Bookstore

For bookstores please purchase books at Ingram Content group

For Individual purchases of paperback/ebook/audibles follow the links below

I. Murphy Lewis

  • An American woman's initiatory journey before, through and after the Maasai Warriors, a story of reclamation. Inspired by the stories of the Kalahari, in search of more, Lewis takes flight from her fashion career to Botswana. Only to discover through an intuitive, she had been a San Bush-woman in 1787, who was kidnapped by the Maasai and dragged across the continent to heal their elderly. This pronouncement will lead her to Kenya in and out of NYC on her holidays where she will be immersed in the culture through a naming ceremony, a water ritual and the final fire walk, which will open her heart, awaken her to her gifts, catapult her out of the corporate world, transform the way she sees the seen and the unseen the worlds.

Mahdi

  • An own voice author, whose sole purpose is to shed light on the quintessential aspects of duality and oneness in all that exists. That adds such an authentic touch to Khaak; a moving story, based on true events entailing the attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar, Pakistan that devoured the lives of more than 144 children and teachers by the alleged Terrorist organization called TTP(Tehrik-i-Taliban) on December 16, 2014. To pen this tale of sorrow and cruelty became more of a conscious decision for Mahdi; to re-create a story-world that didn't necessarily begin with screams and end in silence, but roared with the “love” of a mother and the earth shattering spirit of a valiant seven year old, declaring and honouring a growing presence, the presence of a message that has not been said, but which is very much there.

Claudia Rosenhouse Raiken

  • A Book designed for anyone who has been in a womb, has a child in the womb, or fervently wants a child in her womb. Written for mothers and fathers-to-be, Claudia Raiken’s Messages from the Womb: Babies talk through guided visualizations expanding our hearts and minds reveals the pre-birth relationship between the new Mother and the incoming soul. Establishing this affinity before birthing a child can transform delivery into reunion!

Gail Segal

  • Settling into the force of earthly experience is the project of Gail Segal’s first manuscript of poems, In Gravity’s Pull. The poems chart a landscape where “soft motherlight” mixes with “patches of mucilaginous waste.” “Lilies scatter like an epidemic.” “Stars” are weighted with “lead.” From severe compression to incantation, autobiography to myth, the book stakes out great extremes – and with a striking combination of detailed observation and remove, of what might be called linguistic sensuality and philosophical inquiry.

To buy contact us through hello@imlpublications.com

Lysbeth Boyd Borie

  • In the roaring 20's, Philadelphia's Mainline was at its height. Model T's, bobbed hair, elegant garden parties, fox hunts on private estates, lunch and tennis at the Merion Cricket Club--all were the rage. Immersed in this, yet ahead of her time, was a free-spirited young woman by the name of Lysbeth Body Borie. In 1928, J. B. Lippincott of Philadelphia published Lysbeth's first book, Poems for Peter. These poems were written about her three-year-old son, at play on the Borie Estate. During its 82 year history, Poems for Peter has sold over 29,000 copies. With the cooperation of the Borie family, I. Murphy Lewis has republished this charming books in its entirety from the original copper plates, rekindling the hearts of those who have treasured the tales of young Peter and now igniting the hearts of their grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

To buy contact us through hello@imlpublications.com

Gay Walley

  • A most unusual “guide,” The Erotic Fire of the Unattainable reveals what women never really say-- what they feel, what they know, about men, their futures, fame, hunches, talent, the ocean, sex, and aging.

    What they want to articulate about their own feelings but perhaps never had the courage to admit, even to themselves – and what men have always wanted to grasp. The narrator travels, rebels, has made mistakes, and delves into all the vicissitudes of life intently and intensely.

Jacqueline Gay Walley

Gay Walley

  • In her first novel, Gay Walley weaves into a seamless narrative - a woman’s quest for love, and the drunken, vagabond childhood she endured with her father. Raised on a barstool, Charlee spends her youth drinking in the dark dives of New England and Montreal with a father who flees from woman to woman. When she grows up, she longs for companionship, but from her father she has learned to trust only her own will and to crave solitude. Can she overcome a life of defiant independence and her drought of affection?

Jacqueline Gay Walley

  • This is a story of an anguished love affair between two adult children (Arieh and Mira) of holocaust survivors who cannot get their parents’ pain out of themselves. But his anger, his volatility leads her to a kinder gentler Englishman, Michael. However, she cannot accept his goodness, nor what appears to be a dullness compared to the wildness of Arieh. They become involved in a triangle and the seemingly cuckolded man goes mad and wants to punish the woman with a vengeance that is almost Nazi-ish. She takes it because she feels she deserves it, having been treated badly by her survivor mother, although she doesn’t deserve this kind of rage. But she knows it is born of pain, a pain familiar to her.

Venus As She Ages

Venus as She Ages is a six book collection by Jacqueline Gay Walley.

You can buy the box of six novels or buy each book individually bellow.

  • Venus as She Ages takes an unflinching female artist from youth to her late sixties as she grows through love, mistakes, the vicissitudes of life, and commitment to her work. The Collection consists of six literary novels.

Jacqueline Gay Walley

  • The “I” is a woman who is deliberating getting married to her boyfriend and is frightened. Her childhood has made her distrust union. She has a friend who has just gone to jail for growing marijuana. He has been a war hero, an artist, is good looking, a womanizer. She begins to visit him, because he is trapped like she is, and he gives her advice on love and herself. She begins to listen. He is the one who is “free” to her. In listening to him, she begins to itemize her own crimes in love. She marries her boyfriend, out of friendship, but the marriage feels doomed to her because the prisoner’s mind is lodged inside her. She has to come to where she belongs and what is true freedom and true love to her.

Jacqueline Gay Walley

  • The title harkens back to Duras’ novel and film, “Destroy, she said”. Mira, the main character, a writer, has a kind of magical realism experience with these two 20th century writers who come back to life as she steps through a mirrored glass to meet Jean Rhys in a bar and Marguerite Duras on a park bench. With ethereal credit cards they whisk her off to Vienna to heal that Jewish heritage, to teach her about life, love and writing, and to open her to new love with an oboe player. It’s as though they want her to know that love comes and goes, experiment, don’t be afraid, but all the while keep perfecting the craft of the writing, what Walley exudes as, “The private lives of sentences.”

Jacqueline Gay Walley

  • This is a book about longing and how three people have to break through their respective prisons. David, a man, in actual prison for growing marijuana longs for her and has to deal with being in prison. Peter, her husband, is in the prison of not being loved enough by a wife who is obsessed with freedom. And Mira, the wife, feels that marriage is a prison for her and only being herself will make her free. She creates a situation where they all get to break their binds.

Jacqueline Gay Walley

  • A woman over sixty wants her sexuality, her eros back. It opens with the main character going on a date alone, walks herself along the High Line in New York, shops for a book at The Strand and goes to hear Mahler. She remembers the past when she had that juiciness, and she finds lovers in the present, but something is amiss. She has a friendship with a female holocaust survivor who lives upstairs, who has that eros, even over 80, just in her being. The older woman dies, but in the lessons she leaves behind, the narrator finally finds that eros within her attitude toward life.