Saturday, January 24, 2026

January-February Reading List

 


January-February Reading List

This is the perfect time to fight against the cold by staying inside, curled up with a good book.

Here are this month's selection. They should warm anyone up. 

The Purpose of Getting Lost by  Tracy Smith 

Oak Logs and Gasoline by Jake Knox

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

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

The Divine Feminine From Awakening to Walking in Union by James Compton 

The Sisters: The Saga of The Mitford Family by Mary S. Lovell

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 Imperfect Hand of Fate by Wade Monk

The Girl From Melodia by Jonathan Toussaint

Carrying On by Kali Desautels

Choppiness on High Seas by Arvid Wadhera

Intervention (The Galactic Milieu Series Book 1) by Julian May 

The Mantis Continuum (The Mantis Gland Series Book 4) by Adam Andrews Johnson 

If 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: $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.














































































































































































































































Friday, January 23, 2026

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

 

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

By Julie Sara Porter 

Horror 

10. Reaping By Numbers(A Dead-End Job Book 1) by Nicole Givens Kurtz

This is a fun and interesting take on the Grim Reaper.

Patrice Williams is the latest in a long line of Reapers in her family. Her latest assignment puts her in the middle of a murder investigation, a turf war between warring demons, a meddlesome angel, and a demon that possesses her niece.

Much of the humor in the book comes from Patrice treating reaping like any other regular 9-5 job. Patrice clocks in and out, takes breaks, deals with annoying coworkers, collects her earnings, and goes home. She just happens to carry recently deceased souls into the Afterlife.

She also has to deal with family struggles. Her father is proud of her upholding the family legacy. Her mother and sister believe that she is consorting with demons. This accusation becomes more troubling when Patrice’s niece’s soul is on the line.


9. Survive The Cursed by Ashton Abbott 

This is an eerie nightmare of a book that presents the post-Apocalyptic landscape as a literal Monster Mash.

Avery Winters is part of a group of survivors that hunt for witches, vampires, were creatures, and zombies. It is a fight for survival that becomes more personal when a witch and a vampire are imprisoned and Avery has to guard them.

The book's strongest theme is the line between human and monster. Avery has become detached and jaded in her fight against her adversaries so much that she has lost her humanity. She ignores or takes part in medical experiments and torture sessions. She vows that if one of her people transforms, she would kill them without a second thought.

However her views begin to change the more she talks to her captives Whitney, the witch and Mathias, the vampire. Suddenly the faceless enemies have faces, names, personalities, and histories. She starts to wonder if she had been wrong about who the monsters really are.

8. The Bellfontaine Haunting by Marie Wilkins

This is a gripping and eerie ghostly mystery that reminds us that cold cases don't always close.

News reporter Kara King returns to her hometown to reopen the local paper. At the office, she sees the ghost of Renee West, a reporter who may have been murdered. Kara decides to look for answers.

This book is both ominous and purposeful. Renee begins as a silent wispy presence that gets more pronounced the closer Kara gets to the truth.

Kara’s interactions with Renee show her as a vibrant dedicated woman whose life ended abruptly. Now it's up to Kara to find out who ended it and why.


This sequel to Kaleidoscopic Shades Within Black Eternity, my favorite book read in 2022, limits the widespread perspective of its predecessor to tell a narrow focused streamlined story that is mystifying, unearthly, and uncanny.

A boy disappears in an area known as “The Playground.” The investigator, Ben McLevy is afflicted with disturbing sounds and images. Meanwhile Josh Triplow has visions about a missing friend and feels compelled to go to Australia to find him. This search takes him right to The Playground.

This book thrives on immediate urgency and personal connections to these strange events. These sinister presences are related to the physical and mental torture of children and are a reflections of the hatred and trauma experienced in the past involving the central characters.

The Playground inspires feelings of fear, anxiety, loneliness, and trauma. It is festered with the violent history of the people who lived within and did unspeakable things to others. It's practically a gateway to Hell where if you don't lose your life, you are guaranteed to lose your mind.


6. Slumber Nevermore by R.J. Garcia

This spooky anthology crosses genres to give the Readers a full effect of dark twisted tales that deliver on chills, ominous energy, and unforgettable mental images.

A woman looks for her missing sister who may have been abducted by fairies. A boy is haunted for years by the presence of a menacing demonic clown. Three witches debate about taking the life of their latest potential victim. Three teens become obsessed with The Axeman of New Orleans unsolved mystery.

It combines Traditional Paranormal Horror with Dark Fantasy, Suspense Thriller, Psychological Suspense, and Historical Fiction to give a full view of the different layers that define Horror.


5. The Hat Man by Greg Marchand 

This novella depicts the sinister mysterious Hat Man of recent lore and builds a story around its enigmatic otherworldly presence.

Sadie Burrows and Colton Garrett lost loved ones to this nightmarish creature. They investigate its origins, presence, and ways to face and defeat it.

The Hat Man doesn't just take lives, it destroys the people around the victim. It doesn't just kill physically, it destroys them emotionally by removing those they love the most. This leaves the victim emotionally and mentally vulnerable and helpless when The Hat Man attacks.

This version gives The Hat Man a more violent edge. Instead of frightening people by appearing in their nightmares, it uses more aggressive tactics and unstoppable rage to seek the vengeance and justice after death that it didn't have in life. It's not an understandable or sympathetic character but it was once human and had a history.



This book is a confusing, captivating, surreal look at life beyond death.

Will Deadmarsh is haunted by the demonic presence of his deceased sister. Atra Hart escapes from her paranoid adopted father. The two escape and become involved in experiments to research life after death, particularly The Otherside and its portal, The Altered Planes.

Will and Atra are face to face with spirits that can't be studied or understood. Part of their presence is in defiance of the human arrogance to research and contain them. If they can't be studied or can't be contained, they can't be destroyed or defeated. The only options are to run from them or live with them.

The surrealism can be found in the setting. There are times when the land and nature resist Will and Atra's attempts at normalcy. For example, they go to small towns which are unnervingly silent and devoid of any life but Will and Atra. These experiences leave them vulnerable to those that attack them. Their worst fears are multiplied in the silence.

This is a rich, enchanting, disturbing, complex novel about a witch that is reincarnated over the centuries.

