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Moral Danger
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Founding Scroll follows a ledger-trained merchant’s daughter who accidentally touches a run-shifting guild scroll labeled Vow of Accord / Twelfth Hand, leaving her Oathbound and forging the beginnings of the Vowforged. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
The inspiration came from a blend of gaming, anime, and real-life responsibility. I’ve spent years playing games like New World, World of Warcraft, and Elder Scrolls Online, and I’ve always loved how life-skills, crafting, and non-combat systems give players identity and purpose beyond fighting. Those systems feel lived-in, and they make the world believable. I wanted that same feeling in The Founding Scroll.
Anime such as Shield Hero also influenced the story, especially the idea of power that isn’t glamorous or chosen, but forced upon someone who never asked for it. Seren doesn’t begin as a warrior or a savior; she’s trained to track, record, and survive through systems. When she touches the scroll, the power she gains isn’t freedom; it’s obligation. That idea mirrors real life far more than traditional hero narratives.
Seren doesn’t just gain power; she gains public responsibility. How did you approach writing leadership as something morally dangerous as well as necessary?
Leadership in this story is shaped by my own experiences with responsibility, particularly decisions made through co-parenting, where the right choice isn’t always the one that benefits you personally. Sometimes leadership means choosing stability, protection, or fairness for others, even when the outcome costs you something. That tension is at the heart of Seren’s growth.
I wanted leadership to feel exposed and irreversible. Once Seren becomes visible, every decision she makes carries public consequences. There’s no version of leadership where she can please everyone or walk away unscathed. That moral danger, knowing that even the best choice will still hurt someone, is what makes leadership necessary, but never comfortable. Power in this world isn’t about dominance; it’s about carrying the weight of impact.
What role does the in-world codex play for you as a storyteller?
The codex is the structural backbone of the world. As a storyteller, it allows me to build a setting that feels governed rather than improvised. It defines how oaths function, how systems interact, and why consequences exist. Instead of magic being vague or reactive, it operates through rules that characters must learn, challenge, and sometimes exploit.
Beyond the page, the codex represents a larger creative vision. It’s designed to support expansion into multiple formats, whether that’s tabletop storytelling, interactive experiences, or visual adaptations, without losing internal consistency. I’ve always felt that many fantasy worlds are missing connective tissue between mechanics and meaning. The codex lets me fill those gaps, creating systems that feel discoverable, intentional, and alive.
Where does the story go in the next book, and where do you see it going in the future?
The first book is designed to complete a full rise-and-trial arc. Seren’s journey establishes her as a leader whose influence comes not from force, but from trust, trade, and the systems she helps shape. By the end of the story, she earns legitimacy, but that legitimacy comes with a visible cost. The world begins to recognize that her voice doesn’t just affect people; it affects how power itself moves.
The next book expands the scope of the story while deepening its relationships. As Seren’s influence grows, so does the complexity of leadership, particularly around partnership and responsibility. The world is structured so that growth feels earned, layered, and discoverable, where progress comes from systems, cooperation, and long-term choices rather than brute force. This is also where familiars take on a more prominent role. They aren’t pets or accessories; familiars aren’t pets in this world, they’re reflections of trust, role, and responsibility. They reinforce identity and function, shaping how individuals and groups operate together rather than acting as isolated sources of power.
Looking further ahead, the series explores legacy. It asks what happens when systems, oaths, institutions, and alliances become larger than the people who created them. As influence scales, those systems begin to strain, and Seren must confront whether they can evolve without losing the values they were built on. The familiars, like the people bound to them, become part of that question: what is chosen, what is inherited, and what endures.
Each book builds outward from personal survival, to shared leadership, to long-term consequence, while leaving room for future stories that explore different perspectives within the same world. At its core, the series isn’t just about gaining power, but about deciding what kind of world that power ultimately sustains.
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Seren has spent her life balancing ledgers, not shaping history. But when she accidentally binds herself to an ancient guild oath—the Vow of Accord—her quiet world is pulled into a system far older and more dangerous than she imagined.
In a realm where contracts shape reality and trust is a form of power, Seren must navigate guild politics, rival merchants, and unseen forces that seek to control what she represents. Leadership is earned, not claimed. Every promise carries weight. And every decision leaves a mark.
The Founding Scroll is a system-driven fantasy about leadership, responsibility, and the cost of building something others depend on. Blending immersive worldbuilding with moral tension, it offers a fresh take on power—one forged through cooperation rather than conquest.
