Author Archives: Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

About Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

My Niece and Nephew joke that I could open a used book store with all the books that I own. I love to read, that is my addiction. I can't go a week without going to a book store. I love crocheting. I love to write stories and poetry. I also love my family, even though they make me crazy at times. I am a huge Donald Duck Fan.

The Trek Continues Blitz

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More Memoirs of a Rocket Scientist

Memoir

 

Date Published: October 7, 2025

 

Publisher: Pawpress

 

 

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A life of adventure, science, and survival— one man’s journey from
writing for Star Trek® to exploring the edges of the world

 
After
co-writing “The Tholian Web,” a classic episode of the original series of Star
Trek, Chester L. Richards charted a path unlike any other—one that led
him from the wonders of science and engineering to the wilds of uncharted
rivers and exotic creatures with sharp teeth, some of them human. Now, in The
Trek Continues: More Memoirs of a Rocket Scientist
, the award-winning author
of From the Potato to Star Trek and Beyond shares a Tholian Web night and the
surprising legacy of the show, and series, in his new, unforgettable
collection of true-life stories about extraordinary people, leading-edge
projects, the love of his life Sarah and oh, those wilds.

 

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Vendetta Teaser

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Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense

Date Published: October 10, 2025

Publisher: Changeling Press

 

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They betrayed me. They tried to sell my woman. But I’m the man
they couldn’t kill. Now I’m the darkness coming for them.

 

Dylan — I thought I could handle my uncle’s world. I thought if I kept
my head down and stayed quiet, I could survive with the help of the mysterious
man who’d slipped into my bed like a secret I didn’t want to
question. But one night everything shattered. My uncle Eli handed me off to a
trafficker like I was nothing, and the man I trusted turned out to be the
ghost Eli thought he’d left hanging in the woods — the man who would
kill to keep me safe.

Vendetta — I used to be Tank, proud to wear the Cottonmouth patch, until I
spoke out against the rot our so-called leaders let poison our MC. They hung
me for it. I crawled out of my grave and took a new name. Now I’m back
to burn the criminal empire infecting Oak Grove, and the Cottonmouths that
invited it in, to the ground.

Dylan was never supposed to be part of the plan. Hell, she’s the niece
of the man who betrayed me. But I’ll die before I let him hurt her
again. And when Eli and his men try to finish what they started, they’ll
see I’m not the same man they tried to bury.


Warning: Vendetta is intended for readers 18+ due to explicit adult content,
violence, and bad language. There’s no cliffhanger, no cheating, and a
guaranteed HEA.

 

Vendetta paperback

 

EXCERPT

 

Dylan


Ned’s Sundown Lounge
looked rougher in the light of day than it ever did
at night.

Dylan Crizer waited across the street with her keys clenched in her hand,
taking it all in. The building looked old, dressed in faded black brick. The
same flickering neon sign that barely spelled the word “Open” was
still there. She remembered it from passing by that building as a child. The
tinted windows smeared with fingerprints and smoke stains were new. While the
building wasn’t falling apart just yet, it had clearly seen better days.
Maybe better decades.

Yeah, it was as bad as her Uncle Eli had said it was. It blew her mind that he
was now co-owner of the bar that had been there most of her life. Eli Crizer
was a big bad biker, president of the Cottonmouths and all that, but
he’d never been well-off before. How did a biker get that kind of money?
Did he dip into his retirement account? Did he even have one of those?

Not long after she returned to Oak Grove, she found out her uncle had bought
the place with a “business associate.” How did he get a business
associate? The place had always fascinated her, so when she saw the
‘help wanted’ sign in the window, she marched herself in and
applied right away. Not surprisingly, her uncle, who hadn’t made time to
reach out to her so far, called her the same day about her application.

“It’s not the place for you, Dylan,” he said right off the
bat. When she asked why, he countered with, “It’s gonna be full of
drunks, ex-cons, and worse.”

She thought the fact that she’d been a waitress for years would
guarantee her the job. She had bartender experience too, although she
wasn’t the best at making drinks consistently good in a rough
environment. Her uncle didn’t agree. “You’re a Crizer.
You’re better than serving drinks to scummy people.”

But here she was anyway. Not just because she had something to prove. She now
had something to rebuild. Her entire life basically. Maybe she wouldn’t
be starting a new job today; Eli as a co-owner could cut her off. But she had
to try.

