Michael J. Bowler's Blog

July 21, 2025

An Emotional Rollercoaster

My multi-award-winning new novel, Losing Austin, focuses on the Bowman family, represented by possibly unreliable narrator Colton, who tells the story of how his older brother vanished one rainy day and cannot be found. Since Colton screamed in Austin’s face right before the disappearance, he feels responsible and vows to find his missing brother at all costs. He’d also like to prove to the world that he didn’t kill Austin, as many people want to believe.

Losing Austin is a story of grief and trauma and of not being able to take back angry words because the other person is no longer present to accept your apology. It’s about letting go, about accepting that some people aren’t ours, no matter how much we love them. It’s about redemption and the ability to overcome one’s past. And it’s about the need for parents to love their children equally—no matter that one child might require more of their time—because all children need to be nurtured. It’s maybe my most emotional book yet, if early reviews are any indication.

“For readers who seek stories that are emotionally rich, unafraid to confront difficult truths, and tinged with just enough mystery to keep the pages turning, “Losing Austin” is an unforgettable experience. It is a novel that lingers, like a memory, like a question, like the ghost of someone you are not ready to let go.”—Aulia at Goodreads

“This book is not just about a missing boy. It is about grief. About the way loss fractures a family, leaving jagged edges that do not quite fit together anymore. It is about guilt and redemption and that desperate, aching hope that maybe, just maybe, love can transcend time, space, and even reality itself.”—Ralphseyi at Goodreads

Losing Austin has been compared with bestsellers like Gone Girl, We Were Liars, and The Vanishing Season. Author Kim Bartosch (Ask The Girl) had this to say: “If you’re a fan of books that blend real-world emotion with eerie mystery—think Paper Towns meets Stranger Things—this one should be on your TBR.”

I feel I’ve crafted something extra special with this book simply by tapping into the raw emotions of the family members and keeping the story simple and accessible. Yes, Austin disappears without a trace and Colton comes to believe in the possibility of alien abduction. But this book is about holding onto hope under all circumstances. Colton refuses to stop hoping his brother will be found, even when everyone around him says he should, and he refuses to give up searching. His tenacity and devotion to finding Austin against all odds makes Colton Bowman one of my favorite and most memorable characters.

Buy the Book

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Published on July 21, 2025 13:05

September 24, 2024

What Is A Monster?

My newest novel, Forever Boy, has been born and, while written for teens, young adults, and the young at heart, the story delves into the essense of human nature, something we can all relate to. Does someone become a monster by choice or is monstrosity thrust upon them such that they can no longer be decent human beings, no matter how hard they try?

Forever Boy appears to be a contemporary youth tale mixed with the paranormal, but the characters grapple with some weighty issues like free will, abuse, bullying, and loneliness. Does monstrosity come from within or without? Does one need to look like a monster to be one? If someone looks frightening, does that automatically make them dangerous? We all have our light and dark sides and every day we choose which one to display. These realities about human nature form the essence of Mary Shelley’s brilliant Frankenstein, and they permeate Forever Boy, as well.

I believe there are monsters in this world, but they are humans who choose to be that way; Frankenstein’s creature didn’t start out violent and evil, but the violence and hatred people directed at him from human society poisoned his soul. My title character Drágan Albescu, has dealt with great hardships and much rejection in his fourteen years and could easily go the way of Frankenstein’s creature.

Does he?

You’ll have to read the book to find out.

Forever Boy has been getting stellar reviews from editorial sites and has, in my opinion, a dynamic cover designed by Sanusi Emmanuel, who has given the book a striking appearance that’s hard to ignore.

Orphan Drágan, always on the move from place to place, lands in Millwood, Maine where he finds himself surrounded by a cast of mostly likable characters who learn and grow and come of age as the story progresses. Isaac, through whose eyes the story unfolds, is someone most of us can relate to. He is also the first character I’ve ever created who, like me, was born with hearing loss and must navigate life through the impreciseness of hearing aids. If you’re a mom, you just might love the character of Penelope Foster who, as one reviewer puts it, is “the kind of mom all kids wish they had; one who listens to and believes in her child.”

This same reviewer writes, “Drágan is a complete enigma. A boy seemingly outside of time, of place. But Drágan holds dark secrets. As the bond between the boys strengthens, Drágan begins to peel back the dark curtain on who he really is. This is a bell that can’t be unrung; a sight that cannot be unseen.  As Isaac begins to comprehend, he is shaken to his core.”

Grab your copy today and dive right into an unforgettable adventure!

