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Humanity in Trouble and Our Failure to Act
Posted by Literary Titan

This book is an unfiltered, fiery commentary on the state of humanity. Author James Vodnik moves through subjects as wide-ranging as politics, diet, religion, climate change, capitalism, Hollywood, and even grammar. Each chapter is a diatribe, but also a plea, warning that if we don’t change our ways, humanity is heading straight into disaster. At its heart, the book insists that stupidity, greed, and apathy are our greatest threats, and it offers both blistering critiques and scattered ideas for solutions.
Vodnik writes like a man with much to say and not enough patience, and that makes his voice raw, funny, and often biting. I loved the blunt honesty. There’s a gutsy refusal to whitewash, which makes the book feel like a long conversation with an angry but oddly endearing friend. Still, his tendency to repeat points, or to swing from one issue to another without much transition, left me dizzy more than once. It’s chaotic, but in a way that fits the urgency of his message.
What struck me most was the emotional weight behind the anger. Beneath the sarcasm and the swearing, there’s grief for a planet and a species that could be so much more than it is. His chapters on climate change, inequality, and our failures as stewards of Earth hit hard. I felt a mix of frustration and sadness, but also a little hope, because Vodnik never completely gives up on the idea that we can do better. That combination of outrage and reluctant optimism gives the book its heart.
I would recommend this book to readers who appreciate unapologetic social commentary and don’t mind a heavy dose of ranting along with their insight. It’s for people who like to be provoked, who can handle blunt opinions without flinching, and who are willing to laugh a little while being scolded. If you’ve ever thrown up your hands at the world and thought, “what is wrong with us,” you’ll find a companion in these pages.
Pages: 183 | ASIN : B0CTWVLR1V
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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, ebook, goodreads, Humanity in Trouble and Our Failure to Act, indie author, James Vodnik, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, political science, Politics and Government, read, reader, reading, social comintary, story, writer, writing
A Struggle Between Two Worlds
Posted by Literary Titan
Set in the distant future, the nations of Earth have mastered space travel and expanded into the far reaches of the solar system to settle colonies and expand humanity’s reach. Now, with resources and territory at stake, the nations have chosen sides and gone to war. A Struggle Between Two Worlds combines aviation fiction and space adventure as it follows Lieutenant Jaxon, a Space Force ace pilot, struggling to keep the faith in a galaxy where all seems lost. Will Jaxon survive? Find out in this futuristic sci-fi with a Top Gun twist.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: A Struggle Between Two Worlds, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Kevin Matthew Hayes, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, science fiction, scifi, space opera, story, trailer, writer, writing
I, Monster
Posted by Literary Titan

I, Monster tells the story of Hans, a boy born into poverty, abuse, and neglect who grows into a man consumed by cruelty. What begins as childhood bullying and violence slowly shapes him into a predator, then into a soldier, and eventually into a commander of a concentration camp. Through Hans, the book explores how systematic brutality and dehumanization can turn an ordinary person into an architect of horror. It is not a story of redemption but of descent, a chilling portrait of the way cruelty feeds on itself until nothing remains but emptiness and power.
The writing is sharp, relentless, and full of imagery that sticks in the mind long after you finish the book. The brutality is not sensationalized but presented with a stark clarity that made me feel both horrified and transfixed. At times, I wanted to look away. At other times, I found myself compelled to keep reading, almost against my own comfort. The author’s ability to take me into Hans’s mind disturbed me, because I caught myself understanding the logic of cruelty, even while despising it. That balance between revulsion and reluctant empathy is what made the book so powerful for me.
The prose can be heavy, almost poetic in its repetitions and its grim rhythm. It worked in creating atmosphere, yet sometimes I felt like I was drowning in it. Still, that might have been the point. The book doesn’t want to let the reader breathe too easily. It forces us to live in the same suffocating darkness as its main character. I appreciated that. It’s not an easy read, but it left me thinking hard about the banality of evil and how ordinary pain can harden into extraordinary cruelty.
I, Monster reminded me of Ordinary Men by Christopher Browning, since both confront the terrifying truth that cruelty often grows not from monsters at birth but from ordinary people shaped by their times and choices. I would recommend I, Monster to readers who are willing to confront the darkest corners of human nature. If you want a raw, unsettling exploration of how monsters are made, this will stay with you long after the last page.
Pages: 216 | ASIN : B0FN6T64YQ
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Clifton Wilcox, dark fantasy, ebook, fiction, goodreads, Holocaust fiction, horror, I Monster, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, terrorism thriller, thriller, writer, writing, WWII Historical Fiction
The Secret of the Pharaohs
Posted by Literary Titan