Dylan spent five years with a man who couldn’t commit and didn’t
want her to grow. Five years pretending she was happy in a dead-end
relationship in Richmond. When she left him and the city, she made up her mind
that she’d come back to Oak Grove and figure it out from the ground up.
She’d start over. Hell, she was only twenty-five. She had time.

She was starting over right here at Ned’s Sundown Lounge.

Pushing through the front door, Dylan blinked as her eyes adjusted to the low
light inside the bar. The entire place smelled of old leather, cheap whiskey,
and stale beer. It appeared to be well stocked and mostly clean despite all
the scuff marks and the sticky spots along the floor. The tables were roomy
and spaced out well around its central dance floor. A narrow hallway led off
in the direction of the restrooms and the back offices. Ned’s Sundown
Lounge had its own unique charm. If you squinted.

“Good afternoon,” came a voice from behind the bar. A tall, older
woman with a sharp jaw and leopard-print eyeglasses worked at polishing
glasses, watching Dylan with a smile. “You must be Eli’s
niece.”

“Dylan,” she said, stepping up to the bar. “Here for my
first day.”

At least she hoped she was. If Eli told them she couldn’t work there,
what would she do? She really needed the job and had already told him that.

“I’m Peggy,” the woman said in the way of introduction as
she gave her a once-over and nodded like she approved of what she saw.
“You got the job. Just stay aware and don’t take shit from anyone.
Even the regulars. You’ll be fine.”

Dylan didn’t hesitate. “Wasn’t planning on it.”

“Come on.” Peggy put the last glass she polished on the bar and
motioned for Dylan to follow her.

Down that narrow hallway and to the left was a line of really old lockers
outside the business offices. All of them had huge padlocks, protecting the
personal items the employees wanted to tuck away. Just one, at the far end,
had a small key stuck in the bottom of its padlock. Peggy pointed to that one.

“There’s only one key,” Peggy warned. “If you lose it,
you’re responsible for getting a new lock, okay?”

Dylan nodded, tucking her purse into the locker and securing it with the
padlock before sliding its tiny silver key into the front pocket of her jeans.

Peggy jerked a thumb in the opposite direction. “The kitchen is that
way. There’s not a lot of menu options to memorize. Burgers, fries,
nachos. I think they have chili a couple of times a week. None of it is that
great.”

Good to know. Pulling the hair tie from her wrist, she pulled her hair up into
a ponytail as she followed the woman back through the bar, taking in every
corner as she went. Dylan was many things but naive wasn’t one of them.

Her Uncle Eli had influence here and he led a shady biker club. And now he was
a co-owner of this place. People didn’t just “run bars”
these days. Bars were often covers for other things. More shady shit.
She’d left a couple of bars after learning they were running drugs out
of them. The second one had a full police raid one night and it took hours for
it to be cleared up so everyone could go home. She never returned because
drugs were dangerous and brought dangerous people. No job was worth putting
herself in the line of fire.

But until she had proof that something wasn’t right here at her
uncle’s bar, she was going to do the damn job. Unfortunately, she needed
the money to get back on her feet.


Smile. Hustle. Listen
. It had been her mantra since her first job in a bar.

Peggy looked to be somewhere in her forties. She had a no-nonsense attitude
that had to come in handy in a place as rough as this. “House rules.
Keep the regulars’ drinks full and staff are not allowed to talk
politics. Or religion. People don’t want to think about religion when
they’re drinking and partying, you know? The jukebox plays when it
fucking wants to, so no beating it or kicking it. If Ned’s here and he
sees you do it, he’ll lose his mind.”

“Who’s Ned?” Dylan asked.

“The other co-owner,” Peggy replied. “Try not to piss him
off, even if you are Eli’s family.”

“Understood,” Dylan said.

“Now, if a fight breaks out and there’s usually one each fucking
week,” Peggy explained, “don’t be a hero. Just try and get
clear and wave down one of the bouncers. We usually have at least two of them
scheduled each night. It’s not a bad idea to check the schedule.
It’s on the whiteboard with the lockers. See who’s on duty each
night so you know who you’re looking for.” She jerked her chin in
the direction of the far end of the bar.

Dylan followed her gaze to the two huge guys leaning against the back wall
near the hallway, perfectly still and silent. One of them was built like a
refrigerator with tattoos creeping up both sides of his neck. The other looked
mean even though he wasn’t actively trying to at that moment. He was
leaner with an angular face and a body you could only get from hours each week
in the gym. The gym rats were hit-or-miss as bouncers. Dylan would be willing
to bet money that the fridge was the one to flag down in a fight.

