EBA 2024 – SEE OUR FINALISTS’ BIOs

Few days ago we were glad to announce the finalists of Eyelands Book Awards 2024. Here you can see a brief bio of our finalists.Names appearance order by the date of submissions. Congratulations & Good luck to all!

Prize winners to be announced on December 30, 2024

NOVELS UNPUBLISHED

The Defection and Subsequent Resurrection of Nikolai Pushkin – Ken Pisani

USA

Ken Pisani is a novelist, playwright, screenwriter and member of the Writers Guild of America West. His debut novel, AMP’D, published by St. Martin’s Press, was a Los Angeles Times bestseller and finalist for the Thurber Prize for American Humor. AMP’D also won the Eyelands Grand Prize in 2022. Ken optioned his second work of fiction, the mystery novella 4 Corners, for television. He’s also contributed fiction and nonfiction to Huffington Post, Literary Hub, Salon, Publishers Weekly, Washington Independent Review of Books, Carve, Cedar Hills Press, The Writer, and the anthology More Tonto Short Stories, published in the U.S. and U.K. He recently completed a new novel, Days Are Here Again (publication forthcoming). Visit kenpisani.com for more.

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Cassandra Moon and the Murders in the Olive Groves – Maddie Grigg

UK

Maddie Grigg is the pen name of freelance journalist and former local newspaper editor Margery Hookings, from Dorset, England.

As Margery, she writes features for local magazines and promotes the annual Bridport Literary Festival.

As Maddie, she writes a weekly column for The People’s Friend magazine, which came about ten years ago after the editor discovered her blog.

Maddie (and Margery) has a great fondness for Corfu, where she lived for twelve months in 2012. She published a book, Good Morning Corfu: A Year on a Greek Island, about her grown-up gap year.

Obsessed with Greek mythology since reading Enid Blyton’s Tales of Long Ago as a child, she won a place at university as a mature student to study classics and ancient history at Masters level. But she was overwhelmed by academia and brilliant young students and quietly dropped out instead of completing her dissertation.

After regrouping, she began studying in 2019 for an MA in creative writing with The Open University. She loved the experience and decided to combine the new tools in her writer’s armoury with her passion for ancient Greece. The cosy crime novel, Cassandra Moon and The Murders in the Olive Groves, is the result.

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Beauty – Rena Rauch

Canada

I was born and raised in the city of George along South Africa’s scenic Garden Route. Living here instilled an early love of literature in me, fuelled by writers like J.M. Coetzee, A.S. Byatt, and the poetry of Sylvia Plath, Antjie Krog, and N.P. van Wyk Louw. In my final year of high school, I won a prestigious essay competition honoring C.J. Langenhoven—one of South Africa’s literary giants—a milestone that solidified my passion for writing.

I pursued Journalism and Literary Theory before completing a MPhil in Applied Ethics at the University of Stellenbosch, specialising in biomedical ethics. The research for my thesis sparked my dream of writing a novel, but the demands of running a business, extensive travel, serving on the University of Kwazulu-Natal’s Ethics Committee, guest lecturing, and raising children with my husband, a busy surgeon, left little time for such creative pursuits.

It was only after relocating to Canada 15 years ago, settling in a farmhouse with a view of the expansive Manitoba prairies, that I returned to this dream. There, cocooned in the solace of nature, in the deafening silence with my two cats by my side, my novel Beauty was born—a journey I will treasure forever.

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The Whore Saint –  Mohsen Estesnaei

Canada

Mohsen Estesnaei is a mysticism scholar with over 30 years of experience in the field. He has authored three books, with his second publication, “The Depth of Vision,” having earned four international book awards. His third book, “The Whore Saint,” remains unpublished but has already garnered four 5-star reviews from Readers’ Favorite and a 5-star review from the Literary Titan Book Award, highlighting its potential for success. Currently, Mohsen is seeking a traditional publishing house to collaborate with and bring his latest work to a wider audience.

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A Generation of Leaves – Alexander Matheou

Malaysia

Alexander Matheou is a humanitarian worker, a traveller, and a writer.  In 2016, while supporting the response to the migration crisis in Greece, he researched the history of how his Greek grandfather died in the resistance in Central Greece in 1943, and he published the story on Amazon.  He then spent four years researching and writing a novel: A Generation of Leaves, loosely based on family history, which follows the adventures of three very different brothers in the Balkan Wars in Greece in 1912/1913. Each summer, Alexander stays on the Island of Aegina, where in 2022 and 2023, he wrote Aegina Tales, a collection of short stories that weave an ancient spell from the abandoned goddess, Aegina, into the lives of people living on the island in the summer of 2023.  Alexander is currently Regional Director for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, based in Malaysia, and is responsible for coordinating humanitarian work in thirty-eight countries.

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HASHTAG: Stole your husband – Jo McClelland Phillips

Australia

Ontario-born Jo McClelland-Phillips is a neurodivergent, queer writer whose creative nonfiction has been featured in TIME, USA TODAY, Fairfax Media, and Scary Mommy. She is the winner of the Iceland Writers Retreat Alumni Award and a two-time resident at Varuna: The National Writers’ House in Australia. When she is not working as Community Development Coordinator for Headspace, Jo studies for her master’s degree in creative writing at Macquarie University and watches old Hollywood movies and baking competitions. She lives under a green roof (she pretends is Green Gables) with a bookseller, a nine-year-old, and a very tolerant cat.

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Freeze frame – Dawn-Michelle Baude

France

Dawn-Michelle Baude is an international author, educator and Senior Fulbright Scholar. Among her publications are seven volumes of poetry, two volumes of translations, two art catalogues, three communications books, one children’s book and a ghost-written international bestseller. She has published articles in various Condé Nast magazines and sites, the Los Angeles Times and Huffington Post; art reviews and criticism in ArtCritical and White Hot; literary reviews in San Francisco Chronicle and American Book Review, among others; and poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction in physical and digital publications. Excerpts from her autofiction, FREEZE FRAME, have won several distinctions, including First Prize in Nonfiction at the Tucson Festival of Books. She earned her Ph.D. at University of Illinois – Chicago and has taught writing at Bard College, American University of Paris, American University of Beirut, Alexandria University (Egypt), and John Cabot University (Rome). After briefly making her home in Las Vegas, Nevada, where she was a contributing writer at the Las Vegas Weekly, in 2022, she settled in Provence, France, where she founded the editing business Verve.