Pick up your copy

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Published on September 24, 2024 10:02

October 11, 2023

My Characters Choose their Own Destiny

Book Three of my Film Milieu Thriller series is finally out in the world. Yay!

Writing mysteries is tricky and my hat’s off to those writers who turn out so many clever and compelling stories. My series is both mystery and thriller with paranormal and suspense elements, so they are not the “cozy” variety. But I came to love the characters in the first two books and took the unprecedented step of bringing both their worlds together in the third so I could have them interact with each other.

Admittedly, for a long time, I didn’t think I could pull off this sleight of hand. Combining the two books meant bringing a lot of characters together and, while most of my book series sport numerous characters, I’ve never tried writing a mystery thriller with so many. The goal of such books is to keep the story moving, introduce red herrings, depict attempts to knock off key characters, but also, as with any story, to flesh out the characters along the way.

Sidelined by surgery, I took a long, convoluted path toward completing this book, but the end result shocked me by being one of my favorites. I somehow managed to give all the characters a three-dimensional presence, and I loved how they chose to interact with each other. As with most stories, the characters take on a life of their own and some make choices I hadn’t originally mapped out for them. This is probably what makes the often lonely job of writing so fulfilling, when characters become so real to the author that they dictate their own choices and drive the story forward.

I think They Know When The Killer Will Strike is the best of this series and one of my best books, period, so I hope everyone gets a chance to meet my fun cast of characters. However, they’re first introduced in the previous two books, along with plot points important to this story, so it’s best, as one teen reviewer put it, to read the other books first to fully enjoy the latest installment. Besides, you see how the characters grow along the way.

Despite wrapping up the major plot elements in this third book, my mind immediately began formulating stories to continue exploring the lives of my young characters in future installments, and I hope readers will long to know becomes of Leo and his friends as much as I do.

They Know When The Killer Will Strike

Michael J. Bowler

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Published on October 11, 2023 12:18

April 12, 2022

NEW RELEASE

Hello Readers,

Happy April and Happy Book Birthday to Shifter (The Healer Chronicles 2). This is an exciting day for me because it’s not only the birthday of my newest novel, but it’s also my birthday. I love sharing my special day with the release of Shifter because the characters that populate this series are near and dear to my heart, just as are the real-life Special Education students who inspired me so much over the years were.

And, MORE IMPORTANTLY, at smile.amazon.com, a percentage of any of my purchased books goes to one of my favorite nonprofits, RAISE A CHILD, which started me on my journey toward adopting the most amazing son ever and continues its passionate goal of finding forever homes for kids in foster care.

I’m also thrilled that Shifter won a Gold Award in the Literary Titan Book Awards, as well as a passionate 5-Star review. It’s a great start to the life of this book, but I hope many more readers will jump into this series. Book 1, Spinner, is available for only 99 cents, so if you or your friends like horror, mystery, suspense, action populated with unique and memorable characters, definitely check out Spinner and then delve into the compelling sequel, all in anticipation of the thrill-packed conclusion, Spoiler, coming in July.

Literary Titan had this to say about Shifter

“The author also created a rich and relatable world by adding small details between big moments.There were plenty of everyday things that we take for granted highlighted in these extreme circumstances. For example, Alex’s experiences with his disability, not being able to reach a shirt in a closet that wasn’t made for someone in a wheelchair. 

Alex’s human existence gave us a closer connection to a character with incredible power. I loved so many of the characters in the novel. They were unusual heroes, abandoned or scorned by society because of who they are, mistakes from their past, or circumstances beyond their control.

Shifter (The Healer Chronicles Book 2) is a suspenseful young adult thriller. With strong and memorable characters, non-stop action, and high tension, readers will not want to put the book down and anxiously await the conclusion of this exciting trilogy.”

So, if you like compelling series fiction with unique and memorable characters, give The Healer Chronicles a try. #yaseriesfiction#yaseriesbooks#paranormalstories#suspensebooks#horrorbooks#disabilityinclusion#endearingheroes#amreadinghorror#amreadingya#amreading #bookbirthday

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Published on April 12, 2022 14:02

June 9, 2020

A New Kind Of Summer

So far, 2020 has turned the world upside down in so many ways, none of them good. As a writer, I have seen much to decry and comment upon, but as the parent of a young child, it’s best that I focus on him and his immediate needs and leave the commentary to others who feel they are more qualified.





In this regard, the school year is trickling to its conclusion, which is probably a relief to every parent in America. Fortunately, Ronald’s transition from partial to total online classes was not traumatic or even difficult for him, so his education was not unduly disrupted. However, his summer will be quite different than it was in 2019.





