Coming Back to Life: A Roadmap to Healing from Pain to Create the Life You Want

Nonfiction, 230 pages, rebeccahsilence.com

Summary: Millions of Americans are self-medicating, suffering from mental health diagnoses and are not getting the support that they need to heal and lead healthy lives.

Rebeccah Silence has taught clients worldwide on topics such as how to understand that past pain impacts the present, how to liberate yourself from those wounds and how to connect to your own inner healer to create a life where you not only survive but also thrive.

This book helps readers create an opening to possibility, providing tools, strategies and support that will allow readers to get to the root of their pain patterns while also receiving hope, encouragement and access to the light at the end of the dark tunnel they may find themselves in.

Author: Rebeccah Silence is a global advocate and leading coach in emotional healing and relationships. As a survivor of childhood trauma and abuse and Stage 3 cancer while she was pregnant, she has helped countless individuals, couples and families process even the most intense traumatic experiences — and heal.

Wronged and Dangerous: Viral Masculinity and the Populist Pandemic

Nonfiction, 264 pages, bristoluniversitypress.co.uk

Summary: Around the world, populism, extremism and supremacy crimes, like U.S. mass shootings, are on the rise. Ever wonder what they have in common? The through line is aggrieved manhood, a seething sense that masculinity is under attack and must be restored.

“Wronged and Dangerous” re-frames this feeling from a political position to a public health problem. It traces how the feeling has gone viral — literally — and suggests what can be done about it.

Author: Author Karen Lee Ashcraft is a professor of communication at the University of Colorado Boulder. She grew up in the lap of white Evangelical populism, and her research examines how gender interacts with race, class, sexuality and more to shape organizational and cultural politics. She resides in Denver.

Best Tent Camping: Colorado

Nonfiction, 192 pages, shop.adventurewithkeen.com

Summary: Discover 50 of the state’s best campgrounds for car campers with a guide that offers essential details and easy-to-read maps. The Centennial State provides a spectacular backdrop for some of the most scenic campgrounds in the country. But, do you know which campgrounds offer the most privacy or the best lakeside views?

Monica Parpal Stockbridge traversed the state — from the historic Mesa Verde National Park to the bird watcher’s paradise at Pawnee National Grassland — and compiled the most up-to-date research to steer you to the perfect spot.

“Best Tent Camping: Colorado” presents 50 campgrounds in national parks, state parks and some of the most enchanting places in the state, organized into five distinct regions.

Author: Monica Parpal Stockbridge is a Denver-based writer and editor with a background in journalism and content marketing. She grew up enjoying the outdoors but only began camping as an adult. Today, she loves exploring her home state with her family and especially loves spending a night or two outside in a good old camping tent.