The Helper by M. N. Snow (Book Review #91)


I was given this book by the Author & UnderratedReads for a review.

The Helper is a book written about three friends with three secrets. It takes you on a journey where friendship, relationships and the desire to help others means more than anything. They have the power to heal people, meaning they are a giver.

John Sloan is a marine and loses this generous ability. Since that is all he knows to be from the age of four, the loss takes on several tumbles and falls to figure out why and how to now carry on without it. Dusty Hakalla is a healer with a past. His powers were once abused, and he is not quiet over this ordeal. Deena Morrison is John’s love interest and is also a healer. She too has a past where she was adopted and does not know much about her biological parents.

The helper begins with an absolutely beautiful prologue. I highly recommend readers to start the book with that. It truly gives you an insight on what you are to expect walking into this story. I use the term “walking” because it was truly a walk-through rather than a read through. The use of accurate terminology, wording and the high-quality literature standard flying off the pages impacted my vision so much so that I was off my scale of conception.

There is quite a substantial amount of backstory to how everything begins for all three friends. The chapters are short and easy to read through. The connection between the characters and the bond between them was touching. All of them had relatable personalities and were written up to draw you in. The setting of the world and description was very well put together, and the plot did consist of enough twists and drama to keep you reading and feel engaged. I have also to add that there is profanity regularly used across the book.

I recommend this book to anyone that loves to read on magical realism, science fiction, and fantasy stories. I look forward to reading more from this author.

Written by Jeyran Main

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Blogger Recognition Award #1

I am honored to be nominated by THE MUNDANE TEENAGE LIFE. Thank you for this beautiful award!

 


RULES

  • Thank the blogger who nominated you and provide a link to their blog.
  • Write a post to show your award.
  • Give a brief story of how your blog started.
  • Give two pieces of advice to new bloggers.
  • Select 15 other bloggers you want to give this award to.
  • Comment on each blog and let them know you have nominated and provide the link to the post you created.

 

 


The story of how my website started is here. I challenged myself to start reading one book a month as a new years resolution. My life and responsibilities, work and everything else had consumed what I loved, and that was to read. So I wanted to push myself back into a routine, and once I started, it was like giving back beats to my sleeping heart.

As part of the reward I am to give two pieces of advice so here goes:

1- Always be honest in what you post. By being honest, you attract the right audience & gain genuine love back

2-Be consistent. No matter what you decide with your blog or website, stick to it. Don’t flip flop between interests. Be organized and clear.


I nominate the following blogs. They deserve this recognition.

Boring Bug

By Hook or By Book

Eslarner Zeitung

Chronosfer 

The Nutty Book Blogger

Reminds

Bun Karyudo

Theivorytide

CARNIVAL (The Spark Form Chronicles Book 2) by Matt Doyle (Book Review #338)

Carnival is book two of the Spark Form Chronicles. The story picks up from where it left off, and it is the second day of the spark Forming World Championships. John, Fahrn, Maria, Meera, Lana, and Connor remain as enticing characters in the storyline and the top four competitors in the game are in the final stages of their battles. Artificial intelligence is at its peak with holograms and many epic battles consisting of blood and death. Carnival has a big choice to make, should she decide to die only to re-appear as a more powerful being or should she continue existing.

Card games have never sounded this exciting. The characters and plot were yet again multi-layered, and filled with action battles. The pace of the story was fast and justified. Each character had its own agenda, path, fate, and personality. I personally enjoyed this aspect of the story. The science fiction and content was filled with highly thought out, plausible reasoning which gave the tale a solid foundation to its grounds.

I believe that if I had not read the first book, this one would have not made any sense. If you are interested in reading this book, then I would start from the beginning.

Wick by Matt Doyle (Book Review #240)

The international card battling uses holographic data, and that is how the competitors choose to battle it out depending on the combinations of the played cards. As each character’s agenda was pursued, they all came together for the big finale which made this story to be extremely appealing to read. I recommend this book to science fiction fantasy readers.

Written by Jeyran Main

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Malignant Melanoma – A Potentially Deadly Skin Cancer by James Okun, MD

 

It is time for James Okun to pick our brain and inform us on some important medical matters. You can show your support by buying his books or leaving a comment here if you like- Jeyran Main


James D. Okun, MD is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Duke University and of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. He is the co-author of The History of New Innovations in Modern Medicine and of Erasing Scars: Herpes and Healing.


