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SandySaysRead is a place where Author Sandy Lender can share more conservative and diverse reviews of titles than "tolerated" elsewhere. Opinions and reviews that must be cautious (or curtailed) on other sites can be open and freely discussed here.
Members of SandySaysRead will also get sneak previews of upcoming releases and events, as well as access to content, writing tips, and general book-nerd fun not shared with other platforms.
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Tuesday Tune

Today's #NigelAndCharissSong is "Our Love" by Andrea Hamilton

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You Know It's Duran Duran...

You can pre-order the electronic version now for its release on Duran Duran Appreciation Day! (print link coming soon) https://books2read.com/u/bP8kXd

00:00:39
Kat Timpf Book Review

Guys, I don't think I shared this here on the SandySaysRead community back when I filmed it a couple months ago...and not everyone who accesses Locals will view stuff on YT...so...enjoy! This is a discussion of "You Can't Joke About That" and free speech.

00:11:45
A dragon book review for ya this weekend...

#SandySaysRead #BookReview #Dragons
This review of “Rex Draconis: Lords of the Dragon Moon,” the second book in the series by Richard A. Knaak, includes a spoiler at the 6-minute mark (from 6:00-6:59, specifically). Time stamps below to help with all that.

Enjoy the drag racing #neighbors in the background, courtesy of my neighborhood. (You can follow the saga of my neighbors if you subscribe to my free newsletter at https://bit.ly/SSReNews. Just sayin.)

Book Specs & BC 00:14
Overview & Character Discussion 1:15
Reading Sample 4:42
BIG SPOILER 6:00-6:59
Power of Friendship & Outro 7:00

See the review & discussion of the first book in the series, “Rex Draconis: Under the Dragon Moon,” at this link (and see the map of Tiberos by Patrick Pullen in that review, too).

The books of the “Rex Draconis” series are as follows:
Under the Dragon Moon (2017)
Lords of the Dragon Moon (2018)
Shadows of the Dragon Moon (2019)
Of Dragon’s Blood (2020)
War of the Dragon Moon (2022)
...

00:08:47
Monday Motivation!
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Monday Motivation!

I hope you all are killin' it this week!!!

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Tuesday Tune

Today's NigelAndCharissSong is "Same Page" by John Splithoff and I truly hope this link works so you all can enjoy this lovely thing...
https://youtu.be/gAVGLNPoaF8?feature=shared

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All My Life for This Side Hustle
Let's stop blocking success based on other victims' status

By Sandy Lender

I’m not pretending to be a victim. Instead, I’ll tell you I’ve experienced the surreal anxiety of fighting for my place in many scenarios while being told I’ve been handed my successes. Even now, fellow content creators will roll their eyes and call me a privileged white woman. On one hand, okay, that’s fair. I recognize I’ve received benefits in the past based on the color of my skin. Let me give you a blatant example.

In 2006, I was privileged to be driving a Saturn I’d paid off about a year or so prior, to a salaried job I was privileged to have at a university where my Catholic boss was looking for reasons to fire a Southern Baptist, so I was hurrying to get there early. I was not only speeding, but I whipped out to go around a slow truck in a no-passing zone. As I sped in front of the truck, I passed a police officer parked in someone’s driveway.

Being aware of what was coming, I pulled over before the officer caught up to me. When he approached my window, I apologized. I knew I was in the wrong. I told him, “I’m sorry officer. I know I’m in too big of a hurry. I know better. Here’s my stuff.” I handed him my license and registration without him asking for it.

He came back to my window a few minutes later telling me to slow down, to obey the law, and telling me he appreciated me pulling over quickly in a safe place. He let me go with a warning. And I'm aware that is predicated on not only the fact I owned up to what I did wrong, but on my race, as well. It’s the climate we live in.

I did get fired from that job. I wasn’t the right flavor of Christian and my husband at the time was moving, thus my boss assumed (without asking me) that I knew he was moving and was moving with him. I’ve had people tell me being fired from a Catholic university for being Southern Baptist isn’t a violation of my rights. Having that university’s HR department talk to the husband I’d filed to divorce about my benefits, severance package, and potential continued health coverage behind my back wasn’t a violation of my rights. And so on. It’s a bit much to go into in this essay. The point is I was told to let it go and lose my house because it would be “easier” than to fight that battle while going through cancer treatment.

I fought my way back from the illness (twice) and the hit to my career and financial life.

I currently have a great job I enjoy, an old house I’m working hard to pay off, an older-model car that hasn’t killed me yet, a struggling side-hustle to which I give every ounce of energy I can spare, and a lowering tolerance for the dichotomy happening in marketing these days. The dichotomy exists when responses teeter between “you don’t deserve to succeed because you don’t have enough victimhood as a white woman” and “you don’t deserve to succeed because women have been handed all the success already.”

