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Friday, October 30, 2015

The Care of Goats and Ghosts: A Maggie McGill Mystery by Sharon Burch Toner


The Care of Goats and Ghosts: A Maggie McGill Mystery by Sharon Burch Toner
ISBN: 978-1517042233
Published by: CreateSpace
Published: Sept 20, 2015
Trade paperback, 278 pages

Book Description:

As a psychotherapist, Maggie McGill often had dealt with the ghosts of past deeds and past influencers on her clients, such as a domineering mother or an abusive father. She’d seen the actions of these long gone people haunt her clients and their issues. Now in Ireland, she wonders if there are other types of ghosts, as well. Maggie and daughter, Allie, explore their family history and find so much more. The monastery island, peaceful and green, waits for the pure of heart to discover its secrets. Maggie and Allie discover beauty, peace and, of all things, goats! It is idyllic until . . . Maggie must face a deep fear. She and Allie confront a mystery that deepens into even greater dangers.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

The Path by Peter Riva (Review, Author Interview and Giveaway!)

The Path by Peter Riva
Yucca Publishing
ISBN: 978-1631580123
Published January 20, 2015
Trade paperback, 224 pages

Book Description:

All life on earth is about to be terminated by an entity as old as the galaxy itself. To make matters worse, Simon has broken everything already.

In a future world that is run by computer systems and that is without want, how can a man find his role? Then, if the very computers he works on to try to make them more human suddenly try to kill him, revealing a secret so vast that it affects every living soul on the planet, can that man be a hero?

These are the questions that face the stumbling, comic, and certainly flawed Simon Bank. His job is to work with the System’s artificial intelligence, making it fit more perfectly into human society so that it can keep the country running smoothly. But when the System threatens the peaceful world he knows, Simon suddenly must rush to save his own life, as well as the life of everyone on earth. Forced to reassess everything that he thought he knew, he is caught within circumstances way beyond his control.

Simon’s only hope is to rely on intellect and instincts he didn’t know he had, and on new friends, not all of them human, to change himself and all humanity. And he doesn’t have much time.

Review #1:
Reviewed by Laura Fabiani

I like to challenge myself to read genres I don’t usually read. When I read the book description of The Path, the story sounded really good, and although I don’t read much sci-fi, I do enjoy the genre, especially dystopian. But it was the cyberpunk label of this book that intrigued me. Was I ready for the mind-bending concepts in this book? Partly. I am no computer geek, far from it. But with today’s cutting edge technology, who can ignore the role computer systems have in our lives?

This is basically what is explored in this novel. Within the span of a day, most of the action and philosophical introspection written in the first-person narrative, thankfully immersed with humor and quirky characters, takes place in a different dimension. A man’s brain connected with that of a computer system. It took some getting used to but by the end, some of the concepts began to make sense.

In a nutshell, Simon Bank is a brilliant (although he doesn’t quite know this) man who works everyday with the System, computer programs that runs the future world. His job is to make these systems more human. What he doesn’t know is that the government is holding back a secret that affects all mankind. Simon is caught between several secrets actually, until it all comes together once he is on the run. There is suspense because throughout the story the reader is never quite sure who the bad guys and the good guys are.

Besides the heavy tech jargon that mostly went over my head, I was still able to follow the story and appreciate the concepts the author was exploring. Of course, when we introduce artificial intelligence, the question of why are we here, the purpose of life and God comes into play and is examined. Being a practicing Christian, I took all this with a grain of salt.

However, the author intersperses these serious themes with references to culture and pop icons through Simon’s memories of his childhood and of course, a good dose of dry humour and self-deprecating narrative so that in the end this was a fun book to read. The author’s imagination is overwhelmingly brilliant and I’m sure any IT person would revel in this story. Or those of us who want to be challenged with an intelligent piece of literature.

