Cascade Publishing House, Now A Home For New Writers

At Cascade Publishing House, we are in the business of writing and publishing. We cater to the first time author, who always wanted to write a book, but did not know how to get into print with a professional high quality book.

At Cascade Publishing House, we pride ourselves on making dreams come true, expertly and professionally. You can trust your manuscript to us. We will read it with care, listening for your voice and will help you bring that voice to your audience.

Initially, Cascade Publishing House was intended to be the vehicle that published my literary works. In 2010 we published my legal thriller Paper Puzzle and in 2015 we published a nonfiction book, Justice in the Round, which was inspired by the turmoil in the streets of America as a result of unarmed Black men and women being gunned down by police officers.

Last year, December 2016, Cascade Publishing House, published Easier to Obtain than to Maintain, by Charles Steele, Jr. In this book Steele, the President and Chief Executive Office of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference lay out his plan for the globalization of civil rights.

In April 2017, we will release an inspirational book by a first time author, Rodney Battle, entitled Life and Relationships: Something to Think About. In it Mr. Battle gives his readers a lot to think about when it comes to forming intimate relationships. Mr. Battle had wanted to be a writer since the early 1980s when he was in junior high school. Next month he will get to hold his book in his hands and go on speaking tours inspiring people to have better relations.

Later this year we will release an inspirational book on faith by Valinda Johnson, a native of Montgomery, Alabama. Mrs. Johnson’s book will explore what it means to live a meaningful life centered on faith.

Also, slated for release in 2017 is Big Bend: Where the Tide Bends around Tuscaloosa by Ruby Simon. Mrs. Simon is a native of Tuscaloosa, Alabama and has penned a wonderful book on the rich cultural history of the Big Bend community, which is one of the Black sections of Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

I hope you will join us in supporting these new authors who are redefining what it means to live in America in the 21st century. Also, we at Cascade Publishing House, welcome a chance to turn your dream manuscript into reality.

Harold Michael Harvey is an American novelist and essayist, the author of Paper puzzle and Justice in the Round, Easier to obtain Than to Maintain: The Globalization of Civil Rights by Charles Steele, Jr.; and the host of Beyond the Law with Harold Michael Harvey. He can be contacted at haroldmichaelharvey.com.

The Making of Easier to Obtain than to Maintain

The making of “Easier to Obtain than to Maintain” began in the spring of 2016. I received a call from a friend who asked if I would be interested in writing and publishing a book on the life of Cathelean Steele, the first lady of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

I was intrigued about getting to know the woman behind Dr. Charles Steele, Jr., the Chief Executive Officer and President of SCLC. After all Dr. Steele, had on two occasions in the 21st century resurrected SCLC from the brink of extinction. The woman supporting such a man had to be a fascinating person, worthy of the public’s attention.

We all know that the straw that stirs the drink of any successful man is the woman behind him, giving sage counsel outside the ear shot of the public. The prospect of bringing Mrs. Steele’s story to life excited me. I quickly told my friend that I would be interested in meeting with Mrs. Steele to discuss her ideas for a book on her life. A time for my introductory session with her was set.

Two days before our meeting, my friend called again to say that Mrs. Steele had decided to defer to her husband because she thought he should publish his book before her book. Good wives tend to defer to their husbands in the manner of Mrs. Steele. They push their husbands at all costs, even to the detriment of their own goals and ambitions.

My friend wanted to know if I would be willing to meet with Dr. Steele instead. I must admit that the fact Mrs. Steele wanted to push her husband’s story ahead of her own, made me want to tell her story even more. What manner of woman was this?

I changed my focus; setting my sights on the personage of the man heading up the organization founded by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. I began to research his early years growing up in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, his years as a high school football player, his childhood friendships with the writer George Curry and the cultural curator James Horton. I learned of his defiant act of civil disobedience as a young adult in Tuscaloosa and his work as a state senator in the Alabama legislature. I studied his ability to build relationships across racial and economic lines. I learned that he was an expert fundraiser.

I began to document how Steele raised $3.5 million in 2005 to build the SCLC International Headquarters two doors down from Dr. King’s old office on Sweet Auburn Avenue in Atlanta, Georgia, where Dr. King plotted and planned the destruction of Jim Crow.

