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Literary Titan Silver Book Award

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

Dying to Meet the Newcomer by Judith Fournie Helms

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Therein Lies the Pearl

Therein Lies the Pearl by Catherine Hughes is a historical fiction novel set in the 11th century, moving from rural Normandy into the orbit of Duke William and then across the Channel into England in the years around the Norman Conquest. The story follows Celia as loss and duty harden her early, especially after her mother dies in childbirth and Celia becomes the steady center for her baby sister, Vivienne. Over time, Celia is pulled into larger forces and unfamiliar institutions, including religious life and English politics, with friendships and loyalties tested as power shifts and violence spreads. The book frames all of it with a storm at sea in 1068, a moment that feels like the story’s emotional bookend and its reckoning.

I liked the writing’s physical closeness. Hughes keeps putting your hands in the work: bailing, washing, digging, carrying, feeding. It is the kind of detail that makes survival feel earned, not symbolic. Celia, especially, is drawn with a sharp edge that I came to trust. She is not “likable” in a neat way, and that is the point. When she is tender, it lands because you have seen how hard she fights to keep tenderness alive in a world that keeps trying to stamp it out. The language is earnest and old-world without getting showy, and it often uses simple, concrete sensations to keep you grounded, like cold water, rough cloth, and the hush of spaces where people are not saying what they mean.

The author’s choices around history are interesting, too. This is not a battlefield chronicle, even though wars and rulers matter. It is a story about how big events leak into kitchens, convent halls, and friendships. One scene that was particularly impactful for me was the chaos around William’s coronation, where misunderstanding and fear turn into fire and violence, and the personal cost lands right inside the political moment. I also appreciated the way the book admits what it is doing: it is fiction inspired by historical events and family stories, not a literal record. That honesty makes it easier to relax into the novel’s emotional logic, especially when the plot shifts into court pressure, religious scrutiny, and the quiet bargaining people do with themselves to endure.

By the end, I felt like I had lived beside these characters, not just watched them. The final movement, looping back to the storm framing, brings a stark, fateful mood that fits what the story has been asking all along about agency, sacrifice, and what we owe the people we love. I would recommend this most to readers who like historical fiction that prioritizes interior life and lived detail over nonstop action, and to anyone who enjoys stories about resilient women navigating faith, family, and power without being turned into saints. If you want a medieval world that feels muddy, intimate, and emotionally serious, you’ll enjoy this novel.

Pages: 518 | ASIN : B0G67J1G46

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The Sin of Angels

The Sin of Angels is a big, old-school historical saga that follows the Marquand family from an 1850 Kentucky slaveholding farm into the chaos of the frontier and the coming Civil War. It starts with a brutal little powder keg in a barn loft, where Edward’s secret relationship with the enslaved Sally explodes into violence with his twin brother John, and it keeps widening from there into logging camps, army posts, political halls and battle clouds. The book tracks how these men and the people around them stumble through slavery, war, ambition and love, and it keeps circling the same hard question. What does it cost a person and a family to live comfortably inside a system that is rotten at the core?

The narrative voice is smooth and clear. It reads like a classic twentieth-century historical novel, not a modern minimalist thing. Scenes like the opening in the hayloft or John’s fight for his life during the Indian attack are vivid and easy to picture. The action is staged cleanly, the stakes are obvious, and the dialogue has a plain, almost theatrical rhythm. I found myself turning pages because I wanted to see how far John would fall, whether Edward would ever really face what he had done, and how characters like Allen, Sally, and Matilda would get out from under the damage the twins leave behind. The book is long, and it sometimes lingers on exposition and political detail. There are stretches, especially in the sections about secession politics and militia organization, where I felt the energy slow, but I understand that the information matters to the bigger picture.

The writers do not hide how ugly slavery is, yet they stay very close to the white family’s point of view. Sally’s early scenes are electric and painful, and Matilda’s story has real weight, but they still mostly appear as part of the Marquands’ moral journey. I also enjoyed the romantic beats in the later chapters, especially Bob and Shirley’s storyline. Parts of it are genuinely sweet and give some welcome breathing room from all the violence and scheming, and at a few points the tone leans toward melodrama. I enjoyed the big emotions and how neatly some of the turns play out. The last act left me with that heavy, restless feeling a family epic should give. People live, love, hurt one another, and history keeps grinding on.

