Thursday, November 27, 2025

Gravity Flow The Jimmy Whistler Stories by EM Schorb, Walk With Me One Hundred Days of Crazy by Ernesto H Lee, Penthesilea Rise of An Amazon by Stephanie Vanise, The Bluestockings A History of The First Women's Movement by Susannah Gibson, Violeta by Nikki Roman



By Julie Sara Porter 
Bookworm Reviews 


These are summaries. The full reviews can be found on Reader Views or MockingOwl Roost 

Gravity Flow: The Jimmy Whistler Stories by EM Schorb 

This is a seriocomic anthology of various moments in the life of Jimmy Whistler, a writer, in the 50's-60's.

The covers Jimmy's troubled childhood, his time working in a burlesque theater, military career, writing career, his friends, lovers, children, and other important experiences.

Characterization is this book's strongest asset. Jimmy's experiences are told by various vignettes that describe events in his life. He encounters many eccentric characters including a burlesque performer, a Beatnik poet, and different lovers.

The book is told through Jimmy's point of view so we see the world through his eyes. Most of the characters are broad, farcical, and bizarre. Jimmy's narrative voice is arrogant, impulsive, but always fascinating.


 

Walk With Me One Hundred Days of Crazy by Ernesto H. Lee

This is a powerful evocative novel about life, love, death, and learning to appreciate life.

Mark Rennie and Karen McKenzie are both dying. Instead of just waiting for the inevitable, they decide to spend 100 days traveling and enjoying themselves before the end.

The book is a descriptive travel guide of different experiences like dancing in Cuba, walking across the Great Wall of China, and swimming with sharks in Cancun. It is a scenic itinerary of exciting adventures and experiences.

It also captures how people face death in different ways. Some want to do everything medically possible to prolong their lives while others would rather face death on their own terms. There is no one way to face this conflict and all are valid.


Penthesilea: Rise of An Amazon by Stephanie Vanise 

This is a powerful and gripping Historical Fiction novel about a young Amazon, Penthesilea during the Trojan War.

She is third of four daughters of the Queen of Amazon. Penthesilea lives in the shadow of her other sisters and struggles to find her own identity in war.

Various characters and events from Greek Mythology appear including Hippolyta, Hercules, Paris, Helen of Troy, and Achilles. They are made more complex in this adaptation as Vanise captures their psyches and inner conflicts.

Penthesilea in particular is looking for recognition in a powerful war like family. She strives to empower herself and stand out. She strives to be one of a kind not one of hundreds.






The Bluestockings: A History of The First Women's Movement by Susannah Gibson 

This is a fascinating Historical Nonfiction account of the Bluestockings, a group of 18th century women who hosted salons, encouraged creative talents, and discussed politics, philosophy and other topics in which women were discouraged from discussing.

These women supported one another in their creative pursuits like writing and art. These were women whose voices might otherwise have been followed. They also had unconventional lives where some married supportive men, had Lesbian relationships, or opted not to marry at all.

The Bluestockings did not last very long but they were an influence for many women like Jane Austen, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Elizabeth Gaskell who in turn inspired the various waves of Feminism. Women's History would have been very different without them.



Violeta by Nikki Roman 
This is a Gothic Literature novel that focuses on child abuse, trauma, and finding ones personal power and independence.

Violet Valentine is isolated by her mother who keeps her secluded from the outside world. Her only contact is with her brother, Tommy. The toxic situation explodes when their mother puts both children'a lives in danger.

Violeta involves the anxieties that are found in families particularly between parents and children and siblings. The Valentine Family engage in continuous conflict, emotional and psychological instability, and fragile dysfunction. 

The siblings are confined and battered by their mother's volatile abusive behavior so they can only rely on each other. They support each other to break from her, find their comfort, independence, strength, sanctuary, and real home. 




December-January Reviews


 December-January Reviews

Finally, I thought that last list would never get done. It looks like I am going to have to do that again. As usual I overbooked myself (pun not intended). 

Because of it being the Holiday season, I want to finish editing Elyria's Journey by Rina Hasan, and I want to do the Annual Favorite Books Lists at the end of the month, I will probably get to do only half of these this month and save the other half for January. 

So some will be eligible for Best Books for 2025 and others will have to wait until 2026. I will try to keep to all strict headlines but some more lenient ones will have to wait. 

Short reviews and links for Gravity Flow: The Jimmy Whistler Stories by EM Schorb, Walk With Me: One Hundred Days of Crazy by Ernesto H. Lee, Penthesilea: Rise of an Amazon by Stephanie Vanise, The Bluestockings: A History of The First Women's Movement by Susannah Gibson, and Violeta by Nikki Roman 

The Long Farewell by Bob Von Laerhoven 

Goon by Glenn Erick Miller*

The Wise Marie: Paradise Edition by Natasha Brune*

Oath by Kate Butler*

Bird of Paradox and Other Tales by John Devlin

Recovering Maurice by Martin Zelder

Magnificat (The Galactic Milieu Series Book 4) by Julian May 

The Wine Broker (The Richard O’Brien Series Book 3) by Ian Rodney Lazarus

The Waterway Girls by Milly Adams

Pulverize (Aiko Rising Book 2) by D.B. Goodin

Rising Karma by Eugene Samolin

The Promise of Love by Emmeline Lovel

Quest for Freedom: The Conquest Trilogy Book 1 by Matthew Devitt

The Dark Chronicles by Karmen Spiljak

The Forgotten Queer: A Journey of Self-Discovery, Breaking Free, and Healing by Stella Mok

Raising Readers: How to Help Your Child Learn to Read by Amy Coffey

Wasted Talent How Greed, Exploitation, and the Promise of the Future of Work has Failed the Front Line and a Plan to Fix It by Sam Caucci

The Platinum Workforce How to Train and Hire For the 21st Century’s Industrial Transitions by Trond Arne Undheim

Best of The Best 2025: Contemporary and Historical Fiction 

Best of The Best 2025: Fantasy and Science Fiction 

Best of The Best 2025: Horror, Mystery/Thriller, and Nonfiction 

If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:

Bluesky

Facebook

Goodreads 

Instagram

LinkedIn

LitPick

Reader Views 

Reedsy Discovery

Threads

Upwork

Email: juliesaraporter@gmail.com 

Prices are as follows (subjected to change depending on size and scope of the project):

Beta Read: $50.00-75.00

Review: $50-100.00**

Copy/Content Edit: $100-300.00

Proofread: $100-300.00

Research & Citation: $100-400.00

Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$200-400.00

*These are books reviewed for LitPick or Reader's Views and will only feature a summary and a few paragraphs with links to the full reviews on their sites. Some may not be featured at all.

