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A Curse of Wings & Gems: A Cursed Royals Fantasy Romance
Posted by Literary Titan

When I closed the last page of A Curse of Wings & Gems, I felt like I’d stepped out of a dream filled with curses, storms, and hauntingly beautiful songs from the sea. This book is about Edmar, a Dragon King cursed to bind himself to brides chosen by fate, each doomed to die, and Emmy, a mermaid princess burdened with dangerous magic and shackled by the expectations of her people. Their stories intertwine across decades of longing, loss, and the constant pull of destiny. The world itself is vast, with kingdoms above and below the sea, ruled by kings, dwarves, and ancient forces, each holding secrets that keep the tension alive. It is a story about power and love, but even more so about chains, both magical and emotional, and the desperate fight to break them.
The writing pulled me in right away. Huston’s style is lush and dramatic, full of imagery that makes the setting shimmer. The opening scenes with Edmar flying through the storm or Emmy enduring the pain of her magic are vivid, and I could almost feel the salt air or the sting of fire in her veins. I admired the ambition, and the rhythm of the sentences often matched the emotions of the characters, which kept me hooked. The shifting perspectives between Edmar and Emmy also added layers, though sometimes I wanted them to linger longer in their thoughts before switching.
What I liked most were the emotions underneath the fantasy spectacle. Edmar’s exhaustion with his curse hit me hard. That sense of being trapped in endless repetition, of watching love turn to ashes over and over, felt raw and painful. Emmy’s plight, on the other hand, carried a different weight. Her fear of her own power and her father’s cold willingness to barter her away felt both heartbreaking and infuriating. I found myself rooting for her to rebel, to scream, to burn it all down if she had to. That frustration was real, which shows the author succeeded in making me care. At the same time, the romance felt fragile, more like a thread of hope than a blazing fire, and I actually liked that. It felt earned rather than rushed.
I’d recommend this book to readers who love epic fantasy mixed with aching romance, especially those who don’t mind a slower, descriptive pace that lingers on atmosphere. If you enjoy stories where curses shape kingdoms and love feels both impossible and inevitable, this will be your kind of tale. It’s not a light read, and it thrives on mood as much as plot, but for me, it was a fun adventure.
Pages: 676
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: A Curse of Wings & Gems: A Cursed Royals Fantasy Romance, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, story, writer, writing
Whispers of Luck
Posted by Literary Titan

Sophie Bartow’s Whispers of Luck blends small-town charm with a swirl of mystery, romance, and destiny. Set in Swan Harbor, the story follows Shay O’Reilly, a new oral surgeon who arrives in town after feeling an unshakable pull to leave her old life behind, and Justin Simpson, an orthopedic surgeon haunted by a tragic loss. Their paths collide in ways that feel both inevitable and magical, weaving together a tale that balances grief, hope, and the strange energy of a town that seems to whisper its own secrets. The book carries readers through moments of heartache, intimacy, and wonder, while hinting at something larger than the people who live in Swan Harbor.
Reading it, I felt a mix of warmth and curiosity. Bartow’s writing is smooth and easy to sink into. The characters are written with real affection, and you can tell the author knows this town inside and out. Shay’s arrival is painted with just the right amount of unease and hope, and Justin’s struggle with loss is raw and relatable. What really stuck with me was how the supernatural elements never fully overshadowed the human story. The “nudges” and cryptic scrolls add a layer of intrigue, but the true heart is in how people heal, connect, and risk themselves for love again. I’ll admit there were moments where I rolled my eyes at the intensity of their attraction, but then I’d find myself grinning because the chemistry felt so alive.
Some of the dialogue carried an extra layer of sentiment, and a few of the mystical moments left me a little puzzled. Yet I couldn’t deny that I was pulled along. I cared about whether Shay and Justin would open themselves up or let their pasts keep them shut down. And the setting itself almost felt like a character. Swan Harbor is drawn with immersive detail. There’s a comfort in that, like being let in on a secret world that’s both ordinary and enchanted.
Whispers of Luck is a heartfelt start to the Mystical Waters Canyon series. It’s a book that would be perfect for anyone who loves small-town romances, especially those with a hint of magic threaded through real-life struggles. If you want a story that mixes hospital corridors with whispered prophecies, that gives you both heartbreak and swoony embraces, this is the kind of book you’ll curl up with on a quiet evening.
Pages: 391 | ASIN : B0DY87G8D6
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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, contemporary romance, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, Mystery Romance, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, Small Town Romance, story, Whispers of Luck, writer, writing
Time and Space
Posted by Literary Titan

