Sunday, November 3, 2024

November Reading List







 November Reading List 

Last month started out well. Then the last couple of weeks, I got hit with some psychological problems so I ended up pushing back my final reviews for the month.

Trigger Point (An Angela Hardwicke Science Fiction Mystery Book 5) by Russ Colchamiro

Priceless Passion by Ary Chest

Sailing By Gemini’s Star (The Constellation Trilogy Book 3) by Katie Crabb

The Serpent's Bridge (The Serpent Series) by S.Z. Estavillo

Innocents, Immortals, and Amoral Gods by Harry Dehrian

Traumatization and Its Aftermath: A Systemic Approach to Understanding and Treating Trauma Disorders by Antoineta Contreras 

The Young by Nicholas John Powter*

An Extraordinary Turn of Events by J.C. Hopkins 

The Candid Odyssey: Exploring India and The Philosophy of Life by B Johnny

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











Email: juliesaraporter@gmail.com



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

Beta Read: $35.00-50.00

Review: $35-50.00**

Copy/Content Edit: $75-300.00

Proofread: $75-300.00

Research & Citation: $100-400.00

Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$100-400.00



*These are books reviewed for LitPick and will only feature a summary and a few paragraphs. The full review is  on LitPick's site.

**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, Coffee and Thorn Book Group, LitPicks, BookTasters, Reedsy Discovery, Voracious Readers, and other noted book groups.

Payments can be made to my PayPal account at juliesaraporter@gmail.com

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





















Among Stars and Shadows by Diane Farrugia; Beautiful Romantic Fantasy Between An Elven Prince and Human Woman


Among Stars and Shadows by Diane Farrugia; Beautiful Romantic Fantasy Between An Elven Prince and Human Woman 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Diane Farrugia’s Fantasy Romance Among Stars and Shadows can be formulaic and predictable with its story of the love between a human woman and an Elven Prince. However, Farrugia does enough in terms of characterization and world building that she works well within the formula to make the book a standout.

In the kingdom of Lockhaven in the land of Encantraalm, Prince Declan is sworn to defeat his tyrannical father by any means necessary. Declan’s allies have discovered an artifact that could remove The King’s magic and potentially end his life. The only problem is that it's inside the domain of the High King. For Declan to gain access to the artifact, he has to receive admittance from the High King. To do that he has to offer his hand to the High King's daughter, Princess Myra. Oh well, some things are more important than Declan's personal feelings and whether he likes Myra or not is immaterial as long as his father is defeated. Unfortunately, a serious wrinkle in Declan's plans arrives in the form of Kayla Winters, a woman from London, or Humaynraalm to phrase the vernacular. After receiving some devastating news, Kayla is swept away by a mysterious vortex right into Encantraalm and Declan’s presence. The two are instantly attracted to one another despite Declan's misgivings about a human in the elven realm and also his growing awareness that Kayla might be his Lasai Cara, his twin flame.

The world building is that right blend of imagination and archetypes that can be found in this genre. When Kayla first stumbles into Encantraalm, she has a strange encounter with an underwater siren only to be rescued by a winged elf, also known as an avariel. Many of the characters display certain gifts like Declan's empathic abilities. In one very creepy chapter, The King displays his abilities of mental manipulation.

The backstory of Encantraalm is combined with the legend of Camelot connecting the mythical and the real worlds. Another clever bit is Kayla's astonishment at Encantraalm having electricity and appearing modern when in her mind, a fantasy realm would be Medieval in appearance. It is fascinating how the book plays with expected characters and situations but also has fun exploring new ones and concepts within them.

Declan and Kayla's relationship goes through the usual spots of difficult first meeting, arguments based on assumptions, and different worlds to the point where those spots are predictable but somewhat comforting in their predictability. It's like comfort food. You know what's going to happen but like it anyway.

There is a lot of depth in their relationship that takes the novel in interesting dimensions. One of the complications is that Kayla was diagnosed with lupus before arriving in Encantraalm. She is not just in danger from this magical world but also from her own body and is in a place where the people don't know about lupus and certainly don't have any treatment for it. It's also refreshing to see a character in an Epic Fantasy setting dealing with real world problems. 

