Sunday, June 28, 2026

Spotlight of I'll See You In My Dreams by Larkin McPhee


PHOTO CREDIT:
TYPORAMA
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I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS
LARKIN MCPHEE
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF SAMI  JO LIEN PUBLICIST, CREATIVE STRATEGIST + LIFELONG CHAMPION OF STORIES.
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A memoir that chronicles the author's relationship with her late brother Charles McPhee, the host of the nationally syndicated Dream Doctor Show, who passed away after an ALS diagnosis in 2011.

It's a story about an extraordinary sibling bond, told with a filmmaker's precision and a sister's heart.
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June 10, 2026 
Köehler Books

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PRAISE FOR I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS:

"In I'll See You in My Dreams, documentary filmmaker Larkin McPhee delivers a long-form literary eulogy to her brother Charles-her childhood protector, creative muse, guide to the world of dreams (his professional realm), and above all best friend-and an unblinking view into the brave, agonizing battle he fought with the progressive neurodegenerative disease ALS. She does all of this with the eye of a journalist and the heart of a poet."-Jonathan Gluck, journalist and author of the bestselling memoir An Exercise in Uncertainty

"It's rare to find a kindred spirit in this world, someone who instinctively understands the innermost workings of your heart and mind, and rarer still if that kindred spirit is your sibling. In I'll See You in My Dreams, Larkin McPhee introduces us to her beloved brother Charles, whose life was cut short by ALS but who left an indelible impression of love and light on everyone lucky enough to know him. Illuminating memories from their shared childhood and their far-flung but intertwined adult lives are threaded throughout with email and letter excerpts, photos, scenes from Charles's deepening illness, and the steadfast love and support of his family. An inspiring, elegiac, and profoundly moving memoir."-Alison McGhee, New York Times bestselling author of books for all ages

"Some people arrive in our lives as pure light-and Charles was that. In I'll See You In My Dreams, Larkin McPhee gives us not a grief memoir but something rarer: a love letter to a brother who was a compass, warrior, optimist, and dream doctor all at once-a man who embodied light, love, and who, even now, has not stopped guiding. It will crack you open and leave you more whole."-Catherine Duncan, author of Everyday Awakening

"I'll See You In My Dreams is not only a heartbreaking family memoir of love and grief and ALS; it is also a portrait of the ways in which it is possible to live fully, even exuberantly, under the most difficult of conditions. Larkin McPhee has written an extraordinary portrait of an extraordinary human being."-Julie Schumacher, New York Times bestselling author of Dear Committee Members

"This bittersweet memoir eloquently captures the essence and power of a brother and sister's love, even in the face of tragic loss. Deeply touching, laced with vivid imagery, and uniquely inspirational, it compels us to think more deeply about creativity, meaningful relationships and life."-Stephen P. Kiernan, author of The Baker's Secret and Pollock's Last Lover

"Larkin McPhee's love letter to her brother captures both the crushing realities of ALS and the transcendent power of the relationship between two siblings who shaped each other's worlds through shared dreams, midnight conversations, and an unbreakable bond that not even a devastating disease could diminish. This is more than a story about ALS. It's a masterclass in resilience, a testament to the human spirit, and a deeply personal tribute that honors not just one remarkable life, but also the enduring power of the connections that define us. If there is one thing that ALS teaches everyone it touches, it's that love conquers all."-Scott Kaufman, former Chairman of The ALS Association

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ABOUT I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS:

 I'll See You In My Dreams: A Sister's Memoir is an unforgettable portrait of sibling love as told by Larkin McPhee, a Peabody and Emmy award-winning documentary filmmaker, and her dream-expert younger brother, Charles McPhee, host of the nationally syndicated radio program The Dream Doctor Show. At forty-four, Charles's life changed forever when he was diagnosed with the fatal neurodegenerative disease ALS.

Using remembered moments, dreams, emails, and excerpts from his radio show, Larkin looks back on the years with her brother, both before his diagnosis and afterward, tracing a poignant but joyful journey across time as they encourage each other's creativity and nontraditional careers. In addition to helping his radio listeners, Charles guides Larkin through her dreams and their impact on her life, helping her discover her voice as a documentary filmmaker. And in the face of insurmountable odds, Charles finds hope and beauty, ultimately showing Larkin, and all of us, how to live.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Peabody and Emmy award-winning documentary filmmaker Larkin McPhee brings the same penetrating curiosity and emotional depth that have defined her acclaimed film career to her debut memoir I’ll See You in My Dreams: A Sister’s Memoir (June 10, Köehler Books).

In the book, she shares a deeply personal story of her brother Charles McPhee, the nationally known dream expert and host of The Dream Doctor Show, whose life, work, and death from ALS left an incredible mark on his family and on the thousands of listeners who found meaning and comfort in his voice.

For more than three decades, McPhee has been one of public television’s most trusted voices - a director, producer and writer whose work has consistently illuminated the human condition across some of the most pressing subjects of our time.