Ronald loves acting, so his summer camps are always theater-based. He adores Shakespeare plays and was scheduled to attend the Youth Theater Camp at Theatricum Botanicum here in the Los Angeles area for the second year, culminating in the performance of a Shakespeare play. As with all camp activities, this one will now go online. How that will work, or even will it work, are questions that remain unanswered in this new COVID-dominated world.





Later in the summer, he’s scheduled for a musical theater camp that has, of course, also moved online this year. His YMCA soccer program is canceled, as are all youth sports, so this will be a summer of adaption, just as the spring has been. Fortunately, beaches and hiking trails are reopening, so we can get outside the house and breathe in much needed fresh air in those venues.





The one advantage of everything being online is the abundance of possible activities, some of which are free. If you have children and worry about how to keep them busy this summer, check out this link for a few ideas: https://www.commonsensemedia.org/blog/15-online-camps-fill-kids-summer-with-learning-adventures





My one hope about this lockdown is that families will have learned to appreciate each other more than ever before. Hopefully, people will realize we don’t need to over-program our children, or ourselves, for that matter. Just sitting at home after dinner and playing board games is the kind of bonding time that will be gone all too quickly when our kids are grown and moved out on their own.





So here’s my suggestion: let’s enjoy our kids while we can and let them become professional athletes or dancers or actors or scholars or You Tubers or whatever when they’re older. Children want to do anything and everything right now because, like so many adults, they become easily addicted to “likes” and “views” and other forms of vicarious fame. It’s up to us, the parents, to balance out their lives.





No matter how much they may love a sport or dancing or acting or studying or any other pursuit, they need time each day to be children and engage in free play with other children. They may complain when you don’t let them attend a dancing class or soccer practice or play video games every day, but they will thank you down the line when they have children of their own and know how to feel comfortable simply playing with those children or letting them play with each other in unstructured activities.





We must safeguard this fleetingly short period of time for our children, whether they understand the reasons or not, because childhood is too short, and too precious, to waste, and once it’s gone, it’s gone forever.







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Here’s Ronald participating in his Physics and Cooking classes. I’m so grateful that I decided to homeschool him this year because his HS teachers did a fantastic job converting from in-person classes to online and keeping the work hands-on, so much so that Ronald felt completely engaged in the curriculum.


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Published on June 09, 2020 10:39

October 16, 2019

A Heart-Pounding Tale That Centers on the Ideas of Fate, Decency, and Humanity

The title of this post is taken from an Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) review from Red City Review of my forthcoming book, I KNOW WHEN YOU’RE GOING TO DIE, now available as a .99 cent pre-order on Amazon. This book releases February 25, 2020, and the .99 cent eBook price will remain in place from now through the first week of release, so grab it while the grabbing is good. LOL The novel will also be available in paperback and audiobook on release day. The pre-order link is at the end of this post.

Seriously, I’m super excited about this new book, and February seems like soooo far away, but I want ample time to get ARCs out to review sites and bloggers. I’m also open to Bookstagrammers who would read and post about the book. All I ask is that early readers consider posting an Amazon review on release day, and/or on Goodreads or their blogs anytime between now and February 25th.

This book has gone through many revisions and edits and beta readers, including two awesome teen readers at LitPick.com who gave me absolutely stellar suggestions for making the story and characters stronger. I’m also grateful to an outstanding author, Huston Piner, for providing terrific and insightful feedback, and to my tireless editor, Loretta Sylvestre, who walked me through more drafts than I can remember.

More than a whodunit, I Know When You’re Going To Die is a whowilldoit because the tale hinges on preventing a murder that hasn’t happened yet. It’s a mystery and a suspenseful thriller, but for those who may be squeamish about blood, it’s not at all gory. The characters are engaging and the plot is page-turning fun. The cover art by the amazing Streetlight Graphics perfectly captures an image that’s at the heart of the mystery.

For inquiries about reading and reviewing an ARC, feel free to contact me at my website (www.michaeljbowler.com) or through Goodreads (Michael J. Bowler). The blurb is below and underneath that, I’m reposting the entire Five-Star Red City Review because that writer champions this book more passionately than I ever could.

Thanks for checking out my work!

Blurb:

Leonardo Cantrell is a painfully shy sixteen-year-old who cannot look people in the eye. One night while he’s volunteering at a homeless shelter, an old man forces eye contact and gives Leo the power to see Death.

His best, and only, friend—J.C. Rivera—thinks this new power is cool until Leo accidentally looks into J.C.’s eyes and “sees” his murder, a murder that will occur in less than two weeks. Stunned and shaken, the two boys sift through clues in Leo’s “vision” in a desperate effort to find the killer and stop him before he can strike.