The incarnation that is explored is Merona, the adopted daughter of Mairead, the Druid High Priestess in 5th century Brittany. Merona must be taught to use her powers and to recognize her former and future incarnations so she can fight Armaeus, the most feared Daemon in the entire realm.

Those who are interested in folklore and legends will be fascinated by the abundance of witch lore weaved into narrative. The book is set when Druids were still in high authority but were aware that the transition to Christianity is on its way. They are determined to pass their Pagan knowledge along even if it means hiding underground.

Some of the most fascinating chapters occur during Merona’s training. The flashes of intuition and wisdom from various incarnations become more concrete as she explores her past and future lives. She also expands on her magical abilities by facing tests of elemental magic through earth, fire, air, and water. The final test takes her to the Labyrinth of Shadows where she has to encounter her fears, face her biggest challenges, and embrace her powers to become a potent witch.

2. Fate's Last Melody by Vanessa Smith

This book's setting and tone depicts Hell with all of its overall darkness, graphic violence, scares, and ominous chills coming from every chapter. 

Melody is abducted and taken by a demon named Nyx into Hell. She learns that she is the daughter of one of the Fates of Greek Mythology and has to journey through Hell and learn how to see and change destinies before she comes face to face with The King of Hell.

The descriptions of Hell aggravate the senses and the landscape shapes itself to torture those suffering. It is a composite of different mythologies and religions, mostly Abrahamic religions and Hellenic mythology. There are representations of the 7 Deadly Sins and the Titans.

There is a sense of abandonment, hopelessness, and desolation that exists primarily throughout the book as Melody fights the King of Hell. But the outlook is so dismal that there are hints that all that is occurring is one tyrant being overthrown for another.


1. Aliza in Naziland by Elyse Hoffman 

Anytime a book journeys into Hell, it's bound to produce some graphic Horror images and this book has some of the most disturbing moments produced by supernatural and human characters.

This book uses fantastic and dark elements from Old Testament scripture, Jewish folklore, and European myths and legends to tell a challenging story of mortality, prejudice, Antisemitism, courage, sacrifice, maturity, faith, hatred, vengeance, justice, punishment, and retribution.

Aliza Auerman and her adopted father and sisters are Holocaust survivors trying to adjust to life in the United States. A planned demonstration by a local Antisemitic Holocaust denial group traumatized Aliza so when she receives a visit from Ha-Satan, she accepts his offer to be in charge of one of Hell’s Zones, the zone that contains many of the most prominent Nazis including Hitler himself.

At first the punishments are humorous in a dark twisted comic way and become more grotesque, gruesome, and painful. She soon acquires a sadistic delight in torture. It is a vindication of the horror that was forced upon her by the human monsters that she now leads. Her desire for vengeance is understandable considering the trauma that was inflicted upon her.

Aliza also possesses a conscience that allows for limits. She dials back on punishments doled out to families and doesn't want the Nazis' children to suffer because they had horrible parents. She also questions her role as a Hell Zone Master when another Zone Master shows punishments too severe even for her. There is a connection between her family and one of the Nazis in the other Zone. She has to weigh if vengeance only creates more monsters and if there are limits to hatred. 


Honorable Mention: Dead People Anonymous by Loraine Hayes, The Slither Queen by Tamara Lawson, Sinister Ascension by Marc L. Abbott

Mystery/Thriller 

10. Murder Makes Waves (Jack and Frances Mysteries) by Carmen Radtke

This Cozy Historical Mystery features a charming couple solving a murder mystery on the high seas.

1931, engaged couple Jack Sullivan and Frances Palmer travel with Frances’ Uncle Sal on a cruise from Australia to the UK. What should be a peaceful luxurious voyage becomes fatal as another passenger is murdered and a new friend is accused of the crime.

This book hearkens back to the early mysteries where stylish, sharp couples are often surrounded by dead bodies and the worst of human nature and use their wit and observation to save the day. Frances is an outgoing, spirited, vivacious assistant to her magician uncle. Her natural charm and empathy draws people to her and her working class street smart savviness gives her a common sense outlook and knowledge of human nature.

Jack is a staid, steady organized nightclub owner. He has a paternal demeanor and wartime experiences that help him understand the troubles that others go through. His sharp intellect, dry wit, and managerial skills allow him to put the details together to find a solution. The couples' strengths balance each other out in their personal and professional lives, whether they are solving mysteries or having a night out with each other. 

9. The Assassin's Heart by Chuck Morgan

This is an enthralling character driven Crime Thriller about an assassin whose heart and emotions put her career on the line.

Delia Cahill is a happily married successful attorney who is also a high priced and deadly assassin. Her latest assignment, Alexander Thorne, proves to be quite a challenge since she has fallen in love with him.

Delia straddles the lines between consummate professional and romantic heroine and plays both extremes rather well. She's like a black widow spider or praying mantis attracting her captive before destroying him. She is so deliciously fun, that it would have been nice to see more aspects of this side of her character.

Mostly we see her when she realizes that her job isn't what she thought. After she falls in love with Alexander, her former employers go through extreme measures to break her, treating her the same way that she treated her targets. Delia lived a life of violence and tried to live without a conscience. It worked until her conscience overpowered her. 

This Spy Thriller combines the flashy colorful adventure of an Ian Fleming James Bond novel with the duplicitous realistic tension of a John LeCarre George Smiley novel.

In 1965, orphaned James Vagus is recruited to join MIS-X a secret organization which recruits young spies. James is partnered with Dakota Walker and his first assignment to trail a corrupt East German businessman to a conspiracy involving a manufactured killer virus.

James and Dakota are spies with all of the gorgeous locations, beautiful people, cool toys, vehicles, and gadgets, and daring narrow escapes. However, there is also an awareness that the governments can't always be trusted, even the ones they work for, that agents can be quickly betrayed, and murder is never far away. 

There is a seedy underside to this seemingly glamorous exciting world. It is a seedy underside in which young adults in their late teens whose brains haven't fully developed are being thrown into and expected to survive. Characters are betrayed, deceived, tortured, and murdered. The bond between James and Dakota is the only real honest thing in the entire book. 


