Saturday, February 21, 2026

Spotlight of We Inherit The Fire by Kagiso Lesego Molope


PHOTO SOURCE:

TYPORAMA
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WE INHERIT THE FIRE
KAGISO LESEGO MOLOPE
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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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A gorgeously rendered, unflinching portrait of the fractured relationship between a mother and her daughter—set against the tumultuous end of apartheid in South Africa.

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January 13, 2026

McClelland & Stewart | Hardcover

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Fiction

World Literature

Africa - Southern Africa

 Fiction – Women

Fiction – Feminist

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PRAISE FOR WE INHERIT THE FIRE:

“Kagiso Lesego Molope writes with striking precision and intelligence, crafting prose that moves like poetry while speaking directly to the heart. This novel of the bonds and betrayals between mothers and daughters and the scars of a changing country sparks like a flame: dangerous and beautiful. Deftly weaving the less told stories of young women and the haunted memories of political prisoners in South Africa, We Inherit the Fire asks what it means to be truly known amidst the collective struggle.”—Janika Oza, author of A History of Burning

 

"We Inherit the Fire is a dazzling and poignant portrait of intergenerational love, trauma and resilience, about a hero mother and her teen daughter made strangers by apartheid’s violence. A story that will leave you fired up and holding your heart at the same time."—Farzana Doctor, author of Seven and The Beauty of Us

 

"Blazingly brilliant. In We Inherit the Fire, Kagiso Lesego Molope brews a simmering coming of age story about the mother of a nation alight with violent, racist, and colonial oppression. While apartheid has ended, Lesego Molope reminds us a nascent state is not a utopian, static place to arrive at. She deftly situates the reader in intergenerational transitions from childhood to adulthood, using youthful longing and nostalgia and the struggles of motherhood to sharply question whether habitual and ongoing suppression should be fought through quiet dignity or by professing legitimate anger. She asks us, where we find ourselves in repressive situations, what costs we are willing to bear and complicates ideals of the mother figure through a fiery character drawn as iconic, heroic, rationally hostile yet traumatized."—Jamie Chai Yun Liew, author of Dandelion

 

“To the world, Kewame 'Dolly' Malaka is a freedom fighter, a symbol of unyielding resistance. To her daughter, she is both formidable and fragile, scarred by prison and loss. Amid the final tremors of apartheid, We Inherit the Fire is a haunting portrait of two lives bound by history and undone by its wounds; a mother and daughter wading through love, rage, and the unextinguishable blaze of memory.”—Francesca Ekwuyasi, author of Butter Honey Pig Bread

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ABOUT WE INHERIT THE FIRE:

There is that photograph, of course. My mother: standing in front of a soldier, closer than anyone else would dare . . .

 

In late-1980s South Africa, teenager Kelelo is forced to leave her mountain school for a newly desegregated school in town, where her identity as the daughter of celebrated freedom fighter Kewame “Dolly” Malaka makes her an instant curiosity.


While her classmates see her as a symbol of progress, at home she struggles with a mother who is emotionally unreachable, still haunted by the violence and deprivation she endured as a political prisoner under apartheid.

 

Kewame, now living in material comfort, hides a growing inner collapse as memories of prison life and the women who sustained her resurface, stirred by her grandmother’s illness and the pressure of maintaining a façade of perfection.


As mother and daughter navigate a shifting political landscape, We Inherit the Fire interlaces their voices to reveal the unspoken wounds, buried histories, and complex inheritance of resilience, pain, and responsibility that bind and divide generations of Black South African women.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

KAGISO LESEGO MOLOPE is an Indigenous novelist and playwright of the San people of Southern Africa.

She is the author of four other novels: Dancing in the Dust, which was on the IBBY Honour List for 2006; The Mending Season; Such a Lonely, Lovely Road; and This Book Betrays My Brother.

She has been nominated for the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award four times.

She is the winner of the 2014 Percy FitzPatrick Award, the 2019 Ottawa Book Award for Fiction, and the 2019 inaugural Pius Adesanmi Memorial Award. Across Southern Africa and in parts of Europe, her works are read in schools in several languages.

She wrote the play Maya Angelou: Black Woman Rising, which was staged for five years at Oslo’s Nordic Black Theatre.

She lives on the unceded and unsurrendered Anishinaabe Algonquin territory.

