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Freedom Boulevard
Posted by Literary Titan

Freedom Boulevard, by Yusuf Blanton, is a raw, fast-moving novel about two people who arrive in Cordova looking for reinvention and instead find a city that tests every weak seam in their lives. Andy Blackwell comes west chasing music, nightlife, and queer belonging, admitting early on, “I was a rapper that yearned for recognition and a lost Queer in search of his proverbial tribe.” Sakeenah Bailey arrives with her own mix of fear, faith, ambition, and exhaustion, hoping the city might give her room to become someone new. Their stories unfold in alternating first-person chapters, giving the book the feel of two confessions running beside each other until their lives begin to rhyme in painful ways.
Cordova is the book’s real engine. Freedom Boulevard isn’t just a street full of clubs, motels, drugs, performers, creeps, hustlers, and neon. It’s a place that sells people the fantasy of freedom while charging them for every mistake they make. Blanton writes the city as a trap and a stage at the same time, where people come to be seen, to disappear, to make money, to get high, to pray, to perform, and to survive the night. The setting has a sweaty, lived-in quality, and the best scenes make you feel the cheap rooms, bad lighting, stale smoke, and nervous hope pressing in from every side.
Andy’s half of the novel follows an artist who wants recognition but keeps finding transactions where community should be. His world of clubs, promoters, hookups, landlords, clients, and empty promises is loud, funny, ugly, and increasingly dangerous. Sakeenah’s half is more inward but just as urgent. Her chapters wrestle with Islam, anxiety, family disappointment, weed, surveillance, abusive relationships, and the constant need to find shelter without losing herself. Together, they make the book feel less like a single plot and more like a map of two people trying to stay human in a city built to use them up.
Blanton’s style is big, profane, theatrical, and often funny in a bruised sort of way. The prose swings hard, sometimes piling image on image until the narration feels like a spoken-word performance, a panic attack, and a diary entry all at once. That intensity fits the characters, especially because both Andy and Sakeenah are trying to turn chaos into meaning. The book is full of sex, drugs, faith, poverty, ambition, and damage, but its deeper subject is storytelling itself: who gets reduced to a case file, who gets remembered, and who gets to turn pain into testimony.
Freedom Boulevard is a novel about survival as an act of authorship. Sakeenah’s journey gives the book its final shape, especially when she decides that “The pen was my new prayer mat and justice was my new singular aim.” That line captures what the novel is reaching for: not easy healing, but a way to make witness feel like purpose. It’s a harsh, messy, passionate book about people chasing freedom through places that rarely offer it cleanly, and it leaves behind the feeling of someone writing because silence would be another kind of death. I recommend this book to readers who like powerful, emotional stories about survival, resistance, and finding purpose through telling one’s truth.
Pages: 207 | ASIN : B0GSSR7FX4
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action, adventure, adventure series, author, The Cordova Series, Bisexual Fiction, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, bookblogger, books, books to read, bookshelf, ebook, fiction, Freedom Boulevard, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, LGBTQ+, LGBTQ+ Action & Adventure Fiction, literature, neo-noir, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, series, story, transgender fiction, writer, writing, Yusuf Blanton
The Grey Areas of Life
Posted by Literary_Titan

