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Moses Cryer, author of Cryer's Collection, finds inspiration in writing a collection of nonfiction poems about love, friends, and family. Cryer's Collection takes readers during the time when Cryer was drug and alcohol addicted to experiences with mental illness.

Cryer's Collection clearly demonstrates an optimistic view and is both heartfelt and gripping. With passion and wisdom, Cryer delves into the aspects of human emotions and the experiences of life with the celebration of love and friendship and the serene joys of longtime devotion.

Cryer never gives up on his faith in God and his belief that one day he will join Him in heaven.
Charles Rawlings, author of "It Really Is That Complicated," examines and dissects multiple relationship issues, including what Rawlings calls the horrors of marriage, the degeneration of romance and eroticism into the mundane and boring as well as the deal-breaking power struggles over control, money, and property. "In a relationship, the one who holds the power is the person who cares the least," Rawlings says; and this truism can be recognized at every level of any type of relationship.

Just when the discussion turns bleakest, the book offers a glimpse of optimism, exploring the multiple attitudes that both men and women can take when it comes to romantic involvement, both positive and negative. When you tell the world I prefer to be my own person, you open yourself up to new experiences, new life events, and as a ripple effect new and seriously improved unique relationships with people...not to mention your significant other. Knowing yourself and having no fear begins to open new vistas. You become your own person. This reflection, along with many others in "It Really Is That Complicated," will help readers deal with their relationships and society's expectations of what relationships should be.
Charles Rawlings, author of "Living Shells," a coffee table book, will take you on a visually stimulating and educational journey to the mysterious oceanic realm, home to exotic creatures great and small. You will discover some of the rarest and most exquisite living shells in the world - taken in the animals natural habitats. In his dive travels, Rawlings has attempted to capture the essence of the underwater world in all its vigor, stunning and vibrant colors, shapes, textures, and fascination. These patterns and colors are an art form in and of themselves. This book is not only an attempt to document these creatures in all their glory, but to tell their individual unique stories as well.

Charles Rawlings is an award-winning underwater photographer and conducts scientific exploratory expeditions, of which he has been on over fifty, taking particular interest in the study of living seashells. His photos have received critical acclaim, have been exhibited worldwide, and many have adorned the covers of American Conchologist magazine.
Dale Cox's book Tango Trajectory is based on pure spy novel excitement in which a young female navy test pilot is pushed to the limit to become the first woman to fly Mach 7 from the secret Groom Lake Air Base in Nevada. She is met with a wave of hostility at the all male base. Her unexpected discovery on her first "spook" mission of a new terrorist enclave enrages the Wahhabi al Furan, who plot to kill her! Although Tango Trajectory is a novel, the plane, Taurora, is based on an actual Mach 7 plane first revealed to the American public by an article in the Wall Street Journal in 1992.
Top Secret Flight is about a highly classified mission that took place in March of 1942, three months after the infamous Pearl Harbor raid. The object was to obtain specific photos of Tokyo targets for the success of the planned April bombing of Japan. The mission was so secretive that it was never revealed in any military history nor ever reported to the American public. A month later, April 18, 1942, sixteen B-25 bombers were launched from the USS Hornet. The Doolittle Raid was on its way to bomb Japan. The bombing mission was successful and raised the morale of the American people. Dale Cox's book is nonfiction, but fictional themes are woven into the plot for spy novel excitement.