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FIND KAGISO:

Friday, February 20, 2026

Showcase of Hard Headed Woman by Howard Gimple and a Giveaway of a print (or ebook) edition of the book AND a $25 Amazon.com Gift Card

Hard Headed Woman by Howard Gimple Banner

HARD HEADED WOMAN

by Howard Gimple

February 2 - 27, 2026 

Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

No one but Hannah Johansson believes her father was murdered. Not even her mother. The doctors say he had a stroke, but Hannah knows he was poisoned. She just doesn’t know who did it or why. One thing she does know is that the answers can be found at the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, a pristine 9,000 acre nature preserve where her father was superintendent.

When she goes back to the Refuge, instead of answers, all she finds are more questions. Ominous questions. Where are all the birds? Why is there a heavily armed guard at the gate? What’s in the mysterious bundles being dropped off there in the middle of the night? When the police won’t investigate, Hannah is determined to find the answers herself, and she won’t quit until she learns the truth. Not even after she is shot at, thrown in jail, and beaten up by a 300-pound lesbian biker.

Hard Headed Woman by Howard Gimple

Praise for Hard Headed Woman:

"A gamesome detective story, dramatically absorbing and intelligently wrought."
~ Kirkus Reviews

"Hard Headed Woman is a refreshingly original story, free of many of the tropes often associated with mystery novels. That alone makes it deliciously difficult for the reader to guess who did what, and that makes this story one of the better mysteries we’ve read recently."
~ The Mystery Review Crew

"The writing was exquisite, with vivid descriptions of all the events. It was a gripping read, especially with all the changes happening in the wildlife refuge. I found the story thoroughly enjoyable and was engrossed until the final page. The conclusion was a major surprise, and I did not expect it at all."
~ Readers’ Favorite

Book Details:

Genre: Mystromedy (a mystery comedy)
Published by: MYSTROMEDY BOOKS
Publication Date: June 22, 2024
Number of Pages: 416
ISBN: 979-8990761513
Book Links: Amazon | KindleUnlimited | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

Hannah Johansson stood at the lectern in front of 300 people staring at her, waiting for her to say something heartfelt and meaningful. She looked around the room. A room that was unfamiliar to her even though she’d been in it thousands of times. But that was when it was the multipurpose room at the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge. She played in the large barn-like structure as a child with her dolls and toys and electric trains. She practiced her jumpshot here when her father put up a hoop after she made her junior high team. And when she was a little older, it was where she came when she needed to be alone with her thoughts and her guitar.

But the room that Hannah knew was gone. It was now the Axel Johansson Memorial Auditorium, renamed to honor her father’s memory.

Every seat was filled. The first two rows were reserved for relatives and VIPs. Hannah’s aunt Gilda and cousins Catherine and Phillip were sitting in the middle of the front row, flanked by officials from the Mayor’s Office, the New York City Parks Department, the National Parks Service and local assemblymen and state senators. The second row held representatives from a half-dozen environmental organizations including the Sierra Club, the National Audubon Society and the World Wildlife Fund.

The rest of the packed hall was crammed with children from neighborhood schools, birdwatching enthusiasts from all over the city and beyond, and men and women of all ages and ethnicities who loved the beauty and tranquility of the Refuge and wanted to show their appreciation and gratitude for the man who created and nurtured it.

Michael Leigh, the president of the east coast chapter of the National Environmental Conservancy and the organizer of the event, had just finished the last of a dozen tributes to her father, the man who transformed a rat infested, garbage strewn swamp into one of New York City’s environmental treasures.

Before Leigh left the stage he said, “Our final speaker, Superintendent Johansson’s daughter Hannah, would like to say a few words.”

On one side of the podium an easel held a portrait of her father in his khaki superintendent’s uniform, surrounded by a snowy egret, a great blue heron and a glossy ibis, painted by the celebrated wildlife artist Arthur Singer. On the other side was a wrought iron plant stand, but in place of a plant it held a hand-enameled aluminum urn containing her father’s ashes.

Tiny pearls of sweat formed on Hannah’s forehead. She gripped the lectern for support.

“Thank you all for coming,” she said, fighting to maintain composure. “I know my father meant a lot to you. He meant everything to me. He was my hero. My mentor. My best friend. I loved him more than I could ever possibly say.”

Her face contorted. Her eyes welled up.

“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry I killed him,” she wailed.

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Excerpt from Hard Headed Woman by Howard Gimple. Copyright 2024 by Howard Gimple. Reproduced with permission from Howard Gimple. All rights reserved.