The Secret of the Pharaohs sweeps readers into the turmoil of 1939, where archaeology, espionage, and the shadow of war collide. We follow James Wilson Forrest, a young journalist, as he journeys from New York to Egypt, drawn into Professor Pierre Montet’s excavation at Tanis and the discovery of the Silver Pharaoh’s tomb. What begins as an assignment for National Geographic quickly transforms into a harrowing adventure entangled with King Farouk, French and British intelligence, stolen treasures, and the looming threat of World War II. Love, betrayal, and survival intermingle as JW and his companions navigate a dangerous world where ancient secrets hold modern consequences.
The story hooked me right from the chase through the Cairo streets. The authors blend action with rich historical detail in a way that feels cinematic.Some passages read like old-fashioned pulp adventure, and I loved that energy. A few scenes linger longer than necessary, especially in the middle chapters, and I caught myself wanting the plot to move faster. Still, the characters, especially Gisele and Renée, add warmth and intrigue, and they kept me invested.
What impressed me most was the way the Alcocks wove real figures, like King Farouk and Professor Montet, into the fictional plot. It gave the book an air of authenticity without feeling heavy-handed. The writing is straightforward, almost conversational, which makes the story easy to follow even when politics and archaeology mix. The love story felt genuine, and the sheer sense of adventure, danger, and discovery pulled me through from start to finish.
The Secret of the Pharaohs is a lively and entertaining read. It would be perfect for anyone who enjoys historical fiction with a dash of Indiana Jones-style escapade. If you’re a lover of archaeology, wartime intrigue, or just a good old-fashioned adventure tale, this book will keep you turning the pages.
Pages: 234 | ASIN : B0F8C3DVNY
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Egyptian History, goodreads, Historical Christian Fiction, History of Egypt, indie author, J and M Alcock, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Secret of the Pharaohs, writer, writing
The Mysteries of the Sea
Posted by Literary_Titan

Stone of Faith follows a sea captain searching for a legendary stone of faith, who comes across the siren of the sea, and he realizes he has found his fated love, but she is held captive by a monster unwilling to release her. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration came from my love of Celtic Lore and the sea’s timeless mysteries. I’ve always loved stories of sirens, but I chose to make her something other than the usual temptress. I imagined her as the one imprisoned—longing for freedom. The sea captain grew from Scottish maritime history, where men risked everything on storm-tossed waters, often carrying the weight of legacy and loss. Bringing the two together allowed me to explore how love and faith can become the greatest treasures of all—more powerful than magic or curses.
I found Captain Ewan MacDougall to be an interesting character. What was your inspiration for that character and his role in the story?
Captain Ewan MacDougall springs from my fascination with Scotland’s seafaring past and the resilience of men who live by the sea—bound by duty yet longing for freedom. I wanted him to carry the weight of his family’s legacy, threaded with both honor and tragedy —a man haunted by ghosts but still clinging to hope. His role as captain gave him not only authority but also isolation—he commands the sea, yet his heart yearns for connection. Meeting the siren forces him to confront what he’s been missing: faith in love and in himself. Ewan became the bridge between the mortal world and the mystical one, demonstrating how courage and devotion can even break the strongest chains.
I felt that there were a lot of great twists and turns throughout the novel. Did you plan this before writing the novel, or did the twists develop organically while writing?
Most of the twists and turns I planned—I’m very much a plotter—but some still developed organically as the story unfolded. The seafaring theme of Stone of Faith actually grew directly from Stone of Lust, which ends with the stone slipping into the sea and vanishing beneath the waves. That loss became the natural bridge into Ewan’s world, driving both the maritime setting and his quest. While I had the major arcs mapped out, I always leave room for discovery, and a few surprising turns surfaced as I outlined and wrote. Those moments of spontaneity often bring the most magic to the page.
I hope the series continues in other books. If so, where will the story take readers?
Next in the series:
Highlander’s Holly and Ivy, a Christmas companion book coming December 1st, 2025. Features Alex MacDougall, Mary, and Roderick from Thistle in the Mistletoe son. A forbidden love between a Highlander and an English lady intertwines with magic, betrayal, and the fate of a nation as they fight to unite their worlds and reclaim Scotland’s legacy.
Stone of Destiny, book 7. Kathryn MacArthur, Evie’s BFF, love story. The exciting conclusion to the Stones of Iona Series, where a woman torn between fate and forbidden love must defy a Fae prophecy and battle dark forces to reclaim her future—and the heart of the Fae warrior she can’t forget. Look for this one early 2026.
This series leads into another connected series, Dragons of Tantallon, a dragon-shapeshifter series revolving around the magic Iona Stones.
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Margaret Izard, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, romantasy, Stone of Faith, story, writer, writing
Anything Can Be Denied
Posted by Literary_Titan