This is a modern day Neo-Noir Murder Mystery with a seedy location, troubled detective, ineffective or corrupt authorities, powerful and dangerous men and women in suits, and innocents who get swept up in a dangerous life that they are unprepared for. 

Lee Jensen, an Australian PI exiled in Bangkok is hired to look for Zoe Burgess who goes missing after working as a jazz singer in a nightclub. Lee learns that she was kidnapped, trafficked, drugged, and forced into sex work. Now Lee has to find her while facing the Yakuza who play a large part in her current situation.

There is a hard boiled detective edge to the novel. Lee goes through various clubs, businesses, and hangouts, encounters many unsavory characters, and isn't above bribery or using force to get answers. It's a dark world made even darker by the presence of its protagonist.

He knows this world because he has to live not just in his job but in his mind and body. He is Schizophrenic and his hallucinations and delusions are kept at bay by his meds. This makes him vulnerable at times particularly when he is held captive by the Yakuza and is deprived of his medication. He is not just surrounded by enemies outside, but enemies in his mind that threaten to destroy and annihilate him from within.

6. The North Sea Killer by Dale E. Manolakas 

This novella is a short but tight Crime Thriller about a rich aristocrat with a very dangerous side.

Edward Kenworthy is a rich playboy who is also a serial killer. When Edward's latest conquest is reported missing, the trail appears right at his doorstep and his collection of dead bodies won't be hidden for long.

There isn't a moment in this book that is wasted because of its short length and tense plot. It tells a fascinating psychological thriller by taking multiple points of view of the murders, coverups, investigation, accusations, evidence gathering, arrest, and trial.

Edward makes a charismatic manipulative and terrifying killer reminiscent of an Alfred Hitchcock character who hides a sinister veneer under wealth and privilege. He thinks that his wealth and privilege will keep him from facing retribution until he runs out of allies and protection.

5. The Matriarch Matrix/ The Matriarch Messiah (Mystery of The Matriarchs Book 1 and 2) By Maxine Trencavel

This is a complex engrossing Adventure Thriller about ancient secrets leading to ancestral memory, goddess figures, and future possibilities.

Peter Gollinger and Zara Khatum are the heirs to oral traditions and prominent ancestral legacies. These legacies lead them on a mission at Gobleki Tepe and an object that could lead to untold power, knowledge, and potential destruction.

The adventure has many Byzantine layers that link past and present. Many characters are descended from others and follow similar paths of their ancestors. People switch sides, family members face each other, and couples are united as though they were predestined to get together.

The strengths in characterization are particularly shown in the second volume where the women like Zara, and two antagonists, Rachel and Mei are particularly memorable. They embody different pantheons and goddesses like Xwede, Asherah, and Jiang based on their origins, back stories, personalities, and character arcs. They are women of substance and propel the narrative by their actions.


4. Con and Consequence/ Cease to Exist/ The Wine Broker (The Richard O'Brien Series Book 1-3) by Ian Rodney Lazarus 

This series has a compelling protagonist with a shaky love life and who possesses brilliance, physical toughness, and a morally gray philosophical outlook on life. However each volume includes antagonists who are captivating, stimulating, and often the most fascinating aspects of the books.

FBI linguist turned special agent Richard O'Brien gets involved in a series of murders that often begin as connections to minor crime such as cyber fraud, lab theft, or wine smuggling. They then lead to conspiracies involving warring nations, government conspiracies, and organized crime.

O’Brien is a good lead for this series. He is an anti hero who respects the law but isn't above bending some rules. He has a complicated love life that carries over into multiple volumes. He has a close Irish Catholic family which takes center stage in the first book when they are caught in the crossfire of O’Brien’s investigation. He is put in some difficult situations that reveal his vulnerabilities especially when he is held captive by his enemies. 

Many of the antagonists are brilliantly written from the genius con artist, Jelani, to the enigmatic terrorist cell leader The Professor, to chameleon like DNA thief Emma, to the wealthy conniving Spence, to the hapless stand up comedian/Yakuza inductee Jack. Each character has a story to tell about why they committed the crimes, the means of doing so, what they hoped to gain, and how they planned to get away. They aren't characters to root for but they are fascinating and understandable. 

3. Murder Under Redwood Moon by Sherrie Dodd

Unlike many Murder Mysteries that star witches the emphasis on this one is not on magic but on mystery. It is a realistic Murder Mystery that stars a woman who happens to be a witch.

The body of a former high school acquaintance of Arista’s, a witch and New Age shop associate, is found. Arista and her friends try to find out what happened. Arista uses her intuition and spiritual connections to investigate the truth.

This book shows how witches operate in the real world. It is not based on amazing special effect driven magical things happening or communicating with creepy demons and wise cracking ghosts. The rituals, tools, and intuition are based on belief, focus, and intention. 

This realistic look also spills into the antagonists. Instead of wizards, vampires, and demons, Arista has to face criminals that are all too human. They have sick perverted minds over how they think the world should be and who they have to hurt. They have violent destructive impulses, no respect for those around them, and dehumanizing views of  their victims.


This book uses shadows as a frequent motif as characters disappear in and out of them or hide their true natures behind veils of environment and secrecy.

Ada was kidnapped from her opulent Victorian home by Nadine, who is part of a team of well trained thieves, spies, and assassins. When she finds no home to return to, Ada joins The Shadows.

Ada has to be stripped down to her barest minimum before she recognizes the hidden strength and adaptability that she needs to survive in the world. She begins as an object of beauty living an existence of artifice, almost a doll-child made of porcelain in a dollhouse. The moment that she discovers some disturbing facts about her family, she realizes that her world was a complete fabrication. She was exalted only to be knocked down, a shiny bauble that has lost its value and is completely disposable.

Ada’s training as a Shadow is both disturbing and mesmerizing. The Shadows are stripped of their former identities and trained rigorously in fighting techniques and subterfuge. Ada is drilled not to trust anyone and doubts her family, colleagues, her mentor, her assignments, and herself. They hide in and out of shadows to find information or kill intended targets. They no longer trust a world in which they are no longer a part of.


This is an effective Historical Mystery in which Jack The Ripper is the primary antagonist. It captures time, place, and important themes about the degradation of women in the Victorian Era.

