As with her first novel in the Feverwake duology, Victoria Lee’s sequel The Electric Heir crackles with that same magnetism that allures you to Noam’s chaotic and feverish world. Six months have passed since the events of The Fever King,…
Book Review: The Blossom and the Firefly by Sherri L. Smith
Sherri L. Smith flips the script on historical fiction in her latest novel The Blossom and the Firefly, detailing the alternate side of WWII from the Japanese war effort to the love between a girl and a kamikaze pilot. In…
Book Review: Red Hood by Elana K. Arnold
Elana K. Arnold spins fairy tale into fact with her debut Red Hood, a Little Red Riding Hood, retelling that cuts to the bone. Prom night: a long-awaited time for dancing, drinking, and for 16-year-old Bisou, wolf slaying. On the…
Book Review: Spellhacker by M.K. England
Set in a magic-fueled futuristic world, M.K. England’s Spellhacker dazzles with a compelling story of thievery, heavily-regulated magic, and the unscrupulous underbelly of corporate misdeeds. After a contaminated dose killed thousands, maz—a naturally-produced magic permeating from the earth—became highly-regulated and…
Book Review: The God Game by Danny Tobey
“Win and all your dreams come true. Lose, you die.” Welcome to The God Game, where Danny Tobey delves into the dark side of artificial intelligence and tests the boundaries of human morality. While fiddling around with an internet chatbot…
Book Review: The Fever King by Victoria Lee
Mixing a magical epidemic with prevalent societal issues, Victoria Lee’s The Fever King electrifies with its magnetic story, strong characters, and sweet romance. After a magical virus decimated modern civilization in the U.S., the land was cleaved in two, divided…
Book Review: The Whisper Man by Alex North
“I need to start with an apology. Because over the years I’ve told you many times that there’s no such thing as monsters. I’m sorry that I lied.” Cryptic, spine-chilling, and undoubtedly ominous, Alex North’s The Whisper Man is crime…