Deconstructing America Blitz

Deconstructing America banner
Deconstructing America cover

 

Political Nonfiction

Date Published: January 21, 2026

Publisher ‏: ‎ Seacoast Press

good reads button

In recent decades, most of us have witnessed increasing social and
political strife, tearing apart the very fabric of American society. This
polarization stems from decades of shifting ideologies, moving from a
foundational center-right perspective toward the left. Acknowledging the root
causes of this cultural shift and recognizing the depth of the problem is the
first step toward addressing it.

The divide we see today is largely driven by ideas that contradict the
founding principles of the United States. Deconstructing America explores
these forces through a series of interconnected, fact-based narratives,
revealing the key moments and influences that have contributed to America’s
decline.

About the Author
G. H. Spears
After a long career as an entrepreneur working in the cycling and
fitness industry managing, owning, and consulting for numerous retail
establishments, it became natural to study the people, cultures, and social
environments in and around my working life. Once retirement became imminent it
afforded me the time and vigor to completely immerse myself in the social
sciences, including anthropology, sociology, social psychology, and history in
furtherance of understanding and writing about the complex world issues that
humanity faces.

 

Contact Links

 

Website

 

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon


B&N

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

Samson Teaser

Samson banner
Samson cover

 

Motorcycle Club Romance, Age Gap, Suspense

Date Published: March 27. 2026

good reads button

 

Some men protect with promises. I protect with possession.

 

Samson: I don’t chase power. I don’t wear rank. I don’t
claim women. Until I find her broken, on the edge of Reckless Kings’
territory — and realize letting her go would sign her death warrant.

Inside the gates, there’s only one way she stays. So I claim her. No
waiting. No soft edges. She sleeps in my house, under my name, with my hand
always close enough to remind the world she’s not unprotected anymore.
The man hunting her thinks I’m just another biker without authority.
He’s about to learn commitment is far more dangerous than rank.

Callie: I ran because men like him don’t hear no. They twist it. Punish
it. Being claimed should feel like another trap — but Samson doesn’t
cage me. He stands in front of me. Believes me. Touches me like I’m
something worth keeping, not something to break.

The danger follows me straight to the compound gates. This time, it meets a
man who doesn’t hesitate… and never lets go of what’s his.
A dark Motorcycle Club Romance where obsession is protection, love is
irrevocable, and justice is served in the most painful way possible.

Perfect for fans of Romantic Crime Thrillers and MC Romance.


WARNING: Adult themes and content including: intense emotional situations,
predatory behavior, motorcycle club — related criminal activity, trauma
recovery and psychological distress may trigger some readers.

Samson paperback

 

EXCERPT

 

Samson

The narrow backroad twisted through Tennessee pines, a black ribbon barely
visible in the late evening darkness. I leaned into the curve, my
Harley’s engine growling beneath me, the vibration familiar against my
thighs. The headlight carved a path through the night, insects dancing in the
beam as I pushed toward the compound. Another mile and I’d be on
Reckless Kings’ territory. My gaze locked on a crumpled shape at the
edge of my light, half-hidden where asphalt met gravel and dirt.

I eased off the throttle, the bike slowing as I approached. My mind ran
through possibilities — discarded trash, dead animal, maybe a dumped duffle
bag. But something about the shape didn’t fit any of those. The
moonlight broke through the trees just enough to catch the paleness of skin
against dark earth.

“Shit,” I muttered, slowing to a crawl.

My boots hit the asphalt as I killed the engine. The night pressed in, but I
left the bike’s running lights on, giving me just enough visibility. My
hand went to my waistband, fingers brushing the grip of my pistol. Fifteen
years with the Kings had taught me caution.

I approached slowly, scanning the tree line for movement. Nothing but night
sounds — crickets, the occasional rustle of nocturnal creatures. The shape
resolved into a woman as I drew closer, curled on her side facing away from
the road. Her clothes — what looked like jeans and a thin jacket — were torn
and filthy.

“Hey,” I called, keeping my voice low but firm. “You
okay?”

She flinched hard, curling tighter, a ragged breath escaping her.

I stopped ten feet away, making myself visible in the dim glow from my bike.
“Not going to hurt you. You need help?”

She rolled slightly, turning just enough to see me. Her face was a mess —
dirt streaked with tears or sweat, hair matted against her forehead, a nasty
cut at her temple with dried blood in a smear down her cheek. But her eyes —
wide with terror — were what caught me. The look of someone hunted.

“Go away,” she rasped.

