The Name and the Key
Posted by Literary Titan

Kristina Elyse Butke’s The Name and the Key is a fantasy novel with a strong gothic streak, and it opens like a haunted coming-of-age story before widening into something darker and stranger. It follows Lily Bellamy after her mother disappears into the woods and is found dead, an event that leaves Lily grieving, marked by visions in mirrors, and pulled toward a hidden magical world tied to names, doors, demons, and her bond with her childhood friend Andresh. What I liked right away was how the book grounds all that big fantasy machinery in personal loss first, so the magic never feels like decoration. It feels like grief changing shape.
Lily’s first-person narration has an earnest, intimate quality that made me feel close to her even when the plot moved into more elaborate fantasy territory. The early sections are especially strong. The discovery in the marsh, the mirror hauntings, the smell of death she cannot wash away, all of that lands with real force because Butke lets the horror feel physical and emotional at the same time. I also liked that the book is not in a hurry to sand Lily down into a polished heroine. She is frightened, stubborn, curious, and sometimes overwhelmed in ways that feel believable. That gave the story a human center I could hold onto.
I also found myself interested in the author’s choices, even when they made me pause. The book blends fantasy, gothic horror, romance, and a bit of alchemical and occult imagery, which gives it a distinct texture. Sometimes that mix really works. The ideas about true names, mirrors as thresholds, and magic as Word, Deed, and Will gave the story a mythic feel without losing its emotional thread. There were moments when I felt the book was reaching in several directions at once, and I could feel the scaffolding of a larger series underneath it. Since this is the first book in a trilogy, some developments read less like a full stop and more like a door opening into the next room. I did not mind that, but I think readers who want every thread tied off in one volume may feel that incompleteness more sharply.
I’d recommend The Name and the Key to readers who enjoy fantasy that leans intimate rather than epic, especially if they also like gothic atmosphere, haunted family secrets, and a coming-of-age story wrapped around romance and dark magic. I think it will work best for someone who wants to sit with a book’s mood as much as its plot, and who does not mind following a story that begins in sorrow and keeps reaching toward deeper mystery. For me, the strongest parts were the rawness of Lily’s grief and the eerie beauty of the world behind the mirrors. That was enough to make me curious about where the trilogy goes next.
ASIN : B0GHZTX2FX
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, The Darkening Gate, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dark Romantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, historical fantasy, indie author, kindle, kobo, Kristina Elyse Butke, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romantic fantasy, story, The Darkening Gate, The Name and the Key, writer, writing
The Island of Mystics
Posted by Literary Titan

The Island of Mystics is a young adult fantasy that leans hard into emotion, family tension, and the ache of feeling out of place. It picks up with characters already carrying real damage, and that matters. The book opens with grief, moves into separation and escape, and then widens into a story about love, duty, guilt, and belonging. What stood out to me most is that it isn’t built around a single quest so much as a web of relationships under strain. That gives it a more intimate feel, even when the setting gets larger and stranger.
What really gives the book its shape is the way the author lets emotional pain drive the plot. Lucas is crushed by guilt and convinced the people around him would be better off without him. Audrina is trying to hold onto love while living under royal expectations. Gertrude gets pulled between devotion and self-erasure in a way that feels painfully sincere. None of that reads like background decoration. It’s the engine of the story. Even a line as simple as “Nothing lasted” carries weight because that fear keeps echoing through the book in different forms.
I also liked how the fantasy world is presented. The island setting, the mermaids, the unusual birds, the castle details, and the sense of hidden history give the novel a colorful, storybook surface. The book keeps bringing things back to character. It’s less interested in showing off lore for its own sake than in asking what a magical world feels like when you’re scared, heartsick, or trying to choose between love and responsibility. The setting feels vivid, but it never pushes the people out of the center.
The writing has a sincere, openhearted quality that fits the material. Sometimes it’s earnest to a fault, but more often that directness helps. The book is at its best when it lets characters say exactly what they fear, want, or regret. One of my favorite lines comes near the end: “This is not goodbye. This is only until we meet again.” It’s romantic, a little defiant, and very much in tune with the novel’s belief that separation doesn’t have to mean erasure. That same spirit runs through the whole book.
The Island of Mystics is a heartfelt fantasy that cares deeply about its characters and takes their feelings seriously. It’s a book about wounded people trying to find one another, trying to forgive themselves, and trying to imagine a future that isn’t already chosen for them. I came away thinking of it less as an adventure story with emotional stakes and more as an emotional story told through fantasy. That ends up being its real strength. It knows what it wants to be, and it commits to it.