Aided by feisty new-girl-at-school, Laura, the boys uncover evidence suggesting the identity of the murderer. However, their plan to trap the would-be killer goes horribly awry and reveals a truth that could kill them all.

Review:

I Know When You’re Going to Die

by Michael J. Bowler

The concepts of predestination, of being able to see and affect the future, of having a unique glimpse into the workings of life and death, all pervade the narrative of I Know When You’re Going to Die by Michael J. Bowler. The novel opens on a young man, Leo Cantrell, who is painfully introverted and reserved, serving his local LA homeless population at a mission shelter. He is only sixteen, but he already possesses wisdom, kindness, and compassion beyond his years. He frequents the homeless shelter with such regularity that he knows everyone, and everyone knows him. There’s one man in particular, though, who catches his eye one fateful day. He stares deeply into his soul, and the man endows him with a remarkable gift: the ability to see exactly when and how others will die when he looks into their eyes. The man tells him, “I gave you a great gift, boy. Or maybe a curse.” And for the remainder of the novel, Leo explores whether his newfound ability truly is a gift or a horrible curse. His entire world turns upside down when he’s forced to look into his best friend J.C.’s eyes, and he sees his brutal murder only two weeks in the future. It’s a race against the clock for them to try to figure out how to bend the rules of predestination, prevent the murder from happening, and identify the would-be killer. With the help of the new girl at their high school, Laura, J.C. and Leo attempt the nearly impossible and defy fate. Will their attempts be thwarted? Will they be able to ensnare the potential murderer? Only time will tell.

Because I Know When You’re Going to Die is written in the first-person, Leo’s perspective, the reader enjoys a deep introspective look into his psyche as he processes the implications and repercussions of the ability he didn’t ask for, but nonetheless has. It’s an intimate way to tell such a heart-pounding tale that centers on the ideas of fate, decency, and humanity. Leo grapples with what is right, with what it means to have the power to look into someone’s eyes and see their death. He struggles with whether or not to warn them. Would he want to know, were he in someone else’s shoes? When it comes to his closest friend in the world, though, the choice is clear, and that choice informs and drives the remainder of the narrative into complex and interesting places heretofore unimagined by other novels of the same genre. Death is an inevitability, but this coming-of-age YA novel explores the very real lengths to which we will go to preserve love, life, and all that is precious within those concepts. Beyond the scope of the narrative, the language of I Know When You’re Going to Die captivates and enthralls the reader to the very end. It’s the kind of literary style that gets wonderfully stuck in your head and entreats you to keep reading well past the time you told yourself you would stop.
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Published on October 16, 2019 15:22

A Heart-Pounding Tale That Centers on the Ideas of Fate, Decency, and Humanity

[image error]



The title of this post is taken from an Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) review from Red City Review of my forthcoming book, I KNOW WHEN YOU’RE GOING TO DIE, now available as a .99 cent pre-order on Amazon. This book releases February 25, 2020, and the .99 cent eBook price will remain in place from now through the first week of release, so grab it while the grabbing is good. LOL The novel will also be available in paperback and audiobook on release day. The pre-order link is at the end of this post.





Seriously, I’m super excited about this new book, and February seems like soooo far away, but I want ample time to get ARCs out to review sites and bloggers. I’m also open to Bookstagrammers who would read and post about the book.  All I ask is that early readers consider posting an Amazon review on release day, and/or on Goodreads or their blogs anytime between now and February 25th.





This book has gone through many revisions and edits and beta readers, including two awesome teen readers at LitPick.com who gave me absolutely stellar suggestions for making the story and characters stronger. I’m also grateful to an outstanding author, Huston Piner, for providing terrific and insightful feedback, and to my tireless editor, Loretta Sylvestre, who walked me through more drafts than I can remember.  





More
than a whodunit, I Know When You’re Going To Die is a whowilldoit
because the tale hinges on preventing a murder that hasn’t happened yet. It’s a
mystery and a suspenseful thriller, but for those who may be squeamish about
blood, it’s not at all gory. The characters are engaging and the plot is
page-turning fun. The cover art by the amazing Streetlight Graphics perfectly
captures an image that’s at the heart of the mystery.





For inquiries about reading and reviewing an ARC, feel free to contact me at my website (www.michaeljbowler.com) or through Goodreads (Michael J. Bowler). The blurb is below and underneath that, I’m reposting the entire Five-Star Red City Review because that writer champions this book more passionately than I ever could.





