Cable Publishing Works in Progress

Game of Spade'sBrule River Country

Author: Nan Wisherd
Anticipated release date: mid 2012
Stage in production: We are working on the manuscript, and finalizing the cover design.
Pre-order this title

Synopsis: Nan's Third book of Lake Superior regional history focuses primarily on the Bois Brule, the River of Presidents. Included are numerous maps dating back centuries with the accompanying history of those times: highlighted pioneer families, Joe Lucious, and Alexander McDougall; and the little-known story of the Communist Movement.


Fight On (tentative title)

Author: Bernie Kahn
Anticipated release date: late summer 2012

Stage in production: We are working on the 2nd manuscript, and working on a cover design.

Synopsis: A teenage boy leaves Hitler’s Germany in the 1930s, following his Jewish father to America, and returns to his homeland as a U.S. soldier.


Survivor of Buchenwald

Author: Louis Gros with Flint Whitlock
Anticipated release date: April 1, 2012
Available on Amazon for Kindle - Dec. 22, 2011
Stage in production: We are at press.

Synopsis: What was it like to be incarcerated in Nazi Germany’s worst concentration camp? The unforgettable memoirs of Louis Gros is the second volume of The Buchenwald Trilogy.


Ghosts DancingGhosts Dancing

Author: Steve Fortney
Anticipated release date: February 2012 wide release
Available now on the Cable Publishing website.
Synopsis: Native Americans call the northern lights the wawatay—ghosts dancing—and believe they appear when the earth is in peril. Travel back to a time when the Native Americans felt that everything was lost.


Buchenwald: Hell on a Hilltop

Author: Flint Whitlock
Anticipated release date: early 2013
Synopsis: The final volume in The Buchenwald Trilogy covers topics such as the medical experiments at Buchenwald and examines the many falsehoods dealing with the camp's liberation on April 11, 1945.


The Communist Chasm

Author: Nan Wisherd
Anticipated release date: Late 2013
Synopsis: In 1986, a group of thirty-three people from Duluth, Minnesota, anxiously peered through the windows of their train as it chugged into Petrozavodsk, the capital city of the Soviet Union’s province of Karelia. The Duluthians had named Petrozavodsk their sister city and had decided to travel to the city with plans of forging ties. As they stepped off the train, hoping that someone in the waiting crowd would understand English, the enthusiastic greetings in perfect English were shocking. Their welcoming committee at the train station had once been Midwesterners who had moved with their parents to the Soviet Union more than a half-century earlier. The Iron Curtain and Cold War had securely sealed them from the family and friends they’d left behind and, as the years passed, one of the most interesting chapters in pre-WWII history was in danger of being lost forever….