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Drinking from the Stream
Posted by Literary Titan

Drinking from the Stream follows two young Americans, Jake and Karl, whose chance meeting turns into a long, hazardous journey across East Africa in the early 1970s. What begins as flight, Jake from a violent past in Louisiana, Karl from ideological and emotional dead ends in the United States, becomes immersion. As they move through Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, and beyond, their personal reckonings unfold alongside coups, ethnic violence, and the aftershocks of colonial rule. The novel braids coming-of-age restlessness with political catastrophe, asking what it means to stay human, or decent, when history is on fire around you.
I read this book with a mounting sense of unease, and I mean that as praise. Sacks doesn’t offer Africa as backdrop or metaphor; he insists on its specificity. Roads that punish the body, bureaucracies that toy with fate, conversations that slide from flirtation to terror without warning. Jake’s voice, in particular, is sharp-edged and morally alert, a man who knows he has crossed an invisible line and can’t uncross it. The novel’s early scenes on the oil rig, heavy with menace and casual hatred, establish a moral pressure that never really lifts, even when the landscape opens into beauty. I felt myself reading faster, not because the prose rushed me, but because it refused to soften what it saw.
What stayed with me most were the arguments about race, revolution, guilt, and responsibility that erupt in buses, bars, and borrowed rooms. These exchanges feel earned rather than staged, the product of young people who are smart, frightened, idealistic, and often wrong. The author has little patience for slogans, whether they come from Western radicals or newly empowered strongmen, and that skepticism gives the book its bite. Sometimes the historical density is demanding, but it mirrors the characters’ own overwhelm; ignorance here has consequences, sometimes lethal. By the end, I felt the weight of the knowledge the characters carry, knowledge they never asked for and can’t put down.
This book will most reward readers of historical fiction, literary adventure, and political coming-of-age novels, especially those drawn to morally complex travel narratives. If you admire the restless intelligence of The Sheltering Sky or the political consciousness of A Bend in the River, Drinking from the Stream belongs on your shelf. It’s a novel for readers who don’t want reassurance so much as reckoning. This is not a story about finding yourself abroad; it’s about discovering how much of the world you can carry back, and what it costs to do so.
Pages: 377 | ASIN : B0DXLQTN5M
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: 20th century historical fiction, action fiction, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, coming of a ge, Drinking from the Stream, ebook, fiction, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, political thriller, read, reader, reading, Richard Scott Sacks, story, suspense, writer, writing
Operation Archer 2nd Edition.
Posted by Literary Titan

Operation Archer is a wartime time-travel thriller that follows Simon — a grieving engineer in 2027 — whose recurring nightmares and unresolved trauma lead him to seek hypnotherapy. What begins as an attempt to heal from the anguish caused by his wife Lorna’s preventable death develops into something far stranger, as Simon’s sessions unlock vivid recollections of flying RAF bombers in WWII. Soon, the boundaries between memory, imagination and reality vanish until he participates in a dangerous mission with life – changing consequences. The book blends historical fiction with speculative adventure, grounding its big swings in a character who feels painfully human.
Beyond the aerial action, hypnotherapy and intrigue, this is really a story about grief and the mind’s strange ways of restoring balance after it has been shattered. The early chapters are heavy with loss. Simon’s memories of Lorna feel tender and raw, and his anger toward the medical system is explored in a way that feels honest rather than melodramatic. When the book shifts into regression, past-life imagery, and eventually full time-travel, the transition works better than I expected because the emotional groundwork is so solid. I found myself believing the unbelievable simply because Simon did, and because the narrative lets his curiosity and vulnerability drive the plot rather than spectacle alone.
The author makes some bold choices, especially in how he describes the procedural details of hypnosis, RAF aviation, and wartime operations in great detail. Sometimes I caught myself wishing the pace would move a little quicker, but then I would hit a passage where the sensory detail pulled me right back in. The roar of Merlin engines. The searing heat of a burning bomber’s fuselage. The eerie quiet of a hypnotic induction. When these moments appear, they feel less like exposition and more like slipping into someone else’s skin. And I appreciated the book’s willingness to stretch genre boundaries. It is a mixture of historical and science fiction plus psychological drama, which gives it a strange charm.
Operation Archer is reflective, occasionally surprising, and anchored by a protagonist whose pain feels real even when the plot turns surreal. If you enjoy historical thrillers with a speculative twist, or character-driven stories that explore trauma and transformation, you’ll enjoy this book. Readers who love World War Two aviation fiction or time-travel adventures will feel especially at home here. For me, Operation Archer is a compelling blend of heart, history, and imagination.
Pages: 223 | ASIN : B0G52L2ZL3
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action fiction, Alternative History, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Colin M Barron, ebook, ficiton, goodreads, historical fiction, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Military Historical fiction, nook, novel, Operation Archer 2nd Edition., read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, time travel, war and military, war fiction, writer, writing
Ascension of the Phoenix
Posted by Literary Titan
Ascension of the Phoenix is an adventure filled contemporary action novel by author Jessica Piro. Detective Leila is tasked with finding the serial killer, Bryan Foster, after he murdered eleven people. He didn’t technically murder the 12th person, but he heavily contributed and thus Leila blames him for that too. They were co-workers and that made it personal. Leila and her partner David are out celebrating a birthday when they get a call that Foster has been sighted. They race to the scene where things tragic and Leila is told to take a break and recover. During her recovery she meets Jamaal, a very compelling character, and gets invited to a fighting tournament. Jamaal and Leila enter the tournament as fighting partners. Will they win? Will Leila fully emotionally recover from that fateful night? And is the cost worth it?
I loved seeing the friendship between Leila and Jamaal develop and change over time. The only thing the same about them is where they live at the start of the book. Culturally, fighting style, philosophically, they are completely different. Compared to some other fighting pairs in the book (Shamus and Luke), they go well together, in a buddy-cop sort of way. Through the book they become close, but stay friends, which is was certainly a nice dynamic that makes their relationship much more absorbing. There’s no friend-zoning, no tension of unrequited love, just mutual care and support. Shamus and Luke are really annoying when in the same scene together (but this is probably intentional). My personal dislike for them gets dealt with and addressed in the book in a satisfying way, so the author does get points for that.
Ascension of the Phoenix is a character driven action story that takes readers in unexpected directions. Filled with interesting characters, concise and stimulating dialogue, all designed to accentuate the action and keep the story moving. Author Jessica Piro has created a strong female protagonist, that is self reliant but stronger with friends, and I found her character refreshing. I look forward to the next book because, although the story ends on a satisfying note, Leila is far from recovered. I MUST see the end of her journey. Ascension of the Phoenix is an exciting read with a satisfying ending.
Pages: 371 | ASIN: B08GL84FBQ
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action, action fiction, adventure, Ascension of the Phoenix, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary fiction, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, Jessica Piro, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, womens fiction, writer, writing
Spider’s Web – Trailer
Posted by Literary Titan
Over three years have passed since Maggie’s near fatal injury. She is restless running the team’s special ops missions from the safety of the Grid. No sooner does she re-enter the real world when her past finds her. In an instant, Maggie’s life is forever changed. Unsure who to trust, Maggie tries to navigate her new reality. Will she be able to choose her future, or will she remain trapped in the web of enemies she created?
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: action, action fiction, author, book, book review, Book Trailers, bookblogger, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, shannon condon, spiders web, story, suspense, technothriller, thriller, trailer, writer, writing




![Ascension of the Phoenix (The Phoenix Trilogy Book 1) by [Jessica Piro]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51kQSplislL.jpg)


