I Finally Had to Write
Posted by Literary Titan

Crown Prince follows a man whose extraordinary gift of Sight is a double-edged sword, allowing him to glimpse danger but never freeing him from his own pain. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The New Blood Saga began with a recurring dream so emotionally intense that I would wake up in tears. I finally had to write it. The dream gave me the emotional core but not the characters, so I drew on my background in philosophy — especially my fascination with Socrates — to create Natharr, a man seized by the Daemon of Sight much as Socrates was seized by the Daemon of Philosophy. I already loved drawing maps, and one of them provided the world the story needed. I set out to write a single novel, but the emotional weight and complexity quickly outgrew that plan. I expanded to a trilogy, reading each night’s pages to my wife, whose psychology background helped me refine pacing and character realism (particularly with the female characters). As the world deepened with its history, mythology, and pantheons, I realized even three books weren’t enough, so I allowed myself six. However, while writing book six, my wife asked why it felt like I was rushing. When I told her it was because the story “had” to end in six books, she simply said, “What if I give you permission for more?” And that opened the door to the full eight-book saga.
Natharr avoids feeling like a traditional heroic archetype. How did you approach writing a character who is both capable and deeply constrained?
First of all, thank you. I try to do that with everything I write to at least some degree. When I’m writing anything, whether it’s a novel, a poem, a news story, or just developing a character, I come up with the kernel of the idea, then I think about all the others I’ve read that are similar. Truth of the matter is that all of fantasy if Homer repackaged. So I look for the common thread from all that I’ve read. Then I ask myself, “How can I do the opposite?” What I end up with is rarely the opposite, but it’s usually different enough that it takes readers by surprise. If I manage that, then I’ve achieved my goal: take something that has been done before (to some degree) and throw it on its head. As far as being both capable and constrained, that’s the easy part. Here’s why. Although I pretty much stopped growing when I was 12 (I’ve grown maybe two inches since then), I was a giant growing up. As a result, playing with my friends, doing nothing different than they were doing, I would accidentally hurt them. I didn’t mean to, I always felt horrible, then their parents would make it a thousand times worse. If I wasn’t already crying because I hurt my best friend, then I would be when his mom reamed me for what I’d done. From a very young age, I was fighting internally to control impulses, not rough-housing with my friends because I was so much bigger than them, even when they were having the time of their life. When I started wrestling when I was 6, my workout partners were 9 or 10 because they were my size. They had been wrestling a lot longer and beat me to death every day. I hated wrestling. When the next season came around, my dad (who was also one of my coaches), told me that he knew it was hard my first year, but he thought I had learned a lot. So, if I wrestled one more year and still hated it, I could quit. He was right. That year, I was an All-American in both freestyle and Greco-Roman and, at the peak of my career years later, was world-ranked and qualified to represent the United States in Greco-Roman. So, where normal life left me walking around in a straitjacket, wrestling gave me an outlet where I could let go. There are aspects of Natharr that have similarities, and were easy to write, because I didn’t even have to think to know how it felt.
The Elder and the warped space near the end introduce a new layer of mystery. What role does that kind of surreal element play in the larger series?
Huge. It’s called the All-White Realm or the Faceless Realm. It changes everything in more ways than I could possibly list. Nor would you want me to, because every one of them would be a spoiler. Ellis the Elder is just as significant, aside from being many readers’ favorite character. He is fun, enigmatic, deep, tragic, essential, and also changes everything, much like the other.
Can you give us a glimpse inside the next book in the New Blood Saga? Where will it take readers?
The cast of characters grows significantly. Some are loveable, some are not. Some are respectable, some are not. Some seem like a real problem from the first moment but are not. Some readers will hate, some readers will love. Some will be hated, but their persona will be understandable, perhaps even worthy of sympathy. Very little in the New Blood Saga is black and white.
TAGLINE:
The future of Mankind relies on the Guardian of Maarihk. Can a mysterious Order help him repair the damage of choosing happiness over duty?