Shaking the Trees follows Jake, an environmental activist, who is pushed to sabotage a coal rail line in a desperate act of protest that sets off a chain of events that can threaten his future. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
There were two inspirations: the first was climate change itself and specifically a coral reef scientist telling me how little time the Great Barrier Reef had to survive. The Reef has had a profound influence on me. That news sent me into a prolonged depression shadowed by both grief and anger. From there, the book’s initial scene of sabotage took hold.
The second was less an inspiration than an epiphany – I wanted a shadow story for the story of Jake and climate change. Out of some deep recess in my subconscious, I said, ‘The Siege of Sarajevo’. Literally, I stopped and said aloud, ‘but Jeremy, you don’t know anything about the Siege of Sarajevo.’ And that turned out to be, in good part, the point. It was a war ignored not only by those who could have stopped it, but those, like me, who thought I was paying attention. I began to realise that anything can be denied.
A significant amount of time was spent crafting the character traits in this novel. What was the most important factor for you to get right in your characters?
Two factors stand out: the need to integrate the political and the personal. Activists don’t see these as separate, for anyone. They are intimately linked even when they are not always easy to reconcile and even when the relationship between one’s personal life and political life isn’t always clear. Even withdrawal from the plethora of events in our lives that are political, is a direct and political response to a society that feels too brutal, ugly or cold.
The characters wanted to show me how much of what we face or are forced to face in the world is entangled not only in politics but in our own histories and even histories older than we are – family and community histories. Excavating these histories is not a simple or rapid task. Like an archaeologist who finds an object deeply buried, we must gently remove a lifetime of encrustations and then – equally hard – try to make sense of what this strange object from our past is, what it signifies, whether it is only a small part of a larger whole.
I began to realise that the characters, forced by circumstances and choices none of the characters could entirely control, were living out their psychological histories in new and often damaging ways. I had to listen closely to the characters, to explore how histories of love and lovelessness, trauma, fear, ambition, repression, denial were still alive in them as the story unfolded. I often had no idea what the characters would show me.
What themes were particularly important for you to explore in this book?
1 – The various faces and types of denial. Denial can be personal and a useful form of self -protection. Often, when the need for self-protection is gone the behaviour remains. Like an auto-immune disease the brain responds in destructive ways to news or information it desperately wants to be untrue. Sometimes, particularly, amongst our leaders denial has no excuse, no value except in serving the interests, usually pecuniary, of themselves or other members of their privileged class. I was particularly interested in how we – individually and as a society navigate between the necessary and the destructive? How do we face the reality that anything can be denied, just as anything can be believed? How to think about faith? Is it destructive, protective, or simply a kind of disappearing from the world? And is love, too, a kind of faith?
2 – I didn’t know when I started the novel how important the theme of love would be – its many faces, its profound power and profound capacity, if love is lost, to tear us from our moorings. I also didn’t know when I started that I would find the heart of the book to be the effort of Jake to try and reconcile his love for the planet and his love for Julie, loves perhaps too large for any single person to hold.
3 – Finally, I wanted to explore activism. How people choose to face conflicts that can radically subvert their ideas of democracy, community and shared ideals. How activists struggle with a life’s work primarily characterised by failure and in a system that at every turn makes activism and change harder. Watching a political system treat activists like criminals and corporate criminals like friends is the kind of stark reality that activists experience throughout their working lives. It’s confronting work. So many activists leave this work in order to do something more immediately rewarding and kind. That said, young activists keep coming into activism, with new energy, new ideas, and old ideas they think are new. They give of themselves in ways impossible not to admire.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?
I am completing a last edit on a manuscript that was shortlisted in 2024 for the Dorothy Hewett award in Australia. The book is called Vanishment, the story of a young man who fights to protect a species threatened with extinction. It is loosely based on the true story of the extinction of the Christmas Island Pipistrelle and loosely based on Christmas Island, often called the ‘Galapagos of the Indian Ocean’ but also an island subject to a dismal history of misery industries – phosphate mining, a massive casino for high rollers from Jakarta and finally a detention centre carved out of the Island’s unique rainforest. Love and loss are the dominant themes and like Shaking the Trees, both those themes have many faces.
I don’t have a publisher yet so I’m not sure when it will be available, but I hope next year.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
When Jake, a passionate environmental activist, desperate for action on climate change, starts to take drastic action, he sets off a chain of events that threatens everything he holds dear—his freedom, his future, and the woman he loves. As the storm he ignited grows more violent, Jake loses control even over his own life.
Meanwhile, his father Ian—an aging academic and firm climate sceptic—faces a reckoning of his own. With the death of his wife comes the uncovering of long-buried truths, including a cache of unopened letters from his sister lost to war and trauma. Letters that speak of survival, betrayal, and a city under siege.
Spanning continents and generations, Shaking the Trees is a gripping novel about the legacies we inherit and the choices that shape us. It asks how far we’re willing to go for what we believe—and whether love can endure the fallout.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Environmental Fiction, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jeremy Tager, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, political fiction, read, reader, reading, Shaking the Trees, story, writer, writing
Adventures in Online Dating: True Stories from the Shallow End of the Dating Pool
Posted by Literary Titan