Did you know that a mole can turn malignant, spread and lead to death if it is not diagnosed by biopsy and treated early? This condition is called metastatic malignant melanoma. Also, extremely important is prevention involving the use of appropriate sun blocks and avoidance of high-risk behaviors such as overexposure to the sun or improper use of tanning beds.

Malignant melanoma is a dangerous type of skin cancer and is what killed actor James Rebhorn of Showtime’s popular Homeland TV program at the age of sixty-five (www.dermacentermd.com).

Melanoma also killed famous singer Bob Marley at the age of 36 when a melanoma developed under one of his toenails. This type of melanoma known as “acral” or “hidden melanoma” develops in obscure areas of the body such as “the lining of the mouth, nose, and female genitals, and underneath or near fingernails or toenails.” (www.melanomaupdates.com/2014).

 

Per the American Cancer Society (www.cancer.org) melanoma is relatively rare and “accounts for only about 1% of skin cancers but causes a large majority of skin cancer deaths.”

The three layers of the skin consist of a surface layer and two deeper layers. The top protective and waterproof layer of the skin is the epidermis. The next deeper layer is the dermis which contains hair follicles and sweat glands. This layer is followed by the subcutaneous layer which is the deepest layer of the skin and contains fat.

The epidermis contains the melanocytes which produce the dark pigment melanin that leads to darkening of the skin. In melanoma, the melanocytes become malignant (cancerous) and if not caught early this type of skin cancer can metastasize (spread) to other parts of the body and can lead to death as in the case of Mr. Rebhorn and Bob Marley.

 

Under normal circumstances, the melanocytes like other cells in the body, divide and grow under cellular controls that control the rate of cell division. Growth rate and cellular restraint on growth are normally in a homeostatic balance. When cancer ensues, out of control cell growth eventually forms a tumor composed of melanocytes which are known as a melanoma (See The History of New Innovations in Modern Medicine Chapter 10). The cancerous melanocytes divide with abandon overwhelming the normal restraints against wild, out of control cellular growth.

One potential sign of a melanoma includes (www.cancer.org) the development of a new mole or spot not noticed previously. Additionally concerning is a mole that has changed in color, has borders which have become irregular, has become asymmetrical, has increased in size, or is in the process of changing or “evolving” in terms of size, shape, color, “feel” or borders, or is bleeding or cracking.

Common sites of distant spread or metastasis of melanomas include the lungs, liver, bones, and brain (www.melanoma.org).

Treatment options for melanomas include chemotherapy, radiation, surgical excision, and new types of targeted therapies in which drugs are specifically targeted to affect molecules in the tumor which control cell division and growth, based on genetic profiles, hopefully without affecting normal cells.


James D. Okun, MD is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Duke University and of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. He is the co-author of The History of New Innovations in Modern Medicine and of Erasing Scars: Herpes and Healing.



 

A Mother Dies by Arusha Topazzini (Book Review #90)

Arusha loses her mother due to cancer. This common and hard to survive from illness takes over an everlasting bond of love and separates a mother from her daughter in a very touching way.

Although this book references cancer, the cause and how Arusha’s mother battles with it, the focus is more on the journey that she takes and how it affects them both.

I have reviewed several books on death, dying and how to survive afterward which you can read by clicking the links below. However, this book is more personal, and you cannot help but shed some tears over the way Arusha articulates her emotions and what she personally expresses in her book.

On Death and Dying

No one has to die alone

Losing a mother is an incredibly hard experience regardless of what race or age you are. It is the strongest bond of all and once broken, in some instances, will consume the mental mind and disrupt the whole physical and mental mannerism of a being. The psychological approach towards life raises many questions to an individual’s core existence. You experience feelings you may never knew existed.

How you survive or cope with this whole sensitive hard encounter is up to the individual itself. However, that is not what I want to review here. I noticed that the book is titled “A Mother” and not “My Mother.” I found this approach to be incredibly touching. Although the story is about Arusha’s journey and her mother, she chose to dedicate it to all mothers not just her own. For this reason alone Arusha deserves admiration.

 

This is a short story but very insightful and necessary. While we do not want to face this challenging time that will come to every one of us, at least we know there are ways to deal with it.

I recommend this book to anyone dealing with loss or wishes to read a story written from the heart.

I am ending this review with the Authors own words

“My wish is that these words will accompany others as they too, traverse fragile times, or times of stillness and self-reckoning. And my hope is that these words will mean something to them.”

Written by Jeyran Main

This review was kindly requested by the Author, Arusha Topazzini.

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A World Without Color by Bernard Jan (Book Review #337)

A World Without Color is an emotional novella about Marcel, the beloved cat, and Bernard, the owner of this beautiful animal. Bernard shares the last three days of Marcel’s life in what I found to be a very touching story.

The author’s emotions and the way he expresses what he endures was very raw and authentic. I felt as though, I was there as the third person and grieved as he grieved. The true love felt between the two was stunning. The work reached unsuspected depths of emotional turmoil, and the literature represented it a very lovely way.

The only thing I would improve would be the ending. I believe a story that is real, surely can end with a tangible ending as well.

I believe the reason why this book stands out is that nothing about it felt fabricated. If you are an animal lover, you will really enjoy reading this book and understand how it is to love an animal.

In addition, I really like the name of the book. Life truly does lose its color when you lose your love.

Written by Jeyran Main

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Fancy & Adriaan by Haidji (Book Review #92)

This love story is written in the format of poetry and fantasy. Fancy is a fairy and Adriaan is an elf. Fancy is the fruit of a thought of a being, living on a flower. She can feel but not think. Adriaan is an elf born in the forest living in a tree. He can think but not feel.

 

Fancy begins to fly away from her origin. Adriaan wishes to move away from the tree too but no matter how many times he tries and thinks, he cannot find a way.

“His Thoughts, Rather than Helping Him, Created More Walls Around Him”

As Fancy flies around testing her wings, she flies closer to the middle of the forest and finds a tree that Adriaan has been stuck in. As they meet they fall in love. Here is where the magic happens. She can then feel what he is thinking, and he can then think what she is feeling.

This is a beautiful love story. The type you wish to read over again just so you too, can start flying like Fancy and find that wonderful Adriaan.

The setting of the story is magical and full of mysterious yet enchanting moments of extraordinarily written literature. The poetic touch in the story adds to its hypnotizing effect, and it really steals you away from whatever is previously on your mind.

 

I liked the separated sentences as well. It gave me time to think about what I just read before reading the next. I think that was a smart touch by the author.

The book is so nicely done that you can use many of its phrases as inspirational love quotes.

I highly recommend this short story to anyone that still believes in love its eternal effect on the human being.

Written by Jeyran Main

This review was kindly requested by the author, Haidji.

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A Pattern for Pepper by Julie Kraulis (Book Review#85)

Pepper is a beautiful girl looking for the right pattern fabric for a dress she wishes to wear for an important event. It is her grandmother’s birthday, and she is invited for cake and tea. Pepper’s mother takes her to the tailor in hopes of Pepper finding her favorite pattern.

The book gets really interesting as the tailor introduces Pepper to a different kind of fabric, color, and design. Each design and fabric have a story, background, origin and explanation. They aren’t just pieces of thread put together. I found this absolutely fantastic!

Introducing a child to a world of fabric and textures where color and design combined with history and ethnic origins bring life to an occasion and a dress.

Pepper is very particular; she knew exactly how she wanted to feel and what she was looking for. She finally agreed on a particular fabric which becomes the dress that she wears for her special occasion.

I highly recommend this book to parents looking for something unique, different and educational.

Written by Jeyran Main

This book was given to me by Penguin Random House Canada through NetGalley.

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Taken: Stories of The Alien Invasion by Mel Corbett (Book Review #334)

Taken is a science fiction short story about Aliens taking over the Earth and destroying humanity. This apocalypse tale displays the struggle for survival. As Rachel and her boyfriend try to escape the situation, the story takes a turn on how hard it is to stay alive, and how one sacrifices all for the people they love.

There are other sideline storylines also regarding characters like Mary, Kailey that take place in this tale. However, much to my delight, I enjoyed the concept of survival in this novel.

As mentioned before, the book is short, and with that, some things could improve in later series. The timeline with each side story did not match for me. The plot had many questionable scenarios, where it would distract me from the flow of the work. However, besides this, it was a well-written novella.

It is evident that the author has a passion for writing and I believe it is wonderful to see the ambition and will of literature, within the content of the work so pleasantly laid out.

I recommend this book for people who like to read stories about aliens.

Written by Jeyran Main

If you would like a book review click here

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