**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, LitPick, Reedsy Discovery, Hidden Gems, Voracious Readers, Reader's Views, and DP Books. Payments of short Nonfiction reviews are already facilitated through Real Book Review, Amazon Book Groups, Michael Cheng, Five Stars Books, and Book Square Publishing. 

Payments can be made to my PayPal and CashApp accounts at juliesaraporter@gmail.com

Well that's it. Thanks and as always, Happy Reading.






























































































































Inside Out Worlds: Visions of Strange by Sophie Jubillart Posey; Science Fiction and Fantasy Worlds and Concepts Captured in Novella Form


 Inside Out Worlds: Visions of Strange by Sophie Jubillart Posey; Science Fiction and Fantasy Worlds and Concepts Captured in Novella Form

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 


Spoilers: If anyone can capture a complete fantastic world with important themes found in Science Fiction and Fantasy in less than a novel length, it's Sophie Jubillart Posey. Her anthology, Inside Out WorldsVisions of Strange covers ten novelettes and novellas that do just that. They build descriptive worlds, create important concepts, and explore themes of loneliness, romance, conformity, rebellion, empathy, trauma, communication, AI, dehumanization, transformation, and ecology. 

The best selections are:

"The Angel and The Sphinx"

This story explores the concept of love between immortals and Alternate Universes.

Adiphael, an angel, has fallen in love with the Sphinx. Oh not the one protecting pyramids in Egypt. The one from Greek Mythology who posed a riddle to Oedipus before he killed his father, married his mother, became king, and blinded himself. 

Adiphael can't stand to watch his beloved leap to her death when the riddle is answered so he reverses time to convince The Sphinx to give Oedipus a different one that he can't solve. Unfortunately, this decision creates more problems for the pair and the entire world.

Adiphael and The Sphinx make a peculiar but compelling couple. Since Adiphael is an angel, he is practically made of love and empathy. He is a highly emotional creature who feels things strongly when he helps others. He is ruled by his heart. 

The Sphinx is made of thought and cunning. She is a highly intelligent creature who thinks deeply as she challenges others with her words. She is ruled by her brain. It is an attraction of opposites but that doesn't always translate to a happy or healthy union.

A theme in this story is of unending obsessions and appetites. Adiphael is obsessed with the idea of helping others but can't always understand that helping sometimes causes more problems. His actions are born out of love but sometimes don't carry enough foresight to see the results.

The Sphinx is obsessed with using her gift of riddles to outsmart and defeat others but doesn't know what to do with herself when she is defeated. If she wins, she is left with an appetite for human flesh which can never be filled or appeased. 

The two characters are completely consumed by their obsessions becoming a toxic couple. The obsessions become addictions and a love affair between two different immortal creatures becomes destructive to everyone including themselves.

"Prophecies of the Great Mother"

A story that frightened me the first time that I read it was “By The Waters of Babylon” by Stephen Vincent Benet. In it, a boy from an agrarian society travels to a forbidden place for a rite of passage. Upon arrival, he learns that the forbidden place is the remains of New York City and he lives in a Post-Apocalyptic society. 

I hadn't read that many Science Fiction works at the time so I wasn't as familiar with this twist so it disturbed me enough to give me nightmares. I have since read many Post-Apocalyptic Dystopian Science Fiction works, many for this blog in fact. But I never forgot my experience with Benet’s short story.

Posey’s “Prophecies of the Great Mother” could be seen as a continuation of Benet’s work with a huge difference. Benet’s story was published in 1937 and while commenting on war and industrialization, a future like that could only be imagined.

 “Prophecies of the Great Mother” reminds us that this future is not far away. It's right here and that makes this story more haunting and disturbing. This story demonstrates exactly what happens when society collapses and communication, interdependency, and learning are sacrificed.

In “Prophecies,” we know that this is a Post-Apocalyptic society from the beginning. The Narrator is part of such an agrarian tribeThe society in which he lives is caught between vilifying and learning about the past. 

They are many generations removed from the Old World but many of the younger people are sheltered from learning about it. They can't leave the confined villages and all they know comes from the elder’s words, the words that they learned from their predecessors and so on.

This society knows of the past but without literacy or technology, it's told through oral storytelling and playacting. Their history speaks of the modern world destroyed by prejudice, war, and climate change but this only consists of pockets, mere drops of information and is interpreted by the one telling the story.

 The tribe members are forbidden from learning anything deeper or exploring for themselves. Many such as The Narrator's friend Ikewa burn with curiosity because so much is forbidden. She sneaks out of the village to understand why people are disappearing. 

Despite the Elder's good intentions to not let history repeat itself, their refusal to let the young ones learn for themselves makes them unprepared and ignorant when they are faced with these problems.

 Instead of gaining agency and fighting against other societies, they are passively destroyed by a more technologically advanced society. The Narrator is captured, graphically tortured, and dehumanized by a scientist. 

The technological society is cruel and inhuman and the agrarian society is wilfully ignorant and passive.  They can't work together, understand, or function so they destroy each other and themselves.

