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Monthly Archives: June 2024

Only the Strong Survive: A Womanist Journey by Adeyela Albury Bennett

Only the Strong Survive is a coffee-table book to enjoy time and time again. Written from a womanist perspective that centers on Black, Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC), the author takes readers on a journey that highlights women and goddesses from each continent. This book is a great conversation piece for book clubs, women’s groups, and anyone interested in getting a glimpse into women’s power in the universe since the beginning of time.

The first of its kind, Only the Strong Survive introduces readers of all ages to powerful feminine influencers, such as Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the US Supreme Court Justice; Atabey, the creator goddess of the Taino-Arawak people of the Bahamas and the Caribbean; Kidst Dingel Mariam, the Ethiopian name for the Virgin Mary; and Madragana, the Moorish woman who is an ancestor of Queen Elizabeth II.

Proceeds from the sale of this book will benefit girls, young women, and transgender and nonbinary people in the Women in Training, Inc., programs to end period poverty and End Poverty. PERIOD!

Only the Strong Survive on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1665303891

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Generations Series by Suzette Harrison and Suzette Riddick

Welcome to the Generations Series, a collaborative literary endeavor that launches with “Forever Beautiful” and “Wandering Beauty” by Suzette Harrison and Suzette Riddick. Listen to the BAN Radio Show interview with the authors, go here: http://tobtr.com/s/12344031

This series features ten interconnected novellas, divided into five sets. Each set pairs one historical fiction novella with a contemporary women’s literature novella, creating a rich tapestry of interwoven narratives. The heroines in both historical and contemporary stories are directly linked, forming a multigenerational saga.

The small, all-Black fictional town of Colemanville, North Carolina is at the heart of these stories. Founded in 1875 on the pillars of Love, Liberty, and Legacy, Colemanville thrives on its rich history, tight-knit community, and enduring spirit. Despite the challenges over the years, its idyllic scenery and small-town charm make it the pride and joy of its residents.

Generations celebrates Black culture, sisterhood, and the remarkable strength of Black women throughout the ages. So, pour yourself a glass of sweet tea, settle in, and let the stories of Colemanville transport you to a place where history and contemporary life beautifully converge. Your journey through the Generations Series awaits.

Available in paperback and ebook. View the Generations storyline here – https://bit.ly/44eNIJH

Check out the Generations Series on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D2JWFLF8

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Reap: The Bible Belt Series by Tiffani Quarles Sanders

Reap: The Bible Belt Series by Tiffani Quarles Sanders
https://www.amazon.com/Reap-Bible-Tiffani-Quarles-Sanders-ebook/dp/B0CJLT4HGF

ALABAMA 1931:

Annie Lawson thanked the Lord everyday for the life she and her husband, Sam, had made for themselves as sharecroppers on the Moore plantation. They were even more blessed to raise their granddaughter Liz, a bright, observant, book-loving girl who longed to continue her education past the primary grades. But when Mary Moore decides she wants Liz to drop out of school and become her private maid, Annie calls on her friends, the Miller siblings, to save Liz without risking eviction for her family.

As they work out a plan to free Liz from Mary Moore’s clutches and secret her off the plantation, the Millers reach deep into the pain of their past, harkening back to the 1870s and confronting the moment when Bill Moore altered their lives forever. As an influential and powerful white man in the Deep South, Bill was never charged with his crimes, leaving the Millers devastated and forever caught in the shadow of his vile act.

Discover how decades of simmering evil come to a boil in Reap, Tiffani Quarles-Sanders’ latest book. For Bill Moore, the lesson is clear: A man will reap what he has sown.

About Tiffani Quarles-Sanders
A native of Montgomery, Alabama, Tiffani Quarles-Sanders is an author of historical and modern African-American fiction, and the owner of Hollow Bridge Publishing. Quarles-Sanders holds a B.S. in Early Childhood Education from Alabama State University and has been teaching as an elementary school teacher for 25 years.

