John Staughton, Senior Reviewer

About John Staughton, Senior Reviewer

Providing exceptional writing, editing and publishing services to hundreds of international clients, ranging from nutritional copywriting and long-form ghostwriting to substantive editing, assessment/analysis of academic texts and structural/content editing for bestselling novels.

Get Off by Scott Alderman

Prepare yourself for a rollicking, shocking, and inspiring story of life’s lowest lows and greatest heights in Get Off: The Sordid Youth and Unlikely Survival of a Queer Junkie Wonder Boy by Scott Alderman. This tell-all read is graphic and unabashed, detailing a life of sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll from both extremes: the ecstatic and the tragic. Unsentimental but sincere, Alderman is able to get past the romance of his own tall tales to pry out wisdom and meaning, as well as difficult lessons that ring timeless for youth of any generation.

 […]

2020-03-03T08:56:01+02:00March 3rd, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

Review: Time’s Musicians by Mark Paul Oleksiw

Time's Musicians by Mark Paul Oleksiw

A bizarre, mind-bending story unfurls on the pages of Time’s Musicians by Mark Paul Oleksiw, an author with an imagination only matched by his delicate and authentic style. In this decade-spanning novel, the idea of connections across time and space mix with our boundaries of mental health, love, and reality itself.

When Billy meets Dieter, a young boy with an unfinished comic book who claims he can travel through time, he has no idea that it will set him on a life-defining course. Dieter disappears under mysterious circumstances and Billy’s family moves to give him a fresh start, at which […]

Review: The Nosferatu Conspiracy: The Sleepwalker by Brian James Gage

The Nosferatu Conspiracy: The Sleepwalker by Brian James Gage

Dripping in drama and a grim, sinister pall, The Nosferatu Conspiracy by Brian James Gage is a dark piece of fiction that defies categorization. While there are certain elements of historical fiction, gothic romance, horror, and suspense, the author plays with form and uses language as a paintbrush, poetically scribbling on the dungeon walls of this striking novel.

Much of the action centers on a fictional alternate reality at the end of the Romanov Dynasty in Russia, a mysterious piece of history that has compelled storytellers and historians for generations. A supernatural angle takes the forefront in this novel, in […]

Six (A Demon Hunter Romance Book 1) by Carrie Thorne

Six (A Demon Hunter Romance Book 1) by Carrie Thorne

Author Carrie Thorne kicks off her Demon Hunter Romance series with Six, a steamy romance between two unexpected allies with a delicious paranormal twist. When a beautiful demon hunter literally falls out of the sky into Ryan Hunt’s life, destiny gets decidedly heavy-handed and forces the pair into solving a mystery using their unique skill sets. Avoiding the overused tropes of pulp romance writing, the paranormal edge to this story helps to keep the jokes fresh and the plot line unpredictable. Quinn and Ryan make a scorchingly sexy team and Thorne delivers a strong start to what should be […]

2020-02-26T11:29:58+02:00February 26th, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

Fall of the Raven by Thymournia

Fall of the Raven by Thymournia

Cloaked in shadowy themes and haunting in its imagery, Fall of the Raven by the poet Thymournia is a meditation on despair, isolation, and the loneliness of the observer. Presented as a collection of evocative photographs and fragmentary writing, the reading experience can be unnerving, as the book is existentially heavy and complex, even with its deceptively simple form. The ominous photography maintains a constant undertone of mystery, while the prose is terse and bold, sometimes directed at the Raven itself – the poetic tool that unifies this work. Laden with sorrow and challenging musings on death and perseverance, Fall […]

2020-02-26T08:33:35+02:00February 26th, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

What I Tell Myself First by Michael A Brown, Illustrated by Zoe Ranucci

What I Tell Myself First by Michael A Brown

Crucial life lessons and empowering personal affirmations for young children overflow on the vibrant pages of What I Tell Myself First by author Michael A. Brown, with illustrations by Zoe Ranucci. Unlike many other motivational books directed at younger readers, this book addresses both the good and the bad, presenting realistic, optimistic, and self-driving ideas that can help to shape developing minds. Beautifully illustrated with a clear vision of childhood challenges, What I Tell Myself First is an honest and original take on positivity and self-help for youngsters.

 […]

2020-02-25T10:18:18+02:00February 25th, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

The Rez: An American Love Story by G. Michael Madison

The Rez: An American Love Story by G. Michael Madison

Author G. Michael Madison offers an authentically deep plunge into reservation life in the 1960s and 1970s with his powerful novel The Rez: An American Love Story. The first in a trilogy of books, this is a profound examination of an oft-overlooked culture during a historically tumultuous time. Delicately dissecting the issues of racism, family, ambition and the American Way, The Rez is a humanistic peek into another world. With vivid dialogue and a sincere respect for his three-dimensional characters, Madison has laid the foundation for a deeply affecting series that feels contemporary and relevant.

 […]

2020-02-25T10:35:31+02:00February 24th, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

The Storm 1776 by Tom Schneider

The Storm 1776 by Tom Schneider

Author Tom Schneider transports readers to the violent and inspiring crucible of America in The Storm 1776, capturing the patriotic vigor and sacrifice of the country’s tentative first steps. Told through the humble eyes of a traumatized young boy and his sister trying desperately to find their father, the writing is both heartfelt and historically vivid. Exploring themes of revenge, duty, familial bonds, and persistence in the face of tragedy, The Storm 1776 is a gripping escape that echoes with authenticity.

 […]

2020-02-24T08:54:33+02:00February 24th, 2020|Categories: Editorial Reviews|
Go to Top