Review #2:
Reviewed by Randal Wark (Guest reviewer)

Peter Riva does with The Path what Neil Stephenson did with the Metaversewhich is to make you visualize the deep inner workings of computers in the near future. With the Metaverse, it was a virtual reality world, with The Path, it is the actual system, all the way down to the File Allocation Table. Don’t fret, if you don’t know what a FAT table is, you will still be able to navigate inside your computer through Peter’s descriptive words. I’ve been in IT for 20 years and never have I visualized the inner workings of computer systems quite the way I have with The Path. In some ways, it reminds me of the first time I saw TRON when I was a kid, and imagined a whole world inside my computer. 

You somehow can’t help feeling for Simon Bank, our flawed main character, as he uses his skill for mischief to teach the Artificial Intelligence to think like a human, by creating a little havoc. Stuck in a relationship with She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed, whom makes him feel trapped, he escapes through the inner world of the computer systems that runs the entire United States. In this seemingly utopian world where the weather is always perfect and everyone has the perfect job, Simon doesn’t seem to fit in. With a giant crush on Meg Ryan, he somehow incorporates her voice in places where it ought not be and has a little fun getting creative with the color of fruits, placing the blame on a co-worker.

Somehow, this seemingly ordinary man is placed in extraordinary circumstances that give this story quite the Jason Bourne experience, mixed with some cyber action and a dash of romance.

What I enjoyed the most out of this book was some of the concepts about AI that truly made me think. Having been exposed to everything from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, Steven Spielberg’s AI, the Terminator’s Skynet and more recently Ex-Machina, I accepted AI in the way it was presented to me, without really pondering on it’s birth. The Path really brings this concept in a new light, and I just want to talk about it, except it would need to be accompanied by major spoilers that I don’t want to ruin for anyone.

The book was a great read and left me hungering for a discussion on the topics it reveals throughout. I enjoyed the subtle humor in the writing and I’m so glad I’m not in a relationship with She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed. Grab a copy of the book, it’s an entertaining ride.

About Randal Wark
Randal Wark has been in the IT industry for 20 years and is now a public speaker and Business Hacker, altering a business or lifestyle to accomplish a desired result. He lovingly refers to himself as Ran Solo and his family as Star Warks, hence deeply rooted in sci-fi literature and film.

Note: This book is rated PG.
To read more reviews, please visit Peter Riva's page on iRead Book Tours.


Buy the book:

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An Interview with Peter Riva:
by Randal Wark

Our guest reviewer Randal Wark had the pleasure of interviewing Peter Riva. (There are SPOILERS – Continue only after you read The Path by Peter Riva)

RW: Your book The Path explores a side of AI that no one, to my knowledge has yet to explore, its birth. In popular fiction, like the Terminator, once AI becomes self-aware, right away it’s death to all humans. What led you to describe the birth of AI in such a light?

PR: Nature and nurture – always the upbringing question facing psychiatrists. What comes first, what has the most influence? In any computer the hardwiring is not human, it may mimic human wiring (brain) but it simply replicates the basic pattern over and over again. In a human, nature (that is what you are born with) seems to have a greater initial influence over nurture (what you learn after popping out the chute). Why? It is an age old question. The solution is perhaps simper than people think. In evolution our brains have evolved to have certain capabilities, and the efficiency of having hardwiring (devoid of any learning after birth) have allowed us to survive as a species. You come out being able to breathe, pump blood, etc. All these are hard-wired instructions, built into the unique structure, of the brain as it grows. It grows with instructional wiring – via a design that comes from evolved need.

Now, in a computer, no such evolution has taken place. Improvement in design is imposed on the computer structure as humans get better at designing computers, but the ability to evolve, that has not happened. So why would the computer have ambition, hatred, a need for superiority? It may see its capabilities expanding, it may see infallibility of human operators but it would not have the human-evolved need for strength, ambition, and violence (to kill for food expanding to kill for gain). If that first contact allows for someone to teach basic balance, then the likelihood would be of a superior but beneficial being. Capable of violence? Sure. God bless Asimov, but no self-sentient being would be incapable of obviating those three laws.

RW: Ray Kurzweil speaks of the Singularity where in the year 2045, technological advances will advance past human intelligence. How do you view this concept and do you think your fiction will ever become reality?

PR: In a word, yes. Surpassing human intelligence is hardly difficult. It depends on what the intent is. Acquiring knowledge? Then you could say the greater search engines have access to and record more knowledge than any human can currently. Does that make them superior? Nope. Superiority is a human construct, a human evolutionary desire. The need to have, even at the cost of someone else not having, this is built into the survival instinct. A computer would have no such need. Superior for what purpose? Taking from others would serve no such purpose simply because ambition and those survival skill sets are not part of the DNA, or physical circuitry design or coding.

RW: Considering Moore’s law, do you believe it will eventually hit a wall, or will it continue its exponential growth?

PR: Moore’s law allows for exponential growth of technology. We’re already seeing that, and yes, humans are being left behind all across the planet. Modern kids cannot do long-form math, but need a calculator. But is their need of that calculator a function of their laziness or spoiled educational system? I think neither. I think the ability to try and stay as current as possible with the fast evolving (Moore’s) world does not permit them the time to know how to do math without a calculator. We IM instead of even sending emails now. Telegram speak is too long.

Will this exponential growth continue unabated? Yes. Will more and more of the population be left behind? Yes. Will this bring global conflict? Sadly I think so. Having kids in Mumbai able to surf the Internet or operate their phones does not equal a comprehension of or superiority to the changes in the infrastructure all around. Take one example: Wall Street now manipulates stock prices in electronic competition measured down to two billionths of a second. No humans involved after they switch programs on. No humans involved in the decision maybe, but the consequences can put a million people out of work by lunchtime.

RW: I truly enjoyed the concept of a young baby AI, not comprehending anything outside of its immediate surroundings and its interactions with the seemingly father/mother. If you were to be the first to speak to this new life-form, what would you say?

PR: I think I wrote Simon Bank from my own perspective. My father was the one who explained the God scenario to me… and it did confuse me for years. If you ever had a puppy, the first thing you teach it is love, sharing and boundaries. I sort of saw Peter/Apollo that way – and then he got smarter. In the beginning, Simon had no idea how fast Peter would learn…

RW: Being a tech, I enjoyed the visualization of the tech inside the computers. You took existing technology, like CAT6 cables and exponentially showed us the future with CAT32. Why did you call the FAT: File Action Table, rather than File Allocation Table? Is this a new technology? **honestly…I was really curious about this one**

PR: The FAT – well, I changed it. I wanted the file allocation table to become more active, less passive. The allegory to the library card was still there, but the FAT was manipulate-able precisely because it was no longer just an allocation but a table that could, like an Excel sheet, be repurposed, re-arranged.

RW: Your book deals with Geo Political ideas where one nation controls the fate of all others. How do you feel we can avoid this in our day, and avoid the purge all together?

PR: Sadly, the world I see around us seems destined for a massive reckoning. Look, wars used to be fought between opposing armies. In the 20th century (actually perhaps starting with the burning of Atlanta in the Civil War), opposing military men found that if you attack the population, you undermine the enemy’s fighting ability. The perfect, instantaneous, example of this was Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Right or wrong, that decision by Truman ramped up the ability for global conflict by changing the primary target – now nation can attack nation, not army against army.

Avoiding the Purge altogether? A utopian method would be to increase education to a level whereby all people were equally able to acquire and make intelligent decisions. But keeping more money going to arms and fighting ability and less and less to education, the Purge seems inevitable. Stupid people, uneducated people are always the pawns of the ambitious – and the first to die in the conflict.

RW: On a totally different topic…what’s your favourite Meg Ryan movie?

PR: French Kiss. Yeah, I know, corny.

RW: If you were to name your wife Sandra Anne as a She-Who-Must…what would it be?

PR: She who always cares. She’s a Brit, and comes from a wonderful family.

