Coming soon: Cool Fulfillment
Cool Fulfillment will handle all Cool Titles wholesaling, fulfillment and distribution, and that of a few select independent authors and musical artists. For more information on this exciting new service, drop us an email.
America’s Simple Solutions by Mark Werts
From the founder of America Rag Cie, author Mark Werts tackles education, healthcare, immigration, taxes, gun control, the environment, gender, equality, and many other issues, and offers Americans simple solutions free of partisan bias, based on how these challenges are handled around the world. Having lived, worked, and traveled across Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, Werts has observed how people in other countries have approached the same dilemmas that we face in the United States.
Werts also reflects on the views of our country’s Founding Fathers, and suggests that we have forgotten much of their considerable wisdom. Throughout, Werts emphasizes the importance of expanded freedom, especially for entrepreneurs and business. He also stresses the critical roles played by education and political participation. And, he laments low voter turnout, urging all eligible Americans not only to vote, but to get involved in local boards and commissions.
With freedom, education, and voting as an underlying theme, Mark Werts believes that we are at a monumental juncture, and that the future of our individual freedom is at stake. America’s Simple Solutions will empower people to get involved, and make the choices that will fuel both growth and freedom.
What Took You So Long by Neville Johnson
Author and attorney Neville Johnson has been writing amazing poems and lyrics for more than two decades. Now it is time to share 167 very special words and rhymes that honor the magic and mystery of romantic love, and then celebrate what happens when it all goes well.
These poems were all written for Neville’s wife, Cindy, but they apply to everyone who is in a relationship, everyone who is in love. Each of these funny, sweet, quirky, and heartwarming poems were written in love, and about love. Don’t be surprised about the impact they make, because love makes life worth living.
The Mane Equation by Lisa Wysocky
In this fourth book in the series, Appaloosa show horse trainer Cat Enright finds herself at Canterbury Park in Minnesota after her estranged father, a groom at the track, insists someone is trying to kill him. Cat is happy to temporarily leave her newly-complicated life to see what is going on. After one jockey goes missing and another is murdered, Cat finds herself calling on friends back home in Tennessee to keep her dad and herself safe. One by one, Jon, Darcy, Bubba, Agnes, and even the possibly psychic horse Sally Blue, help Cat discover the truth. This eight-time award-winning Cat Enright cozy series has been optioned for film and television, and is the winner of Best Horse-fiction Book from the American Horse Media Awards.
“The action begins on the first page, and keeps the reader riveted until the exciting climax. Readers will be waiting to lap up more Cat Enright adventures. And there is that hunky country singer…” —Midwest Book Review
Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Lloyd Price wrote the essays in this book to empower readers. Each essay conveys a different emotion, and is about a pivotal time in his life. Readers meet cruel and racist townsfolk of his youth in his hometown of Kenner, Louisiana. Then there are the bigoted police officers and salesmen, along with an eye-opening trip to Africa. Throughout, Lloyd Price grabs readers and pulls them into his life as a black man growing up in the Deep South many decades ago. Lloyd also deftly reminds everyone, no matter what his or her color, where America was sixty, seventy, eighty years ago in terms of race. And, where we are today. Throughout, we learn of his music, music that changed the course of history, music that changed the world.
“Lloyd Price is not just a pioneer of rock n roll, he just might well be the founding father.” ––Offbeat Magazine
“Times have changed since I was born more than eighty years ago. Blacks can now drink from the same water fountain as white people, eat at the same restaurants, ride in the front on public transportation, get a bank loan, hold jobs in management and we don t get lynched quite as often as we used to.” ––Lloyd Price, sumdumhonky