Black manhood in historical context, from their beginnings in this country, and leading up to the present day.  He writes, “Black manhood came to embrace the twisted ideals of masculine domination that existed in broader America.  It is not coincidental, for instance, that during the same time period where Black women were being portrayed as sexually immoral and loose by the White public, we began to see these same statements echoed by Black men.”  He also explores the role which hip hop has played “…not as a means of disguising our humanity behind boasts and bling, but as a place to honestly examine what it means to be a man.”
In addition to the essays, THE BLACK MALE HANDBOOK also features an appendix filled with specific recommendations and suggestions to assist and support Black men and Black boys on their journey, including recommended reading, music, film and documentary lists, instructions for Black males when stopped by the police, personal hygiene, grooming and etiquette tips, and dress and style advice.
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