Two acquaintances of flower seller Constance Piper have been murdered and their deaths are linked to The Ripper. Constance has reached the interest of Emily Tindall, a school teacher looking for some missing students. The two cases end up linked in surprising ways.

The separation between rich and poor is revealed through the contrast between the two protagonists. Emily lives with the upper middle class while Constance is part of the lower working class. However their friendship is a bridge between the gap as Emily becomes a mentor to Constance by teaching her literacy and encouraging her ambitious goals to ascend higher in life. 

The book is adept at recounting the Jack the Ripper case from the discovery of his canon victims and two others that might be attributed to him, to focusing on the investigation including graphic violence, potential suspects, and theories. In revealing the case and details, the book opens many larger concerns including xenophobia, class struggles, fear of authority, and dehumanization of “The Other.”

It's a mean world where Jack can hide in plain sight because he fits right in. It's a world where Victorian moralists lecture women about propriety while at the same time restricting them, justifying violence towards them, and maintaining a patriarchal system which makes seeking independence and justice impossible.


Honorable Mention: Carriers( Divine Measure) Book 1) by Lisa Llamrei, The Catalogue (A VENOM Novel) by Ty Mitchell, They Know When The Killer Will Strike (A Film Milieu Thriller) by Michael J. Bowler,


10. The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni

This is a short but captivating History retold in novella form about a notorious Renaissance era family, the Baglionis, that faced a violent and bloody attack after a wedding of Astor Baglioni and Lavinia Colonna Orsini.

The book focuses on the powerful influential family who fit the Renaissance ideals of politics, finance, leadership, science, culture, and domination. They had many important allies but just as many enemies. 

The book is an intricate work that captures the culture, class, and conspiracies that made the Renaissance. There are plenty of moments that depict whispered conversations, feigned friendships, and harsh betrayals. Many were on the hunt for financial gain and family power.

The eponymous Red Wedding is a graphic slow moving conflict that fills various pages and chapters. It was tightly plotted as though it were a secret invasion during war. The attackers hid until their targets were separated and  at their most vulnerable and unobservant. Astor and Lavinia just consummated their wedding night when their assassin appeared out of the shadows and ended their potential future in the most violent bloody way possible.



This is a troubling and traumatic autobiography about a woman's involvement with crime and drugs. Brune’s alter ego turned to drugs, abusive relationships, and criminal activity to escape her fractured family and self esteem issues.

Brune's writing style is straightforward and matter of fact. Terrible things happened but she doesn't get sentimental or cloying in describing them. This style gives Brune a detachment towards the events described.

It also makes use of the Hawaiian setting by downplaying the paradise connotations to focus on the reality that Brune experienced. She reveals the poverty of people living in a state noted for its beautiful year end weather and exorbitant high cost of living. 

While crime, drugs, and violence can be found everywhere, in Hawaii's case, this ugly reality clashes with the beautiful image that no person and no place can fill forever.


8. In Search of Cognizance by Nabraj Lama

This is an evocative and insightful Travel book about Lama’s travels to Mount Kailash in Tibet.

The book is rich in sensory detail and deep in spiritual meaning. It fills the senses with physical descriptions of the landscape and soothes the brain and emotions with its theme of connecting the physical plane with the spiritual.

The journey allowed Lama to confront his fears and anxieties. He recognized kindness, respect, gratitude, and selflessness that transformed his life and those around him. He saw the interconnectedness of humanity, nature, and the divine. 

The experience gave him a stronger sense of purpose and spirit. He connected the physical and metaphysical world and found mental, emotional, and spiritual clarity and peace.

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

This is a tragic and triumphant memoir about coming out, authenticity, and finding the physical and emotional space to live one's truth

Mok’s writing style is both personal and informative as she describes her difficult relationship with her parents, growing awareness of her sexuality, and her need to leave home to carve her own identity. She summarizes and gives dry fact based accounts about her experiences but also uses literary techniques like dialogue and internal thoughts in parts. This dual nature is a means to highlight the most conflicts and themes within her story.

Most of the book focuses on Mok’s toxic relationship with her parents. Their conflicts went beyond generational, cultural, and gender gaps. They weren't above using emotional blackmail and mental abuse to force their children to conform to their expectations. 

Mok had to use different means to find her own strengths and personal happiness. One was exploring her sexuality and another was therapy and introspective healing. They reveal someone who was willing to move onto her next life experience.



This memoir is an inspirational, moving, and meaningful look at war, revolution, addiction, trauma, immigration, and the pursuit of professional success and personal happiness. 

Nourashrafeddin was five years old during the 1979 Iranian revolution. The life before was recalled by elders but he recalls people being deprived of music, art, free expression, women's independence. Even as a child, he knew that something wasn't right in a country that deprived its people of so much. 

His descriptions of the Iran-Iraq War are unsettling, particularly cities annihilated with destroyed buildings, sounds of explosions and air strikes, food shortages, wounded neighbors, casualties during what he saw as a futile and needless war. 

Nourashrafeddin also had personal problems as well including an addicted father, health problems, an unhappy first marriage. He persevered in medical school, became a geneticist, had a much happier second marriage, and emigrated to the US. His story reveals how important it is to find positive interests and relationships that clear the mind, soothe the soul, and lead to personal happiness. 

5. The Dressing Drink by Thomas King Flagg

This is a revealing memoir about Flagg’s dysfunctional upbringing by his troubled parents, Dorothy Mary Flagg and Irwin Whittridge. Flagg brought his parents to life with detailed description and literary devices.

The majority of the book focuses on the comparisons and contrasts between his parents. Dorothy had a wealthy upbringing and Irwin a poor one, but had troubled relationships with parents, siblings, unhappy early marriages, addiction, and mental health issues that marked their relationship with each other and their son.

Flagg recognized his parents as individuals first and parents second. He dissects their background and how they became the people that he knew. Their emotional and mental disorders, insecurities, and parenting difficulties became understandable when Flagg and the Reader realized where they came from.

To really understand his parents, Flagg wrote about his book as a nonfiction narrative getting their internal points of view and describing events that he would not have known but probably speculated about. This technique helps us understand his family inside and out.



4. Chomp Press Pull by Elaine Battista-Parsons

This amusing and moving memoir discusses Battista-Parsons’s struggles with sensory dysregulation. It is rich in personal experiences and sensory detail from someone who had to look at the world in her own way.