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Strigorov’s Forest – Tomislav Takac

Serbia

TomislavTakač was born in 1988 in the city of Subotica, Serbia. Since early childhood, he has been fascinated with everything strange  and he eventually became something of a walking encyclopedia. He started writing novels and short stories five years ago and hasn’t stopped since. He currently works in a women’s sock factory.

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NOVELS PUBLISHED

Anatomy of a Half Truth – Purbasha Ghosh

India

If life were a manuscript, Purbasha Ghosh is a work in progress. The inciting incident of her story was a turbulent childhood, spent in remote fringes of rural India, where her father’s postings, took the family. Relocations and recurrent new beginnings frequently upset her emotional status quo.

In the plagiarised, messy first draft of her life, outlined according to the formulaic plot structure of societal expectations, Ghosh was an Architect and a Planner. Recently, upon realising the middle of her life was sagging under the weight of corporate servitude, she has undertaken a large-scale structural edit of her narrative and consequently, is in a state of flux. Purbasha is currently decluttering those off-the-shelf techniques and hacks, advertised by the 24×7 go-getter culture, which she had previously employed, to force-fit her chronicle into pre-fab modules of success. She intends to discovery-write the rest of her saga.

Ghosh is a solo mother, and the setting of the present act of her unfolding tale, is Kolkata.

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Istanbul Crossing – Timothy Jay Smith

France

From a young age, Timothy Jay Smith developed a ceaseless wanderlust that’s taken him around the world many times. En route, he found the characters that people his work. Polish cops and Greek fishermen, mercenaries and arms dealers, child prostitutes and wannabe terrorists: he hung with them all in an unparalleled international career that saw him smuggle banned plays from behind the Iron Curtain, maneuver through Occupied Territories, represent the U.S. at the highest levels of foreign governments, and stowaway aboard a ‘devil’s barge’ for a three-day crossing from Cape Verde that landed him in an African jail.

 Tim brings the same energy to his writing. As a result, he’s won top honors for his novels, screenplays and stage plays. Fire on the Island (2020) won the Gold Medal in the Faulkner-Wisdom Competition for the Novel, and his screenplay adaptation of it was named Best Indie Script by WriteMovies. The Fourth Courier (2019), was a finalist for Best Gay Mystery in the 2020 Lambda Literary Awards. Previously, he won the Paris Prize for Fiction (now the de Groot Prize) for his novel, Checkpoint. Kirkus Reviews called Cooper’s Promise “literary dynamite” and selected it as one of 2012’s Best Books. 

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The Conquest of Kailash – Inderjeet Mani

Thailand

Inderjeet Mani is an Indian-born former US professor and scientist based in Thailand. His novel Toxic Spirits (now in its second edition) drew from his experiences as a volunteer teacher working with hill-tribes in Thailand’s Golden Triangle. Reactions to the novel have included “A complex and enthralling international intrigue with a treasure of remarkable detail” (Frederick Barthelme) and “Mani tells his story in taut, highly descriptive prose, capturing his Thai setting’s cornucopia of sights and tastes” (Kirkus Reviews). In addition to his new novel The Conquest of Kailash , Mani has also published six scholarly books, a hundred-odd scientific papers, and nearly fifty shorter literary pieces published in

3:AM Magazine, Aeon, Apple Valley Review, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Cargo Literary, Drunken Boat, Eclectica, Future Library: Contemporary Indian Writing, Litbreak, New World Writing, Nimrod, PANK, Short Fiction Journal, Slow Trains, Streetlight, Storgy, The Deccan Herald, The Hindu, Unsung

Stories, Word Riot, and other venues. Mani studied creative writing at Penn (with Carlos Fuentes), Bread Loaf (with Patricia Hampl) and Harvard (with Paul Harding). His affiliations have included Georgetown University (Associate Professor), Yahoo (Senior Director), Cambridge University (Visiting Fellow), MITRE (Senior Principal Scientist), Brandeis University (Visiting Scholar), and MIT (Research Affiliate). Website: https://tinyurl.com/inderjeetmani

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Seasons of Four Faces – Benjamin Kwakye

USA

Benjamin Kwakye is the author of several works of fiction and poetry. His work has won several awards, including the African Literature Association’s Book of the Year Award for Creative Writing, two regional Commonwealth Writers Prizes for Best First Book and Best Book, and the IPPY Gold Award for Adult Multicultural Fiction. His other awards include the Afrique Newsmagazine WEB DuBois Award for Literature, an indie book award for poetry, and the Illumination Book Award for Poetry (Bronze). He was a finalist for the Snyder Poetry Prize and the 2023 Eyelands Book Awards (unpublished novel). His novel, The Clothes of Nakedness, was adapted for radio as a BBC Play of the Week.  Kwakye was born in Accra, Ghana and holds degrees from Dartmouth College  and Harvard Law School. He currently lives with his family (Margaret, Nana, Jeede and Kristodia) in Michigan (United States), where he works as legal counsel.

The village of Luka JP Roarke

USA

JP Roarke was a trial lawyer for about 30 years, as well as a mentor to several younger attorneys.  He began writing after completing trial in a tragic death case, and has since written two novels and several short stories.   His short stories include The Tellings Of Julio Rivera and Interregnum, each of which were published in the US. Interregnum was also selected in the Stories of Inspiration anthology and a winner in America’s Sixfold competition, where it was described by Roarke’s own competition as “devastatingly sad but beautifully written.” 