Author Bio:

Howard Gimple

Howard Gimple was a writer at Newsday, the editor of a newsletter for the New York Giants football team, and a copywriter and creative director for several New York ad agencies. He has written English dialogue for the American releases of Japanese anime cartoons, reviewed books for the Long Island History Journal, and written movie scripts for a pay-per-view television network.

Howard was Chief Creative Officer at TajMania Entertainment, a film and TV production company dedicated to creating socially conscious programming. He wrote the award-winning documentary, 'The Garbageman,' about a waste management executive who helped save the lives of more than 50,000 children with congenital heart disease. He was a writer and sports editor for the Stony Brook University alumni magazine. He also taught two seminars at the university, 'Rock & Relevance,' about the political influence of 60's rock & roll and 'Filthy Shakespeare, ' exploring the dramatic use of sexual puns and innuendos in the Bard's plays and poems.

He grew up in Brooklyn, lived in Manhattan and Long Island, and now lives in Glendora, California, with his wife and goldendoodle.

Catch Up With Howard Gimple:

howardgimple.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @howardgimple
Facebook - @authorhowardgimple

 

Tour Participants:

Click through the other tour stops for can’t-miss reviews, insider interviews, exclusive guest posts, and more chances to win!

Click here to view the Tour Schedule

 

 

Giveaway: Murder, Mayhem, and a Hard Headed Heroine

This giveaway is hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Howard Gimple.
See the widget for entry terms and conditions.
Void where prohibited.
HARD HEADED WOMAN by Howard Gimple | Book & Gift Card

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Book Blogger Hop - 2/20/2026

                                     

Question of the Week:

When writing reviews, do you align your text to the left, center, right, or justify it? (submitted by Billy @ Coffee-Addicted Writer)

My Answer:

I center the book cover, and my review has the text aligned left.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

FEATURING: Nothing To See Here by Kevin Wilson


Lillian was skepticaL about the nanny job, but also couldn’t believe the luck of being able to live in a mansion’s guest cottage with domestic help.

The only draw back is that the children have some rare disease where they automatically combust when they get upset. 

Yes...they catch on fire.

FULL REVIEW:  
https://tinyurl.com/yp55e44c

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

When I Kill You by B. A. Paris



Even though Elle changed her name to Nell, she still has her ghosts from before.


Elle witnessed a kidnapping that turned into the victim being murdered.  Elle was obsessed with accusing the man she saw driving the car even though the police had cleared him.


Nell still thinks about the incident and then meets Alex who spends two weeks in London and two weeks in the United States.


She questions if Alex is being truthful with her especially when strange things happen, and she knows someone is stalking her.  She also finds out that Alex's other two girlfriends were murdered or killed.


Questions and suspicions abound.


WHEN I KILL YOU keeps you on edge especially when the letters from the stalker are interspersed and you know someone isn’t who they are or someone is getting close.  The ending line of each letter is chilling.


You know you’re in for a good read with B​. A​. Paris​.  


Will you guess who the stalker is?  5/5


Thank you to the publisher for a copy of this book.  All opinions are my own.



Tuesday, February 17, 2026

A Sociopath's Guide To A Successful Marriage by MK Oliver

Lalla definitely knows how to use, manipulate, blackmail, and frame people, and she does it a lot.

She also kills people and gets away with it along with many other devious things.


You will wonder how Lalla does what she does or thinks up the schemes.


The book kept me reading just because I wanted to know what else she would do and if she would get caught even though she never got caught for a crime she committed many years ago.


You have to read the book to believe her antics and how things play out.


Readers who enjoy a character you love but also hate will enjoy this book.  4/5


Thank you to the publisher for a copy of this book.  All opinions are my own.




Monday, February 16, 2026

Spotlight of The Two Birds by Hal Glatzer


PHOTO CREDIT:  TYPORAMA

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THE TWO BIRDS

HAL GLATZER

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ALL INFORMATION IN THIS POST IS COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR.


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The Two Birds is the third mystery in the Friends with Benefits series, which includes The Nest and The Office Wife.

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February 3, 2026

Words & Pictures

Audio-Playwrights, in New York

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PRAISE FOR THE TWO BIRDS:


“Teddie and Herman are at it again. With all of their sleuthing and other activities, it's amazing that they even have time for a few hours together at their Nest!! This is a fantastic story with lots of excellent plot twists, fascinating characters, and fine tying-up of the entire mystery."-- Caryl Janis  [Carol Binkowski]

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ABOUT THE TWO BIRDS:

Teddie (nicknamed “Ducky”) and Herman (“Drakey”) are friends with benefits, but they aren’t spending much time, lately, billing and cooing.