BACK COVER COPY:
Despite the Guardian of Maarihk being condemned as anathema, and his very existence relegated to legend, Natharr resumes his ancient responsibilities as Mankind’s protector. He joins with a mysterious Firstborn companion, Ellis the Elder, to journey into the snowy reaches of Biraald, where his Sight promises he will find those who secretly adhere to the ways of the Olde Gods.
Although Biraaldi bloodlines show their Firstborn heritage more clearly than even in Maarihk itself, the two nations have never enjoyed peace. It has been far worse since the rise of Brandt the Usurper to Maarihk’s throne. Natharr and Ellis must navigate the threats not only against the Firstborn, but the Maarihkish, as they seek out the sympathizers he Saw who are brave enough to resist Maarihk’s tyranny. Only then can the damage be repaired from when Natharr chose personal happiness with Darshelle and the young crown prince over his weighty responsibilities as Guardian of Maarihk.
SAMPLE
Natharr leapt up and forward, arching his back, and the blade of a short sword sliced the air only a whisper away from his shoulder blade. He whirled immediately, slashing at the men at his back, but had to turn the attack into a defending stroke, and chopped down into one attacker’s blade, then reversed the motion to feint at the body before striking at the sword in a disarming attack. Their blades threw sparks and the soldier’s eyes bulged, big and brown, as his short sword twisted in his grip and flew to the ground, vanishing in the snow. Normally, Natharr would have pressed the advantage, at least bloodying the unarmed man to make him less of a threat when he retrieved his weapon, but the others were already surging forward to give their companion the necessary cover to rearm himself. Once again, Natharr was impressed with the training of these garrison line troops.
Natharr whirled away and leapt over the top of the snow, throwing a new cloud of white, and he saw Martice and Ellis. They stood, rooted in the knee-deep snow as if they were frozen. The old man’s face was hidden in the shadows of his hood, but the expression on Martice’s face was clear enough. Her eyes bulged and her mouth was open, a look of horror that took a strong woman and transformed her into any maid caught in a difficult situation. He was having a hard enough time fighting so many men in the deep snow, he did not need the distraction of the two of them acting like idiots waiting to be told what to do.
“The trap door!” he yelled, leaping over the top of the snow. “Get through it!”
They did not move.
“Now!”
Natharr turned hard to the right and the soldiers followed. He hoped he could keep their attention on him, rather than turning back toward the Elder and the woman, but that was not certain, particularly when he had just yelled instructions. Swords flew at him in rapid succession. By turning so sharply, he had closed the gap between himself and his pursuers, allowing three to get ahead of him, limiting his paths of escape, all of them back toward Ellis and Martice. His sword arm was heavy, his shoulder and wrist burning; his legs were becoming leaden from fighting through the crusty snow both as he raised each foot and as it came back down. He had to even the odds and he had to do it immediately. There was no telling how much longer he could keep this up. He was only a man and he could do only so much for so long, despite his Sight helping him ward off the worst of their sword strokes.
He attacked.
The three that had cut him off cried out, eyes bulging, as Natharr took his long sword in both hands to rain a barrage of strokes at their heads and shoulders. They stumbled backward through the snow, then one backed into the stiff branches of a pine. His eyes flicked upward for the briefest instant, but it was all the distraction Natharr needed. He swung his sword in a wide arc that ended with a wrist-wrenching impact as his blade bit into the man’s arm at the base of the shoulder. The soldier cursed and dropped to his knees, bright red spraying across the snow as he clutched at the wound. The bone had stopped Natharr’s edge from severing the limb, but the Guardian knew the man would not wield a sword for the garrison again.
It was blind luck that the second of the man’s two fellows ran headlong into him, flipping right over the top of him, upended as they both cried out. Natharr hacked at the man who fell atop his fellow, and his sword point sliced through the man’s fleshy backside, then the Guardian was off again, leaping over the top of the snow. The icy crust seemed thicker, or maybe it was just fatigue beginning to weigh him down, his knee throbbing as if aflame as his ankles started to ache, the repeated impact of the tops of his feet against the underside of the crust taking its toll.
“You heard him!” he heard Ellis yell. “Go through!”