Pages: 236 | ASIN : B0GT26F94N
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Alisse Lee Goldenberg, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Teen and YA, The Children of Colonodona, The Island of Mystics, writer, writing, YA, ya fantasy
There’s a Rhinoceros in My House
Posted by Literary Titan

There’s a Rhinoceros in My House! is a playful picture book built around a wonderfully simple misunderstanding. A sleepy mom, stumbling through the house without her glasses, becomes convinced a rhinoceros has invaded the kitchen, only to discover that the supposed beast is really her husband, noisily making breakfast, flipping pancakes, vacuuming the rug, and clattering through the morning routine. The book turns that small domestic mix-up into a comic little adventure, then lands on a family-table ending that feels affectionate rather than merely punchline-driven.
What I liked most is how fully the book commits to its premise. It doesn’t overcomplicate anything. Instead, it trusts the delicious absurdity of a half-awake mind trying to make sense of thuds, crashes, and splashes. That trust pays off. The repeated rhythm of Mom blinking, squinting, and misreading the chaos gives the story a satisfying bounce, and the reveal works because the book has already made the rhinoceros feel real enough for a child to believe in it for a few pages. The humor is warm. The joke is rooted in family life, in the strange exaggerations that happen when we’re tired, annoyed, or not yet fully in the day.
I especially appreciated how the language leaves room for the wonderful illustrations to carry part of the joke. The book’s ideas are gentle and young readers will be able to recognize them. Every page is filled with colorful, lively artwork that gives the story its energy, with expressive scenes and playful visual details that make the household chaos feel funny, inviting, and easy for children to follow. I especially liked the character sketches at the end, which offer a fun glimpse into how the artwork was created. They add an extra layer of charm to the book, and I think children will love trying to draw the characters on their own. It’s a lovely touch that could easily inspire budding young artists.
I came away from this story smiling. It’s an easy book to imagine reading aloud, especially with relish for the sound effects and the slow, teasing build toward recognition. In the end, what stayed with me wasn’t just the joke of the rhinoceros, but the fondness underneath it, that sense of a family translating everyday racket into story. I’d recommend this picture book to young children who love silly visual misdirection, for families who enjoy read-alouds with a theatrical streak, and for anyone partial to picture books that turn ordinary mornings into something slightly magical.
Pages: 25 | ASIN : B0GNJ3CZ63
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: animals, author, bedtime stories, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens animals books, childrens books, ebook, family, goodreads, indie author, Jack DiSanto, kindle, kobo, life lessons, literature, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, story, There's a Rhinoceros in my house, writer, writing
The Shards of the Conduit
Posted by Literary Titan

The Shards of the Conduit is a military science fantasy novel that knows exactly how it wants to introduce its world: at a sprint, under pressure, with one soldier dropped into a nightmare and forced to improvise his way through it. The book opens with Malek, call sign Specter, heading into a mission gone horribly wrong, and that opening gives the novel its identity right away. It’s tense, tactile, and deeply invested in how fear feels inside the body. One of the smartest things author Sarah Yusuf does is give Malek a simple recurring line, “Don’t lose your head,” and turn it into a window into his trauma, discipline, and survival instinct. That line tells you a lot about the book as a whole. It’s interested in action, sure, but it’s even more interested in the cost of action.
What makes the novel work for me is that it’s not just built on combat set pieces. It’s built on a volatile political and emotional landscape. The mission starts as a hunt for a Fireborne attacker, but it quickly becomes a story about uneasy alliances, inherited hatred, and the dangerous meaning of the shard everyone wants. Malek begins the book with a hard, almost reflexive view of the Elemnai, shaped by military training and old prejudice, and the story keeps pressing on that worldview. The epigraph, “None of us are free, until all of us are free,” feels less like decoration and more like the book quietly telling you where its heart is. Beneath the firefights and covert ops, this is a story about empire, fear, and whether people raised inside a brutal system can learn to see each other clearly.
The book’s center of gravity is Malek, and Yusuf gives him enough rough edges to keep him interesting. He’s capable, sarcastic, stubborn, and often one bad decision away from disaster, which makes him a good anchor for a story that depends on forward motion. His dynamic with Kei is especially strong because it develops under fire rather than in safety. Their banter never feels like it wandered in from a different book. It feels earned by exhaustion, injury, and necessity.