Declan and Kayla's romance takes a long time to build and actually goes through several stages that take advantage of a long 900+ page book so they are fully developed as individuals and as a couple. 




 

Thursday, October 31, 2024

1949: Starlings of Peace Book 1 of The Historical Fiction Trilogy by Catharine A Deever; Character Driven Novel About Life Between WWII and The Cold War


 1949: Starlings of Peace Book 1 of The Historical Fiction Trilogy by Catharine A Deever; Character Driven Novel About Life Between WWII and The Cold War

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: It doesn't take a lot of Historical research to realize that the end of World War II was a direct cause to the Cold War. The United States and Soviet Union were once allied against the Axis Powers and then emerged from the aftermath as the two strongest super powers. They divided most of the world through their ideologies, support of political figures, military might, and resources distribution. Even though not a single weapon was fired between the two superpowers, the Cold War was a war of arms distribution, ideologies, and political maneuvering. It was not the war of guns, aircrafts, tanks, bombers, atomic weapons, and soldiers of the Second World War.

Catharine A. Deever’s novel 1949: Starlings of Peace, captures the tumultuous years in which the Second World War ended and The Cold War began when one conflict was removed but another lay in the horizon.

In keeping with the themes of changing warfare and ideologies, even though it is by definition a war novel, it isn't concerned with big battles and sweeping military fears. It isn't long on plot. Instead it focuses on characterization and how it's various leads, specifically four couples navigate a changing world that promises peace but actually brings more conflict.

The four couples in question are:

Capt. John Jacob “Mac” MacDonald and Magdalena Eva “Maggie” Welles-From America. He is an Air Force pilot who was shot down and is now investigating the damaged European countries. She is a political operative and senator’s daughter who is on a fact finding mission for the Marshall Plan. Their separate ambitions are as powerful as their desire for finding and navigating a future together.

Sir Robert Anthony “Tony” and Lady Evelyn Taylor- From Britain. He is a baronet and financial newspaper magnate. She is an investment firm partner from an aristocratic family. They put off plans for a family on hold during the war and now they are ready. Unfortunately, they have to deal with changing feelings and putting on an elegant front in the face of a troubled home life.

Rene Laurent and Violet Charlet Boulanger-From France. He is an interpreter and translator who is mourning the loss of most of his Jewish family. She is a language teacher who specializes in Russian and is able to study the Soviet Union and provide insights on the impending superpower. They reunited after a long separation and tremendous grief which puts a toll on their relationship.

Sebastian Lukas Gauss and Heidimarie Regina “Heidi” Bauer-From Germany. He is a former soldier and POW who currently runs a small hotel. She is a former resistance fighter who now works for Sebastian. The two work to make their hotel into a success while suffering from the traumas of their past and growing attraction for each other.

The characters have many stand out moments where they deal with the scars of the previous war and live in the uncertainty of the future with another different sort of war looming on the horizon. They are at crossroads and have to navigate a return to a life that they may not be able to fully return to.

The couples have some interesting moments which display the depths of their characterization. Mac for example is still living with his injury and is trying to reform Europe for the future. Maggie is a very dedicated woman who uses her position to find out exactly what post-war lives are like without propaganda getting in the way. Their romance starts out well because they have similar goals and are very intelligent professionals. It goes a bit too fast for two rational adults in a post-war time setting when they get married not even halfway through the book. Considering the setting is one year, they were only involved for weeks or months before they were wed.

 I suppose a quickie romance and subsequent marriage would have made more sense during the war but it seems a bit too sudden to be believable here. Maybe, their romance should have been more of a slow burn leading to an engagement in the final chapter. But that's a small quibble because Mac and Maggie are two characters that bounce off each other like lovers in the movies of that era.