Thanks for checking out my work!





Blurb:





Leonardo Cantrell is a painfully
shy sixteen-year-old who cannot look people in the eye. One night while he’s
volunteering at a homeless shelter, an old man forces eye contact and gives Leo
the power to see Death.





His best, and only, friend—J.C.
Rivera—thinks this new power is cool until Leo accidentally looks into J.C.’s
eyes and “sees” his murder, a murder that will occur in less than two weeks.
Stunned and shaken, the two boys sift through clues in Leo’s “vision” in a
desperate effort to find the killer and stop him before he can strike.





Aided by feisty new-girl-at-school, Laura, the boys uncover evidence suggesting the identity of the murderer. However, their plan to trap the would-be killer goes horribly awry and reveals a truth that could kill them all.





Review:





I Know When You’re Going to Die





by Michael J. Bowler





The concepts of predestination, of being able to see and affect
the future, of having a unique glimpse into the workings of life and death, all
pervade the narrative of I
Know When You’re Going to Die
 by Michael J. Bowler. The novel
opens on a young man, Leo Cantrell, who is painfully introverted and reserved,
serving his local LA homeless population at a mission shelter. He is only
sixteen, but he already possesses wisdom, kindness, and compassion beyond his
years. He frequents the homeless shelter with such regularity that he knows
everyone, and everyone knows him. There’s one man in particular, though, who
catches his eye one fateful day. He stares deeply into his soul, and the man
endows him with a remarkable gift: the ability to see exactly when and how
others will die when he looks into their eyes. The man tells him, “I gave you a
great gift, boy. Or maybe a curse.” And for the remainder of the novel, Leo
explores whether his newfound ability truly is a gift or a horrible curse. His
entire world turns upside down when he’s forced to look into his best friend
J.C.’s eyes, and he sees his brutal murder only two weeks in the future. It’s a
race against the clock for them to try to figure out how to bend the rules of
predestination, prevent the murder from happening, and identify the would-be
killer. With the help of the new girl at their high school, Laura, J.C. and Leo
attempt the nearly impossible and defy fate. Will their attempts be thwarted?
Will they be able to ensnare the potential murderer? Only time will tell.





Because I
Know When You’re Going to Die
 is written in the first-person,
Leo’s perspective, the reader enjoys a deep introspective look into his psyche
as he processes the implications and repercussions of the ability he didn’t ask
for, but nonetheless has. It’s an intimate way to tell such a heart-pounding
tale that centers on the ideas of fate, decency, and humanity. Leo grapples
with what is right, with what it means to have the power to look into someone’s
eyes and see their death. He struggles with whether or not to warn them. Would
he want to know, were he in someone else’s shoes? When it comes to his closest
friend in the world, though, the choice is clear, and that choice informs and
drives the remainder of the narrative into complex and interesting places
heretofore unimagined by other novels of the same genre. Death is an
inevitability, but this coming-of-age YA novel explores the very real lengths
to which we will go to preserve love, life, and all that is precious within
those concepts. Beyond the scope of the narrative, the language of I Know When You’re Going to Die captivates
and enthralls the reader to the very end. It’s the kind of literary style that
gets wonderfully stuck in your head and entreats you to keep reading well past
the time you told yourself you would stop.








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Published on October 16, 2019 10:28

July 9, 2019

FREE READ

My first novel, A BOY AND HIS DRAGON, has been revised and rewritten and is unspooling chapter by chapter over at Wattpad. I had previously published this story on Amazon to test the waters, but it’s no longer available for purchase and can only be found on Wattpad. It’s suitable for all ages.

This book was written in the 1980s, well before the fantasy resurgence that culminated with Harry Potter, and also saw endless dragon-related stories hitting the bookshelves. I wanted to try a somewhat realistic approach to a dragon story, so I took my childhood—at least my seventh and eighth-grade years—and inserted a dragon. I wondered how life might progress for that thirteen-year-old boy living in suburban Northern California in the year 1970 as he juggled daily life while also caring for, and hiding, a rapidly growing dragon, without the use of the internet or any of the technology we have today that would have made such a task easier. Somehow, Bradley Wallace Murphy must figure out solutions to every dilemma that crosses his path without the use of Google, which means the story takes longer to unfold, but hopefully, it plays out in a believable fashion.

Of course, this is more than just a boy and his dragon story and the book is intended as the first of a trilogy that postulates a return of magic into our modern world (at least, the modern world of the ’70s and ’80s.) It’s a nostalgic tale for anyone who remembers that time, and for younger readers who can’t imagine life without cell phones and social media, it will be an eye-opening depiction of a different kind of childhood.