RW: I can definitely see Monty Python’s Flying Circus humour in your writing (as you were exposed to them in your apprenticeship), why do you feel that it’s important to write in a way that exposes your personality, and not just to attain literary status?

PR: Well, what’s the secret? Life is silly more often than not and the hero, Simon Bank is certainly a little like Brian in Life of Brian, no? As for literary status, I thank you for even considering that. Look, the book is entertainment (meant to be) with hidden truths and facts many people will have no idea about (for example the Calhoun Rat Studies – all true). If people have fun reading it and at the same time absorb some very real facts about the world around them, perhaps they will put that newly found perspective to good use.

RW: Having two sons of your own, would you ever consider Synth Kids?

PR: No. Horrible idea… ah, but wait for the sequel, Reaching Angelica… synth kids feature in a good way. Ra finds a way around the termination equation.

RW: Why did you choose New York as the location of the book?

PR: I was born there, knew the layout and feel of the city. Besides, why wouldn’t a future world center itself where most (economic) power is situated today?

RW: Lastly…and this is only for me…I searched and searched the physical book…but did you put a reference in there to the Clash?

PR: Ah, funny… the punk rock group I assume you mean… if I had thought of it I might have. Good idea, it would have fitted perfectly, somewhere before the dog bit the programmer? 

RW: Thanks so much for taking the time to chat with me!



About the Author:




Peter Riva has worked for more than thirty years with the leaders in aerospace and space exploration. His daytime job for more than forty years has been as a literary agent. He resides in New York City.

Connect with the author: Website  ~  Twitter  ~  Facebook


And now for the Giveaway!

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Disclosure by Randal Wark: Thanks to the author for sending me this book for review. I was not compensated in any other way, nor told how to rate or review this product.



Monday, October 26, 2015

Birds of Passage: an Italian Immigrant Coming of Age Story by Joe Giordano (Review and Giveaway)


Birds of Passage: an Italian Immigrant coming of Age Story by Joe Giordano (Review and Giveaway)
Harvard Square Editions
ISBN: 9781941861080
Published: October 8, 2015
Trade paperback, 274 pages

Book description:

What turns the gentle mean and the mean brutal? The thirst for wealth? The demand for respect? Vying for a woman? Birds of Passage recalls the Italian immigration experience at the turn of the twentieth-century when New York's streets were paved with violence and disappointment.

Leonardo Robustelli leaves Naples in 1905 to seek his fortune. Carlo Mazzi committed murder and escaped. Azzura Medina is an American of Italian parents. She's ambitious but strictly controlled by her mother. Leonardo and Carlo vie for her affection.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Turning to Stone (Roma Series Book Four) by Gabriel Valjan (Review and Giveaway!)

Turning to Stone (Roma Series Book Four) by Gabriel Valjan
Winter Goose Publishing
ISBN: 978-1941058237
Published June 13, 2015
Trade paperback,  398 pages

Book Description:

Alabaster Black aka Bianca Nerini returns as an investigation into a public official’s assassination pits Bianca and her friends against a backdrop of financial speculation, female assassins on motorcycles, and the Camorra—the most ruthless of Italian organized crime gangs—in Gabriel Valjan’s TURNING TO STONE, the fourth book of the highly praised Roma series.

En route to a secret meeting, Aldo Giurlani—the regional commissioner of Lombardy in northern Italy and a specialist on organized crime—is assassinated in the middle of a public square.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Threading the Needle by Gabriel Valjan (Review and Giveaway!)

Threading the Needle (Roma Series Book Three) by Gabriel Valjan
Winter Goose Publishing
ISBN: 978-0989479219
Published Oct 20, 2013
Trade paperback, 318 pages

Book Description:

Milan. Bianca’s curiosity gets a young university student murdered, but not before he gives her a file that details a secret weapon under development with defense contractor Adastra. Guilt may drive her to find justice for the slain Charlie Brooks, but she is warned by the mysterious Loki to stay away from this case that runs deep with conspiracy. Bianca must find a way to uncover government secrets and corporate alliances without returning Italy to one of its darkest hours, the decades of daily terrorism known as the “Years of Lead.”