Tony and Evelyn’s relationship comes from a different place than Mac and Maggie’s. They are a more sophisticated couple that had to keep their private lives behind closed doors. There is one telling argument that they have which suggests that their marriage was out of convenience and for appearances rather than any emotional or romantic feelings towards each other. This conversation plays a lot into how they interact with each other in public and in private. 

They are a couple that put up appearances before the War and put emotional personnel decisions on hold. Now that the War is over, they have to talk about them. Tony and Evelyn care about each other but now have to decide whether appearances matter in a changing world or is it finally time to achieve personal happiness. 

We also get PTSD from characters who were first hand witnesses to the brutal dehumanization of the Nazi Party. Rene and Heidi’s stories are by far the most traumatic in the book so it is good to see them embracing chances for new and better lives.

Being Jewish, Rene lost most of his family in the death camps. Even more heart wrenching is that he and Violet’s young son also died. They suffer such tremendous loss and grief and naturally are uncertain whether they can ever recover when they lost everything and everyone they ever knew and loved.

With the absence of family, Rene and Violet from families with the people around them. Ever amiable, Rene works alongside and translates for the others. He is a bridge that brings the various characters together. Violet is also in an interesting position. As a Russian translator, she is able to get some insights into the country that will soon become a formidable adversary on the world stage.

Heidi also has a gripping backstory. She has flashbacks of the things that she had to do to survive such as dressing as a boy to avoid rapists and becoming quite adept at using weapons. She lived in total flight or fight survival mode and it is difficult for her to adjust to a world where she doesn't have to live like that.

Sebastian and Heidi have a very interesting dynamic as she is someone who suffered at the hands of the Nazis and he is someone who while wasn't a member did a lot of damage by ignoring the signs until it was too late. In the post-war period, they have to navigate an unlikely friendship as well as their goals to open and run a successful business. 

The characters in 1949 brilliantly capture people who have finally reached the end of one stage in their lives and now have to deal with what comes next in their lives, relationships, and countries.


BASH: Love, Madness, and Murder by Michael Bartos; Suspenseful Satire Flies Close to the Cuckoo’s Nest but Falls Flat

 

BASH: Love, Madness, and Murder by Michael Bartos; Suspenseful Satire Flies Close to the Cuckoo’s Nest but Falls Flat

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: For someone to be placed in a mental hospital, they would have to be considered a potential harm to themselves and others. For someone to want to be put in there, they would have to be even more mentally ill, an investigative reporter looking for a story, or both. Ashley Roper, one of the protagonists of Michael Bartos’ novel BASH: Love, Madness, and Murder is both and he has a story to investigate.

The Blakemore Anderson State Hospital (BASH) is the site of several controversies. Accused murderer, Burton Peale escaped from there. Another, Tyler Goode languished there. There are reports of drugs being unwisely distributed and potential mistreatment. It's not a pleasant place to be sent to but it is a potential story so Ashley, a reporter for the lifestyle newspaper, Charley Town, decides to investigate it. He will impersonate a patient there and find out what's going on. Unfortunately, he finds getting admitted is the easy part. It's surviving and getting out of this environment that's the hard part.

BASH is kind of a mixed bag with some parts that work and others that don't. Some subplots get introduced and threaten to turn the book into something else but peter out before they pose any real effect on the narrative. Burton Peale’s escape promises to be thrilling but most of the points produce very little suspense and are only recalled after the fact. 

There are hints of abuse and corruption from the upper levels but the results aren't shown in a way that shows any after effects towards the patients. Maybe, in a drive to be satiric, Bartos ignored the human interest element that in such an environment people would be suffering, people who are often unable to function in the outside world and are at the mercy of their caregivers.

The plot that works the best is Ashley's. He is someone who is looking for a good story. He gained prominence because of his first person articles detailing his service in Afghanistan. This article could give him some more relevance and bring some much needed publicity to Charley Town, which with the exception of Ashley's military themed articles, has a reputation of being mostly local news and light fluff.

