Many people’s minds live in cages. People are limited to what they will accept and are stuck in their way of thinking. Seeing what I’ve seen and overcoming all that I’ve overcome has allowed me to be more open minded and look at life from different angles. To be “Out of the Cage” means to break free from the demons that keep us from being all we can be. The book contains thirty memoirs that address the different demons we have within ourselves such as fear, pride, overthinking, bitterness and many more.
Out of the Cage
Free: “25 Years in the Rearview Mirror”
What were you doing 25 years ago? Where would you like to be 25 years from now? This collection of lively essays will get you thinking about your past and future and inspire you to make the small steps that will take you down the right path. Fifty-two authors give a sneak peek into their romances, hardships, joys, careers, and setbacks. Discover new authors for your to-read list as you get insight into their lives…and your own. Free on Kindle.
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Double Happiness
An award-winning memoir of a journey across China and through the soul of a young American, Double Happiness not only paints a fascinating portrait of life in the Middle Kingdom but recounts a groundbreaking story of coming of age in today’s era of globalization.
Tony Brasunas’s rugged road brings daunting perils, unexpected romance, and wild twists of fate that transform his understanding of right and wrong, beauty and truth, suffering and happiness. $1.99 on Kindle.
A Garland for Ashes
When little Hannelore (Hanna) Zack left Cologne, Germany, on a train bound for London as a seven-year-old Mädchen (young girl) on July 24, 1939, she had no way of knowing that she was part of the Kindertransport, an epic rescue effort that would save 10,000 Jewish children from Hitler’s Nazi regime by granting them safe passage to England. $4.99 for a limited time.
Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail
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At twenty-two, Cheryl Strayed thought she had lost everything. In the wake of her mother’s death, her family scattered and her own marriage was soon destroyed. Four years later, with nothing more to lose, she made the most impulsive decision of her life. With no experience or training, driven only by blind will, she would hike more than a thousand miles of the Pacific Crest Trail from the Mojave Desert through California and Oregon to Washington State—and she would do it alone. Told with suspense and style, sparkling with warmth and humor, Wild powerfully captures the terrors and pleasures of one young woman forging ahead against all odds on a journey that maddened, strengthened, and ultimately healed her. $3.99 on Kindle
Memoirs of a Starving Artist

“Memoirs of a Starving Artist” follows the author on a lifelong journey from Australia to Tahiti, Ireland to Estonia to Budapest and beyond. It is an inside look at what it means to be an ex-pat American writer in the era of the ebook revolution.
Kill Daddy

Pony Tales

Abandoned in a strange country with three small children, Peta struggles to keep ponies from wandering, goats from scaring unsuspecting mothers and cows from walking through fences as she tries to establish her riding school. She is plagued with the strange antics of parents, farmers, and even has to battle the mayor to rescue her cow from the local pound! Barely more than a kid herself she tries to keep her pupils from too much mayhem as they scare the locals while galloping madly through their gardens. This is a heart warming story about the struggles and triumphs of an unusual life.
Autobiography of Charles R. Barefoot Jr.

Excerpt: It was dark, he couldn’t see anything. Junior opened the window so he could hear the car. Junior then jumped down and turned off the inside lights hoping it would help him see better and keep them from seeing him. Junior hated that it was a bit foggy and he couldn’t see. Junior knew that if they turned on their lights, he’d know exactly where to shoot. But if not, he’d have to rely on his hearing. Propping himself up at the best angle to do the most damage. Junior sat in anticipation with the gun aimed and cocked. Junior listened carefully. He wasn’t afraid, but he didn’t like not being able to see the car. Junior was determined to keep them from getting shots off that could hurt his pops or Lonnie.
Home

This is the place where he put pen to paper…
But clung to the wall, the shelves are now bare.
All that remains of his words is but vapor …
All you can spot is but a dent in his chair
Six years after I discovered my father’s poems, a moment which happened in my childhood home while mourning for his passing, I present a tender tribute: a collection of poems and prose, half of which is written by me, and half—by my father, the author, poet and artist Zeev Kachel. I have been translating his poems for nearly a year, with careful attention to rhyme and rhythm, in an effort to remain faithful to the spirit of his words.




