Log into Facebook and Follow Tiffani Quarles Sanders
https://www.facebook.com/Tiffani-Quarles-Sanders-719329044867475/

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Tristan’s Choice by Savannah Jackson

Tristan’s Choice by Savannah Jackson. Learn more: https://a.co/d/5mQIgSj

Savannah Jackson’s Tristan’s Choice follows the life of Shiloh and his son Tristan fifteen years after Tristan’s birth. Shiloh and his wife, Moselle, are doing a great job raising Tristan and his sisters. Although Moselle is not Tristan’s birthmother, anyone observing from the outside would never know because she loves and treats him as her own.

All is going well for Shiloh, Tristan, and their family until a knock on the door changes everything one day. Tristan opens the front door and faces a stranger who turns out to be his birthmother, Angela. Angela returns after fifteen years to claim her son after the prompting of her boyfriend Leroy, who has recently been released from jail and believes that he is Tristan’s father.

Leroy coerces Angela to develop a relationship with Tristan using whatever necessary means. Angela meets Ms. Ella, an older woman who befriends her. Through love and wisdom, Ms. Ella helps Angela become a better person. As she changes, Angela begins to regret her actions regarding Tristan and his family.

Shiloh and Moselle witness Angela’s change and decide to allow her to have a relationship with their son once Leroy is no longer in her life. However, Tristan is initially unsure of his feelings regarding his relationship with his birth mother.

After a conversation with his family, he decides to allow Angela to become a part of his life. Tristan and his family join Angela and Ms. Ella at a festivity celebrating Angela joining a church, where he shares the good news with his birth mother.



Excerpt from Tristan’s Choice by Savannah Jackson


“I’ll get it Mom!” Tristan yelled to Moselle…

Moselle and Shiloh often left Tristan in charge of his younger eleven-year-old twin sisters, Maya, and Amelia when they had a date night; a responsibility Tristan took seriously.

A few seconds later Moselle heard the alarm system chime as the front door opened, but she didn’t hear Tristan announce the visitor. “Who is it, Tristan?”

When he didn’t respond, Moselle called out from the laundry room, “Tristan, I asked who is at the door?”

She knew that although he was only fifteen, Tristan was her most dependable child. When she got no response the second time, Moselle became concerned. She looked at Amelia who was helping her out and then placed the clean clothes in her hands back into the dryer and headed to the door.

Just as she turned the corner from the kitchen into the hallway leading to the foyer, she heard Maya say, “I think it’s his mother.”

Tristan stood face to face with a woman whose eyes mirrored his. He heard Moselle ask who was at the door but for the life of him, he couldn’t answer.

“May I help you?” Moselle’s voice sounded from behind Tristan. And then, he felt her hands on his shoulders as she moved him and stood between him and the stranger at the door.

“Yes, I’m here to see my son.” The woman’s voice and stance became aggressive.

“I think you have the wrong house.”

The woman’s eyes narrowed. She observed Moselle for a second and then settled her gaze on Tristan.

“Wrong house? No, I don’t think I have the wrong house. My name is Angela Pritchard and I’m Tristan’s mother.”


( Continued… )

Copyright 2024 All rights reserved. Book excerpt reprinted by permission of the author, Savannah Jackson. Do not reproduce, copy or use without the author’s written permission. This excerpt is used for promotional purposes only.


About the Author
Savannah Jackson
was born and raised in Wilmington, Delaware, in an Italian neighborhood called “Little Italy.” Her family’s unconditional love and support and her environment’s influence fostered her passion and talents in the Arts. Subsequently, she studied music and literature during her college years, which fed her passion for writing.

She is the author of Toward the Light and the sequel The Prodigal Son, Behind Closed Doors, The Prey, Raising Tristan, and the sequel Tristan’s Choice and Savannah’s Place. She is also the founder, organizer, and host of The Annual Authors Literary Festival, held yearly in the Richmond, Virginia, Metro Area. The Annual Authors Literary Festival is no longer held; however, Savannah hopes to one day bring it back. She is also busy completing one short story and two novellas, which she hopes will debut by the end of 2025.

In her spare time, Savannah Jackson enjoys reading, watching movies, traveling, and spending time with family and friends. She currently resides in Virginia with her son and family. For more information, email her at savnhj@aol.com. Her website is currently under revision.



 

54 Miles by Leonard Pitts Jr.

From Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Leonard Pitts, Jr. comes a historical page-turner about a family forced to grapple with its past amid a flashpoint in the American civil rights movement.