Roarke’s writings have been published both in Europe and the United States, and honored in several international competitions.  He explains that his Eyelands entry, From The Village Of Lucca, was inspired by two real life women who while still children were involved in a terrible Lord of the Flies experience.  The British commentator Juliette Foster (now of the BBC), describes Lucca’s principal characters as “… honorable, decent women, emblematic of how the good in the world can win out against wickedness, even when the odds of success aren’t necessarily great,”  and adds that the novel “seamlessly moves between countries and centuries..[and] …once read will never be forgotten…Everything about it works.”

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The Zygan Emprise – Y S Pascal

USA

Y S Pascal is a pediatrician, journalist, and co-author of the Award-Winning Sammy Greene Thriller Series with Dr. Deborah Shlian.  Pascal is a member of the Writer’s Guild of America West, and has been published in the Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, Los Angeles Times, HuffPost, and Tribune International.  She is also the author of several pediatric research papers and two non-fiction books on health administration, as well as the children’s book, “High Hopes Big Dreams”.  Pascal is also the author and producer of a short film about her family’s tragedy in 1922 Anatolia, The Full Catastrophe, https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/the-full-catastrophe-short-film.   Pascal and her husband were born in Greece and live in Los Angeles, close to her three wonderful adult children and two sweet granddogs.  Her fourth novel in the Sammy Greene series, Dirty Deeds, is due out in February at https://www.amazon.com

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Now Beacon, Now Sea – Steven Hendricks

USA

Steven Hendricks is writer, book-artist, and teacher in Olympia, Washington. Hendricks’s first novel, Little is Left to Tell, was published by Starcherone Books in 2014 and reissued by Campanile Books in 2016. His new novel, Now Beacon, Now Sea, was published by Kernpunkt Press in 2024. Hendricks moved out west from Nebraska to attend The Evergreen State College, then completed his MFA at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has been a member of the faculty at Evergreen since 2002.

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POETRY UNPUBLISHED

 Seang (Hungering) – Anne Casey

Australia

Originally from the west of Ireland, Anne Casey is a Sydney-based, internationally award-winning poet/writer and author of sixpoetry collections. A journalist, magazine editor, media communications director, legal author and academic for 30 years, her writing is widely published and anthologised, ranking in leading national daily newspaper, The Irish Times’ Most Read.

Anne has won literary prizes in Ireland, Australia, the UK, USA, Canada, Hong Kongand India, most recently theAmerican Association of Australasian Literary Studies Poetry Prize, American Writers Review Prize, Henry Lawson Poetry Prize and iWoman Global Award forLiterature. She holds a law degree and a PhD in archival poetry and poetics of resistance. Annewas awardedthe nationalDistinguished Creative Arts Doctoral Student Award2024 (1st Prize) by the Deans and Directors of Creative Arts in Australian universities for her doctoral work, which includes her unpublished poetry collection entitled ‘Seang (Hungering)’.

Anne has served on numerous editorial advisory boards, as Vice President of Voices of Women arts alliance and as a founding board member of the Prankqueans, an Irish-Australian women’s arts collective, twice commended in New South Wales Parliament for their cultural contribution in Australia.

anne-casey.com    @1annecasey.

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Waiting for Godot in the blue Corolla – Jennifer M Phillips

USA

Jennifer M Phillips authored the poetry collection Wrestling With the Angel (Wipf & Stock, 2024), and chapooks Sitting Safe In the Theatre of Electricity (iblurb.com 2020), A Song of Ascents (Orchard Street press, 2022), and Sailing To the Edges (Finishing Line Press, forthcoming 2025). A bi-national immigrant, she lives gratefully in Barnstable, Cape Cod on Wampanoag ancestral lands. She is a bonsai-grower, gardener, painter, was a long-time HIV-AIDS  and hospital chaplain and Episcopal priest.

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Tidings from the Pelagos: a Polyphony -Jena Woodhouse

Australia

Born and based in Queensland, Australia, Jena Woodhouse has also experienced transcultural status, being a non-native speaker of several European languages, and having spent time in England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Germany, the Former Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Russia, and more than a decade living and working in Greece. She is the author of twelve published books and chapbooks across several genres, including seven poetry titles.

Background to my unpublished

poetry collection, Tidings from the Pelagos Greece is, quite simply, the love of my life: a passion that will inspire me to the end of my days. I venerate the country, its culture ancient and modern, and its people, the bearers of that culture. One lifetime can scarcely suffice to adequately express all I feel and all I owe to the sustained encounter with a topos and living culture that is not the one I was born into, but one where I came to feel at home.

The poems collected in Tidings from the Pelagos are a response to my encounters with Aegean Greece, and a reciprocal offering in return for the manifold joys and revelations bestowed on me by Greece over the past four decades since I first set foot there. actualising youthful dreams of a living, vibrant cosmos whose archaeology, mythology, art, philosophy, and physical beauty had beckoned me from afar.

  • Photo : Anna Jacobson

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But God…Hope that Never Fails – Vernae Coffee

USA

Vernae Coffee is a Christ Follower who has written prose, poetry, and songs since experiencing at a young age how words inspire the human spirit. She is one of seven children and grew up in Birmingham, Alabama, and Atlanta, Georgia. Vernae is a graduate of Berea College and East Tennessee State University, and currently works as a School Psychologist with Rutherford County Schools in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. She has committed her personal and professional life to encouraging others to see their obstacles as opportunities and their pain as purposeful.

Vernae was selected as a 2021 Palm Beach Poetry Festival Langston Hughes Fellow, and a 2019 Eyelands Book Award’s Finalist for her unpublished children’s book, Teddy Wet My Bed. Vernae is the 2017 NTCE and Penguin Random House recipient of the Maya Angelou Poetry Grant Award.

But God…Hope That Never Fails is the debut of Vernae’s first Poetry collection. She is exhilarated to share how God’s love and acceptance can be a place of peace,healing, and transformation.

