Book Review: Catalyst by Sloane Mercer

Book Details:

Author: Sloane Mercer
Release Date: 2 October 2025
Series:
Genre: Psychological Thriller, Political Thriller, Terrorism/Espionage Thriller, Literary Suspense, International Intrigue
Format: E-book 
Pages: 193 pages
Publisher: AMEE Publishing
Blurb:
Everyone’s the hero in their story. Even the monsters.
Jake Rossi, a Capitol crewman trying to rebuild his life, isnโ€™t looking for meaning โ€” just a paycheck, a place to belong, maybe someone to talk to. Then he meets Emily, a reserved Belgian chocolatier with a scar on her collarbone and eyes that never blink. Her silence is magnetic. Her past, untouchable.

But the closer Jake gets, the more off-kilter things begin to feel. Curiosity twists into obsession. Obsession curdles into fear. Is Emily a survivor haunted by shadows, or the shadow itself? Every answer Jake uncovers only deepens the riddle, and every step closer drags him toward a truth too dangerous to name.
By the time the city gathers under banners and floodlights, it may already be too late.
For readers of dark, atmospheric, slow-burning psychological thrillers with flawed heroes and razor-wire tension, Catalyst will keep you turning pages deep into the night.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Catalyst by Sloane Mercer is the kind of slow-burning psychological thriller that creeps under your skin rather than rushing to shock you. Sloane Mercerโ€™s writing carries that rare balance of elegance and unease, drawing you in with the intimacy of character before you even realize youโ€™re standing at the edge of something dark.

The brilliance of this story lies in its tension, not the loud, cinematic kind, but the quiet, suffocating kind that makes you second-guess whatโ€™s real. As Jakeโ€™s fascination with Emily deepens, the novel turns into an exploration of obsession, perception, and the fragility of sanity. Mercerโ€™s prose is clean and deliberate, every sentence calibrated to tighten the thread of unease. You start to feel as though youโ€™re peering through a fog, seeing outlines of truth but never the whole picture. And thatโ€™s precisely what makes Catalyst addictive; itโ€™s less about solving a mystery and more about descending into it.

Jake is written with a refreshing honesty. He is flawed, lonely, and relatable. Heโ€™s not a classic hero; heโ€™s someone doing his best to survive the static of his own mind. Emily, on the other hand, is mesmerizing; part riddle, part mirror , and Mercer wisely resists defining her too soon. Through their fractured connection, the book asks a chilling question: what happens when our need to understand someone else exposes the darkness in ourselves? By the time the truth begins to surface, you realize Catalyst isnโ€™t just about the main character, but about the stories we tell to justify the monsters we become.

Catalyst is atmospheric, introspective, and razor-sharp. It’s a dark psychological thriller that trades jump scares for slow, emotional corrosion. It is perfect for readers who loved Gone Girl or You, and crave stories that linger long after the last page.


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Book Review: Unearthed: The Lies We Carry & The Truths They Bury by Chanchal Garg

Book Details:

Author: Chanchal Garg
Release Date: 2nd June 2025
Series:
Genre: Autobiography
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 282 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
In this searing memoir, Chanchal Garg reveals the spiritual and sexual abuse that shattered her sense of self and forced her to question a life defined by duty and sacrifice. Raised as a devoted Indian daughter, she was taught never to question authority-until a transformative moment during a yoga class, while pregnant with her daughter, awakened a truth she could no longer ignore.
That realization set her on a solitary journey, as she lost her faith, community, and the life she had always known. Without the support she had once relied on, she had to learn to trust herself, reclaim her bicultural identity, and redefine what it meant to be both Indian and American-on her own terms

Unearthedย is a powerful call to every woman who has ever felt silenced-an invitation to trust your inner voice, reclaim your story, and return to yourself.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Unearthed by Chanchal Garg is a book that doesn not just tell a story but bares a soul. This beautiful memoir is raw and luminous in equal measure. It traces author Gargโ€™s painful yet empowering journey through spiritual and sexual abuse, her loss of faith, and the reclamation of her identity as both Indian and American. The bookโ€™s greatest strength lies in its honesty as Garg doesnโ€™t hide behind polished prose or distance herself from the pain. Instead, she invites the reader into her unraveling and rebuilding, offering a voice that feels courageous, vulnerable, and deeply relatable.

Gargโ€™s writing is tender but unflinching. Each chapter feels like a confession whispered into the dark. She shares moments of doubt, grief, awakening, and slow healing stitched together with lyrical precision. What moved me most was her ability to explore trauma without letting it consume the narrative. Unearthed isnโ€™t a story of victimhood; itโ€™s a story of reclamation. Through her awakening during a yoga class, while carrying new life within her, Garg begins to question the doctrines and power structures that once defined her, and in doing so, she creates space for other women to do the same. The narrative feels spiritual, but not in a religious sense, itโ€™s about returning to oneself, trusting that quiet inner knowing that so many of us are taught to suppress.

The memoir also shines in how it navigates bicultural identity. Gargโ€™s experience of being both Indian and American resonates profoundly. Her journey is personal, but her insights are universal. By the end, youโ€™re not just reading about her healing; youโ€™re reminded of your own capacity to listen inwardly and rebuild. Unearthed doesnโ€™t promise easy closure but offers something rarer: authenticity, compassion, and permission to begin again.

Unearthed is a beautifully written, soul-stirring memoir about pain, awakening, and self-trust. Perfect for readers who loved Educated by Tara Westover or When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill, and for anyone seeking a reminder that healing is not linear, but always possible.


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Book Review: The Convergence: Broken Magic by Richard French

Book Details:

Author: Richard French
Release Date: 1 March 2025
Series: Convergence Series
Genre: Dystopian, Speculative Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 184 pages
Publisher: Indie Pen Press
Blurb:
Federation Enforcer Samantha Reed has orders to kill Connor Blakeโ€”the one person whose soul was torn from hers when the Federation shattered magic itself.
Reality is fracturing across the galaxy as the Convergence approaches, a cosmic force trying to heal what was broken. The Federation claims Connor’s rebellion is causing the breakdown, but when Samantha confronts him, stolen memories surface: their connection isn’t coincidenceโ€”it’s the echo of a bond artificially severed centuries ago.

Their unified magic doesn’t combine separate powersโ€”it remembers what they were before the Federation broke everything apart. But every moment they spend reconnected awakens the truth the Federation desperately hides: the artificial separation is failing, and only their restored unity can stabilize reality’s collapse.
As the cosmos continues to unravel, the Federation’s leader plans to use the Convergence’s healing energy as a weapon to make the separation permanentโ€”even if it destroys existence in the process. The choice isn’t between order and chaos, but between artificial control and natural wholeness.
For readers who devoured Shadow and Bone and The Ten Thousand Doors of January, this is forbidden unity with the fate of reality hanging in the balance.
When remembering their true connection means choosing between Federation loyalty and cosmic healing, will Samantha embrace what was stolen from themโ€”or let the universe fracture forever to preserve a lie?
Get your copy now and discover why some bonds refuse to stay broken.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Every once in a while, I stumble on a sci-fantasy that feels both classic and new, and The Convergence: Broken Magic did exactly that for me. Richard French builds a world where magic has been split (politically, philosophically, and literally) and the cost of that fracture touches everything. What I loved most is how the book stays emotional even while juggling heady ideas; the opening teases the cosmic stakes with โ€œshadow and lightโ€ patterns that feel sentient, immediately hinting this isnโ€™t just good-vs-evil but a deeper question of how things were broken, and whether they can be made whole again.

The chapters (especially in the middle) blend brisk action with chewy ideas about power, control, and institutional memory without drowning you in exposition. I especially enjoyed how the story frames โ€œunifiedโ€ magic as something natural and healing, while forced control breaks people and worlds; a theme that gives the battles real emotional stakes.

Author Frenchโ€™s prose is clean and unfussy, letting the math-meets-myth logic of the magic system carry the wonder. The antagonistโ€™s motivation, born from trauma and fear, adds dimension to the conflict and avoids mustache-twirling; policy, paranoia, and grief entwine into a believable agenda that feels tragically real. This nuance makes the late-book confrontations land harder because the โ€œvillainโ€ isnโ€™t simply wrong; heโ€™s convincingly afraid of what ungoverned power can do.

The finale pays off the promise of the title, with sacrifice, restoration, and an earned sense of hope. Without spoiling anything: the book argues that wholeness requires consent and cost, not coercion, which is a beautiful take for a series opener. I closed the book feeling satisfied yet curious about where this universe goes next, which is always my favorite way to end the first in a series. If you like high-stakes magic systems grounded in character and consequence, this belongs on your TBR.


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Book Review: The Supreme Pastor by Thomas C. Hosey DPM

Book Details:

Author: Thomas C. Hosey DPM
Release Date: 31 July 2025
Series:
Genre: Thriller, Psychological Thriller, Suspense
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 260 pages
Publisher: Pegasus Publishers
Blurb:
Ian thought his quiet life was safe-until the night his uncle was brutally murdered. Narrowly escaping the same fate, Ian finds himself relentlessly pursued by a shadowy organization determined to silence him. Desperate and alone, he reconnects with Nicki, his former college love, a brilliant hacker, and someone with a knack for uncovering secrets.

Together, they dive into the dark web, unearthing a horrifying secret: a human trafficking cult known as the Church of Redemption, led by the ruthless Supreme Pastor Rick-the man responsible for Ian’s uncle’s death. As Ian and Nicki work to expose the cult, they uncover a web of corruption and terror that runs deeper than they imagined.
Packed with suspense, danger, and moral dilemmas, “The Supreme Pastor” is a high-stakes thriller that will keep you on the edge until the final explosive twist.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

The Supreme Pastor by Thomas C. Hosey DPM is an intense, unsettling thriller that grabs you from the first page and doesnโ€™t let go. Thomas Hosey builds his story around a terrifying cult hidden deep in rural America, a community ruled by manipulation, fear, and blind devotion. What begins as a quiet introduction to a mysterious world quickly spirals into a gripping tale of control, violence, and survival. Author Hoseyโ€™s pacing is taut, his atmosphere charged with paranoia, and his storytelling filled with moments that make your pulse quicken.

