Case Studies
Our clients sign a Non Disclosure Agreement to protect their interests and privacy. To that end, we cannot provide titles to books we have written, but we do have permission to include the following synapses from previous clients:
The Great White Way
Who was the client: A Performing Artist in New York City
What was the story about: The daily life of a Broadway and sometimes off-Broadway performer, the struggles, the triumphs of continuously searching for the next role and the attempt of the family to suppress her creative gifts.
Was it published or family legacy: This was published and is available on public forums.
Synopsis
Told in intimate, unvarnished prose, it captures the rhythm of her days: early morning vocal warmups in cramped apartments, afternoons spent racing between auditions, and evenings stepping into the glow of stage lights, sometimes before packed houses, sometimes for half-empty rooms that still demand everything she has.
At its heart, the story is about endurance. The constant search for the next role becomes both a professional necessity and an emotional crucible. Each audition carries the weight of hope and rejection in equal measure, forcing her to confront questions of identity, worth, and resilience.
Running parallel to her theatrical journey is a quieter, more painful struggle: her family’s persistent attempts to steer her away from what they see as an impractical, even embarrassing path. Their disapproval seeps into phone calls, holiday visits, and moments when she most needs support.
This is ultimately a story about claiming one’s identity in a world that offers no guarantees, and sometimes no applause.
Dust and Thunder: A Trainer’s run
Who was the client: A thoroughbred race horse trainer
What was the story about: A race track and back stretch worker who rises from a working-class upbringing in rural America to become a respected racehorse trainer on the national circuit.
Was it published or family legacy: This was published and is available on public forums.
Synopsis
The story traces his early struggles with low-paying stable jobs, long mornings, and the uncertainty of an industry where success is never guaranteed. His big break comes when a promising but overlooked horse under his care begins to win, bringing attention followed by better owners, and higher stakes. As his career grows, he navigates the competitive world of American racing, from smaller tracks to iconic venues like Churchill Downs and Saratoga.
Interwoven with race-day triumphs are the emotional and ethical challenges of the sport: injuries, financial pressures, difficult decisions about horses’ futures, and the constant scrutiny surrounding training practices. The memoir also explores the deep relationships between trainer, horse, jockey, and owner, showing how trust and intuition often matter as much as strategy.
At its heart, the book is about resilience, weathering losses, rebuilding after setbacks, and staying grounded in a high-risk profession. By the end, the trainer reflects on a lifetime spent chasing seconds on the track, recognizing that the true reward was never just victory, but the connection to the animals and the life built around them.
The Healer
Who was the client: A renowned spiritual healer who creating personal wealth.
What was the story about: How someone from humble and unfocused beginnings created a life of purpose serving others while creating his own personal wealth.
Was it published or family legacy: This was published and is available on public forums.
Synopsis
The son of scarcity, he grew up in a small, weathered home where uncertainty lingered like a permanent guest. Money was tight, opportunities were scarce, and the world beyond his neighborhood felt distant and unreachable. Yet even as a child, he noticed something others didn’t: pain had patterns, and people carried invisible wounds that shaped everything they did.
His turning point didn’t come as a sudden breakthrough, but as a slow awakening. He began investing in himself—books, mentors, long nights of reflection. But the memoir doesn’t paint wealth as the finish line. Instead, it reveals the deeper truth: that every level of success brought new internal battles. Old wounds resurfaced in new forms. The difference now was awareness—and the tools to face them.
Ultimately, this is a story about transformation and the possibilities and treasures that exist in all of us.
Miles after the finish line
Who was the client: A retired woman destined to travel.
What was this story about: This memoir follows their transformation from a person defined by deadlines and stability into one shaped by motion, curiosity, and the willingness to be unsettled.
Was it published or a family legacy: This was published and is available on public forums.
Synopsis
A spontaneous decision to take a solo trip, initially meant as a brief escape from daily life, becomes the catalyst for a new way of living. What starts as occasional travel soon evolves into an ongoing journey across continents, cultures, and inner landscapes.
Each chapter centers on a different destination, but the memoir resists becoming a simple travelogue. Instead, the places serve as mirrors: a quiet village reveals the author’s discomfort with stillness, a crowded city exposes their lingering need for control, and a remote landscape invites reflection on aging, mortality, and freedom. Along the way, chance encounters with strangers, fellow travelers, locals, and other retirees who reshape their understanding of connection and independence.
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A Non-Profit Mission
Who was the client: A non-for-profit, charitable organization
What was the story about: The origins of a charitable organization. The world events that inspired its humble creation, the continued charitable efforts and the worldwide growth and expansion of services to international communities.
Was it published or family legacy: This book was published and is available on their website as well as on Amazon.com. They sell this book at fundraising events throughout the year, and it has been included in grant requests.
Synopsis
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, when floodwaters swallowed entire neighborhoods and hope seemed just as submerged, a small group of ordinary individuals found themselves unable to walk away. What began as a single act of compassion, delivering food, water, and basic supplies to stranded families, quickly grew into something far greater than any of them had imagined.
This book traces the humble beginnings of a grassroots effort born in chaos and heartbreak. With no formal structure, limited resources, and little more than determination, the founders navigated logistical nightmares, emotional exhaustion, and the overwhelming scale of human need. Yet, through resilience and an unshakable belief in community, they built something lasting.
What started in the ruins of Katrina soon reached other communities in crisis: responding to earthquakes, wildfires, and humanitarian emergencies across the globe. Despite its growth into an internationally recognized charitable organization, the heart of the mission remains unchanged, people helping people in their most vulnerable moments
Between Monsoons and Memory
Who was the client: A man who left England in midlife and began again in India.
What was this story about: A middle-aged man who emigrates to India
​Was it published or a family legacy: This was quietly published but was more of a family legacy.
Synopsis
Though the reasons for his departure remain layered, shifting, and not always fully revealed. What was meant to be a temporary relocation, part escape, part reinvention, slowly becomes permanent.
As he builds a life in India, the memoir unfolds through a series of lived moments rather than a strict timeline: navigating unfamiliar customs, forming unexpected friendships, and confronting the privileges and blind spots he carried with him. The country is not romanticized; instead, it is presented in its complexity, welcoming and disorienting, intimate and distant.
Interwoven throughout are fragments of his past in England: a strained marriage, a sense of quiet dissatisfaction, and a life that looked complete from the outside but felt increasingly hollow within. His move was more about survival and an attempt to step outside a version he could no longer sustain.
The story offers a fragile sense of belonging, not by fully assimilating, nor by holding onto his past, but by accepting the in-between space he occupies. He offers a quieter insight: that identity is not something we carry intact across borders, but something continually rewritten, shaped as much by what we leave behind as by where we choose to stay.
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Vision
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