Sasq’et Virtual Book Tour

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Historical Fiction / Mythology

Date Published: ‎April 7, 2026

Publisher: ‎ Manhattan Book Group

IN 1939, A DEADLY CONFRONTATION IN THE CANADIAN WILDERNESS shatters
young Albert Pingree’s life and leaves him the keeper of a truth so staggering
it could tear apart mankind’s understanding of itself. Sixty years later, his
granddaughter Mallory – a small-town veterinarian in rural New Hampshire,
inherits more than his fortune; she inherits his secret. When Albert is found
dead behind his remote British Columbia cabin, Mallory is drawn into a world
of deception, lost identity, and scientific obsession. Inside a locked candle
box, she uncovers a horrific relic – a severed hand too large to be human –
and a note that beckons her toward the impossible.

Mallory recruits Dr. George Avery, the world’s leading field zoologist to help
her identify what she has found. At first, he is reluctant, unaware of the
magnitude of what she has brought to him. As the puzzle begins to take shape,
he is confronted by what the answers they find, reveal.

Exploring deeper, their growing affection ignites a sense of purpose, even as
they face the shadows of the past and the dangers of their pursuit. In the
haunting wilds of the Pacific Northwest, nature’s grandeur and brutality are
ever-present. Tangled forests and untamed rivers, bears, wolves, and the
ancient reverence of Indigenous traditions surround them, blurring the lines
between myth and reality. Their quest becomes a journey not only to solve a
mystery, but to reconcile love, loneliness, and the immortal question of our
place in a world still ruled by secrets.

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About the Author
Maxim Langstaff
Maxim Langstaff is a Grammy-and Emmy-nominated writer, producer, and
author whose creative and editorial work has reached millions of people
worldwide. He is recognized for his innovative vision and exceptional
versatility and reach, crafting narratives that reflect powerful insight into
the natural world and our relationship to it.

His debut novel, SASQ’ET will be released on April 7, 2026.

Max holds an honorary doctorate from Connecticut College and a degree in
Anthropology. He is a member of The Writer’s Guild and past participant
at the Breadloaf Writer’s Conference. His editorial and creative writing
has been published by The New York Times, Philadelphia Enquirer, Gannett,
Wildlife Conservation Magazine, PBS, Disney,
and the Wildlife Conservation
Society
.

Max produced the multi-media Making of Sgt. Pepper with Sir George Martin,
featuring Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and Phil Collins.

He wrote and produced the most complete filmed history of the Beatles through
the eyes of Sir George who signed them, produced their work, and played on
many of their recordings. A part Max’s film became the award-winning PBS
series Soundbreaking.

Many of the greatest pop culture icons of the 20th century have collaborated
with Max on projects he has created, written, and produced including Herbie
Hancock, Brian Wilson, Elton John, Joni Mitchell, B.B. King, Tony Bennett,
Vince Gill, Burt Bacharach, Bonnie Raitt, Mark Knopfler, Michael Tilson
Thomas, Gordon Lightfoot, Smokey Robinson, Jack White, Dave Grohl, Run-DMC,
and Willie Nelson. A more complete listing of artists he has worked with can
be found at: www.maximlangstaff.com

Known for his work with John Denver, Max created and produced the acclaimed
television event, the Wildlife Concert, spawning the highest rated music
program in cable TV history upon broadcast, two multi-platinum CD sets, and
one of the best-selling music video programs ever released by SONY.

Working with the Wildlife Conservation Society, Max helped lead the largest
fundraising effort ($100mm) ever undertaken for wildlife conservation, seeding
the first integrated global conservation initiative to save endangered tigers.

On any given day you will likely find him on a wilderness river or mountain
trail. A three-time Boston Marathoner, he lives in North Carolina.
SASQ’ET is his first novel.

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Rip Teaser

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(Kiss of Death MC)

Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense, Age Gap

Date Published: May 15, 2026

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She found her strength. I’ll makes sure no one takes it again.