Here’s a blurb for the book. I really hope you go on Wattpad and check it out. I’m adding in visuals that tie directly into each chapter and are relevant to the storyline. If you do read this book at the link below, please comment along the way. Us authors only improve if we have constructive feedback to work from.

Thanks for checking out this free read. Enjoy!

BradleyWallace Murphy just turned thirteen, and he’s not happy about it. He doesn’tfit in at school, he’s no good at sports, a bully torments him, he’s adisappointment to his parents, and his only “friends” are fictional characterson a TV show called Dark Shadows. He’s on the verge of manhood, but wantsno part of that, either.

Then hefinds the egg and everything changes.

From thisegg hatches Whilly, a supposedly mythical dragon that bonds with him emotionallyand spiritually. The sudden responsibility of hiding, feeding, and caring for arapidly growing dragon in a small California city in 1970 forces BradleyWallace to grow up whether he wants to or not. 

Throughtheir adventures together, boy and dragon learn the true nature of theirsymbiosis and Bradley Wallace learns that he is not just a misfit kid.

He’s dangerous. More dangerous than anyone in history. So dangerous that he’ll be killed if the truth comes out. The boy who doesn’t want to grow up comes to realize that it might be better for the world if he didn’t.

https://www.wattpad.com/story/193384793-a-boy-and-his-dragon

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Published on July 09, 2019 08:32

TWO FREE READS

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I’m
excited to announce that two of my novels are available as free reads. One is
my latest book and the other is a brand new version of my first. The new novel
is available to read at SwoonReads.com and I’d love some solid feedback on the
story and the characters. It’s suitable for teenagers to adults and just might land
a publishing deal if enough readers are as passionate about the story as I am.





 LIKE A HERO is an action-packed, contemporary
tale of orphaned brothers coming to terms with the death of their parents while
simultaneously fighting to better their community. It’s bursting with emotion and
drama and grapples with complex issues of right vs wrong, legal vs moral. I’m impassioned
about this story because I see apathy as one of our most destructive human
traits, and it’s one we all too often slip into without even being aware.





Dennis may
only be fourteen, but he’s an old soul who’s sometimes wiser than his
twenty-year-old brother, Vincent. He believes with a fervor that one person can
make a difference in this world, that one person can truly inspire the masses
to take action. The question becomes, will the masses  be inspired for better or for worse? That’s
the moral dilemma these brothers face as they put their plan into action.  It’s easy to convince people to engage in mob
mentality. That’s been proven throughout human history. But can enough people
be persuaded to take positive action in their community, to step up and fight
against what is wrong, even if it costs them personally? The brothers believe they
know the answer, but proving it is far more difficult—and costly—than they ever
imagined.





Here’s a
blurb that describes the book. You need to set up a free SwoonReads account at
the link below, but that’s all. You’ll also have access to their other free
reads, but I’m hoping you’ll check out mine first. Thanks!





Courage can be costly. Orphaned
brothers Vincent and Dennis Villanueva learn the truth of those words when they
create a masked crime fighter and turn him loose on Los Angeles. The brainchild
of fourteen-year-old Dennis and embodied in twenty-year-old Vincent, “Invictus”
hits the streets to jumpstart apathetic Angelenos into taking a more active
role in their city.





But reality isn’t a comic book. Vincent
finds poverty, homelessness, drug addiction, abuse, bad parenting, and cast-off
children. Labeled a vigilante and criminal, the shy grad student with formidable
martial arts talent and abysmal people skills soon doubts his ability to make an
impact.





Forced to straddle an ambiguous line
between moral and legal, he becomes disheartened and secretive, hiding the truth
of what he’s doing from Dennis and driving a wedge between them. Feeling
neglected, Dennis infiltrates a dangerous drug ring to show Vincent he can be
just as heroic, not knowing that the woman in charge is weaving an insidious
plot against Invictus as part of her citywide scheme of vengeance. In a race
against time, Vincent must regain Dennis’s trust before he loses forever the brother
he loves.





https://www.swoonreads.com/m/like-a-hero/





My first novel, A BOY AND HIS DRAGON, has been revised and rewritten and is unspooling chapter by chapter over at Wattpad. I had previously published this story on Amazon to test the waters, but it’s no longer available for purchase and can only be found on Wattpad. It’s suitable for all ages.





