Category Archives: Five Stars
The Little Girl’s Mother
Posted by Literary Titan

The Little Girl’s Mother drops us straight into a police station that turns into a battleground and then never really lets the tension slip. It follows a family whose daughter witnesses a murder and suddenly becomes the target of a powerful criminal syndicate. The parents, both former military with heavy pasts, step back into a world they hoped to leave behind. The story twists from procedural chaos into a dark rescue mission, something between a thriller and a raw look at what parents might do when no one else can keep their child alive. It moves fast. Sometimes brutally fast. And it carries a steady drumbeat of fear and determination.
Reading it, I felt myself leaning in, almost holding my breath. The writing hits with a kind of straight shot energy. There is no drifting around. The scenes move with hard edges and sharp turns. I liked that. It pulled me right into the panic, the cold choices, and the way the parents shift from frightened to focused. I cared more than I expected to and sometimes caught myself rooting for them in ways that surprised me. The emotional weight lands strongest when the parents talk to each other or when they steady their daughter. Those moments feel real. They cool the fire just enough to let the story breathe before it kicks off again.
Some scenes in the workshop are rough. Not because they are gory but because of the calm way they unfold. The tone made me uneasy in a way that felt intentional. I could sense the author pushing me to sit with the question of what desperation does to good people. I liked that the book did not try to pretend those choices are clean or noble. The pacing can feel intense. Yet the emotional through-line keeps things grounded and stops the story from tipping into pure action for its own sake.
I would recommend this book to readers who like high-tension thrillers and stories about families under extreme pressure. It fits readers who enjoy military backgrounds, tactical problem solving, and moral knots that do not come undone easily. If you want a story that grabs you by the collar and refuses to let go, then this will absolutely hit the mark.
Pages: 217 | ASIN : B0FHSHXY18
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Crime Action Fiction, crime fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Matt Campbell, military fiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Suspense Action Fiction, The Little Girl's Mother, War & Military Action Fiction, writer, writing
The Third Twin: Love, Lies, and Billionaire Secrets
Posted by Literary Titan

The Third Twin is a romance thriller that follows Sienna Casanova, an ER nurse whose world fractures the moment she feels her identical twin, Savannah, scream. Savannah, a famous investigative journalist, has gone dark, leaving behind only a bloodied necklace and a trail of danger. As Sienna races to find her, she’s pulled into a violent web involving black-market adoption rings, corrupt insiders, and Luca Stone, her sister’s brooding head of security. The story blends high-stakes suspense with an evolving, combustible romance. It’s very much a romance thriller at heart, stitched together with family secrets, danger, and the messy intensity of twinhood.
Reading it felt like riding in a car that never dips below fifty. The writing is fast and cinematic, with fight scenes that crack like glass and emotional beats that don’t waste time getting to the point. Parker leans fully into immediacy. Characters breathe hard, move fast, and react without overthinking. There were moments when I wanted the prose to linger or soften, but the clipped style fits the story’s heartbeat. Sienna’s voice oscillates between raw fear, jealousy, tenderness, and grit, and I found myself liking her more whenever she admitted something uncomfortable. Luca, meanwhile, carries that familiar romance-thriller energy: stoic, lethal, frustrating, and of course, irresistible. Their dynamic is chaotic in a way that feels intentional, like sparks thrown off metal.
What surprised me most was how the book knits an intimate relationship into the tension of a broader conspiracy. The author could have relied on the dangerous-man-protective-woman trope alone, but she gives the siblings’ bond real weight. The “twin sense” isn’t just a gimmick. It becomes the emotional spine of the story and gives the romance a stronger foundation than heat alone. Some emotional transitions happen fast. One chapter, you’re dodging gunmen, and the next, you’re collapsing into each other’s arms. But honestly, the abruptness works in a romance thriller. Bodies crash together under pressure. People cling to whatever feels solid. It all felt believable within the world that author Lexi Parker is building.
I’d recommend The Third Twin to readers who love romance thrillers packed with danger, devotion, and a relentless pace. If you enjoy bodyguard-romance energy, high stakes, and stories where fear and attraction tangle together until you can’t tell them apart, this one will hit the mark. And if you like your books to read like movies playing out in real time, you’ll have a good time here.
Pages: 190 | ASIN : B0FWC5VJFP
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, Action & Adventure Romance, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Lexi Parker, literature, Mystery Action & Adventure, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, The Third Twin, thriller, Thriller & Suspense Action Fiction, writer, writing
Looking for Trouble
Posted by Literary Titan

