Yes, it's true. I have decided to join the ranks of BookTubers who post videos sharing thoughts about various bookish matters on YouTube. Videos will be released to my channel ROY'S BOOK REVIEWS on a weekly basis. Please tune in each Tuesday (or whenever you can get around to them) to hear my thoughts on novels I have read over the years. Fingers crossed that I'll manage to hold your attention. My videos are all in the 10-minute range, give or take a couple minutes. Thoughts and opinions are 100% completely my own. None of these books were sent to me free of charge in exchange for a glowing report. If I loved a book, I let you know. If I hated it, I respectfully let you know. If I'm on the fence, I straddle and give you as much spoiler free details as I can to help you make up your mind about whether you care to check the book out. If you agree with what I've said, please let me know. If you disagree, please let me know. If you've been convinced to pick up a book based on my endorsement of it at ROY'S BOOK REVIEWS, that's fantastic. As a writer myself, I know that word of mouth is invaluable to both authors and readers in constant search of their next great read. So I'm thrilled to be spreading the news via YouTube videos that I have read plenty of great books, with countless others sitting on my TBR pile waiting for me to get around to them, and I encourage you to take a chance on as many as you can. First one up is my review of Philip Roth's novel THE PLOT AGAINST AMERICA.
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
ROY'S BOOK REVIEWS - My new YouTube channel
Yes, it's true. I have decided to join the ranks of BookTubers who post videos sharing thoughts about various bookish matters on YouTube. Videos will be released to my channel ROY'S BOOK REVIEWS on a weekly basis. Please tune in each Tuesday (or whenever you can get around to them) to hear my thoughts on novels I have read over the years. Fingers crossed that I'll manage to hold your attention. My videos are all in the 10-minute range, give or take a couple minutes. Thoughts and opinions are 100% completely my own. None of these books were sent to me free of charge in exchange for a glowing report. If I loved a book, I let you know. If I hated it, I respectfully let you know. If I'm on the fence, I straddle and give you as much spoiler free details as I can to help you make up your mind about whether you care to check the book out. If you agree with what I've said, please let me know. If you disagree, please let me know. If you've been convinced to pick up a book based on my endorsement of it at ROY'S BOOK REVIEWS, that's fantastic. As a writer myself, I know that word of mouth is invaluable to both authors and readers in constant search of their next great read. So I'm thrilled to be spreading the news via YouTube videos that I have read plenty of great books, with countless others sitting on my TBR pile waiting for me to get around to them, and I encourage you to take a chance on as many as you can. First one up is my review of Philip Roth's novel THE PLOT AGAINST AMERICA.
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Juneteenth thoughts
Happy Juneteenth! A video for those who need to learn more about the holiday. #Juneteenth2019 #Juneteenth pic.twitter.com/PSOsvTLaJl— Frederick Joseph (@FredTJoseph) June 19, 2019
Outside the Oval Office, I kept a painting of a small crowd huddled around a pocketwatch, waiting for the moment the Emancipation Proclamation took effect. On Juneteenth, we celebrate the anniversary of that news - freedom - reaching slaves in Texas. And something more: pic.twitter.com/kSkLHbfnc3— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) June 19, 2019
And slaves. Can’t forget the slaves. https://t.co/bwaPQy61lv— Matthew A. Cherry 🏁 (@MatthewACherry) June 16, 2019
"It is impossible to imagine America without the inheritance of slavery."— The Root (@TheRoot) June 19, 2019
On this #Juneteeth, Ta-Nehisi Coates testified at the #reparationshearing to discuss the case for reparations. pic.twitter.com/b4WZlh0nH0
A Line A Day: Reparations https://t.co/STjQ6fLxas— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 18, 2019
I'm pretty sure Mitch was a toddler during the final pre emancipation days https://t.co/rBvgye2Zfk— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 18, 2019
I don't need or expect reparations & could care less what Mitch thinks about it. What I deserve as an American citizen is to have a real president and functioning federal gov't devoid of near Nazis. Where do I sign up for that?— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 18, 2019
Hey JoeBiden cites his relationships with segregationist senators as examples of "civility" https://t.co/jZPYByklEP— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) June 19, 2019
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 19, 2019
Kyle Kashuv, a conservative Parkland survivor who got caught using the n-word, just had his Harvard admission rescinded pic.twitter.com/SMrTppVztl— Austin S. Harris (@austinsharris) June 17, 2019
Free speech doesn't mean free from consequences. No private organization owes you sh*t. Whatever your race is if you like to use the N-word, Harvard may use the "no thanks" expression. So just be happy that the penalty isn't jail time. Or maybe, just maybe, don't say it.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 18, 2019
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 17, 2019
you cant spend $20 on weed with harriet tubman face on it.
