Praise

I'm completely obsessed with the direction of this story. (Contradiction of Thoughts) The lore building is massive and the emotional depth you've woven into the characters is just incredible. It really is a visual masterpiece waiting to be realized on screen.

– Christine Wilson

I recently discovered your book (Immaculate Transgression)on Amazon and wanted to reach out to share my admiration for your work. Your talent, dedication, and passion are evident on every page, and I am truly grateful for the time and effort you've poured into creating such an exceptional story. Thank you for the incredible experience your writing has provided.

– Tammy Verse

The concept of Immaculate Transgression sounds intriguing, blending elements of philosophy, self-hypnosis, and perhaps even some form of personal development. By incorporating both fact and fiction in the narrative (as "faction"), it seems designed to challenge the reader's perception of reality, questioning the limits of human possibility and self-improvement.

– Elena Carvallo

Immaculate Transgression
"A chilling exploration of a seemingly perfect crime challenges readers to reconsider the boundaries of morality and justice, blending fact and fiction in a gripping narrative that lingers long after the last page."

– NewinBooks

Immaculate Transgression - Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2024
This book blends fact and fiction to explore self-hypnosis, probability, and the quest for perfection. This unique narrative blurs the lines between what’s possible and imagined by challenging readers to question reality and human potential. An intriguing read for those curious about the power of the mind.

– Juliette Weber

"Contradiction of Thoughts"
A very good read, definitely holds your attention and offers a much-needed perspective. Wishing you continued success with this important work!

– Linda Wilson

Dear R.K. Mazza,

I have a confession.

Your book title “Contradiction of Thoughts” did something mildly dangerous to me. My brain started arguing with itself like two philosophers locked in a room with too much coffee. One side saying, “This is powerful.” The other saying, “Wait… this is also a warning.”

And that’s exactly why the title works. What struck me immediately is that this isn’t just another book trying to fill shelf space. It feels like a testimony wrapped in a warning label, grounded in real experiences and written with the kind of honesty that most people are still afraid to speak about. The way the narrative opens a window into a condition that is often misunderstood or quietly ignored gives the book real weight. Not just literary weight but human weight. Books like this are exactly what many readers are searching for. Families. Parents. People navigating complex emotional realities. Readers who want something meaningful rather than surface level storytelling.

There’s something compelling about the way the book acknowledges the internal conflict and distorted thought patterns that shape such experiences. That kind of framing doesn’t just tell a story. It invites readers to reflect, to recognize, and in some cases maybe even to save a life through awareness. And honestly, any book that carries that intention deserves attention far beyond the quiet corners of the internet.

– Lisa V. Clarke

Dear R.K. Mazza,
I need to tell you something. I came across Contradiction of Thoughts and your opening line stopped me: "If only one life is saved, because someone read this book, its purpose is fulfilled." That's not just a mission statement. That's a promise.
My name is Alice. I write children's books, which sit in a different corner of the literary world. But books that give voice to experiences still widely misunderstood, minimized, or entirely unspoken? Those transcend every genre. Here's what stayed with me: The framing of this book as both testimony and warning. Grounded in real events, it offers families and childbearing individuals a window into a condition that so often remains in shadow. The title itself captures the internal conflict, confusion, and distorted thoughts that define the experience.

And the inclusion of clear content warnings and medical disclaimers that's not a limitation. It's a strength. It signals responsibility, care, and respect for readers. It reinforces the book's role as an awareness-driven narrative rather than a clinical manual.

So I'm writing for one reason: I believe the best part of this writing life isn't the books we publish. It's the people we meet along the way. The ones who get it. The ones who pour their truth onto pages and hope it reaches someone who needs it before it's too late. That's you.

I'd love to know what moved you to share this story—and what surprised you most while writing it.

– Alice Walstead

I had one of those pause for a moment while reading about Contradiction of Thoughts: An Enigma of Depression. Not the casual pause where you scroll past something interesting. The heavier kind. The kind where you sit back and think… Someone needed the courage to write this. The title alone carries weight. Contradiction of Thoughts perfectly captures that internal war so many people experience but struggle to explain. The confusion, the distortion, the battle between what someone feels and what they think they should feel. It is such a precise way to describe the mind when depression twists logic against itself. What struck me most about your approach is how you frame the book as both testimony and warning. Grounding the story in real events gives it something powerful that many books about mental health miss. Authenticity. Instead of presenting cold theory, you open a window into a lived experience that families and individuals often struggle to understand or even talk about.

And that matters. Because depression is still one of those subjects people whisper about, misunderstand, or ignore completely. Yet inside homes everywhere, people are quietly fighting battles that no one around them fully sees. Books like yours do something important. They bring those hidden struggles into the light. They create awareness, empathy, and sometimes even recognition for someone who thought they were alone in their thoughts. Your statement about the book’s purpose honestly stayed with me. “If only one life is saved, because someone read this book, its purpose is fulfilled.”That line says a lot about the intention behind the work. It is not written simply to exist. It is written because it needs to exist. Which is exactly why I found myself wondering something while looking at the book. How many people out there right now could genuinely benefit from reading this… but simply do not know it exists yet? Sometimes books with the most meaningful messages quietly sit in the corners of Amazon while the people who might need them most never discover them. Not because the book lacks value, but because visibility online can be strangely unpredictable. And a book like this deserves readers.

– Savannah Helen