Self-published Authors Appreciation Week - Last Post



 

There are  a tremendous amount of self published books out there.  This week The Fish Shelf, along with other bloggers, is highlighting self published authors and indie publishers that could use a bit more recognition.

Today we are focusing on general fiction and ones I forgot to add to the previous posts.



Cyrille Martinez’s Dark Library is a book that is hard to classify, outside of engrossing.

Francois Dominique’s Aseroe  isn’t really a book about mushrooms, but it really isn’t either.

Valerine Miner’s Bread and Salt is a nice collection of short stories.

Jean-Baptiste Andrea’s A Hundred Million Years and A Day is about life, mountains, and fossils.

Pete Sortwell’s Idiot’s Reviews series is an entertaining series of product reviews.  Trust me, telling a story this way works quite well.

Heather Marie Adkins’s The Darkest Night  is part romance, part mystery, part fairy tale.

Natalie Keller Reinhart  writes really good equestrian stories.

 

Amendments



Deborah Haile’s Search for Elephants in Thailand  is wonderful book about a trip to see Elephants.

Nicky Drayden writes some really twisted ( in a good way) fantasy.

Nancy Fulda’s Hexes and Tooth Decay is a good short story about teeth and witches.

Cat Rambo’s Eyes Like Sky and Coal and Midnight is an excellent group of retold fairy stories.

Raul Jimenez’s Chicano’s Mexican Adventure  is a good dual language children’s book.

Tracy C Kyle’s Gazpacho for Nacho is a cute book.

Jenny Kay Dupuis and Kathy Kacer’s I am Not Number is a highly recommend children’s book about the residential school system.

Dwayne Harris’ John Henry The Steam Age is a great adaption of the John Henry story to a steampunk setting.

Natasha Alterici’s Heathen is the lesbian Viking story you didn’t know you needed.

Kay O’Neill’s Tea Dragon series is a very cute and pleasurable read about tea dragons.

 


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