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Interview with Christian Sebastian, Author of The Last Hunt

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write The Last Hunt?

A man at the end of his Octobers. A boy who shows up anyway. A mountain that keeps score in bones and weather. It’s about debt, mercy, and choosing to leave the world larger than you found it.

If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of The Last Hunt, what would they be?

Silas: “Hurt” — Johnny Cash. Old pain. Last season.
Eli: “Learning to Fly” — Tom Petty. First steps that count.
The Stag / The Clearing: “Spiegel im Spiegel“ — Arvo Pärt. Holy, patient, inevitable.

What's your favorite genre to read? Is it the same as your favorite genre to write?

Lean literary fiction with weather in it—work, wilderness, injury, grace. Yes. That’s the lane.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

The River (Peter Heller), Returning to Earth (Jim Harrison), Arctic Dreams (Barry Lopez), The Meadow (James Galvin), and Winter in the Blood (James Welch)

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

The clearing. Rifles ready. The look. The lowered muzzle. A quiet choice that echoes louder than a shot.

Do you have any quirky writing habits? (lucky mugs, cats on laps, etc.)

Pre-dawn. Black coffee in a dented cup. One page longhand before I touch a keyboard. Read it out loud. Cut anything that feels like showing off.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

Leave the world larger.

If you could choose one thing for readers to remember after reading your book, what would it be?

Not every victory requires the trigger. Keep something impossible alive.

 

Christian Sebastian is the author of the new book The Last Hunt

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Interview with Livia Huntingdon-Jones, Author of Last Verse of the Sword

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Last Verse of the Sword?

In my professional life, I inhabit a world built of paper walls, where human conflict is meticulously contained within the fine print of contracts and the unyielding logic of precedent. I was compelled by the idea of a world where the code wasn’t written down, but carried in the blood—a code of honor so absolute it was a form of spiritual gravity, holding an entire society in orbit.

This story is about what happens when that world, with its elegant, brutal poetry, collides with a future that has no translation for it. The Aizu's loyalty wasn’t a clause in a contract; it was the entire constitution of their soul. They believed it was an eternal covenant, only to discover it could be rendered void by a new language of iron and fire they had never learned to speak.

My work is to find meaning in the space between words. This book was a chance to explore the deafening silence that follows when an entire world's words are suddenly, violently erased.

If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of Last Verse of the Sword, what would they be?

For Nakano Takeko: It would have to be “Iron” by Woodkid. The song is built on a relentless, percussive, martial beat—the sound of an army on the march. Over that, the vocals are a soaring, almost agonizing lament. It’s the perfect embodiment of her spirit: the warrior's drive and the poet's tragic soul, fused together in a glorious, inevitable fall.

For Nakano Yūko: “On the Nature of Daylight” by Max Richter. This piece is the sound of the moment after the catastrophe. It’s profoundly sad, yet it possesses a quiet, unbreakable resilience. It’s a song about memory, grief, and the immense strength required not to fight, but to simply endure. It’s the theme of the willow, not the cherry blossom.

For Saito Kenji: “The Beast” by Jóhann Jóhannsson. It’s less a song and more a sound of grim, mechanical process. It’s the slow, grinding, deeply unsettling sound of a future arriving—a future that has no room for sentiment, only brutal efficiency. It’s the noise of the machine he forces himself to become, even as it grinds away at his own soul.

For Akaoka Daisuke: Barber’s “Adagio for Strings.” It is, quite simply, the most eloquent and heartbreaking eulogy ever composed. It’s the sound of a beautiful, intricate world fading into memory—a final, perfect expression of a grief too profound for words. It’s the last lesson from a master whose art has become obsolete.

What's your favorite genre to read? Is it the same as your favorite genre to write?

For reading, my tastes are a direct reaction to my professional life. My days are spent navigating the driest of nonfiction, so for pleasure, I’m drawn to history—not textbooks, but the grand, sweeping narratives that feel more like epics. I want to understand the complete architecture of a different time, the weight of its customs, the scent of its air. I suppose it’s a lawyer’s habit—I’m not satisfied until I’ve reviewed all the discovery.

As for writing, that’s a different impulse entirely. I read history to understand the facts, the unchangeable structure of what was. I write historical fiction to explore the human truth that slips through the cracks of those facts. It’s one thing to read about a battle; it’s another to inhabit the soul of a warrior in her final charge.

So, no, they aren’t quite the same. One is about appreciating a world that was meticulously built by others. The other is about building a new world from its ghosts.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

The Guns of August by Barbara W. Tuchman: It’s a masterful study of a world sleepwalking into catastrophe. As someone who writes about the end of one era, I’m fascinated by the intricate, almost legalistic chain of events that led to the end of another. It’s a case study in how precedent and protocol can lead a continent off a cliff.

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel: I’m professionally obligated to be interested in the story of Thomas Cromwell, a man who essentially redrafted an entire nation’s legal and spiritual contracts through sheer force of will. It’s the ultimate story of political maneuvering, and I suspect his methods would be both horrifying and instructive.

SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome by Mary Beard: The Romans were the original master legislators, building an empire on a foundation of law as much as on legions. I’m drawn to the story of how that intricate legal architecture was built, and how, over centuries, it slowly, magnificently, and tragically collapsed. It’s the longest and most complex case file in history.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

If I must choose, it would be the scene in the dusty, forgotten tea room where Yūko finds Daisuke and they play a final game of Go during the height of the siege. My professional world is about imposing order on chaos through language. That scene is the inverse; it’s about finding a quiet, internal order when the world outside has become nothing but chaos. The cannons are thundering, the world is ending, and yet these two souls sit and engage in this silent, structured conversation. It’s a deposition of the spirit.

Everything else in the book is about the clash of steel, the collision of armies and ideologies. That scene is the quiet heart of the conflict. It’s where the book’s central argument is truly litigated: the beautiful, glorious death of the cherry blossom versus the quiet, resilient endurance of the willow. It’s a moment of profound stillness and clarity, and for me, it was the most essential scene to write. It’s the last verse of a poem that the rest of the world has forgotten how to read.

Do you have any quirky writing habits? (lucky mugs, cats on laps, etc.)

I will admit to one procedural necessity. My legal desk is a controlled chaos of case files, research, and highlighted statutes. To write, I must have a completely clear surface. It’s a jurisdictional requirement; my legal mind cannot be allowed to cross-examine my creative one. It’s the only way to create a clean slate—not for a new client, but for a new world. And the coffee must be in a specific, chipped ceramic mug that has absolutely no firm logo on it. It’s my one small act of rebellion against the billable hour—a silent protest for the arts.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

My philosophy is simple, and perhaps a bit contradictory for a lawyer: "Respect the black letter, but live in the white space." The "black letter" is the law, the facts, the undeniable, unchangeable structure of the world—the things that are. My profession demands I master this. It's the rigid grid on the Go board.

But the "white space" is where the story lives. It's the silence between the cannon shots, the meaning that isn't explicitly written down, the human truth that gives the facts their weight. It's the game itself, played within the grid. You can't have one without the other. Without the structure, there's only chaos. But without the story, the structure is just an empty cage.

So, I live by that. I honor the facts, but I search for the truth in the spaces between them.

If you could choose one thing for readers to remember after reading your book, what would it be?

If I could leave the reader with a single thought—a final, indelible impression after the last page is turned—it would be this: History records the fall of the cherry blossom, but the future is grown in the shade of the willow.

 

Livia Huntindon-Jones is the author of the new book Last Verse of the Sword

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Interview with Reece Barden, Author of Mated to the Mountain Bear

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Mated to the Mountain Bear?

I LOVE a grumpy, reluctant hero, and there is nobody more reluctant to take a stranger into his house in the dead of the night than Ben Lennox. Not because he’s not a good guy—he is—but because he takes one look at her and knows his loner lifestyle is about to be turned on its head.

What's your favorite genre to read? Is it the same as your favorite genre to write?

I read a lot of romantic suspense and mafia romance, but I don’t get to read as much as I want anymore!

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

Mountain Man by S.J. Tilly and the Daydreamer series by Susie Tate.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

Definitely the sexual tension buildup at the start, where Zara doesn’t understand why she’s so hot and bothered around Ben, and she can’t escape him in this tiny one-bedroom cabin on the side of a mountain. The pheromones are making her a bit frisky!

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

Feel the fear and do it anyway.

If you could choose one thing for readers to remember after reading your book, what would it be?

All that sexy, torturous angst in Ben’s small, remote cabin.

 

Reece Barden is the author of the new book Mated to the Mountain Bear

Connect with Reece Barden

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Interview with The Chronicler, Author of Legacy

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Legacy?

The story was born out of the young imagination of children at play. As the stories grew, so did the characters. As the child grew, so did the world he had created. The stories I created in my youth never left me, and I wanted to write them down in the hope that one day I could share them with others. Over the years, I slowly worked on the manuscript—building the worlds and characters within, editing and revising. I did my best to polish and create something that people could enjoy. This story is the first in a series that I am working on.

If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of Legacy, what would they be?

Well, this is a fun question, so let’s see…

Angel: Kiss from a Rose by Seal, Headstrong by Trapt, It’s My Life by Bon Jovi, A Hero Comes Home by Idina Menzel, Another One Bites the Dust by Queen, March of Cambreadth by Heather Alexander, Invincible by Crossfade, Rain by Steve Conte, Call Me Call Me by Steve Conte, Words That We Couldn’t Say by Steve Conte, When I’m Gone by 3 Doors Down, By My Side by 3 Doors Down, Six Feet Under by Smash Into Pieces, Heroes Are Calling by Smash Into Pieces, Yesterday by The Beatles, When Legends Rise by Godsmack, Feel Invincible by Skillet