I also liked how confidently the book commits to scale. It gives you the sense of a much larger world without stopping every few pages to lecture about it. The map, the different Elemnai groups, the Alliance structure, the languages, the shifting borders, and the references to past wars all help Eiden feel inhabited rather than assembled. By the time the novel moves toward its later setup, with Malek being pushed into a new command and a new hunt involving the Earthborne and another shard, the story has already earned that expansion. It feels like the natural next step for a series opener, not a trailer for a different book. The shift into a broader mission works because the first part has already established that every shard carries political consequences, not just mystical ones.
The Shards of the Conduit is a sharp, fast-moving series opener with a strong sense of atmosphere and a clear emotional core. It’s a book about soldiers, but also about memory, identity, and the slow cracking open of inherited certainty. Yusuf writes action with urgency, but the book’s staying power comes from the way it ties that action to character and ideology. By the end, it feels less like one mission completed than a world pried open. I came away thinking that this book’s biggest strength is its conviction. It knows the story it wants to tell, and it tells it with heat, momentum, and enough moral tension to make the next installment feel worth following.
Pages: 313 | ASIN : B0G4XTRRKM
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, S.N. Yusuf, sci fi, science fiction, Science Fiction Adventure, Space Opera Science Fiction, space operas, story, The Shards of the Conduit, writer, writing
Screaming At the World
Posted by Literary_Titan
Realistic Meat Substitute is a collection of poems covering themes ranging from conspiracy and commodification to digital alienation and political hysteria. Did you write these poems with a specific audience in mind, or was it a more personal endeavor?
I do a lot of screaming at the world in my poems.
Pointing in laughter, recoiling in horror. Singing with joy, sighing in relief where beauty and goodness can be found. It’s deeply personal, of course, sometimes cathartic. I write with the hope that it might resonate with pessimists and optimists alike—that my fellow human beings on planet earth can relate. But, if a machine intelligence (or something otherwise) gets it, too—great! Welcome aboard.
How do you begin a poem—image, phrase, rhythm, or idea?
I like to improvise and fiddle with language. Usually no plan, no preconceived ideas to start. I don’t want to know what the puzzle is until I solve it, I guess. Open the box, dump the puzzle pieces on the table and get started. Start with the middle or the border pieces? Let intuition be the guide. Musicality is also important. Paying attention to the beat and rhythm of the line, I’ll experiment and play with juxtapositions—see what might stick. What does it mean? What’s it trying to say? Sometimes I’ll have a scene or a situation in mind, so I’ll start with something descriptive of that image. Meaning, subject, theme—whatever the poem is “about”—that generally comes later, if at all.
Was it important for you to balance satire and intensity with genuine emotional vulnerability?
I think the better poems balance the head and heart, the emotional with the cerebral. Absurdity and irony, with sincerity. Tender, but with bite. If the satire works, it can activate the mind, make you smirk and think, but it’s also driven by emotion. It can be a way of coping with baffling contradiction, trouble, hurt and pain. But, like a ruthless, criminal gangster/bad guy from a story—there’s got to be some relatable humanity to the character, otherwise there’s no emotional investment offered to pull a reader/viewer into the story.
What is one thing you hope readers take away from Realistic Meat Substitute?
Well, here’s a few things. I hope they enjoyed the ride. I hope I earned the reader’s attention. Life is crazy. Poetry can be many things. Open up and pay attention. To quote artist/musician Laurie Anderson: “Don’t be afraid of anyone, get a good bullshit detector, and be tender.”
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
left of the soul when everything else is artifice and imitation.”—Randomly Chosen AI Chatbot, after prompts by the book’s author to construct a blurb
for the back cover of Realistic Meat Substitute*
*AUTHOR’S NOTE: ABSOLUTELY NO POEMS CONTAINED IN THIS BOOK
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: American life, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chris D'Errico, collection, contemporary life, digital world, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, poems, poetry, Poetry Themes & Styles, politics, read, reader, reading, Realistic Meat Substitute, story, writer, writing
Get Involved However You Can
Posted by Literary_Titan

Worth of a Girl centers around an eight-year-old girl from Uganda whose young life is altered forever when she is forced into a trafficking ring disguised as a trade school. Why did you choose to tell the story through eight-year-old Bibi’s perspective?
I chose a young girl’s point of view to show perspective. The innocence of a child who trusts adults to do right by them and to help, not hurt, them provides a stark contrast. It reveals truth versus the ugly evil of the world. A child tells the story much better than an adult.