“They don’t talk much, but they move fast, let me tell you. If
some shit goes down, make eye contact, give a nod, and then get out of the
way. Got it?”

“Got it,” Dylan said, scanning the room as Peggy handed her an
apron and a notepad. “Is there a panic button or something? I’ve
worked in other places that had them.”

Peggy snorted. “This ain’t Applebee’s, sweetheart. You see
something coming, you move. Fast.

It wasn’t the serious lack of formal safety protocols that raised
Dylan’s eyebrows. It was the way Peggy said it, like fights
weren’t just a possibility, they were expected. Like there was a rhythm
to them and they were allowed. She nodded and kept listening, but something
about that rubbed her wrong.

“Most of our business is on the weekends, of course, but the VIPs come
in all during the week,” Peggy went on, already moving back to the bar
to stock napkins in old-fashioned metal boxes. “You’ll know them
when you see them. They don’t tip, but don’t piss them off. Eli
likes to keep them happy.”

Dylan paused, notebook in hand. “VIPs?”

“Locals. Out-of-towners. Some are from his MC. Doesn’t
matter,” Peggy said, without looking up. “You serve what they
order and stay out of their conversations. That’s not me being rude.
That’s me keeping you employed.”

The words hit her like a warning. Something about all of it, the emphasis, the
look in Peggy’s eyes, the way she didn’t offer names made
Dylan’s stomach tighten as she kept listening, wondering what else she
was going to hear. Nodding, she filed it all away and forced a smile.

“Thanks for showing me the ropes,” Dylan said. “I appreciate
it.”

Peggy finally looked at her, a long, assessing stare. Then she shrugged.
“You’ve got the eyes for this place. You watch everything.
That’s good. Just make sure you don’t watch too closely,
yeah?”

Dylan didn’t answer. But she was definitely paying attention.

“One last thing.” Peggy spoke quietly. “You’re one of
the owner’s family members which probably means you’d have to
really fuck up to get fired. But just keep in mind, you’re still
expendable.”

“I’ll do my best to remember that.”

The evening crowd was light, just as Peggy explained it would be. It was
Thursday night, and Ned’s Sundown Lounge always did look better at
night. The dim lighting and the fact that the sun had already set, covered the
bar’s many imperfections better than paint ever could. The jukebox was
working tonight, playing songs that were moody and lazy, and they filled the
space without drawing attention.

The regulars were easy to spot, planted on barstools like fixtures, beers in
front of them. Some of them talked to each other in low voices, some were
there on their own. Dylan had just finished clearing one of her tables when
the cool night air blew a newcomer through the front doors.

Dylan glanced up and paused.

The newest patron was tall and built. She didn’t think she’d seen
him before. That didn’t necessarily mean anything. She was just back in
town after having been gone several years.

The man who just walked in didn’t look like a local. Six-four, easy,
with broad shoulders under a worn jean jacket and a dark hoodie that had
definitely seen better days. His long dark hair was pulled back low at the
neck, and a beat-up baseball cap shadowed most of his face. Not that it helped
much. He was fine and pretty hard to miss.

Dark eyes scanned the room once, slow and deliberate. He didn’t come
across as cocky, just aware. Like he was used to being in places where trouble
could find him in a hurry. When his gaze finally landed on her, it lingered
for half a second longer than it needed to. Not creepy or flirty. Maybe
interested.

Dylan straightened and stepped behind the bar, already reaching for a clean
glass. But the new guy didn’t sit at the bar like most of them. No, he
picked out a booth near the back, one that gave him the best line of sight on
both the bar’s exits.

Shit, they really must have fights often here.

Dylan clocked that and noticed how relaxed his movements were. Like someone
trained not to draw attention but fully capable of handling it if he had to.

She walked over with a notepad in hand, smiling when his gaze met hers.
“You look like a bourbon guy,” she said by way of greeting.

“It depends on who’s pouring,” he said, voice deep and
gravel smooth.

 

About the Author

Jamie Targaet is the author of the Hounds of Hell MC. She’s anxious to
introduce you to this club of gorgeous, dominant men and the lucky women who
surrender to them. The ride is going to get wild at times, not going to lie.
But there’s thrilling action, scorching hot sex scenes, and all the feels.

