Book Review: The Book of the Devil: Genesis by Veronica Preston

Book Details:

Author: Veronica Preston
Release Date:
August 27, 2025
Series: Book #1
Genre: Spiritual Fantasy, Mythic Fiction, Speculative Fiction
Format: E-book 
Pages: 201 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
This isnโ€™t a tale of horns and pitchforks.
Itโ€™s a tale of questions, echoes, and exile.
Book of the Devil: Genesis reimagines the Devil as Iblisโ€”a being of fire, loyalty, and impossible choices. Born into a world of smokeless flame, Iblis is chosen to serve God, but he begins to question the nature of obedience, justice, and divine will. His rebellion is not out of vanity, but love, sorrow, and a desire to understand. As he rises through the celestial order, Iblis walks the line between sacred and profane, setting the stage for a fall that may be more holy than it seems.

Review

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Few books dare to give the Devil his own voice, and fewer still manage to do it with the lyrical weight and mythic imagination that Veronica Preston brings to Book of the Devil: Genesis.

Author Preston roots her tale in an expansive cosmology. The Devil here is not a caricature of evil, but a Jinn, born of smokeless fire, whose origins precede mankind itself. Through his eyes, we witness the birth of Nahar, a planet of singing trees, plasma-blooded beings, and a civilization bound by free will and consequence. The refusal to bow to Adam is rendered not as arrogance, but as clarity. In this reframing, the author invites readers to question centuries of dogma: what if the Devil is not our corrupter, but our tester, our liberator, the one who insists humanity use its mind rather than bask in blind innocence?

Thematically, the novel is a meditation on choice, identity, and the necessity of shadow. It threads together Quranic references, Biblical echoes, and speculative cosmology, creating a narrative that is both reverent and rebellious. The chapters read like a blend of scripture and epic fantasy, making the book feel at once timeless and startlingly modern.

As an editor, I must note that author Prestonโ€™s greatest strength, her lush, almost operatic prose, can also be the bookโ€™s stumbling block. Sentences often run long, heavy with imagery and metaphor. While this lends grandeur, it occasionally slows the pacing and risks overwhelming readers who crave more narrative momentum. There are places, especially in the middle chapters, where the philosophical musings could have been pared back in favor of tighter dramatic action.

That said, Book of the Devil: Genesis succeeds in something rare: it makes the reader pause and reconsider a story they thought they knew. It is provocative without being blasphemous, imaginative without losing its theological moorings. It dares to ask what if the Devilโ€™s fall was not rebellion, but part of the Architectโ€™s design?


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Book Review: Of Gods and Men Book 1: Men by Harrison F. Krausย 

Book Details:

Author: Harrison F. Kraus 
Release Date: February 16, 2025
Series: Of Gods and Men (Book #1)
Genre: Epic Fantasy, Science Fantasy, Dystopian
Format: E-book 
Pages: 413 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
The war to end all wars has already been foughtโ€”and darkness has won.
In the realm of Aezigar, gods clashed, dragons roamed, and mortals fought for survival. But when the war between light and shadow reached its end, the god of darkness, Umbra, emerged victorious. His dominion is unchallenged, his hunger insatiable. Now, even as the land of Aezigar suffers beneath Umbraโ€™s shadow, the god of darkness turns to a new world to conquer: Earth.
But Umbraโ€™s conquest is far from assured. On Earth, unexpected powers awaken in the unlikeliest of Earthโ€™s inhabitants: an uncertain younger brother, a fiery older brother, an ignored son, an aspirant student, and a hardened military captain. Soon these heroes begin to discover their extraordinary connections to their parallel selves in Aezigar.