Backroads Blood Brothers follows a seeing the killers of his best friend, who joins up with a survivor of the killers to seek vengeance. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Honestly, the setup for the story came from a short story I wrote. I wanted to play with style and format and I had this idea for the twins. I sent the story to friends who all demanded to know more about the story. I had a long think about it. How could I expand it and should I even try? It struck me that Mark, their victim in the story, had a whole life before he met them. Who would miss him? What would they do about it? Once I had that, I was off to the races. I really dug into my love of those crazy sexy thrillers of the nineties and put my own queer spin onto that genre feel.
What are some things that you find interesting about the human condition that you think make for great fiction? What makes great fiction?
To me it’s all about the grey areas of life. Those places where black and white, right and wrong, are left behind. I love unreliable narrators, narrators who may not be the best people, but they have a life and a story to tell. I think that’s where the most fascinating stories lie, especially when you get into genre fiction. I like heroes who have done bad things. I like villains who can be genuinely honorable under the right circumstances. I like conflicts that are muddled, when the lines get blurred. That’s where the best fiction lies. That’s where the best stories lie.
I felt that Backroads Blood Brothers delivers the drama so well that it flirts with the grimdark genre. Was it your intention to give the story a darker tone?
Absolutely! It’s a tone that plays out in a lot of my stories. It’s my jam, but it’s also such a fun place to play in. When the setting is dark, the people live in that grey area I was talking about above. Maybe I just have a lot of unexpressed anger, maybe I just like a little blood on the page. But the darkness…that’s just where I thrive as a writer.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?
Is any writer working on just one book?! I kid. I actually have several works in progress at the moment. I’ve just finished a collection of stories that I can’t wait to put in front of an editor to see what they make of them. I’m also working on my own gay twist on Sweeney Todd. I have a hospital horror story in the works. And a few other things percolating. There are so many stories to tell. I’m just trying to get my fair share out there.
Author Links: GoodReads | Website
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, Backroads Blood Brothers, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, LGBTQ+ Action & Adventure Fiction, LGBTQ+ Horror Fiction, LGBTQ+ Thrillers, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, W. Dale Jordan, writer, writing
Backroads Blood Brothers
Posted by Literary Titan

W. Dale Jordan’s Backroads Blood Brothers is a haunting tale that blends elements of noir, horror, and psychological thrill. It’s the story of twin brothers, Caleb and Connor, who share an unsettlingly close bond that transcends normal sibling relationships. The plot explores their twisted exploits in small Texas towns, where seduction and violence intertwine. As their dark predations escalate, the story brings in Lane, a man determined to find justice for his murdered best friend, and Ryan, a motel clerk, entangled in the twins’ web. The result is a layered, tension-filled thriller that is equal parts disturbing and compelling.
Jordan’s writing is razor-sharp, immersing the reader in the humid and oppressive atmosphere of small-town Texas. His vivid descriptions breathe life into both the mundane and the macabre. Early in the book, the twins’ calculated charm is revealed with unsettling clarity. The scene where they meet Mark at the bar is a great example of tension-building, as the reader senses the danger beneath their seductive veneer. The dialogue is crisp, yet their eerie synchronicity creates an almost supernatural undertone, heightening the unease. Jordan excels at making these encounters simultaneously alluring and horrifying.
While the twins’ chapters are immersive, I felt that Lane’s storyline sometimes loses momentum. His determination to uncover the truth is compelling, but his repetitive introspection slowed the story for me rather than driving it forward. That said, his interactions with Ryan bring a sense of vulnerability and hope to the otherwise grim tale. Ryan’s character adds a layer of humanity, his internal conflict over the twins capturing the emotional turmoil that permeates the novel.
The book delves unapologetically into violence, manipulation, and taboo desires, which could alienate readers seeking lighter fare. Yet, Jordan’s exploration of moral ambiguity is where the story shines. The twins’ relationship, as unsettling as it is, provokes thought about identity, autonomy, and the human need for connection. It’s a testament to Jordan’s skill that these themes stayed with me even after I put the book down.
Backroads Blood Brothers is a gripping read. Its mix of raw emotion, vivid imagery, and unflinching storytelling makes it a standout for fans of dark, character-driven thrillers. This book is ideal for readers who enjoy morally complex tales that venture into the shadowy corners of the human psyche. Just be prepared to lose some sleep after diving into this one.
Pages: 143 | ASIN : B0DFZG3XHT
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, Backroads Blood Brothers, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, LGBTQ+ Action & Adventure Fiction, LGBTQ+ Horror Fiction, LGBTQ+ Thrillers, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, W. Dale Jordan, writer, writing