 

Jade — I ran from a man who broke me, only to land in the arms of a biker who
could destroy what little I have left. Rip is an alpha protector with a
dangerous edge I can’t seem to resist. He sees too much, wants too much,
and makes me crave things I swore I’d never risk again. He gives me the
courage to believe in myself. When my past refuses to let me go, I know I can
surrender or stand and fight. If my ex thinks he can take everything from me
again, he’s about to learn exactly how wrong he is.

Rip — The first time I see Jade, she’s barely holding herself together,
a trauma survivor trying to outrun a nightmare who won’t stay buried.
She’s still fragile enough I know better than to push my way into her
life, even when every instinct tells me to pull her close and never let her
go. I don’t expect her to see me as anything more than a safe place.
Whether I claim her or not, my MC brothers will lay down their lives for her.
And when the smoke clears and the blood is washed away, Jade will know she was
always meant to be mine. Forever.

 

Rip teaser

 

EXCERPT

 

Jade

The soft, warm lighting in the small dining room did little to reassure me. I
stared at my hands resting on the scarred wooden table, watching them tremble
against my will. Three weeks at Haven, and my body still hadn’t gotten
the message that I was safe now. Safe. What a strange word to apply to
homelessness, to sitting in a communal room, surrounded by women who
couldn’t meet my eyes because we all recognized the shame in each
other’s faces.

I pulled down my sleeve to cover the faint, yellowing bruise on my wrist. My
ribs still throbbed with a dull persistent ache that no amount of ibuprofen
could completely relieve. The pain was almost comforting — a reminder that I
hadn’t imagined it all, that I wasn’t crazy. My fingers brushed
against my cheekbone, the swelling finally gone but the discoloration still
visible beneath the concealer I’d carefully applied that morning.

A little boy, maybe five or six, darted past me chasing after his sister, both
of them laughing. Their mother called after them in a hushed voice. All the
women here spoke quietly most of the time, as if normal volume might shatter
whatever fragile peace we’d found. Or too afraid our respite would end
in violence once again. I watched them without trying to seem like I was
watching. Their mother had dark circles under her eyes, but she smiled when
she caught them, tickled them until they squealed.

I looked away. There was an intimacy to their bond that felt invasive to
witness, like I was trespassing on something precious. I didn’t belong
here, among these women who’d fled with children, with purpose. What did
I have? A business degree I’d never used, a dried-up marketing career,
and a suitcase only half full of clothes I’d grabbed while Eric was at
work. No kids. No friends left. Just bruises and tremors and the growing
realization that I had nowhere else to go.

“Jade? Do you have a moment?”

I looked up to see Ada approaching, a clipboard tucked under her arm and a
sympathetic smile on her face. Since I’d come here, I’d learned
that every woman from that club Mia’s new man belonged to volunteered at
this place. The men guarded Haven but never made the residents feel smothered.
In fact, I only saw them occasionally. Everyone here cared. Probably too much
sometimes. I saw the few people who came through here. Everyone had a sob
story and most of them were horrific. By comparison, I had it pretty easy.

“Of course,” I said, straightening my posture automatically.

Ada slid into the chair opposite me and placed the clipboard on the table
between us. “Your thirty-day evaluation period ends this weekend,”
she said, her voice soft. “I have your extension paperwork here. I hate
that we have to do shit like this, but it gets us money for supplies.”
She smiled.

My heart stuttered. I hadn’t realized how terrified I was of her saying
anything else until the relief flooded through me. “Yes,” I said
too quickly, then bit my lip. “I mean, if that’s OK. I’m
still working on… figuring things out.” I had to force myself not
to wring my hands. I didn’t used to be like this. I didn’t want to
be like this now.

Ada pushed the clipboard toward me. “That’s what we’re here
for. I just need your signature.”

I picked up the pen, my fingers trembling. I gripped it tighter, trying to
control the shake as I signed my name. Ada watched without commenting on my
obvious anxiety. She was good at that — giving people dignity even when they
were falling apart.