I stayed where I was, keeping my hands visible. “You’re hurt.
Middle of nowhere. Temperature’s dropping.” I kept my voice
matter-of-fact, neither pushing nor retreating. “I can help or I can
leave. Your call.”

Her breathing came fast and shallow, the rhythm of someone running on pure
adrenaline. I’d seen it before, in Prospects during their first real
violence, in civilians caught in club business. The body burning through its
reserves before the crash came.

And she was close to crashing.

“What’s your name?” I crouched down to appear less
threatening, still maintaining distance.

She didn’t answer, just watched me with those wary eyes. Up close, I
could see the exhaustion etched into her face. Early twenties, maybe, though
hard to tell through the dirt and fear. Her knuckles were scraped raw,
fingernails broken and caked with dirt. She’d fought something or
someone.

I glanced back at the empty road, then to the dense trees. The nearest house
was miles away. Club territory began just around the next bend, but this
stretch was no-man’s-land — the kind of place bodies got dumped. The
kind of place women didn’t end up by accident.

“I’m Samson,” I offered, not using my real name. Nobody
outside the club knew Lyle Harker existed anymore. “I’m heading
home. But I’m not leaving you out here like this.”

Her chapped lips parted as if to speak, then pressed together in pain. The
jacket she wore had ridden up, revealing bruises on her side — fingermarks,
dark against pale skin. Recent, but not fresh. Maybe a day old.

The road remained empty behind me, but something felt off. The birds had gone
quiet. I’d spent enough years riding these backroads to know when
something wasn’t right. The woman must have sensed it too — her gaze
darted past me toward the trees across the road.

“How long you been running?” I asked, voice even lower.

Her gaze snapped back to me, surprise breaking through the fear for just a
second.

“Your shoes.” I nodded toward her feet. The sneakers were shredded
at the edges, the once-white fabric now brown with mud and blood. “Those
have seen some miles.”

She swallowed hard, her throat working painfully. When she spoke, her voice
cracked. “Since last night.”

I spotted the edge of a zip tie mark on her wrist, peeking from beneath her
sleeve. Not from police cuffs — those left a different kind of bruise.
Someone had restrained her, and she’d torn herself free. The skin was
raw, inflamed.

The night seemed to press closer. Despite the warm evening, goose bumps rose
on my arms. Years in the Reckless Kings had honed my instincts. Right now,
they screamed we weren’t alone.

I straightened slowly, scanning the tree line again. Nothing moved, but the
feeling persisted. Whoever had marked this woman up might be watching.
Waiting. The compound was only two minutes away by bike, but even that could
feel like an eternity if someone made their move.

“Can you stand?” I asked, not taking my eyes off the darkness
beyond the road.

She tried to push herself up and failed, collapsing back against the ground
with a soft whimper. Dehydrated, exhausted, probably not eaten in at least a
day. The dried blood on her temple concerned me — head wounds were tricky.
Could be nothing, could be a concussion.

I made my decision. The Kings had rules about bringing outsiders anywhere near
our territory but leaving her here wasn’t an option. Not with those
marks on her. Not with whoever gave them to her potentially closing in.

“Let me help you up.” I stepped closer. “Then we’ll
figure out what comes next.”

Her eyes fixed on the patch on my cut — Reckless Kings in bold stitching. For
a moment, fresh fear washed over her face. I knew what she saw — a
thirty-something biker, broad-shouldered and tattooed, offering help more
dangerous than whatever she was running from.

But then her gaze drifted back to the trees, and she made her choice.

I kept my hands visible, fingers spread, as I edged closer to her. Club life
had taught me how to move without threatening — a skill useful whether
dealing with rival MCs or frightened women on backroads. Her gaze locked onto
my every movement, muscles tensed to flee despite her exhaustion. Behind the
fear in her eyes lurked something sharper — calculation, survival instinct.
Whatever hell she’d escaped from had taught her to think even when
terrified.

“Water?” I asked, I retreated to grab the bottle in my saddlebag.
I unscrewed the cap and held it out, still maintaining distance. “Small
sips. Too much at once will make you sick.”

She stared at the bottle, conflict evident on her face — desperate thirst
warring with ingrained caution. Thirst won. She reached out with trembling
fingers, taking the bottle and bringing it to her cracked lips. Water dribbled
down her chin as she drank greedily, ignoring my advice.

“Easy,” I warned. “Been without long?”

She lowered the bottle, gasping slightly. Half-empty already. “Since
yesterday morning.”