This book was written in the 1980s, well before the fantasy resurgence that culminated with Harry Potter, and also saw endless dragon-related stories hitting the bookshelves. I wanted to try a somewhat realistic approach to a dragon story, so I took my childhood—at least my seventh and eighth-grade years—and inserted a dragon. I wondered how life might progress for that thirteen-year-old boy living in suburban Northern California in the year 1970 as he juggled daily life while also caring for, and hiding, a rapidly growing dragon, without the use of the internet or any of the technology we have today that would have made such a task easier. Somehow, Bradley Wallace Murphy must figure out solutions to every dilemma that crosses his path without the use of Google, which means the story takes longer to unfold, but hopefully, it plays out in a believable fashion.





Of course, this is more than just a boy and his dragon story and the book is intended as the first of a trilogy that postulates a return of magic into our modern world (at least, the modern world of the ’70s and ’80s.) It’s a nostalgic tale for anyone who remembers that time, and for younger readers who can’t imagine life without cell phones and social media, it will be an eye-opening depiction of a different kind of childhood.





Here’s a blurb for the book. I really hope you go on Wattpad and check it out. I’m adding in visuals that tie directly into each chapter and even some audio cues that are relevant to the storyline. If you do read this book at the link below, please comment along the way. Us authors only improve if we have constructive feedback to work from.





Thanks for checking out these free reads. Enjoy!





Bradley
Wallace Murphy just turned thirteen, and he’s not happy about it. He doesn’t
fit in at school, he’s no good at sports, a bully torments him, he’s a
disappointment to his parents, and his only “friends” are fictional characters
on a TV show called Dark Shadows. He’s on the verge of manhood, but wants
no part of that, either.





Then he
finds the egg and everything changes.





From this
egg hatches Whilly, a supposedly mythical dragon that bonds with him emotionally
and spiritually. The sudden responsibility of hiding, feeding, and caring for a
rapidly growing dragon in a small California city in 1970 forces Bradley
Wallace to grow up whether he wants to or not. 





Through
their adventures together, boy and dragon learn the true nature of their
symbiosis and Bradley Wallace learns that he is not just a misfit kid.





He’s dangerous. More dangerous than anyone in history. So dangerous that he’ll be killed if the truth comes out. The boy who doesn’t want to grow up comes to realize that it might be better for the world if he didn’t.





https://www.wattpad.com/story/193384793-a-boy-and-his-dragon


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Published on July 09, 2019 08:32

September 24, 2018

Youth Are The Road To Positive Change

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“Lance is an epic hero.” So said a reviewer when the first editions of my Lance Chronicles appeared under the “Children of the Knight” moniker. Now, it’s 2018 and the series has been revamped, revised, and re-released. Was I able to substantially improve these books? I sincerely hope so. Is Lance still an epic hero? That’s up to readers to decide. But I can say that Lance’s coming-of-age journey from boy to young man is pretty epic stuff in many ways, especially since this tenacious teen, aided by his adoptive family and friends, fundamentally changes the United States of America. Considering how many people today—especially young people—would like to see America’s flaws put right, I suppose Lance’s chronicles toward that end are indeed epic. But I don’t think his goals or methods are impossible, not if enough Americans stop arguing and work together. I do believe, however, that it’s the youth who must lead this charge for change because older people tend to accept the status quo all too readily.


The Lance Chronicles features a teen protagonist, but is it just for teens? Not at all. The ideas, the challenges presented, the painful truths revealed, and the solutions to some of our most fundamental issues as a country are relevant to all ages. These aren’t children’s books, but anyone in high school and above should find much to like, to hate, to make them angry, to make them cheer, maybe make them laugh or cry. More importantly, these books should provide food for thought, because how America treats her children is problematic at best and we can do so much better.


There is currently a movement afoot to inspire more young people to become involved in the running of this country. Hashtags like #neveragain and #roadtochange have become popular for sharing information and events. Both of these hashtags, in addition to one of my favorites – #wecandobetter – sum up The Lance Chronicles. #NeverAgain has been applied to school shootings, but there are so many ills in this country to which that hashtag should be attached: #neveragain should children be abused by adults; #neveragain should kids be thrown out of school for being different; #neveragain should LGBT kids be bullied in school or kicked to the curb by heartless parents; #neveragain should children be considered adults when they do something wrong, but not when they do something right; #neveragain should our justice system be about winning instead of about justice; #neveragain should our school system be one size fits all when every kid is a unique individual and needs to remain so; #neveragain should children be considered the property of adults or government. These are but a few of the #neveragain issues tackled in The Lance Chronicles.