"Girl at Sea"

Unlike many of the other stories in this anthology, this one’s central conflict is not societal. Instead, it's more personal. This story is part Psychological Thriller and part Dark Fantasy/Horror. It's a Gothic Literature novelette by way of a Grimm Fairy Tale. Oneira is a naive innocent held captive by an evil guardian, her mother.

Oneira’s mother physically and mentally abuses her. She frequently tells her that she is Oneira's mirror. She repeats Oneira's negative traits but increases the attacks. Oneira gets mad and responds with a sharp retort and Mother becomes furious and answers with a cutting insult. 

Oneira uses her hands to defend herself and Mother punches her Oneira makes an innocent cooking mistake and Mother destroys dinner. It's a childish and immature mind game but it keeps Oneira captive and from retaliating or defending herself.

Mother is a true example of a Narcissistic parent. She sees Oneira as merely an extension of herself. She believes that her daughter's only purpose is to serve and take care of her without any agency for herself.

 Oneira can never leave the house, make friends, or do many of the things that most kids should do. Oneira's mother might have given birth to her but holds no maternal love for the girl, just ownership. 

Like many fairy tales, Oneira's escape comes in the form of magic. She finds a bottle that when opened, smoke spills out and grants her every wish but only temporarily. She takes full advantage of the situation to reunite with friends, travel to different places, and change into different forms. 

Unfortunately, she always has to return to where she was before. It's an escapist fantasy which clears her mind but offers no real solutions.

Like many protagonists in such works, Oneira's freedom is not a result of outside forces like magic. It comes from her finding her own self-respect and courage to stand up to her mother. Only when she changes herself inward is she able to change her life outward.

"ReGroup"

This story would fit right in with Black Mirror (which I started watching this year and loved. It's one of my favorite new series to me).

 Like the Netflix series, this novelette shows the addictive hold that technology can have on people and how many will exploit others for money, hits, or entertainment.

There's a new social media app called ReGroup. Among its members are Dhriti, a Yoga instructor, Gilbert, a chef, Abigail, a hunter, and Akio, a historian. This story reveals the positive and negative attributes of social media. 

The characters are able to share their interests and expertise with like minded individuals. They can earn a living doing and talking about what they love. 

They can openly express themselves and explore their creativity to its fullest. Communities and relationships are formed. There are definite benefits to this app.

Unfortunately, with positives comes negatives and in ReGroup’s case the latter outweighs the former. Users are rated by hits and receive cash prizes with the more hits, posts, comments that they make. Motivated by financial greed and instant fame, comments become inflammatory, hateful vulgar posts and videos are created, and hate speech and death threats become frequent. It's a mess.

The logical thing that most would do is reduce their time on ReGroup, only use the app for their specific interest, change their settings to private, close their accounts, or leave the app entirely. But the characters can't or won't. 

They are consumed by notoriety, avarice, and anger. Some flame others and others just passively accept it but don't do anything to stop it. They are watching a train wreck and can't look away. 

The characters are a figurative part of the machine of hatred that the app exploits. It changes them until they become a literal part of it. They gave their humanity away and now they are nothing more than endless streams of data, words, and numbers that no longer have any purpose or meaning.

"The Sea"

This novella combines many of the frequent tropes that are found throughout the anthology like it is Posey's final word on the book as a whole. It is an allegory about the union between humanity and nature.

Amos is drawn towards and frightened of water. It provides him some comfort but he also has nightmares of drowning. He imagines conversations with it like it's a living being. It provides a connection that he can't always find with people. 

When Amos is alone, The Sea speaks to him. It warns him that he, like the rest of humanity, has squandered the gift of nature and they will die. Amos begs for another chance that they can turn things around and he will lead them.

The relationship between Amos and The Sea is complex. It serves as a mentor that inspires him to study marine biology and oceanography. He becomes an expert in water conservation and addresses governments about climate change. He can feel the Water’s pain and suffering as it is polluted and altered by corporate greed and willing denial. He has found a purpose in life and is determined to give his all.

There is also a personal component between Amos and The Sea. They share a connection that is borderline sensual. The descriptions of Amos swimming and The Sea surrounding is reminiscent of making love. The Sea takes a human form and Amos has visions of himself in mercreature form so they can explore one another's bodies.

 For someone who can't communicate with many humans, Amos shares desires, longing, secrets, and deepest thoughts and feelings with The Sea. He finds a worthy partner, so he becomes more determined to save it. Amos defends it the way a devoted spouse would to find a cure for their dying partner. 

The novella has a theme of transformation. Humanity has transformed the seas to become unlivable and separated themselves from nature. Both The Sea and Amos take other forms to balance humanity and nature. Soon all of Earth, the land and the people will have no choice but to transform.




Tuesday, November 25, 2025

In Search of Rain From Motel Qu to Pittsburgh by Syed Nourashrafeddin; Memoir About War, Hardship, Education, Trauma, and Happiness


In Search of Rain From Motel Qu to Pittsburgh by Syed Nourashrafeddin; Memoir About War, Hardship, Education, Trauma, and Happiness


 In Search of Rain From Motel Qu to Pittsburgh is Syed Nourashrafeddin’s detailed, emotional, inspirational, moving, and meaningful memoir. It covers topics like war, revolution, addiction, trauma, illness, immigration, and the pursuit of academic and financial success and personal happiness.

Nourashrafeddin’s life began in Iran during a tumultuous time in the country’s history. ’He was five years old during the 1979 revolution. He was too young to remember life before the Revolution and knows it from elder’s memories and documentation. They described that life as joyful and filled with vitality. They could drink and smoke in public. Women were free to pursue career opportunities. Artists and singers expressed themselves without censorship. 

All of that changed when the Ayatollahs stepped in. Nourashrafeddin’s description of a country deprived of everything that they once had like destroyed cinemas and clubs, banned music and art, women completely covered is completely heartbreaking. Even as a child, Nourashrafeddin felt that something wasn't right in a country that deprived its people of so much and used their limited interpretation of the Islamic religion to enforce and justify it.