⭐ Perfect for readers who enjoy:
Guild-focused fantasy
Strategic worldbuilding
Moral leadership dilemmas
Progression with real consequences
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: action, adventure, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fantasy, Fantasy Action & Adventure, Fantasy Adventure Fiction, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, series, story, The Founding Scroll, writer, writing
The Founding Scroll
Posted by Literary Titan

Seren starts as a ledger-trained merchant’s daughter in Ember City, practical, tired of being small, and then stumbles into a document that refuses to stay “just paper”: a cold, rune-shifting guild scroll labeled Vow of Accord / Twelfth Hand with the cheerful warning that “the price burns all.” When she touches it, she becomes Oathbound and accidentally-foundational, forging the beginnings of the Vowforged and learning that in this world, contracts aren’t metaphors, they’re leverage you can feel in your bones. The story escalates from street-level trade grit to guild warfare and road-ambush politics, culminating in a convoy betrayal where Ashmark turns the “collaboration” into bait for Dominion’s masked raiders and their glass-coin smoke. Seren answers by writing survival into the air itself, an enforced cohesion oath that frightens even her allies, while, elsewhere, Corvus watches the board with the calm appetite of someone who enjoys the word due.
What surprised me most was how physical the “bureaucratic magic” feels. The book makes ink behave like weather: pressure, heat, the metallic taste of consequences. When Seren throws authority around, it isn’t a triumphant sparkle-burst; it’s more like biting down on a live wire and deciding you’ll smile through it anyway. I loved that tonal choice. It keeps the power fantasy from floating away on easy hero fumes, every oath reads as a bruise you chose on purpose. And the guild dynamics scratch that MMO itch in a way that’s less “stats screen” and more “social aggro”: alliances form because they’re useful, then turn because usefulness rots. Even the quiet moments after violence land, smoke ribbons, stunned survivors, someone counting heads twice because grief can’t do arithmetic yet.
The lore is deep and detailed, with systems, factions, titles, and mechanics. I kept coming back because Seren’s arc is thorny in a satisfying way: she doesn’t merely “become strong,” she becomes responsible in public, which is a rarer, harder transformation. Her relationships sharpen that conflict: Ronan’s steadiness, Lyra’s prickly competence, Mira’s strange gentleness, Kael’s smile that always seems to be hiding a second smile. And when Seren etches that “Unity Oath” into the night, half rescue, half brand, I felt the moral temperature spike: leadership as shelter, leadership as subtle captivity, the same blade held two ways.
If your shelves are filled with epic fantasy, progression fantasy, LitRPG-adjacent guild politics, hard-magic oaths, found-family under siege, and grim road adventure, you’re the target audience for this book, especially if you like your victories paid in soreness rather than confetti. In spirit, it reminded me of Mistborn-era Brandon Sanderson: the same pleasure of rules-driven power, but with more mud under the fingernails and more menace in the fine print. If you want a fantasy where promises are not spoken but forged, and where the bill is always on its way, this one delivers. The Founding Scroll is a story where every vow is a weapon, and every victory leaves a mark.
Pages: 484 | ASIN : B0GFQBWZQQ
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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, ebook, epic fantasy, fantasy, fantasy adventure, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, story, The Founding Scroll, writer, writing
Under Orders Of Silence
Posted by Literary Titan
Under Orders of Silence is a modern, literary retelling of the Book of Job. Set in contemporary Atlanta, it follows Malik Rosario, a beloved school principal whose life collapses after a tragic public event and a coordinated media campaign erases his reputation. As Malik endures loss, betrayal, and spiritual silence, he must decide whether faith can survive without answers.
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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, christian fiction, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, trailer, Under Orders Of Silence, writer, writing
Under Orders of Silence Inspired by the Book of Job
Posted by Literary Titan

Under Orders of Silence is a modern and deeply emotional reimagining of the biblical Book of Job, set against the backdrop of institutional injustice, grief, and faith in a fractured world. The novel follows Malik Rosario, a former soldier turned community leader and principal, whose life crumbles under political, societal, and deeply personal weight. As his school is dismantled, his reputation smeared, and his family torn by tragedy, Malik is forced to confront not only public betrayal but also divine silence. This is a tale about endurance—not just of suffering but of love, dignity, and truth in a world that seems determined to erase them.
The writing is poetic without being overdone, tender and furious in equal measure. Author Quinton Taylor-Garcia doesn’t just describe pain, he walks you through it, sits you down with it, forces you to feel it. The pacing is slow in parts, but it’s the kind of slow that lets heartbreak settle into your bones. Malik’s voice is quiet but sharp, filled with dignity even as the world strips it from him. And Imani—his wife—feels so real, so raw. The book doesn’t chase resolution. It honors uncertainty, like Job did, and that makes it sting all the more.