What impressed me most was how emotional the story feels, even in its darkest moments. The novel explores the kind of psychological and emotional control that allows people to surrender their will, not just out of fear, but sometimes out of desperate faith. The titular Supreme Pastor is a chilling antagonist, both charismatic and monstrous, and the world he commands feels disturbingly real.

Yet, beneath all the tension and violence, thereโ€™s a thread of emotionality that grounds the book. The characters, those trapped inside the cult and those trying to save them, are not just pawns in a thriller plot; theyโ€™re flawed, hopeful, and painfully realistic. Their choices carry emotional weight, and the moments of courage, even the smallest ones, shine all the brighter against the darkness surrounding them.

The Supreme Pastor is not an easy read as itโ€™s raw, sometimes brutal, and emotionally charged, but itโ€™s also powerful and deeply thought-provoking. It exposes the danger of blind faith, the seduction of power, and the resilience of those who dare to resist. Author Hosey has written a thriller thatโ€™s not just about escaping a cult; itโ€™s about reclaiming oneโ€™s will and voice. It is perfect for fans of fast-paced thrillers with high-stakes action and thrills.


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Book Review: Singing the Forge by G H Mosson

Book Details:

Author: G H Mossonย 
Release Date: 22 April 2025
Series:
Genre: Poetry
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 90 pages
Publisher: David Robert Books
Blurb:
Singing the Forgeย explores the singing of what’s shaped us and what we’ve shaped for ourselves. Through poems at times personal, plus vignettes from men and women of the past two centuries in the book’s middle section, these poems offer mirrors of becomings. Readers encounter melodies from diverse lives. Across free verse, meter, and poems of organic form, you might just see yourself.

G. H. Mosson is the author of five prior books and chapbooks of poetry, includingย Questions of Fireย (Plain View Press),ย Season of Flowers and Dustย (Goose River Press), andย Family Snapshot as a Poem in Timeย (Finishing Line Press). Two of the chapbooks are collaborative,ย Heart X-raysย &ย Simultaneous Revolutionsย (PM Press). His poetry has appeared inย The Tampa Review,ย California Quarterly,ย The Hollins Critic,ย The Potomac Review,ย Smartish Pace,ย Lines & Stars,ย Free State Review,ย SurVisionย of Ireland, and across the U.S.

“Through a series of beautiful meditative lyrics, Mosson links childhood and adulthood, journey and reckoning, memory and wonder. A humane and earnest poet, Mosson is as much attuned to ‘songless streets of Baltimore’ as to ‘trees’ unnamed relation to the world.’ He captures this attunement with carefully measured language and impressive precision. Many poems are probing observations of places and people, rendered in verbal landscapes revealing his debt to visual artists. Hans Hofman, Philip Guston, Henry Moore are three invoked in this volume. The poems inย Singing the Forgeย create a philosophy of life centered around the idea of harmony with the universe – even if harmony’s always at the verge of disintegration. They should be paid attention to and cherished for this reason.”
-Piotr Gwiazda, Professor of English, Univ. of Pittsburgh

“Mosson’s poems are magical, memorable and meticulous, speaking to the powerful pull of locales and weathers and loves, yet get pinned to the memories of a reader with lines like these, spoken by a physician in his old age: ‘The nursing home is out there like a shark/ that has swallowed so many of my patients one by one.’ Give a copy to someone you love but be sure to keep one for yourself.”-Clarinda Harris, Professor Emeritus, Towson University
-Piotr Gwiazda, Professor of English, Univ. of Pittsburgh

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

G.H. Mossonโ€™s Singing the Forge is a contemplative and richly textured poetry collection that meditates on creation and the shaping forces of time, memory, and place. Itโ€™s a book that doesnโ€™t simply present poems; it invites readers into a dialogue about how we are formed by what we build, love, and lose. The collection moves fluidly between the personal and the historical, exploring the idea of โ€œforgingโ€ as an act of both endurance and transformation.

What I found most compelling about Mossonโ€™s work is his ability to weave lyrical introspection with a painterโ€™s eye for detail. Each poem feels sculpted, deliberate, and yet brimming with emotion. His imagery, whether drawn from the โ€œsongless streets of Baltimoreโ€ or from the elemental beauty of nature, transforms the ordinary into something almost sacred. Thereโ€™s a rhythm to his lines that mirrors the forge itself: heat, strike, cool, and shape again. Itโ€™s poetry that asks you to slow down and feel the subtle music of thought.

Throughout the book, Mosson balances philosophy and tenderness. The poems meditate on memory, childhood, work, and the constant tension between chaos and harmony. You sense an awareness that life itself is a form of art, ever unfinished, ever reshaped by our hands and hearts. This awareness gives the collection its emotional pulse, turning each piece into an intimate act of reckoning and renewal.

Singing the Forge is a beautifully crafted, powerful collection that rewards patience and reflection. Itโ€™s for readers who find comfort in language that hums with meaning and for those who believe poetry still has the power to make sense of our shared becoming.


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Book Review: Love Without Borders by Ni Wencai

Book Details:

Author:ย Ni Wencai
Release Date: 29 July 2025
Series:
Genre: Memoir, Non-Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 229 pages
Publisher: Earnshaw Books
Blurb:
For more than three decades into the early 21st Century, China’s effort to curb population growth through the “one-child policy” created a wave of abandoned Chinese infants, most of them girls. Around 160,000 of these Chinese children found homes abroad, with more than half of them joining American families.
International adoptions should be a beautiful story of familial love transcending national boundaries. However, when the unintended fallout from the one-child policy came to light, it captured Western media attention, making Chinaโ€™s international adoption program a controversial subject.

This book offers a unique blend of Chinese and Western perspectives. The author, a Chinese civil servant who also oversaw a local orphanage, is a scholar with an international outlook. The book explores human relationships: familial bonds that transcend biological links, the continuing connection of the adoptees and their families with their homeland in China, and the special relationship that developed between the author and families who adopted daughters from his jurisdiction.
In an era of unprecedented geopolitical tensions between the United States and China, this book highlights an overwhelmingly positive aspect of the relationship between citizens of these two great nations, offering much-needed inspiration and hope.,

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Love Without Borders by Ni Wencai is a heartfelt and deeply moving story that explores the universal longing for connection across cultures, distances, and emotional boundaries. What begins as a seemingly simple narrative of two people brought together by chance gradually unfolds into something more profound; a meditation on love, identity, and the courage it takes to open oneself up to another person in an unfamiliar world. The author writes with tenderness and sincerity, allowing readers to feel the push and pull of emotion that defines cross-cultural relationships.

What I found particularly moving about this book is how grounded it is in real emotion. It doesnโ€™t romanticize difference or distance but instead portrays love as a complex, evolving force that is beautiful, frustrating, and transformative. The characters feel authentic, their flaws and hopes interwoven with the settings they inhabit. From moments of introspection to scenes of cultural discovery, every page captures the vulnerability of stepping beyond oneโ€™s comfort zone for the sake of connection.

The prose flows with warmth and restraint, striking a delicate balance between passion and reflection. The pacing allows readers to breathe, to feel the weight of each emotional beat, and to witness how love reshapes the individuals at its center. Thereโ€™s a sense of maturity in the storytelling that makes it stick with you after the story is over.

In essence, Love Without Borders is not just a story about romance; itโ€™s about empathy, transformation, and the shared emotional connection that transcends geography. Itโ€™s a reminder that while love may begin between two people, it ultimately bridges entire worlds.


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Book Review: Mortal Zin by Diane Schaffer

Book Details:

Author: Diane Schafferย 
Release Date:
4 March 2025
Series: A Mortal Zin Mystery (Book #1)
Genre: Crime Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Humour
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 408 pages
Publisher: Sibylline Press
Blurb:
A crusading attorneyโ€™s death. Sabotage at a family winery. Secrets buried in Californiaโ€™s pastโ€ฆWhen corporate attorney Noli Cooper visits her godparentsโ€™ Santa Cruz Mountain winery, sheโ€™s hoping for a few quiet days to consider her future. But the future will have to wait. The body of her childhood mentor, a crusading social justice lawyer and local hero, is discovered in a rocky ocean cove. The sheriff is quick to call it suicide. Noli knows heโ€™s wrong. Teaming up with PI Luz Alvarado, Noli dives into a world where nothing is as it seems.

As threats mount and the winery teeters on the brink of ruin, Noli and Luz must navigate a treacherous landscape of greed, revenge, and long-buried secrets. Their investigation weaves through the rich tapestry of Californiaโ€™s vineyard history, the mystery of zinfandel grapes, and the haunting legacy of the Vietnam War. With a murderer on the loose, predatory neighbors circling, and Noliโ€™s godfather framed for murder, the clock is ticking. Can two fearless women from different worlds unravel the truth before itโ€™s too late?

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Mortal Zin is a lively, character-driven novel that blends crime, suspense, and a touch of dark humor into a story that feels gritty as well as entertaining. From the opening chapters, the book throws readers into a world of ambition, temptation, and danger, where choices are rarely clean and every action carries weight. Itโ€™s the kind of story that keeps you engaged with its mix of sharp dialogue, fast pacing, and a cast of flawed, unforgettable characters.

What stands out most is how the author builds atmosphere. The settings feel vivid as bars, back alleys, and quiet corners all carry an undercurrent of tension, making the reader feel like something is always about to happen. The tone shifts seamlessly between high-stakes tension and wry humor, offering moments of relief without ever letting go of the suspense. This balance gives the book an energy that pulls you along while still allowing space to appreciate its layered characters.

At its heart, Mortal Zin is a story about choices and consequences. It digs into how people justify their actions, whether driven by greed, survival, or loyalty, and what happens when those justifications unravel. The protagonistโ€™s arc is particularly compelling, as he is constantly walking the line between control and chaos, morality and survival.