Looking for Trouble follows Maurice Hicks from his childhood in Baltimore through his early years in law enforcement. The book moves fast, almost breathless at times, as it shows a kid growing up in a rough world who somehow stays hopeful. It tracks his path from a paperboy with big dreams to a Marine and then to a police officer who ends up facing danger that feels unreal. The stories unfold with heat and sweat and fear and sometimes humor, and they paint a picture of a city that seems alive and angry and wounded all at once. What struck me most was the constant push and pull between survival and duty. The book never slows down. It grabs you at the start and keeps going.
The writing is blunt. It is raw in spots. It has a rhythm that feels like someone talking to you across a table late at night. The scenes inside the housing projects made my stomach knot. The tension builds so sharply that I kept catching my breath. At the same time, the author also slips in these little pieces of heart, small moments of gratitude or pride or humor that soften the edges. I liked that mix. It made the stories feel relatable. I found myself angry at the chaos around him, frustrated at the failures of systems that should have helped people, and surprised by how quickly small choices could turn dangerous. The book does not try to pretty anything up. It gives you the smoke and the noise and the fear straight up, and I respected that.
What stayed with me even more were the quieter reflections woven into the story. The author writes about the weight officers carry and the scars they collect along the way. He also writes about the people who shaped him, from family members to neighbors to teachers who saw more in him than he saw in himself. Those parts hit me hardest. They felt honest. They felt like memories he never stopped holding. I found myself thinking about how the environment shapes a person and how strength sometimes comes from the most unexpected places. The ideas here feel grounded. Nothing lofty. Nothing inflated. Just real life and the lessons scraped out of it.
I would recommend Looking for Trouble to readers who want a vivid, unfiltered look at police work, city life, and the long road a person walks to find purpose. It is a strong fit for people who enjoy memoirs that pull no punches and for readers curious about what it feels like to be inside the chaos instead of watching it from far away. The book is sharp, tense, and full of heart.
Pages: 535 | ASIN : B0C15B8JDB
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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, crime, criminology, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Looking for Trouble, Maurice Hicks, mayhem, memoirs, mudery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, true crime, writer, writing
The Diary of Vivienne – Is hope enough?
Posted by Literary Titan

The Diary of Vivienne unfolds as a layered and haunting story. It follows a hidden journal discovered in the ruins of a future society that has scrubbed away its own painful past. The entries from Vivienne Rose, her partner Richard, and the ethereal teachings of Neferatu paint a world that swings between collapse and renewal. War tears through nations, faith shakes, and reforms itself, and ordinary people cling to hope as their only compass. The book wanders through violence, prophecy, political decay, and spiritual awakening, then suddenly shifts into a bright new age where humanity tries to forget what nearly destroyed it. The result is a narrative that asks, again and again, if hope can save us or if forgetting our darkness only guarantees its return.
I found myself caught between admiration and discomfort as Ashby moves from intimate confessions to sweeping political commentary. Sometimes the writing feels like a storm that refuses to settle. Other times it quiets into soft moments of grief or tenderness, especially when Vivienne speaks of her daughter or her friends. I loved those parts. They felt raw and human. But I kept circling back to the idea of Neferatu. His teachings land with a strange mix of poetry and severity. I felt drawn in, then pushed back out, unsure if I was reading wisdom or warning. That tension made the experience oddly addictive. I kept turning pages just to sit with that uncertainty.
The political edges of the book hit me differently. Ashby writes with open frustration about the collapse of governments, the decay of social trust, and the failures of institutions. Those sections made me pause because they echoed fears many people carry but rarely spell out so boldly. Sometimes I nodded along. Sometimes I winced. The diary style makes these passages feel personal rather than preachy. Still, the blend of prophecy, politics, mysticism, and dystopia can feel dizzying. But I liked the daring mix. The emotional swings, though, are what give the book its pulse. I felt alarm, sadness, wonder, and even hope that felt shaky but real.
I would recommend The Diary of Vivienne to readers who enjoy stories that blur the line between spiritual reflection and dystopian fiction. It fits anyone who likes a narrative that thinks out loud, pokes at uncomfortable ideas, and makes you question what you believe about society, faith, and the future. If you want a book that lingers in your mind long after you close it, this one will do just that.
Pages: 288 | ASIN : B0F6TFS5DG
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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, Dr. Glenville Ashby, ebook, faith, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religion, spirituality, story, The Diary of Vivienne - Is hope enough?, writer, writing
One Ordinary Man – A novel based on the true story of Harry Hopkins
Posted by Literary Titan