 It wasn't the religion itself that created it because Islam was Iran’s primary religion before the Revolution. It was because the country was taken over by a sect of religious extremists with a very limited narrow view of what their religion meant and demanded that the people follow it.

Nourashrafeddin also grew up during the Iran-Iraq War and he effectively describes the after effects of a childhood in war. He bluntly describes the War as “a war for nothing.” The places where he and his childhood friends pretended to shoot each other in games were demolished by adults who really did shoot each other.

 His descriptions of a city practically annihilated with destroyed buildings, sounds of explosions and air strikes, food shortages, wounded neighbors, and casualties during a futile and needless war are unsettling.

There was also war brewing at home as well. Nourashrafeddin and his eight siblings were raised by an introverted passive mother and an outdoorsy temperamental father who was addicted to opium and heroin, “a world of smoke and addiction,” as his son wrote. His father’s addiction spiraled out of control as he lost his wife, youth, job, money, and eventually freedom to the disease. 

The conflicts at home and outside during the war showed chaos, anxiety, and trauma on all sides. It would be enough to drive anyone to despair and Nourashrafeddin revealed a lot of inner strength and determination to survive it.

Through education, Nourashrafeddin discovered his passion. Starting out as a lackluster student, he became interested in receiving a letter of recommendation to study mathematics and experimental sciences in high school. His goal was to become a doctor to earn respect, serve his community, and care for his family.

 He succeeded in school all the way to receiving a PhD in Molecular Medicine. He also obtained practical experience working in different fields like the military, administrative work in the Health Department, and worked in various medical and science laboratories, classrooms, departments, and fields.

His tireless pursuit of academic success and commitment to education is revealing, depicting him as someone who asked questions, hypothesized, theorized, researched, read, studied, measured, and shared his results. In other words, someone who was born to be a scientist but needed a slight nudge in that direction. Once he received that nudge, he excelled in the field. 

Nourashrafeddin’s adulthood was as eventful as his youth. Financial problems and overwork contributed to friction in an early marriage that ended in divorce. He was imprisoned after not paying alimony and upon release was temporarily homeless and destitute. He had vitiligo which lightened his skin and isolated him further. 

During that time, he indulged in hobbies like mountaineering and traveling to gain some perspective and a new outlook. He also had a better second marriage, found career success in Genetics, and eventually emigrated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

This section reveals that during times of difficulty that are out of one's control, it's important to find positive interests and relationships and that clear the mind, soothe the soul, and lead to personal happiness. It's also important to search for and find new directions in life that provide challenges and propel one to move forward.

Nourashrafeddin’s memoir is about a man who lived through much trauma, sadness, happiness, and success. He told his story so Readers can find ways to push past their own traumas and find their own personal success and happiness.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Carriers Divine Measure Book 1 by Lisa Llamrei; The Matriarch Matrix Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 1 by Maxime Trencavel; The Matriarch Messiah Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 2 by Maxime Trencavel

 Carriers Divine Measure Book 1 by Lisa Llamrei; The Matriarch Matrix Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 1 by Maxime Trencavel; The Matriarch Messiah Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 2 by Maxime Trencavel 




Carriers (Divine Measure Book 1) by Lisa Llamrei 

Carriers is a suspenseful and intricate thriller about the mysteries of human perception and natural and supernatural curiosities.

Nora Lansing, a deaf cryptographer receives a coded message from her missing friend, Marisol. The message leads Nora to pictures of crop circles. Nora is doubtful but curious and worried about her friend, so she books a tour of the circles headed by Steven Campbell, a tour guide and musician. Other people start disappearing in the same manner as Marisol suggesting a connection. Nora and Steven are thrown into a mystery involving aliens, ESP, secret societies, and conspiracies. 

Carriers is the kind of mystery and thriller that introduces some fascinating possibilities and theories about many real life mysteries. Crop circles have been believed to be everything from UFO signals to experimental art projects or hoaxes. When Nora and her companions enter the crop circles she feels an energy surge, sees light formations, and senses that she is being watched. There are hints that these circles came not from human means but by something otherworldly. 

The book is filled with action chapters where Nora, Steven, and their colleagues have to escape from secret societies that have their own agendas with the information that Marisol gathered. There are also moments of betrayal when characters turn traitors on one another and suspicions are raised about other dubious figures. It’s the kind of compelling adventure that holds the Reader’s interest with its various twists and cliffhangers.

One of the strongest themes in this book is language and communication. Because Nora and Marisol are deaf, they mostly communicate through sign language which requires an interpreter or use their phones for written messages. They also communicate to each other through mathematical languages and codes. This is how Nora learns of her friend’s discoveries and troubles. It is a complex language that doesn’t need words. It just needs two brilliant minds in synchronization and understanding. 

Steven also has a way to communicate without words. He uses music. He has synesthesia which means that two or more senses work at once, so he can see lights whenever he hears notes play. There are beautiful moments when Nora sees him play music. She sees his deepest emotions and reverence that reveals more than dialogue ever could. 

This book explores the various meanings of language and how humans use different means of expressing their strongest emotions towards each other. All it takes is another soul who understands. 


The Matriarch Matrix (Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 1) by Maxime Trencavel 

The Matriarch Matrix by Maxine Trencavel is a complex engrossing Thriller about ancient secrets leading to ancestral memory and future possibilities.

Peter Gollinger, a copy editor, has recently inherited an oral tradition passed down by his deceased grandfather, a tradition that is told in riddles and leads to an ancient discovery. Zara Khatum is a Kurdish warrior battling the Daesh and is the heiress of a long matrilineal line. The two of them are hired by tech mogul Alexander Murometz who also has a shared complicated history with Zara. Their mission leads them to the temple of Gobekli Tepe and an object that could lead to untold power, knowledge, and potential destruction. 

The adventure in this book has many byzantine layers that link the past and present. Many characters are descended from others and follow similar paths that their ancestors did. People switch sides, family members battle one another, and couples are reunited as though they were predisposed to repeat one another. 