Overall, Mortal Zin is a smart, engaging read for anyone who enjoys crime fiction with depth. It isnโ€™t just about the mechanics of the plot, but about the people who inhabit it, their flaws, ambitions, and the shadows they carry. Suspenseful, atmospheric, and at times darkly funny, itโ€™s a book that will resonate with fans of noir and contemporary thrillers alike.


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Book Review: High Desert (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date:
19 March, 2021
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Crime Fiction, Western Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 69 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
MUSCLE CAR WESTERN – Hanner only wants to tinker in his desert junk yard, fish for wrecks on the highway and forget his family legacy. A rotten Sheriff, fate and a vault full of organized crime loot have another idea.
Free samples at adamfike.com/books.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor. All told in the present tense. Like reading a movie.

“What a HOOT… recommended to me by a friend… High Desert is a clean shot at life and crime in the mid-twentieth century… I haven’t laughed so much in years. I plan to start on The Quiet Ones and work my way through them all.”

– BookBub Reviewย 

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

High Desert by Adam Fike is a gritty, cinematic slice of crime fiction that perfectly captures the raw, unpredictable energy of the American West. Adam Fike doesnโ€™t just tell a story about a botched heist and the violent, eccentric characters surrounding it, he creates a living, breathing desert landscape where danger lurks behind every gas station, junkyard, and stretch of empty highway. The atmosphere is heavy with heat, dust, and tension, giving the story a visual quality that feels ready-made for the screen.

What makes this tale so compelling is the cast of flawed but unforgettable characters. From Hanner, the hardened junkyard owner with his own rules of survival, to small-time hustlers, con men, and corrupt lawmen, every interaction is laced with suspicion, wit, and the constant threat of betrayal. The dialogue is sharp and often darkly humorous, while the pacing keeps the narrative moving with the same relentlessness as a car engine roaring across desert roads.

Overall, High Desert is a meditation on survival, morality, and the blurred lines between law, outlaw, and everything in between. Itโ€™s grim, fast-paced, and at times unexpectedly funny, making it a standout entry in the People Making Danger collection.


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Book Review: Operation Dragonhead (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date:
19 March, 2021
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Science-Fiction, Satire
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 78 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
MID-CENTURY SCI-FI SATIRE – Early one morning at the end of the 1950s, an impressive, highly coordinated Army training exercise goes off without a hitch. Until frightened town folk decide to fight back. Based on a true story.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor. All told in the present tense. Like reading a movie.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Operation Dragonhead by Adam Fike is a wildly inventive, satirical tale that blurs the line between Cold War paranoia, small-town Americana, and comic-book absurdity. Based on a real-life Army exercise in the 1950s, the story reimagines the chaos through the eyes of farmers, townsfolk, and overzealous generals who mistake, or encourage others to mistake, routine maneuvers for a full-blown alien invasion. What unfolds is a sharp, humorous critique of fear, authority, and the fragile trust between citizens and institutions.

What I loved most about this story is its tonal balance. Author Adam Fike layers sharp political commentary beneath a playful, almost cinematic surface. The exaggerated characters, the blustering General Hammertree, the wide-eyed townsfolk, the opportunistic local elites feel like archetypes, yet they capture something essential about human behavior in times of confusion. The dialogue brims with wit, and the pacing keeps the reader engaged, moving seamlessly between tense military briefings and farcical encounters with โ€œaliens.โ€

Overall, Operation Dragonhead is more than a quirky historical fiction piece, itโ€™s a mirror held up to both the absurdity and the danger of orchestrated fear. Readers who enjoy a mix of satire, history, and speculative playfulness will find this story as thought-provoking as it is entertaining.


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Book Review: Italian by Default by M.J. Walker

Book Details:

Author: MJ Walker
Release Date:
25 July, 2025
Series:
Genre: Memoir, Women’s Literature
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 283 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
AN ADOPTION REUNION โ€“ based on a true story โ€“
Meet Polly, her Italian husband Joe and his identical twin brother Cicero. Polly is adopted and wants to find her heritage, but the twinsโ€™ passion for Italy dominates her life. She gets more style than Gucci, more opera than Verdi and more pasta than she can eat.
If this isnโ€™t bad enough, Pollyโ€™s friends insist that she belongs where she is loved โ€“ safe and secure in her wealthy Sydney suburb.
What should Polly do?
She has met her birth mother, but not only will that lady refuse to discuss the past, she has barred Polly from ever meeting her siblings. Then one day Polly reads in the newspaper that her mother has been murdered.
Or has she?
Pollyโ€™s longed-for adoption reunion finally happens but not in the way she expects.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Every once in a while, I come across a book that feels less like a neatly packaged story and more like an intimate glimpse into someone’s life experience. Italian by Default by M.J. Walker is very much that kind of book. It reads like a heartfelt exploration of identity, belonging, and cultural duality, written with honesty and warmth. From the very first pages, the narrative establishes itself as personal and genuine, inviting readers to not just observe, but to sit with the authorโ€™s reflections and journey.

What stood out to me most was the way the prose blends simplicity with depth. Thereโ€™s an ease to the storytelling, it doesnโ€™t try to dazzle with overly ornate language, yet the sincerity behind the words makes the book resonate on a deeper level. The pacing feels unhurried, almost conversational, giving space for the cultural observations and personal insights to sink in. This style makes the book accessible while still carrying weight in its themes.

Without delving into spoilers, I can say that what I appreciated most about this book is its exploration of identity, not as a fixed, singular concept but as something fluid, shifting with environment, relationships, and perspective. For anyone who has ever lived between cultures or questioned where they truly belong, Italian by Default will feel especially relatable.

Overall, this book is a thoughtful and respectful meditation on selfhood and heritage. It doesnโ€™t seek to give easy answers, nor does it try to universalize the authorโ€™s experiences. Instead, it offers a window into one individualโ€™s journey, while leaving enough openness for readers to reflect on their own. In a world where identity is so often boxed and labeled, Italian by Default reminds us of the richness that lies in nuance, complexity, and authenticity.


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Book Review: Into the Mountains: Exploring China’s Sacred Daoist Peaks by Debra Liu

Book Details:

Author: Debra Liu
Release Date:
8 July, 2025
Series:
Genre: Nature Writing, Memoir, Philosophical
Format: E-book 
Pages: 232 pages
Publisher: Earnshaw Books Ltd
Blurb:
In a journey of discovery through China’s sacred mountains, traversing the hidden caves of Huashan, freshwater pools where alchemists once lived on Luofushan, and the opulent brilliance of the Gold Palace atop Wudangshan, Debra Liu explores the rich culture and history of the Daoist tradition.
The author was ordained as a Daoist in the Qingsong group of temples, part of the Quanzhen Dragon Gate lineage, in Brisbane, Australia. She seamlessly integrates elements of Daoist philosophy and contemporary practice in this fascinating account, where the past is inextricably entwined with the present, where each step up a mountain is punctuated with magnificent vistas, archaic legends and the chants of ancient scriptures echoing across stone stairways.
Through this book, the reader can ‘enter the mountains’ to find the heart of the Daoism, as a vibrant, modern practice with deep roots in antiquity.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

From the very first page, Into the Mountains by Debra Liu drew me in with its subtle yet powerful storytelling. Itโ€™s a narrative that carries the intimacy of lived experiences and emotions as well as the vastness of the land that shapes those experiences. Author Liu manages to capture the pull of the mountains not only as a physical space but also as a metaphor for solitude, and transformation.

What I particularly appreciated was the way the prose balances descriptive richness with emotional honesty. The mountains come alive not just through visual detail, but through atmosphere. The book is at its strongest when it weaves external journeys with internal ones, showing how isolation, challenge, and beauty leave their mark on the human psyche.

The pacing is deliberate, and I found myself savoring it rather than rushing. Author Liu doesnโ€™t force revelations but allows them to unfold organically, much like a climb itself: one step at a time, with effort and pauses to simply take in the view. By the end, I felt I had walked alongside the narrator, sharing in their solitude, their awe, and their gradual rediscovery of self.

Overall, Into the Mountains is a reflective and evocative read that will especially resonate with readers who, like me, are drawn to stories of solitude, inner transformation, and the healing power of nature. It is less about a plot and more about emotional resonance and atmosphere. And for that very reason, it lingers long after the last page is turned.


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Book Review: Burn My Shadow Issue #2 by Sebastiano Lanza

Book Details:

Author: Sebastiano Lanza
Release Date:
September 22, 2025
Series: Burn My Shadow (Book 2)
Genre: Graphic Novel
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: under 100 pages
Publisher: Markosia Enterprises
Blurb:
In Leipzig, Tharmas devises a plan to kidnap Thomas Crowley. To do so, heโ€™ll need assistance from a quite extravagant tech wizz, a rather inhumane amount of patience, and a very light footstep. Even so, plans rarely unfold as first imagined.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Burn My Shadow #2 takes readers deeper into its dystopian, cyberpunk-inspired world, where surveillance and control dictate every aspect of existence. This issue ramps up the tension by placing Tharmas and young K in the thick of shadowy deals, infiltration missions, and encounters with faceless enforcers. At the same time, we see propaganda speeches from the ruling elite, dripping with doublespeak that reframes oppression as progress. The contrast between the cold sterility of those in power and the grim desperation of those in the streets makes for a sharp and unsettling read.

The writing is dense with themes of compliance, resistance, and survival, while the artwork excels at amplifying the mood. Stark whites and clean lines dominate the scenes of propaganda, while the rain-soaked cityscapes and back-alley dealings pulse with grit and urgency. Tharmas, weary yet determined, is fleshed out further as a morally complex anti-hero, while K brings both innocence and moral tension to the story.

Issue #2 successfully balances world-building with forward-moving plot, setting up the confrontation with Crowley that promises bigger stakes ahead. Though some of the political speeches may feel lengthy, they reinforce the chilling reality of this authoritarian future. With its mix of noir tension, political allegory, and cinematic visuals, Burn My Shadow #2 is a gripping continuation that solidifies this series as one to watch out for.