I crouched down to her level, still giving her space. The dried blood at her
temple formed a jagged path down to her jaw. Head wound, but not fresh —
maybe twenty-four hours old. No active bleeding, pupils equal size. Good
signs.

“Mind if I look at your head?” I asked.

She flinched back. “Don’t touch me.”

I nodded, respecting the boundary. “Fair enough. Can you tell me your
name?”

A pause. She took another drink. “Callie.”

“Callie,” I repeated, keeping my voice steady. “You got
somewhere safe to go, Callie?”

Her laugh came out hollow, more air than sound. “Nowhere’s
safe.”

“Someone after you?”

Her gaze darted back to the road. She didn’t answer, but she
didn’t need to. The zip tie marks, the bruises, her terror — they told
enough of the story.

“How bad are you hurt? Besides what I can see.”

She shrugged one shoulder, wincing at the movement. “I’ll
live.”

“That’s a low bar.”

Her eyes met mine, surprising me with a flash of defiance. “Higher than
it was yesterday.”

I found myself respecting her — the spark still burning beneath all the fear
and pain. The Kings valued resilience. This woman had it in spades.

“What happened to your head?” I asked, nodding toward the wound.

She touched it gingerly. “I’m not sure. Not the first time,
though. This one isn’t as bad as the first time I tried to run.”

The casual way she said it raised the hair on my neck, like getting hurt
counted as just another Tuesday. I’d seen that kind of detachment before
in people who normalized violence to survive.

“You need a hospital?” I asked, though I already knew the answer.

She shook her head vehemently. “No. They’ll look there.”

“They?”

Her mouth clamped shut, fear returning to her eyes.

“All right,” I said, backing off. “No hospitals.”

Wind rustled through the trees, carrying the scent of pine and something else
— the metallic tang of coming rain. The temperature had dropped another few
degrees. Callie shivered, her thin jacket providing minimal protection against
the night air.

I glanced at my watch. Nearly midnight. The compound was close but bringing
her there would mean questions. Hard ones.

“Let me see your hands,” I said.

She hesitated, then extended them. She’d need medical care.

“You fight back,” I observed.

A small, grim smile. “Always.”

I respected that too.

“When’s the last time you ate?”

She shrugged again. “Not sure.”

“Can you stand?”

She tried, bracing against the ground. Her legs wobbled, threatening to
collapse. I reached out instinctively, stopping just short of touching her.

“May I?”

She nodded, reluctance clear in every line of her body. I slipped an arm
around her waist, supporting her weight as she found her footing. She felt too
light, bones sharp beneath skin meant to hold more weight. Malnourished, and
not just from two days without food.

“You’re not cops,” she said, nodding toward my cut.
“But you’re something.”

“Something,” I agreed, not elaborating. The less she knew about
the Kings, the better — for her safety as much as ours.

She swayed on her feet, and I tightened my grip slightly to keep her upright.
She flinched at the pressure but didn’t pull away.

“I need to get you somewhere safe,” I said.

“Nowhere’s safe,” she repeated, but with less conviction.

“Safer than here.”

A distant sound pierced the night — an engine, far off but approaching.
Callie’s entire body tensed, her breathing accelerating into near
hyperventilation.

“That them?” I asked.

She nodded, panic overriding caution.

Decision time. I knew taking her to the compound would have consequences. Was
I prepared to face them?

“I’ve got a place,” I said, making my choice. “People
who can help. But you need to trust me, just for tonight.”

“Why would you help me?” she asked, suspicion threading through
the fear. “You don’t know me.”

A fair question. One I’d asked myself.

“Because years ago, I was on the wrong side of some bad men,” I
said simply. “Someone helped me then. Sometimes that’s reason
enough.”

Not the whole truth, but enough of it. The Kings had saved me from a life
heading nowhere fast, given me purpose, family. Some debts you pay forward.

“I don’t have another option, do I?” she asked.

“You always have options,” I said. “Right now, they’re
just all bad ones. I’m offering the least bad one I can.”

She glanced toward the sound of the approaching engine, then back to me.
Weighing unknown dangers against the devil she knew.

 

About the Author

Harley Wylde is an accomplished author known for her captivating MC Romances.
With an unwavering commitment to sensual storytelling, Wylde immerses her
readers in an exciting world of fierce men and irresistible women. Her works
exude passion, danger, and gritty realism, while still managing to end on a
satisfying note each time.

When not crafting her tales, Wylde spends her time brainstorming new
plotlines, indulging in a hot cup of Starbucks, or delving into a good book.
She has a particular affinity for supernatural horror literature and movies.
Visit Wylde’s website to learn more about her works and upcoming events, and
don’t forget to sign up for her newsletter to receive exclusive discounts and
other exciting perks.