— Demetrius (@DemetriusHarmon) May 14, 2015
judgmental ass face , you gone fuck around and buy tulips pic.twitter.com/UXcFyC4Fl0
A Line A Day: Will trade a Benjamin for five Tubmans https://t.co/qruD0wQuT0— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 14, 2019
I just watched When They See Us from beginning to end of the series. Incredibly powerful, packed full with fantastic performances. Bravo to @ava and God bless the @centralparkfive— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 7, 2019
Wow– April Ryan: “Mr. President, will you apologize for the Central Park 5?— philip lewis (@Phil_Lewis_) June 18, 2019
Trump: “You have people on both sides of that. They admitted their guilt ... we’ll leave it at that.” pic.twitter.com/Cm3pQZ1Dis
I'm currently reading The Plot Against America and the parallels between Roth's novel and what's going on in America today are uncanny. Main difference is that in the novel there isn't a clear path to impeachment of president. https://t.co/QKlwH5NMxV— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) June 18, 2019

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This was a very interesting piece of alternate historical fiction. Philip Roth asks the question - what if FDR had been defeated in his presidential run for a third term by the charismatic, anti-Semitic Charles Lindbergh whose main campaign promise was to keep the US out of World War II while having a darker motive for acquiring great power? Roth tells his story in a macro way as well as going micro and showing the impact of Lindbergh's presidency through the eyes of a boy in a Jewish family living in Newark, NJ. I decided to read this book upon learning that HBO is doing a movie adaptation of it, with portions being filmed in my neighborhood. I took the opportunity to visit the site of filming when it was taking place a few blocks from my house. It was a cool experience made cooler by getting to hang out with a few of the extras. I've long been a Philip Roth fan, and while this novel didn't impress me quite as much as the masterful American Pastoral or crack me up like the hilarious Portnoy's Complaint, it was still a great read. Parallels between the 1940's of Roth's imagination and our current political climate are striking. Simply switch the idea of a man who ascends to the presidency aided by a foreign government (Germany) with the idea of a man ascending to the presidency aided by a foreign government (Russia). Switch a celebrity with no previous political experience having an improbable, meteoric rise to the White House with a celebrity with no previous political experience having an improbable, meteoric rise to the White House. Switch people being thrown into hellish concentration camps because they're Jewish with people being thrown into hellish detention centers because they crossed a border in hope for a better way of life. One is hypothetical fiction, the other is the life we're living. The deeper into the book you get, the more you marvel at how Roth seemed to be stealing from a reality that hadn't happened yet by creating one that never happened. As a wise man once said, truth is stranger than fiction.
View all my reviews
From MATTERS OF CONVENIENCE
President Joe Biden has signed legislation establishing Juneteenth as a federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery. Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union soldiers brought the news of freedom to enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas. https://t.co/zuUa3cEVpB
— The Associated Press (@AP) June 17, 2021
Monday, March 4, 2019
Leaving Neverland
For years I have been an enormous Michael Jackson fan. Not the fanatical variety that dressed up like him and tried to emulate his every move, but I've been in awe of his musical talents from nearly as far back as I can remember. I've been around the block long enough to have watched him perform with his big brothers, ironically (in retrospect) seeming so much older than his years. At my first job as a summer camp counselor for 7, 8 and 9 year old kids at my church, the kids put on a talent show at the end. The girls performed Stop! In the Name of Love and the boys, led by this little guy who was a fantastic dancer, performed Dancing Machine. I remember hearing songs from Off the Wall the first time around and knowing immediately that there was a new sheriff in town. I expected him to become a big movie star after The Wiz but it turned out to be a one shot deal. Along with everyone else I recognized while watching Motown 25 that he was ready to explode to the next level. I remember anticipating the hyped debuts of videos such as Thriller and Remember the Time that actually turned out even cooler than we imagined they would be. In college I lied to a girl or two I was trying to impress, claiming to be one of the background dancers in Michael Jackson's video for Bad. I named one of my short stories after an MJ song (You've been hit by, you've been struck by...). If not quite a stan, I was definitely a Michael Jackson all caps FAN.
