My Books

Krak Teet: A Catalog of Savannah’s Black Biographies

The first-hand accounts in this book are transcribed directly from the grandchildren of the enslaved who laid the city’s treasured cobblestone roads and introduced its famous red rice and deviled crabs. Those who lived through what can be considered the country’s second wave of the #BlackLivesMatter movement.Krak Teet catalogs stories of struggle—Ms. Madie’s family of sharecroppers fleeing after her father sold a pig without permission, Mr. Roosevelt stuffing his mother’s stab wounds with cobweb to stop the bleeding, and Ms. Florie marching Broughton Street twice a day to protest segregation—alongside stories of success—Queen Elizabeth Butler becoming Savannah’s first black woman to own a car, Ms. Sadie making over $500 a week running numbers, and the city’s desegregation eight months before the Civil Rights Act passed.

Women Who Ain’t Afraid to Curse When Communicating with God: 31-Day Self-Study Guide to Spiritual Liberation

This book will guide you in bringing God back to your table with open conversations about how you really feel and what you really want. These pages are filled with dialogue that heals and liberates by opening your heart to what Spirit has to say to you, and through you. It’s for free spirits with old souls who believe in the magic of: me-time, ancestral guidance, visualization, mirror work, self-pleasure, and journaling. As you learn to recognize and trust the ever-present voice of Spirit, you’ll simultaneously tap into your power and potential. Included are 31 writing prompts, meditations, and personal stories, summoning you to start from where you are to deepen your connection with Spirit, language, and the world around you.

Girls Who Ain’t Afraid to Curse When Communicating with God: 31-Day Self-Study Guide to Spiritual Liberation

A 31-day self-study guide for girls to explore their innermost thoughts, investigate their version of righteousness and truth, and build the courage to say what they gotta say and do what they gotta do with more clarity and confidence. Co-edited by 32-year-old Trelani and 18-year-old Jayla, Girls Who Ain’t Afraid is packed with quotes written by girls all over the country that’ll make you scream “Amen.” It’s the perfect mixture of honesty, attitude, style, and solidarity to assist you in transitioning into womanhood less triggered and more empowered.

What to Do After You’ve Written and Edited Your Book: Self-Publishing Steps

In this guide, I share all the steps between finishing it and getting it in your hands. I even threw in some of my favorite marketing tips–ones that have worked magically for me. Everything from copyrighting it to getting your cover done and everything else in this guide. Digital copy downloads automatically after purchase.

How to Write a Self-Help Book

I break it down for you step-by-step with very little writing involved. You’ll learn how to write your chapter titles, your introduction/conclusion, how to write the content without actually writing, where to find an editor/designer, and more. Digital copy downloads automatically after purchase.

Making + Managing Money with My Mini-Me’s

A breakdown of how I taught my children how to budget and include goals in their budgeting. I also include examples of how we budgeted and saved for a 5-city road trip that cost less than $600. Pictures included. Digital copy automatically downloads after purchase.

Purple Petals

A journal of 50 prompts to explore and express who you are and what you connect with. Nurture your innermost thoughts, feelings, and desires. Find truth, healing and liberation. Light a candle and find your favorite pen because this is your time.

What the Devil Meant for Bad

Marking the third generation in her family to mistress as a means of making ends meet, Shantelle was simply going along with what was passed down. Raised by her bitter-hearted, sharp-tongued Aunt Pam, she’s never really questioned anything out of fear of causing unnecessary tension. Until now. One mistake causes her to lose everything. After she’s taken in by Glynnis, who becomes her spiritual guide, Shantelle adopts a new way of living and thinking. Now knowing better, she must make the critical choice of redirecting her journey or resorting to what she knows best. The struggle in getting back on her feet makes the choice a tough one, however. Doing the right thing grows even more complicated when she meets the last person she ever thought she would, causing everything she thinks she knows to be questioned once again.

Getting Across

Once a thick-headed, fast-tailed, big-city dreaming teenager, Louisa moved to New Orleans where she clawed her way to her position as a millionaire madam. She made many sacrifices for this title, including abandoning her role as a mother. Back alleys, betrayals and bribery were all pieces of her puzzle. Everything comes with a price. That was her first lesson learned. Even money costs, and the price that Louisa paid for her wealth keeps her up most nights. When she returns home to visit her dying mother, she’s reminded of everyone she’s wronged, including her neglected daughters. Losing her mother urges her to make peace with her past, but making money is easy; coming clean isn’t. Can she face her fears and clear her conscience, or will she return to the ever-secretive underworld?