Review: Dead Angels By Glen R. Stott
Oily, paranoid, grim. “Dead Angels” by Glen R. Stott is an uncomfortable book, one that before any further reading should carry the warning that it touches on very sensitive material, and while it does...
View ArticleReview: The Gate Keeper by Jules Gabriel
The synopsis of The Gate Keeper by Jules Gabriel is intriguing.I am 16 years old and my name is Phil. In fact feel free to be me. Welcome into my world at high school. Feel the romance and the love I...
View ArticleReview: Echoes of Paradise by Deanna Kahler
Do you believe in the afterlife? Have you ever felt the presence of a loved one who has died, but couldn’t explain it? Deanna Kahler’s novel, Echoes of Paradise, is fiction. Yet if you are curious...
View ArticleReview: Bangalore Baloney by Thomas Itty
Bangalore Baloney written by Thomas Itty is a story that spans several decades and takes place in several countries. At its core, though, the book is the intimate journey of three young men. Given how...
View ArticleReview: My Friend, Freedom By Peter Eliot
My Friend, Freedom is a short story by emerging author Peter Eliot, set in futuristic, Dystopian London, following the life of Yakimoto, a Japanese immigrant, whose life is left in ruin after a failed...
View ArticleReview: Jesse James and the Secret Legend of Captain Coytus by Alex J. Mueck
Jesse James and the Secret Legend of Captain Coytus is the latest offering by Alex J. Mueck, an author who has shifted from more serious crime work to achieving more interesting edges in previous book...
View ArticleReview: The Devil’s Playground by Cynthia Sens
The Devil’s Playground (Sapphire Staff #1), by Cynthia Sens, is an action-packed novel that’s hard to put down. Mel Taylor was born in 1916. He’s lived through World War I and World War II. Now he’s...
View ArticleReview: I and You by Beverly Garside & Lucas Duimstra
This Ayn Rand-inspired comic book from writer Beverly Garside and illustrator Lucas Duimstra is a refreshing read in my pile of reviews this month.Drawing on the social theory by novelist Rand of...
View ArticleReview: A Bus Ride Home by Tidimalo
This debut novel by South African writer Tidimalo is part romance, part chick lit, but takes a unique approach to both genres. The story is framed by a hiking trip, and that trope comes up again and...
View ArticleReview: In The Name Of Vengeance by J. B. Bergstad
This second volume in the Hyde’s Corner Trilogy chronicles the continuing tribulations of Selmer Burks, sheriff of Sundowner County, Oklahoma. Before I go any further, let me warn you: This is a...
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