Many of the characters share themes of family legacy. Peter’s is an oral tradition that his family told one another. The meaning isn’t clear but it is what connects him to his ancestors. This tradition also opens up actual memories as he recognizes not only his own soul in the past but those of others like Zara. For him, this trip is a discovery of answers that have been hidden by words and images.

Zara’s lineage is more concrete. She knows where she came from. She knows that she came from a powerful lineage of wise courageous women who have watched their power and influence become smaller and more diminished by the dominance of men. This journey for her is an act of reclamation to reacquaint her with a history that was never really lost. It was just hidden and waiting to be rediscovered. 


The Matriarch Messiah (Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 2) by Lisa Llamrei 

In this volume of The Mystery of The Matriarchs series, The Matriarch Messiah, the book lives up to its name. The most fascinating character arcs belong to the female characters while the men are pushed to the sidelines. It's a deliberate subversion of the usual gender roles often found in Adventure novels where male protagonists go on the adventure of looking for valuable treasure or information and women are the obligatory love interests/sidekicks. 

Peter Gollinger and Zara Khatum have returned from their previous adventure in which they found a valuable ancient object in Gobekli Tepe and fell in love. Now they are contemplating their next move when tech CEO/financier, Alexander Murometz reappears to give Zara another assignment. She and Peter have to travel to a cavern of blue light but they have to do it as a couple. Meanwhile, Rachel Capsali wants to uncover the truth about an ancient goddess.

The adventure aspects are brilliant with the usual historical clues, traps, betrayals, exotic locations, and spine tingling suspense. But its strength lies in characterization. The female presence of Zara, Rachel, and Mei, a former associate of Murometz and lover of Peter's are the best parts.  They embody different pantheons and goddesses. They are women of substance and goals and propel the narrative by their actions.

Zara is caught between her love for Peter and her own personal calling. She wants to live an ascetic life as a Sufi priestess like Rabi’a al-Adawiyya, a woman who dedicated her life to living in solitude and serving her god, Xwede. To do that Zara has to withdraw from emotional attachments including Peter’s. 

She loves Peter but isn't sure that she is supposed to spend her life with him. She also resents Murometz’s pestering for her and Peter to consummate their relationship and conceive a child to pass their intelligent strong genes along. Joke's on Murometz because a graphic assault rendered Zara unable to bear children. While going on this adventure, Zara has to weigh her dedication to her heart and love for Peter or her head and religious devotion.

Rachel represents a different aspect. While Zara is a Kurdish Muslim, Rachel is Jewish and a Torah scholar. Her main interest is in the myths of Asherah who some ancient texts imply was the wife of Yahweh before she was edged out by male rabbinical scholars and chroniclers. 

Like Zara she is intellectually devoted to her faith and wants to restore the female presence in mythology and history. The journey is Rachel's determination to find the answers that she sought. 

The conflict between Rachel and Zara is reminiscent of the continuous Middle Eastern conflicts with each woman representing the two sides. They are both strong-willed devout women with similar goals suggesting that both sides have more in common than they are aware. They have problems that could be resolved through conversation, compromise, and understanding of interdependency. Trencavel humanizes both sides by giving them voices.

Mei, the third character, comes from a different place, a wealthier posher, more polished place than her protagonist sisters. She is a stylish fashionista who didn't mind playing up on her femininity to seduce Peter. She also had a troubled relationship with Alexander Murometz in which they shared ideas in business and in bed. She was someone who tried to be in control of any situation but things reached a downward spiral.

Now she questions her alliances and future. Once a shallow superficial character, she is forced to look inward towards who she really is and what she wants. She is also pregnant and weighing whether or not she wants to be a mother and if the father is a good fit. Her goddess association is Jiang, a Chinese fertility goddess, who had to isolate herself to give birth. Mei has to wonder if being at the center of such chaos, corruption, war, and destruction and whether she can or should have a child.

Mei, Rachel, and Zara are faced with immense choices and crossroads where they have to weigh their own fates, decisions, personal outlooks and also have to consider what is best for the world as a whole. 


Friday, November 21, 2025

Legends of Us: The Legend of The Soul Guardian by Lorie Rea; Brilliant Protagonist and World Building Outshine Sometimes Convoluted Plot


 Legends of Us: The Legend of The Soul Guardian by Lorie Rea; Brilliant Protagonist and World Building Outshine Sometimes Convoluted Plot

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 


This review is also on Reedsy Discovery.

Spoilers: One thing that can't be denied is that Lori Rea worked hard on her Science Fiction Fantasy novel,  Legends of Us: The Legend of The Soul Guardian. The initial idea and her lead protagonist, Amber Rose, have been on her mind for years. She fine tuned her book and based many characters on people that she knew. She created the familial relationship, the political structure, and the language of the fictitious world of Vilroh. I know all of this because the book has occasional “Break Room” chapters inserted throughout the book that describes her writing process.

Some may find the “Break Room” chapters as congratulatory or distracting but for Science Fiction and Fantasy authors who have an epic imaginary world that they want to share with others, they are a valuable educational experience. Rea gives her personal experience and offers her novel as the final document of her journey. And it is quite a document indeed.

While far from perfect, Legends of Us certainly benefits from its author's attention to detail in building the world and characters, particularly in its lead protagonist.

Amber Rose’s parents were killed in a fire and she was separated from her friends and family, particularly her sister, Victoria. She is raised in exile and is trained to become an adept warrior. She reunites with some friends and they strive to keep her real identity a secret. She lives under the assumed name of Juliet. But forging a different identity is easier said than done when Amber encounters jealous colleagues, concerned relatives, feuding enemies, and twisted secrets that could alter the new relationships that she is trying to build.

Rea’s details are well constructed. She put a lot of thought into the world of Vilroh including the history, social structures, and other information. Families are large and multigenerational. Some families have long standing feuds. Adults are referred to as “Master” and “Lady.” There is a military presence that resorts to extreme violent tendencies to meet their goals. The details make us understand the thought that went into creating this book.

