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Dominion: Ascension
Posted by Literary Titan

Dominion: Ascension drops readers into a future where a woman-led government controls every part of life and men are sorted into rigid castes by a brutal testing system. We follow Dani Matthews, an investigative reporter who cannot let go of the lies around her father’s death or her mother’s role in building Dominion’s power. As she digs, she crosses paths with rebels, hidden sanctuaries, and the underground world of men who are bred, bought, and discarded. Her journey pulls her away from the glitter of elite parties and into tunnels, camps, and secret havens, then sends her back again with new eyes. By the end, Dani has to decide what kind of truth-teller she wants to be, what price she will pay for that choice, and how far she will go to expose the system that raised her and used her.
I felt the world of Dominion in my gut. The Singletary bands around the men’s necks, the polished parties full of “Seducers,” the Dissident buses packed with bodies, the cold efficiency of Illegis testing, all of it hit me with a mix of fascination and dread. The alternating focus on Dani and her mother, Linda, kept pulling me in two emotional directions at once. I kept judging Linda, then catching myself, then feeling a twist of pity when the book showed the ruins she lived through after the war. At the same time, Dani’s voice felt raw and human, not a perfect hero, just a stubborn, sometimes messy young woman who loves her father’s memory and hates what her mother built. I liked that the book let her be angry and scared and selfish and brave in turn. By the time she reached Haven and started to see what resistance actually costs, I felt that familiar tightness in my chest, the one I get when a story stops being “cool dystopia” and starts feeling a little too close to home.
On the craft side, the book was well written. The prose can be lush, even theatrical, and at times it lingers on description a bit longer than I liked, especially early on in the gala scenes and some of the world exposition. Still, those same details created a strong sense of place, and the visual images stuck in my mind. The emotional beats between mother and daughter worked very well for me. Their arguments about safety, control, and sacrifice gave the book its heart. The romantic thread has real chemistry and some scenes that feel both tender and intense, though now and then it nudged the story toward drama when I wanted to stay in the political tension. The ending, with Dani sitting in front of her article and deciding whether to send it, gave me a sharp jolt of excitement and frustration at once, because it clearly sets up more to come rather than tying everything off in a neat bow.
I would recommend Dominion: Ascension to readers who enjoy character-driven dystopian fiction with a strong emotional core and who do not mind some darkness in both theme and imagery. If you like books that flip power structures and ask what happens when the oppressed become the rulers, this will hook you. It is a good fit for fans of speculative stories that blend politics, family tension, romance, and questions about justice into one fast-moving arc. Book clubs that want something to argue about, especially around gender roles and state control, will have a field day with this one.
Pages: 354 | ASIN : B0FGZMLYCM
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, college fantasy, coming of age, D.A. Murray, Dominion: Ascension, dystopian, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, new adult, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, science fictino, story, writer, writing
The Slide
Posted by Literary Titan

Aaron Ryan’s The Slide is a tightly wound, emotionally raw, and fast-paced sci-fi thriller that tackles the apocalypse in a way I’ve never quite seen before. Set in late 2025, the story follows Dane Currier, a brilliant but troubled scientist who discovers that a massive, uncharted black hole is heading straight for Earth. The revelation kicks off a tense, global unraveling, paralleled by Currier’s personal obsession: a secret teleportation project called Courier 3.1. As the world faces doom, Dane sees a chance for redemption, escape, or maybe something deeper. It’s a bold mix of hard science, emotional confession, and philosophical grit.
Ryan’s writing is conversational, even chatty at times, and it works. It pulls you in like a friend telling you the end is near over a late-night drink. The balance between grand cosmic doom and intimate personal fear feels incredibly relatable. There’s a rawness to Dane’s voice. His acid reflux, his bitterness, his hope, all made him feel painfully real. I didn’t always like him, but I couldn’t stop listening. I also loved the way Ryan treats the black hole not just as a sci-fi monster, but as a metaphor for grief, purpose, and mortality. The writing is smart and hits hard, often laced with sarcasm and gallows humor.
The pacing picks up quite a bit in the later chapters, and there were times I found myself wanting a little more space to take it all in. While I admired the emotional honesty throughout, a few moments of dialogue leaned a bit dramatic. Still, these are minor things in an otherwise powerful story. What shines here is the vision: the gnawing sense that science and soul are dancing toward the same abyss. Ryan captures the spiraling collapse of society with an eeriness that feels way too close to home. And Courier 3.1? Man, that machine had me questioning everything.
The Slide is part sci-fi disaster, part confession booth, and part love letter to human stubbornness. If you like your fiction with big ideas, flawed heroes, and the occasional burp of existential dread, this book’s for you. I’d recommend it to fans of Blake Crouch, Andy Weir, or anyone who wonders what they’d do if the end of the world knocked on their door and offered them a way out.
Pages: 331 | ASIN : B0FFFMJQR3
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Aaron Ryan, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Disaster fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, hard scienc fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction, psychological fiction, read, reader, reading, sci fi, science fictino, story, suspense, The Slide, thriller, writer, writing