Adventures in Online Dating is a hilarious and raw chronicle of one woman’s plunge into the unpredictable world of online dating. Through a series of short, punchy stories, S.E. Linn lays out the good, the bad, and the utterly bizarre encounters she’s had while swiping, matching, and meeting strangers. Each chapter reads like a cautionary tale, equal parts outrageous comedy and quiet confession, with lessons tacked on at the end that feel both tongue-in-cheek and hard-won. The tone is cheeky and confessional, and it never takes itself too seriously. Still, beneath all the cringe-worthy moments and wild characters, there’s a steady thread of resilience and humor that ties it together.
I found myself laughing in places, then wincing in secondhand embarrassment in others. The writing is sharp, conversational, and brutally honest. There’s no glossing over details, even when they make the storyteller look vulnerable or naïve, and that’s what makes it feel so real. Some stories had me howling, like the cat-hair-covered horror show, while others left me shaking my head at how bad people can be at basic decency. At times, it felt like swapping stories with a friend over wine, where the laughter helps mask the sting of frustration underneath. That intimacy pulled me in.
What I especially liked is how the author doesn’t play the victim. She frames these trainwrecks of dates as both ridiculous and educational, a way to laugh at what would otherwise be disheartening. That perspective made the book oddly uplifting. I’ll admit, though, there were moments where the humor veered into the absurd, and I had to pause to decide if I was amused or disturbed. That unpredictability is part of its charm. It’s messy and chaotic, just like dating itself, and it’s refreshing to see it told without the usual sugarcoating or cliché happy endings.
I’d recommend this book to anyone who has braved the trenches of online dating or is curious about what really happens when you dive into the apps. It’s perfect for readers who like their memoirs raw, funny, and a little outrageous. If you’ve ever needed reassurance that your own dating misadventures aren’t the worst ones out there, this book will make you feel seen and keep you laughing all the way through.
Pages: 105 | ASIN : B0FFNQ8NY9
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Adventures in Online Dating: True Stories from the Shallow End of the Dating Pool, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, computers and internet humor, ebook, goodreads, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, nonfiction, nook, novel, psychology humor, read, reader, reading, S.E. Linn, self help, short stories, Single Women Fiction, social media humor, story, True Stories, writer, writing
Limited Partner Investing
Posted by Literary Titan

Limited Partner Investing lays out the world of limited partner investing in a straightforward way. It explains how people can move beyond low-risk investments like CDs and mutual funds and instead look at opportunities to fund local businesses, franchises, and community ventures. The author weaves history, like the aftermath of the 1930 stock market crash, with modern examples of cash cow franchises and real estate partnerships. There are sections on how LPs work, what perks they bring, the risks involved, and how they can build both income and community. This is a guidebook for people curious about diversifying their portfolio with something more hands-on and connected to real communities.
This is not a dry finance book stuffed with numbers and charts. It feels more like a friend giving you a pep talk about why you shouldn’t just park your money in the safest corner of the room. The writing carries an energy that kept me flipping the pages. I liked how the author tied in friendship, networking, and local pride with money matters. It gave the topic a human touch. On the flip side, I did wish the book had gone deeper into case studies or hard data. I wanted to see more real-world examples of success and failure.
The sentences are short and punchy, which makes the book easy to follow and quick to digest. The style feels conversational. There’s a contagious enthusiasm in the writing, and it’s clear the author genuinely believes in limited partner investing as a path to both wealth and stronger communities. That passion made me pause and imagine investing as something personal and tangible, not just numbers in a faceless market. It’s a powerful idea that sticks with you.
Limited Partner Investing is best for beginners who want to get excited about investing outside the box. If you’ve only ever thought about stocks and mutual funds, this gives you a peek at another path. It’s not a textbook. It’s more of a spark, an encouragement to join an investor club, talk to local business owners, and think bigger about your money.
Pages: 70 | ASIN: B0CHQVSPSB
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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, business, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, Limited Partner Investing, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, self help, story, writer, writing