One Ordinary Man tells the life story of Harry Hopkins in a way that feels both intimate and sweeping. The book opens with a touching prologue about Hopkins’s son meeting Winston Churchill, and then drops the reader straight into the turmoil of the Great Depression, where Hopkins begins his rise as Franklin Roosevelt’s trusted problem solver. The early chapters lay out the stakes with clear urgency. Americans are hungry, the economy is broken, and Hopkins storms into Washington determined to help ordinary people find work again. The writing blends historical detail with fictional color, and the story moves fast, jumping from train stations filled with despair to backroom political battles that shaped modern America. It is a story about duty, grit, and a man who constantly drove himself forward even as his health failed him.
I found myself caught up in the rhythm of the writing. It moves with a kind of pulse that mirrors Hopkins’s own restless energy. Scenes come alive with sharp little details that stick with you. The smell of Hoovervilles, the clatter of trains, the tension in overheated government rooms. I felt pulled along, sometimes faster than I expected, and I enjoyed that sense of motion. I also liked how the dialogue feels plainspoken and direct. It gives the characters a human quality that grounds the high stakes of the era. I did catch myself wanting a breather here and there. The narrative rarely slows. Still, that speed gives the story a sense of immediacy that worked for me, especially when Hopkins squares off with political opponents or barrels into new crises without hesitation.
The story keeps circling back to public service and sacrifice, and the emotional weight builds slowly. Hopkins is shown as flawed, stubborn, loyal, and deeply committed to helping people who have nothing left. I felt a quiet sadness beneath many scenes, especially the ones that remind you he pushed himself far past what his body could take. The foreword hints at this, and the novel delivers on it. I also appreciated the attention to the political climate of the time. It is unsettling to see how familiar some of the fears and arguments feel today. The book makes that point without lecturing. It just shows men trying to hold a country together and lets the reader sit with the echoes.
I would recommend One Ordinary Man to readers who enjoy historical fiction that feels close to real life. It is especially well-suited for anyone interested in the Roosevelt years, political leadership, or the hidden work behind major turning points in history. The story is lively, heartfelt, and often moving, and it paints a portrait of a man who shaped the world from behind the curtain while never thinking of himself as anything special.
Pages: 622 | ASIN : B0FTMVW16Q
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Dr. Toad’s Short Book for a Long Memory
Posted by Literary Titan

Dr. Toad’s Short Book for a Long Memory is a light and friendly guide that walks readers through simple ways to recall names, numbers, lists, and lost items. The book blends humor with practical advice, using vivid examples, quirky illustrations, and down-to-earth explanations to show how memory works and how anyone can strengthen it. It moves through seven short chapters that each offer a new tool or idea and wraps it all up with a warm push toward healthier habits for a sharper mind.
As I read it, I found myself smiling at how disarming the tone is. The author talks about blimps, spilled eggs, dancing seniors, and cartoon images glued to people’s faces. It made learning feel easy. At times, I caught myself trying out the techniques before I even realized it. When he described the Roman Room idea, I could almost see my own messy living room turning into a mental storage unit, and it honestly made me laugh. I liked that the writing never tries to sound smarter than it needs to be. It keeps things simple and conversational, which left me feeling more relaxed than judged.
I also appreciated how encouraging the book feels. The author stresses that forgetfulness is normal and often harmless. That reminder took a weight off my shoulders. Reading the sections on distraction and switch tasking made me nod in recognition because they felt so true to daily life. Some parts felt a little repetitive, and I wished a few techniques had more real-world examples. Still, the charm of the book never fades. I felt the writer rooting for me, which made the advice land with more force.
By the end, I felt motivated. The book’s mix of science, humor, and practical steps stirred a sense of hope that memory can be trained with small habits. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants simple tools without heavy jargon. It is great for busy people, older adults who feel a little nervous about forgetfulness, students who want to sharpen their recall, and anyone who has walked into a room and muttered, “Why did I come in here?”
Pages: 67 | ASIN : B0G3TDSHJD
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: aging, Aging & Longevity, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Dr. Toad’s Short Book for a Long Memory, ebook, goodreads, indie author, Jeffrey Tolstad, kindle, kobo, literature, Memory Improvement Self-Help, mental health, nook, novel, Popular Applied Psychology, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Gracie and Aero’s Wallet
Posted by Literary Titan

