The horror/urban fantasy genre has increased in popularity, especially in the young adult markets. Novels about vampires and werewolves—as well as ghosts, angels, and demons—are devoured by young and adult readers alike, especially... Read More
What if a conflict in America’s past came back to haunt its twenty-first-century citizens? When a man turns up dead in the Battle of Tippecanoe Park on the two-hundredth anniversary of the battle, a police officer assigned to the cause... Read More
South African poet A.E. Ballakisten’s latest collection of poems seethes with rage over the violence humanity inflicts upon itself and the natural world. Hope flickers amid the bleakness via the voices of Desmond Tutu, British nurse... Read More
Mike Griffin’s "Tales of the Lost Flamingo" challenges readers to determine where reality ends and fantasy starts. This includes the author’s bio, which states that the book was thirty-three years in the making, and Griffin expects... Read More
"Takeover" marks the first installment in a new science-fiction series by Mitchell Love in which two planets collide in a colossal war. A peaceful planet, ruled by King Allawen and Queen Vountin, is threatened by an insidious plan for... Read More
British author Pauline Sabin Moore’s historical romance, "Storm Frost", will be more readily received by dedicated followers of British Anglo Saxon history and literature than by general readers looking for happily-ever-after love and... Read More
One of the problems with modern politics, it’s been said, is that politicians tend to think small, shying away from grand ideas and rarely challenging the status quo. In Stella: A One-World Nation Platform, James Crippa outlines a... Read More
Although promoted on its back cover as an autobiography, Henry Lee Hill’s A Station Agent’s Story is more of a ranting memoir. Hill aims to expose the New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) for treating its... Read More