There is some humor and suspense with the process in which Ashley gets himself committed and the lengths that his girlfriend and friends have to use to get him released. It almost gives a gaslighting quality towards the possibility that Ashley's investigation could have gotten him committed for the rest of his life, even having doubts whether he imagined the circumstances that brought him there and slipping into the insanity that he feigned.

It would have been much more interesting if BASH was written as a terrifying place that deserves to be exposed so we would be much more concerned about Ashley's time there but the potential activities are more subverted and less upfront. It mutes the trouble that Ashley has gotten into for trying to expose the corruption but does show his determination in trying to reveal it.

BASH could be a better book but it needs to have more care in putting the ideas together to make a decent work.

Monday, October 28, 2024

Secrets of Ash by Josh Green; Brotherly Bond Uplifts Story of Vet With PTSD

 


Secrets of Ash by Josh Green; Brotherly Bond Uplifts Story of Vet With PTSD
By Julie Sara Porter 
Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Josh Green 's Secrets of Ash is a bleak somber look at veterans with PTSD and a brotherly love that gives the book an emotional uplift.

Chase Lumpkin, a vet from Afghanistan, has left his home in Atlanta to the rural town, Cherokee. He can no longer bear the PTSD, flashbacks about a disastrous friendly fire incident, and his own struggles with his family, so he plans to take his own life. Meanwhile, his equally troubled brother, Jack, is recruited to look for him while dealing with his own personal demons as well.

This is a very dark book that specializes in getting even darker. It is a definite character study in veteran PTSD. Chase is a very disturbed individual. His flashbacks are harrowing especially when he remembers the friendly fire incident. He displays plenty of rage, remorse, and intense grief that is felt through the pages.

When he moves to Cherokee, he obviously has one thing in his mind. The book goes through the various stages in the mindset of a suicide. Chase shows detachment for the outside world and self-isolation. He gives away possessions and puts his affairs in order. 

The most sinister aspect of Chase’s character is in the certainty of his decisions exemplified by his changing moods. One of the signs is that when a suicidal person is ready for their final act is that they act fine, even jubilant. Sometimes Chase acts that way. As depraved as that thought is, he believes that his problems will soon be over.

A bright spot in this book is the bond between brothers, Chase and Jack. This isn't a “good sibling/bad sibling” dichotomy. In fact, Jack is just as messed up as Chase in many ways. Even though he is fairly well known as a radio sports commentator, Jack can't find personal happiness. 

He is a recovering alcoholic who often relapses. He hops from bed to bed with various women as though to fill a void in his life. He has a daughter that he never sees and a dysfunctional relationship with his mother. In fact, the only thing that hasn't unraveled is his relationship with Chase.

When Jack goes to look for Chase and Chase tries to carry his plan forward, they are behaving like two lost souls searching for love and support. Their childhood gave them an “us against the world” mentality and without one another, they can't function properly. In many ways, Jack just isn't trying to save Chase. He's trying to save himself. 


Saturday, October 26, 2024

The Fourth Victim (Belfast Murder Mystery Book 7) by Brian O’Hare; Cold Case Gets Heated By Inspector Sheehan and Co.


 The Fourth Victim (Belfast Murder Mystery Book 7) by Brian O’Hare; Cold Case Gets Heated By Inspector Sheehan and Co.

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: In Belfast, if you want a murder, new or old to be solved, then you call Inspector Thomas Sheehan and his team. In this seventh book in the Belfast Murder Mystery Series, The Fourth Victim, they do just that work on a current murder case which takes them to an old one.

In this volume, Sheehan and his partner, Detective Sergeant Denise Stewart are called into investigate the murder of Seamus Higgins, MLA who was beaten to death in his apartment. He has a very colorful past, as part of the New IRA and may have been targeted by them or members of other terrorist or paramilitary groups. Besides that, the team discovers that 14 years ago, he was involved with an unsolved murder concerning four wayward law students, a little girl, a grieving mother/attorney, and an errant vehicle.