One of the early chapters is a prime example of Rea’s creativity. Amber is still an infant but her extended family including her sister, cousins, aunt, and  uncle speak in an original language which looks like a composite of words from various other languages, slang terms, and pidgin dialect. For example “Du sollest haben sayertan” means “You should have awoken me.”

 It's a clever contribution to Rea’s fertile imagination but gods is it ever hard to follow when several characters have long conversations consisting solely of this dialect. Thankfully there's a helpful glossary at the beginning of this book.

Besides world building Rea excels in writing richly developed characters. Nowhere is this more evident than with the lead, Amber. She is a complex and often contradictory character that goes through many changes.

We see her originally as a sheltered flighty young girl from an upper class environment. She has her usual teen hang ups and urges but mostly she is immensely proud of her older sister, Victoria's academic successes. It seems like she was destined to follow her sister's path. 

The next time we see Amber, after her kidnapping and parent's death, she is a hardened commando who can efficiently do away with someone before treating her own wounds. She is not the sweet innocent girl that we met before. Instead, she is a sardonic tough badass who captivates those that she meets and inspires gossip and speculation.

Amber is a cypher to those around her especially as she assumes the "Juliet" alias. Despite her hardened professionalism born through years of imprisonment, abuse, and survival instincts, Amber demonstrates the difficulties of living under an assumed name. It can be difficult to remember to answer to that name, especially when she is around people who knew her as Amber.

 She also has to create various deceptions to uphold her new identity and avoid or fight against nefarious people that she doesn't want to recognize her. At times she questions who Amber really is.

Amber isn't the only one questioning her identity. Other characters offer their opinions on this woman. Some see her as a fragile innocent who needs protecting. Others see her as a master manipulator. Others see a deeply wounded broken bird hurt by the world's mistreatment. Others see her as an avatar of death and destruction. Many of her cousins see the girl that she used to be and maintain their friendship and loyalty to her. 

The secret is that Amber is all of these and more. She is a layered personality that alters between loving and fury, vulnerable and strong, cunning and empathetic, traumatized and defiant, a good friend and a feared enemy. She can't be placed into one category and moves through all of them.

Amber is the best aspect of the book that can be lost in its complexities. Legends of Us is not an easy read. In fact, this reader had to reread it twice and the opening one more time to make sure that she got it. It's worth it because of the detail but it's also too easy to become lost in the plot and multiple characters surrounding it.

These are large families where characters are related either by blood, marriage, or are involved through romance or friendship. There are character guides spread throughout the book and a family tree at the beginning that focuses on each character and that helps. But there are a lot of names and long names with plenty of middle and family names at that. Even with the character guide, it's all too easy to get tangled up by the relatives and hard to keep track of who is related to whom. 

There are plot points that are confusing. There is a love triangle that is never resolved. One character seems to be in love with Amber and her missing sister. Amber at one point has an eerie telepathic conversation with a rival that could lead to friendship and understanding but the rival later continues to warn her boyfriend and friends about Amber's questionable intentions.

 Perhaps it could use some trimming and certainty or maybe the Reader just needs to read it again. Despite the convoluted plot, the book excels because of Amber and the world in which she lives.

Legends of Us’ title comes from a line where Amber says that people create their own legends by their stories and experiences. In truth, Amber is her own legend and Rea's as well.





Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Diamond Mask (The Galactic Milieu Trilogy Book 3) by Julian May; Sequel Ramps Up Hydra Attacks and Female Characterization

Diamond Mask (The Galactic Milieu Trilogy Book 3) by Julian May; Sequel Ramps Up Hydra Attacks and Female Characterization 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: When we last left the Remillard Family, in Jack The Bodiless, the family was under attack by a sinister being called Fury and Fury’s aide Hydra. They were created during the death of patriarch Victor who tried to control the united metaconcert of the highly telepathic family. Because of this, they know that Fury and Hydra are Remillard Family members who might not know the violent sadistic creatures exist within their psyche. After several murders and attempts, Hydra is identified but goes into hiding. Fury however remains an enigma. 

Meanwhile, Teresa Kendall-Remillard learns that she is pregnant with her fifth child despite strict laws from the Galactic Milieu. Psychic impressions and mental communication occurs even within the womb suggesting that the little one will be highly powerful indeed. Jon, AKA Jack Remillard is born and is highly telepathic and intelligent. As a toddler, he suffers a cancer that metastasizes and devours his entire body leaving only a disembodied brain. He is able to create a body image surrounding his brain so he can live a seemingly normal life.

Diamond Mask, the next volume in The Galactic Milieu Series, begins ten years after the ending of Jack The Bodiless. Jack is now a child prodigy and attends classes and experiments with his college age brother Marc. He is destined for a high position in the Milieu. Things seem to be quiet on the Fury-Hydra front for a while. Note I said for a while.

Fury reappears to his eager sadistic subordinate. Hydra is ordered to resume their attacks. This time they attack the mother, uncle, and aunt of Dorothea McDonald, a Scottish girl who is an adept telepath and healer. After the murders, Dorothea and the rest of her family go into hiding on another planet, Caledonia and she tries to suppress her abilities. But over the years, she can't ignore them nor can she ignore the mental communication with a certain bodiless lad from Earth.

Diamond Mask is a worthy continuation in the series. The biggest standouts are the terrifying presence of Hydra and the multilayered presence of Dorothea McDonald.

In the previous volume, The Family learned that Hydra was actually five of the Remillard cousins sharing a hive mind. They were sadistic, immature, and their mental communications with Fury were darkly comical. However there wasn't much distinction between them. 

This volume is where we really get a sense of their depravity and sadism. They come into their own as individuals with one as the brains and leader, another is charismatic and charming, another is lustful and active, another is innovative and tech oriented, and another is muscular and silent. 

