
Review: Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis
Do you enjoy your cozy fantasy with a villainous twist? If the answer is, yes, then this is the book for you! Recommended for fans of Assistant to the Villain.
Review: Stone & Sky by Z.S. Diamanti
Stone & Sky feels like the epic tales of the '80s and '90s, with modern twists and great pacing. Highly recommended for lovers of good fantasy adventures.
Review: Bloodwoven by G.J. Terral
Laws that cannot be broken, lest one wants to damn themselves. That’s what Lin thinks, until a surprise attack changes everything. Care to know more?
Review: Star Marshal by Jeffery Roarke Jr
Roarke’s writing has matured, and the straightforward approach ensures that every word counts offering a more polished and cohesive storytelling experience.
Review: Die Young by Morgan Shank
Political threads are woven masterfully, punches are not pulled and everything builds to an explosive finale that left me eager for the next book in the series.
Review: Dark Town, A Fantasy LitRPG Adventure: Level One of the Dragon's Crawl by Palmer Pickering
Whether you’re a seasoned litRPG fan or a high fantasy enthusiast, “Dark Town” offers a fresh, funny, and thoroughly engaging experience that’s hard to put down.
Review: The Wrong Stop by Rex Burke
Come for the comedy, stay for the comfort. The Wrong Stop is a quick and cozy weekend read perfect for fans of road trip buddy comedies from the 90s and 2000s.
Review: Julia by Sandra Newman
Sandra Newman reveals to us a different side of 1984’s dystopia, allowing us a peek into a far more uncomfortably tangible world than Orwell imagined.
Review: Riven Earth by Zammar Ahmer
Zammar ignites the theme of man versus nature while intertwining the reader in a grimdark world of emotional depth, unexpected twists, & complex characters.
Excerpt: The Doors of Midnight by R.R. Virdi
I came to Etaynia in search of the most important thing in the world. A story. A secret—the sort best held and better kept from the world. But I met with a prince instead.
Review: Wedding Dragon by Liv Rider
This book is the equivalent of a Hallmark movie if it was gay, had dragon shifters, and a good backstory to keep you hooked. A good brain melt to relax with.
Review: The Knight by Will Wight
90s nostalgia, the power of friendship, and everything that mega franchises are failing at, Will Wight manages with ease and consistency in the Last Horizon.
Review: Garden of Secrets by Drake LaMarque
If Harry Potter was regency, in the countryside, gay, and with enough smut to make you blush. (Coming from a person who hasn’t actually read Harry Potter)
Review: The Long Nights by Tom Mock
A STUNNING debut by all means! Fast-paced; exquisitely written; superb character work, and an incredible setting. Dark, horror, urban noir fantasy done right!
Review: A Princess of Oldir by Bryan Wilson
Whether A Princess of Oldir is your initiation to the Power of the Stars saga or you’re an experienced Solara wielder, this is a must-read for sci-fantasy fans.
Review: Golden Son by Pierce Brown
Golden Son features some of the most memorable, bombastic events I have ever seen in fiction, with scenes that cement Darrow and his enemies as iconic.
Review: Soul Cage by L.R. Schulz
Soul Cage is a complete fantasy package with a colorful world, complex characters, thought-provoking magic system, and a rich story that sets up a larger epic.
Review: Until We Shatter by Kate Dylan
If you said "Give me a book with found family, unstable magic, and an impossible heist." Don't be surprised when the only book I hand you is Until We Shatter.
Review: Unbound by Michael R. Miller
Unbound cut away the baby fat of Ascendant, leaving us with a lean, hard chunk of dragon jerky which is powering this series to Paragon status and beyond.
Review: Tea and Empathy by Shanna Swendson
The atmosphere is its undeniable charm. The book unfolds with a soothing cadence, blending elements of slice-of-life tranquility with tantalizing mysteries.