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Young Adult Books That Capture the Magic of Growing Up

Young Adult Books That Capture the Magic of Growing Up

Growing up is messy, complicated, and unforgettable—and these stories capture it all. They explore identity, first love, and finding your place in the world. Each one reflects the thrill and heartbreak of adolescence. Ideal for readers chasing that bittersweet feeling of becoming who you are.



Money Skills For Teens (Teen Life Skills Mastery Series Book 1)

by A.K. He

Release Date: August 17, 2025

Money mistakes are expensive—confidence is free. Money Skills for Teens is a clear, engaging guide to help ages 12–19 earn, budget, save, and invest wisely. With real stories, quizzes, and tools, it builds money smarts and confidence so teens can avoid debt, spend smarter, and take control of their future.

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I Be Brave (Grit and Grace in the Heartland Book 2)

by Gretchen A. Carlson

Release Date: September 3, 2025

In the summer of 1940, as Hitler’s armies destroy Europe, guilt ravages thirteen-year-old Sissy’s heart after her younger brother dies—on her watch. Nothing she does can mend the rift between her and her mother. When an abused and abandoned boy follows Sissy to her farm in rural Kansas, she knows he can’t stay permanently with her broken family, and yet she tries to help him.

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Death in the Dark

by Bryce Moore

Release Date: August 5, 2025

When multiple women are found murdered in their London homes during World War II, seventeen-year-old Mary Churchill vows to uncover the identity of the Blackout Ripper, even if it puts her own life at risk. From the author of The Perfect Place to Die, Don't Go to Sleep, and A Family of Killers comes another chilling historical mystery

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The Wind of Change (Blossoms and Blades Book 5)

by Daniel John Roddy

Release Date: September 1, 2025

Kyoto, 1867. The samurai age is ending, and one restless dreamer dares to carry Japan into a new dawn. Sakamoto Ryōma has always lived on the edge—mocked in youth, hunted as a ronin, yet determined to bridge old and new. With his wife Oryō at his side, he forges alliances between bitter rivals, envisions fleets to guard Japan’s shores, and dares to imagine a parliament long before its time.

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A Beautiful and Terrible Murder

by Claire Andrews

Release Date: August 5, 2025

Perfect for fans of Stalking Jack the Ripper, this historical murder mystery follows the cunning Irene Adler as she teams up with the mysterious Sherlock Holmes to discover who is murdering Oxford's elite students in the All Souls class.

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The Rebel King: Shivaji Maharaj (The Jewel of the Ages Book 4)

by Daniel John Roddy

Release Date: August 23, 2025

From Teenage Rebel to Emperor: The Extraordinary True Story That Changed History
India, 1646. Sixteen-year-old Shivaji Bhonsle stands on a mountain peak, staring at the fortress that will make him either a king or a corpse. In a world ruled by the mighty Mughal Empire, where submission seems the only path to survival, one teenager dares to dream the impossible: a free kingdom ruled by its own people.

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Romantic Reads That Restore Your Faith in Love

Romantic Reads That Restore Your Faith in Love

These uplifting stories remind us why we believe in love in the first place. Filled with moments of vulnerability, resilience, and connection, they offer more than just a happy ending. They’re about rediscovering trust and the courage to open your heart. Every book on this list will leave you smiling with hope.



Mated to the Mountain Bear (Bear Protector Book 1)

by Reece Barden

Release Date: August 31, 2025

My stalker has taken everything from me: my job, my freedom, my peace of mind. When he breaks into my apartment, I barely escape with my life. My only option is to trust a gruff mountain man who has barely left his remote cabin in years. He’s supposed to protect me, keep me hidden, but all I want is for him to make me his.

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Boardwalk Breezes (Magnolia Key Book 7

by Kay Correll

Release Date: September 5, 2025

Beverly Mooney has spent decades building a quiet life on Magnolia Key, where the scent of sea air mingles with fresh-brewed coffee and the boardwalk holds memories too bittersweet to revisit. But then Cliff Griffin—her high school heartbreak turned ambitious developer—returns with plans for a towering high-rise that could change everything.