“Thank you,” she said, taking back the clipboard. “The
extension is for another sixty days. After that, we’ll reassess.”

I tried to smile but couldn’t quite commit. I knew how pathetic I looked
by not getting back in the game of life, but the thought of trying to explain
the abrupt departure from my previous job, of interviewing with visible
bruises, of having to be around strange men who might remind me of Eric, could
send me into a panic attack.

“Jade, honey? You OK?”

I glanced up at Ada when she spoke. Short answer? No. I wasn’t OK.
Better answer? “Fine,” I said. “Just tired.”

Her eyes softened with understanding that made me want to crawl under the
table. “There’s a resume workshop on Thursday. No pressure, but it
might help to interact with others. And group therapy tomorrow at four is open
to everyone.” She put her hand on my shoulder. “There’s no
rush, you know. I’m checking boxes because it’s required. You take
as much time as you need. We call this place Haven for a reason.”

When she left, I let my shoulders slump, exhausted by the brief interaction.
Across the room, a woman about my age was showing her daughter how to braid
string into a friendship bracelet. Another was helping her son with what
looked like math homework. I’d wanted that once. A family. To be all
domesticated and stuff.

Eric had told me he had the same dream. Turned out, his dream had been more
about building himself up by keeping someone under his foot. It had been me
since before college. Then he wanted Mia but wanted his fucking mind games
with me too.

I picked at a dangling hangnail until it bled, sucking the small wound.
I’d come to Haven because the nice lady who’d brought me said this
place would keep Eric away from me. No questions asked. I stayed in Haven
because I was officially homeless and had nowhere else to go. The sad truth
was, I hated the thought of leaving this place because I’d never stayed
anywhere I felt safer than I did at Haven.

What came next? The question circled in my head like a vulture. I
couldn’t stay here forever, but I couldn’t imagine a life outside
these walls either. Not when Eric was still out there.

I wrapped my arms around myself, pressing against the bruises on my ribs until
the physical pain drowned out everything else.

The crash shattered the afternoon quiet like a gunshot. I didn’t see
what happened. First, the ball bouncing across the linoleum, then a little boy
chasing after it. One or both of them hit the table where a ceramic vase sat
just a little too close to the edge. I only registered the sound as it
exploded against the floor, blue and white shards spraying outward like
shrapnel. My body reacted before my mind could catch up. Flinch. Gasp. Arms
over face. Heart instantly hammering against my ribs as if trying to punch its
way out of my chest.

The rational part of my brain knew it was just a broken vase. Just a
child’s accident. But my body was already in full survival mode, dumping
adrenaline into my bloodstream. My ears rang. My vision tunneled. My muscles
coiled tight, ready to do anything I could to avoid what usually came after a
crash.

I sucked in a sharp breath that hurt my throat. Held it. Forgot how to release
it. The common room had gone still. Through the gaps between my fingers, I saw
women frozen in various postures of interrupted activity. Some exchanged
knowing glances and looks of sympathy, a language survivors recognized as a
trigger response. Others deliberately turned away, giving me privacy in my
panic, or maybe protecting themselves from the mirror I’d become.

“I’m so sorry,” the little boy’s mother murmured,
already on her knees, gathering ceramic pieces into her cupped palm.
“Tyler, go put your ball away, please.” Her voice was tight but
controlled. Tyler looked terrified, his lower lip trembling as he clutched the
rubber ball to his chest and scurried away.

“It’s fine,” someone said. “Just an accident. Our
fault for having something not kid-proof in here.”

“I’ve got a dustpan,” another woman offered, heading toward
the supply closet.

I forced my arms down, away from my face. Attempted a smile that probably
looked more like a grimace. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking, but I
couldn’t just sit there like a broken doll while everyone else handled
the situation. I slid from my chair and knelt beside the boy’s mother.

“Let me help,” I said, reaching for a larger piece of ceramic.

She glanced up at me, her expression a careful blank. “Thanks.”