I was preparing to present his illustrative story of leaving SCLC after dedicating the new building, to work as an international public policy consultant and of his return a few years later when SCLC was not able to find a steady hand to guide it following the death of Rev. Howard W. Creecy, Jr.

When the day of our initial meeting arrived, I immediately launched into my presentation of the type of biographical book I thought he had in mind. This was not the type of book Dr. Steele wanted to publish. He hastily stopped me in mid sentence.

He began to tell me about a dream he had during a visit to Africa with his friend, the late George Curry. He did not understand the dream. He told his wife about the dream when he returned home, but she was unable to decipher it for him, six months later, he return to Africa, this time he traveled with his wife. The dream recurred. He woke up his wife and related the dream to her.

This time she was by her husband’s side, moments after he awoke from the dream. She was able to unlock the riddle of the dream to him. He had to tell the world about the work SCLC had been quietly doing around the globe, resolving conflicts through the use of Dr. King’s nonviolent philosophy of reconciliation.

As we began to develop a calendar for interviews so that I could gather the material needed for this book, the idea of “Easier to Obtain than to Maintain: The Globalization of Civil Rights” began to take shape.

Before our first interview session, I read every speech and article written by Dr. Steele in the last sixteen years. I discovered that he had been writing and speaking about the globalization of civil rights for quite some time. However, because SCLC was instrumental in achieving civil rights for the American Negro, the public perception was that SCLC’s effectiveness was limited to the United States of America. Even when he boldly proclaimed successes in Dimona, Israel and Berlin, Germany, the headline of Atlanta’s major newspaper questioned whether the global initiatives of SCLC were misguided.

Thus the necessity to present the public with Dr. Steele’s belief that Dr. King’s dream is realized only when civil rights are enjoyed by all God’s people. I am honored to have participated in a small way in focusing Dr. Steele’s work in furtherance of Dr. King’s dream of globalizing civil rights for all.

I collected his best speeches and writings on the subject of globalization of civil rights, augmented with background material on the civil rights struggle in America and wove them together in a singular volume, seamlessly, I hope.

And while I have enjoyed globalizing Dr. King’s dream and Dr. Steele’s work, I can hardly wait until Mrs. Steele calls and gives me the go ahead to begin work on her book.

Harold Michael Harvey is an American novelist and essayist, the author of Paper puzzle and Justice in the Round. He can be contacted at haroldmichaelharvey.com.

 

New Book by Rodney Battle

We are pleased to announce a new book on relationships has been acquired by Cascade Publishing House. The author is Rodney Battle. The working title is “The Battle Line: Boy meets Girl or Vice Versa.” The Battle Line is sure to bring a fun hip-hop approach to meeting and greeting that special someone. The Battle Line is expected to be published in time for the holiday season.

Rodney Battle is an up and coming writer. He lives in Montgomery, Alabama and earned a degree in Psychology from Alabama State University.

Battle came to the attention of the Cascade Publishing House by way of his  provocative and racy posts about relationships on Facebook. He is an inspiration to a growing group of men and women who are out to sharpen their relationship skills.

Here is a snippet of what readers can expect from Rodney Battle:

“LADIES: Once a MAN feels like he “HAS YOU” he then begin to TEST you! He wanna see what all you are willing to put up with…..now, ladies to avoid all the BS you gotta be sure to ESTABLISH that ZERO TOLERANCE policy in the BEGINNING! Men VICE VERSA. It makes for a beautiful relationship.”

“Rodney Battle is an up and coming writer,” Cynthia Harvey, Media Relations spokesperson for Cascade Publishing House said. “We look forward to working with him.”

Battle came to the attention of Cascade Publishing House from the hilarious posts he makes on Facebook. “He is a real social media guru,” Harvey said.

The human in Battle’s work is unique and touch a nerve with many of his social media connections.

“We look forward to working with Mr. Battle in the editing process, she said.

This could be an interesting process because Mr. Battle tells it like it is in a boy meets girl relationship.

Mr. Battle’s book is expected out in time for Valentine.