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If the birds should hear this – Dike Okoro

USA

Dike Okoro is a poet/scholar and graduate of the MFA program for creative writing at Chicago State University and the PhD in English program at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. He studied poetry under Gwendolyn Brooks, former poet laureate of Illinois/USA. His poetry has previously appeared in many publications including: Callaloo, Pure Slush, Commuterlit.com, Fiyah, Bellingham Review, Nzuri, Fingernails Across the Chalkboard, Witness Magazine, Yellow Medicine Review,Universal Oneness, and Full of Crow. A professor of English at a college in the US, Okorois the recipient of numerous fellowships/awards, including a Sam Walton Fellowship, a Newberry Scholar-in-Residence, a Gwendolyn Brooks graduate assistantship for research, and a Ken Saro-Wiwa Senior Research Fellowship. He is the author of the poetry collections Homecoming: New and Selected Poems, Dance of the Heart, and In the Company of the Muse, and the editor of We Have Crossed Many Rivers: New Poetry from Africa, shortlisted by humanrightscareers.com (UK) as one of 5 Vocal Human Rights Poetry Books inspiring change. He has been invited to read his poetry in Kenya, South Africa, Norway, Pakistan, India, Canada, and Nigeria, and has been a finalist for the Iliad Poetry award and the Cecile De Jongh Literary Award.

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POETRY PUBLISHED

Even the Dog Was Quiet – Margaret R. Sáraco

USA

Margaret R. Sáraco, author of two poetry collections, If There Is No Wind and Even the Dog Was Quiet (Human Error Publishing), has received three Honorable Mentions in Allen Ginsberg Poetry Contests, nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and was a semi-finalist in the inaugural Laura Boss Poetry Narrative Book Contest. Margaret and her filmmaker won first prize in Moving Words Film Festival for her poem, “Dear Rorschach.” Her short stories and poetry appear in journals and anthologies including Voices in Italian Americana, All About My Mother, Book of Matches, Greening the Earth (Penguin), Kerning, and S/He Speaks 2: Voices of Women, Trans & Nonbinary Folx. Margaret is a spoken word artist and writing workshop leader. She has appeared in video, Instagram, and podcast projects and is a poetry editor for Platform Review. More info. at https://margaretsaraco.com

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Hypocrisy has a Face and Other Writings – Dina Kafiris

UK

Born in Sydney to Greek parents, Dina Kafiris earned her undergraduate degree at the University of Western Sydney, during which she studied Ethics (Philosophy) at Deree–The American College of Greece. She subsequently moved to the UK. Her poetry, fiction and essays have appeared in Mōnolith: Visuals & Verses, Wild Court, American, British and Canadian Studies, The Journal, Nea Synteleia, Horizon Review and Odyssey Magazine, among others. She was a regular member of and collaborator with the Corais group of the Greek literary review Nea Synteleia (New End of the World), under the Greek poet Nanos Valaoritis.Her poetry chapbook,The Blinding Light Circling Elpida, in one act, was published by Original Plus in 2014 and is from her forthcoming trilogy 21st-century Modern Greece: The First Decade. She holds an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Leeds and a PhD in Critical and Creative Writing from the University of Wales, Bangor.She was Writer in Residence and Guest Lecturer at Kingston University London.

Kafiris is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

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Banana Girl -Paris Rosemont

Australia

Paris Rosemont is an Asian-Australian poet and author of poetry collection Banana Girl (WestWords, 2023), shortlisted by the Association for the Study of Australian Literature for the 2024 Mary Gilmore Award for a first volume of poetry, the Society of Women Writers NSW Inc. Poetry Book Awards 2024, and longlisted for the International Poetry Book Awards 2024 (UK).

Paris’s poetry has been widely published and has won awards both locally and internationally, including first place in the Hammond House Publishing Origins Poetry Prize 2023 (UK), second place in the Whitsundays Literary Heart Awards Poetry Prize 2024, shortlisted for the International Proverse Poetry Prize 2023 & 2024 (Hong Kong) and longlisted for the New Writers Poetry Competition 2023 & 2024 (UK).

Paris takes delight in bringing her poetry to life through multi-disciplinary modes of expression, including theatrical performance, and has featured at events including the Red Dirt Poetry Festival 2024 (Alice Springs) and Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2023.

Paris’s second poetry collection, Barefoot Poetess, is due for release in early 2025. She may be found on Instagram @msparisrose, Facebook http://www.facebook.com/parisrosemont or at http://www.parisrosemont.com

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I have decided to remain vertical – Gayelene Carbis

Australia

GayeleneCarbis is an award-winning Australian/Irish/Chinese/Cornish writer of poetry, prose, short film, and plays.Gayelene’s first poetry collection,Anecdotal Evidence (Five Islands Press) was awarded Finalist, International Best Book Award, U.S. Her second book of poetry, I Have Decided to Remain Vertical (Puncher and Wattmann) has been Finalist /Distinguished Favourite in numerous international poetry book awards in 2023 and 2024 (U.K.; U.S.) and most recently awarded Highly Commended in the NSW Society of Women Writers’ Poetry Book Award 2024. Her book is currently Finalist in the Eyelands Poetry Book Award 2024 (Greece).
Gayelene’s work has been widely published, performed and won/been finalist in poetry, prose, short film and playwriting awardsin Australia/overseas, including India, Malaysia, Nepal, Edinburgh, Oxford, New York, andCanada, where she was awarded a Banff Residency Scholarship in Poetry.She teaches Creative Writing in universities and at Sandybeach (Sandringham) and works as a writing mentor and manuscript assessor.She is currently working on two collections: prose poetry; and auto-fiction/memoir.
Gayelene lives and works on the unceded land of the Boonwurrung people.