I beg your finest pardon?

At what point is it okay to tell anyone they can’t be allowed to succeed because other members of their class have been handed success before them?

Anyone telling me I don’t get to excel because some other woman (no matter her level of melanin) excelled in the past can pucker up and kiss my fair ass.

I will keep fighting for the side hustle I’ve dreamt of since I was an eight-year-old girl. Since I was a teen with parents who told me, “No, you can’t be a writer because you have to pursue math or science instead.” Since I was a college student and an advisor told me, “Really, Sandy, what do children’s books have to do with creative writing?” Since I was graduating from college and an older man in a group interview snickered at my resume, tossed it onto the boardroom table in front of him, and asked, “You have an English degree? Are you planning to write the next great American novel?” Since I was a fledgling author and a New York literary agent ten years my junior sat across a table from me and sneered about a detail I mis-spoke in my pitch, saying, “You don’t cure a virus with antibiotics.” Since I was launching a BookTube channel, and the platform moved the goalpost for monetization.

I’m gonna keep fighting for this side hustle I’ve dreamt of my whole life. No matter what anyone thinks of anyone else’s victimhood status, I’m not one. As Helen Reddy sang during my childhood: “I am woman.”

If this kind of storytelling helps with your motivation, I encourage you to check out my motivational business book “Capture Your Dream,” available now. It includes anecdotes from colleagues and me, as well as inspiration and exercises to help your work-life balance while you stack your goals and go for your side-hustle dreams.

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The Sun Always Shines on TV
why I want to be part of our instant gratification society today

By Sandy Lender

We’re a society accustomed to instant gratification. The shorts and reels on YT and Insta and elsewhere have trained us to expect a mini dopamine hit every 60 to 90 seconds as we doomscroll before breakfast. And on our coffee breaks. And at lunch. And while in traffic. And so on. (I included a reaction to how this affects college students’ reading abilities in my November wrap-up.)

But the larger problem I see around the United States is our lack of situational awareness. We’re not in a television program. This reality isn’t a Made-for-Netflix program that’ll wrap with a rainbow cast dancing into the sunset after 90 minutes.

We’re living in a world that moves at the speed of business where a man takes the oath of office one day and a population of chickens decimated by a former administration does not magically recover the next, thus returning to egg production levels of four or five months prior. In our reality, hens lay eggs more proficiently in the spring; those eggs take 21 days to incubate; the chicks that survive take—depending on the breed, conditions, stress—anywhere from 16 to 32 weeks to start laying eggs.

You may wonder what makes me any kind of qualified to talk about eggs. Let me tell you, I’ve been raising Buff Orpingtons in my backyard since 2021. In addition to being friendly and weather-hardy, the gals start laying eggs around four-and-a-half months of age and really do like to sit on their eggs instead of making way for me to gather them.

We have more than eggspectations to talk about in society today.

There are folks who expected tariffs to immediately cause manufacturing to explode within the United States (beyond Hyundai with a $5B steel plant, John Deere, Paris Baguette, Siemens with data center investment, Taiwan semiconductors, Volvo), and others who expected prices to immediately soar. While prices of various goods in my neck of the woods had doubled and tripled between 2021 and 2024, it was difficult to tell if there was an additional impact other than oil and gas prices decreasing after April 2, 2025, but I can tell you I believe the expected downfall of the economic system may be what’s manufactured in this country.

I don’t have a favorite television program to suggest we compare the economic situation to for a sunny, 60-minute wrap-up (minus commercial breaks). But as a member of the instant-gratification society, I wish to God we were living in an episode of House.

Or any other medical procedural where a happy 16-year-old goes into the doctor’s office with headache complaints and comes out after 60 minutes (minus commercial breaks) with a diagnosis and a cure for a fast-growing brain tumor. I want to be in an episode where an extended family praying for a miracle is derided by Gregory House for their silly faith while his incredible team runs quick-n-efficient tests that show exactly what’s wrong; assigns the immediate surgery to a bold, confident surgeon; and returns after the commercial break saying, “We got all of the tumor. Your family member’s going to be fine.”

I want the sunny, TV-wrap-up for my young cousin.

I recognize we’re not getting instant gratification on any of the topics above. Our Great Physician may still be in the business of miracles, but we’re not living in a television program. None of us are seeing results in a 23-minute sitcom or 2-hour movie runtime. We must be patient, even when we don’t want to be. We must trust the process and wait for the sun to rise each morning.

I would appreciate those who are prayer warriors to pray for a 16-year-old named Cooper.