Her experiences are rich in various details such as crowded and sweaty classrooms, noisy family events, items like stickers and air fresheners making her nauseous, food that tasted good or bad before she ever put them in her mouth, and bright neon colors and flashy images of her 80’s upbringing. The senses can be overwhelming when they are increased or decreased.

She has brilliant ways of writing about her issues. One chapter describes alphabetically some of the difficulties that her condition caused. Certain gestures like biting fingernails and cracking air pockets were stress relievers. Arm hair was uncomfortable so she shaved it. Certain colors like green and gray were soothing while others like red were disturbing. Anything considered innocuous and minor to other people like zippers, Play-Doh, dry lips, suitcases, lemons, and sandals were huge obstacles to her. 

Battista-Parsons used various coping mechanisms to deal with her dysregulation like chewing or biting anything edible, pressing down crayons and pencils on paper, or pulling on objects like hair and string. She also took comfort in texture by holding objects. She later studied her condition,  consulted experts, and learned various techniques like Reiki and therapy to soothe her and diminish the sensory impact.



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 often excluded from.

These women supported each other in their creative pursuits like writing and art. There were women whose voices might otherwise have not been followed without an understanding network.

They also lived unconventional lives. Some married supportive husbands, 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 various waves of Feminism. Women's History would have been very different without them.


The story of the Love Has Won cult and its founder Amy Carlson is a twisted tale of divine worship, mental manipulation, and belief gone horribly wrong. Profaci’s memoir takes us inside a personal journey into a cult and specifically their leader whom he felt equal parts fascination, fear, love, and loathing.

A dysfunctional upbringing, low self-esteem, and a constant search for truth brought Profaci to Carlson's website. He attended her online sessions and finally he decided to meet Carlson in person. After joining the cult, he became her lover and ascended the title of Father God.

Profaci's personal experience with the cult ended before the abuse allegations began and Carlson's grisly death and her cult’s gruesome display of her body. Those were only known to him secondhand so his book glosses over those events.

What he does reveal is a toxic tumultuous relationship between Profaci and Carlson in which Profaci loved Amy, the kind, friendly, warm hearted woman that he met online but grew to despise The Mother God persona, the manipulative leader, the Narcissist controlling others, and the delusional woman who lied about having all of life's answers so often that she genuinely believed the lie. 

1. Justified Anger by Jennifer Colne

This is a sobering unnerving account about the effects of child molestation on a woman’s family.

Both of Colne’s daughters were molested by their uncle. Their uncle was arrested and charged but that's not the end of the story. Colne’s younger daughter, Emma reveals that she was also molested by her father, a charge that Colne supports but her older daughter, Katherine denies.

Colne's intense descriptions of her daughter's abuse and the aftermath including their fractured mental states reach into the Reader's souls. We understand the pain that this family went through and are still going through. The abusers left their marks leaving their victims in fragile states unable to cope with  the stress in their lives.

It wasn't just the initial crime of sexual assault that made these men monsters. It was the continuous after effects that created a lifetime of trauma from two innocent girls who were hurt by men that they should have trusted to love and protect them. Katherine and Emma suffered from physical, mental, and emotional scars that never healed as they grew. They were in tears, enraged, and engaged in self-harm.

By far the biggest crime that their father did was break apart the whole family. The sisters were on the same side against their uncle but stood on opposite sides when it came to their father. Emma and her mother, Colne pressed charges against him so he was tried. Katherine denied the abuse and turned against them by venerating her father and encouraging other family members to do the same. This shows a painful truth that sometimes trauma brings people closer together but sometimes it drives them further apart.


Best of the Best 2025 Fantasy and Science Fiction

Best of The Best 2025 Fantasy and Science Fiction 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 
 

Fantasy

10. Addie's Eyes by Tim Landry 

This is an enchanting wholesome YA Fantasy that combines early 20th century entertainment with dream worlds.

Addie Alexander, a blind girl, befriends Fedor Jeftichew AKA JoJo The Dog Face Boy, a sideshow performer with abnormal hair growth on his body. Their friendship develops to the point that when they are caught, Fedor is sent to another venue. Addie follows, is knocked out, and travels to a fantasy world based on her and Fedor’s imagination.

The first half is a genuinely touching Historical Fiction with bite. This bite is caused by the focus on people with disabilities and physical abnormalities, many of which are sideshow entertainers. Fedor is trained to perform. He can't hide his disabilities so he uses them to entertain a captive fickle audience. Addie is raised to hide by working behind the scenes at her father's theater and making few contacts with the outside world. They bring out the best in each other through their mutual connection.

The fantasy aspects from Addie’s journey are drawn from a child's imagination. There are different areas associated with different themes such as animals, candy, toys, musical instruments, and other sensory experiences. It works because we are experiencing a world that the dreamer is seeing for the first time so things would look bizarre and outlandish because she is only learning to view colors and shapes without much context for what they are. That's also why the threat of darkness resonates with her. She just learned to see and doesn't want to lose that opportunity again.


This book has a magnificent setting inspired by Japanese culture, a labyrinthine plot with multiple points of view, and a diverse pair of deuteragonists who make a convincing team.

In the land of Okara, Daisuke escapes slavery by becoming a foot soldier then an Omnito Intelligence Officer. Obito, a wealthy Omnito’s, partner is killed so he is paired with Daisuke. Meanwhile Lady Shadow, an enigmatic cult leader bonds with a demon to search for talismans which will help her defeat the Emperor.

The setting of Okara is clearly based on Japanese culture. Names, social hierarchy, costuming, art, food, career paths, mythology adheres to a specific time and place on Earth. It's as though settlers from Earth’s Japan came to Okara and took their culture with them.

The plot is wound by multiple characters and their motivations. Lady Shadow is a fascinating, captivating antagonist who is driven by near insanity and obsession. She wants to be the controller but she herself is controlled.
Daisuke is a street tough physically active presence who is capable of defending himself and others. Obito is a highly intelligent analytical agent who fights duplicity with his own seemingly indifferent nature. The duo work well together by combining their strengths as agents who study and observe but also can fight and kill.