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Death Row Row Row Your Boat – Kurt Luchs

USA

Kurt Luchs (kurtluchs.com and https://www.facebook.com/kurt.luchs/) won a 2022 Pushcart Prize, a 2021 James Tate Poetry Prize, the 2021 Eyelands Book Award for Short Stories, and the 2019 Atlanta Review International Poetry Contest. He is a Contributing Editor of Exacting Clam. His humor collection, It’s Funny Until Someone Loses an Eye (Then It’s Really Funny) (2017), and his first full-length poetry collection, Falling in the Direction of Up (2021), are published by Sagging Meniscus Press, along with his newest poetry book, Death Row Row Row Your Boat (2024). Before turning his attention to poetry, nonfiction and fiction, he wrote humor for the New Yorker, the Onion and McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. He also wrote comedy for television (Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher and the Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn) and radio (American Comedy Network). As a member of the sketch comedy act the Luchs Brothers he co-wrote and sang the often-bootlegged Sex Pistols parody single “Kill Me I’m Rotten” and its flipside, “Losing My Lunch Over You.” He lives in Kalamazoo, Michigan”.

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SHORT STORY UNPUBLISHED

Black Crescent – Townsend Walker

USA

Townsend Walker draws inspiration from cemeteries, foreign places, violence and strong women.  “3 Women, 4 Towns, 5 Bodies & other stories,”a short story collection, Deeds Publishing, 2018. “La Ronde,”a novella of linked stories, Truth Serum Press, 2015. Overone hundred short stories and poems published in literary journals. Two nominations for the PEN/O.Henry Award. He reviews for the “New York Journal of Books.” He teaches creative writing at Mount Tamalpais College on the San Quentin State Prison Campus. His website is https://www.townsendwalker.com.

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The House of Genyo and Other Stories –  Terry Watada

Canada

Terry Watada is a writer living in Canada.  He has 4 novels, 6 poetry books and a collection of short stories in print. His 6th poetry book, “The Mask”, was released in December 2023.  His 4th novel, “Hiroshima Bomb Money”, became available in the fall of 2024.

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Oscillations of Humanity  – Aalok Rathod

USA

Aalok Rathod is an emerging voice in contemporary literature, known for his introspective and thought-provoking explorations of human nature. Born and raised in Mumbai, India, Aalok moved to the USA in 2016. Aalok holds a Bachelor’s degree in Finance and a Master’s in Media Management, a unique blend of disciplines that informs his storytelling with both depth and structure. Oscillations of Humanity marks his foray into literary fiction. His writing style blends poetic prose with keen social observations, drawing readers into a narrative that resonates across cultural boundaries.
Beyond writing, Aalok has received critical acclaim for his chart-topping podcasts and award-winning films, cementing his place as a powerful voice in the world of media and storytelling. When not writing, Aalok lectures at universities and participates in global conferences on tech and finance. He currently resides in New York City, with his dog Ella

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A weaver’s way – Charles Osborne

UK

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Pagodas of the Sun—Japan Stories – G. S. Arnold

 Canada

G. S. Arnold has an MA in English in the Field of Creative Writing from the University of Toronto and works at a career college in Toronto, Canada. His work has appeared in literary journals such as The Malahat Review, Event Magazine, Ninth Letter, Asia Literary Review, Glimmer Train, Prairie Fire, and The Masters Review. Along with receiving numerous Toronto, Ontario and Canada Arts Council grants as well as a Pushcart and a Journey Prize nomination, his stories have been short or long listed in contests such as the Writer’s Union of Canada Short Prose competition, the 2019 CBC short story award, the international Bridport Prize for short stories, and the Masters Review Short Story Anthology. He has recently finished his debut novel “Sea of Clouds,” set during the 1923 Tokyo earthquake.

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SHORT STORY PUBLISHED

Little Fortified Stories – Barbara Black

Canada

Barbara Black writes short and flash fiction, poetry and libretti. Her work has appeared in many publications and anthologies, including The Cincinnati Review, Geist, The Hong Kong Review and Bath Flash Fiction Award anthology 2020. Achievements include: Fiction Finalist, 2020 National Magazine Awards and Winner, 2017 Writers’ Union of Canada Short Prose Competition. Barbara was shortlisted for the 2023 Edinburgh Flash Fiction Award and won First Prize in The Plaza Prizes Microfiction Contest and Second in their Flash Fiction category. Her debut book, Music from a Strange Planet, received the 2023 Sunshine Coast Writers and Editors Society Award in Fiction, was a finalist in The Canadian Book Club Awards and won the international Wishing Shelf Book Award for Fiction. Her latest book, a recipient of the 2024 Firebird Book Award for Short Story, is Little Fortified Stories, a collection of micro and flash fiction. Barbara lives in Victoria, BC, Canada, where she gardens and loves to ride the twisties on her trusty Triumph motorcycle.

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Dolores and Other Sorrows – Denis Smyth Díaz

Belgium

Born in Madrid, Spain, to Spanish and British parents. I studied English linguistics and literature at university in Spain and France and moved to Belgium to pursue my day job in translating. I took up writing to pour out all the stories that had been forever flitting around in my head. Initially I wrote in Spanish, but I then switched to English as an experiment, and that was the language in which I ultimately published my first collection of short stories, Dolores and Other Sorrows. I have also worked as an editor for Irish poet Mary Kennelly, I am co-chair of the Brussels Writers Circle and I am now working on a novel and a second collection of short stories.

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Dead Dreams – Sandeep Kumar Mishra

India

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Truth or Dare – Nadia Kabir Barb

UK

Nadia Kabir Barb is a British Bangladeshi writer and journalist and the author of Truth or Dare, a collection of short stories (Renard Press 2023, Bengal Lights Books 2017) listed in ‘The Best of 2023’ by the Indie Press Network. Her stories have featured in various international literary journals and anthologies. Can You See Me was a winner of the Audio Arcadia short story competition. She was longlisted for the 2021 Bridport Prize Peggy Chapman-Andrews First Novel Award. Her poems have featured in Post Lib journal and visual verse.

Nadia has been a long standing columnist for the leading English language newspapers in Bangladesh, The Daily Star and Dhaka Tribune. She holds a BA Hons from SOAS, and an MSc from the London School of Economics and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She has worked in the health and development sector in both the UK and Bangladesh.