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A Bump on an Autumn Road
(honorable mention in the Autumn Writers Weekly short story competition)

Blinking at the bloodied reptile between his wagon wheels, Erik cursed his luck. The horses he’d stolen in Mar Dell were champing at their bits, pulling erratically against the brake he’d set, and generally whinnying their distress to any creature who might be watching from the forest. He glanced to the colorful foliage drifting on the breeze, expecting to see this creature’s parent crashing toward him.

 

A disheveled ruffian peered over the side of the wagon instead, rubbing sleep from his eyes. “What was that? D’you lose a wheel?”

 

Erik shrugged off his cloak, hoping the breeze would lift his muslin shirt suddenly sticking with sweat to unwashed skin. “I think it’s a dragon.”

 

His companion disagreed. “That’s not possible. The slayers hunted ’em all out a hundred winters ago. None left.”

 

Erik spread his arms wide to show the evidence before him. “What else would you call this?”

 

“By the gods, man! You ran over a dragon? How’d you not see—”

 

“It came out of nowhere.”

 

“You better drag its carcass to nowhere.”

 

Erik cringed against Jackore’s sarcasm and countered with, “You don’t think it’s good eatin’?”

 

Jackore pointed toward the cornfield behind Erik. “Hide it or the adult’s gonna find and eat you.”

 

Erik laid his cloak next to the fledgling. While he manuevered the child-sized creature onto it, he griped about Jackore’s culpability in this mess also making him a juicy meal for a dragon parent. “You could help me.”

 

“I’m not getting its blood on me. You think the mother won’t smell that when it comes to heal it?”

 

“Heal it? What are you on about?”

 

Jackore lowered the pitch of his voice almost an octave. “Bards in the pubs tell of the old wyrm mothers laying a hundred eggs and if even one went missing, they’d leave the ninety-nine to go find it. They could track and heal like nothing else in this world. Dragons were full of magic only the gods understand.” Returning his voice to his normal whine, he finished. “I want nothing to do with it.”

 

Erik paused to wipe his brow, wishing he’d stolen a sword while in Mar Dell’s marketplace. “Fine. You hide up there doing nothing.”

 

He grumbled some more while he pulled the makeshift gurney into the field. It took time and effort to drag the thing over felled stumps no farmer had removed and far enough into the vegetation that the crushed stalks left in his wake could be hidden from the roadway, too. The only good fortune in the whole situation was the unharvested crop rustled above his head as he hid his crime.

 

It should prove good cover.

 

The juvenile’s robust colors of orange and red mimicked the turning leaves of the forest, which Erik told himself was half the reason he didn’t see the thing dart in front of the horses in time to stop. The richness of the colors also made him worry about the efficacy of his lightweight cloak hiding the creature. He tucked its spiked tail under the fabric, cursing at a scale pricking his finger.

 

“This’ll have to do. There’s no time for diggin’ graves. I’ve gotta get further down the roadway before your momma comes ’round.”

 

He left the dragon — cloak and all — between rows of fresh-smelling corn and scurried back. The horses stood silently quivering under a lather of sweat with their nostrils flared and ears laid back, which he considered an improvement. Jackore’s lack of complaint was welcome, too.

 

He quickly kicked some of the roadway’s sand-and-pebble over the blood to conceal the accident and jumped to the driver’s board. “Good riddance,” he said. “Let’s go.”

 

The horses whinnied their unhappiness, but moved forward as directed. He drove them more quickly than before, keeping an eye on the forest to his left. If dragon’s fire were to accompany the breath of the wind, it would likely come from there.

 

One gnomon’s shadow later, his heart rate had returned to normal, the breeze was starting to bite, and he called to Jackore. “You can stop cowering under your blankets. We’re plenty far from the act and plenty safe.”

 

When Jackore didn’t respond, Erik grumbled under his breath and turned on the seat. The threadbare blankets Jackore had insisted on bringing instead of a cloak were missing. As was Jackore.

 

Erik yanked the reins to stop the horses. A twinge of lightning shot through him, searing his muscles. His heart rate began racing and he jumped from the wagon as a pair of winged reptiles dropped behind it—one the size of Erik’s favorite tavern.

 

When the dragons’ feet thudded on the ground, spraying sand and sound, the horses bolted.

 

The smaller of the two beasts had a mess of corn silks sticking to dried blood on its scales. It pointed at Erik, as if singling him out from among a host of men. The larger one lowered its head and bared its teeth.

 

With a shriek, Erik turned to run after the galloping horses and bouncing wagon. It was a useless reaction. Dragons are full of magic only the gods understand.

 

The End

(c)2024SandyLender

(This story takes place in the world of Onweald, which you can learn more about on The Choices Series page.)

 

 

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