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The Solicitor's Wife

by Iris Lim

Release Date: August 8, 2025

A straightforward solicitor, Rupert Iverson, looks forward to an uncomplicated arranged marriage to a distant, quiet family friend. Yet when the woman he brings home is anything but meek or mild, Rupert questions everything he’s ever thought he’s wanted—and whom he wants it with.

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Things We Need to Say (Second Chance Love Stories Book 2)

by Linda Middleton

Release Date: August 27, 2025

Emma thought she had her life figured out — the career, the love, the future. But her career feels like it’s going nowhere, and her once-perfect relationship with Jay is beginning to unravel. The life she’s always envisioned feels like it’s slipping away. Jay has always dreamed of running his own restaurant. But he never imagined that in chasing success, each step forward would pull him further away from Emma.

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The Burdened Billionaire (The Billionaire Clean Romance Series Book 2)

by Elizabeth Marie

Release Date: August 29, 2025

Ellen Watson has no time for men who live as if consequences don’t exist. Between raising a son with a serious illness and keeping her tech company afloat, control is her lifeline. So when billionaire Matthew Stewart—once reckless, once dismissive—shows up with investment offers and a smile that unsettles her carefully built walls, Ellen is determined to keep him at a distance.

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The Surrender (Arlington Hall Book 2)

by Jodi Ellen Malpas

Release Date: September 2, 2025

A pawn in a man’s callous game, Amelia Lazenby is trying to heal after being betrayed by the wealthy and scorchingly sexy Jude Harrison. Now he’s saying all the right things, whispering apologies as sincere as his kisses, and refusing to let her walk away. It’s hard for Amelia to resist a force as strong as Jude. Before long, he’s making her pulse pound, her head spin, and giving her the rapture she craves.

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Adapt and Thrive: Books That Redefine Professional Success

Adapt and Thrive: Books That Redefine Professional Success

Leading through disruption takes clarity, courage, and adaptability. These books show how healthcare leaders and executives can guide teams, embrace innovation, and create trust in technology-driven systems. Leadership has never been more critical. With these insights, you’ll be ready to lead through uncertainty with confidence.



The Doctor's Future

by Dr. Pietro Emanuele Garbelli

Release Date: June 29, 2025

Uncertain about AI and robotics in medicine? The Doctor’s Future equips healthcare leaders and doctors with clear strategies to adapt, thrive, and deliver trustworthy care. Blending insight, foresight, and practical guidance, it provides a roadmap to lead confidently through the current transformation of healthcare.

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Add a Zero

by Rose Han

Release Date: September 2, 2025

There's no doubt about it: the financial struggle is real, especially in a world that isn’t designed to help you get ahead. But whether you’re in debt or simply feel like your paychecks vanish as soon as you get them, you can learn to take control of your money. Financial freedom isn’t the mystery we’re taught to believe it is. You just need a plan to get there that actually works.

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Get Your Money Right

by Taylor Grant

Release Date: August 27, 2025

Imagine 5 years from now: no more panic over a $500 emergency, no more credit card spiral, and a growing investment account working quietly in the background. That’s not a dream; it’s what happens when you start following a clear, proven plan.

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The Trader's Guide to Risk Management

by Jesús A. Rodríguez G.

Release Date: September 2, 2025

If you’ve ever stepped into the stock market thinking profits would come easily, you already know the harsh truth: trading is not about finding the “perfect” strategy—it’s about surviving long enough to let your edge play out. The market doesn’t care about your hopes, your hard work, or your predictions. It rewards discipline and punishes arrogance with surgical precision.

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Retire Today

by Jeremy Keil & Emily Guy Birken

Release Date: August 20, 2025

In Retire Today, Jeremy Keil shows you how to move from confusion to confidence in five simple steps. You’ll learn how to maximize your income, minimize your taxes, and most of all, steer clear of costly retirement mistakes.

