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The Guidance
Posted by Literary Titan

The Guidance tells the story of three isolated tribes living on the lone world of Domhan. Each tribe grows in its own strange corner of the land, shaped by a mysterious universal force called the Guidance. The Harvest Tribe lives by farming rules set in the Book of the Blest. The Hunter Tribe learns to survive with spears and livestock. The Pharmacist Tribe crawls forward through intuition, experiments, and whatever scraps of nature it can gather. Their traditions shift. Their beliefs twist. Their lives unfold as the Guidance quietly watches. The book paints these three evolving cultures in slow, steady strokes, showing how tiny changes ripple across generations.
As I read, I felt myself pulled into the rhythm of the writing. It is calm, almost meditative. Sometimes the prose slows down, but I didn’t mind because the world had a kind of warm strangeness that kept me curious. I liked how the author reveals each tribe’s beliefs through their daily routines instead of long lectures. The scenes around harvest rituals, hunting decisions, and plant experiments had a subtle charm. I found myself smiling when small discoveries became big turning points for them. It made the world feel alive. I also liked how the book lets misunderstandings shape entire cultures. A single phrase or symbol grows into sacred truth.
There were moments when the writing made me pause in a good way. The shift from gratitude toward spirits to gratitude toward one God. The Hunter Tribe guessing that animals hold the divine. The Pharmacist Tribe stumbling into medicine and chemistry without knowing what those things are. These moments hit me with a sense of wonder. I also felt a kind of sadness. The tribes keep changing but never know why. They try their best with limited clues and plenty of hope. That hit close to home. The writing is simple, but it carries a quiet emotional punch.
The book is thought-provoking and rewards patient reading. I’d recommend The Guidance to anyone who enjoys calm, idea-driven fiction. It would be great for readers who like stories about worldbuilding, mythmaking, and how cultures grow from tiny seeds. It’s not a fast ride, but it is a meaningful one, and it leaves you thinking about how people learn, how they survive, and how they make sense of forces far bigger than themselves.
Pages: 187 | ASIN: B0DZGRM23J
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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, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jack Verson, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, The Guidance, writer, writing
Prism
Posted by Literary Titan

Prism is a science fiction novel that follows Vernon Vining, an investigator with an unusual sensitivity to the natural world, as he’s sent to a distant planet called Prism to solve a life-or-death mystery. The planet is a technicolor ecosystem where everything shifts through endless shades. The local life communicates by flashing patterns of light instead of sound, and the human settlers, who initially thrived, now face a frightening problem after a worker dies from a catastrophic and inexplicable internal breakdown. Vernon and his longtime partner Sam are sent across light-years to figure out what Prism is trying to say and how to stop the danger before the entire colony must be evacuated.
Vernon’s voice is warm and wandering in a way that makes even technical explanations feel personal. He reflects on childhood, on breezes and falling leaves, and somehow those memories fold into his ability to understand alien worlds. I liked that. It made the story feel grounded even while describing shimmering forests and oceans that blink like jewels. The author leans into color as a living force, almost a language, and that choice gives the book a dreamy undercurrent. The pacing sometimes slows, but the wandering feels intentional, as if we’re supposed to drift a little so Prism’s strangeness can seep in. I didn’t always know where the story was taking me, but I didn’t mind being led.
What surprised me most was how gently the book handles first contact without making it sentimental. The native creatures don’t speak. They glow. They flash warnings or greetings that humans barely know how to read. When Vernon and Sam try to interpret those signals, the book plays with the idea that meaning might hide in anything. A ripple in water. A field shifting from green to gold. Even a sudden, planet-wide burst of color that feels like a greeting from the world itself. I found myself wondering, along with the characters, whether we’d notice such messages on Earth, or whether we’ve forgotten how. The mystery at the heart of the plot gives the story momentum, but it never overshadows the quieter reflections about perception, patience, and what it takes to truly listen.
By the end, I felt like I’d spent time in a place that was oddly soothing despite the danger. The book is science fiction, but it carries the tone of a field journal mixed with a travel diary. I’d recommend Prism to readers who enjoy reflective sci-fi, worldbuilding built around sensory detail, and stories where the “alien problem” is really a communication problem at heart. If you like stories that move with curiosity and a steady, thoughtful rhythm, you’ll probably enjoy settling into Prism for a while.
Pages: 227 | ASIN: B0CHL7WRTG
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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, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jack Verson, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Prism, read, reader, reading, science fiction, scifi, story, writer, writing





