Monday, January 26, 2026

It started with K-Pop by Laura Hunsaker

Hi Everyone! I wanted to write about physical media today. I have gotten back into CDs, and if you follow me on Threads or Twitter, you'll already know that. I definitely need a shelf or CD holder now! 

It started with K-Pop...

My daughters have been fans for years, but one of the coolest things about K-Pop has been seeing the physical albums make a comeback. I didn't quite get it, at first but the same CD/Album will have many different versions. I kept thinking, "Why does she need two of the same CD?" Readers, it's not just about the actual CD. It's about all the fun things that come inside the album. The photo cards, the posters, the stickers, the post cards, the extras. Each one is a different experience. It's so fun and cute! And now that I'm a huge fan, I've joined in.

What that has done for me, is now I want more CDs. I come from the time we had CD holders on our car visor, however, in this time of Apple Car Play, my car no longer has a CD player. So I bought one for my Nightstand.

I think I really enjoy just popping in a CD and hearing the album. No worrying about my phone battery life, or the AirPods not connecting, or whatever other "back in my day" type of complaint I can make. I think I'm going to go low-tech with Blu Rays again too. I think I want to own my media again. Which, this of course brought me back to books. 

I love ebooks. I don't have to store them, I get instant gratification when I want the books, and a Kindle or my phone are just easier on my hands than a physical copy. But not all ebooks have a paperback option, either. That being said, I don't love how now when I purchase an ebook, it tells me that I'm only purchasing the license to read the book, I don't own it.

But also, I don't have the space for a full library (isn't that the dream?). So how do you decide which books you buy the physical copies of, and which books you don't? And how do you feel about movies/music/books? Does it matter to you which format you own?



My cute little CD player-it lights up, connects to Blue Tooth, headphones, all that jazz. And it has a good speaker! link here, in case you want to twin with me! 


And while many of my books do not have physical copies, the Hockey series I write as Kenzie MacLir does! Here's a link to all 3 of the books we've written so far (new one coming out soon!)

Kenzie MacLir The New York Empires




Friday, January 23, 2026

NATIONAL COMPLIMENT DAY - January 24th

 by Judy Ann Davis 

 Hello 2026! Good-bye 2025.

It’s been a long year. A wild ride. A year when negativity has reigned 365 days on the radio, television, internet, and in our lives. Whenever someone tells us to be thankful for the blessings in our lives, it’s a tough rule to follow, especially when we feel our calm, once functional world is now not the same.                

National Compliment Day on January 24th offers a wonderful way to brighten someone's day or to give credit for a job well done! It’s a day to give an extra compliment not only on January 24th, but also any time one is deserved.                        

A compliment has a powerful effect. It can empower confidence in a child. Allow a person to feel worthy. Validate someone's hard work. A compliment not only improves the receiver's mood, but also it says something about the giver. It tells them you’ve noticed. Whether we recognize someone's achievement or their classic style, a compliment can go a long way.

However, in all our attempts to stay positive, we also need to navigate negativity. This includes actively reframing our thoughts and shifting our focus by practicing mindfulness, gratitude, and self-compassion. 

It also means we may have to set boundaries and limit exposure to negative environments or people. It might mean we may have to walk away. It also involves recognizing negative patterns, challenging their validity, and consciously choosing to engage in positive actions and seek uplifting experiences instead. 

To further make our lives more pleasurable, we need to surround ourselves with uplifting, positive people who share and support our goals. Engaging in enjoyable hobbies or activities like reading, exercising, listening to music, for example, also helps to disengage from negativity.

Whatever day, whether you’re reading this or currently having one of those negative moments, take some time to treat yourself with kindness and pass it on to others...and especially be sure to do it on "National Compliment Day," January 24th! 

 

 
 
New Release:  
eBook/Digital - $2.99
Print - 6.99 

 

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Those Were the Days by Liz Flaherty

When my mind is blank, which happens more and more often these days, I usually compile a list for a blog post. I like doing that, but have to admit I've spent 20 minutes trying to think of something interesting to make a list of.

So, let's go with this. 

The day I felt like a good wife. My father-in-law and his brothers were on the TV show What's My Line? Years ago, before the internet was as big as it is now, I located an agent who had a recording of the episode. He sent it to me on a VHS tape. 

In the years since, we've put the episode on DVD and passed them out to family members and my son put it on YouTube so we can look it up, but ... oh, that first day.

The day I knew love didn't always have limits. My first child was born. That knowledge became more amazing when my second and third ones were born and I realized you could feel that way more than once. 

With the arrival of seven grandkids, I was no longer surprised by how much we could love. 

The day I felt the world open up. The very first day of first grade, when we were given reading books. I was not an extraordinary student and I hadn't learned to read before going to school, but oh, my goodness, the windows that were opened by words that had been written. 

The day I realized that "yes, I could." It wasn't a day, really, and I didn't realize it until my first book was published. In the 12 years I went to school, no teacher ever imposed limits on what I could do or what I could learn. It would have been more ideal, I guess, if I'd been able to continue my formal education, but those teachers never indicated that I should be slowed down by life's circumstances.