Time and Space is a science fiction story wrapped in a very human struggle. It follows Time, a woman on the cusp of turning forty, who is suddenly pulled out of her ordinary Toronto life and thrown into a future where time travel is not just possible but exploited. She encounters arrogant young men from a society built on patriarchal dominance, where women’s roles are reduced and history has been rewritten in chilling ways. The narrative shifts between the claustrophobic experience of being kidnapped, the surreal awe of futuristic landscapes, and the stark reality of oppression disguised as order. It’s a mix of adventure, social critique, and personal awakening, all told through the voice of someone caught completely off guard by forces far bigger than herself.
I enjoyed how raw this book felt. The writing is vivid and sometimes almost abrasive in the way it pulls you into the protagonist’s fear and confusion. I often felt a knot in my stomach while reading, especially in the early chapters where she’s mocked, manipulated, and treated as less than human. The banter of the boys who kidnap her is infuriatingly smug, and Jeejeebhoy captures that dynamic with unsettling accuracy. At the same time, the details of the future world are fascinating, almost cinematic. I could see the gleaming white roads, the seamless suits, the eerie efficiency of a society that values power over compassion. That contrast between wonder and dread kept me turning the pages.
On a personal level, the ideas behind the story really resonated with me. The future Jeejeebhoy imagines is not some far-fetched dystopia, it’s a mirror held up to our present choices and blind spots. The way women’s rights are slowly eroded in the book feels uncomfortably plausible, like a warning wrapped in fiction. I found myself angry at times, and then strangely hopeful, because even in her fear, the protagonist resists in small ways. There’s something incredibly relatable about her longing for home, her disbelief at the world around her, and her stubborn spark of individuality. The writing isn’t polished in a traditional sense, but it has grit, heart, and honesty, and I think that’s what makes it stick.
Time and Space is both a thrilling time travel tale and a sharp commentary on power, gender, and history. I’d recommend it to readers who like their science fiction with a social edge, and to anyone who enjoys stories that make them think uncomfortably about the world we live in. If you enjoyed the unsettling social critique of The Handmaid’s Tale or the time-bending thrills of The Time Traveler’s Wife, then Time and Space will be right up your alley.
Pages: 331 | ASIN : B0FPDQ8FGL
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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, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, metaphysical, Metaphysical Fantasy, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, sci-fi, science fiction, Shireen Jeejeebhoy, story, Time and Space, time travel, writer, writing
Swimming with Manatees
Posted by Literary Titan