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Book Review: The Quiet Ones (PEOPLE MAKING DANGER #1) by Adam Fike

Book Details:

Author: Adam Fike
Release Date:
19 March, 2021
Series: PEOPLE MAKING DANGER
Genre: Literary Horror, Psychological Horror, Crime-Thriller, Noir, Horror
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 66 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
SUBURBAN THRILLER. When a young girl goes missing, families fall apart and neighbors grow together with the help of their friendly local serial killer.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of quick, fun, three-act, feature-length stories, full of suspense, surprises and dark humor. All told in the present tense. Like reading a movie.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Adam Fikeโ€™s The Quiet Ones is a sinister slice of small-town noir with a macabre twist: neighbors who โ€œgrow togetherโ€ under the shadow of a serial killer. Set in the sleepy but unsettling town of Clearfield Falls, the story layers the ordinary things like funerals, lawn services, and office gossip with the grotesque, where bodies double as fertilizer and everyday people reveal darker impulses. The writing blends dark humor with chilling violence, making the mundane (like mowing lawns or family dinners) feel like itโ€™s always one step away from horror.

What stands out most is the interplay between banality and menace. Characters like Ruth, who hides behind oversized glasses, and Junior, the deceptively gentle gardener, embody the theme that danger doesnโ€™t always roar, sometimes it whispers. Fikeโ€™s pacing is cinematic, cutting between suburban kitchens, cemetery burials, and sinister sheds with a rhythm that keeps readers uneasy yet hooked. While the sheer length of descriptive passages and overlapping storylines could overwhelm some readers, the atmosphere is thick, immersive, and undeniably memorable.

Overall, The Quiet Ones succeeds as a dark, satirical portrait of community and complicity. Itโ€™s a story that asks unsettling questions about what people are willing to ignore to maintain comfort, and whether monsters are truly outsiders or simply the neighbors we never look at too closely.


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Book Review: Unborn (The Dark World #1) by Eva Barber

Book Details:

Author: Eva Barber
Release Date:
December 9, 2024ย 
Series: Dark World (Book 1 of 2)
Genre: Speculative Fiction, Sci-Fi, Surreal
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 458 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Olesya was not born like other people but was found in the Siberian Forest by a couple unable to have children. Plagued by mysterious visions and dreams, she struggles to fit into a society both as a socially inept but brilliant child and as she becomes part of a research team to discover the nature of dark matter. The findings of this discovery never make it to the scientific community as the project leader goes missing and the physics lab blows up, destroyed by a powerful foe with seemingly noble intentions.
Seattle detectives question Olesya in connection with the explosion and the disappearance of her boss. She becomes a person of interest until she herself goes missing. From her kidnappers, she learns that her parents, knowing she lacked a belly button, suspected she was created by the Russian government as part of a scientific

experiment, and emigrated to the USA to hide and protect her. She also learns she possesses powers related to dark matter and of the existence of a brother held captive since his discovery by the Russian government. Even though she suspects her kidnappersโ€™ interest in her and their motivations arenโ€™t so noble, she joins them in rescuing her brother. Catastrophic world events following the successful rescue force her to continue working with her foes to save the world from destruction.
While working to save the world, Olesya experiences a moral dilemma and becomes someone she never thought sheโ€™d beโ€”a mother. Olesya learns of mysterious chambers scattered around the world, and her visions return to haunt her, until she opens the chambers and learns their secrets, wishing she hadnโ€™t. Now she faces the heart-wrenching realization that she must travel into a dark dimension to save the world from self-destruction. Worse yet, her daughter, Emery, is the key to humanityโ€™s salvation and must follow her mother once she becomes an adult because she is the only being who can travel where no one else can to restore balance to the universe and return with an extraordinary gift for humanity. But powerful entities have reasons to keep the gift away from humanity and will do anything to stop her.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Eva Barberโ€™s Unborn is a sprawling, multi-layered tale that weaves together mythology, science, political intrigue, and the raw intimacy of family bonds. At its heart lies Olesya, a young woman whose very existence straddles two worlds: the ordinary and the extraordinary. Discovered as a mysterious child in a Russian forest, she grows up to find her life intertwined with secrets of origin, otherworldly shadows, and a destiny that is as heavy as it is unavoidable.

What author Barber achieves brilliantly is the atmosphere. The shadow realm, where the unborn linger in darkness yearning to be born, is chilling and original. Some scenes are haunting and eerie, layered with sorrow and wonder.

Thematically, Unborn is preoccupied with identity, destiny, and the burden of choice. Olesyaโ€™s journey constantly tests the boundaries between science and the supernatural, fate and free will. The novel is ambitious, drawing on mythology, speculative science, and fears of loss and love.

That said, as an editor I must point out where the novel falters. At over 80 chapters, the pacing suffers under the weight of its own ambition. Some sections, particularly Olesyaโ€™s inner reflections, repeat ideas already conveyed, slowing momentum. And sometimes, the secondary characters and subplots dilute the focus.

Still, Unborn succeeds in leaving its reader with a lingering unease; the sense that destiny is both irresistible and cruel, and that love, even across impossible boundaries, may not be enough to undo what has been set in motion. Overall, Unborn is ambitious, atmospheric, and thematically rich, and it stands out for its originality and emotional depth.


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Book Review: B&G Mystery: We Can’t Tell You by Josh Martin

Book Details:

Author: Josh Martin
Release Date:
January 27, 2025ย 
Series: B&G Mystery: We Can’t Tell You (Book 1 of 3)
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Supernatural, Psychological Thriller
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 107 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Have you ever awoken from a deep sleep and still feel like youโ€™re dreaming? A few minutes of confusion is certainly commonโ€ฆ..
But what about several months?
Not so common, unfortunately.
One day, not quite a year ago, it happened to me. I couldnโ€™t shake the feeling. I could remember, and not remember, all at the same time.

Confused? Yeah, I was tooโ€ฆ.
Still am, as a matter of fact.
That one morning changed everything. I meanย everything. Nothing could have prepared me for the events that followed.
Prepare yourselfโ€ฆ.
Youโ€™re about to see why.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

B&G Mystery: We Canโ€™t Tell You by Josh Martin is an ambitious and unsettling thriller that begins in the quiet of a Wisconsin morning but quickly spirals into a labyrinth of dรฉjร  vu, cryptic notes, phantom figures, and rules that seem to govern fate itself. Told through the eyes of a seventeen-year-old whose memory and reality keep splintering, the novel places readers in the same disoriented state as its protagonist, never sure whether he is awake, dreaming, or being manipulated by forces beyond comprehension.

The bookโ€™s strength lies in its atmosphere. From the very first pages, the story is drenched in dread. The text messages, the mysterious trio in the woods, the near-death experiences at intersections, and the omnipresent feeling of being watched create a constant sense of unease. Symbolism is cleverly threaded throughout, providing narrative cohesion even when the plot itself veers into deliberate chaos.

I must point out that the narrative often undermines itself with repetition. Tension that should build steadily sometimes loops back on itself, making the pacing sag in the middle chapters. Yet when the book works, it works brilliantly. The closing chapters bring together many of the scattered clues and escalate the narrative into cosmic horror, suggesting that the story is not merely about one boyโ€™s fractured reality but about humanity itself being manipulated, collected, and used.

We Canโ€™t Tell You Part 1 is a bold, eerie, and at times brilliant psychological thriller that thrives on atmosphere and symbolism. It is a gripping, confusing, and unforgettable experience that lingers long after the last page, even if the reader is left with more questions than answers.


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Book Review: The Fortunetelling Wizard by Amanda White

Book Details:

Author: Amanda White
Release Date:
January 27, 2025ย 
Series:
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 192 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Legends and common knowledge donโ€™t always agree, but when it comes to wizards the facts are not so far from the stories.
Both say that tunics are made from wild magic. Both say that a len who catches, tames, and puts on a tunic is a wizard. And both say that a wizard is named and known by his deeds. Take Duin the Fearless or Bjarne the Vengeful as examples.
My name is Hol and I am a wizard of the kingdom of Dar.

Though this is true, what name will come from my deeds is yet unknown.
From the time I was young, my mother said I would be known as Hol the Proud. The Queen once called me Hol the Loyal. The other wizards of Dar call me Hol the Upstart. Most times, I fear I will be remembered as Hol the Failed.
My tunic has its own opinions about what I should be called.
In fact, my tunic has opinions about everything.
If it has its way, I will be known as Hol the Fortunetelling Wizard.
But there hasnโ€™t been a fortunetelling wizard in Dar in over eight hundred years and because I didnโ€™t actually catch or tame my tunic, I fear even more that I might not even be a wizard at all.
I want to prove my mother wrong.
I want to prove the other wizards wrong.
And most of all, even if my tunic ends up being right, I hope I prove myself wrong as well.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Amanda Whiteโ€™s The Fortunetelling Wizard and Other Stories from the Kingdom of Dar is a lushly imagined fantasy tale set in the kingdom of Dar, where magic is not merely spectacle but a dangerous, demanding force. At its heart is Hol, a young wizard bound to a tunic of wild magic, who dares to take on the mantle of being the fortune-telling wizard, thought to be extinct for over eight hundred years.

What makes the book so compelling is its voice. Told in first person, Holโ€™s narration is both intimate and wry, colored by his constant dialogue with his sentient tunic. This relationship, half companion and half conscience, lends the story a unique freshness, layering humor and heart into scenes that might otherwise veer too dark. The mythology of fortunetelling wizards is richly drawn, giving the narrative a depth of history that feels lived-in.

Thematically, the novel is about destiny versus agency. Hol is repeatedly warned that โ€œknowing the future does not save one from itโ€, yet he clings to the belief that โ€œtelling the future saves others.โ€ This tension drives the story, especially as he becomes entangled with kings, queens, banshees, and form stealers.