Author on Facebook, Instagram, & TikTok: @harleywylde

Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress

Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15

Pre-Order Today

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

You Joyful Years Blitz

You Joyful Years banner
You Joyful Years cover

Empowering good health and happiness beyond 50

 

 

Self help, Women Health

 

Date Published: 20 March 2026

good reads button

 

“An uplifting and empowering guide to later life that blends lived
experience with science and practical wisdom, encouraging us not merely to
age, but to thrive. I read this book as a middle-aged man and loved it
… it is beautifully reassuring, humane, and optimistic.”


— Professor Chris van Tulleken, Clinician, Academic, TV Presenter, UK

 

Aged 50+ is a pivotal stage in many women’s lives. We are entering
post-menopause—free from reproductive hormones, periods, and
contraception. Children may be leaving home, careers may be shifting or
winding down, and there is the dawning realisation that we may have 20 or 30
healthy years ahead of us. This is not an ending, but a powerful new
beginning. This stage of life offers an opportunity to reconnect with
yourselves, to rediscover what truly matters, and to prioritise self-love and
self-care without guilt. This book brings you the wisdom of 50 inspiring women
who share their lived experiences with honesty and generosity. Their stories
offer guidance, reassurance, and permission to live authentically on your own
terms. Together, they show how this stage of life can be rich with meaning,
purpose, freedom, and joy. These are Your Joyful Years.

Professor Joyce Harper is a down-to-earth expert in reproductive and
women’s health, with almost 40 years’ experience listening to
women and translating science into practical, evidence-based guidance. She has
published widely about women’s health and is passionate about helping
women thrive. Joyce combines research, real-world experience, and a deep
belief in living life to the full, and she practices what she preaches. This
book is the second in her trilogy: Your Fertile Years; Your Joyful Years; and
Your Final Years.

 

About the Author

Joyce Harper
Joyce Harper is an internationally renowned and award-winning educator,
author, women’s health coach, podcaster, academic, public speaker, and
scientist. She is Professor of Reproductive Science at University College
London in the Institute for Women’s Health, where she leads the
Reproductive Science and Society Group. She has published more than 250
scientific papers and regularly gives keynote lectures at international
conferences.

Joyce is deeply passionate about empowering women to live their best lives
through good health and happiness. Her last book, Your Fertile Years,
published by Sheldon Press in 2021, explores women’s health from puberty
to menopause. In Your Joyful Years, she shares the wisdom of 50 women over 50
who are thriving, to empower women to lead a life of good health and
happiness. She has started writing her next book, Your Final Years, about the
end of life.

Her podcast Why didn’t anyone tell me this? is ranked in the top 10% of
podcasts globally on Listen Notes and is listened to in more than 90
countries.

Joyce gives many public talks. She regularly appears in the press, on radio
and TV. She is a regular guest on various BBC programmes including
Women’s Hour and the BBC World Service. She has been a guest on Brian
Cox’s Infinite Monkey Cage and his radio show A Question of Science and
she explained sex to Philomena Cunk, in Cunk on Life.

As co-founder and co-lead of the UK Menopause Education and Support Programme
(InTune) with Dr Shema Tariq and the International Reproductive Health
Education Collaboration (IRHEC), Joyce is dedicated to improving reproductive
health education for all ages. She collaborates with schools across the UK and
globally to deliver impactful programs that promote knowledge and
understanding.

An avid cold-water swimmer, Joyce is also a founding member of the research
network SwimHer, which investigates the links between women’s health and
cold-water swimming. Her groundbreaking work includes publishing the
world’s first study about how cold-water swimming affects menstrual and
menopause symptoms.

Since 2016 she has run a local women’s group in Saffron Walden, The
Purple Tent.

Contact Links

Instagram: @ProfJoyceHarper
TikTok: @ProfJoyceHarper

 

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

Sauli And The Great Escape Blitz

Sauli And The Great Escape banner
Sauli And The Great Escape cover

 

The Mayhem Unleashed

Adventures Of Sauli The Rescue Pup, Book 3

 

Children’s Books

 

 

good reads button

 

Get ready for hilarious hound hijinks in Sauli and the Great Escape, the
third book in the Adventures of Sauli the Rescue Pup series!

Sauli’s back, and this time, she’s on a mission: FREEDOM! From disastrous bath
times and daycare breakouts to tent invasions and Thanksgiving escapes,
Sauli’s quest for adventure leads to one comical catastrophe after another.
Watch as she stirs up chaos in open houses, forms an alliance with a wolfdog
escape artist, and even leads a wild doggy parade through the streets of San
Francisco!