Teddie has been cast as Lady Macbeth in the local community theater troupe: and she and her husband George have to practice to stay competitive in their tennis club.

Herman has been drawn into pursuing a decades-old cold case: but his wife Sylvia needs his help fighting off a challenge to her professional life.

Teddie has been cast as Lady Macbeth in the local community theater troupe: and she and her husband George have to practice to stay competitive in their tennis club.

Herman has been drawn into pursuing a decades-old cold case: but his wife Sylvia needs his help fighting off a challenge to her professional life.

The spouses, who long ago gave up sex, are willing to tolerate the arrangement, as long as it doesn’t become public knowledge.  But that’s a big risk, since Ducky and Drakey flown into mysteries before, uncovering murder and mayhem in Grand Lake City.  Fortunately police homicide detective Sarah Larson has, by the summer of 2019, come to accept their help and to help them in return.

The cold case resolves around an urban legend that somewhere in the city there is a warehouse of vintage motorcycles that were stolen from the factory—still in their shipping crates—back in 1948.  Felix Long, and aspiring writer, brings this story to Herman, who is a retired magazine editor, hoping that, together, they can write a book about it.  That would mean locating the con man Don Reynolds who, in 1986, claimed to have found those stolen bikes.  He sold them, then ran off with the money, never having produced any bike but the one he drove around town.

Sylvia’s need for Herman’s help is more pressing.  She chairs the local college’s School of Forestry and runs its research lab about 100 miles away in the mountains.

The owners o the acreage just uphill from the lab are a 93-year-old man named Homer Gilly and a corporation called Harves Gold, LLC.  They are asking the state’s Department of Land Management to issue a logging permit.  At a public hearing, Gilly says he wants to sell the timber to give a nest-egg to his daughter Agns, who’s in her 70s.

Logging would wreak havoc on the forest land around the lab.  To prioritize Sylvia’s dilemma, Herman sidelines Felix by introducing him to Irwin Duteriane, who has a local true-crime podcast; and to Shirley McKenzie, who writes a local true-crime blog.

Each of them promises to help Felix, but after a week, Irwin disappears; and two weeks later Shirley disappears too.  So Herman feels he has to pick up the ball again.

Teddie is being whipsawed between the theater troupe’s more experienced leading ladies:  Susie Warriner and Margo Boyd.  Both are trying hard to be Teddie’s new best friend, even though each of them wanted—expected—to play Lady Macbeth herself, until Teddie came along.  And her shoulder is giving her trouble, so she might not be able to compete in the tennis club’s upcoming tournament.

But what seems like separate threads are actually woven into a tapestry of deception, poison, and murder.  If Ducky and Drakey try to unravel it, they could zero out their benefits and—if they don’t watch their backs—wind up dead.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Although the Friends with Benefits series takes place in the modern age, much of Hal Glatzer’s mystery fiction has been set in the past.


His Katy Green novels—Too Dead to Swing, A Fugue in Hell’s Kitchen, and The Last Full Measure—are set in musical milieux in the years just before World War II. And his illustrated bildungsroman, Dead In His Tracks, chronicles the rise and fall of a family-owned streetcar line.


In the 1970s, Glatzer worked as a reporter andbureau chief for newspapers and TV news stations; but in 1978 he began to cover the emerging high-tech industries of Silicon Valley. He contributed to and/or edited several “computer magazines” for general readers, and had three non-fiction books published about computers and telecommunications.


He debuted as a mystery novelist in 1986 with The Trapdoor, about a hacker who gets in trouble with organized crime. He is a longtime member of Sisters In Crime; and of Mystery Writers of America, currently serving as vice-president of MWA’s New York chapter.


Glatzer also writes Sherlock Holmes pastiches, set authentically in the Victorian and Edwardian era, whichhave been published in  U.K. and U.S. anthologies, and reprinted in his own anthology: The Sign of Five. He is active in several “scion societies.” And every year, he produces a Sherlock Holmes play in New York, performed in old-time-radio style.


When he is not working as an author, he’s working as a musician, playing guitar and singing the “Great American Songbook” from Tin Pan Alley and Broadway.


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