The bookโ€™s greatest strength, its rich and lyrical prose, is also, at times, its weakness. Sentences often seem to run long, layered with description and lore. While this creates atmosphere, it occasionally hampers pacing. A leaner approach could heighten the urgency of the plot without sacrificing its richness.

That said, author White succeeds in crafting a tale that feels both old and new. The interplay of folklore, political intrigue, and personal ambition gives the novel a layered texture, and Holโ€™s determination to prove himself makes him an endearing protagonist. The climactic confrontations, especially with the form stealer, are vivid, cinematic, and emotionally charged.

On the whole, The Fortunetelling Wizard is a thoughtful, atmospheric fantasy that stands out for its inventive magic system and its narratorโ€™s unique voice. Though it could benefit from tighter pacing in places, it remains a worthy, ambitious contribution to the genre.


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Book Review: Deadly Odds 8.0 by Allen Wyler

Book Details:

Author: Allen Wyler
Release Date:
7 July 2025
Series: Deadly Odds
Genre: Medical Thriller, Thriller, Cyber Thriller, Suspense
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 281 pages
Publisher: Stairway Press
Blurb:
On a Sunday morning, an unsuspecting parishioner collapses on the steps of a church.
Moments later the CEO of a cardiac pacemaker company receives a phone call from an electronically distorted voice demanding that they shutter their business by the end of the week, or he will continue to kill implanted patients.
Arnold Goldโ€™s team of cyber detectives must now race the clock to track down the hackerโ€™s identity and stop him before he can kill other innocent victims.
Arnold Gold and his team of techie geniuses break their vowโ€”no new clientsโ€”when a hacker launches a deadly game targeting AI-driven pacemakers. Another heart-stopping read from Allen Wyler.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Deadly Odds 8.0 by Andy Wyler is a tightly woven medical cyber-thriller that feels both frighteningly plausible and compulsively readable. The story opens with a seemingly ordinary Sunday morning at church, shattered when a parishioner collapses, his AI-driven pacemaker fatally compromised. Almost immediately, the CEO of a cardiac device company is threatened by a faceless hacker: shut down your operations or more people will die.

Enter Arnold Gold and his team of cyber detectives. Known for their vow of taking on no new clients, they are forced to break it when lives hang in the balance. What follows is a relentless chase through the shadowy world of hacking, corporate sabotage, and medical technology vulnerabilities.

What I loved most about this book is how author Wyler blends medical science with cutting-edge cyber warfare. The plot is terrifying because itโ€™s plausible, the idea that someone could weaponize pacemakers through AI isnโ€™t far-fetched in our world of interconnected devices. That plausibility gives every chapter a pulse of urgency.

Arnold, with his brilliant but socially awkward demeanor, anchors the story. His sharp intellect paired with his teamโ€™s collective skills makes for some clever, nail-biting investigative sequences. At the same time, author Wyler doesnโ€™t lose sight of the human stakes: each victim is a reminder that this isnโ€™t just a game of codes and firewalls, itโ€™s about real lives being extinguished with a keystroke.

The pacing is tight, the tension unrelenting, and the moral questions layered just enough to keep you thinking even as you flip the pages in a rush.

Deadly Odds 8.0 is another heart-stopping entry from Allen Wyler, perfect for readers who enjoy thrillers that merge medical technology, cybercrime, and high-stakes suspense. If youโ€™re looking for a story that feels both entertaining and frighteningly possible, this oneโ€™s a must-read.


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Book Review: Job Junky by Rudy Ridolfo

Book Details:

Author: Rudy Ridolfo
Release Date:
2 May 2025
Series:
Genre: Memoir, Non-Fiction, Humour, Essay
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 131 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Job Junky is a bare-bones memoir of work, survival, and everything in between.ย Told in short, raw chapters, it reads more like a barstool confession than a polished life story.
Rudy Ridolfo worked over 50 jobs while chasing a creative dreamโ€”from managing shady bars and moving trucks to airport tarmacs, martial arts dojos, and indie film sets. Along the way, he crossed paths with unforgettable coworkers, chaotic bosses, and even icons like Al Pacino and Robert Redfordโ€”learning not from their fame, but from how they worked

Thereโ€™s no tidy arc or grand revelation here. Just true stories from the grindโ€”gritty, absurd, and unexpectedly funny.
If youโ€™ve ever clocked in, burned out, or wondered what the hell youโ€™re doing with your lifeโ€”this oneโ€™s for you.

โ€œA funny, delightful, and incisive tour of working odd jobs.โ€
โ€”Kirkus
โ€œWildโ€ฆ Reading this book is a ride.โ€
โ€”Independent Book Review
โ€œFast, matter-of-fact, and full of memorable moments.โ€
โ€”San Francisco Book Review
โ€œInsightful, humorous, and engaging.โ€
โ€”The US Review of Books

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

There are memoirs, and then there are wild, gut-punched, whiskey-soaked truth bombs like Job Junky. Rudy Ridolfoโ€™s unconventional chronicle of forty-odd jobs spanning decades reads like Hunter S. Thompson and Charles Bukowski got together to document the gig economy before it had a name.

What begins as a sardonic retort to a dismissive remark, “You were in the movie business,” spirals into a fever-dream confession about the absurdities of surviving while chasing a creative life. From sewage trucks and donut shops to nightclubs, acting gigs, and near-death moments, Ridolfo throws you headfirst into scenes that are messy, hilarious, and heartbreakingly human.

The structure is episodic, like reading journal entries dictated by someone whoโ€™s part philosopher, part hustler, and part accidental prophet of the working class. And it works. Because Ridolfo doesnโ€™t just tell us what he didโ€”he shows us how it felt to be discarded, desired, disoriented, and ultimately defiant.

Thereโ€™s something profoundly liberating about this bookโ€™s refusal to be polished. The stories are vulgar and vulnerable in equal measure, peppered with gritty humour and surprising emotional depth. As a writer, I found myself admiring how effortlessly he shifts toneโ€”from bawdy to tender, from surreal to sobering. It’s memoir meets street theatre meets a cigarette break in a film noir.

But what elevates Job Junky is that it’s not just about jobs. Itโ€™s about identity. About masculinity. About family wounds and inherited violence. About the price of pursuing art when life keeps shoving reality in your face. It’s not merely a working man’s diary, itโ€™s a manifesto of survival with grace, even in degradation.

That said, the bookโ€™s rawness may not suit everyone. Some anecdotes push boundaries, and others may come off as overly indulgent or chaotic. But in Ridolfo’s world, that’s kind of the pointโ€”there’s no tidy resolution, only a relentless will to keep moving.

Ultimately, Job Junky is a masterclass in lived experience, told by a man who has nothing left to prove and everything to confess. Itโ€™s equal parts tragic and triumphant, and if youโ€™ve ever felt like your โ€œreal jobโ€ was just a myth youโ€™re still chasing, this book is for you.


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Book Review: The Ghost Whisperer by Andrew Masseurs

Book Details:

Author: Andrew Masseurs
Release Date:
1 June 2025
Series: A Day in the Life Series (Book 5)
Genre: Post-Apocalypse, Thriller, Dystopia, Survival Horror
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 428 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
‘A Tale of Revenge!’
Vengeance! Lucy is hunting down the men who did her wrong. One victim at a time! How can she achieve this in a world full of vicious predators both human and inhuman and who is the unlikely stranger she has grown an alliance with? Can Michael, Shelby and the Uncles of the Apocalypse free Tim, Steven and Mr Oscar from the horrific chains of The Hunter and most importantly will Horacio complete the twelve tasks to become an Uncle?

Will Tony, Luke and Matt survive the wrath of a woman scorned and what dreams are haunting Teresaโ€™s nightmares?
All these questions and more will be answered in the exciting fifth book in the A Day in the Life Series. A book you wonโ€™t want to miss and will not be able to put down. The vengeful, merciless tale of, โ€˜The Ghost Whisperer!โ€™
Join in the fight to surviveโ€ฆ

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

The fifth instalment in Andrew Masseursโ€™ A Day in the Life series, The Ghost Whisperer, is a relentless plunge into a brutal, post-apocalyptic nightmare where survival is never guaranteed and alliances are as fragile as the bodies that make them.

Author Masseurs wastes no time immersing us in his bleak, creature-infested world; a place where monstrous predators roam freely, the cold itself feels like a weapon, and trust is as dangerous as betrayal. Through a web of interlinked perspectives the novel balances the intimacy of personal vendettas with the sweeping scale of survival horror.

The prose is cinematic yet gritty, pulling you through narrow corridors, ice-bitten roads, and tense face-offs that feel like they could detonate at any second. The atmosphere is relentless, and even moments of camaraderie are undercut by the knowledge that trust can be a death sentence.

What author Masseurs does brilliantly is layer human conflicts over the already hostile environment. The grotesque, otherworldly predators are terrifying, but itโ€™s the moral compromises, the fractured loyalties, and the moments of desperation that make the novel so unnerving. You never quite know whether the real danger is outside the door or sitting across from you at the fire.

While itโ€™s part of a series, The Ghost Whisperer stands strongly on its own, though readers familiar with earlier books will appreciate the deeper character arcs and recurring threads. Itโ€™s violent, tense, and at times deeply unsettling, but it also has an undercurrent of resilience that serves as a reminder that even in a world this far gone, vengeance, loyalty, and survival are still deeply human drives.

The Ghost Whisperer is a gritty, atmospheric continuation of the A Day in the Life saga that blends creature horror with the even sharper horror of human nature. Not for the faint-hearted, but highly recommended for fans of apocalyptic fiction that doesnโ€™t pull its punches.