But the real mayhem begins when Sauli lands in Mumbai! A chance sighting of
Grandpa sends her on a whirlwind chase, turning the bustling streets into a
hilarious “Sauli stampede.” Will she ever settle down? Or will Sauli’s dream
of freedom keep her on the run?

Join Sauli on her funniest adventure yet, filled with tail-wagging trouble,
heartwarming moments, and the ultimate discovery that home is where the heart
is! Perfect for young readers and animal lovers of all ages.

Why readers will love Sauli and the Great Escape:

* Laugh-out-loud humor: Sauli’s antics will have you giggling on every
page!
*Relatable themes: Explores the desire for freedom and the
importance of family.
*Beautiful illustrations: Vivid scenes bring
Sauli’s adventures to life.
*Perfect for young readers: Easy-to-follow
story with engaging characters.
*Heartwarming message: A story about a
determined pup who finds her place in the world.

Entertaining for all age ranges!

 

About the Author

 

 Kay Jay

 Kay Jay is a cross-genre author, data scientist, and environmental storyteller
whose books spark curiosity, compassion, and conversation. From eco-fables
like “The Day Fire Disappeared” and “The Day Water Vanished,” part of the
acclaimed “A Song and Dance for Mother Earth” series, to satirical and
soul-searching titles like “Diary of Clichés” and “Why Does Nobody Buy
My Book?”, Kay Jay writes with heart, wit, and purpose.

She’s also the creator of the beloved Adventures of Sauli the Rescue Pup
series — joyful, heartwarming stories inspired by her real-life rescue
dog. These tales help young readers understand the importance of empathy,
resilience, and the beauty of giving second chances.

She recently published the first book of the emotionally layered literary
series Beautiful Men, The Dog Walker — a quiet, powerful exploration of
longing, connection, and the healing spaces between people.

A graduate of Harvard Business School’s analytics program and a lifelong
advocate for sustainability and animal welfare, Kay Jay believes that the
right book at the right moment can change the way we live, love, and lead.

When she’s not writing, she’s walking rescue dogs, planting
metaphors in messy notebooks, or sipping chai under a banyan tree.

Contact Links

Website

Instagram

Facebook

BookBuzz

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon


B&N

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS

Faceless Blitz

Faceless banner
Faceless cover

 

Contemporary Romance

 

good reads button

 

There are three things that I know about myself:

1. I am a woman of no importance at all.

2. I am a woman who, one day, fell in love with the least likely person.

3. I am a woman who faced the worst aspects of herself—and vows to never
go back.

Briseis Cunningham—plain and ordinary!

After the 2024 Presidential Election, Briseis, a patriotic tour guide, felt
like she wanted to take a tour of her own city of Philadelphia, looking for
resolution in the past. While sitting on the tour bus, she has flashbacks of
the last three summers, and what was occurring in her country at the time.
Weighted down by the worries of the choice her nation just made, she undergoes
a great deal of soul searching.

Beginning with one summer, in 2022, she accepts a job, working at the
Philadelphia Chinese Lantern Festival. While there, she meets all the talented
performers, but one stands out the most: Jin Chang, a Face Changer.

From there, it all begins!

Follow the tale of an American woman who stumbles on love for a man from
another side of the world… and while also having to come to terms with
what has just happened in the United States, her fear of the loss of the
American Experiment, and her worries of where her country is headed.

 

About the Author

B. J. Quander logo

 Hello, readers! My name is B. J. Quander, and I am an American Revolution
history enthusiast, who has always been compelled to learn about the origins
of the United States of America, as well as the countries that created it,
that have inspired it, and the native nations that this land belongs to.

I also have a great respect for the constitution, the law, and strictly
upholding it. After all, many of my fellow Americans, along with other nations
who have helped us, have died for the American Experiment to live. Being a
native Philadelphian, I have felt the tie that connects us back to the
foundations of a war that was fought on principles of a free government and
defiance against unchecked authoritarianism. Did we fail? Plenty of times. But
the dream still was there, and it felt real. Or it did once. This book I wrote
is about a heroine who worries about the sun setting on our nation, as opposed
to the sun rising on it, while also being willing to fall in love. Thank you
for stopping by.

Contact Links

Publisher’s Website

BookBuzz

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon

Kobo

iBooks

Satin Romance

 

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Leave a Comment

Filed under BOOKS