When I opened Swimming with Manatees, I expected a quiet story about nature and maybe a bit of reflection. What I found instead was a crime novel tangled in saltwater and shadows. At its heart, the book follows the mysterious death of April Seagram, discovered floating near manatees in Crystal Cove. Detectives Ava Martinez and Dan Riley dig into the case, which quickly grows beyond a single drowning. Propeller wounds, bruises, biker gangs, pharmaceutical secrets, and corporate greed all mix with the rhythm of a small Florida town. What starts with a body in the bay unfolds into a twisting investigation that pulls the detectives deeper into corruption and loss.
The writing is lush and alive, especially in the opening scenes with the water and wildlife. Bennett knows how to paint a picture that feels both beautiful and uneasy, the kind that makes your stomach tighten even when the sun is still shining. The dialogue between Ava and Dan crackles with wit and tension, and their partnership feels natural without falling into clichés. At the same time, the violence lands heavily. The murders are described with a blunt honesty that refuses to look away, which left me unsettled in the best possible way. It felt raw, relatable, and grounded, even when the plot veered into conspiracies about corporations and hidden labs.
Some chapters gave me whiplash, shifting from gorgeous descriptions of manatees drifting peacefully to gritty crime-scene details that almost felt like a sharp contrast. There were stretches where Ava’s inner thoughts circled the same worries. Still, I found myself forgiving those lulls because the characters kept pulling me back in. Ava’s grit, Dan’s warmth, Ben’s quiet steadiness, these weren’t just plot drivers, they felt like people I wanted to root for, even when tragedy hit hard.
Swimming with Manatees is more than a murder mystery. It’s a book about the thin line between beauty and brutality, about the way fragile places and fragile people can be scarred and still carry on. This book feels like a blend of Where the Crawdads Sing and Gone Girl, with the lush atmosphere of small-town nature writing wrapped tightly around the sharp edges of a murder mystery. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy crime fiction layered with atmosphere and heart, especially those who like a story that isn’t afraid to linger in grief and still find something worth protecting.
Pages: 378
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Bill Bennett, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, detective, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, SWIMMING WITH MANATEES, thriller, writer, writing
But You Saw It Coming!
Posted by Literary Titan
What happens when the bruises fade, but the questions remain?
In this bold, unflinching novel, Caren Cross introduces us to a group of women bound not by friendship, but by pain — and the shared question that haunts them: Why didn’t I see it coming?
When NYPD Detective Janine Carter starts a support group for women who’ve escaped abusive relationships, she expects tears, maybe even healing. But what unfolds is something far more raw. As the women peel back layers of denial, hope, and heartbreak, they uncover chilling parallels in their stories — patterns of manipulation, subtle warning signs, and a society that taught them to romanticize red flags.
Each meeting becomes a confessional, a revelation, and ultimately a reckoning. These are not weak women — they are survivors. And together, they begin to reclaim their voices, rewrite their narratives, and shatter the lies that kept them chained.
But You Saw It Coming! is not just a story — it’s a mirror, a message, and a movement. With piercing insight, dark humor, and uncompromising honesty, Caren Cross delivers a novel that will leave readers rethinking love, control, and what it truly means to heal.
Powerful. Raw. Necessary. This is the book we didn’t know we needed — until now.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, But You Saw It Coming!, Caren Cross, crime fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jerrimiah Stonecastle, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, trailer, writer, writing
The Long Red Hair and Other Short Stories
Posted by Literary Titan

Nancy J. Martin’s The Long Red Hair and Other Short Stories is a collection that leaps across time, place, and tone, stitching together memoir, fiction, and flashes of whimsy. Each story feels like a vignette pulled from a full life lived close to its edges. From swamp tours where alligators rise from the murk for marshmallows, to the neon days of San Francisco’s Carnaby Street fashions, to the aching intimacy of family decisions, Martin shifts seamlessly between humor, nostalgia, and reflection. The centerpiece tale, “The Long Red Hair,” frames the book perfectly, a personal, almost cinematic glimpse into youth, service, and the strange twists of fate.
What struck me most was the voice. It’s conversational and direct, but it carries weight. At times I laughed, like when Ruby the horse took her rider for a punishing ride, and at other points I felt a lump in my throat, especially during the stories that dealt with family, loss, or the hidden scars of memory. The writing doesn’t try too hard. It doesn’t dress itself up with flowery language. Instead, it trusts the reader to lean in, to listen as if an old friend is sharing stories. That trust worked on me. It pulled me in close.
I’ll admit, not every story hit me with equal force. Some felt lighter, more like sketches or travel diaries than deep dives into character or theme. But that unevenness became part of the charm. It was like flipping through someone’s scrapbook, some pages were breathtaking, others were small snapshots of a day in a life. What held it together was the honesty. Even when Martin fictionalized, I could feel the kernel of truth beneath the words. That authenticity, that refusal to smooth over the rough edges, gave the collection its power.
Closing the book, I felt like I’d been in conversation with someone who has lived wide and reflected deeply. It’s a book for readers who enjoy storytelling that feels personal rather than polished, relatable rather than distant. If you like memoirs, travel sketches, or short fiction that blends fact and imagination, you’ll enjoy this collection.
Pages: 108 | ASIN : B0FNS424YB
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, collection, ebook, fiction, goodreads, humor, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Nancy J. Martin, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, short stories, story, The Long Red Hair and Other Short Stories, writer, writing
Starting Over
Posted by Literary_Titan