How did you approach writing trauma in a way that is honest but not overwhelming or exploitative?
My books are about children and the evils they face, whether it addresses abandonment, exploitation, or abuse and loneliness. Because the plot is meant to be inspirational, I want to give the reader a sense of the trauma without actually telling it with explicit words. Grueling words, swearing, or foul language are not necessary if the author can show the action. One’s imagination can play a bigger role if the reader is told what to think. It’s been proven: ‘you’re more afraid of what you can’t see. ‘They’ll understand and see it, feel it, if it’s written honestly and plainly without a lot of detail.
The contrast between promise (school, clothing, opportunity) and reality (exploitation) is powerful. How did you develop that tension?
First, and foremost, I pray and ask God to help me write words that convey reality and tug on readers’ heartstrings. Then, I put myself in the main character’s head as much as possible. Although I’ve never faced these terrible conditions, I can imagine what it must feel like. I’m probably not even close. I do know, however, what failed promises feel like and the disappointment that follows. Extensive research (over three years) went into this book from interviews with African missionaries to documentaries and other reading. I learned what many girls had to do and endure to survive. Many of the incidents in the book were derived from real testimonies.
What kind of conversations do you hope this book starts among readers, churches, or communities?
The goal of this book is awareness of child exploitation. The awful plight of innocent children who are taken and abused, tortured, and sometimes killed needs to be known. It doesn’t just happen overseas. It’s close to home; it might even be happening down the block from where you live. Who would know? I hope readers will get a sense of urgency to help these children in some way, even if it’s through their church in helping children, fostering kids, or opening their hearts to volunteer. Not everyone can donate money. Many communities have groups that minister to children in some way. I sew dresses for girls overseas. It is known that if they have a new dress, especially with a label on it, it means they are being watched — thus, less likely to be taken by a predator. If I’ve helped just one girl in that way, my mission and goal have been fulfilled. I hope others get involved in any way possible.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
When Bibi faces challenges beyond her control, her bold, unshakable faith guides her with courage and strength. But how will she endure her fate? What will it take to save her?
When the new missions doctor, Dr. Steve Warden, arrives in Uganda, he suspects something nefarious is going on at the trade school. He never expected to unearth the dark underbelly of Evil directly beneath those who vowed to help the children. With righteous indignation ignited, he determines to seek justice for the children and rescue Bibi, even if it means taking down his own colleague and well-known people of the community.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, C.A. Simonson, christian fiction, Christian Mystery & Suspense, Domestic Thrillers, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Religious Mysteries, story, thriller, Worth of a Girl, writer, writing
The Radiant Word: Reflections in the Orthodox Tradition
Posted by Literary Titan

V.K. McCarty’s The Radiant Word is less a conventional theological study than a gathering of lived sermons, meditations, and keynote reflections that move through the Orthodox liturgical year while lingering over Scripture, icons, saints, hymnody, and patristic sources. The book begins in light, with the Transfiguration and the idea that Christ’s radiance reaches into “the complicated corners of our lives,” then widens into reflections on the Theotokos, desert mothers, Mary Magdalene, the Prodigal Son, the Jesus Prayer, Kassia’s hymn, Pentecost, Basil, and finally love and beauty in pandemic life. What binds it all together is McCarty’s desire to make ancient sources feel not archival but immediate, devotional, and warm.
What I admired most was the book’s intensity of attention. McCarty doesn’t write about doctrine as an abstract system. She writes as someone who has spent time with icons, stood in candlelight, listened hard, and let texts work on her over time. The most arresting pages for me were the ones on the Mandylion icon, where her encounter with the face of Christ becomes almost physically unsettling: tired, dirty, painfully alive, even a little repellent before it turns mesmerizing. That passage has real voltage. It’s intimate, vulnerable, and odd in the best way. I also liked the way she reopens familiar material through unexpected angles, as when the Prodigal Son becomes a question about “Prodigal Daughters,” or when the Dormition meditation frames Mary not as a static emblem but as a figure of action, stillness, assent, and eschatological hope all at once. At her best, McCarty has a tactile, sensuous prose style that can make theology feel inhabited rather than explained.