In March 1965, young Adam, raised in Harlem by his white father, George, and Black mother, Thelma, returns to his parents’ home state of Alabama to join in the voting rights campaign, only to be brutalized in the Bloody Sunday melee. He is still recovering when he is struck a heavy emotional blow, learning of a horrific family secret that sends him spiraling further into danger, and drawing Thelma back, for the first time in twenty years, to the South she both hates and fears.

Meanwhile, Thelma’s brother Luther is also spiraling, but in a different way. Forty-two years after his parents were lynched before his eyes, and twenty years after the man who led the lynch mob walked out of court a free man, Luther has just made a shocking discovery. He’s found the murderer, Floyd Bitters, helpless and enfeebled in a rest home—literally at Luther’s mercy. And Luther, who has never overcome this life-defining trauma, grapples with the awful question of what justice now demands.

Set against a backdrop of racial conflict and transformation, 54 Miles explores what happens when cycles of trauma echo through generations, and what erupts when people are pushed to their breaking point.

Praise for 54 Miles

“54 Miles is a stunning historical novel—heart-wrenching, propulsive , and beautifully written. Leonard Pitts Jr. works powerful magic in this unforgettable story.”
—Jonathan Eig, New York Times-bestselling author of “King: A Life”

“In his stirring new novel, Leonard Pitts, Jr. takes us back to 1965 Selma, around and through the dizzying changes happening in society to tell a deeply reflective story of two families dealing not only with that era’s upheavals, but also memories of a brutal and painful past.”
—Denise Nicholas, author of Freshwater Road


Intimate Conversation with Leonard Pitts, Jr.

Leonard Pitts, Jr., is the author of the novels The Last Thing You Surrender, Grant Park, Freeman, and Before I Forget, as well as two nonfiction works. He was a journalist for more than forty years, including a long tenure as a nationally syndicated columnist for the Miami Herald. He is the winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, in addition to many other awards. Born and raised in Southern California, Pitts now lives in suburban Washington, DC.

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Celebrating 20 years of Publishing with Yonder Harrison

Yonder Harrison and Ella D. Curry: A Literary Friendship Forged at Capital BookFest

In the vibrant heart of the literary world, amidst the bustling energy of book festivals and author signings, some connections are destined to stand out. Such was the meeting of Ella D. Curry, president of EDC Creations, and the celebrated author and poet Yonder Harrison at the Capital BookFest, a pivotal event that celebrates African-American authors and their works.

Yonder Harrison is a celebrated author, dedicated civil servant, loving father, devoted husband, and an all-around great man. He is the creative force behind the “What I Do Is Taboo” series, an erotic collection of books that follows the journeys of unique characters. Erotic in nature, yet hilarious and exciting, this series of short stories, inspired by true events, offers readers a glimpse into a world of fantasy…or perhaps reality.

Yonder’s passion for writing was ignited by the captivating stories of his favorite authors. Inspired by their work, he began to put his own thoughts on paper, releasing his first piece in 2005. The “What I Do Is Taboo” series, his premiere work currently available to the public on Amazon and online retailers, will ultimately consist of seven books.

His influence on readers has inspired him to explore various aspects of the literary world. Yonder takes pride in his ability to bring awareness to topics such as business, health, relationships, family, and faith, all while infusing humor into the challenges of everyday life.

For Yonder, keeping God, his beautiful wife, three children and his family close is essential, providing him with peace and tranquility. His notable works include co-authoring “Joy Comes in the Morning: 90 Day Devotional” and authoring titles such as “Lost and Turned Upside Down,” “Suckubus,” “Taboo Mocha: An Erotic Novel,” “The Incubus,” and the “What I Do Is Taboo” series (books 1-5).

As Yonder Harrison celebrates 20 years as a published author, reflecting on his remarkable journey reveals a story of passion, dedication, and community support. His debut in 2005 with the “What I Do Is Taboo” series marked the beginning of a prolific career, one that has seen him grow into a revered figure in the literary world. This erotic collection of books, inspired by true events, follows the journeys of unique characters, blending humor and excitement with a touch of fantasy.

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The Last Thing You Surrender: A Novel of World War II by Leonard Pitts Jr.

The Last Thing You Surrender: A Novel of World War II

Could you find the courage to do what’s right in a world on fire?