Starting out at Smithsonian World and National Geographic EXPLORER, she went on to NOVA, PBS’s flagship science series, where she earned an Emmy Award for her work on the aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

A graduate of Middlebury College, she later established herself as an independent filmmaker based in Minneapolis Minnesota.

She won several Emmy’s for her work on Troubled Waters: A Mississippi River Story and earned the Peabody award for a PBS special on the illness of depression.

As an independent, McPhee has directed and produced a body of work spanning the full range of human experience.

She is perhaps best known for her critically acclaimed NOVA special Dying to Be Thin, a pioneering exploration of eating disorders, narrated by Susan Sarandon; Depression: Out of the Shadows, a landmark ninety-minute PBS national special, and Caring for Mom & Dad, narrated by Meryl Streep, which premiered in primetime on PBS in 2015. 

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SOCIAL LINKS:

Goodreads

Website

Instagram

Facebook

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This Week At Silver’s Reviews



Ready for another week of good books?

Hope to see you.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Spotlight of Massawa by Pam Webber

PHOTO SOURCE:
TYPORAMA

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MASSAWA
PAM WEBBER
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF JACKIE KARNETH | SENIOR PUBLICIST | BOOKS FORWARD
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Bestselling author of “The Wiregrass”, Pam Webber, is back with the first novel in a new series about the American women who changed the tide of World War II by working as spies in North Africa and the Red Sea: “Massawa: A Tale of Illusion, Espionage, and Love”

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June 23, 2026

She Writes Press

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PRAISE FOR PAM WEBBER:

“For this reviewer, ‘The Wiregrass’ was reminiscent of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird,’ ‘Tom Sawyer,’ and ‘Of Mice and Men,’ yet, all the while, it was its very own unique story written with a large measure of tenderness and grace.”Story Circle Book Reviews

“With empathy and care, Webber brings to life the hidden world of ‘The Wiregrass’ in the 1960s. This is a coming-of-age story that will move you profoundly.Susan Breen, author of “The Fiction Room”


“‘Moon Water’ is a flood of love and tragedy. There is intense action and humor, soul satisfying courage and redemption, and throughout, Webber's knowing, authoritative hand with setting and character.”David L. Robbins, New York Times-bestselling author


“[‘Life Dust’ is] a testament to the heroes of the Vietnam War and an eye-opening experience for readers… Highly recommended.”Historical Novel Society


“‘Life Dust’ had everything I could wish for in a novel…romance, suspense, great characters, and an intense story.Readers’ Favorite


“[‘Life Dust’ is] a character-driven book where love, war and humanity attempt to co-exist. A brilliant piece of writing to be enjoyed by many.”Southern Literary Review


“[‘Massawa’ is] a thoughtful and engaging adventure, generously enriched with fascinating historic and geographic details”Christine Echeverria Bender, author of “The Far Reach of Yesterday”


“To unravel mysteries of corruption, the old wisdom is to ‘follow the money.’ In ‘Massawa,’ Pam Webber has found that rare gem, an untold adventure in an out-of-the-way World War II setting that will fling you into a maze of intrigue, style, and danger. The African desert is hot, the history is cool, and you’ll find yourself clutching the book as you follow every twist and turn.”David L. Robbins, New York Times bestselling author of “War of the Rats”


PRAISE FOR MASSAWA:


"combines impressive research with vivid geographic detail, depicting the key roles of American female spies during the Second World War...immersive...emotionally layered" –Publishers Weekly, BookLife

"A brilliant blend of historical facts and thrilling fiction." –Kirkus Reviews, Kirkus Star Honoree

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ABOUT MASSAWA:

In 1942, at the height of World War II, “Wild Bill” Donovan—the director of the United States’ first spy agency—believes women are the key to winning the intelligence battle against the Nazis. He partners fledgling agent Kit Thomas with British MI6 agent Mark Williams and sends them to one of the most perilous places in the world—Massawa, Eritrea—to investigate the theft of millions in military payroll funds.


In Massawa, Kit and Mark discover a conspiracy by Nazi sympathizers, known as the Vichy, to shut down the only Allied naval base on the Red Sea—which is an essential resource in stopping the Nazi invasion of North Africa. As they work to reveal the conspirators, Kit and Mark engage in a dangerous and tempestuous dance of trust versus mistrust.


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An Interview with

Pam Webber

  1. How did you learn about Massawa and the role it played in the Allies winning WWII?After my last book, “Life Dust,” was published, I knew I wanted to start a new series. I talked with my brother, an incredible historian with a special interest in the little-known stories of World War II. He told me about the Miracle at Massawa and the facts leading up to it.

2.  Why was Bill Donovan interested in working with women agents?

Bill Donovan was a very intelligent man. He was also well-connected in the world of European espionage. He paid attention to what worked and what didn’t as he designed America’s Office of Strategic Services (OSS), which was the precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency. Donovan was also a notorious womanizer, which I am sure played a role in his belief that women were the best emetics of secrets.