As Jackson got older he definitely got weirder. Stories about him grew increasingly disturbing. The odd changes to his appearance actually turned out to be useful distractions from odder, not particularly low whispers about his personal life. I remember feeling relieved when he married Lisa Marie Pressley. Maybe, in spite of some eccentricities, he was basically a normal guy after all. People try to take advantage of absurdly wealthy celebrities by making up salacious stories and suing them as a get rich quick scheme all the time. Michael Jackson was quirky because of an abnormal childhood, but nothing more sinister than that. I tried to believe this and was largely successful at convincing myself.
I was rocked when he died as evidenced when I wrote One Glove-One Love: Michael Jackson tribute and Michael Jackson Memorial Service. I knew there would never be another like him. Although I didn't consider him to be a music genius on the level of Miles Davis or Prince, Michael was certainly the ultimate entertainer. To make a proper comparison, rather than choosing another singer it probably makes more sense to compare him to Harry Houdini or Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Game changers!
Last night I watched the documentary Leaving Neverland. I've officially seen and heard enough. I can no longer see Michael Jackson as innocent until proven guilty. Now it's the other way around. At least I still have Janet...and Tito.
Get your Michael Jackson binge listening on while you still have time...— Travon Free (@Travon) March 4, 2019
Even the Church of Dr. King can't handle it!#LeavingNeverland https://t.co/BgLplBIoLG— Daniel Raza (@S_DannyRaza) March 4, 2019
This Leaving Neverland documentary is sickening. Primarily wtf is the matter with this guy's parents? Father at least had the sense to stay away from this show but Mom is cheerfully on camera acting beyond clueless.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
I would eventually learn why there was no appearance by the fathers in documentary. Not a whole lot of happy in these stories.
#LeavingNeverland - Either MJ was a monster or these people are really f'd up for making up such horrible stories. But they make the parents look just as bad for incredible negligence as they make Michael Jackson out to be a predator. How can no anger be aimed at their parents?— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
Sure seems that MJ groomed particular types of families who were easiest to manipulate. Not only overwhelmed by his stardom but also hopeful to achieve their own stardom with Jackson's help. I also think MJ maintained relationships with kids, esp. famous 1's, that weren't sexual— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
Macaulay Culkin, Emmanuel Lewis, Corey Feldman are credible when claiming relationships w/ Michael Jackson weren't sexual because they're likely telling the truth. I used to think if MJ was into boys he'd just pay for sex trafficking. But these families basically acted like pimps— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
Yes there was a childlike quality to Michael Jackson,Michael Jackson is not the 1st person to have his "childhood stolen". Whether it's due to child stardom or far less glamorous reasons, there are quite a few people who missed out on traditional childhoods. Most don't compensate as adults by hanging out with kids all the time.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
but to what degree was it a lure?