Pulitzer-winning journalist and bestselling novelist Leonard Pitts, Jr.’s new historical page-turner is a great American tale of race and war, following three characters from the Jim Crow South as they face the enormous changes World War II triggers in the United States.

“The Last Thing You Surrender” is the intertwining story of two families from the Jim Crow South – one black and poor, the other wealthy and white – through the carnage of World War II, an ordeal that will threaten their faith and challenge everything they know about race hatred and love.

An affluent white marine survives Pearl Harbor at the cost of a black messman’s life only to be sent, wracked with guilt, to the Pacific and taken prisoner by the Japanese . . . a young black woman, widowed by the same events at Pearl, finds unexpected opportunity and a dangerous friendship in a segregated Alabama shipyard feeding the war . . . a black man, who as a child saw his parents brutally lynched, is conscripted to fight Nazis for a country he despises and discovers a new kind of patriotism in the all-black 761st Tank Battalion.


Set against a backdrop of violent racial conflict on both the front lines and the home front, The Last Thing You Surrender explores the powerful moral struggles of individuals from a divided nation. What does it take to change someone’s mind about race? What does it take for a country and a people to move forward, transformed?

Nora Jean M. Goodreads 5-Star Customer Review for The Last Thing You Surrender 
This is a POWERFUL read, and I highly recommend it to anyone who is an avid reader. The language is beautiful although the story is haunting. The character development is very real, and it makes the reader hurt even more for these people who become important to the readers’ lives. This is an area of history that we do not learn in school, and the author has provided an imitate portrait of this time. Read this book!

Reader Review from Grayson Hugh
5.0 out of 5 stars | A New Classic

The best novels not only entertain us with good characters, an interesting story and skillful prose; they show us something about what it means to be a human being. Tolstoy, Joyce , Faulkner, Hemmingway, Updike, Morrison, Baldwin, Wright, Momaday, to name just a few, have created timeless works that are timeless stories of the human experience. With “The Last Thing You Surrender”, by Leonard Pitts, Jr., we have a new classic.

It is fitting that it is a story about race, as it would seem the brains and souls of men and women, especially in America, need to continue to evolve. But this book, The Last Thing You Surrender, is more, much more, than a dry treatise on that subject. It is a love story, a human story, a story of war and peace, it is a story about the love, pain, the joys and sorrows that pass between a parent and child, grandparent and grandchild, sister and brother.

It is the story of what is learned and lost between forces of good and evil. It is eloquent, heartbreaking and beautiful. It is a new classic. Read it, America; read it, world. And learn some more about that most tremendous gift of all that the Creator gave us: the ability to see things through another’s eyes, to care deeply about someone other than one’s self, in short, to love.

Reader Review from Sheila Boyce
5.0 out of 5 stars | Powerful, compelling and important story

Since first reading Leonard Pitts, Jr.’s columns in the Miami Herald almost 18 years ago, I have found that if Pitts has something to say, I want to read it. . . in fact, I need to read it. He can put complex, often difficult, ideas into beautiful words that show the reader his point of view, educating and helping the reader gain empathy and understanding.

I ordered Pitt’s latest book, #TheLastThingYouSurrender, as soon as it was released – and it was everything I expected and more. It is a deeply researched work of historical fiction, with a compelling story that is hard to put down. I tried to keep from racing through the book, as I didn’t want to say goodbye to the characters who became friends, and who showed me the world through their eyes – which is why we read!

Yes, there are parts that are very difficult to read, but part of the power of this book is to show us, to remind us of the brutality of parts of our history that get glossed over as some of us extol the “good old days.”

I highly recommend this book, and hope Mr. Pitts will write a sequel to show us how they carry their inspiration and motivation into battles to come.

Editorial Review: The Last Thing You Surrender
Leonard Pitts, Jr., a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, turns again to America’s fraught history of race relations in this unflinching, gritty WWII saga. It centers on a trio of finely drawn characters, two black and one white, all from Alabama, whose worlds collide because of Pearl Harbor.

Marine Private George Simon—wealthy, religious, white—survives the sinking of his ship because Eric Gordy, a black messman, rescues him. Eric dies, and while George recuperates, he pays a condolence call on Eric’s widow, Thelma. Thelma and her brother, Luther Hayes, a bitter alcoholic, are living with the memory of their parents’ lynching 20 years earlier.

