Foreword INDIE
2005 Editor's Choice Prize Nonfiction for Art
Book Review
Department Zero
When Cthulu calls, "Department Zero" listens. Paul Crilley’s zingy, hilarious new book takes a cheeky swipe at H. P. Lovecraft, Los Angeles, single fatherhood, and pretty much everything else. Peppered with pulpy slang and enough...
Book Review
A Father's Letters
by Karen Rigby
A father emphasizes remaining true to oneself in this moving collection of letters to his college-aged daughters. A Father’s Letters to His College Daughters by William Courter gathers insights, advice, and reflections from the pivotal...
Book Review
The Slush Pile Brigade
This high-energy, rollicking misadventure will change the way you look at the publishing industry forever. Calling themselves the Slush Pile Brigade as a nod to the unsolicited writings sent to publishing houses, four friends take on the...
Book Review
One Life: An Afghan Remembers
by Nancy Walker
Safi writes with eloquence and sophistication about a country that is striving to survive under the strictures of fundamentalism and ancient tribal enmities. "One Life: An Afghan Remembers" is a fascinating memoir, not only for its...
Book Review
Khamlok
Pagan rituals and herbal medicine team up with laser beams and space travel in "Khamlok", the second installment in Regina M. Joseph’s Alterran Legacy series. With Colony Earth in 2012, Joseph began to explore an alternate history of...
Book Review
The Way Up
Former lawyer Ward Jones has made good use of his private and corporate legal expertise in his fifth novel, "The Way Up". Against a backdrop of courtrooms, lawsuits, and the legal maneuvering needed to create an oil and gas exploration...
Book Review
Hiding in Sunshine
At a time when everyday life is fully dependent on technology, the idea of cyber warfare seems increasingly plausible. As "Hiding in Sunshine"’s main protagonist, Gavin Brinkley, notes, “Everyone is connected and our lives are the...