The ideas in this book wrestle with the big ones—God, truth, systemic oppression, grief, legacy—but they’re delivered in such relatable and grounded ways that it never feels like a lecture. Taylor-Garcia plays with silence in stunning ways. Not just literal silence, but the silence of institutions, the silence of faith under pressure, the silence between loved ones too broken to speak. There’s so much rage simmering under the surface, but it’s channeled into something graceful. I did struggle with the density in a few sections, especially during the longer philosophical dialogues, but even then, the language remained evocative. And there’s this underlying heartbeat of hope that, somehow, never dies.
If you’ve ever lost something and didn’t know how to scream about it, this book will find you. I would recommend Under Orders of Silence to readers who love literary fiction rooted in faith, justice, and emotional truth—fans of James Baldwin, Jesmyn Ward, or even Toni Morrison will feel at home here. This is for the ones who sit in silence but still get back up. Who still believe, even when belief hurts.
Pages: 150 | ASIN : B0F775SQ3C
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: author, Black & African American, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, christian fiction, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, thriller, Under Orders of Silence: Inspired by the Book of Job, writer, writing
Ashes of the City
Posted by Literary Titan
When a devastating earthquake reduces a bustling city to rubble, a group of high school students must navigate the ruins to survive. Ashes of the City delves into the raw struggle for leadership, morality, and survival in a world where the old rules no longer apply.
Maya, a compassionate and responsible leader, believes in unity and hope, striving to protect her friends and rebuild some semblance of order. But her ideals are tested by Jace, a charismatic rebel who champions a harsher philosophy—one where only the strongest survive. Their clash divides the group, igniting a dangerous power struggle over dwindling resources and fragile trust.
“The ultimate clash between one group with ‘ideals but no plan’ and another with ‘resources but no compassion’ creates a unique dichotomy that will have readers questioning their own preconceived notions of leadership and survival.” — Haley Koth
“Each crumbling building and each tremor in the earth feels real, immersing the reader in a world teetering on the edge of collapse.” — Literary Titan
Maya and Jace’s riveting battle for survival will leave you breathless in this thought-provoking tale that examines the cost of leadership, morality, and resilience in a brutal, post-disaster world.
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Posted in Book Trailers
Tags: Ashes of the City, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, coming of age, ebook, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, post apocalypitic, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, science fiction, story, teen fiction, trailer, writer, writing, ya books, young adult
Ashes of the City
Posted by Literary Titan

Ashes of the City by Quinton Taylor-Garcia delivers a gripping tale set in the aftermath of an earthquake that leaves a group of high school students stranded in a shattered urban landscape. Maya, a compassionate leader, strives to bring unity, while Jace, a ruthless pragmatist, champions strength as the key to survival. Their opposing ideologies fracture the group, igniting tension over scarce resources. As aftershocks loom and destruction mounts, both leaders grapple with harrowing choices and the weight of their decisions.
This novel is a riveting work of modern dystopian fiction. From the opening sentence, the author’s evocative prose commands attention. Vivid descriptions transform the ruined city into a visceral, almost living presence. Each crumbling building and each tremor in the earth feels real, immersing the reader in a world teetering on the edge of collapse. The story doesn’t just depict survival; it mirrors the fragility of the modern world, asking readers to confront unsettling truths about humanity and resilience.
The characters shine as the heart of this story. Maya and Jace, polar opposites, embody two sides of survival in crisis. Maya’s warmth and hope resonate deeply, offering a vision of collective strength, while Jace’s unflinching pragmatism challenges notions of morality when survival is at stake. Their clash is riveting, not only as a battle for leadership but as a commentary on what it means to remain human amidst chaos. The raw authenticity of their internal struggles makes them relatable, their humanity laid bare in every decision, every moment of doubt.
Themes of leadership, morality, and sacrifice pulse through the pages, creating a story that is as thought-provoking as it is thrilling. The story moves with relentless energy, but it also takes moments to reflect, adding depth and nuance to the chaos. The contrast between destruction and the characters’ determination to survive is both haunting and inspiring.
Ashes of the City is an exploration of resilience, a challenge to consider how far we’ll go to endure, and a testament to the enduring power of hope. It’s a must-read for anyone drawn to dystopian stories.
Pages: 320 | ASIN : B0DK4397YD
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, adventure, Ashes of the City, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, coming of age, dystopian, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Quinton Taylor-Garcia, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, teen, Teen & Young Adult Survival Stories, thriller, writer, writing, YA Fiction, YA Sci Fi, young adult