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Book Review: Face in the Sand (Burn My Shadow Issue #1) by Sebastiano Lanza

Book Details:

Author: Sebastiano Lanza
Release Date:
March 27, 2025
Series: Burn My Shadow (Book 1)
Genre: Graphic Novel
Format: E-book 
Pages: under 100 pages
Publisher: Markosia Enterprises
Blurb:
November 2113. Tharmas and K – outcasts of society – are in dire need of supplies. They journey to Leipzig, the nearest megalopolis. Here, Tharmas comes to knowledge of an impending speech by Thomas Crowley – the head of public relations of the European Commission. Tharmas is positive Mr Crowley holds a dark truth, which will lead him to what heโ€™s after.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

From the very first panel, Face in the Sand pulls you into a bleak, wind-scoured world where survival is as much about grit as it is about sheer luck. This opening issue of Burn My Shadow doesnโ€™t waste time with exposition dumps, instead, it drops us straight into the desperate trek of Tharmas and K, two unlikely companions bound together by necessity. Hunger gnaws, water runs low, and the only constants are the endless desert and the shadow of danger that seems to follow them.

The sepia-toned palette by Iacopo Calisti sets the perfect tone for this dystopian landscape where the muted colours arenโ€™t just aesthetic, but they press down on you, almost making you feel the grit in your teeth and the oppressive heat on your skin. The dialogues keep the pacing sharp, giving urgency to their terse exchanges and adding weight to the silences between them.

What I loved most was how quickly the author establishes a sense of moral tension. This isnโ€™t just another survival story; itโ€™s about the choices you make when the world has stripped away comfort, civility, and certainty. The city they eventually reach is no haven, itโ€™s a place of masks (literal and metaphorical), rigid control, and desperation. The faceless enforcers are unsettling, their uniform anonymity acting as a chilling contrast to the raw humanity of the people scraping by.

The action sequences are tight and cinematic. The supply run chase had me flipping panels with bated breath. If this first issue is any indication, Burn My Shadow promises a gritty, morally complex journey where every step forward costs something. Itโ€™s tense, atmospheric, and unflinching. It is a story that asks how far youโ€™d go to survive, and who you might become along the way.


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Book Review: A New Life by L J Ambrosio

Book Details:

Author: L J Ambrosio
Release Date:
21 July 2025
Series: Reflections of Michael Trilogy (Book 3)
Genre: Literary Fiction, Contemporary Fiction
Format: E-book 
Pages: 166 pages
Publisher: Louis Ambrosio
Blurb:
From America to the streets of Paris, A New Life follows two friends as they navigate grief, love, and self-discovery in a city filled with history and hope. A New Life is a story that lingers long after the last page. In the shadow of personal loss, two men journey from America to Paris in search of healing, purpose, and a place to belong. Set against the romantic backdrop of Shakespeare and Company bookstore, A New Life is a poignant tale of love, loss, and the transformative power of friendship, literature, and new beginnings.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

A New Life by L.J. Ambrosio is the third book in the Reflections of Michael Trilogy. It is one of those deep, philosophical books that doesn’t merely tell a story, it makes you to pause and listen. Itโ€™s a meditation on grief, friendship, memory, and the philosophical pursuit of freedom, wrapped in the intimate bond between two men, Ron and Louie, as they go through life in Paris after profound personal losses.

At its core, this novel isnโ€™t plot-driven; itโ€™s character-driven, emotion-led, and deeply poetic. Author Ambrosio invites us into the world of Shakespeare and Company as a sanctuary, a home for the broken and the brilliant. Through rich, dialogue-heavy scenes and introspective monologues, we witness Louie and Ron as they rebuild their lives and identities in the wake of death, trauma, and exile.

What I found particularly compelling is Ambrosioโ€™s ability to layer personal grief with historical and literary subtexts. Through references to St. John of the Cross, Virginia Woolf, Hart Crane, and Sylvia Beach, the novel situates its characters within the lineage of great thinkers, artists, and seekers, many of whom were outcasts in their own time. This intertextual depth lends the book a haunting resonance, reminding us how art often emerges from profound solitude.

Louie, who is at once fragile and radiant, feels like a character born out of longing. His bond with Ron is tender, real, and beautifully undefined; it resists the binaries of friendship and romance, instead embracing something more nuanced: chosen kinship. Other secondary characters add their own textures to Louieโ€™s emotional backdrop, shaping his growth and reminding us that human connection is always political and spiritual.

This book isnโ€™t for readers who crave fast pacing or traditional plot arcs. Itโ€™s for those who enjoy wandering thoughts, philosophical digressions, and the meditative rhythm of characters sitting in cafรฉs talking about art, grief, and the unknowable future. Itโ€™s a novel that asks you to slow down and feel rather than simply read.

There are moments where the prose becomes slightly repetitive or self-referential, but even that feels intentional, as if echoing the loops of memory and grief the characters are caught in. And thereโ€™s something profoundly healing in that.

Overall, this is a book about remembering, and in remembering, beginning again. Author Ambrosio gives us a novel of resistance; the resistance of the artist, the queer body, the intellectual, and the survivor. And in doing so, he leaves us not with answers, but with a space to contemplate our own โ€œnew life,โ€ whatever that may mean.


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Book Review: HUMAN byย Brett Hodnettย 

Book Details:

Author: Brett Hodnettย ย 
Release Date:
2 April 2025
Series:
Genre: Apocalyptic, Post-Apocalyptic, Dystopian, Speculative Fiction
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 242 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
A remarkable exploration of family, society, and what makes us human, HUMAN will take you from the post-apocalyptic world of the near future, to the two very different societies that emerge 15 million years later, where those few surviving individuals have evolved to become something that we might not fully recognize as human.
When Aylaโ€™s research takes her to a remote river in Canadaโ€™s far north, Chris brings their daughter to an isolated island in the southern Pacific. Though at opposite ends of the earth, they both awaken one morning to black skies, and a night that doesnโ€™t end. Slowly, Ayla and Chris begin to realize that humanity has been…

… inexplicably wiped out, and only their isolation has saved them. Besides the handful of people around them, they are now alone in the world. As they struggle to build new ways to live, they must also struggle with how to let go of their past.

Millions of years later, when their descendants finally meet, they have evolved to become two very different kinds of humans, with two very different civilizations. As each tries to build a better world for themselves, navigating love, loss, betrayal and success within their own societies, their biggest challenge may be to recognize the humanity of the other.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Spanning timelines that leap not just decades but millions of years, HUMAN is a genre-bending, mind-expanding tale that defies easy categorization. At its heart, this novel is about survival, of the individual, the species, and above all, of meaning. What happens when humanity is pushed to its limits? What remains?

We begin in the aftermath of an environmental apocalypse, with Ayla and a group of survivors trying to rebuild society from the ashes of catastrophe. This is not your typical dystopia. Thereโ€™s a measured quietness here, an introspective tone that lingers on community, on language, and on grief. As the book unfolds, we shift to completely different worldsโ€”one thousands of years in the future, under the ocean, with genetically evolved descendants of humanity like Kakapen and Emee; and then again, even deeper into a far-flung speculative future.

Whatโ€™s striking is how seamlessly author Hodnett moves between perspectives. The transitions from Ayla and Luke, to Edvar and Ilusia, to Isko, to Kakapen and Emee, and beyondโ€”all build toward a cumulative meditation on what it means to be human in any form. Despite wildly different settings and physical realities, there’s a throughline of connection, love, and the need to be seen.

The novel is also deeply anthropological. Itโ€™s not just worldbuilding, itโ€™s world-layering. We see how cultures form, how language evolves, and how rituals replace memories. And even when society becomes alien, the emotions remain achingly familiar.

Stylistically, the writing is clean, at times sparse, but rich with internal reflection. Author Hodnett allows silent moments to breathe and trusts the reader to engage with the ideas without excessive exposition. And while some readers may find the multi-era structure disorienting, I found it quite satisfying as if I were reading a long, braided essay disguised as speculative fiction.

If I have a quibble, itโ€™s only that certain sectionsโ€”especially in the second and third narrative strandsโ€”could benefit from more emotional grounding. Sometimes the ideas leap ahead of the character arcs. But the final act brings it all together with poignant clarity.

In short, HUMAN is an ambitious, genre-straddling novel that asks questions instead of giving answers. It’s perfect for readers who loved Cloud Atlas, The Overstory, or Annihilationโ€”and for anyone who finds themselves wondering, not just what our future holds, but what kind of people we become to survive it.


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ARC Review: More Than Conquerors: On The Run by DJanรฉe

Book Details:

Author: Djanee
Release Date:
21 October 25
Series:
Genre: Science-Fiction, Speculative Fiction, Faith-Infused, Thriller, Action, Christian Literature
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 296 pages
Publisher: Xulon Press
Blurb:
Sophie and her friends have been captured and held prisoner for the purpose of obtaining intelligence they do not have. They have been burned, tortured, and abused for days right after having everything that they have ever known destroyed and taken away from them. They discover from a prophecy that mysteriously appeared to them in the night that they are destined to escape. Motivated with determination and purpose, they must develop a plan for freedom. What they don’t know is that past all the dangerous guards and the unsurpassable escape route is a surprise that will change their lives forever. Djanรฉe loves writing songs, novels, poetry and singing. Her Christian faith is the cornerstone of her life. Inspired by the action and the adrenaline from three separate dreams in one night, what began as a mini-story on a few sheets of loose-leaf paper evolved into the digital writing of an 800 plus word story. The thrillers and twists in the story surprised her, and the different elements in the story wound up melding together flawlessly as though planned. Realizing this had to be more than happenstance she felt led to publish her book, which has become a series.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

More Than Conquerors: On the Run by DJanรฉe is an energetic and highly imaginative work of Christian speculative fiction, blending sci-fi, action, and faith themes into a fast-paced, futuristic narrative. At its heart, this is a story about perseverance, belief, and survival against overwhelming odds that’s a clear reflection of the author’s intent to fuse entertainment with deeper spiritual resonance.

The world-building is ambitious: a futuristic society layered with danger, advanced technology, and oppressive systems. Yet, at the core of it all is faith, which is presented not as a preachy addition but as an organic part of the charactersโ€™ journey. Author DJanรฉeโ€™s writing captures the urgency of the chase, the desperation of her characters, and the resilience required to keep moving forward, even when the world seems intent on crushing them.