But you can be strange without being a pedophile. Was MJ both? I'd like to believe he wasn't but more than being a stan, I'm a realist.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
One thing made clear to me from social media regarding high profile criminal cases of various natures is that people pick a side early on. Based on desired outcome they choose what evidence sways them & what to dismiss in order to to support pre-reached conclusions.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
If you're sympathetic to the accuser for whatever reason, it won't matter to you that case against the accused isn't ironclad. You'll accept the accusations without requiring hard proof. The accused person's denials will fall on deaf ears.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
Conversely if you're sympathetic to the person accused of wrong doing, no amount of circumstantial evidence will be enough to convince you they're guilty. You'll grasp any straw that points to possible innocence. Conspiracy theories will seem quite reasonable even if far fetched.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
In the end you may never know what actually went down with 100% certainty. Your guesses/assumptions will be right some of the time and wrong some of the time. But in your mind you'll always be right and that's what counts.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
Sometimes you just know something in your gut. This isn't true knowledge. It's belief. It's conviction. But it really really feels like knowing what is/isn't true. So we go with it.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
The smoothest criminals are those who excel at choosing perfect victims. This keeps them from being caught/accused for a long time, & when day of reckoning finally does arrive the accusations come from flawed sources that are easy to dismiss. Powerful people are tough to topple.— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 4, 2019
I am a therapist that works with survivors. If the abuser is a loved one (I.e., parent, sibling, etc) often the loss of the relationship to the abuser is as traumatic as the abuse itself. It can take a long time for a victim to come to terms with such a loss.— J Axman (@jeffluvsmetal) March 4, 2019
Even if you take out the matter of the sexual molestation (which I believe happened) just the psychological damage MJ did to these boys by fostering a fantastical relationship with them and then coldly cutting it off is unconscionable. Their parents failed these boys as well.— J Axman (@jeffluvsmetal) March 4, 2019
I don’t know if what happened to him was at the hands of Michael Jackson, but that statement rings very true to me, as a survivor. It seems normal because it’s what you know until you mention it to someone “normal” and they are horrified :/ it’s a shitty feeling.— Jᴇɴɴɪғᴇʀ (@oyofmidmidworld) March 4, 2019
If you're not able to stomach watching the documentary (you certainly wouldn't be alone) but you are interested in this subject, I recommend reading this BuzzFeed article at minimum.
Some other stuff I found (while looking for a picture or two to accompany this post) to be taken with as large a grain of salt as you wish:
MJ and Boys; NY Post article; National Enquirer article
Some radio stations across the world are taking the allegations made against Michael Jackson in the #LeavingNeverland documentary pretty seriously.
— theGrio.com (@theGrio) March 7, 2019
His music has been pulled from several radio stations.https://t.co/16J4SaOgLU
A statue of Michael Jackson has been removed from Britain's National Football Museum in the wake of fresh allegations of sexual abuse that continue to surround the pop superstar's legacy https://t.co/CWPcy2hsQJ pic.twitter.com/GHxIjgaOmb
— CNN (@CNN) March 7, 2019
As I head back to Los Angeles, I want to thank UK media for giving me the opportunity to be a voice for my uncle Michael.
— Taj Jackson (@tajjackson3) March 7, 2019
To all the MJ fans worldwide, you have been truly amazing.
While they have stories...we have the truth.
The facts don’t lie, people do.
The useful thing about my ability to separate art from artist at least 98% of the time is I don't have to agonize when a fave turns out to be f'd up. Not that I go out of my way to financially support them, but I wage no hard core boycott either. A bop is a bop so dance on.
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) March 6, 2019
Sunday, March 3, 2019
THE BLACK ATHLETE - Reprinted
A 260lb man almost running a 4.3...I mean DAMN!! #MontrezSweat— Damien Woody (@damienwoody) March 3, 2019
Alabama DL Quinnen Williams 1st 40 = 4.87u. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/haUNKVKmX0— ig: josinaanderson (@JosinaAnderson) March 3, 2019
Alabama DT Quinnen Williams' official 40-time is 4.83.— ESPN Stats & Info (@ESPNStatsInfo) March 3, 2019
That's the 4th-fastest by any 300-lb player at the Combine since 2006, and faster than:
- J.J. Watt (4.84 at 290 lbs in 2011)
- Geno Atkins (4.85 at 293 lbs in 2010)
- Daron Payne (4.90 at 311 lbs in 2018) pic.twitter.com/B77QL8Jn0q
D.K. Metcalf has taken over the NFL combine.— Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport) March 2, 2019
— 6’3” 228lbs
— 27 reps
— 40.5" vertical
— 4.33 40 time
— 1.6% body fat pic.twitter.com/ZsFr1Iziks
#Mizzou WR Emanuel Hall with an amzing 11'9" broad jump.— Steve Frederick (@_SteveFrederick) March 2, 2019
2nd-best broad jump in the history of the NFL Combine (Byron Jones). pic.twitter.com/OyeT4gTwVS
Officially the FASTEST 40 of the 2019 #NFLCombine...@OleMissFB DB Zedrick Woods runs a 4.29!!! 🔥 @ZedrickW pic.twitter.com/QJNFkcifSe— NFL (@NFL) March 4, 2019
Do African-Americans (and individuals of African heritage in general) tend to excel in athletic competition? If answered in the affirmative, what is the rationale behind this phenomenon? And most important of all, what are the implications of this reasoning?