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Things to Do (and Not Do) in Retirement

by August 11, 2025

Release Date: August 11, 2025

The difference between a retirement you love and one that feels like a very long and confusing weekend often comes down to one thing: whether you're actively designing your days or passively letting them happen to you. Whether you've just stepped away from your career or you’ve been retired for a while and feel overwhelmed with your retirement life, this book will offer an innovative, uplifting approach to making the golden years truly shine.

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Interview with Brogan Thomas, Author of Bitten Vampire

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Bitten Vampire?

I wondered what happens when someone pours everything into a relationship, only to realize—ten years later—that they’ve lost themselves. My heroine hits that breaking point and says, “Enough.” Her restart proves that being older doesn’t mean the adventure has passed you by. She’s wonderfully imperfect, and the moment she chooses herself, she’s swept into magic, danger, and an unexpected romance.

At its heart, the book celebrates the courage it takes to rewrite your life. No matter our age, we can all be the hero of our own story. My hope is that readers finish the novel believing it’s never too late to claim their strength, embrace their uniqueness, and understand that age is never a limit—we’re all capable of extraordinary things.

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

Gah, that’s a difficult choice. If I had to choose a favourite, it would be urban fantasy. I’m drawn to stories where magic meets the modern world, and I love writing them. I adore magical creatures, enjoy rooting for the underdog, and relish characters who start with everything stacked against them, yet discover their inner strength. Ultimately, they learn to save themselves.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

I’m a voracious reader and usually finish a book a day, which keeps my TBR pile small. I have no self-control; I grab new books the moment they appear on my eReader and dive right in. I feel incredibly fortunate that so many talented authors create stories I can’t wait to explore.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

The bonus chapters at the end, written from the male lead's perspective, were my absolute favourite to write. This is the first series where I've delved deeply into the male protagonist's viewpoint on the page. I was nervous about capturing an authentic male voice, but these chapters add a fresh dimension to the story, revealing secrets and emotions that neither the heroine nor I fully grasped until that point. As a writer, this element of discovery kept the process genuinely exciting.

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

I always get my best plot twists when I'm trying to sleep; my characters always choose that moment to give me the good stuff, so I have to get up and write them down before I forget.

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

“Be kind.” It’s simple, maybe even old-fashioned, but it’s how I try to move through the world—treating others with the same consideration I’d hope to receive. Kindness matters. I aim to meet people with empathy and respect, even if I’m not always as gentle with my characters. In real life, though, leading with compassion goes a long way. I also believe things happen for a reason; life often makes sense only in hindsight, and I’ve learned to put my faith in that.

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

I want readers to feel they’ve had a true escape. Life can be hectic and heavy, and my goal is to offer a breather, an adventure to disappear into. If someone turns the last page smiling, eager for the next book, or simply feels their time was well spent, that’s the greatest compliment. More than anything, I hope my stories bring a spark of magic, a dash of joy, and a reminder that sometimes getting lost in a good book is exactly what we need.

 

Brogan Thomas is the author of the new book Bitten Vampire

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Interview with A.K. He, Author of Money Skills For Teens

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Money Skills for Teens?

I wrote Money Skills for Teens as a gift for my son, who just turned 13. Like many teens, he’s bright and curious but still learning how to be independent. When I thought about the challenges ahead—managing money, making decisions, and building confidence, I realized I wanted to give him something I wished I had at his age: a clear, supportive, no-lecture guide to money. This book is my way of preparing him, and other teens like him, to step into adulthood with confidence rather than confusion.

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

Since my book is nonfiction, the “characters” are really the teens learning about money. For them, I’d pick something upbeat and empowering, like “Stronger” by Kelly Clarkson, because learning money skills is about resilience. And maybe “Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey, because building financial habits is about hope and persistence.