8. Merchants of Light and Bone (The Pentagonal Dominion Book 2) by Erika McCorkle 

This continuation of Merchants of Knowledge and Magic is a family drama starring a very peculiar family.

The family of throuple Amirere Lasteren, Liesle Denwall, and Su Scrimshander are different types of demonic creatures. They are in mourning for their deceased daughter and sister, Tawny. Meanwhile each parent is going through their own personal crises.

Despite this being a Fantasy novel with an entire Fantasy cast and nary a human or humanoid character in sight, the plot itself is very human and relevant. The characters struggle with the death of a child and grief afterwards. They consider seeking revenge. A child is abused by their guardian and the protagonists worry about reporting it. There are questions about gender identity.

In fact, the usual Fantasy Tropes of going on long quests, defeating a tyrant, and living in a large sweeping epic are largely absent. The one journey is to another town to take care of one specific conflict. It succeeds in being a different kind of Fantasy novel by putting unusual looking characters in a situation that is all too usual.


7. Speechless in Achten Tan (Sands of Achten Tan) by Debbie Iancu-Haddad 

This will appeal to YA and adult readers because of its captivating lead character and her search for personal power.

After Mila, a mute cavern gnome, fails a test to prove her magic skills, she is ordered to go to the land of Achten Tan where a witch will train her. While there, Mila finds romance and friendship, becomes involved in a power struggle, and discovers her strength and power.

This book is a journey towards maturity. Each step Mila takes becomes a lesson for her to learn. Her friendships help her use her gifts for various reasons that affect her whole world, not just herself. Mila’s journey to Achten Tan reconciles her past, present, and future and gives her the chance to gain closure with some painful memories.

Many Readers will relate to Mila as they follow their own path, discover their own abilities, and gain their own voices.



6. Oath by Kate Butler 

This is a charming, engaging Queer Fantasy Romance about the love between a lord and his knight.

Lord Aerion Valemont is the spoiled Narcissistic son of the Archbishop. A taciturn austere knight Sir Clyde of Blackholt AKA The Hound is assigned to be his protector. What starts out as a romantic comedy of a mismatched couple becomes a stirring drama of courage, sacrifice, and love in the face of adversity.

What makes this book so engaging are its protagonists. Whether it's Aerion's loud costumes, flirtatious manner, and desire to be the center of attention, or Clyde's serious outlook, brief conversation, and standoffish personality, they are memorable.Despite their flaws and frailties, they are so lovable that the Reader wants them to get together long before they do.

Something happens halfway through the book that changes the tone from a light hearted romp to a gritty quest for love’s survival amid war and separation. These aspects make Aerion and Clyde's relationship even more powerful. They move beyond a spoiled lord and a stoic knight and gain depth, wisdom, and insight to become stronger, braver, more selfless, and devoted characters and lovers.



This brilliant follow up to To End Every War, my favorite new book from 2023 takes the female protagonists of Vespa Academy to higher stakes and personal troubles.

An assassination attempt on campus occurs at the same time that each character is going through a personal crisis. Duchess Esmeralda Vespa is weighing a potential marriage. Viatrix Corna discovers that her once stable family is rupturing from the inside. Zabel Lusine’s body is inhabited by a demonic presence. Alya Parmoyan’s sister is put in a line of crossfire. Kirsi Takala is investigating her mother's time at Vespa while trying to control her more violent nature. Kam Ruszo goes through physiological changes and learns of her family's duplicitous nature.

The characters’ struggles are external and introspective, mixing the personal and political. There are great moments that collide their private and public lives and push them into a wider circle of influence and change.

They are on the outside of events leading to war, but war is inching ever closer to them. These events force the women to confront family members, friends, each other, and themselves. The sisterhood that held them together might be under threat.



This unique concept features the Ancient Greek pantheon in the Wild West.

This book’s answer to Hephaestus and Ares is Ari the gunslinger. He has a large kill list and an unquenchable thirst for vengeance. Meanwhile Sheriff Posey and Deputy Leena (Poseidon and Athena) try to track him down before he completes it and Auntie Phyllis (Hades) tries to conduct her criminal underworld dealings as usual but Ari’s rampages halt that.

The retelling of myths in the
Wild West is given its fullest fruition with characters and plot points directly lifted from the old stories. We know how most of the stories, such as Aunt Phyllis taking a lover for six months out of the year, will go. Yet the journey is a fascinating one.

The more intriguing parts are when the characters challenge the prerequisite mythological narrative. They discover that they are being manipulated by unseen forces and strive to change their story, violently if they have to.

3. The Healer's Daughter by Myriana Merkovic 

This is a bewitching Historical Fantasy about a witch and healer who finds herself under threat in 17th century North America.

After her mother dies en route to their escape from Andover Massachusetts to Charles Town, South Carolina, Naida Galene has to carry on her matrilineal legacy of witchcraft and healing. She earns a comfortable living but makes enemies with a local eccentric and a nobleman in charge.

This brilliant character study is of a woman who survives even thrives because of her inner power and living outside the fringes of society. She uses her family legacy to help others with their illnesses and ailments often putting her own safety at risk. Her family lineage is one of inherent knowledge, respect for nature, and the strength of women.

This is a compelling look at what life was like for an independent woman in this era and how living alone, pursuing her craft, and challenging the status quo aroused support and suspicion.


This beautiful lyrical bildungsroman of a young girl experiencing an ethereal evocative world of lucid dreaming, imagination, and creativity will make one feel like they are coming home.

Tyra Blair escapes from her dysfunctional family and war torn homeland into a world of lucid dreams. The dreams help her cope with everyday stress, escape to other worlds, and plan for the day when she will be invited to live in the Land of the Great Lakes, a fabled land of thought, imagination, and beauty that can only be reached by invitation.

It grabs the Reader's attention with its beautiful details about the dreams. Tyra sees many of her favorite stories come to life and meet heroes of great courage, thought, and sacrifice. She meets characters who ask her questions and challenge her thinking. These encounters cause her to make changes in her waking life. 

This book tells us that what we dream about, long for, hope for, create, imagine, love, and bring to life are reasons to continue surviving in a dark world. If we are only a spark in this vast universe then we might as well find something that isn't harmful but worthwhile, gives us contentment, and helps us find pleasure in being alive.