Jamie writes erotic romance for Changeling Press, a little fanfiction on the
side, and she’s an aspiring horror writer in another life. She enjoys time
with her family (including the fur babies). She likes good horror movies and
shows, emo metal and classic rock, and time spent in other worlds writing and
reading. She loves hearing from readers and is looking forward to hearing from
you.

 

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

 

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

 

 

 

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The Wheels on the Stroller Blitz

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Children’s Book

Date Published: 2025

Publisher: Serapis Bey Publishing

 

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The Wheels on the Stroller, a fresh adaptation of the well-known song
and book, The Wheels on the Bus, invites parents and children on a stroller
journey of song, motion, and colorful illustrations. Roll through a variety of
neighborhoods meeting delightful creatures and various neighbors in action as
the seasons change. Experience being fully present in the moment with your
child as you sing and act out each verse. The Stroller kids show readers how
to perform each motion! In addition, a picture clue in each illustration
signals the next action. The Wheels on the Stroller aims to reawaken the joy
and wonder of simple, everyday happenings as seen through the eyes of young
children. It seeks to inspire readers to make up verses of their own based on
adventurous stroller walks (or wagon walks!) through their neighborhoods.

Ready…Set…Let’s Roll!

 

About the Author

Claudia Kramer Kohlbrenner
Claudia Kramer Kohlbrenner earned a B.S and an M.Ed. degree in the field
of speech-language pathology and she also received extensive training in the
teaching of reading. She maintained her American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association (ASHA) certification during her 35+ years of teaching and for many
years after retirement. Claudia taught mainly in the public schools with
students of all ages but primarily with special education and general
education students at the preschool and elementary levels.

When teaching at the preschool level, Claudia encouraged busy parents to
utilize the time spent carrying out daily routines as language-rich
opportunities. Parents were counseled to talk about what was happening in a
child’s “here and now” – while getting dressed, brushing
teeth, taking a stroller walk! Claudia used available and self-generated
rhymes and songs and involved as many bodily senses and movements as possible
to facilitate developmental skills in preschoolers. She considers the
repetition used in The Wheels on the Bus book and now in The Wheels on the
Stroller
to be a valuable learning tool for young children. According to early
childhood research, repetition reinforces language processing, pattern
recognition and a sense of predictability. It also provides children with
opportunities to rehearse new sound and word sequences.

After retirement, Claudia’s love of rhyme inspired her to take a few
children’s poetry writing classes. She was pleased to have several poems
published in “Highlights High Five” and “Highlights”
magazines, with two poems also published in children’s anthologies. The
joy of reading to her sons long ago and now her grandchildren sparked her
desire to write a children’s book as well. One day, after she and her
young grandson enthusiastically sang and motioned along with The Wheels on the
Bus
book, grandma and grandson set out for one of their many adventure-seeking
neighborhood stroller walks. As the wheels on his stroller went round and
round, they greeted neighbors with tail-wagging dogs, watched squirrels scurry
up trees and delighted in the “ding! ding! ding!” of an
approaching bicycle along with other encounters- The Wheels on the Stroller
was spontaneously born!

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It Takes a Forest Virtual Book Tour

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Juvenile Fiction

Illustrator: Amanda Ravensdale

Date Published: June 10, 2025

Publisher: Lucid Books Publishing

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It Takes a Forest is a heartwarming tale of courage, community, and the
bonds that hold us together. When Mama Wolf discovers her den is no longer
safe for the winter, she must make a difficult decision to protect her young
pup, Caleb. In the midst of a fierce snowstorm, they venture through the
forest in search of a safe haven. Along the way, they encounter creatures who,
though kind, are unable to provide shelter. Just as hope seems to dwindle,
Mama Wolf finds a family willing to take Caleb in.

As Mama Wolf departs with a tender kiss, Caleb is left with a swirl of
emotions-doubt, fear, and curiosity. Can Mama truly repair their den? What
will it be like to live with a new family? And most importantly, will she keep
her promise to return?

Join Caleb on his journey of discovery as he learns what it means to be part
of a new family, while Mama Wolf works tirelessly to secure their home.
Through the experiences of both Caleb and his foster family, this enchanting
story reminds us all that raising little ones in safety and love takes not
just a parent, but an entire forest.