Meanwhile, in his arrogance, Umbra has left embers of rebellion still smoldering in Aezigar. In that alternate universe, the heroes begin to stand against a world dominated by the forces Umbra left to rule in his absence: a hunter in service to the darkness, two brothers fleeing for their lives, a coward hiding in enemy lands, a leader of a shattered people, and a reaver seeking plunder in the chaos.
Now, the fate of two worlds hangs in the balance. Will the heroes of two worlds be able to stop the darkness that the heroes of Aezigar alone could not? Or will the light of both worlds be extinguished forever?
โ€ฆ
Of Gods and Men is a sweeping blend of fantasy and superhero genres, crafted for those who crave epic tales of courage, sacrifice, and hope. Spanning two worldsโ€”modern Earth and the fantastical realm of Aezigarโ€”it weaves multiple interconnected storylines into a grand narrative of rebellion, redemption, and resilience. With heroes shaped by their struggles and choices that echo across realities, this is a story where every action carries weight, every bond is tested, every sacrifice matters, and the fate of entire worlds hangs in the balance. Prepare to embark on an unforgettable journey of parallel worlds, godlike battles, and the enduring fight against darkness.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Of Gods and Men by Harrison F. Kraus is one of those rare debut fantasy novels that manages to feel both classic in scope and refreshingly contemporary in voice. I absolutely love ambitious worldbuilding, and author Kraus doesnโ€™t hold back. From the icy intensity of the Sicarius hunting dragon-like Serpentes in Aezigar, to the quiet heartbreak of Samuel Turnerโ€™s humble teenage life unraveling in rural Pennsylvania, the dual narrative arcs are handled with surprising nuance.

What stood out most to me is how the novel explores the human condition through both grounded and mythic lenses. Sam, in particular, is a character who grows on you, his discomfort in his own skin, his awkward, uncertain crush on Kelly, and the surreal changes happening in his body reminded me of early King meets Percy Jackson but with a more literary edge. Thereโ€™s a subtle emotional current running through the domestic scenes that really worked for me, even as the broader fantasy arc began to kick in.

The prose is confident, cinematic at timesโ€”especially during the Sicariusโ€™s icy, violent questsโ€”and the structure is intelligently paced, divided cleanly into โ€œpartsโ€ that mirror thematic progression. However, I felt the book occasionally overextended itself, particularly in the slower exposition-heavy sections, and some of the dialogue between younger characters could’ve been more organic.

Still, this is an author with undeniable promise, and Iโ€™m really curious to see where Book 2 leads. For readers who enjoy morally complex anti-heroes, mythic beasts, and parallel worlds brimming with elemental power, Of Gods and Men offers a bold and thoughtful entry point into a much larger saga.


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Book Review: Aย Dance to Wakeย aย Dragon by Richard Pratt

Book Details:

Author: Richard Pratt
Release Date:
September 1, 2024
Series:
Genre: Classic fantasy, Epic Journey, Coming-of-age, Hidden Legends, Magical Realism, Folklore-Inspired Fantasy
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 229 pages
Publisher: Earnshaw Books
Blurb:
Can you save the world with a dance? Can you call dragons with music? And can you do this when no-one believes that such things exist or are possible?
The dragons of Tianya guard the balance between the forces of order and randomness, of heaven and earth, and when things are stable, no-one remembers they exist. But any disturbance can create tragedy, and only the mysterious dance to wake the dragon, performed at the ancient site of Zamai, can save the world. And the only person who knows the dance in this new age is Shengli.

Shengli lives in a remote village with her friends, her dog companion, and a wise old neighbour who is one of the last in Tianya to understand the ancient ways. She embarks on a dangerous mission, with her friends and the mysterious Renzi, to perform the dance at Zamai and the journey offers trials and tests that demand courage, cunning, and comradeship.
With echoes of Lewis, Tolkein, and Pullman, but with a wholly original voice, this is a classic quest adventure in a fresh setting that explores contemporary themes in a timeless format.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

A Dance to Wake a Dragon by Richard Pratt is a beautiful, lyrical, and utterly heartwarming fantasy adventure that swept me away from the very first page. Reading it felt like stepping into a snow-laden, otherworldly village where ancient traditions, stubborn young hearts, and mystical forces weave together into an extremely powerful narrative.