My fingers trembled so badly I couldn’t pick up the shard. I tried
again. Failed again. The third time I managed to grasp it, but my hand shook
so hard that I dropped it almost immediately. It clattered against the floor,
breaking into smaller pieces.

“Sorry,” I whispered, mortified.

“We’re all a hot mess,” she said with a watery smile.
“How about we do the best we can and understand we’re all
ghosts.”

The woman with the dustpan and a hand vacuum arrived, sweeping carefully to
get the larger pieces before using the vacuum. I tried again to help but my
breath came in shallow gasps that weren’t bringing in enough oxygen.
Black spots danced at the edges of my vision. I was going to pass out and make
an even bigger scene.

I stumbled to my feet and backed away, scanning for somewhere to retreat. The
bathrooms were too far. The dormitory area was up a flight of stairs. My legs
couldn’t even manage to make it to the elevator much less make it up a
flight of stairs. Luckily, I found an empty corner by the bookshelves,
partially screened by a large potted plant. I made my way there on wobbly
legs, pressing my back against the wall and sliding down until I sat on the
floor, knees pulled tight to my chest.

I used to be good at talking myself down from the ledge. Back when the panic
attacks were just garden variety anxiety and not the souvenirs of systematic
abuse. I tried now, struggling to find the rhythm of controlled breathing that
had once been second nature.

I pressed my forehead against my knees, trying to make myself smaller. A tear
leaked from the corner of my eye, sliding hot down my cheek. Then another. I
wiped them away furiously with the heel of my hand. I was not going to cry in
this fucking corner like a child because someone broke a vase. I was not going
to be this broken thing Eric created.

But the tears kept coming, silent but unstoppable. They weren’t really
about the vase or even about the flashback. They were tears of pure
frustration at my body’s betrayal and my mind’s inability to
distinguish past from present. And for how pathetic I’d been for so
long. Now I had nothing.


I’d come to an agreement with Hannah. I help out with housekeeping,
cooking, and anything else needed in Haven, and I could stay longer. At least,
that was the agreement I proposed. She’d smiled and told me that of
course I could stay. That there were no conditions and I could stay as long as
I wanted. As safe as I felt here, I knew it would be a long while before I
“wanted” to leave. And also, I didn’t really believe
they’d let me stay here much longer. It was past time I left. I just
couldn’t make myself go.

Now, I pushed the supply caddy, which seemed to weigh a ton, its wheels
squeaking as I pushed it down the hallway. Hannah had asked me to deliver
fresh towels and toiletries to the linen closet where everyone got what they
needed. A simple task, but it got me away from the sympathetic glances after
my meltdown in the common room. The building designated for Haven had been a
former warehouse. But someone had converted the place into a very comfortable,
very soothing atmosphere inside.

I passed the small office and approached the security station that controlled
access to the entire building. The security here was insane and every security
guard working here took their job very seriously. No one got inside Haven who
didn’t belong. The door was ajar, and I slowed as I heard Hannah’s
voice from inside, clearer and more authoritative than her usual soft-spoken
manner.

“– have to adjust the rotations since Noose’s funeral. We
can’t leave any gaps in coverage, especially at night. The restraining
orders don’t mean shit if –”

I hesitated outside the door, not wanting to interrupt but also curious about
the changes happening around us. Noose had been killed just before I came
here. He’d died in the same fire that had nearly claimed the lives of
Mia and Oktober, as well as Pain and Inferno. The Kiss of Death MC had been
providing security for Haven since its founding, a fact that had initially
terrified me until I realized they were the only thing standing between the
women here and the men who might come looking for them. More than once,
I’d been ashamed of the way Eric had called these men criminals.
I’d learned that, while most of them had killed, they’d all had
good reasons for what they’d done and had taken their punishment.