She is the writer in residence 2024 for CILIP (Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals) RPG and is also a member of The Whole Kahani, a collective of British writers of South Asian origin.

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Occupations -Anna Mantzaris

USA

Anna Mantzaris is a San Francisco-based writer. Her work has appeared in The Cortland Review, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Necessary Fiction, New World Writing Quarterly, Sonora Review, and elsewhere. She teaches writing in the M.F.A. program at Bay Path University.

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HISTORICAL NOVEL/MEMOIR UNPUBLISHED

A Greek Love Affair – Mary Irvine

Scotland, UK

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The Three and a Half Loves of Miss Lorelei Culpepper – Jean Tschohl Quinn

USA

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A Funny Thing (about Old Man Drought)’ – Steve Hawe

Australia

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Darkness in 1984 – Paul W. B. Marsden

Wales

Husband to Elena and dad to three grown up kids who make me so proud. I work in construction but I’m burning passion is being a writer. I have enjoyed a varied career as an anti-war member of parliament, director of an animal charity, security consultant, quality management professional and I dally in IT and AI. I have published technical construction book, local history books, poems, aphorisms and a literary history book – Entente Cordiale of 20 Writers in the 19th century.

I am absolutely delighted and honoured to be a finalist in the Eyelands Book Awards with Darkness in 1984 about the Christmas meeting, in 1945, between Arthur Koestler and George Orwell in North Wales that influenced his writing of 1984.

Recently I finished my next manuscript, Making A Moveable Feast, on the day to day conversations, in the first months of 1922 in Paris, between Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway that shaped his unique writing style. It is a story about the impact of the women of the era, not least, Hadley Richardson.

I am now planning my next ‘writers’ book!

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Museum of Forbidden Art – Jennifer Steil

France

Jennifer Steil is an award-winning author and journalist who lives in many countries (currently Uzbekistan/France/UK). Her new novel, Exile Music, released by Viking in May, has received many terrific reviews, including a starred Booklist review, and was chosen by Good Morning America as one of the 25 Novels You’ll Want to Read This Summer. Her previous novel, The Ambassador’s Wife, won the William Faulkner-William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition Best Novel award and the Phillip McMath Post Publication book award. It was shortlisted for both the Bisexual Book Award and the Lascaux Novel Award. The novel has received much acclaim, notably in the Seattle Times, Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and The New York Times Book Review. Jennifer’s first book, The Woman Who Fell From the Sky (Broadway Books, 2010), a memoir about her time as editor of the Yemen Observer newspaper in Sana’a, was hailed by The New York Times, Newsweek, and the Sydney

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Boundaries Borders Crossings-One Lesbian Life 2.0 – Jill P. Strachan

USA

Jill P. Strachan was born in Athens, Greece and spent her childhood accompanying her US Foreign Service parents to postings around the world, including Pakistan, Egypt, and Sri Lanka. As a Third Culture Kid (TCK) she enjoys travelling and learning about other people. In 2016, she gave up grant writing for the pleasures of writing nonfiction, hanging out with her partner, playing tennis, walking her dog, and singing in Not What You Think, an a cappella group offering songs of social justice and humor. Her first book is Waterfalls, The Moon and Sensible Shoes – One Lesbian Life.

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Mercy’s View: Blackout –  J.J. Maze

USA

J.J. Maze is an award-winning author as well as a singer, composer, and educator in Chicago. She was a runaway and high school dropout at age fifteen. After surviving some harrowing experiences on the streets, she toured internationally as a singer/songwriter for over a decade, then got her GED and went back to college as a performance major. She received her MM in classical vocal performance in 2008 from Northwestern University. Ms. Maze is on the faculty at Vandercook College of Music, a teaching artist for Ravinia Festival, and she is a highly sought-after vocal coach. J.J. remains an active part of the Chicago music scene. In her downtime, she likes nothing more than laughing with good friends and walking her two dogs, Bella and Lenny.

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HISTORICAL NOVEL/MEMOIR PUBLISHED

Today In Paradise – Andrew Corin

New Zealand

Andrew, a New Zealand trained doctor and award-winning author, has been working in General Practice since 1997. He is based in Tauranga, New Zealand, working full time as a primary care physician and clinical researcher with extensive experience in governance roles for health and community organisations.

Andrew has also had medical experience in Ireland, Kenya and the Philippines, including work for emergency relief and mission organisations.

He enjoys growing avocados on his small orchard and participating in as many outdoor activities with his family as possible in all his spare time!

Writing has been a delightful creative release for him, whether in the form of coaxing life out of a dry, academic article, or embracing the unpredictability of crafting fiction. Andrew’s first published work, a collection of short fiction stories titled This Old Stick was awarded as Finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book awards of 2020. His debut novel, Today In Paradise, a historical fiction, has been awarded as a Finalist in the Eyelands Bood Awards 2024.

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FINAL APPROACH: My father and other turbulence – Mark Blackburn

UK

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 Swim – Lisa Brace

UK

Lisa Brace is a British writer who combines writing novels with running her own business in the beautiful surroundings of West Sussex in the UK.

She has worked as a journalist and copywriter for over twenty years, giving her the chance to be nosy without getting into trouble.

Swim is her debut historical novel, her second,  The Fastest Girl on Earth, is out summer 2025.

When not writing, and running writing retreats in the south of England, Lisa enjoys walking her dog, reading everything she can lay her hands on and baking elaborate cakes.

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Straight Enough – Lorinda Boyer

USA

Lorinda Boyer is a multi-award-winning author, and published poet. She lives with her wife, Sandy, and pup, Mollie, in the Pacific Northwest. She enjoys writing, reading, running, and drinking far too much coffee.

Lorinda’s journey through fundamentalist Christianity, sexual addiction, and eventual self-acceptance unfolds in her memoir, Straight Enough. More than a coming-out story this is a coming-into story—coming into an authentic life and self.