1. Ismene and The Voice by Juniper Calle 

This book is my favorite Fantasy novel that I read because the protagonist Ismene is among the characters that I identified with the most last year. This book is about a fractured kingdom, a wise and sentient library, and a woman whose power comes from a love of books, respect for knowledge, and the desire to share them with others.

Ismene, Lady Harmonia, and Eryx visit The Castle, a vast library which contains all of their world's knowledge. Each woman has her own reasons for going. Harmonia researches how the texts portray her family. Eryx wants to find forbidden knowledge to aid the rebel’s cause against Harmonia’s family. Ismene wants to become part of the Library and collect and share information with others.

The Castle is treated as a living presence and in a way it is. Its most important figure is The Voice, a wise unidentified veiled being who speaks on behalf of The Castle and is emotionally and mentally connected to it. The Voice alone judges who is worthy to receive the Castle's contents.

Each woman represents a microcosm of their society and ours especially now when the act of sharing information, reading books, and obtaining knowledge is under fire. Harmonia represents authority figures who stifle information for their own favor. Those that allow the people to read, hear, and see what they want them to. Eryx represents the rebels. Those who want to use that information to support their causes, end the old regime, and create a new one.

For Ismene, the very act of reading and sharing information is revolutionary in and of itself. Knowledge and wisdom are important to her, not the power to wield by controlling them or the change that comes from fighting. Ismene reads, keeps the knowledge in her head, and shares it so that it becomes the truth. She is like a High Priestess and The Castle is her deity. Because of that, Harmonia’s people see her as a threat. Harmonia and Eryx see the Castle as a means to and end. For Ismene the Castle is the end. For her The Castle is.



Science Fiction 

10. The Diminutive Defenders of Num (The Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil Book 3) by Jessica Crichton 


Jessica Crichton is back with the final Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil series. She definitely saved the best for last.

The gangs of Kids and Teens headed by Trevor and Tabitha Tate, AKA Guts and Glory respectively, decide to take on the nefarious Dr. Fixit at his citadel, Num. They find brainwashed Adults, subservient robots, and missing family members. Guts, Glory, and their older siblings learn about the real reason for coming to Nil in the first place.

Crichton doesn't skimp on the details with her imaginary world. Everything from costumes, to names, to social structures are brilliantly magnified. One of the more hilarious touches is the Adultspeak, slang terms that the adults use that are based on business jargon and cliches. (Like “cutting edge” is now or today and “level the playing field” means discussion or communication.)

Crichton also does not insult her young readership by writing down to them. She uses multiple first person narratives so the Readers can experience the book through various perspectives. She also gives the characters strong arcs and development. For example, the Tates have to face their own frailties, strengths, and understanding of what it means to be a hero.

9. Miles in Time/ Time Fixers (Time Fixers Book 1 and 2) by Lee Matthew Goldberg 

Blog favorite, Lee Matthew Goldberg returns with this YA Science Fiction series about a young boy who travels through time to save his ruptured family.

Miles Hardy uses his older brother, Simon’s time machine to investigate Simon's mysterious death. Then he uses it to go back even further to save his parents from the tragedies that shaped their adulthood and resulted in mental instability, institutionalization, and neglect. Along the way, Miles is stalked by Omni, a secret organization that knows about the machine.

The results and consequences of time travel are uniquely and somewhat humorously explored. The second volume features Miles and his companions getting up close and personal to late 90’s music, fashion, and fads.

There are also many heart wrenching moments that cause Miles to see his family in different aspects of their lives that he never knew. He sees his brother and parents as complex people with the same questions, worries, and insecurities he had and hopes that they, and he, don't become consumed by them.





8. Losing Austin by Michael J. Bowler

This book adds an otherworldly transcendent spin to a missing child case.

Colton's nonverbal Autistic older brother, Austin goes missing and his family searches for an agonizing five years. Colton remembers bright lights and strange presences and wonders if Austin was abducted by aliens. This strange theory becomes possible when Austin returns five years later, alive, unharmed, and the same age that he was when he left.

The book reveals the anguish when a child goes missing. Colton and his parents are so lost in their own grief and ways of dealing with the problems that they cease to function as a family. Many possibilities are addressed and latched onto in a desperate attempt to find meaning in the disappearance of a son and brother.

The otherworldly theory becomes reality because of Austin's unaged reappearance. It transcends the ordinary world and spins the book into a new direction. One where normal rules and answers don't apply and other unseen forces are at work.

7. Blunt Force Rising (An Angela Hardwicke Science Fiction Mystery Book 4) by Russ Colchamiro 

The penultimate Angela Hardwicke Science Fiction Mystery Thriller is probably its most gruesome, bloodiest, most violent, darkest, and most memorable volume.

Angela and her partner Eric Whistler are invited to travel on a luxurious galaxy cruiser by a cybernetics CEO to look for a missing technician. What starts out as a Cozy Science Fiction Mystery ala Agatha Christie by way of George Lucas turns out to be a darker and more violent affair when something bizarre happens and everybody on board violently attack one another.

The violence is described in excruciating graphic detail and is enough to give nightmares. People aren't just pushed, or shoved, or stabbed. They are ripped from the inside and completely torn apart by other people that they know and love. What was stylish and luxurious is now primal and aggressive.

It even affects Angela and Whistler. Angela's thoughts which hover between not wanting to hurt her friend to digging up old wounds just so he can react in anger are truly terrifying. Even though external forces manipulate this situation, it's clear that in the final volume that things will never be the same again.

6. The Hero Virus by Russell Dumper 

This book is a very realistic take on what would happen if people were suddenly afflicted with super powers.

Chris Taylor is one of several people in the UK who are struck with a virus that gives them superpowers like strength, invisibility, pyrokinesis, flight, and others. It isn't long before the UK is at the center of a health crisis threatening to go global as more are affected. One of the newly afflicted is Tim, Chris's friend who gains the ability to absorb other people's powers and gets an insane ambitious desire to use it.

Despite this odd premise, the book is written completely straight. The people stricken with this virus can do amazing things but they are normal everyday people who can't control, understand, or master them. Of course they would be frightened. Of course there would be side effects. Of course people without powers would panic or be envious. Of course people would use them for their own gain. They have the powers of gods, but the limited capacity of humans.