McCarty’s voice is ardent, recursive, and devotional, and that makes the book can feel luminous for long stretches, but also rhetorically saturated. The imagery is often beautiful. I respected the seriousness of the vision. She is trying to restore a scriptural and patristic imagination she thinks modern Christians have thinned out, and the argument lands most powerfully when she centers women whose authority has often been reduced or sidelined. Her pages on the Desert Mothers, on Mary Magdalene, on Kassia, and on early Christian women at prayer give the book a distinctly generous moral texture. Even the closing reflection on pandemic life, with its idea of the Church as an “Arc of Safety” and its insistence that strange online intimacies could become occasions of grace, carries a tenderness.
The Radiant Word is a personal book disguised as a collection of sermons, and that personal quality is what gives it its pull. I never doubted the depth of McCarty’s reading or the sincerity of her spiritual imagination. This is a book for readers who want theology with incense still clinging to it, who don’t mind being asked to feel as much as think, and who are open to finding beauty in the old, the liturgical, the icon-filled, and the unabashedly reverent. For readers drawn to Orthodox spirituality, sacred art, women saints, and reflective devotional prose, I’d warmly recommend it.
Pages: 176
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, Orhodox, read, reader, reading, religion, spiritual, story, The Radiant Word: Reflections in the Orthodox Tradition, true story, VK McCarty, writer, writing
Twenty Years & Then Some: The Year the Compass Broke
Posted by Literary Titan


I found Twenty Years and Then Some to be a restless, intimate novel about a woman trying to make sense of desire, faith, memory, and selfhood while moving between London, Iraq, and later Mashhad, all under the pressure of romantic entanglements that never quite become refuge. Aisha’s story unfolds through encounters with men like Mustafa, whose gentleness can’t kindle love, and Diyaa, whose emotional evasions wound precisely because the chemistry feels real, while her spiritual life keeps pulling her toward shrines, graves, prophecy, and questions of intercession that are not ornamental to the plot but the plot’s deepest engine. What emerges is less a conventional romance than a record of inner weather, a book about a woman whose compass is broken not because she lacks intelligence, but because feeling, belief, and longing keep pointing in different directions.
The book’s voice has a confessional intensity that can be startling, sometimes almost feverish, and when it works, it really works. I kept thinking of the scene in Najaf where shared laughter with a grieving woman breaks the heaviness for a moment, and of the visit to the grandmother’s grave, where longing for marriage, fear of death, family history, and theology all gather in one charged space. Those moments feel lived rather than engineered. The prose often reaches for grandeur, but it also knows when to come down into a sharply human detail, like Aaliya arriving with thyme pastries and Arabic coffee, or Aisha watching Diyaa’s restraint on the sofa and feeling that non-kiss as a form of intimacy more unsettling than an actual touch. I admired how often the writing refuses embarrassment. It’s earnest in a way many contemporary novels are scared to be, and that earnestness gives it heat. The novel can sometimes circle the same emotions, the narrator’s self-awareness sometimes deepens the feeling, and sometimes merely names it again. Still, even that repetition began to feel like part of the design, the rhythm of someone who knows the lesson intellectually long before she can bear to live it.
I was equally taken by the book’s ideas, especially because they’re inseparable from the narrator’s emotional life. This isn’t a novel that treats faith as background decoration. Its Shia spiritual imagination, its meditations on shrines, the dead, intercession, visions, and historical erasure give the whole book a metaphysical charge that sets it apart from more familiar breakup fiction. I found the contrast between Aisha and Diyaa especially revealing: he reaches for Helen Fisher and the anatomy of love, trying to reduce heartbreak to something legible and clinical, while she insists that love belongs as much to myth, intuition, and holiness as it does to biology. That tension gives the novel real intellectual texture. I also appreciated the passages where private suffering opens onto political and sectarian history, especially the reflections on demolition, memory, and the Wahhabi project. Those sections are bold and deeply felt, though they can be more essayistic than dramatic. I liked that the novel had something serious to say, but there were moments when I felt the fiction briefly gave way to argument. Even so, the argument is never hollow. It comes from a bruised inner life, which gives it conviction.
I came away from this book feeling I’d spent time inside a mind that is ardent, contradictory, wounded, and fiercely searching. It’s strongest when it allows romance, theology, and memory to collide without trying to tidy the mess. I’d recommend it to readers who like emotionally candid literary fiction, especially those interested in faith, sectarian identity, diasporic loneliness, and the unnerving gap between knowing what’s good for you and wanting something else anyway.
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, diapora, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jannah Essa, kindle, kobo, literary fiction, literature, Multicultural, nook, novel, postcolonial, read, reader, reading, spiritual fiction, story, Twenty Years & Then Some, women's fiction, writer, writing









