Monday, 2 March 2026

Book Review: Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure By Cliff Lovette



Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure 
By Cliff Lovette


Publication Date: 1st March 2026
Publisher: Bim Bom Books
Print Length: 478 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Romantic Adventure /  Political Intrigue

Soviet circus performers arrived in America hoping to build cultural bridges. Instead, they became unwitting pawns in a Cold War game of international intrigue.

When the first privately owned Soviet circus arrived in 1990 in America as the Soviet Union disintegrated, its elite performers expected to build cultural bridges through spectacular shows. Instead, this prestigious troupe faced a perilous journey through Cold War America.

Circus director Yuri had to navigate treacherous waters where American mobsters, Soviet agents, and political forces circled like predators. Young aerialist Anton dreamed of becoming a clown against his family’s wishes, while forbidden romances and unexpected connections bloomed between Soviet performers and Americans who saw past the ideological divide. As high-stakes conspiracies threatened to tear the circus family apart, they had to choose between the authoritarian chains of home and the uncertain promise of freedom.

As the Ringmaster reminds us, “The best Soviet stories are like vodka—they burn with suffering, intoxicate with conflict, keep you stewing in reflection, and yearning for your heart’s desire.” This genre-bending tale explores whether human connection can transcend ideology—and whether storytelling can bridge the divides that separate us.



Book Rating:

📚📚📚📚📚⭐ = A book in a million

📚📚📚📚📚 = I could not put this book down. I Highly Recommend it.

📚📚📚📚 = A really great read.

📚📚📚 = It was enjoyable.

📚📚 = It was okay.

📚 = Um...! 😕

My Review

Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure


📚📚📚📚📚


I went into this book thinking I was getting a quirky Cold War circus story, perhaps with some historical flavour and a dash of adventure. What I didn’t expect was how deeply human, strange and emotionally messy it would become.

On the surface, it’s about a Soviet circus touring America at the tail end of the Cold War, but what truly drew me in was the constant tug of war between control and freedom. The performance scenes are so vividly written I could almost feel the heat of the spotlights and hear the blare of the brass band, yet the moments that affected me most happened offstage, in dim corridors and cramped rooms where the characters wrestle with who they are allowed to be.

The Ringmaster’s voice completely won me over. He slips between past and present, sometimes narrating events, sometimes reflecting on them, almost as if he’s standing beside me sharing confidences. It could easily have felt like a gimmick, but instead it made the whole story feel oddly intimate, as though I’d been granted access not just to the show, but to the private thoughts and fears of the performers.

One of the most unusual and delightful aspects is how the book reaches beyond the page. Throughout the story there are references to specific songs and dances, along with QR codes you can scan to actually watch or listen to what the characters are experiencing. Instead of just reading about a 1960s dance craze or a piece of circus music, I could pull out my phone and see it for myself. It turns the novel into something halfway between a book and a living scrapbook, making the cultural clash between Soviet restraint and American pop culture feel immediate and tangible.

What lingered with me most is the book’s refusal to offer easy comfort. The closing scenes are chaotic, sensual and unsettling. A moment of private liberation and joy is shattered the instant authority storms in. Reading it, I felt both the exhilaration of that forbidden freedom and the sharp sting of the consequences that follow.

When I reached the final page, nothing was neatly wrapped up. Instead, I was left suspended between acts, slightly shaken, deeply curious, and keen to know what happens next. It feels less like an ending than a breath held before the next leap.

Dramatic, provocative and unlike anything else I’ve read, this is a story that doesn’t just ask to be read but to be experienced. It stayed with me long after I’d put it down, music still echoing faintly in my head.


You can pick up your copy of this book on Amazon.


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What Makes This Novel Different

Circus Bim Bom offers an innovative multimedia reading experience. The novel includes 45+ YouTube links to period music, historical speeches, and cultural moments embedded throughout—readers can listen to the actual songs characters dance to as they waltz, and watch Reagan's Brandenburg Gate speech as it's referenced in the text.

The companion website (www.bimbombookclub.com) extends the story beyond the page:
Character Avatars: 25+ talking video introductions where characters speak directly to readers
Re-Imagined Circus Posters
Book Club Experience: Interactive forums, live chat, and community discussions
Historians Room (under construction): A space for Cold War history buffs to fact-check the novel, explore primary sources, and debate historical accuracy

Cliff Lovette


Father, storyteller, and dog lover living in Sandy Springs, Georgia, with London curled at his feet. Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure is the first book in his debut duology, followed by Circus Bim Bom: The Great Escape.

Connect with Cliff Lovette:

Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Read an excerpt from An American Slave in Barbary: The Odyssey of Winston Prescott Jones by Larry Kelley


An American Slave in Barbary:
The Odyssey of Winston Prescott Jones
By Larry Kelley


Publication Date: December 11th, 2025
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 459
Genre: Historical Fiction / American Historical Fiction

A Homeric American Novel


An American Slave in Barbary: The Odyssey of Winston Prescott Jones is the story of a first-generation American student whose commercial ship is captured in the summer of 1801 by Moslem pirates. 


He spends the next sixteen years as a captive in Algiers. He rises to become a confidant to the Dey of Algiers, who is desperate to know what made the American shopkeepers and farmers believe they could defeat the British war machine, and how they intended to rule themselves.


In the genre created by Homer, it is a tale of suffering, sin, and redemption, and a young man's epic journey to regain his freedom.


Excerpt


We were only about thirty leagues from the Straits of Gibraltar. Adjusting the sails and riggings of our twelve-man ketch, Intrepid, we made in the morning of August 2, 1801, seven days after we left Greece, ready our departure from the Mediterranean and entrance into the Atlantic. We were on our return voyage to Boston when our passage was blocked by two Muslim pirate ships. Each was a three-masted xebec, with crews of about one hundred and fourteen cannons. They did not fire their cannons at us, because their aim was to capture our ship intact and our crew alive.