Leen: Melodies of Life by Emiko Shiratori, A Thousand Words by Jade Villalon, Is It True by Yohanna, Behold by Abigail McBride, Paradiso by Yoko Kanno, My Immortal by Evanescence, Rain by Mai Yamane, Blue by Yoko Kanno, What Made You Say That by Shania Twain

Cogeta: We Are the Champion by Queen, Temperature by Sean Paul, Hot Hot Hot by Buster Poindexter, The Pied Piper by Del Shannon/Crispian St. Peters, Cotton Eye Joe by Rednex, Cup of Life by Ricky Martin, She Bangs by Ricky Martin, Leave a Light On by Papa Roach, Roll to Me by Del Amitri, Thunder by Imagine Dragons, Girls by Beastie Boys, High Hopes by Panic! At the Disco, Wine, Beer, Whiskey by Little Big Town, Centuries by Fall Out Boy, Head Up High by Fitz, G.O.A.T by Theory of a Deadman, What Ifs by Kane Brown, Animals by Nickelback

Cory: Broken by Seether, Go the Distance by Michael Bolton, I’m Not Okay by Citizen Soldier, Would Anyone Care by Citizen Soldier, Save Your Story by Citizen Soldier, How Do You Get That Lonely by Blaine Larsen, Dreamer by Ozzy Osbourne, Second Chance by Shinedown, Shy by Sonata Arctica, I Want to Know What Love Is by Foreigner, Fairytale by Alexander Rybak, Fine by Kyle Hume, Skin by Sixx AM

Becky: Bad Influence by Pink, Battlefield by Jordin Sparks, Lose My Breath by Destiny’s Child, Any Man of Mine by Shania Twain, I’m Gonna Getcha Good by Shania Twain

Bonus Character: Sound of Madness by Shinedown, Monster by Skillet, Another One Bites the Dust by Queen, When You’re Evil by Voltaire, Cold by Crossfade, Breaking the Habit by Linkin Park, Jekyll and Hyde by Five Finger Death Punch, Wrong Side of Heaven by Five Finger Death Punch, One Step Closer by Linkin Park

That should give a good idea of the character themes to some extent. Some songs could easily cover more than one character. There are more songs I could tie to each character on any given day.

What's your favorite genre to read? Is it the same as your favorite genre to write?

I would have to say that it is the same genre I prefer to write in: fantasy. It’s fun exploring new and wild ideas that aren’t always bound by what we know; worlds we can escape to and explore through adventures. I also enjoy historical fiction as well.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

It’s probably blasphemous for a writer to say this, but I am overall not much of a reader—not as I once was—so I don’t have a pile of TBR titles waiting for me. However, that said, I do have a long list of anime that I need to finish watching, as well as a number of new ones I want to check out.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

I enjoyed writing the different action scenes. It was fun to watch them play out in my mind, though at times it was a challenge to put them onto the page.

Do you have any quirky writing habits? (lucky mugs, cats on laps, etc.)

I don’t think I’ve developed any quirky writing habits yet. I listen to music sometimes, which helps me get into the vibe of a scene. Occasionally, I put on a show or movie for background noise.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

I believe everything happens for a reason and that everyone has a story to tell.

If you could choose one thing for readers to remember after reading your book, what would it be?

I hope it will be the characters. I would like them to live on after I am gone.

 

The Chronicler is the author of the new book Legacy

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New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | September 2

Hold on to the edge of your seat as we hunt for clues and solve the case with these exciting new mystery and thriller books for the week! There are so many bestselling authors with new novels for you to dive into this week including Jeremy Robinson, Lisa Regan, Scott Carson, and more. Enjoy your new mystery, thriller, and suspense novels. Happy reading!



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New Books to Read in Literary Fiction | September 2

Literary fiction readers are in for a treat. This week’s latest releases list is full of intriguing reads you won’t want to miss! The new releases list includes so many bestselling authors like Christian Sebastian, David Burnett, Livia Huntingdon-Jones, and more. Enjoy your new literary fiction books. Happy reading!



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New Science Fiction and Fantasy Books | September 2

Set off on an adventure to new worlds this week! This selection of new science fiction and fantasy books will surely please! Science Fiction fans should be excited about the latest from bestselling authors Jacqueline Druga, Lamar Golden, Michael Cole, and more. If Fantasy is what your library needs, you’ll be able to pick up the latest from Brogan Thomas, The Chronicler, Boyd Craven III, and more. Enjoy your new science fiction and fantasy books. Happy reading!


Fantasy


Science Fiction


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New Biography and Memoir Books to Read | September 2

Looking for some new biography and memoir books for your library? There are so many new releases this week that you’re bound to find a new favorite. You can pick up new books from John Malone, Loretta Soffe, Christine Brown Woolley, and more. Enjoy your new biography and memoir books. Happy reading!



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New Young Adult Books to Read | September 2

Are you an avid reader of Young Adult books? This week you are in luck! With all of these new novels, you’re bound to find a new favorite book to add to your reading list. This week includes new novels from bestselling authors A.K. He, Sam Wachman, Rebecca A. Jackson, and more. Enjoy your new young adult books. Happy reading!



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