The worst day. A few that I keep to myself, because sharing them might open wounds that have healed--messy scars and all. 

Other worst days. The days JFK and RFK were assassinated. Nine-eleven. January 6, 2021. 

Best days. Days with family, ones with friends, ones when the guy in the other recliner and I are together in all the ways we want to be. 

The Best Writing Day. The one when I type The End.

The Other Best Writing Day: The one when I type Chapter 1

Want to share your Days with us? We'd love to hear about them!

The Girls of Tonsil Lake, my first Women's Fiction title, is on sale for 99 cents. If you haven't read it, I hope you'll give it a look.

Four women whose differences only deepen the friendship forged in a needy childhood...

They were four little girls living in ramshackle trailers beside a lake in rural Indiana. They shared everything from dreams to measles to boyfriends to more dreams. As they grew up, everything in their lives changed--except their friendship. Through weddings and divorces, births and deaths, one terrible secret has kept them close despite all the anger, betrayal, and pain. Now, forty years later, facing illness, divorce, career challenges, and even addiction, the women come together once again for a bittersweet month on an island in Maine. Staring down their fifties, they must consider the choices life is offering them now and face the pain of what happened long ago. Secrets are revealed and truths uncovered, but will their time together cement their lifelong friendship--or drive them apart forever?

 
Amazon: https://a.co/d/3NQVqLC





Friday, January 16, 2026

Make Room for a New Year by Joan Reeves

We are 2 weeks into the New Year, and practically everyone I know has been sorting and storing away holiday decorations, cleaning out closets and garages, and carting the excess to Goodwill and church thrift stores.

After thinking about this a while—when I was actively avoiding engaging in the same activities—I decided there's a reason behind this compulsive cleaning and organizing.

What they're acctually doing is a physical manifestation of making room for the New Year. I think this is a good thing.

It's like warming up your engine for the Grand Prix race ahead—making new starts, changing habits, improving whatever one thinks needs to be optimized, undertaking new projects, etcetera.

Make room in your life for new beginnings. Clear the decks for that all important assault on resolutions or goals or whatever you choose to call those good intentions we all have to optimize our human body, mind, and spirit. I cheer you on and wish you the best.

Since I did much of that cleaning, organizing, and paring down in 2025, I'm good. In fact, I'm so over the "clearing the decks" that I don't even have goals for this New Year. 

Maybe I'm still tired from all the frenetic activity of the last 6 months, but I'm okay just floating along and doing what comes next.

In my case, what comes next is the writing. I'll confess I do have writing projects listed. I'm excited about getting some new books out. If—yes, if because there are always challenges—my eyes and vision hold up, I'll make that a reality.

In the meantime, if you've been clearing the decks and getting ready to launch yourself into the stratosphere, figuratively speaking, I'm offering a free romantic comedy so you'll have something to read when you run out of things to do.

You'll notice JUST ONE LOOK is still wearing its Christmas cover. 

Seduction and sex can be pretty funny—especially when both sides play dirty, and there's no holiday ceasefire in this battle of the sexes!

Get your free ebook while offer lasts.

Free ebook starts Friday Jan. 16, 2026, at 12:00 AM PST. 

Free offer ends Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026, at 11:59 PM PST.

I wish you a happy year ahead. Go forth and conquer!

Best Wishes, Joan Reeves
"Writing Happily Ever After—Time After Time




Love to read? Sign up for Joan's free newsletter, I LOVE READING, and receive exclusive content and news about book bargains and new releases.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Make it Make Cents~ Sherri Easley

 The American penny passed away quietly last year on November 12, after a prolonged illness. It was 238 years old.

We all knew it was coming, yet it still feels like the end of an era.

Once the smallest coin in our wallets by value, the humble penny outlived its sibling, the half‑penny, by a remarkable 168 years.

It’s survived now by the nickel, dime, quarter, and those elusive half‑dollar and dollar coins we only seem to encounter on rare occasions.

Why, you might ask, would something so small, so seemingly insignificant, be retired? The answer is simple and hard to argue with: it costs nearly four cents to produce a coin worth only one.

And yet…

I am old enough to remember when a penny meant something. When it had value beyond its copper weight. When there was penny candy, and parking meters, and a whole collection of sayings that stitched the penny into our everyday language:

 A penny for your thoughts…

Find a penny, pick it up…

A penny saved is a penny earned…

We slipped them into our shoes for wedding‑day luck. Tossed them into fountains with whispered wishes. Tucked them into jars, trays, and palms like talismans. Some pennies brought luck. Some carried love. Some were simply kept because it felt wrong to let them go.

 For generations, the penny has been part of the language of romance, small and easily overlooked, yet quietly powerful. Much like first glances… or second chances.

Which leaves me wondering:

What happens to all those sayings now?

What do we offer instead of a penny for your thoughts?

How do we wish someone luck without a small copper coin to press into their hand?

Maybe the penny disappears from our pockets.

But it doesn’t have to vanish from our hearts.

Romance is made of small things that carry big meaning:

The coin in your shoe.

The cent on a café floor that felt like a sign.