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

I read widely—self-help, personal growth, and finance are always on my list, but I also love memoirs because they offer such an honest window into people’s lives. When I write, I combine those interests: practical guidance plus personal storytelling. I like to write in a way that feels like a conversation rather than a lecture, so teens (and parents) feel supported, not overwhelmed.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

I’ve got The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel, Atomic Habits by James Clear (a re-read because the insights are timeless), and The Defining Decade by Meg Jay. I’m also reading a lot of teen-centered books in the life skills space, since I’m building out my Teen Life Skills Mastery Series.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

I loved writing the stories about teens facing real-life money situations—like Jake, who spent all his summer job earnings on sneakers and gadgets, only to realize he didn’t have enough left for college applications. Those stories let me blend lessons with real emotions, which is where teens connect most.

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

I tend to write late at night when the house is finally quiet, with a big mug of tea beside me. I also keep stacks of sticky notes everywhere, scribbling down random money tips, teen quotes, or scene ideas when they pop into my head. My writing space usually looks like a collage of scattered notes.

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

“Small steps every day lead to big changes.” I believe in progress, not perfection. That’s how I approach both parenting and writing, and it’s the same message I share with teens about money. You don’t need to master everything at once; you just need to start.

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

Money isn’t just about numbers; it’s about confidence. If a teen finishes this book feeling less intimidated and more in control, then I’ve done my job. The skills will grow, but the belief that “I can do this” is the most powerful takeaway of all.

 

A.K.He is the author of the new book Money Skills for Teens

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Interview with Dr. Pietro Emanuele Garbelli, Author of The Doctor's Future

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write The Doctor's Future?

I wrote The Doctor’s Future not just as a physician, but as a guardian of medicine’s soul. After more than two decades at the intersection of clinical care, medical leadership, and emerging technology, I’ve witnessed a silent storm gathering across healthcare. Artificial Intelligence and robotics are no longer experimental—they are becoming embedded in diagnosis, treatment, and care delivery. Yet the medical profession remains dangerously underprepared.

We are standing at a critical inflection point. Doctors feel it. Leaders sense it. Patients are beginning to ask questions. And if we—those entrusted with care—don’t lead this evolution, someone else will. Likely, someone without the clinical, ethical, or human lens that makes medicine more than data points and decisions. That’s why I wrote this book.

It’s also why I created the Healthcare Convergence Framework® (HCF)—a globally relevant, physician-informed benchmarking framework and AI/robotics readiness assessment tool designed to future-proof healthcare organizations at every level. While the HCF emerged from my work in Acute Internal Medicine, its agility and universal design mean it can be applied across all healthcare environments—from large hospital systems to national health agencies, and across borders, specialties, and cultures. It’s not just a framework—it’s a compass for navigating transformation with clarity, precision, and care.

The Doctor’s Future is not a warning—it’s a blueprint. A guide to help clinicians, executives, and policymakers lead with courage, not fear. To turn resistance into responsibility. To transform disconnection into convergence.

This book empowers doctors to redefine their role—not by resisting change, but by mastering the tools of the future with emotional intelligence, ethical grounding, and clinical leadership. It also calls on healthcare decision-makers to collaborate—not compete—with clinicians in designing systems that are intelligent, safe, inclusive, and profoundly human.

If we don’t shape this future ourselves, we will be shaped by it. And we risk losing more than our relevance—we risk losing our voice, our values, and the human heart of medicine.

The Doctor’s Future is your invitation to lead this change. And the Healthcare Convergence Framework® is your tool to do it wisely.

If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of The Doctor's Future, what would they be?

Depending on the chapter, the soundtrack of 2001: A Space Odyssey or Star Trek comes to mind. AI and robotics, and the futuristic brain, AI interfaces aren’t just a villain or a hero; they have the potential to be both. The choice is ours, but we need to move fast before it’s too late!

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

When I read for inspiration and personal development, definitely, but I also enjoy getting completely absorbed in a great narrative.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

I have with me Climb Greater Heights by Tony J. Selimi and Breath by Prem Rawat.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

I had a lot of fun writing Chapter 6, “When Machines Go Rogue: The Medical Doomsday Scenario,” using my imagination to describe, in three escalating scenes—from bad to worse to worst—what our reality could look like if things go wrong. I enjoyed the complete freedom of creating characters, their personal stories, and an engaging storyline. I wrote the first draft of this chapter in pure narrative style, then adapted it during the revision process to match the rest of the book.