The authors press hard on responsibility. Not just the obvious villains, but also the charming, clever, “good” people who benefit from bondage and then from war. John’s story, in particular, shows how charm and talent can curdle into cruelty when no one tells you no soon enough. The book also digs into how a border state like Kentucky tried to stand apart while being pulled in two directions, and that tension feeds the family drama in a satisfying way.

I would recommend The Sin of Angels to readers who enjoy long, character-driven historical novels set around the Civil War and the antebellum South, and who are comfortable sitting with both moral discomfort and old-fashioned storytelling. If you like sprawling family sagas, clear scene work, and a mix of frontier action, politics, and romance, this will hit the spot. The Sin of Angels is an emotionally stirring novel, and I think that blend will appeal to a lot of history-minded fiction readers.

Pages: 534 | ASIN : B0792LD3PT

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Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Silver Book Award

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

Hug whispers Between Worlds by William Klenk

Cover Up by John Wendell Adams

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

CLEOPATRA: Secrets from the Tomb

Book Review

From the first pages, Cleopatra: Secrets from the Tomb sets itself up as a sweeping historical fiction retelling of Cleopatra VII’s life. The opening chapters follow her from childhood in the royal palace gardens to the brutal politics of the Ptolemaic dynasty, where executions, betrayals, and uneasy alliances shape her world. We watch her lose a sister, fend off assassins, endure exile, and stage her dramatic return to Alexandria, ultimately stepping onto the stage with Julius Caesar in a way that blends political calculation with personal ambition. It reads like a behind-the-scenes chronicle of a woman forced to sharpen her instincts in a nest of vipers, and it moves steadily from innocence to strategy to survival.

As I moved through the story, I found myself reacting not just to the events, but to the way Blundell chose to show them. The writing is direct, almost cinematic at times, with scenes that place you right in the heat of Alexandria or the hush of a temple at night. Some moments are vivid enough to feel like you’re standing beside Cleopatra herself, like the early image of her playing among flowers before freezing at the sight of a viper, a simple childhood moment that quietly foreshadows the dangers ahead. Other scenes, like Berenice’s execution or Cleopatra’s exile, come at you quickly and without sentiment, which fits the harsh world the book wants you to feel. I appreciated how the author frames Cleopatra as intelligent and capable without softening the darker edges of her ambition.

What surprised me most was how personal the story sometimes feels, even while staying grounded in historical detail. Cleopatra’s voice comes through in her shifting confidence, her anger, and her sharp awareness of how others perceive her. The book doesn’t try to turn her into a flawless heroine. Instead, it lets her be ambitious, manipulative, wounded, and occasionally tender. Those choices made the familiar historical moments feel fresher. And while the writing is straightforward, moments of sensory detail land well when they appear.

By the time I closed the book, I felt that anyone who enjoys historical fiction centered on political intrigue, complicated women, and ancient worlds brought to life would get a lot from this story. Readers who want a richly detailed, almost immersive retelling of Cleopatra’s rise will appreciate the blend of fact and interpretation. If you’re looking for a reflective character study wrapped in the drama of palace life, war, and shifting loyalties, this book is an engaging pick.

Pages: 323 | ISBN : 979-8-8230-9526-6

Literary Titan Silver Book Awards

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

Losing Mom by Peggy Ottman
This Is For MY Glory: A Story of Fatherlessness, Failure, Grace, and Redemption
Toil and Trouble by Brian Starr

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

Talthybius by Jessie Holder Tourtellotte and Nathaniel Howard
Golem Mine by Donald Schwartz
A Trail in the Woods by Mallory O’Connor
Messenger of the Reaper Part 2 by Jimmy Straley
Missing in Lincoln Park by Staci Andrea
Medusa: Or, Men Entombed in Winter by Kyle Farnworth

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.