 

It Takes a Forest paperback

 

 

About the Author

 Jessie Todd Mayfield

 Jessie Todd Mayfield lives in Akron, Ohio where she works as a labor and
delivery nurse by night and writer by day. She is passionate about
children’s literature from her years of teaching English abroad, and
about at-risk children from her family’s own involvement with the
ministry Safe Families for Children and foster care—namely her youngest
brother, Jacob, who was adopted from foster care. Jessie loves to write songs
and travel the country with her bluegrass musician husband, David, who is her
greatest encourager and sweetest soulmate. She is grateful for her family who
has championed this project, and the many families doing the hard work of
making their homes a safe place for children—whether theirs or someone
else’s.

 

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The Smallest of Miracles Virtual Book Tour

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Literary Fiction

Date Published: March 6, 2025

Publisher: Seacoast Press

 

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One choice. One moment. A ripple that changes everything.

In The Smallest of Miracles, Douglas Carpenter crafts a masterful literary
debut that merges gripping storytelling with profound life lessons. The novel
follows Ted Carrington, a wealthy, brilliant, and emotionally distant man on
the autism spectrum, who returns to the private elementary school that shaped
him—for better and worse. He intends to make a large donation, but what
begins as a business transaction slowly becomes a reckoning with his past.

As the story transitions between Ted’s present and his childhood,
readers meet the deeply flawed, often cruel boy he once was—especially
to a vulnerable new classmate named Anna. But life, in its quiet way, begins
to turn his world upside down.

What emerges is not only Ted’s transformation, but an invitation to the
reader: to reflect, to slow down, and to reconsider how the smallest
decisions
—the ones we barely notice—can lead to the greatest
changes
.

This is not just a novel. It’s a call to awareness. A self-improvement
guide disguised as a coming-of-age story.

📘 “Just like everything in life, meaning is found in the small details.”

 

📘
“A golfer knows a 2-inch putt counts the same as a 200-yard drive. Life is
very similar…”
📘 “Change is the fertilizer of life. It often stinks,
but it is necessary for growth.”

 

🔹 Perfect for fans of literary fiction with depth
🔹 A powerful read for young adults and up
🔹 Ideal for classrooms and book clubs seeking discussion-worthy themes

Read it once for the story. Read it again for the insight.

 

The Smallest of Miracles tablet

EXCERPT

Quotes from your Book 

  1. “The truth is always hidden behind things that are out of place.”
  2. “You can never accomplish anything great until you let go of your fear!”
  3. ” Just like every thing in life, meaning is found in the small details”
  4. “A golfer knows a 2-inch putt counts the same as a 200-yard drive Life is very similar, except there are innumerably more 2-inch putts than 200-yard drives “
  5. “The meaning of life comes down to the effect you have on others”
  6. “Satisfaction equals happiness. One brings the other”
  7. “An adult takes responsibility”
  8. “He had been asked on more than one occasion which was more important: what you know or who you know? He answered both were important to success, but if you wanted power, real power, then it came down to what you know about who you know.”
  9. “One thing that never changes is that everything does.” 
  10. “Change is the fertilizer of life It often stinks but it is necessary for growth.”
  11. “Being different is a gift from God. Unfortunately, those lucky enough to be afflicted with it find it’s a gift that takes a very long time to unwrap ”
  12. “When we have friends, real friends, we must weigh the value of their qualities against our willingness to accept their faults This is a necessary part of every long-lasting relationship.”

 

About the Author
Douglas Carpenter
Douglas Carpenter is not your typical author. A Certified Public
Accountant (CPA) and Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Douglas became the
youngest stockbroker in the U.S. at just 17 and currently owns two accounting
firms and an asset management company in New York. Despite a thriving career
in finance, his true passion lies in storytelling.

His debut novel, The Smallest of Miracles, took ten years to write—a
deeply personal and intricately crafted journey of self-discovery and
transformation. Drawing on his keen eye for detail and analysis, Douglas
poured over every word, shaping a literary fiction novel that functions as
both an engaging story and a guide to personal growth.

The book explores how tiny, seemingly insignificant choices shape our lives
far more than major events. Readers are invited to slow down, reflect, and
discover truths hidden in the smallest details—just as Douglas has done
through his writing.

Douglas hopes his novel will find a place in high school curricula and on the
bookshelves of thoughtful readers young and old. His message is clear: “The
truth is always hidden behind things that are out of place.”


Connect with Douglas Carpenter
to discover a new perspective on life,
character, and the miraculous power of small decisions.

 

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