What worked well for me was the sheer momentum of the narrative. Thereโ€™s rarely a dull moment; the plot races along with the same relentless energy as its protagonists, who are constantly on the run, battling not only physical adversaries but their own doubts and fears as well.

However, at times, the execution wobbles slightly and some parts feel overwritten, certain characters could benefit from more depth, and the pacing occasionally sacrifices clarity for speed. That said, the message shines through: faith can be the anchor in the most turbulent of storms.

I’d recommend this book for readers who enjoy speculative fiction infused with faith, action, and a strong sense of purpose. Think of it as a futuristic spiritual thriller with heart.


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Book Review: The Faery Enchantment by Marie Lukic

Book Details:

Author:ย Marie Lukicย 
Release Date:
April 2025
Series: Kingdom of Nerada (Book #2)
Genre: Fantasy, Middle Grade
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 105 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Dottimar returns to the sunken sea kingdom and desperately tries to awaken her son, rainbow dragon, Cathoundral, who has been enchanted by Orange Faery. Ancient faery Verimetus and her grand-daughter, Blue Lantern faery, Vermial, lead Triton, the dragons and the merfolk into the Abyss in an attempt to find Triton’s missing daughter, Princess Sirena Mirashal.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

If youโ€™re someone who loves classic fairy tale energy (think shimmering kingdoms, ancient magic, enchanted creatures, and brave quests) then The Faery Enchantment by Marie Lukic is bound to charm you. Author Lukic has created a rich, imaginative world where dragons, merfolk, and faeries collide in a story brimming with wonder, danger, and heartfelt moments.

At its heart, this is a tale of family, loyalty, and the lengths weโ€™ll go to save the ones we love. Dottimarโ€™s desperation to save her rainbow dragon son, Cathoundral, sets the tone for a story full of high-stakes adventure. Meanwhile, Verimetus and Vermial (who might just be my favorite characters) add layers of ancient wisdom and courage to this already magical narrative.

The underwater scenes are beautifully rendered and feel lush and vivid, and the blend of folklore with fantasy is handled with a delicate, almost lyrical touch. Author Lukicโ€™s world-building feels expansive and lived-in, with hints of deeper mythology beneath the surface.

While I loved the story, at times, the pacing felt a little uneven. Certain sections could have been tighter to keep the momentum flowing, especially for younger readers who thrive on action and clarity. However, the richness of the world and the warmth of the characters more than make up for it.

The Faery Enchantment is perfect for fans of The Water Horse or The Spiderwick Chronicles, those who love their fantasy with a splash of wonder, heart, and a dash of darkness.


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Book Review: Tokyo Tangents by Robin S. Hasuki

Book Details:

Author: Robin S. Hasukiย 
Release Date:
June 1, 2025
Series:
Genre: Literary Fiction, Surreal Fiction / Magical Realism, Contemporary Fiction, Slice-of-Life Fiction, Japanese-Inspired/East Asian Literature
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 321 pages
Publisher: JCA Press
Blurb:
Tokyo Tangents is a quietly haunting, speculative fiction novel, laced with Japanese pop culture and metafictional nudges. Fans of Haruki Murakami, Makoto Shinkai, Andy Kaufman, or David Mitchell will feel right at home in this dreamlike Tokyo, where nothing is ever quite what it seems.
In the neon-lit party districts, between chiming convenience stores and countless hole-in-the-wall eateries, hidden histories lurk in every back alley. On the sweltering city streets, two strangers stumble upon a mystery that stretches far beyond their understanding of themselves and their place in the world.
A fading pianist, haunted by the weight of a crumbling career. A pharmacist, driven by the ghost of a brother long lost.
Linked by a fleeting encounter and an inexplicable connection, they begin pulling at threads that unravel long-buried secretsโ€”about their families, their pasts, and the seemingly solid seams of the universe around them.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

If Murakami were a bit more playful and less obsessed with wells, you might end up with something like Tokyo Tangents. Robin S. Hasuki has crafted a quietly surreal, oddly poignant picture of Tokyo, woven together through tales of commuters, piano players, secret doors, and mysterious women who vanish into the cityโ€™s folds.

This isnโ€™t a book you read in a single sitting. Rather, itโ€™s one you slip into, chapter by meandering chapter, much like wandering through the back alleys of Tokyo itself. Author Hasuki excels at capturing the ennui and madness of modern urban life, giving us characters whose loneliness feels tangible, yet whose eccentricities spark genuine curiosity.

What really worked for me was the understated humor and the surreal, almost dreamlike unfolding of the plot. The writing is restrained yet richly atmospheric, striking that uniquely Japanese balance between the absurd and the subtly melancholic. The intersections between characters, the piano player with his secret job and the pharmacist haunted by a family heirloom, feel like disparate threads that somehow harmonize by the end.

Itโ€™s not without its imperfections. Some parts stretch longer than necessary, and there are moments when the pacing lags, perhaps intentionally to reflect the monotony of daily life, but it risks testing the readerโ€™s patience.

Still, Tokyo Tangents is a book for those who savour atmosphere, character introspection, and stories about the unnoticed magic tucked into the cracks of everyday existence. A charming, subtle, and strangely affecting debut.


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Book Review: Isabella Airyfairyabelous & the Sleepy Dragon by by Marie Lukic

Book Details:

Author:ย Marie Lukicย 
Release Date:
April 2025
Series: Kingdom of Nerada (Book #1)
Genre: Fantasy, Middle Grade
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 145 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Princess Isabella embarks on a quest to find a magical cure for her tragically ill mother, Queen Julianne. Her exciting adventures lead her to hunt and fly sea dragons. Will Isabella finally discover a cure when all others have failed?
She also encounters Cyclops Ponder and his family as he battles for freedom after slavery.
An exciting adventure into a fantastical world where wonder thrives, danger lurks and humour occurs at every turn!

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Isabella Airyfairyabelous & the Sleepy Dragon by Marie Lukic is a fantasy book that is whimsical, witty, and full of wonder. It is a joyride through a richly imaginative world that children (and adults with a playful heart) will adore.

Princess Isabella is no ordinary royalโ€”sheโ€™s brave, quirky, and driven by a fierce love for her mother, Queen Julianne, whoโ€™s fallen gravely ill. When traditional cures fail, Isabella sets off on a quest brimming with dragons, magic, unexpected allies, and some seriously laugh-out-loud moments.

What I loved most is how effortlessly author Lukic blends classic fairy tale elements with modern charm. The writing sparkles with humor, the world-building is vibrant and whimsical, and the characters are unforgettable. Thereโ€™s depth beneath the adventure with themes of courage, freedom, and love running throughout the tale.

For young readers, this is the perfect introduction to fantasy as it is accessible yet layered with emotion and meaning. And for grown-up readers? Itโ€™s a reminder of the kind of magic we used to believe in. I’d recommend it for fans of How to Train Your Dragon, Ella Enchanted, and the kind of stories that make bedtime reading a nightly event to look forward to.


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Book Review: Lunarmancer by Jake Bennett

Book Details:

Author:ย Jake Bennettย 
Release Date:
July 10, 2023
Series:
Genre: Young Adult, Epic Fantasy
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 436 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Reika is a changeling, a human girl brought up in a kind community of Metazoans, a sapient
zoomorphic species who migrated from a distant land long ago. She works as a servant at the
Kingโ€™s citadel.
But all this changes when Reika and her friends Melito and Tabithaโ€”royal guards
at the citadelโ€”are attacked by rebel Metazoans led by the fearsome sorcerer Magnus. Facing
death, Reikaโ€™s true nature is revealed by the light of the full moon; a dormant power is
awakened, and Reikaโ€™s destiny changes forever.

In order to heal the darkness awoken in Reikaโ€™s soul, and to escape the machinations of
powerful foes, she will need allies. Thus begins an epic journey spanning multiple continents
and cultures, through magical and material perils, and even bending the fabric of time itself…
Lunarmancer is the debut YA fantasy-epic by Jake Bennett, a novel that marries the brilliant
ensemble casts of Kingdom Hearts and Final Fantasy with Tolkienโ€™s luscious world-building.

Review

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.

Lunarmancer by Jake Bennett is a sweeping, richly imagined fantasy epic that blends classic genre tropes like magic academies, prophecies, chosen ones, with a surprisingly intimate emotional core. What begins as a tale of self-discovery rapidly unfolds into a sprawling, multi-threaded saga of war, identity, loss, and resilience.

At the heart of it is Reika, a former servant girl grappling with a curse that transforms her into somethign she never imagined. Her journey is full of pain, sacrifice, and moments of profound inner reckoning. As a reader, and especially as a developmental editor, I was struck by the way Bennett threads psychological realism into a fantastical framework. Reikaโ€™s arc isnโ€™t just a magical evolution; itโ€™s a deeply human coming-of-age shaped by trauma, survival, and rediscovered agency.

What impressed me most is how author Bennett manages to juggle a vast ensemble cast including Junayd, Kenzuo, Lief, Destrian, and so many others, without losing narrative focus. Each character, even those on the margins, feels fully rendered with complex motivations and believable flaws. Thankfully, the villainy isnโ€™t cartoonish and the heroes arenโ€™t infallible. Itโ€™s this grey-toned morality that adds gravitas to the story, grounding its epic battles and magical lore in real emotional stakes.

The world-building is elaborate and detailed, perhaps a touch overwhelming at times, especially with terms like Dragelve Consortium, Somnium Carcerem, and Ferrum Champions flying fast and a bit too early (for me personally), but readers who love rich lore will find much to feast on. Thereโ€™s a real sense of history behind every location, political alliance, and magical artifact.

Stylistically, the prose leans towards cinematic, with fast-paced scenes punctuated with high-octane action. But where author Bennett shines is in quieter moments, like a quiet conversation under moonlight, that give the narrative its soul.

What keeps this book from being a full 5 stars is pacing: there are moments where exposition threatens to bog down the emotional momentum, and the sheer number of locations and lore elements can be disorienting. That said, itโ€™s a minor flaw in what is otherwise an impressively ambitious debut.