George and Thelma begin a correspondence after he returns to active duty; she takes a job in a shipyard. Luther, deciding this is a white man’s war, tries to evade the draft but ends up serving with a tank battalion in Europe. George endures horrific conditions in the Pacific as Thelma faces growing racial hostility at work, culminating in a brutal moment of violence that compels her to make a difficult decision.

While remaining true to his characters, Pitts brings the story lines to realistic conclusions even as he holds out hope for the future, resulting in a polished, affecting novel. —Janelle Walden Agyeman, Agent Marie Brown Assoc.


 

Chapter Excerpt: The Last Thing You Surrender

Luther stood on top of the tank. He felt his mouth fall open. He felt his mind fumble for language. But there were no words.

It was a camp of some sort, barracks arranged in neat rows. And hobbling, shuffling, tottering toward them from every direction came an assemblage of stick men in filthy black-and-white striped prison suits. Maybe some of them were women, too. It was hard to tell. The creatures seemed sexless.

Dazed, Luther dismounted the tank. His mouth was still open.

The creatures swarmed the colored tankers. It was difficult to believe they were even human. Their eyes were like those of small, frightened animals, peering out from the caverns their eye sockets had become. Their mouths were drawn tight against their bony jaws. You could look at them and see where tibia met patella, count their ribs by sight. They were little more than skeletons wearing rags of flesh.

And their eyes gleamed with a madness of joy, an insanity of deliverance at the sight of the colored tankers. They shook clasped hands toward Heaven, they smiled terrible, toothless smiles, they looked up at the Negro soldiers like penitents gazing upon the very throne of God. A woman—at least he thought it was a woman—took Luther’s hand and lifted it to her cheek. Her grip was like air. She held his skin to hers, which was papery and thin, almost translucent. Her face contorted into an expression of raw, utter sorrow, and she made groaning sounds that did not seem quite human. It took Luther a moment to realize that she was crying because her eyes remained dry, no water glistened on her cheeks. She had no tears left in her.

And Luther, who had never touched a white woman before, who had never so much as brushed against one in a crowd, who had avoided even that incidental contact with a kind of bone-deep terror accessible only to a Negro man in the Deep South who grew up knowing all too well what messing with a white woman could get you, could only stand there, stricken and dumbfounded, as this woman pressed his hand to her cheek. He was a man who had seen his parents tortured and burned to death before his very eyes at his own front door by white people. It had never occurred to him that their capacity for bestial cruelty was not limited to the woes they inflicted upon Negroes.

But here was the proof, this poor thing whose gender he had to guess, this creature whose age might have been 16, might have been 60, holding his hand in her airy grip, crying without tears.

Luther looked around. The place reeked of death and shit, a stink of putrefaction that surely profaned the very nostrils of God. Naked and emaciated bodies lay stacked in piles exactly like cordwood, only their gaping mouths and sightless eyes attesting to the fact that once they had been human and alive. Flies droned above it all in great black clouds, a few of them occasionally descending to walk in the mouths and eyes of the dead.

At length, the crying woman got hold of herself. Luther gently took back his hand. She gave him a shy, weak smile, touched her feathery hand to his shoulder—some sort of thank-you, he supposed—and wandered slowly away. Luther watched her go, still dazed, still failed by language. And he still struggled to understand. It had never occurred to him, not even in his angriest, most bitter imaginings, that something like this was possible.

How could white people do this to white people?

How could anybody do this to anybody?

( Continued… )

© 2019 All rights reserved. Book excerpt reprinted by permission of the author, Leonard Pitts Jr. Do not reproduce, copy or use without the author’s written permission. This excerpt is used for promotional purposes only.

Purchase The Last Thing You Surrender: A Novel of World War II by Leonard Pitts Jr.

Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/Last-Thing-You-Surrender-Novel/dp/1572842458

Barnes&Noble:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-last-thing-you-surrender-leonard-pitts-jr/1128941167

Publisher:
https://www.agatepublishing.com/titles/the-last-thing-you-surrender

Goodreads:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38225249-the-last-thing-you-surrender

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