I knocked lightly on the doorframe, the caddy parked beside me. “Sorry
to interrupt. I have supplies for –”

The words died in my throat as I stepped into the doorway and saw who Hannah
was talking to. A large man filled the small security office with his presence
across from Hannah. The Kiss of Death leather cut stretched across shoulders
that could have belonged to a linebacker. His dark hair was buzzed short on
the sides but longer on top, and a shadow of stubble darkened his jaw. But it
was his hands that held my attention. They were large and weathered with scars
across the knuckles. I didn’t know this man, but he obviously belonged
to the club.

I froze, instinctively. I didn’t like strange men. Most of the women
here had issues with strange men. I gaped at the guy, feeling like prey caught
in a predator’s trap.

“Jade, perfect timing,” Hannah said, seemingly oblivious to my
reaction. “This is Rip. He’s taking over Noose’s security
detail.” She turned to the man. “Rip, this is Jade. She’s
been with us about three weeks now and has been helping with a few chores.
She’s been a lifesaver in so many ways.” Hannah gave me a smile
before reaching out to take my hand and tug me farther inside the office.
“If you can’t find something, find Jade. She’ll either know
where it is or if we have whatever it is you need.”

I managed a tight nod, my throat too dry for words. This man was here to
protect us, not harm us. I knew he wouldn’t be here if he were a bad
person, but my body didn’t get the memo.

“Rip’s going to be handling the night shift security,”
Hannah explained, filling the quiet.

I nodded again, stealing a glance at the man from beneath my lashes. I found
it difficult to read the guy. His gaze was direct and penetrating, taking in
everything around him. When they met mine, I felt a jolt of emotion. Not fear,
exactly, but I knew he could see straight through to the very core of me and
saw the wreckage hidden underneath the surface. His eyes were intense but
kind.

The longer he looked at me, the more his gaze narrowed. He looked almost
startled. He turned his head slightly toward me and rubbed the center of his
chest absently as though it ached.

I dropped my gaze immediately, studying the scuffed toes of my shoes. My chest
tightened with the familiar anxiety that men triggered in me. This man saw
things I didn’t want him to see. I knew it like I knew my own name.

“Good to meet you,” I managed to say. I backed toward the door,
eager to escape the intensity of his gaze. “I should let you get back to
it.”

Rip nodded once. He still hadn’t spoken, but somehow his silence
wasn’t threatening. It felt considerate. As if he understood that his
voice might be too much for me right now.

I slipped out of the doorway and leaned against the wall in the corridor,
breathing deeply to slow my racing heart. Through the partially open door, I
could hear Hannah resuming their conversation as if they hadn’t been
interrupted.

I pushed away from the wall and headed back toward the common area, my mind
replaying those few moments of eye contact. There had been something oddly
comforting about the weight of his gaze. Rip hadn’t given me the
predatory assessment I’d grown accustomed to from Eric but simply
waited. Watchful in the way a guardian surveys their charge.

Strangely, for the first time since arriving at Haven, I felt truly seen. Not
as a victim or someone who’d betrayed her best friend, but as a person
worth protecting.

 

 

About the Author

Marteeka Karland is an international bestselling author who leads a double
life as an erotic romance author by evening and a semi-domesticated housewife
by day. Known for her down and dirty MC romances, Marteeka takes pleasure in
spinning tales of tenacious, protective heroes and spirited, vulnerable
heroines. She staunchly advocates that every character deserves a blissful
ending, even, sometimes, the villains in her narratives. Her writings are
speckled with intense, raw elements resulting in page-turning delight entwined
with seductive escapades leading up to gratifying conclusions that elicit a
sigh from her readers.

Away from the pen, Marteeka finds joy in baking and supporting her husband
with their gardening activities. The late summer season is set aside for
preserving the delightful harvest that springs from their combined efforts
(which is mostly his efforts, but you can count it). To stay updated with
Marteeka’s latest adventures and forthcoming books, make sure to visit her
website. Don’t forget to register for her newsletter which will pepper you
with a potpourri of Teeka’s beloved recipes, book suggestions, autograph
events, and a plethora of interesting tidbits.

