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Dirty Myrtle is the kind of book that grabs you by the collar and doesn’t let go. Kennedy Weible drops you into the sweaty, neon underbelly of Myrtle Beach and makes it impossible to look aw... Read the full review
Symphony of Lies opens like a door slammed by winter: a Swiss chalet, a restless journalist, and a registered letter that feels more like a verdict. Within a few pages, Maria Monday makes co... Read the full review
Linda Gambill’s The Geography of Desire is the kind of memoir that doesn’t just recount a journey; it interrogates the reasons for taking one. From its first pages, it’s clear this book is l... Read the full review
So You Want To Be a Pilot opens with the feeling every plane‑watching kid knows: that sudden tug in your chest when something silver cuts across the sky. Linda Soules makes that moment bigge... Read the full review
Maxwell Hoffman's omnibus Sven and Pien: Terror of the Cruel Yeti drops Norse villagers and their Innu neighbours into late-medieval Newfoundland—and drops a roaring yeti between them. It re... Read the full review
Some children’s books entertain; a rarer few gently recalibrate how a child sees themselves. Sumaira Ahmed’s You’re Pretty Amazing is that kind of picture book—bright, rhythmic, and quietly... Read the full review
Operation Medusa reads like a fuse being lit in three different centuries at once—history, memory, and modern warfare twisting into one tight cord. It’s a military thriller with real emotion... Read the full review
What If Anger Is the Answer? reads like a conversation you did not know you needed: a Marine officer's stories from Afghanistan and training, threaded with the Greeks and Shakespeare, framed... Read the full review
Hunter’s Hidden Camera really grabs your attention from the start and keeps you hooked. Anthony Auswat has written a story that feels raw and brave, but also surprisingly gentle. It follows... Read the full review
Second-chance romances are everywhere, but Ellen Wood's The Angel stands out for how deeply it believes in the ache of “what if” and the healing power of coming home, a feeling I carried wit... Read the full review
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