I hope this doesn’t go against the rules, but I wanted to share that I’ve released a book (my 3rd book) that I’ve been working on. It’s on the Amazon Kindle app and Amazon.Com for the paperback.
Interesting @Mixmaster_Mike looks like something I can read and seriously appreciate. I’ll definitely download it and give it a read.
Update purchased!!!
@Mixmaster_Mike I’ve read you new book on my kindle. It’s a good and quick read, though I do read rather quickly. The material is very thought provoking. The material reminds me of an episode of my favorite science show “Do We Live in the Matrix?” the fourth episode of the sixth season of Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman. In that episode scientists discuss if our whole existence is simply a high tech computer simulation like in the movie the matrix.
Thank you McDuckie, I appreciate the review.
Yeah the book is shorter than I anticipated at around 40 pages but I have a couple books on geoengineering and geopolitics that are over 300 pages.
Definitely!
I’ll give you a good review on Amazon also, once I can find a few extra min.
Thanks I appreciate it, it will be my 1st review. I’m still trying to figure out how to do marketing to boost my sales, but reviews help.
Here’s a couple other of my books that are avaliable on Amazon, Kindle, and Google Books.
The Mars Blueprint: Engineering a Multi-Planetary Species
From ancient stargazers to Perseverance’s sample tubes, from SpaceX’s Starship to the first child born beneath a Martian sky — this is the complete story of humanity’s greatest endeavor. Michael Harris charts the science, the missions, the companies, and the profound philosophical imperative driving our species toward the Red Planet. Mars is no longer a dream. It’s an engineering program. And the countdown has begun.
STEALING THE RAIN
The Hidden War for the World’s Last Resource.
They say water is the new oil. They forgot to tell you someone is already drilling in the sky.
For centuries, the rain was an act of God. In 2026, it is an act of state. From the high-altitude plateaus of Tibet to the arid plains of the American West, a silent, invisible war is being waged—not with bullets, but with silver iodide, high-voltage drones, and terawatt lasers.
As the planet warms and traditional water sources vanish, the atmosphere has become the ultimate geopolitical chessboard. But when one nation “milks” a cloud to save its harvest, does it steal that life-giving moisture from a neighbor? Is a drought in India a natural disaster, or a calculated theft by a rival power? In STEALING THE RAIN, investigative journalist and technology analyst Michael Harris pulls back the curtain on “Atmospheric Sovereignty.” Discover:
• The Sky Rivers: How massive geoengineering projects are rerouting the world’s moisture across international borders.
• The Weather Mercenaries: The private corporations selling “customized climates” to the highest bidder.
• The ENMOD Trap: The fragile UN treaty from the Cold War that is the only thing standing between us and total weather warfare.
• The Butterfly Effect: The terrifying scientific reality of how “fixing” the weather in one zip code can trigger a catastrophe on the other side of the planet.
One is 200 pages and the other is 333 pages respectively.
*edited because I used the wrong book description for Stealing the Rain
@Mixmaster_Mike those look right up my alley.
https://www.amazon.com/Stealing-Rain-Hidden-Worlds-Resource-ebook/dp/B0GTMW3VFL/
https://www.amazon.com/Mars-Blueprint-Engineering-Multi-Planetary-Species-ebook/dp/B0GTGDK27F/
https://www.amazon.com/Fukushima-Rising-Daiichi-Nuclear-Disaster-ebook/dp/B0GTG8P71D/
https://www.amazon.com/White-Desert-Secret-Ends-Earth-ebook/dp/B0GTK1XRMN
https://www.amazon.com/Hydropolitics-Race-Desalinization-Great-Fought-ebook/dp/B0GTJQ8J83
I’ve been away from here for a while as I was finishing my latest book.
I’ve been doing okay with my nonfiction but not selling as much as I’d like. I average around 2 sales a day with a $6-8 profit on each one. I started paid advertising so that should help.
So anyways, I decided to write in a genre that’s selling. Fiction Psychological Thrillers. Harris Blackwater is my new pen name for fiction books.
This is a tense and morbid mind f— with multiple twists and turns…
Book overview
Jesus Loves the Little ChildrenShe started counting the dead. Then she realized she knew who was with them when they died.
Dr. Laura Wolfe arrived at St. Brigid’s Mercy Hospital in Morrow’s Ford, Vermont, with shaking hands and a secret she has never confessed: a patient died in Milwaukee because she made a mistake, and a man she trusted altered the records to cover for her. She took the NICU posting because she needed to prove, to herself, that she deserved to be a doctor.
Sister Gillian Frome has been at St. Brigid’s for eleven years. She is sixty-one years old, Daughter of St. Elizabeth, and the most devoted nurse on the ward. She sits with the dying. She knows every family by name. She sings, very quietly, to the babies in their incubators.
When baby Caleb Prescott dies on his twenty-second day of life, Laura begins keeping a notebook. Not because she suspects anything. Because she cannot stop counting. Four deaths. Eight. Seventeen. Twenty-three out of twenty-seven— everyone with Sister Frome at the bedside, or the last hand on the line.
Three miles away, Joan Garrity— sixty-three years old, retired Burlington homicide detective— receives a letter. The letter is from Rebecca Halloran, a mother who lost her daughter at St. Brigid’s twenty-two months ago, who has ALS and is running out of time. Rebecca has compared notes with other bereaved families. She has found fifteen nearly identical condolence cards, all from Sister Frome, all opening with the same sentence, all closing with the same phrase:
“Your child’s last friend”.
Joan has seen something like those letters before. Once. In a basement in Lowertown. In 1998. A classic form of ‘prolonged empowerment and control’ common in serial killers.In Morrow’s Ford, everyone is carrying a secret.
For readers of: Freida McFadden, Tess Gerritsen, Karin Slaughter, and the slow-burn, twisty institutional dread of “Shutter Island.”
"The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose." —William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice
334 pages