We also see the humanity within Chris and Tim. Chris wants to hold onto his humanity by retaining the relationships that he had before his transformation. He believes that he was saved to be a hero to everyone including Tim. Tim meanwhile wants to settle old scores by getting even with former enemies and obtaining wealth. Instead of being the little guy who gets stepped on, he wants to do the stepping. These different views result in a clash that could end in defeat or death.

5. Beyond Tomorrow's Sun by Roland McGuire 

This book covers various Science Fiction subgenres through the adventure of one character.

Charles begins in a Post-Apocalypse setting. He has to rely on his own skills to survive in the wilderness by himself. He is faced with life or death situations which challenge any civilization codes that he previously held. He also shows affection for Katie, a dog that he adopts.

The book then veers into a Hardware Space Military when Charles moves to a city and joins the Space Force. He learned resilience and survival in the wild, but now he has to learn about diplomacy, strategic thinking, and the responsibility of command. All of these lessons come into play when his fleet fights against a charismatic and crafty space pirate.

Finally, Charles lands in an Interstellar Travel narrative. He and his companions have to travel to a distant world for possible relocation. Everything that he has been through before leads up to this moment as he has to rely on his own survival instincts and the ability to lead in a new strange environment.

4. The Inside Out Worlds: Visions of Strange by Sophie Jubillart Posey 

This anthology builds descriptive worlds, creates important concepts, and explores important themes.

 These themes include loneliness, romance, conformity, rebellion, empathy, trauma, communication, AI, dehumanization, transformation, and ecology.

An angel falls in love with a tyrannical and aggressive Sphinx. A young man from a Post- Apocalyptic agrarian society comes into contact with a more technologically advanced inhumane one. A girl gets even with her abusive mother in a magical way. Several people become addicted to a new social media app until they become a literal part of it. The Sea takes a human form for a man who wants to conserve it.

All of these stories are very strange and completely out of this world.

This book is as long and complex as its name.

After catching his friend and girlfriend cheating on him with each other, Nick Valiente travels back two years into the past. Since he remembers what will happen, he seeks revenge on his future former friends. What starts out as a time travel revenge thriller becomes more complicated when Nick learns that he shares memories and consciousness with Arlize Dentragon, a swordsman and magician from a parallel world.

Nick’s revenge is nicely handled as he not only becomes more aware of his friends’ false natures but he seeks to improve himself by getting good grades, building an investment portfolio, and obtaining a prestigious fellowship. He is living well despite the inevitable betrayal.

The shared consciousness with Arlize pushes the novel forward into a wider more immense story. Nick sees through Arlize’s eyes and experiences different abilities such as heightened senses and increased mental capacity. Arlize also had similar problems and faced them with the courage, strength, and leadership that Nick feels that he lacks. The book asks plenty of questions about Arlize, Nick, and their connections. It is an intricate plot with deep themes of awareness, perception, and facing one's own identity and power.


This book has an immersive visceral setting, deep rich characters, an immense plot covering various worlds and times, and strong themes of fate, interconnectivity, and belonging.

After the disappearance of his beautiful extraterrestrial wife, Phillip Brandon reads an account from her world Piral concerning the arrival of an inexperienced high priestess who has prophetic dreams about someone called The Emissary who will save their world from destruction. An amnesiac named Vilam Tavisan fits many of the characteristics. Could he be The Emissary?

The details in the setting are massive and quite impressive. There is a chronology in the appendix that details Piral’s history and important events. Krausche really thought a lot about this world and what happened before, during, and after. There are also hints scattered throughout that the book has a non linear timeline because Vilam has memories of Philip as Philip reads the book. 

The characters are also well written and richly developed. Vilam is a man who is uncertain of his role but when he starts aiding people, he feels The Emissary’s presence. Various other characters have strong story arcs where they obtain personal power and higher outlooks. It's the type of book where a pair of thinly sketched comic relief characters become important catalysts in the evolution and changes to come.



1. Intervention/ Jack The Bodiless/ Diamond Mask/ Magnificat (The Galactic Milieu Series Book 1-4) by Julian May 

When I reread this series, I knew that it was going to be my #1 Science Fiction Novel of 2025, if for no other reason than being the series that got me into the genre. It has been a huge influence on my reading tastes and still held up well after all these years. How could it not be?

The Remillard Family are a wealthy powerful influential family of brilliant psychics. Many of them are involved in business, politics, philanthropy, technology, and academia. They are connected to the unity between the Earth and The Galactic Milieu, an United Intergalactic Nations if you will. Many of the family members bicker against each other and take opposite sides in the conflicts. However, they are also haunted by Fury, a manipulative dark presence inside the mind of one of the family members. Fury controls Hydra, a hive mind of five other family members to do its bidding and kill various people leaving the family vulnerable.

This series covers a wide ground with many relevant characters and themes. The Remillard Family is filled with memorable members such as Jon “Jack The Bodiless,” who was telepathic even in his mother's womb and now exists as a brain with a holographic body, Dorothea “Diamond Mask” McDonald-Remillard, Jack's love interest and eventual wife whose past of suppressing her abilities comes to a head when her home planet is targeted, Marc, Jack's older brother who evolves from protective parentified older brother to rebel leader/antihero to manipulative megalomaniac, and Rogatien “Rogi,” the boy's great uncle who chronicles the saga with dry wit, clear observation, and melancholy. Even Fury and Hydra have a creepy but interesting codependent relationship that changes as Hydra matures and starts to think for themselves. It is a brilliant ensemble that captivates the Reader’s interest.

Besides the characters, themes carry over through the series. Themes like family loyalty, weighing the personal with the political, the stress of maintaining a public life, the long term scars of child abuse and family dysfunction, self-actualization, identity, and suppressing or embracing one's skill and power.

By far the biggest ongoing conflict is between Unity and resistance. Many Remillards like Jack and Dorothea are for Unity while others like Marc and Rogi are members of a resistance wanting Earth to remain independent. May explores the advantages and disadvantages to both sides and allows the characters and Readers to come to their own conclusions. This series does what great Science Fiction does. It builds a new world, allows Readers to wonder and think about the possibilities, find current connections, and decide where they stand on the issues in fictional and real life.