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A Parthenon on our Roof – Peter Barber

UK

Peter Barber is an award-winning author who shares his love for Greece through humorous and heartfelt memoirs. A British native, Peter’s life took a dramatic turn when he reconnected with Alex, his fiery Greek wife, decades after their first meeting as teenagers. Trading the rainy skies of England for the sun-drenched beauty of Greece, Peter found himself immersed in a world of vibrant culture, passionate people, and endless adventures.

His books, including A Parthenon on Our Roof and A Parthenon in Pefki, combine laugh-out-loud moments with touching reflections on family, identity, and the quirks of Greek life. With a self-effacing sense of humour, Peter captures the essence of village life, the challenges of adapting to a new culture, and the universal joy of good food, strong coffee, and spirited conversation.

When he’s not writing, Peter splits his time between Greece and the UK, soaking in inspiration from his adopted home and the colourful characters around him—Alex, included! His stories celebrate the warmth of Greek hospitality and the enduring magic of love, laughter, and a little chaos.

Peter’s books are for anyone who dreams of escaping to Greece or simply loves a good story well told.

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CHILDREN’S BOOK UNPUBLISHED

Elemental  – James Woods

UK

Born and raised in the East Midlands, UK, James Woods attended Nottingham Trent University where he achieved a degree in Business Studies. After graduating, he worked in the retail industry, while completing his first novel, Elemental, for which he is currently seeking representation. In 2024 he was shortlisted for the Marlow & Christie International Novel Prize.

James is passionate about creating new and overlapping worlds for his readers to inhabit. He is fascinated by the intricacies of building a magic system; the cultures it would drive, the relationships it would fuel, and its impact on our way of life. A regular sufferer of insomnia, James does most of his writing after midnight.

James currently lives in Leicestershire, UK, with his partner, 3 cats and a dog. He trains and competes in 4-way Formation Skydiving, in which he has achieved 4 National titles and represented the UK at 4 World Championships.

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Braveheart – Iryna Polishchuk

Ukraine

Iryna Polishchuk is a children books writer from Ukraine. She lives in Kyiv now. Iryna loves children and they love her too. She is sure that each child is unique and needs parents love and care.

She strongly believes that children literature still holds a high place in people’s lives all over the world. It is a significant tool to reveal children’s talents and self-actualize.

She writes kind and good stories to help children to grow up in a loving and caring for the environment.

Despite the horrible war in Ukraine, she continuous to write for children. Becauseit becomes more important to share universal human values such as love, friendship, wisdom, hope, helpfulness, honesty, unity with nature and a world at peace.

Her books are full of beauty and hope what we especially need in today’s troubled world.

Iryna feel blessed with supporting friends and family in her life.

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Starfish and Tide -Dinah Gay-Dorvil

USA

Dinah Dorvil is a seasoned educator with 19 years of experience, specializing in literacy and fostering a love of reading in children. With a decade teaching 2nd and 3rd grade- pivotal years for building strong readers- and a role as an Instructional Reading Coach, she has dedicated her career to empowering young minds and guiding teachers to create impactful learning experiences. Beyond the classroom, she channels her creativity into writing, narrating, and crafting presentations that resonate with diverse audiences.

Her creative endeavors often draw from life’s tidepools—moments of love, loss, and self-discovery—infusing her work with depth and relatability. Whether mentoring teachers, engaging parents, or crafting heartfelt stories, she is committed to inspiring growth, connection, and a lifelong passion for learning.

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CHILDREN’S BOOK PUBLISHED

Bunky and the Summer Wish – Aleksandra Tryniecka

Poland

Aleksandra Tryniecka is an Assistant Professor at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Poland. Her speciality is literature, especially the nineteenth-century (Victorian) novel. She is the author of academic (Women’s Literary Portraits in the Victorian and Neo-Victorian Novel – 2023) and children’s books (Bunky and the Walms: The Christmas Story – 2021, Bunky and the Summer Wish – 2024). In her free time she writes poetry and stories in order to accommodate her life with the right words. She enjoys the nineteenth-century British literature, especially everything written by Anthony Trollope and Wilkie Collins. One of her favourite literary characters is the Cheshire Cat. Without a doubt, Bunky is also her favourite literary character! Bunky and his Friends not only live on the page’s of Aleksandra’s novels, but also in her reality! Bunky has a bunkyful YouTube channel with his all-year-round adventures:

and a website too: http://www.aleksandratryniecka.com

He hopes to become every Reader’s friend and invite more peace, goodness, magic, empathy and nobility into our world.

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The Hampstead Terror -Kate Wiseman

UK

Kate was a late developer who finally got to university at the age of 38. That gave me the courage to try to achieve my dream of writing fiction. Since then I’ve been very lucky to have had 9 books for both adults and children published in 4 languages.

I love history and am a licensed mudlark. This gives me the right to search the foreshore of the Thames in London for historical artifacts. My love of Mudlarking inspired the Mudlark Mysteries, about a group of nineteenth-century teens who mudlark to survive in a tough and uncaring society. The Hampstead Terror is the second Mudlark Mystery. It centres around an urban myth that dangerous wild pigs lived in the sewers beneath Victorian London and it features toshers – mudlarking elite who hunted for treasure in the many miles of London’s underground sewers.

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Queen of the Mountain – TAK Erzinger

Switzerland

TAK Erzinger is an American/Swiss poet and artist with a Colombian background.Her poetry has been featured by journals at Indiana University, Cornell University, McMaster University, the University of Baltimore and more.  Erzinger’s poetry collection “At the Foot of the Mountain,” (Floricanto Press 2021), won the University of Indianapolis, Etchings Press Whirling Prize for 2021 for best nature poetry book and was a finalist at The International Book Awards 2022. It was also a finalist at the Willow Run Book Awards and Eyelands Book Awards. Her poetry collection “Tourist” (Sea Crow Press 2023) was released in April. Erzinger was awarded a spot by the Art Centre Padula, Artist in Residency Programme summer 2023.She lives on the foothills of the Alps in Switzerland with her husband and two cats.