Gracie and Aero Brown are two spirited youngsters stepping into the early world of finance. Last summer’s yard sale funded their ice-cream dreams and delivered a handful of valuable lessons. Now they’re ready for something bigger. A telescope has captured their imaginations, yet its price tag sits far beyond their current savings. Undeterred, the siblings map out a plan: another yard sale, extra chores, whatever honest work will help them inch toward their goal. Readers join them as they navigate each step of their budding financial journey.
Gracie and Aero’s Wallet, written by Rachel Gregory, is a brightly illustrated children’s book suited to elementary and early middle-school readers. Its concise length and colorful artwork bring the siblings’ world to life, portraying their small discoveries and everyday encounters with warmth and charm.
Although designed for young readers, the book clearly aims higher than simple entertainment. Gregory uses the siblings’ mission to demonstrate real-life financial principles, earning, saving, and the early roots of budgeting. As Gracie and Aero calculate the cost of the telescope and estimate how many chores or sales they need to reach it, they begin internalizing concepts that will serve them long after childhood.
Despite its practical lessons, the book never loses its sense of fun. The illustrations are lively enough to draw a child’s eye, and the protagonists themselves are irresistibly endearing. A helpful budgeting chart appears toward the end, along with age-appropriate ideas for earning a bit of extra money.
Gregory offers a story that blends adventure with genuine, useful guidance. Parents seeking a way to introduce responsibility and foundational financial skills will find this book an excellent companion as their children take early steps toward independence.
Pages: 32 | ISBN : 1637653433
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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, children's money and saving reference, childrens book, ebook, goodreads, Gracie and Aero's Wallet, indie author, Jack Foster, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Rachel Gregory, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
The 12th Cleansing: A Cold Case Reignited by a Serial Killer’s Return
Posted by Literary Titan

The 12th Cleansing follows Detective Walker Michaels as the nightmare he thought had ended, suddenly returns. A serial killer known as the Moralist resumes his ritualistic murders after a four-year silence, forcing Michaels to confront old failures, grieving families, and the unraveling lives of those caught in the killer’s moral crusade. The story moves between investigators, victims’ families, and the killer’s perspective, building a tense, layered thriller that keeps tightening as new secrets surface.
This was an absolutely gripping read. The writing feels clean and fast, and the shifting viewpoints land with weight. I found myself sinking into the Rawlings family scenes. The way the parents break down, the strain between husband and wife, and the quiet shock of their son Connor all hit hard. Those moments felt honest in a way that surprised me. I caught myself getting frustrated with the detectives when they stumbled and then suddenly rooting for them again when a new clue clicked into place.
I also found myself torn about the ideas behind the story. The book pushes into heavy themes, especially around judgment, morality, and grief. At times, it made me uncomfortable, but in a way that felt intentional. The villain’s twisted logic is disturbing, and the author lets that discomfort sit with you. I liked how the characters wrestle with their own blame and doubts. It made the story feel more human, not just a chase after a monster. And I’ll admit I got pretty worked up during a few scenes. Some had me whispering little reactions under my breath. Others made me pause for a second, thinking about how thin the line is between control and collapse.
In some ways, The 12th Cleansing feels like The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, since both blend dark mysteries with messy family secrets and investigators who carry their own scars, yet Glass’s story hits closer to home with its raw focus on grief and moral tension. I’d recommend The 12th Cleansing to readers who enjoy crime thrillers that mix emotional tension with a slow-burn mystery. If you like stories that dig into family strain, moral conflict, and the ripple effects of violence, this one is absolutely worth the read.
Pages: 404 | ASIN : B0FY6F4YM1
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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, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, murder, N Joseph Glass, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, serial killers, story, The 12th Cleansing: A Cold Case Reignited by a Serial Killer's Return, thriller, writer, writing











