- Book Reviews
 
        - Books Published July 25, 2017
 
        
         
            July 25, 2017
    
        Here are all of the books we've reviewed
        that were
        published July 25, 2017.
                    You can also
            view all of the books we've reviewed that were published anytime in July 2017.
            
    
        		                            "The Sasquatch Murder" is an accomplished and thoroughly enjoyable tale, the kind of book one is sorry to finish because it’s such good company. No typical bigfoot tale, Jeffery Viles’s "The Sasquatch Murder" is a genre-bending novel... Read More
 
                                    Its innovative, visionary ideas make Planetary Rent a book of vital importance. Planetary Rent by Aleksandr Bezgodov is a visionary manifesto promoting an innovative way of managing the planet’s resources. Envisioning a broad, unified... Read More
 
                                    All the world’s Jews, Christians, Muslims, Hindus—they’re peas in a faith-based pod. But Buddhists don’t belong in there. No, the Buddhist gig is more about waking up to what’s real, realization of how the universe really... Read More
 
                                    It’s 2109. Teleportation coexists with Rome’s iconic Vespa scooters, and the Mona Lisa has just disappeared. Following a plasma storm that knocks out the city’s tech network, Joel Byram wakes up with a very loose grasp on time... Read More
 
                                    Success stories throughout provide good reason for audiences to feel inspired, shake off self-doubt, and reach for the stars. Rule #1 Don’t Be #2 by Daniel Milstein is an inspirational book filled with familiar thoughts about achieving... Read More
 
                                    The images evoked in this reframing of vampire legends are both familiar and strange. Lee Markham’s cross-genre "The Truants" pulls no punches in its paradigm-shifting treatment of vampire legends. An unnamed man sits on a park bench... Read More
 
                                    The circus becomes both a refuge for Depression-era misfits and a site for additional cruelty. Ellen Marie Wiseman gathers potent Gothic elements in The Life She was Given to examine the impact of child abuse across generations. A... Read More