Considered objectively, African-Americans clearly represent a significantly larger percentage of professional athletes (particularly at the most elite levels) than the portion of the population that they represent. This is beyond debate. On the track, if anyone will be gaining ground on Marion Jones or Maurice Greene any time soon, in all likelihood they will not have blonde hair and blue eyes. Whether in short distance sprints or long distance marathons, the person who crosses the finish line first usually has brown skin. On most teams in the NBA in recent history, if you were searching for a white man you would have been best served starting with the twelfth man on the bench, if there was one to be found at all. Disproportionate numbers of blacks occupy positions in the NFL that require the most speed, agility, and leaping ability. Think about it. If you were choosing sides for a game of pick up basketball and had to decide between the remaining white guy and the remaining black guy, all other characteristics appearing equal, whom would you choose?
Scientists have researched, and some even claim to have found physiological differences that prove members of one race are predisposed to do better at certain tasks than members of other races. If it is taken as factual that a person's heritage makes them more susceptible to a particular disease, then can an equally valid point not be made about one group of people genetically having faster twitch muscles than another?
And so, with both impartial numbers and unbiased science supporting the case, why is the statement that blacks are superior athletes to whites such a controversial one? Why do some people vehemently oppose such a seemingly obvious notion? The answer can be written in black and white. America is a land obsessed with race relations. Racial prejudice is by no means a lost art in the land of the free, home of the brave. So any broad statement that divides us along color lines will be open to great scrutiny. Even if a generality seems benign, it still constitutes a stereotype. Once a stereotype is accepted by those it is being pinned on, the argument for other less pleasant stigmas is strengthened. Is to accept being labeled as naturally faster worth the cost of also being considered inherently lazier, or less intelligent, or more criminal minded? Of course not. This is a clear cut case of the negatives far outweighing the positives. Sometimes evidence is best left ignored.
Besides, the latest wave of European imports and special American finds is slowly but surely bringing a semblance of racial balance to the NBA. If any race can be said to be tailor made to dominate Major League Baseball, that honor belongs not to blacks, but to Hispanics. Perhaps the next white heavyweight champion of the world is not lurking around a corner in nearby proximity (I was proven wrong here. See Brothers Klitschko). But a Brit did recently manage to win and hold the belt for awhile, which is just about as fantastical as the plots of Rocky I through V.
It's just plain sense that those who were initially excluded from competing at the highest levels of sports would end up excelling when finally given the opportunity. As for dominating or at least achieving fair representation in coaching and front office positions, this is probably still a long time away. One barrier at a time. Changing institutionalized perceptions is a slow process, and Jackie Robinsons come around only every so often. So as tennis goes the way of the Williams sisters; Tiger Woods elevates himself farther and farther above his tennis brethren; and African-Americans continue to smash pigskin myths by demonstrating an aptitude for "thinking" positions like quarterback; those who long for a paler shade of sports are left to take solace for now that not too many folks who aren't greatly reddened by the sun have taken particular interest in ice hockey yet.
Speaking of ice hockey though...