Author on Instagram & TikTok: @marteekakarland

Author on Facebook

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

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

 

 

 

 

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Meat Cove Virtual Book Tour

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SAGATHRILLER


Meat Cove combines saga and thriller via Fundy’s lurid diary, which appears
between each chapter, forming a tale within a tale. As Fundy’s grim memories
slowly come back to life, her past and present collide in a riveting
conclusion worthy of the first sagathriller.

Date Published: January 22, 2026

Publisher: Seacoast Press

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Constable Fundy Sutherland is a buff, gruff Mountie with a price on her
head and a veritable ossuary of skeletons in her closet. A former JTF-2
sniper, Fundy is quietly raising daughter Skye in Cape Breton Island, Nova
Scotia when three events upend her careful obscurity: Skye brings home a DNA
ancestry kit; the doppelgänger of Fundy’s runaway mother settles in tiny
White Point; and an erratic Venezuelan ship passes through the Cabot Strait.

As local disturbances and international tensions escalate around a NATO
conference in Halifax, Fundy must leave her safe lane and resurrect an
implacable past. Generational love story meets geopolitical suspense in a SAGA
THRILLER barreling across the North Atlantic.

Meat Cove paperback

EXCERPT

Calm surf woke me. My nose felt cold. As predawn light pearled my bedroom walls, I swept an arm over the sheets: Pascal had gone but his scent lingered, teasing my blood. Last night we had slept naked for the first time since October. A splendid outing, but I’d soon be paying the price for such indulgence. I burrowed beneath my Hudson’s Bay blanket, wishing I could wear it to work or better yet, stay in bed. Waking teemed with such fantasies.

About the Author

 Janice Weber cover

 Janice Weber grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey and graduated summa cum laude
from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York.

At the time of her Carnegie Recital Hall debut at age nine, she was writing
her first short stories. She has continued both pursuits, with her novels
providing counterpoint to the staid world of a concert pianist, or perhaps
with her recitals offsetting the staid world of a writer.

Janice’s novels have a worldwide following. Her debut, The Secret Life
of Eva Hathaway
, enjoys near cult status and is widely recognized as iconic
Chick Lit – though appearing years before the genre was invented. Its
colorful characters, verbal virtuosity, wit, and sensuality established the
hallmarks of a style that has earned Weber comparison with Mark Twain, Fran
Liebowitz, Harold Pinter, and Robert Ludlum (if such a hybrid can be
imagined).

Janice’s novels happen between (and occasionally during) concerts. Music
on some level infiltrates almost every book: Eva Hathaway writes hymns between
trysts, Floyd Beck met the love of his life at Carnegie Hall, Leslie Frost is
a concert violinist, and Ross Major listens to Beethoven when the going gets
rough. Characters without music in their lives fill the void with swinging,
murder, and treason, activities musicians tend to eschew since this would
detract from practice time.

Janice divides her time between fishing villages in Massachusetts and Cape
Breton.

 

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Garbage In, Faster Blitz

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Why AI Needs Conversation Architects

Business, Nonfiction

Date Published: April 19, 2026

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AI doesn’t remove the need for human alignment. It amplifies it.

From the co-author of the #1 Amazon Kindle Bestseller Connecting Goals to
Impacts and Outcomes
comes a provocative companion: a book about why AI makes
human conversation skills more essential — not less.

Organizations laid off Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches. Then they adopted AI.
They eliminated the people who create alignment — and bought a
technology that makes alignment more critical than ever.

The result? Garbage in, faster.

This book was written in collaboration with Claude AI by Anthropic. The entire
manuscript was generated in under 60 seconds. But those 60 seconds only worked
because of the hours of structured conversation that preceded them — and
the twenty years of expertise behind those conversations.

The process of writing this book proved its thesis.