Along with their individuality, their own personal desires come forward. They aren't just hurting people because Fury ordered them to. They have their own independent reasons, ambitious goals, and unsatisfied hunger compelling them to act. This suggests that they learned from the master, Fury, and soon he won't be able to control the monsters that he created.

The Remillards are still a presence and have their conflicts. Many question their allegiances like Anne’s loyalty to the Galactic Milieu and Unity and Adrien and Severin’s support for Rebellion. Marc weighs his own beliefs while preparing his own questionable potentially destructive project.

This volume introduces Dorothea McDonald, the future love interest of Jack Remillard. They don't meet face to face until towards the end and their union is tepid so this gives us a chance to get to know Dorothea on her own terms rather than created to just be a girlfriend and nothing more.

In the previous book, we were told that interstellar travel is a routine thing. We see a few short travels to other worlds including where Uncle Rogi Remillard visits a completely frozen planet and is given an important assignment. But Diamond Mask is the first one where intergalactic travel is a primary focus.

One of the interesting aspects of many of the planets is the cultural presence of Earthlings. Many of the Earth’s citizens took to the stars and brought their cultures with them. So there are references to planets with Japanese, Irish, Inuit, Nigerian and other diverse themes. 

Dorothea’s family lives on Caledonia, a planet colonized by Scottish Earthlings. The McDonalds live in a world of castles, rich farmland, tartans, and family clans. It makes sense that people exploring unfamiliar terrain would want to take something familiar with them and recreate their own history and traditions.

Dorothea's story compared to Jack’s shows that people faced with similar issues can react differently to them. Their telepathic abilities manifest early, are highly intelligent prodigies, and come from influential academic powerful families. But their personal experiences are quite different.

Jack is unable to hide his abilities because of his family and his illness, so he doesn't. In fact he dramatizes it. He is amused when students wonder what a prepubescent kid is doing on a college campus and even adult academics seek his advice. 

Jack's abilities and intelligence makes him seem remote and far off from other students so he has very few friends his own age. He is great at forging alliances and allyship but is a cypher when it comes to close emotional connections. This explains why he persists on mentally communicating with Dorothea despite her objections. He found someone who is on his intellectual and metaphysical level.

While Jack uses his abilities, Dorothea does not. As a child she compares her various powers as boxes on a shelf. When she has no choice but to use them, she only opens one box i.e. uses one power and only in extreme circumstances. 

Dorothea resents her family’s studies on psychic abilities so she suppresses her powers.She tries as hard as she can to act like a normal kid and withdraws into herself. 

Dorothea puts on a metaphorical mask to hide her capabilities. The events of the book from her family's murders to a natural planetary disaster leaves her scarred but brings out much of her strength, resilience, and abilities. Once she puts on a literal mask decorated with diamond studs, she no longer hides.

She pushes herself forward and stands out accepting her power and leadership. Dorothea's presence ultimately shines like the diamonds that Jack compares her to, hidden, priceless, powerful, beautiful, and strong. Jack and Dorothea are a couple who ultimately shine brightly together and apart.







 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Jack The Bodiless (Galactic Milieu Series Book 2) by Julian May; The Return of an Old Friend


 Jack The Bodiless (Galactic Milieu Series Book 2) by Julian May; The Return of an Old Friend

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: It's an interesting experience to reread a book after many years. In 1997, I read Julian May’s The Galactic Milieu Series. I was new to reading Science Fiction, mostly limited to Ray Bradbury's works. I was curious about this series about The Remillards, a telepathic family. It left such a large impression on me that Science Fiction became one of my favorite genres to read.

Almost 30 years later, I wondered after almost three decades of reading speculative fiction if The Galactic Milieu Series still holds up. I am glad to report that as far as the second volume in the series and the first that I read, Jack The Bodiless is concerned, it not only held up, it actually improved with age.

The most prominent and influential family is The Remillard Family whose members are highly telepathic. When patriarch Victor dies, The Remillards receive mental impressions of two monsters, Fury and Hydra who commit a series of murders over the years leaving the family vulnerable. Meanwhile, Paul and Teresa Kendall-Remillard are expecting their fifth child, Jon or Jack, who is genius, self-aware, and could potentially be the most powerful telepath in the family even as an infant.

The Earth that May envisioned has some interesting touches that are both imaginative and thought provoking. When I previously read it, the future was far away and remote. Now that it’s here, the parallels can’t be missed. 

The setting of this book is over 100 years after a time called The Great Intervention (detailed in the first book in the series, Intervention unread by me.). Various alien races made contact with Earth inviting them to join the Galactic Milieu, sort of an intergalactic United Nations. Earthlings received many perks because of this union including long life spans, rejuvenated youth, mental telepathy, and the ability to travel to the stars. It is an amazing world that May built in which the human mind is invited into a higher consciousness that explores unlimited potential beyond our little blue dot in the vast universe.

However as readers of Science Fiction all know, there is always a catch to what seems to be a great offer and in the case of the Milieu, that catch is Unity. The Milieu wants Earth’s residents to join their minds and consciousness with the other species as a hive mind. Many are on board with this concept, and those who are supportive are granted higher positions in society. 

However, there are plenty of humans who rebelled against the concept like Rogatien “Rogi” Remillard, the cynical and deadpan narrator of the book. Rebels are concerned about the death of individuality, privacy, and human frailties.

 It is a conflict that carries over throughout the series. It’s also open-ended and invites readers to weigh their own opinions about the cost of vast knowledge and power vs. a life of mental subservience and conformity.

While Earth hasn’t exactly made contact with alien species and telepathic abilities are still more theoretical than real, many of the issues that are discussed in this series are still very relevant. In this era of vast technology, social media, surveillance, censorship, and instantaneous connections we humans are made painfully aware of what is at stake.

We are surrounded by conflicts about privacy, the pursuit of vast knowledge, the price of conformity, and the desire to be individuals. May recognized these concerns in the 90’s and inserted them into her imaginary world. Now we are weighing that for ourselves. 