For the rest of the day, our captain, my Uncle Raymond, and his helmsman, Mr. Bagan, desperately attempted to elude the two corsairs that maneuvered about us like huge sharks. While we struggled to keep our two-masted ketch away from our pursuers, a storm gathered from the east. A menacing black cloud descended down to the water.


Captain Raymond shouted from the quarterdeck, “If’n we kin make it into that storm, we kin possibly escape these bastards!”


One of the Muslim corsairs came so close to us we could see the pirates on the larger vessel holding their grappling hooks, readying to fling them at us and pull their boat against ours to board us. During one of these close encounters, our first mate, Mr. Freeman, and the boson, Mr. Leeson, fired their muskets at our pursuers. I saw a pirate take one of the rounds and fall back onto the deck. A group of Muslim gunmen perched on the riggings of the vessel closest to us opened fire, raking our deck with lead shot. One ball hit Mr. Leeson in the neck, killing him instantly.





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Larry Kelley



Larry Kelley's life was changed by 9/11. He desperately wanted to find out who these people were who attacked us, what ordinary citizens could do to join the battle, and how those plotting to kill us in future attacks could be defeated.

Kelley has written scores of columns on the dangers of Western complacency. In his tenure as a political commentary writer, he has made a significant impact.

His feature articles have appeared in the Piedmont Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, Human Events, and Townhall Magazine. Two of his articles were featured on the cover of Townhall Magazine.

His first book, Lessons from Fallen Civilizations, is the result of ten years of research, and received critical praise as a saga that begins on the plain of Marathon in 490 BC and whose main character is Western Civilization.


Website

Author Page at Historium Press

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Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Read an excerpt from One Fine Voice by Rebecca Langston-George


One Fine Voice
By Rebecca Langston-George


Publication Date: January 6th, 2026
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 143
Genre: Middle Grade Historical Fiction / American Historical Fiction


All her life, Esther Hopkins has been told she has a mighty fine voice.


Still, she can't believe her luck when just days after moving to town, she's invited to sing a solo at the 1923 Independence Day picnic.


But the group sponsoring the picnic is not the benevolent fraternal order they claim to be. Worse, they've recruited her father, the town's freshly ordained Baptist minister, to become their chaplain.


When they target the immigrant family of her new best friend, Esther must risk her father's anger, the KKK's revenge, and her family's safety to follow her conscience, salvage her friendship, and find the strength to speak truth to power even if it costs all she holds dear.


Excerpt


Chapter 11


I marched with such purpose toward the feed store that even when the sweet scent of pink blossoms beckoned from the park, I did not stop to dawdle and daydream. Let some other girl stand on that stage and sing. 


If I hadn’t been so focused on what I was going to say to Anne-Marie, I’d have noticed it a block away. Big sloppy red words had been inserted in Lombardi’s window sign. Lombardi’s Foreign Feed. Buy American!  Dribbles of dried red paint dripped down the letters like a bloody nose. 


How could someone do such a thing! I ran to the door. A cross had been scratched deeply in its wood. The knob wouldn’t turn. Lombardi’s Feed was locked. I knocked and knocked but no one answered. “Anne-Marie!” I shouted toward the upper story window “Are you in there?”


No one responded, but I could see a shadow stir near the upstairs curtain. I pounded on the door. “Mr. Lombardi! Anne-Marie! I need to talk to you.” I ran back to the front window, pressing my face against the glass beside the hateful scrawling. Inside Mr. Lombardi pushed aside the maroon curtains. When he peeked around the door he held his hand out, barring me from entering. 


“What happened? Are you okay?” I demanded.


“A prank,” he said. “A foolish prank. No one is harmed.” But his eyes, wary and tense, scanned the town square behind me as he spoke. 


“I’m so sorry, Mr. Lombardi. I’ll help you clean it,” I offered. 


He waved his hand. “No, child. Thank you, but no.” 


“Can I see Anne-Marie, please?  I need to tell her something.”


He shook his head. “That is unwise. I will tell her you asked for her.” He withdrew his head to close the door.


I wedged my hand into the door frame. “Wait! Please, who did this?” 


The old man smiled forlornly and took my hand in his, pushing it gently back. “Go now. Be safe.”


I backed away as he closed the door. He hadn’t answered my question, but if I was honest with myself, I already knew the answer. 


A strange feeling inched down my spine as I left. A prickle at the nape of my neck crawling down my shoulder blades. Eyes watching up and down the street. Eyes on me. The haberdasher next door arranging his hat sign watched as I walked by. The druggist a few doors down swept the street in front of his pharmacy, eyes tracking me. Mr. Holland, leaned against the Chief, nodding as I passed, but piercing me with his stare. I fought back the urge to run. Placed one foot in front of the other until I reached the safety of our porch. 




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Rebecca Langston-George



Rebecca Langston-George is the author of nineteen books for young readers including the globally popular For the Right to Learn: Malala Yousafzai’s Story. Though she’s long been known for nonfiction, One Fine Voice is her first middle grade historical fiction. 

A retired teacher credentialed in both single subject language arts for upper grades and multiple subjects for younger grades, Rebecca is a popular school presenter for all ages, encouraging students to investigate and tap into their personal interests when writing.

She serves on the board of The California Reading Association and is the Co-Regional Advisor for SCBWI Central-Coastal California, helping other writers achieve their dreams.

Rebecca splits her time between California’s scenic coast and its agricultural heartland, writing (and mostly rewriting) at one mile per hour on a treadmill desk.




Book Review: Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure By Cliff Lovette

Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure  By Cliff Lovette Publication Date: 1st March 2026 Publisher:  Bim Bom Books Print Length: 478 Pages Ge...