Natharr cursed under his breath. It would be just like Martice to refuse to flee. He glanced toward her and saw that the old man held her aloft, arms locked around her chest. To the Guardian’s surprise, she did not resist. She simply dangled there, staring at Natharr as if stricken. It was that glance that turned Natharr’s head enough to see that Tavish was running through the snow toward him, throwing up his own wake of white, sword also clutched in both hands. The lieutenant sought to cut off Natharr’s path of escape. Tavish’s face was a mask of rage, cheeks red, and he was roaring like a Great Beast. Teeth gritted, Natharr planted his heels to stop and change direction, but his boot soles found no purchase and shot out from under him. The Guardian belched out an inarticulate sound as he fell backward, arms windmilling, despite the length of deadly, blood-wet steel in his hand. Tavish came in at him, unrelenting, sword raised over his head in both hands —
END OF SAMPLE
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website
The future of Mankind relies on the Guardian of Maarihk. Will his Sight be true? Or will his impure Firstblood prove the ruin of us all?
Natharr is Guardian of Maarihk, one of a long line of protectors dating back to the Firstborn Age, before the Aa Conquest. Natharr’s is an ancient role, rooted in his Firstblood, giving him Sight to see what is yet to be. He adheres to his sacred duties even in the centuries since the Firstborn were forced to the brink of extinction by the Aa.
Natharr still stands guard over all men, Aa or Firstborn, Seeing what will come to pass, deciding what is unavoidable and what is not. He spends decades planning how to save the life of the newborn Crown Prince Vikari so he may one day reclaim the throne of the land where Mankind was created, back in the time when the Olde Gods still walked.
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Crown Prince: Book One of New Blood, dark fantasy, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, sword and sorcery, W.D. Kilpack III, writer, writing
Writing The Last Word
Posted by Literary Titan

In Losing Mom, you reveal the shifting power dynamic between parent and child as you share the incredibly difficult final years of your mother’s life. Why was this an important book for you to write?
As my mom started aging and our roles reversed, more and more of my time and attention was focused on trying to make the end of her life as vibrant and easy as I could. After she died, the void in my own life was quite big, and writing helped me to fill it. Plus, when we were deep in the throes of her decline at hospice, she said something to me about how she hoped that what she was going through might help other people some day. That stuck with me.
I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?
The hardest part to write about was the last day of her life. It was such a mixture of sadness and relief, finding the right words to describe it took quite a bit of trial and error. The other hard part was writing the last word—it felt as final as if I was losing her all over again.
What is one piece of advice someone gave you that changed your life?
I wish I had the perfect answer to this question and that I actually was given one piece of advice that changed my life! But the only thing that comes to mind (after really giving this some thought!) is my father always telling me to ‘stick to my guns’. I can’t say it was life-changing, but I can often hear his voice in my head when I’m feeling like giving up or giving in.
What do you hope readers are able to take away from your family’s experiences?
My hope is that telling the story of the end of my mom’s life will help make death a little less scary. It’s like the proverbial elephant in the room that we all tiptoe around, and if we could just talk about it more with each other, I feel like we’d all be better off. Also, to hopefully demystify the role hospice and palliative care can play in making someone’s last days the most comfortable that they can be.
Author Links: GoodReads | Substack | Instagram | Website
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Losing Mom, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, Peggy Ottman, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
A Boy’s Best Comrade
Posted by Literary Titan

In A Boy’s Best Comrade, Lauren Ennis tells the story of Sasha, a loyal dog in Stalin-era Moscow whose life is repeatedly shattered by the machinery of fear, suspicion, and state violence. After losing Mikhail and Sofia to the NKVD, Sasha is taken in by Andrei, Tania, and their son Yuri, only to watch that family broken apart too. What follows is part historical survival story, part animal adventure, and part aching portrait of devotion, as Sasha and Yuri navigate hunger, homelessness, the Moscow metro, a stray-dog pack, and the dangerous kindness of people like Vanya while trying to stay one step ahead of betrayal and arrest.
I was most moved by how sincerely the book treats loyalty. Sasha’s love never feels cute in a shallow way. It feels bodily, instinctive, almost sacred. The early scene with the New Year’s tree begins with such domestic warmth, Sasha puzzling over the strange spruce in the apartment, Sofia trying to create a little “winter fairyland,” and then that warmth is cracked open by the knock at the door. I liked that the book keeps returning to that emotional pattern: a small, tender human moment, then the cold hand of history pressing against it. Andrei naming Sasha “protector and friend” stayed with me because the whole novel keeps testing whether love can survive when every institution is designed to make people suspicious, selfish, and afraid. Sasha, in her wonderfully stubborn dog way, keeps answering yes.
The writing has a big-hearted, old-fashioned sweep to it, and I mean that affectionately. It leans into feeling. But more often than not, that earnestness works because the story itself is so emotionally direct. I loved the texture of Moscow seen from low to the ground: alleys, stoops, station platforms, scraps of food, damp fur, boots, crowds, the underground geography known by dogs better than humans. Mishka and the pack bring a welcome snap of humor and grit, and the ending, with Sasha forcing Yuri onto the train and then being invited into a new pack, hurt in exactly the right way. It doesn’t give her everything. It gives her purpose, which feels truer.
I felt that A Boy’s Best Comrade is really about chosen family under impossible pressure, and about the quiet heroism of staying tender when the world keeps rewarding hardness. Its ideas are strongest when embodied in action: Sasha biting, guarding, smuggling, waiting, refusing to understand love as temporary. The book would be especially good for readers who like historical fiction with an animal narrator, emotionally sincere adventure stories, and tales of courage that don’t pretend survival comes without grief.
Pages: 269 | ASIN: B0FTWM9BB3
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: A Boy's Best Comrade, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, childrens book, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Lauren Ennis, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
He will never know who I am.
Posted by Literary Titan

Olympus or Oblivion tells the story of fictional sexual encounters with fifteen different Hollywood icons. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Like most people, I have favourite movie stars. One actor in particular, Clancy Brown, has lived rent-free in my head for forty years. I realised one day that my limerence for him (although compelling and chemically indistinguishable from love) was essentially the adoration of a stranger. He will never know who I am.
That led me to think more deeply about the one-sided relationships we build with these people. Why do we place them on pedestals? Do they really deserve a status approaching demigods?
I wanted to place them into ridiculously implausible but very human situations – not to expose them, but to expose us. And, if I’m honest, writing about me getting jiggy with a selection of A-list movie stars was also a gloriously stupid comedic premise and an escape from the mundane.
I wanted readers to laugh, wince, and occasionally stop and think. It would be disingenuous to ignore that there’s erotica in there as well, which may… entertain. Ultimately, it had to feel like the inside of my own head splattered onto the keyboard. The icons get an affectionate roasting by me and my judgmental, sentient house fern, Della. I take their godhood, and their clothes, stripping them down to what matters – their character.
Get your minds out of the gutter. That’s my territory.
We live in a world that moves quickly and often skims the surface of what’s real and meaningful underneath. We celebrate fame as though it were the highest achievement, while quietly overlooking those who make a tangible difference – surgeons, scientists, people who change lives in ways that don’t trend on social media.
What do you find to be the most challenging aspect of writing satire? The most rewarding?
To have a broad appeal yet remain 100% true to myself. That’s it. I’ve no intellectual answer to that. I am largely unfiltered, so my challenges are few.
But that’s also the reward. The inside of my head is a delicious, chaotic, entertaining mess. Readers should relax and enjoy the ride. Lean into the cringe and try not to snigger on the train.
The power of my comedy lies in discomfort; the horror of the cringe, sharp snarking, and weaponised sarcasm. I don’t have much interest in formula or convention. Creative writing, to me, should actually feel creative. Writing courses, degrees, process…nah. Not for me. Watch as I open my flip-top head and let the crazy out for a walk.
If it ever ends up in a library, I quite like the idea of someone having a mild crisis about which shelf it belongs on.
What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?
That fame does not equal legacy.
Striving to be known is deeply human – we all like to think we’ll be remembered. But fame without substance collapses under its own weight. Legacy, on the other hand, is built quietly, through actions and impact, whether people are watching or not.
The people who leave the deepest mark are often not the ones chasing recognition, but the ones who earn it without asking.
Can we look forward to seeing more work from you soon? What are you currently working on?
You surely will.
I’m currently working on another comedy – Olympus or Urbana. It’s a sequel, of sorts. Kind of. It’s a mythological whodunnit with romantic elements, swearing, and multiple story arcs, set across Olympus and its surrounding realms.
There are two co-protagonists, Vox and Hera Minor, both mortals, tasked by Zeus with solving a mystery – helped and hindered in equal measure by a cast of interfering gods. It features riddles, Latin dialogue (with translation), exotic creatures, strange places, and more than a few familiar faces in unexpected roles.
There’s a realm built entirely for hedonism, a god desperate for more adoration than he currently receives, arguments about shades of green, endless feasting, lizard-wrestling, swearing lessons, and Henry Cavill boring everyone to death as Olympus shakes to the collective roar of, “Shut up, Cavill!”
Now, if you don’t mind, I’m off to take my imagination for a long walk along the banks of the Acheron.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook
Part satirical memoir, part erotic odyssey, part divine smackdown—it asks one burning question: If you could sleep with fifteen of the world’s most iconic men, would you risk it all to see who truly deserves godhood?
From Henry Cavill’s heroic inability to navigate basic female anatomy, to Josh Holloway’s hypnotic Route to Ruin; from Chris Pine’s tragic squeaking to Clancy Brown’s gaze hot enough to fuse steel; from Hugh Jackman’s oceanic allure and suspicious interest in tropical fish, to Tom Cruise’s relentless habit of stealing everything that isn’t nailed down—each trial is a riot of emotional chaos, sexual physics, and the occasional pigeon.
Some men rise to Olympus.
Some fall into Oblivion.
All are judged.
Set in the Scottish Central Belt and narrated by a mortal woman with a snark cannon and zero tolerance for mediocrity, this is a filthy, funny, and fiercely honest celebration of desire. Forget perfect abs—these are complex, broken, brilliant men facing one final test. And they’d better pass.
Yes, there’s sex—scorching, poetic, absurd, occasionally athletic enough to dislocate something—but beneath the thrusting runs a deep vein of honesty. It’s about longing, disappointment, body image, female desire, and being seen after a lifetime of invisibility.
Featuring:
15 celebrity “gods” in entirely fictionalised encounters
A judgmental houseplant named Asphodela
Hysterical Latin names for every trialist
Obscene metaphors unfit for church
No male gaze—just squinting female scrutiny
Full-frontal mythology with a chance of redemption
This is not fanfiction.
This is not romance.
This is Olympus or Oblivion.
And the gods are on trial.
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Chrissy Dargue, ebook, erotica, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Olympus or Oblivion, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Moving Targets
Posted by Literary Titan

Moving Targets is a detective thriller about Miles Darien, a Lakeville, Wisconsin private investigator whose cases keep pulling him toward bigger questions about loyalty, justice, grief, and what it means to build a life with other people. It opens like a classic PI story, with stolen church artifacts and Miles’s quiet vow, “I will find them,” but it grows into something more personal and more emotionally loaded.
The book works best when it lets Miles investigate through conversation, observation, and old-fashioned persistence. The Holy Trinity case is a smart early mystery, full of fingerprints, misdirection, and small details that matter. Then the cold case involving Charles Powler shifts the story into darker territory, bringing in land, mining interests, racism, corruption, and violence. The author gives the investigations a steady, procedural rhythm without making them feel cold.
What gives the novel its heart is Miles’s circle: Ken, Ryan, Anne, Carl, George, Cora, Bobbie, Olivia, and Molly. Their banter makes the book feel lived-in, like you’re dropping into an ongoing community rather than just following a lone detective from clue to clue.
Moving Targets becomes a book about survival as much as solving crimes. Miles keeps working, but the work doesn’t magically fix him. The later sections, including the New York wedding, the Robin subplot, therapy, the move into Carl’s office, and the brief Santa Fe trip, show him trying to find a shape for his life after loss. The final discovery gives the ending a gentle lift without pretending grief is neatly resolved.
Moving Targets is a warm, character-driven detective thriller with several mysteries braided through one man’s changing life. It’s strongest when the cases and relationships feed each other, because Miles’s talent as an investigator comes from the same place as his friendships: he notices things, he cares, and he follows through. The book is part mystery, part community portrait, and part grief story, and that mix gives it more emotional weight than a standard case-of-the-week thriller.
Pages: 327 | ASIN: B0FNC4QS6Q
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Harry Pinkus, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Moving Targets, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, writer, writing
Villa of Mysteries
Posted by Literary Titan

Lorraine Blundell’s Villa of Mysteries: A Novel of Pompeii imagines the lives behind one of Pompeii’s most enigmatic frescoed rooms, beginning with Lady Claudia Lucilla’s commission of the painter Famulus and widening into a many-stranded portrait of artists, slaves, merchants, lovers, priestesses, and patricians living under the long shadow of Vesuvius. The novel braids domestic detail, Bacchic ritual, political danger, romance, and catastrophe into a story where beauty is never quite separable from peril.
I was most drawn to the book’s tactile sense of place. Pompeii here is not a museum under glass; it is hot, fragrant, noisy, uneven underfoot, and morally crowded. Blundell lingers over cinnabar walls, rose perfume, bread, wine, gardens, fresco pigments, bathhouses, and shop counters until the city feels less reconstructed than re-inhabited. At times, the abundance of description slows the plot, but it also gives the novel its chief pleasure: the feeling that every threshold opens onto another chamber of ordinary life, and that ordinary life is the very thing history is about to steal.
The emotional current worked best for me when the novel stayed close to its women: Claudia with her secrets and authority, Alessia with her talent and vulnerability, Tullia with her perfumed hopes, Julia with her hard-won survival. The book is sometimes more mosaic than spear-thrust, moving through many characters and episodes rather than driving relentlessly forward, but that structure suits Pompeii. A doomed city should feel populous. By the time danger arrives, the reader has been taught to care not only about who survives, but about what gets lost: songs, rooms, recipes, friendships, gossip, colors, and private ceremonies no ash can fully preserve.
I think the ideal audience is readers who enjoy immersive historical fiction, women’s fiction, romance, and disaster fiction with a strong sense of setting. Readers of Robert Harris’s Pompeii may recognize the volcanic dread, though Blundell’s novel is less engineered thriller and more frescoed social panorama; it also has something of the intimate, household-centered appeal of authors like Kate Quinn. Villa of Mysteries turns Pompeii’s last bright days into a vivid, intimate fresco of beauty, secrecy, and impending ruin.
Pages: 318 | ASIN : B0GMZQPXNJ
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Lorraine Blundell, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Villa of Mysteries, writer, writing
Weighing a Miracle (Silent Spaces)
Posted by Literary Titan

Weighing a Miracle reimagines the story of Lazarus through Caleb, a man of logic whose belief in absolutes is shaken by a divine event he cannot explain. What inspired you to retell one of the most well-known moments from the Bible?
What inspired me for this story is a sermon I heard titled “There’s a Revival in the Graveyard.” The thought came to me about the reaction Lazarus must have gotten from the people that knew him, and attended his funeral. I wanted to capture the look on their face(s) when they saw him alive. In my mind I thought ‘that’s an interesting concept’ and I left it at that. But the thought would not leave me. I carried that thought for a week and it was burning in my mind. Finally, I decided to outline a story out of the biblical account just to see what it would look like. As I finished the outline, I started writing the first draft and couldn’t stop until I was done. The rest is history and here we are.
How closely did you adhere to the biblical account, and where did you feel free to imagine or expand?
That’s a good question and I am glad you asked. There are some stories in the bible that give a lot of detail. Stories that have a lot of meat on their bones. Then there are stories that don’t even give you the name(s) of the main characters in the story. What I like to do is to make the unnamed characters come alive by bolstering their lives with more detail. The bible stories that have unnamed characters and such, I give them names and also a history if possible. My goal is to make the original story more vivid by supplying the missing detail. And at the same time, I don’t want to ‘bend’ the original account of the story by altering the known facts about the story. So, instead of changing the original story, I enhance it with the missing details that make a good story better.
Were there scenes you found especially difficult to write because of their spiritual or emotional gravity?
No, I don’t think so. With my philosophy of keeping the original story intact and just retelling it with more ‘meat on the bones,’ I don’t find any of that difficult. I just want to make good stories better.
What do you hope readers who are uncertain or skeptical about faith take away from Caleb’s journey?
I hope to inspire people to persevere when the trying of their faith comes along. Keeping the faith is paramount. Especially in the face of adverse conditions.
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Website
Caleb ben Josiah has built his life on certainty — on weights that balance, contracts that hold, and truths that can be measured.
When his closest friend Lazarus dies, Caleb does what he does best: he steps in to manage the practical realities of loss for the grieving family. He expects grief. He expects finality.
He does not expect the tomb to be found empty.
And he certainly does not expect Lazarus himself to appear at his door — alive.
Now the careful merchant faces a reality that shatters every ledger he has ever kept. As grief, memory, and impossible evidence collide, Caleb must confront the one question his scales were never meant to answer:
What do you do when the world you trusted no longer adds up?
Weighing a Miracle is a quiet, introspective reimagining of one of the most famous moments in Scripture — told through the eyes of a man who measures everything, and suddenly can measure nothing at all.
A Silent Spaces Story
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, christian fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Steven Nimocks, story, Weighing a Miracle (Silent Spaces), writer, writing
Silks and Stones
Posted by Literary Titan

Silks and Stones by Quinn Lawrence is a fantasy mystery about Hokuren and Cinna, a pair of investigators whose trip to Fondence begins as a family obligation and turns into a larger case involving smuggling, old secrets, goblins, a dangerous wizard, and the buried truth about Hokuren’s parents. The book sits comfortably in the fantasy genre, but it borrows a lot of its engine from detective fiction: clues, rumors, coded diaries, false assumptions, and the slow pleasure of watching pieces click into place.
What I liked most was how grounded the story feels even when the magical stakes rise. Lawrence opens with a cat rescue, which is funny, messy, and oddly perfect. It tells you right away that this is not a fantasy world built only for grand speeches and glowing spells. It has scratched-up tunics, unpaid bills, awkward clients, and people trying to make rent. That choice gives the book a warm, authentic texture. I also appreciated the rhythm between Hokuren and Cinna. Their partnership has the easy snap of a long friendship, but underneath the banter there is real care. Sometimes it is as simple as bandaging wounds that will heal anyway.
The author’s biggest strength is balancing humor with emotional weight. Hokuren’s grief over her father and her questions about her mother could have made the story heavy, but the book keeps moving through curiosity, action, and small comic turns. Cinna brings a blunt, physical energy that cuts through the sadness without cheapening it. I did occasionally feel the plot had a lot on its hands at once: family history, smuggling, wizard politics, goblins, coded writing, and the central relationship. Still, most of those threads feed the same larger idea, which is that knowing the truth about people can make them more complicated, not less lovable.
I’d recommend Silks and Stones to readers who enjoy cozy-leaning fantasy mysteries with heart, humor, and a strong central duo. It will especially work for people who like investigations in magical worlds, found-family dynamics, and stories where the emotional case matters as much as the criminal one. For a reader who wants a thoughtful adventure with wit, warmth, and a little mud on its boots, this book is easy to recommend.
Share this:
- Share on X (Opens in new window) X
- Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
- Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
- Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
- Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
- Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
- Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
- Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
- Print (Opens in new window) Print
- Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
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, mystery, nook, novel, Quinn Lawrence, read, reader, reading, Silks and Stones, story, writer, writing