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

I give the best when I can take myself out of the day-to-day life, away from my professional duties as a doctor, ideally in a nice location with few distractions: this means I usually "sacrifice" my holidays to write, but I actually enjoy doing it.

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

Health is priceless. Think how remarkably different our healthcare systems would look if all decision-making were based on this simple lynchpin.

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

That they can jump into action and start using the principles of the Healthcare Convergence Framework® straight away to assess the AI/robotics readiness of their healthcare organization. By simply answering an online questionnaire, they will automatically receive a scorecard report with actionable insights.

 

Dr. Pietro Emanuele Garbelli is the author of the new book The Doctor's Future

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Interview with David Burnett, Author of Child of a Swan

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Child of a Swan?

The television series Blue Bloods revolves around Frank Reagan, Commissioner of the New York City Police Department. Frank lives with his father, a former NYPD commissioner. His oldest son was a police officer who was murdered while on an undercover assignment. His two younger sons are both police officers; one is a sergeant and the other a detective. The sergeant is married to a patrol officer. Frank’s daughter is an assistant district attorney.

What would happen, I wondered, if Frank had another child, one who wanted to be a writer, an artist, or a musician? After all, not all children want to join the “family business.” Child of a Swan reflects Lyssa’s attempt to follow her own heart and not be co-opted by family pressure.

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

I seldom read what I write. My novels are almost exclusively romance or women’s fiction. I read mystery, suspense, and crime novels.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

I just completed The Last Sister, a story in which an FBI agent attempts to solve multiple murders in a small Oregon town. I have begun The Vanished Days, and I am awaiting the publication of Christopher Reich’s new novel, The Tourists, in which a CIA agent searches Paris for his missing fiancée.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

When Lyssa is in seventh grade, she is given the opportunity to take a high school-level course—either English or math. She made her selection the previous spring, with her mother’s consent, before her mother passed away. When her father discovers she is not enrolled in high school English, he demands that the principal transfer her.

The scene in the principal’s office is one of my favorites. Lyssa can tell her father is about to explode, and when he does, she thinks surely the principal will knuckle under. The easiest thing—the safest thing—would be to blame her mother for the schedule and acquiesce to her father’s demand. But math is much more interesting than reading or writing. I enjoyed writing about her indecision and her eventual choice to defy her father and follow her heart.

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

Sorry, no quirks! I write at my computer in my home office. Boring, I know!

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

More and more, I’m attracted to the French proverb: “Praise the Lord of all, drink the wine, and let the world be the world.”

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

Lyssa’s words from her graduation speech come to mind: “It is your life,” I said. “It belongs to you and no one else—not your family, your parents, or your friends, and the choices you make should be yours, and yours alone.”

 

David Burnett is the author of the new book Child of a Swan

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Interview with S. Cunliffe, Author of Writers and Other Dreamers

What's the story behind the story? What inspired you to write Writers and Other Dreamers?

I believe that dreams are the engine that drives us to create, and I wanted to inspire dreamers to care for their dreams and pursue their passions—but also to be careful with whom these things are shared.

If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of Writers and Other Dreamers, what would they be?

“Nothing as It Seems” by Gordi.

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

Documentary—I love reading about the lives of others. I then use this to influence my writing, which is contemporary fiction.

What books are on your TBR pile right now?

“Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing” by Matthew Perry.

What scene in your book was your favorite to write?

When Noi, the Thai author, finds the courage to stand up for herself and pursue her dreams and ambitions, no matter what.

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

Not really—I like to listen to music when I am writing, and this often inspires my work.

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

“A woman who is convinced that she deserves to accept only the best challenges herself to give her best. Then she is living phenomenally.” —Maya Angelou.

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

Follow your dreams, but also protect them.

 

S. Cunliffe is the author of the new book Writers and Other Dreamers

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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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