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 High Hopes  Big Dreams – Yolanda S Pascal

USA

SEE BIO at novels published category

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Micahs Wish – Pamela S K Glasner and Judy Brulo,

USA and UK

Pamela S. K. Glasner is an award-winning screenwriter and filmmaker, a critically-acclaimed author, and a social advocate. She has contributed to the Huffington Post, Cabaret Scenes Magazine, and several professional publications.

As the daughter of two senior citizens who were exploited by a stranger who insinuated himself into their lives, thereafter embezzling their life savings, Glasner produced Last Will and Embezzlement, her award-winning documentary movie starring Hollywood’s icon, the late Mickey Rooney. The film addresses the financial exploitation of the elderly.

 Glasner earned her BA in English and secondary education as a Dean’s List student from Eastern Connecticut State University. And finally her honors,Masters in Creative Writing and Literature from Harvard University.

 Ms. Glasner resides in rural Connecticut where she continues working on several new projects and advocating for those who don’t always have a voice of their own.

Judy Brulo

Judy is an international award-winning children’s author and screenwriter with a special interest in conservation.

She grew up in Shepshed, Leicestershire (UK). After graduating from the Guildhall School of Music, London, she worked as a professional violist and teacher.

Her love of writing was inspired by grandchildren Kaia and Taio. To encourage them on their reading journey, she wrote short stories on almost a weekly basis, choosing topics she knew would grab their attention.

Judy lived in Cambridge for many years before moving to Cyprus for six years. She now lives in North Warwickshire with her husband, Alex.

She spends her time writing, editing and presenting Reading-Music-Action sessions in various settings.

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SELF PUBLISHED

Dancing the Labyrinth – Karen Martin

Australia

Karen Martin is an acclaimed Australian indie author. She is known for running away with the circus, creating plays in prisons, and striving for transformational theatre experiences. Awarded for her theatre work and preferring to travel to write in-situ, Karen learned to listen to the muses whispering in her ear. She has contributed to several non-fiction books: The Women’s Circus: Leaping the Wire, and Women in Theatre: Ewa Czajor Memorial Award Recipients, and received a Local History Award for the writing and publication of two booklets on her award-winning production of The Women’s Jail Project. Her debut non-fiction The Little Book of Red Flags, shares a humorous approach to a relationship breakdown.

Karen wrote her debut novel Dancing the Labyrinth while living in Crete. Her second novel The Bringer of Happiness was inspired from Languedoc/Southern France folklore about Mary Magdalene. Her third novel Delphi, the sequel to Dancing the Labyrinth, was recently released. The books are united in her thematic series Women Unveiled and share a distinctive feminine narrative probing societal boundaries. Women Unveiled blends Greek mythology, history and imagination in telling (almost true) stories.

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Be It So – Oma Stanescu

UK

Oma Stănescu completed her primary, secondary and high school studies in Buzău and Constanța.

She graduated the Faculty of Economics in Iasi in 1985, along with a neo-Greek course, between 1982 and 1985. She completed her education and training in a surprising diversity.

Being in India for three and half years, she graduated courses in Hatha Yoga in India at Serampore- Calcutta, Ananda Ashram- Pondicherry, Lonavla Yoga Institute- Poona, Jain Yoga Institute Adhyatma Sadhana Kendra- New Delhi. She was a student of Ayurveda for six months in 1988, at Ariya Vaiyda Chikitsa Salayam, Coimbatore, India and at Ariya Vaiyda Salayam, Kottakkal- Kerala. She also visited Dera Baba Jaimal Singh and the Golden Temple in Amritsar. She returned to Romania after the Romanian Changing of the Regime.
Web page: https://authoromastanescu.com/more-books

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Bittersweet – Tayla Jean Grossberg

USA

Mermaid. Heroin. Actress. Assassin. Princess. Dragon rider.

 Tayla was all of these things as a child (due to her overactive imagination). She grew up on a game ranch in South Africa, between animals such as leopards, buffalo, zebras and giraffes.

 She expanded her horizons by travelling America and Europe. Experiences, people she meets, places she visits and animals she loves inspire her to write novels. Now Tayla spends her time reading, writing and going on crazy adventures.

 The only thing she can’t do is reach the top shelf.

Connect on Instagram/tiktok: @tayla.jean.grossberg

Books:https://www.amazon.com/stores/Tayla-Grossberg/author/B08MVVLL9B?ref=ap_rdr&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true

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 Mercy – Anton Major

Canada

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The trials of Kahu Muller – Paul Knowles

New Zealand

Paul Knowles is a New Zealand novelist delving into the mysteries of Dunedin a South Island city in the 1950’s. Born in Napier he has lived in both the North and South Islands where he spent over three decades in the horse racing industry working in the judicial field. A former journalist he covered numerous headlining stories across a broad range of events. When he retired to live in the small coastal town of Warrington, he spends his spare time writing and The Trials of Kahu Miller reflects some of the cases both he and his former racing detective colleagues worked on throughout their careers.

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Half the child – William J. McGee

USA

William J. McGee was born in New York City and received an MFA in Fiction from Columbia University. Among other pursuits, he teaches undergraduate and graduate Creative Writing; represents air travelers as a consumer advocate for a Washington, DC-based nonprofit; and is an award-winning investigative journalist and columnist. McGee is the former Editor-in-Chief of Consumer Reports Travel Letter and also worked in airline flight operations management and served in the US Air Force Auxiliary. He is the author of Attention All Passengers, a nonfiction exposé of the airline industry published by HarperCollins, and is developing AirFear, a scripted television drama. His novel HALF THE CHILD was a semi-finalist in both the James Jones First Novel Competition and the William Faulkner Creative Writing Competition. McGee lives on Long Island, New York.

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SPECIAL DISTINCTION  FOR WRITERS U20

( CHILDREN’S BOOK UNPUBLISHED)

The weight of giving – Vhutshilo Prudence Matlega

South Africa

(NOVELS UNPUBLISHED)

The Lost Vimana – Jimmy  Tandel

India

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