At the heart of the story is Shengli, a spirited, brave girl who dances not just for joy but, ultimately, to save her world. Through her friendship with her clever fox-like dog Boken (who’s now one of my favorite fictional animal companions!) and the bonds she shares with her village and friends, Shengliโ€™s journey is about hope and honoring the wisdom of the past in a world eager to forget it.

The writing is tender yet intelligent, laced with whimsical humor (especially through Bokenโ€™s delightful โ€œconversationsโ€) and thoughtful insights. Author Prattโ€™s prose has that rare timeless quality which reads like a classic fable but remains fresh and vibrant.

Thereโ€™s a subtle depth running beneath the playful surface, about cycles of life, the price of forgetting our roots, and the small acts of bravery that change the world. I also loved how the book gently critiques modern cynicism without being preachy and simply lets the magic of tradition speak for itself.

If I had any tiny critique, it would be that the beginning meanders slightly (though charmingly) before the main quest kicks into motion, but honestly, I didnโ€™t mind spending extra time in Shengliโ€™s snow-covered world.

If youโ€™re looking for a heartful, exquisitely written fantasy full of dancing, dragons, and characters youโ€™ll miss long after the book is over, A Dance to Wake a Dragon is pure magic. Itโ€™s the kind of story that feels like a warm fire on a winter night: comforting, glowing, and unforgettable.


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Book Review: Whispers of the Selkie by Lisa A. Moore

Book Details:

Author: Lisa A. Moore
Release Date:
January 21, 2025
Series: The Enchanted Heritage Trilogy Book 1
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Mythic Fantasy, Magic-Realism, Paranormal, Mystery
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 306 pages
Publisher: Unraveled Realms Press
Blurb:
Some secrets refuse to stay buried-especially when the ocean itself seems to be keeping them.
When Morwenna Willowheart Brightwood receives a mysterious letter shimmering with an otherworldly pull, her carefully controlled life begins to unravel. She’s content in her weathered lighthouse home on the Maine coast, weaving stories for others and tending her wind-battered garden. But this letter isn’t just a piece of paper-it’s a summons. One that carries her across the sea to the mist-shrouded Scottish Highlands, where ancient legends breathe, magic hums just beneath the surface, and family secrets refuse to stay silent.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Whispers of the Selkie by Lisa A. Moore is a beautifully atmospheric tale that blends Scottish folklore, family secrets, and reluctant destiny into an enchanting and immersive read. From the misty coastlines of Maine to the hauntingly beautiful Scottish Highlands, the novel integrates magic and mystery in a poetic way.

Morwenna Brightwood is the kind of protagonist I loveโ€”strong yet hesitant, grounded yet drawn to something bigger than herself. When she receives a mysterious letter that pulls her across the sea, her journey into a world of selkie legends and ancestral power begins. What I appreciated most was how real Morwenna feltโ€”sheโ€™s not immediately fearless or eager to embrace her heritage. She questions, resists, and struggles with the idea of expectation, which makes her journey all the more compelling. Her dynamic with her sister Ava is another highlightโ€”thereโ€™s warmth, loyalty, and just the right amount of tension that makes their bond feel genuine.

Mooreโ€™s writing is lush and lyrical, painting the setting with vivid imagery that makes you feel the salt on your skin and hear the whispers of the waves. The Scottish Highlands come alive with an almost sentient presence, making the world feel as much a character as Morwenna herself. The mythology is woven in seamlessly, giving the story a sense of depth and history. If thereโ€™s one small critique, itโ€™s that some parts of the pacing felt a little unevenโ€”certain revelations and moments of action could have been spread out more for maximum impact.

Overall, Whispers of the Selkie is a beautifully written and immersive story perfect for readers who love fantasy grounded in mythology, family ties, and the lure of the unknown. Itโ€™s a book that stays with you long after the final page is turned. If you love atmospheric, folklore-driven stories with complex heroines, this one is definitely worth picking up.


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