This volume covers two specific murder cases, the current one and the one from 14 years ago. The investigation into Higgin’s death is efficiently handled especially when there are similar murders suggesting a pattern. There are some red herrings that are slightly hampered by a flashback occurring too early in the text for the Reader, but they provide some interesting leads for the investigators to uncover.

Unlike many of the other books in The Belfast Murder Mystery Series, this one doesn't get too involved with the personal lives of the investigation team themselves. The only subplot is Malachy McBride, one of the detectives, becoming a bit too friendly with a person of interest. It is charming but not overpowering leaving the mystery to do most of the heavy lifting.

In fact the strongest characterization occurs during the murder from 14 years ago. It's very reminiscent of movies like I Know What You Did Last Summer in which an early murder occurred, was never solved, and a grief stricken loved one takes it upon themselves to do what the law couldn't and execute vigilante justice even if it takes years to get it done.

The flashbacks contain a fascinating story that is the highlight of this volume. From the callous wayward self-serving youths who caused this tragedy to the family who found their motivation to fight against it either by latching onto a cause, trying to move forward with their lives, or seeking blood for blood, it is a strong look on the effect that murder has on the people involved. 

The Fourth Victim reminds us that sometimes time can change the way that we see an investigation and what we thought then may not be the same now. That often, a case is never really cold. It just takes a bit longer to heat up.



Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Buckingham Mockup by Asif I. Shaikh; Humorous, Satiric, Warm, and Spiritual Journey of Hiding From The Law and Finding Oneself

Buckingham Mockup by Asif I. Shaikh; Humorous, Satiric, Warm, and Spiritual Journey of Hiding From The Law and Finding Oneself 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Asif I. Shaikh's Buckingham Mockup walks a thin line between humor and joy, satire and spirit, something to laugh at and something to think about.

Alan Haworth went on the run via plane with embezzled drug money. He makes an emergency landing on the island of McCoypuri. He befriends the various locals including Andrew and Marta, a couple that look after Alan during his arrival, Sikander and Hannah, who own Lala’s, the restaurant and hangout, and Laladip, a politician with designs on expansion. Alan becomes involved with his new surroundings while plotting an escape and getting more money.  But he begins to really like the place and people.

Buckingham Mockup takes a tone that might seem uneven but is also meaningful within the distinct divisions that separates them. It starts out as a satirical and even silly crime and political caper. It then takes a strange turn and becomes a meditative and spiritual journey towards finding oneself in a greater place than they were before.

While he is in McCoypuri, Alan plots to get enough money and plans his escape. He can't help but see the criminal possibilities for such an isolated island with plenty of resources, locals, and tourists to take advantage of. He acts appalled by that thought, but often goes back to it as though he may not mind the financial advantages that such a venture could bring. 

He is someone whose criminal history is somewhat laughable as he was a low level grunt who knew that he was in over his head but wanted to make a fast buck. When things got too dangerous, Alan flees for his life and crashed a plane into McCoypuri. If not for his new friends, his escape would have been a short one. It's a good thing that he becomes involved with various legit businesses because he was an incompetent criminal.

Alan is practically rescued and tended by the locals and is torn between his growing loyalty towards them and his own ambitions. He becomes involved with Sikander’s social media presence and local activism. He works with Laladip’s campaign and PR ops. He encourages Hannah's volunteer work and embraces her social consciousness. He also makes Laladip’s a home away from home. The longer that Alan stays in McCoypuri, the more that he feels accepted and involved.

There is a deeper spiritual connection that is understated but still captivating. Alan gets into deeper discussions with characters about altruism, faith, acceptance, and feeling a part of something greater than himself. 

The title Buckingham Mockup describes a model or rendering of a design or product that shows how it might look and function in real life. In the book, it is built for a hotel that Alan envisions for the island. It also serves as a double meaning for Alan himself.

The Alan that we meet at the beginning of the book is the design and model. He gives the impression of being shallow, materialistic, and longing for excitement and easy money. As Alan’s journey continues, we see the real Alan: the one who is empathetic, connected, involved, active, generous, centered, and calmer. In making plans for his new home, Alan realizes that he actually is home.