What you’ll learn:

• Why “agile is dead” is the wrong diagnosis — and what actually
failed

• Communication Debt: the invisible liability destroying your
organization

• Why AI multiplies clarity AND confusion equally — and you choose
which

• How VERB + NOUN syntax creates infrastructure for both humans and AI

• Why “context engineering” is Structured Conversations by another name

• The five conversations AI can never have for you

• How to become a Conversation Architect — the role organizations
need most

• Five conversations you can have Monday morning with no new tools

Who this book is for:

• Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches wondering what comes next

• Product Managers whose AI tools produce beautiful, meaningless
artifacts

• Executives who invested in AI but aren’t seeing results

• Anyone who suspects that better conversations might be the answer

A companion to Connecting Goals to Impacts and Outcomes: Harnessing Structured
Conversations for Customer-Driven Value Delivery.
That book is the complete
toolkit. This one is the argument for why that toolkit is now existential.

Structure the Conversation. Deliver the Outcome.

 

About the Author

 

Claude Hanhart

Claude Hanhart is a Product Strategist and Agile Coach with 10+ years of
leadership experience in driving groundbreaking product strategies and agile
transformations. His approach centers on fostering innovation rooted in
business objectives, customer experience, and market leadership through tools
such as Generative AI, OKRs, and Behavior-Driven Development (BDD).

Claude’s unique academic background – with an MA in Ancient Near Eastern
Archaeology and Languages from the University of Berne in Switzerland and an
MA in Geography from the University of Minnesota – brings an interdisciplinary
perspective to modern product challenges. His multilingual abilities in
German, Swiss German, and French have proven invaluable in international
collaborations.

Structured Conversations represents Claude’s commitment to bridging strategic
thinking with practical implementation. Currently based in New Jersey with his
wife, Claude finds that their three energetic dogs serve as daily reminders
about the importance of clear communication and patient guidance – principles
that translate beautifully into his professional coaching work.

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Human Trafficking Exposed Blitz

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Stories of Exploitation and Survival

 

Nonfiction / Human Rights

 

Date Published: January 8, 2026

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Human Trafficking Exposed rips the mask off human trafficking and throws
it at your feet without sugarcoating the truth. The book drags you straight
into the underground world where children disappear, women are broken, and men
are reduced to disposable labour—all while society pretends not to see.

Drawing from more than 25 years on the frontlines, award‑winning human
trafficking buster Maxwell Matewere delivers an unfiltered,
boots‑on‑the‑ground investigation into one of the world’s
fastest‑growing criminal enterprises worse than slavery.

This is not second‑hand reporting. It is not theory. It is truth wrestled
directly from survivors, traffickers, migration routes, brothels, recruitment
networks, fake job agencies, and the silent corridors where victims are bought
and sold like livestock.

Inside this book, you will encounter:

• Real cases of children trafficked across borders under the guise of
“education.”

• Young girls promised opportunity but delivered into prostitution and
violent sexual captivity.

• Men trapped in forced labour, stripped of pay, papers, and hope.

• Criminal networks operating like corporations—efficient,
ruthless, and invisible.

• Powerful insights into how traffickers weaponize poverty, trust,
promises, and psychological manipulation.

• The myths Americans believe about trafficking—and the
uncomfortable truths no one talks about.

• How victims become “assets,” broken down and exploited
until nothing remains.

This book exposes the global machinery of exploitation—recruiters,
transporters, corrupt officials, fake pastors, greedy relatives, organised
syndicates, migration scammers, and sexual predators—all working
together to turn human suffering into profit.

 

About the Author
Maxwell Matewere
Maxwell Matewere is an internationally recognized legal and crime
prevention expert with 27 years of vast experiences in the areas of human
trafficking and child protection. He is the founder of Eye of the Child, a
child rights organisation in Malawi, and Malawi Network Against Trafficking
(MNAT). In 2020, the US Department of State recognised him as a Global Hero
for championing national responses against human trafficking and successful
rescue and rehabilitation of victims. His expertise specializes in law reform,
advocacy, training, research and designing responses against transnational
organized crimes including supporting victims of human trafficking in Malawi
and their families. Maxwell has committed his professional life to challenge
those who benefit from the exploitation of victims around the world and is
dedicated to ensuring survivors live in freedom.

 

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