The last penny tossed into a fountain—just in case.

Now the penny will live on in our stories and our books. We can write of lucky pennies. Of lost ones. Of the ones you kept.

So I’ll ask you... 

What’s the most meaningful penny moment you’ve ever had?

A penny for your thoughts. 💛

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Cheese Week by Laura Hunsaker

 This is that week where time means nothing. What is time, even? 

In my household we call it Cheese Week because of this meme:


One of the things that threw me off, and had me miss my day (sorry all! I was due the 26th!). I work in a school so I do get a couple of weeks off, but what do you all do with this weird week after Christmas and before New Year's Day? Apparently  I eat too much cheese ;)

I like to leave my tree up until New Year's as well, so I'm literally in my pajamas, hanging out with my dog, watching too much Netflix, and reading all the books I got for the holidays.

I'm keeping this post short and sweet because  I would rather hear from you. What do you do with this time of year? Watch T.V. or read? Do a puzzle, travel? Tell me in the comments!

And if you need a book or two to hit your Goodreads goal, I have several short stories! Dreams of the Future is my latest, and it's a short novella/long short story. But Amethyst Heat is free, it's like 7 pages, and it counts on Goodreads ;) Just sayin'

My Short Stories/Novellas:





Saturday, December 20, 2025

The West Window by Liz Flaherty

I wrote most of this in 2018. I was surprised at how relevant it still felt when I happened onto it.

Every now and then…well, most days, I look out the west window of my office at the trees and the fields and the big round bales of hay that manage to convince me they are deer if I only see them out of the corner of my eye. And I get philosophical. I’m not sure if that comes with age or experience or weariness, but there it is. I find myself with tears on my face and not knowing where they came from or why they’re there. I laugh out loud here in the silence of this beloved room, yet am unable to pinpoint what’s so funny.

This morning, in this quiet place, I’m thinking about Christmas. I’m not “feeling it” very much so far this year. As long as I’m with family or friends, I can find it in the laughter and music that is shared there, but the feeling leaves me too soon. There is still the blessing to be found in believing, the joy in giving, and the rush of pleasure that comes with lights and wide-eyed children.

And yet.

There is so much depression at this time of year, so much loneliness, so much awareness of what we don’t have. Relationships may have changed or disappeared through the year. Loss might have become such a part of you that it seems to have its own heartbeat. You may try to go back to sleep when you wake in the morning because facing the day is just…well, it’s beyond you. You just can’t.

Yes, you know how lucky you are and how wonderful life is and that soon you will feel better. You get the thing with counting your blessings and faking it until you make it and smiling even though it makes your cheeks wobble and your eyes water. You get all of that.

But now it is Christmas and even though you love the lights and the kids and the excitement and the music, you’re kind of overwhelmed, too. You don’t feel like you think you should. You might be angry for no identifiable reason. You might feel compelled to make someone else feel bad because…I don’t know why. Maybe just because. Your own pain from loss and change you didn’t want may threaten to take over your life and take you down with it.

This is when you need to find your west window, even if you don’t know you have one. But you don’t have to do it alone. If you need help, it is up to you to make the call. It is when you must remember…you MUST remember…that it’s not just you. That lots of people are in the same place as you, even ones you think have perfect lives. The Size Twos. The ones with perennially good hair and always full wallets and kids who behave in the grocery store and spouses who know what they’re thinking.

But there’s fear, isn’t there?—that’s hard to get around. If you’ve been hurt, it could happen again. You could lose all the emotional gains you’ve dragged up from inside yourself in just an instant and the next time it will be even worse because you’ve talked to somebody about it and now they know. They know, but they care. If it happens again, and real life tells us it very well might, they’ll still care.

It’s dark now, a morning later, sitting here beside the west window. The office Christmas tree is covered in white lights but only a few ornaments because I never finished decorating it. The desktop is the same mess it always is, with memories showing up sometimes in the piles, stirring the laughter or the tears or both.

There…as the sun comes up in the opposite window, a deer makes his light-footed way through the field. It’s not quite light enough to see him, but I’m almost sure…but it’s not. It’s a round bale, as beautiful in its way as the deer would have been.

I shouldn’t give advice—I am as unqualified to do so as anyone could possibly be—but advice comes, I am convinced, not from thinking you know it all but from caring about the person you’re talking to. But even as I spill out here what I think you should do, I know that the best thing anyone can do for someone else, much better than giving advice, is to listen.

And the best thing you can do for yourself is the giving I mentioned earlier. Whether it’s gifts or time or just a listening ear or a terrible joke. Take an angel from a giving tree, hang mittens on another, ring a bell, visit someone who doesn’t normally get visitors. Instead of scrolling with your phone, call someone and talk on it. They’ll be glad to hear your voice. If you’re not a phone talker (there are those of us around), text. Write a letter or send a card. The truth is, if you’re thinking about someone else, you give yourself a rest.

So, if you’re having a rough holiday season, whatever the cause, find your own west window and things that give comfort—even if they’re round bales instead of deer. There is hope and love and sharing to be found and I hope you find all of it. I hope I do, too.

Merry Christmas.