Second Chances in Brittany follows a retired professional who expected a romantic adventure in France with her husband but finds herself in a quiet battle for her own autonomy and identity. Where did the idea for this book come from?
Shortly after moving from Brussels to Brittany, I joined a group of English ex-patriates who met regularly for lunch. Their different motives for moving to Brittany were fascinating, as were their original expectations of what it would be like to live here, and their different ways of adapting (or refusing to adapt) to what they found. When driving home, I found myself working through storylines about people moving to Brittany.
What character did you enjoy writing for? Was there one that was more challenging to write for?
The two characters I most enjoy are the backbone of the series – Charles Pullen and Gérard Lemestre – but in this book they are in the background.
The most difficult character to write was Sarah herself. I wanted someone capable of planning and organising the perfect move to Brittany, but that’s a dull story on its own. I needed to create a flaw in her character to ensure that things didn’t go as planned, and settled on her adoration for a disastrous husband. Sarah wasn’t initially a sympathetic character, too business-like, too efficient, and yet stupidly deferring to James. But the more I understood her, the more she rounded out into someone worth knowing.
Did you plan the tone and direction of the novel before writing, or did it come out organically as you were writing?
The setting was planned and has never changed. But I initially wrote just to get all the stories I’d thought up interwoven into one coherent whole. That proved to need more than one book. Splitting my initial ideas into separate books entailed moving incidents to different dates and times of year. Something like arranging a large bunch of flowers between six vases!
What is the next book we can look forward to seeing from you?
The second book in the series is Pasts Present in Brittany, following a Canadian woman who moves to France and suffers too much bad luck before coming to Brittany and finding friends and Charles Pullen.
Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website
A second honeymoon in France was supposed to save Sarah’s marriage. Instead, it changes her life forever.
Sarah Pullen arrives in the enchanting coastal town of Saint-Malo, ready to rebuild her relationship with her husband, James. With a dream penthouse, charming neighbors, and the romance of Brittany all around her, she dares to believe their love can be rekindled.
But then the cracks begin to show. Painful headaches. Lingering doubts. And finally, one devastating truth that shatters everything she thought she knew about her marriage.
Left alone in a foreign land, Sarah must summon the courage to start over. As she discovers friendship, resilience, and a hidden secret that reaches far beyond her own life, she realizes that endings can also be beginnings… and that hope has a way of finding you when you least expect it.
Second Chances in Brittany is the unforgettable first novel in Anne Morenn’s Romance in Brittany series, a poignant, uplifting story of love, betrayal, and the healing power of starting again.
Recipient of the Literary Titan’s Book Award
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: Anne Morenn, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, contemporary romance, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, later in life romance, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, Second Chances in Brittany, story, writer, writing
A Place To Escape and Explore
Posted by Literary_Titan

The Pharaoh’s Catacombs follows five misfit cats into Paris’s shadowy underground, where friendship and cleverness prove their only weapons against supernatural peril. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
I love ancient Egyptian history and I always knew I would write something about Egypt. But I wanted a twist. I wanted a story where the reader would search the internet to see if Rameses VIII’s mummy is even in Paris.
Each cat has such a distinct personality. Do any of them draw from people (or pets) in your own life?
This all started with my first cat (as an adult), Franky. He was a sassy fellow with fluffy pants. And since then many more have entered my life and they each have their own lives. Some are lazy. Some run the neighborhood poker game, and some collect the money from the losers of the poker games. It’s fun to create little lives for them.
How do you balance historical detail with magical storytelling without losing pace or accessibility for young readers?
My editor. He reels in my history lesson and reminds me that this is not a boring world with spreadsheets, but a place to escape to and explore.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?
Book 3 will have the same cast of characters and a grumpy dragon that was rudely waken from his thousand-year nap. It will still have riddles, but will also have a whodunnit component to it. I plan to release it in April 2026.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website
🐾 A new maze. A deadly secret. A race against time. ✨
Legends whisper of treasures in the Paris Catacombs, but the kittens of Caylor Academy get more than they bargained for when an ancient mummy pulls them into a dangerous game of riddles and clues.
To survive, Sheba, Buckley, Tank, and their new ally Ruby must solve puzzles carved in stone, survive traps that spring without warning, navigate eerie passageways, and face a mummy who will stop at nothing to free himself from his ghostly world. One wrong answer could mean doom—not just for them, but for the magical world itself.
Dark forces are moving fast, and one wrong choice could unravel everything like a frayed ball of yarn. 🧶⏳
Danger is closer than ever. The question is—can they solve the mystery before time runs out?
For readers who crave thrilling quests, magical riddles, and adventures with claws. 🐱✨
Paws what you’re doing and dive into this CAT-astrophically delightful sequel! 🐾
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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, Karen Bitzer, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Cats of Caylor Academy, The Pharoah's Catacombs, writer, writing, young adult