For readers of Brandon Sanderson, Tamora Pierce, or Fullmetal Alchemist, Lunarmancer will feel both nostalgic and refreshingly bold. Itโ€™s a tale of found family, inherited power, and the subtle, unglamorous courage it takes to choose your own path, even when fate has already written your story.


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Book Review: Children of Dysphoria: Book One Fall of Haven by Rudith Moore

Book Details:

Author:ย Rudith Mooreย 
Release Date:
May 11, 2025
Series: Fall of Haven (Book #1)
Genre: Speculative Fiction, Thriller, Literary Fiction, Dystopian
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 282 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
‘It was Hae-solโ€™s idea, Haven.
Always been obsessed with medicines and the idea of healing those he deemed broken, perhaps because of the cruel way he was raised and the trauma thatโ€™s festered because of itโ€ฆ or perhaps because inwardly, heโ€™s struggling to maintain his sanity, refusing to admit it until he can find and secure a definite remedy.’

Kyun-ho was eleven years old when him and his best friend created Haven.
They made Haven to help Kyun-ho’s brother cope with the cruel way society and their family treated him due to his schizophrenia.
Hae-sol and Kyun-ho would pretend to be his doctors, and Tae-kyun was happy because they only treated him with what made him happy.
Candy and teas for medicine, toys and games for therapy. That was Haven.
Until Hae-sol notices Tae-kyun’s condition is getting worse.
Until Hae-sol is no longer pretending to be his doctor, because he’s convinced he can truly fix Tae-kyun and anyone else he deems broken.
Until time has passed, and now they are 30, and only one of them can recognize the harm that came from Hae-sol’s doctoring, and the horror of all the crimes they’ve buried beneath that treehouse Haven was birthed in.
This is the story of Hae-sol and Kyun-ho, and the aftermath of a purposeful game of pretend.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Reading Children of Dysphoria by Rudith Moore feels like stepping into a slow-burning fever dream that stares directly into the disquieting face of society, trauma, identity, and the perilous tightrope between victimhood and vengeance. This is literary dystopia at its most searing, but also at its most nuanced.

The story weaves between multiple deeply traumatized charactersโ€”Kyun-ho, Hae-sol, Tae-kyun, Hyeong-cheol, and othersโ€”all children and teens weathered by neglect, abuse, institutional failure, and inherited pain. It reads like a series of fragmented testimonies carved into the walls of a collapsing world. Mooreโ€™s style is lyrical and feverish, sometimes poetic and sometimes claustrophobically visceral, but always emotionally exacting. Every sentence feels like it costs something. And you feel that cost.

The trauma here is not sanitized. Itโ€™s complex, intersectional, and realโ€”told through children navigating psychosis, autism, addiction, suicidal ideation, generational abuse, and religious gaslighting. The prose doesnโ€™t flinch from showing us what it means to survive in a world that refuses to see you as worthy of gentleness. But even in that brutal clarity, there is grace. There is care.

What astounds me most is how author Moore lets each character remain fully themselves, neither purely victims nor perfectly redemptive. Kyun-ho, for instance, is deeply flawed, a child forced into a caregiver role, riddled with guilt and anger, desperate for control in a life shaped by chaos. His love for Tae-kyun and complicated grief over Hae-sol are layered with such honesty, itโ€™s hard not to ache with him.

Thereโ€™s no plot in the traditional sense, and thatโ€™s intentional. The narrative moves like memory in a fragmented, circular, and nonlinear way. Scenes echo and haunt each other. The pacing is deliberately erratic, forcing the reader to experience the confusion, fatigue, and spiraling disassociation these children live with every day.

This book is emotionally rich, deeply upsetting at times, and will leave you gutted. But itโ€™s also one of the most important portrayals of complex trauma and neurodivergence Iโ€™ve come across in contemporary fiction. It doesnโ€™t just ask for empathy; it demands understanding.

Children of Dysphoria is not for everyone. But if youโ€™re willing to sit with discomfort, to read with your whole heart, this book will stay with you. Itโ€™s a masterwork of pain and love, of what it means to be broken and still reaching for something more. This book is not for passive readers. But if you allow it, it will reward you with an unforgettable reading experience that lingers in the bones.

Highly recommended for readers of Kathy Acker, Carmen Maria Machado, and Samuel R. Delany. A devastating, brilliant work of speculative literature.


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Book Review: Eva and Skye’s Magical Hair Solution by Darke Conteur

Book Details:

Author:ย Darke Conteur
Release Date:
January 7, 2025
Series:
Genre: Fantasy
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 390 pages
Publisher:
Blurb:
Itโ€™s 1982, and fourteen-year-old Evandra Shade befriends earth-muffin, Skye Daniels. Their friendship is a salvation from the social pressures of high school, especially when damage to the school is dubiously linked back to them and they must repay the school for the damage. A daunting task, until Skye learns Evandra has a secret; her family belongs to a magical society, and the girls quickly concoct a plan that will pay off the debt, and could make them popular.
Skye knows how to make natural hair dye and Eva knows how to infuse creative, mental and physical enhancements into the solution. Want to be more creative? Dye your hair yellow! Want to pass that exam? Blue hair will help you retain all the knowledge you read, and no one suspects thereโ€™s real magic behind it, even with a warning that states prolonged exposure to the โ€˜magical dyeโ€™ will have serious consequences. Before long the entire student body is awash in a rainbow of bright colours, but more importantly, success.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

What starts as a cheeky, fun idea with two teens creating a magical hair dye to help pay back their school, turns into a surprisingly thoughtful and layered narrative about friendship, responsibility, and the moral grey zones of using magic to โ€œfixโ€ what life throws at you.

Eva and Skye’s characters feel refreshingly real. Their dialogue sparkles with teen wit and weariness, and their bond with a mix of codependency, mischief, and genuine care, grounds the entire story. Eva, born into a magical family, is cautious and self-aware; Skye, her normie best friend, is impulsive and passionate. The magical hair dye they concoct to boost academic performance starts as an innocent hustle but quickly becomes a social phenomenon with unintended consequences.

Thereโ€™s a lot to love here: the cozy world-building with its spells and Yule flames, the textured family dynamics, the hints of larger magical systems just beneath the surface, and the way the story never forgets itโ€™s about two girls trying to make sense of their power โ€” both magical and personal. The writing is brisk, charming, and unafraid to lean into the awkward and the vulnerable. And the author doesnโ€™t shy away from heavier moments of jealousy and insecurity to the ethical dilemmas of magical capitalism.

What I loved most was the commentary on consent and boundaries. The dye may sparkle and shimmer, but it also influences emotions and behaviors making the line between intention and manipulation razor thin, and the book knows it.

If you enjoy contemporary fantasy that feels nostalgic yet emotionally intelligent, this book hits the mark. Think Sabrina the Teenage Witch meets Nevermoor, with a slice-of-life format that makes space for character growth over spectacle.

It’s a perfect start to what I hope is a long, magical series. Canโ€™t wait for more of Eva & Skyeโ€™s adventures.


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ARC Review: Geri o Shimasu: Adventures of a Baka Gaijin by Alia Luria

Book Details:

Author: Alia Luria
Release Date:
August 12, 2025
Series:
Genre: Memoir, Cultural, Japanese Culture
Format:ย E-bookย 
Pages: 196 pages
Publisher: Unsolicited Press
Blurb:
Geri o Shimasu: Adventures of a Baka Gaijinย invites readers on a witty, unfiltered romp through 2008 Japan as experienced by Alia Luria, a self-proclaimed “clueless foreigner.” Luria dives headfirst into the quirks and challenges of Japanese culture, from decoding onsen etiquette and enduring public embarrassment to exploring the oddities of love hotels and the loneliness of bustling crowds. With laugh-out-loud anecdotes and moments of poignant self-reflection, she unpacks the universal hilarity and humanity of navigating the unfamiliar. Whether she’s fumbling through train etiquette, braving bizarre foods, or embracing the messy beauty of cultural exchange, Luria’s candid storytelling is blunt, occasionally cringeworthy, and always unapologetically real. This collection is a hilarious and heartfelt reminder of the chaotic, awkward, and transformative adventures that shape us all.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Geri o Shimasu: Adventures of a Baka Gaijin by Alia Luria is a brilliant, ballsy, and wildly unpredictable collection that reads like a love letter to Japan written by someone who knows exactly when to laugh, when to cry, and when to just say, โ€œGeri oโ€™shimasu!โ€โ€”whatever that means in the moment.

This is not your traditional travel memoir. Itโ€™s sharp, fast-paced, and unapologetically personal. Through a series of biting, irreverent, and occasionally heartwarming vignettes, Oโ€™Shimasu invites us into her Japan โ€” not the glossy, curated version, but a chaotic, intimate, sometimes hilarious, sometimes heart-splintering ride through cultural collisions, language mishaps, and moments of deep insight.

This isnโ€™t a book that plays by the rules. And yet, beneath the humour, thereโ€™s a steady current of vulnerability such as reflections on identity, aging, desire, loneliness, and belonging. Author Luria knows when to let the absurdity shine and when to peel it back and show us something raw and real.

Stylistically, it reminded me of a cross between David Sedaris and Banana Yoshimoto โ€” razor-sharp observational humour meets quiet emotional resonance. Each chapterโ€™s accompanying reflections serve as both cultural footnotes and emotional pivots, adding layers of meaning to even the most outrageous tales.

As someone who reads across genres and edits with a focus on voice and tone, I found this collection to be an exceptional example of voice-driven non-fiction. Author Luria’s writing isnโ€™t just fearless, itโ€™s fiercely hers. Thereโ€™s nothing performative here; it’s messy, itโ€™s real, and itโ€™s electric.

Highly recommended for readers who want to travel, reflect, laugh, and occasionally wince โ€” all in one sitting. Geri o Shimasu: Adventures of a Baka Gaijin is a memoir that dismantles Japan’s culture, devours it, and dances in Japan’s weird little alleys with a bottle of sake in hand.


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