As detailed as May’s futuristic world is, her characters are just as well written. None more so than the large Remillard Family. They are like a fictional futuristic telepathic version of the Kennedys, a family that is rich in wealth, power, influence, charisma, and inner turmoil. 

They are enthralling as a family unit and as individuals. They have some great struggles and conflicts that are pulled out of soap opera just as they are out of science fiction. Conflicts like infidelity, divorce, differing viewpoints, child abuse, illness, mental disorders are just as important as the wider conflicts with the Galactic Milieu. The Remillards are a very realistic family that lives in a fanciful universe.

Brothers Marc and Jack Remillards are a pair of stand outs in this intriguing family. Marc is an adolescent who at times acts more mature than his lecherous father and emotional mother. He shares a special bond with Jack even before Jack is born where they communicate telepathically. He also receives visions and mental impressions suggesting that his fate is much larger than he thought.

Jack too is also a brilliant character. He thinks complex thoughts inside the womb. Even after he is born, and suffers tremendous physical pain, his brain is still highly active. His brain practically ascends to a higher plane of existence that doesn’t need to be contained by a corporeal body. The overall impression is a small child who is highly intelligent, otherworldly, and somewhat disconcerting in his otherworldliness.

Surrounding this family are Fury and Hydra terrifying creatures that destroy their victims from within. It is a strange union in which Fury is clearly the dominant leader and Hydra the excitable follower. They conspire to destroy the Remillards from within.

They are like things from nightmares and feed off Remillard Family’s pain, insecurities, fears, and anger. They are unleashed in violent confrontations that are chilling and disturbing.

Jack the Bodiless is highly recommended for readers of science fiction, particularly those who are interested in reading about mental telepathy, intergalactic space travel, dysfunctional families, rebellions, utopias, and the potential of expanded human potential, knowledge, and consciousness. 


Monday, November 17, 2025

The Sixth Victim (A Constance Piper Mystery) by Tessa Harris; Jack The Ripper Takes Center Stage in Ominous Supernatural Mystery

 

The Sixth Victim (A Constance Piper Mystery) by Tessa Harris; Jack The Ripper Takes Center Stage in Ominous Supernatural Mystery 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Now we turn to that unsolved historical mystery, Whitechapel, East End London’s most infamous son, Jack The Ripper. This famed and unidentified serial killer of female sex workers is the primary antagonist in The Sixth Victim: A Constance Piper Mystery by Tessa Harris. This is an effective Historical Mystery which captures time, place, and important themes about the degradation of women in the patriarchal Victorian Era.

Flower seller Constance Piper has to support her family but right now Whitechapel citizens are in fear. The latest victim “Dark” Annie Chapman was found after previous victims, Martha Tabram and Polly Nichols. Every woman walks home in terror and anxiety of the killer that could come out of the shadows to strike. However, Constance has a secret weapon at her disposal. She can communicate with ghosts and has reached the interest of Emily Tindall, a teacher who is concerned about a missing friend and students who have also vanished. Constance and Emily work together to solve these murders and disappearances.

This book captures the setting intricately with both time and place. The Victorian Age revealed a sharp division between rich and poor which is revealed through the contrast between lead characters. 

Emily lives around the middle to upper class while Constance dwells with the working lower class. Emily visits ornate wealthy houses while Constance lives in city slums. Emily's closest circle dines on five course dinners on fancy dishes while Constance’s friends and family face imminent starvation and homelessness. Emily's friends hide marital struggles and family disputes behind closed doors that are protected by status and connections. Constance's friends’ struggles are out for the world to see and are augmented by the lack of concern from those same resources. 

Rich and poor live in separate worlds and the twain does not meet often. However Emily and Constance act as bridges between them. Though Emily's status would be considered wealthy if not comfortable she does not ignore the plight of others. As an educator, she understands the importance of learning and teaches reading to working class women. She helps them realize that they don't have to limit themselves to an impoverished life and they can aspire to a better one. 

Emily recognizes that these women often had very few options which often resulted in domestic violence, alcoholism, addiction, prostitution, and illegitimate pregnancy. By educating them, Emily gives opportunities and options to break the cycles around them.

Constance considers Emily a mentor so their exchanges are full of warmth and support. Constance is the only person in her family that can read and feels like an outsider among her peers whose goals often go as far as their next meal or finding a partner for the night. 

Emily wants to open a shop, leave the East End, and build a comfortable nest egg. One of the more revealing moments is when she is dressed in a nice suit and speaks professionally to a wealthy woman. She surprises herself with her polished refined behavior even as she hides nerves underneath.

Besides the attention to class struggles, this book is adept at recounting the Jack The Ripper case and the overall violent world in which they take place. We are shown the “Canon Five” victims: Polly Nichols, Dark Annie Chapman, Long Lizzie Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Kelly. Kelly's story is particularly heartbreaking as she struggles with an unwanted pregnancy and a troubled common law marriage. 

Harris also offers some speculation. A potential victim is Martha Tabram, who at the time was considered a Ripper victim and even now there's some debate whether she was one or not. There is also the appearance of a headless unidentified female corpse, a real life unsolved mystery at the time that was also attributed to Jack.

The details are there: the notes, the graphic violence, the potential suspects, and the theories. The book plays on speculations and profiles to depict the potential suspects. In depicting them, Harris comments on xenophobia, fear of authority, and dehumanization of different classes. 

Even without the Ripper, there is a dark undercurrent of violence and crime. There is domestic abuse, forced prostitution, child trafficking, and fraudsters posing as mediums. In fact it is during a session with a fake medium when Constance first displays her real clairvoyant abilities

It is a mean world where Jack can hide in plain sight because he fits in. It's a world where Victorian moralists lecture others, particularly women, about propriety while at the same time committing violence towards women and maintaining a patriarchal system in which they can't report it.

With The Sixth Victim, Tessa Harris uses the Jack The Ripper murders as a springboard in this dissection of Victorian class division, subjugation of women, and depraved violence.