What about #RoadToChange? Well, the entire series is about change, which never comes by throwing the baby out with the bath water. Yes, the water of America—compared to the ideals that inspired her creation—has become dirty. Of course, it has. America and all her institutions are run by people and people are inherently self-centered. Therefore, our country and institutions have grown corrupt over time. But the baby – The Constitution – is fine. Only the water surrounding it is dirty. That water needs to be cleaned, but the baby preserved. Our democratic republic will function properly as long as the citizenry has enough courage and adaptability to make it so. In The Lance Chronicles, Lance and the other youth galvanize communities to take charge of themselves, not to wait for the government to solve their problems. We, the people, can solve most problems at the local level. We don’t need bigger and bigger government micromanaging our lives, even though many Americans seem to favor that model. Just like big business and big school districts, big government is more corrupt and more unorganized because that’s the nature of human beings. Bigger isn’t better.


The prevailing hashtag for The Lance Chronicles should be #WeOverMe, one coined by Lance to remind us that every choice we, as individuals, make has repercussions within the larger community and even the world. If each of us pauses long enough to consider a pending choice in light of how it might affect others, the world would be a very different place. Lance uses this motto and other common sense approaches to advance the cause of real, positive change that works within the existing American system to clean that bathwater and make the country better. At least, Lance and company believe they’re making it better. Readers may disagree and that’s all good. Healthy debate is what brings about healthy change. Nastiness and uninformed opinions merely promote the status quo. So yes, #WeCanDoBetter in this country. We can make major improvements, especially if the young people unite via social media as they do in these books and demand those improvements. Youth hold real power to “force” compliance from adults, especially in regards to areas that prominently affect them, like our fatally flawed school system.


One adult reviewer objected to the civil disobedience displayed by the youth, but is that so wrong, for young people to demand their voices be heard? Of course not! Yes, it’s wrong for adults to brainwash impressionable kids to mimic talking points from either the right or the left. As Lance points out when he addresses a joint session of Congress, “Most of us live life in the middle.” And that’s true. Youth need to learn how to think, not what to think, another prevalent theme in these books. If kids are taught how to think and how to analyze, they can come to their own conclusions about what might be the best solution to a given problem. If they are simply taught to parrot their parents or teachers or professors, how will they ever learn to think on their own and clean up that dirty bathwater left by previous generations?


When my series first appeared, someone posted this comment, “This looks like a sh—ty idea,” but that person never bothered to read any of the books to determine if the idea worked or not. An actual reader began his review like this (I’m paraphrasing because his blog has been taken down and the review with it, sadly): ‘I began Children of the Knight thinking this will never work, it will never work, and six hours later I closed the book sobbing, realizing that I’d read one of the best young adult books out there’.


There are readers who never found the central premise credible, and that’s okay too. I’m fine with readers disliking my books. Authors who think they can please everyone are fooling themselves. But, at least, people need to read the books they are criticizing before engaging in a healthy debate about what they didn’t like or disagreed with. Again, only through the give-and-take of ideas can positive change occur. There is no single playbook that has all the answers, despite so many people on the left and the right spouting the same talking points as though such a playbook exists.


Yes, there is a major fantasy element in this series that readers must accept in order to enjoy it. In their own small way, The Lance Chronicles are a continuation of The Once and Future King by T.H. White or Le Morte d’Arthur by Mallory. King Arthur promised to return from Avalon one day and my series has him do just that. In the legends, Arthur was a master at uniting warring tribes of Britain under his mantra of “might for right.” So why can’t this same man unite warring gangs in Los Angeles under that mantra? And why can’t he role model leadership for Lance so the boy can go forward to lead a youth revolution for children’s rights? Any book with fantasy elements requires a suspension of disbelief, but the fantasy elements in my series are few and far between next to the real issues depicted, including America’s dismal treatment of Native Americans, which is dealt with in books four and five.


So I urge youth to read these books and debate the issues among themselves. Even though the books are already in release, I have PDF copies that are free to readers who agree to share their thoughts once they have finished reading. Those thoughts can be shared on Amazon, Goodreads, social media, Reddit, or wherever. My goal is to spark debate, for readers to weigh in on the issues and proposed solutions. I will say that some of what Lance and the other youth demand at the beginning of the series changes as the law of unintended consequences kicks in and real life rears its ugly head. So reading the entire series—which is actually one long book broken into five parts—is necessary to fully understand how Lance’s youth revolution creates real, permanent change. Is that change for the better? That’s for individual readers to decide.


https://www.amazon.com/Children-Knight-Lance-Chronicles-Book-ebook-dp-B07GJTGR8K/dp/B07GJTGR8K/ref=mt_kindle?_encoding=UTF8&me=&qid=1537839085


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Published on September 24, 2018 19:20