This #Juneteenth, we celebrate the Coloured Hockey League. Founded in Nova Scotia in 1895, the league was formed by the sons and grandsons of escaped slaves, whose innovations helped create hockey as we know it today. pic.twitter.com/tBmoSoxrNB
— NHL (@NHL) June 19, 2020
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Confront the dark parts of yourself, and work to banish them with illumination and forgiveness. Your willingness to wrestle with your demons will cause your angels to sing.— Jon Winokur (@AdviceToWriters) February 6, 2019
AUGUST WILSON#amwriting #writing #writinglife pic.twitter.com/S1FgUAEcnz
Tell #stories filled with facts. Make people touch and taste and KNOW. Make people FEEL! FEEL! FEEL!— Jon Winokur (@AdviceToWriters) February 12, 2019
OCTAVIA BUTLER#amwriting #fiction pic.twitter.com/HJ3yZ4PPzS
"The more you know of your history, the more liberated you are." - Maya Angelou pic.twitter.com/6w9k2YIEMt— Capital Prep Schools (@CPREP4Life) February 8, 2019
In 1959, while Lorraine Hansberry broke down the matters of racial discrimination and importance of family, Berry Gordy Jr. formed 1 of the most successful Black owned record labels, Motown Records.— California Endowment (@CalEndow) February 12, 2019
That same yr, jazz trumpeter, Miles Davis recorded “Kind of Blue.” #BHM2019 pic.twitter.com/yAbGoIk6a3
Langston Hughes. Born Feb 1, 1902. “Hold fast to dreams, for if dreams die, life is a broken winged bird that cannot fly.” A writer for the Chicago Defender and a major contributor to the Harlem Renaissance. His insightful, wise words still ring true. #playwright #activist #poet pic.twitter.com/6bcMGSxeRt— Black History Images (@BlackHistoryUS) February 1, 2018
James Baldwin. "I am what time, circumstance, history, have made of me, certainly but I am also, much more than that" pic.twitter.com/WPZzcjNdWH— Black History Images (@BlackHistoryUS) March 8, 2014
Alice Walker. "Everything want to be loved. Us sing & dance & holler, just trying to be loved." #art #history #writer pic.twitter.com/oWfnvRVcCZ— Black History Images (@BlackHistoryUS) March 7, 2014
Audre Lorde. "It is not our differences that divide us. It's our inability to recognize, accept & celebrate those differences." #poet #truth pic.twitter.com/vkZ7R0sqoU— Black History Images (@BlackHistoryUS) September 19, 2017
James Baldwin gives the best answer I’ve ever heard to those who claim they are “color blind” and that Black people should stop talking about race and just move on.#BlackHistoryMonth— Qasim Rashid, Esq. (@MuslimIQ) February 12, 2019
/12pic.twitter.com/zAfOO11rVN
Toni Morrison annihilated this interviewer. #BlackHistoryMonth has been on strugg but this moment should tide us over for a few days. pic.twitter.com/xrvGmw2zzp— NoSugarNoCreamMag (@NSNCMag) February 12, 2019
A Line A Day: Blackness Defined https://t.co/cquexwVLcs #blackhistorymonth— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 12, 2019
A Line A Day: Fatherhood and Black History Month https://t.co/iGil5yHhzq— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 12, 2019
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 12, 2019
A Line A Day: ALL THINGS BLACKNESS https://t.co/RDnDATUSch— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 1, 2019
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 2, 2019
— Roy L. Pickering Jr. (@AuthorofPatches) February 9, 2019
Happy Black History Month! pic.twitter.com/N9u2L49mN7— Sleeper Athletes (@SleeperAth1etes) February 1, 2019
Last but not least, a date near and dear to my heart in Black History because I had the opportunity to participate in it directly was: 1-20-09
Monday, January 7, 2019
CHAPTER ONE - read by the author
I hope you enjoy listening to this excerpt (with accompanying slideshow of visuals) from my novel MATTERS OF CONVENIENCE. Perhaps I'll keep recording and create a full audio book. Then again that's probably best left in the hands of those with greater expertise, though I don't think I sound half bad if I do say so myself. I may have even managed to outdo my effort from the last go around. If you want more of the story, a printed or electronic copy of my book will need to be obtained and read. For now, just hit play and kindly grant me about six and a half minutes of your attention.
Sunday, December 16, 2018
End of Year Book Giveaway Blitz
Kindle edition of MATTERS OF CONVENIENCE will be available FREE OF CHARGE from December 20th to December 24th (aka Christmas Eve).
Kindle edition of PATCHES OF GREY will be available FREE OF CHARGE from December 27th to December 31st (aka New Year's Eve).
Happy downloading! Happy holidays! Good luck with keeping your resolutions for 2019 especially if one of them is to read more often, more varied, more great books. Happy reading!!!
p.s. - Here is my final book review of 2018. Kept this one short and sweet.

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

View all my reviews