3.  How were early OSS agents prepared for their role in the war?

In the year before the OSS was formed, President Roosevelt appointed Bill Donovan as Coordinator of Information and ordered him to initiate America’s espionage activities. From that position, Donovan recruited male and female spies. Initially, MI6, Britain’s spy agency, helped prepare American agents and guided the building and development of our training facilities, many of which were located in our national parks. Places like Camp X,  RTU-1 Farm, Catoctin, and Prince William became primary training sites.


4.  What role did M16 play in training American agents?

Most of Bill Donovan’s mentors in the development of the OSS and training of American agents worked for or with MI6: 

  • Admiral John Godfrey, Director of Intelligence for the Royal Navy, 
  • Sir Steward Menzies, head of MI6, 
  • Ian Fleming (yes, that Ian Fleming), a British Naval commander, and 
  • William Stephenson, aka Intrepid, who was one of Britain’s most famous spies.

5.  How did you create your protagonist, Kit?

Kit is a composite of America’s women spies in WWII, with all of their patriotism, courage, and naivety. However, I must admit she has a little of my alter ego sprinkled in.


6.  What do you hope readers will take away from “Massawa”?

  1. A powerful story
  2. Characters they consider lifelong friends
  3. Eager anticipation for the sequel

7. What can readers expect from the rest of the series? What’s next for you?

I’ve already started the sequel to “Masssawa.”  Based on true events, it promises to be as thrilling as Massawa, if not more.
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PAM WEBBER is a second career, bestselling author of historical fiction. Her novels, “The Wiregrass,” “Moon Water,” and “Life Dust” have garnered multiple regional and national awards from organizations such as the Historical Novel Society, the Southern Literary Review, and the Military Writers Society of America.


In her personal life, Pam is an internal medicine nurse practitioner, an avid traveler, and nature lover. She and the love of her life, Jeff, live and work in Northern Virginia.

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FOLLOW THE AUTHOR ON SOCIAL MEDIA AND LEARN MORE ABOUT HER ON HER WEBSITE:


Website


Instagram


Facebook


Goodreads


Twitter/X

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Friday, June 26, 2026

Spotlight of What Gentlemen Do by Todd Babiak

 

PHOTO SOURCE:

TYPORAMA
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WHAT GENTLEMEN DO
TODD BABIAK
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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF DANIELLE LESAGE | MANAGER, PUBLICITY & MARKETING | PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE CANADA

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In a voice that is by turns comic and unusually wise, What Gentlemen Do is an unvarnished look at a young man wrestling with the consequences of his actions, the shakiness of his beliefs, and jeopardizing important relationships. Waylon tries to dismantle his own perception of truth and to build something meaningful in the process.

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June 23, 2026

McClelland & Stewart

Trade Paperback

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Fiction

Coming Of Age; Fiction

Small Town & Rural

Fiction - Family Life

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PRAISE FOR WHAT GENTLEMEN DO:

“Funny, furious, and quietly devastating. What Gentlemen Do gets at something most people miss about struggling cities—that they come back to life not from top-down policies but from the ground up, from a kid in a used bookstore, a song played in an empty downtown, a philosophy class that won’t let you quit. A novel about placemaking that never once uses the word. Against the most depressing backdrop, Todd Babiak has written one of the most hopeful things I’ve read about our relationship to cities and place in years.”Richard Florida, author of The New Urban Crisis


“Few writers can bring together humour, heart, and hope more thoughtfully and powerfully than Todd Babiak, even in a story set against a very bleak but all too real societal landscape. Brilliantly written, this novel tears you down and then lifts you up. Masterful.”Terry Fallis, two-time winner of the Leacock Medal for Humour

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ABOUT WHAT GENTLEMEN DO:

A lost young man’s sometimes hilarious, sometimes heartbreaking attempt at navigating adulthood, online culture, and friendship in this coming-of-age story for our times.

 

Waylon Gans did not mean to start a riot on the university campus.


He was only there because he wanted to be in the audience while one of his heroes, Josh Modley, recorded a live podcast.

The problem, as Waylon sees it, is that he is trash: he lives in Walleye, a town everyone wants to leave; his parents are losing their home due to a bad cryptocurrency investment; his job at the used bookstore is a dead-end; Derby, the love of his life, cannot even look at him; and he’s worried he’s falling back under podcaster Josh Modley’s influence and the comfort of blaming everything on the “feminists, globalists, and communists.”


Half-heartedly pursuing an associate degree, Waylon is enrolled in Philosophy 118: Introduction to Stoicism. He becomes entranced by these teachings. 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


TODD BABIAK’s most recent novels are The Spirits UpMonument (originally published as The Empress of Idaho)Son of France, and Come Barbarians, which was a Globe and Mail Book of the Year and a number one bestseller.

His earlier work includes The Garneau Block, which was a national bestseller, a longlisted title for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the winner of the City of Edmonton Book Prize; The Book of Stanley; and Toby: A Man, which was shortlisted for the Stephen Leacock Medal and won the Alberta Book Award for Best Novel. 

Todd Babiak is the co-founder of Story Engine and CEO of Brand Gold Coast.
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FIND THE AUTHOR AT THE LINKS BELOW: