Supplicant
Posted by Literary Titan

Supplicant is a science fiction novel with a strong dystopian streak, and its core idea is sharp right from the start: in Kip Cassino’s future, prayer has been measured, weaponized, and folded into the machinery of power itself. A researcher named Mason Pratt proves that directed prayer can preserve life, and centuries later that discovery has helped create a brutal world ruled by the long-lived elite, sustained by engineered “supplicants” who exist to pray for them without end. From there, the novel follows violence, political maneuvering, and the fate of KAX, one of the surviving supplicants, as the story turns that big speculative premise into something much more intimate and disturbing.
What I enjoyed most was the book’s willingness to go all in on its premise. Cassino does not treat the idea of prayer as a soft symbol or a vague spiritual backdrop. He treats it like infrastructure, like currency, like oil in the pipes of civilization. I found that fascinating. There is a real chill in the way the novel imagines faith being absorbed into systems of ownership, biotech, and hierarchy. At its best, the writing has that old-school speculative fiction energy where one bold idea keeps radiating outward and changing everything it touches. You can feel the author thinking through consequences, and I respected that. Even when the book gets blunt, it’s rarely lazy. It wants to ask what happens when something sacred gets processed by institutions until it becomes another tool for control.
The novel is vivid, sometimes almost brutally so, and it doesn’t flinch from cruelty. KAX’s storyline, especially, is hard to read at times. There were stretches where I admired the conviction behind the storytelling, and other stretches where the book leaned so hard into horror that it was shocking. I kept coming back to the fact that Cassino gives KAX an inner life, not just a role in the machinery of the plot. The book is full of excess, but underneath it I could feel a serious concern with dignity, survival, and the damage done when people are reduced to functions. That gave the novel weight. It kept it from feeling empty.
I’d recommend Supplicant most to readers who like speculative fiction that is idea-driven, dark, and unapologetically severe. If someone enjoys dystopian science fiction that wrestles with religion, power, bioengineering, and the moral cost of building a society on human dependence, this book will give them a lot to chew on. For people who appreciate ambitious genre fiction that is willing to be unsettling, provocative, and sometimes messy in pursuit of a big thought, I think it will leave a mark.
Pages: 326 | ASIN : B0GMK71BX2
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on April 7, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dystopian, ebook, fiction, goodreads, horror, indie author, kindle, Kip Cassino, kobo, literature, nook, novel, occult, read, reader, reading, sci-fi, science fiction, speculative fiction, story, supernatural, Supplicant, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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