Editorial Reviews

My Cousin Darcy by Robin Elizabeth Kobayashi

My Cousin Darcy by Robin Elizabeth Kobayashi

Whimsically blending Regency style with a touch of the fairy tale, My Cousin Darcy by Robin Elizabeth Kobayashi is a smart, fun, and creative installment of her Sofia-Elisabete Stories, which reimagines characters from Pride and Prejudice. The historical dialogue, cultural touchpoints, and deep dive into the sporting side of British life suggest significant research by this detail-oriented author, along with skillfully balancing social intrigue, romance, and relatable vulnerability. Moreover, the writing contains beautifully woven allegories that bind the rich and descriptive prose with layers of meaning. Building on Austen’s storied protagonist, Kobayashi imbues this inventive series with authenticity, […]

2023-03-01T11:41:02+02:00February 27th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

The Hook by James Pack

The Hook by James Pack

A dark and spiraling mystery that probes into human nature, violence, and the supernatural, The Hook by James Pack is an original, dialogue-driven thriller. Searching for his mysteriously vanished wife after returning from his tour of duty as a Navy medic in Vietnam, Earnest Kemp is a determined and increasingly desperate man. His arrival in small-town Maine coincides with a bizarre and brutal murder, but he shakes off suspicions as he becomes enmeshed in the investigation, praying that it will lead him to his wife and child. Penned with a gritty grace that blurs the line between reality and something […]

2023-02-27T13:33:27+02:00February 21st, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

Office Poems by Nathan Nicolau

Office Poems by Nathan Nicolau

A varied but thematically concise work of contemporary poetry, Office Poems by Nathan Nicolau mixes together dreamlike verse with an undercurrent of sardonic social awareness. Nicolau’s emotive but playful verse and prose poetry guide the reader through original, ironic, and deeply felt contemplations about the fabric of everyday life – from mundane tasks to the nature of celebrity. At times, the poetry veers into prose reformatted into verse, but the mixture of humor and intellectual inquiry gives the collection a comfortably breezy flair, demonstrating the poet’s total control over his vision. Written with straightforward but layered language, Nicolau’s collection of […]

2023-02-21T17:16:39+02:00February 20th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

After the Parch by Sheldon Greene

After the Parch by Sheldon Greene

Author Sheldon Greene pulls readers into a post-collapse prophecy of America with his stark and cautionary novel, After the Parch. Half a century in the future, the United States has dissolved and resilient pioneers of the ensuing chaos seek little more than stability and safety in a dry and burned-out world, as a young man journeys through California to secure land and hope for the future of his small clan of survivors in the face of perpetual environmental exploitation. Bran’s wide-eyed wonder at the dangerous world before him gives this dystopian slice of on-the-road storytelling an original and authentic […]

2023-02-20T15:42:15+02:00February 20th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

Copper Child by Emma Mnaya-Buzy

Copper Child by Emma Mnaya-Buzy

A lyrical playground of emotive recollections, Copper Child: Poems by Emma Mnaya-Buzy is an homage to innocence, self-confidence, love, and growth. Interspersed with vivid images that are both stunning and simple, mirroring the delicate and lilting language of the verse, readers are gently guided through meditations on mortality, rebirth, nature’s beauty, femininity, and the power of speech – a wide-ranging series of topics that manages to be thematically consistent. Wielding symbolic stories and universal metaphors with grace and creativity, Mnaya-Buzy imbues each poem with a visceral sense of magic and history, for a stunning and well-curated collection.

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2023-02-10T13:30:39+02:00February 8th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

This May Be Difficult to Read by Claire N. Rubman, PhD

This May Be Difficult to Read by Claire N. Rubman

Author Claire N. Rubman, PhD presents a revolutionary new take on a fundamental facet of childhood development in This May Be Difficult to Read: But You Really Should (for your child’s sake). Calling out some of the most destructive myths and ineffective teaching methods related to reading and literacy, this is both a persuasive thesis and a friendly guidebook. Rubman does an excellent job of maintaining the accessibility of the book, without compromising her role as an academic authority and expert in the field. This May Be Difficult to Read is a tremendously helpful read for parents, teachers, and […]

2023-02-07T17:14:09+02:00February 7th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

The Serpent Underneath by Julie A. Fragoules

The Serpent Underneath by Julie A. Fragoules

A frightening novel about America’s potential future, The Serpent Underneath by Julie A. Fragoules is a grim prophecy of societal collapse, and a rough-cut vision of what chaos might follow. Driven by a three-dimensional cast of familiar characters – selfless social warriors, manipulative power-mongers, incompetent politicians, and bedfellows of desperation – the post-apocalyptic narrative borders on allegorical, for a powerfully written literary warning. Further strengthening the prose is Fragoules’ masterful ear for dialogue, as well as her clear fluency in social, political, ecological, and philosophical issues, both current and imminent, resulting in a prescient and engrossing work of speculative fiction.[…]

2023-02-07T14:06:43+02:00February 7th, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|

Voices in the Sanitorium by Amy Lynn Walsh

Voices in the Sanitorium by Amy Lynn Walsh

Voices in the Sanitorium by Amy Lynn Walsh is a gripping spiritual thriller exploring the psychological effect that an abandoned sanatorium, said to be haunted, has on a family who recently made the move to Pennsylvania from New York. Since the night she camped near the wrecked building, Aislyn is not her usual self – does she just miss her old life in the city, or is there something more sinister going on in their new home? Weaving together the present with the past, the supernatural with the historic, and horror scares with a well-crafted detective narrative, Walsh creates a […]

2023-02-03T14:57:24+02:00February 3rd, 2023|Categories: Editorial Reviews|
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