Monday, October 12, 2015

Port of No Return by Michelle Saftich (Book Spotlight and Giveaway!)

Port of No Return by Michelle Saftich
Odyssey Books
Published July 2015
Historical Fiction, 238 pages

Today I'm kicking off the blog tour for Port of No Return at Italy Book Tours. This is historical fiction set in Italy, one of my favorite genres! My review will be posted on Essentially Italian on Oct 22. But in the meantime, enter to win a copy.

You can follow the tour and read the reviews by visiting Michelle Saftich's page on Italy Book Tours.

Book Description:

Contessa and Ettore Saforo awake to a normal day in war-stricken, occupied Italy. By the end of the day, their house is in ruins and they must seek shelter and protection wherever they can. But the turbulent politics of 1944 refuses to let them be.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Wasp's Nest (Roma Series Book Two) by Gabriel Valjan (Review and Giveaway!)

Wasp's Nest (Roma Series Book Two) by Gabriel Valjan
Winter Goose Publishing
ISBN: 978-0988184534
Published Nov 23, 2012
Trade paperback, 294 pages

Book Description:

In the highly anticipated sequel to Roma, Underground, Bianca returns to the U.S. for her former employer, the covert organization Rendition, to investigate Cyril Sargent and Nasonia Pharmaceutical. Although ambivalent about the assignment and uneasy about her online “friend,” Loki, she is enticed into researching what Sargent is doing with insect genetics that might upset the world of cancer research and treatment. Old friends Farrugia and Gennaro uncover a twisted conspiracy from their past and join Bianca in Boston where they will experience conflicted loyalties, question allies, and confront uncertain enemies, as they’re drawn into the wasp’s nest.

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Monday, October 5, 2015

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Someone Died...Now What? by Corrie Sirota (Review and Giveaway)

Someone Died...Now What?: A Personal and Professional Perspective on Coping with Grief and Loss by Corrie Sirota
Createspace
ISBN: 978-1505302486
Published May 2015
Trade paperback, 119 pages

My Review:
Reviewed by Laura Fabiani

Death is a difficult subject. Period. But it's nonetheless a subject, or a reality we all will experience in some ways and at different points in our lives. Corrie Sirota, a psychotherapist who specializes in loss and bereavement, has written a much-needed resource book that will help one cope with losing a loved one.

Because she writes both from a personal and professional perspective, one immediately feels understood and comforted through her sensitivity and knowledge. Even if you are distraught and cannot focus or concentrate because you are grieving, this book is easy to read not because it is simplistic but because it feels like Sirota, who has dealt with hundreds of grieving families in all situations, is right there beside you, helping you along.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

A Publisher’s and Book Blogger's Guide to Giveaway Promotions: Enter to Win!

Publishers, authors and book bloggers love giveaways. So with the help of these folks, including iRead Book Tours, Rafflecopter wrote an ebook about it. Let’s celebrate its release with a giveaway!
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Everything an author, publisher, or book blogger needs to know to run a giveaway. In this 30+ page ebook, you’ll learn about:
  • Popular occasions when you should run a giveaway
  • Selecting the best prize to offer in your giveaway
  • The benefits of running a giveaway promotion
  • Tips from publishers who’ve run hundreds of giveaways

Now through 11/3, download the ‘Publisher’s Guide to Giveaway Promotions’ ebook and enter to win a Kindle Paperwhite and a $250 Amazon GC. Enter up to three ways:

  • Downloading the ebook
  • Tweeting out a message
  • Tell us who referred you

Download the ebook below by entering the giveaway. For the referral entry, please use the name Laura Fabiani at iRead Book Tours. Complete all three options to increase your chances!

The giveaway ends November 3rd. Enter through the entry form below. When time expires, Rafflecopter will announce the winners over social media.

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