Book Review: With His Words I’m Not Alone
WITH HIS WORDS I’M NOT ALONE by Lucas Ryker is a thoughtful character study that explores the ethical and emotional questions of the digital age. Reviewed by Samantha Hui.
WITH HIS WORDS I’M NOT ALONE by Lucas Ryker is a thoughtful character study that explores the ethical and emotional questions of the digital age. Reviewed by Samantha Hui.
ROCCO’S WIFE by B.P Faunce is about a marriage in crisis, mental illness, and the obstacles one woman is willing to overcome for love. Reviewed by Amy Brozio-Andrews.
LIPPINCOTT STREET by Sharon A. Ewing is a touching historical novel about the hardship and hope of Irish immigrants in the 1860s. Reviewed by Addison Ciuchta.
Reality is twisted and sanity jumbled in Sam Munson’s surreal psychological novel, The Sofa. Reviewed by Nick Rees Gardner.
THE WHITE JASMINES by Hasti Saadi is a thoughtful meditation on finding peace in the endless cycle of breaking and rebuilding. Reviewed by Samantha Hui.
It Always Rains In Estaran by Murat Boyner is about the intricacies of power changing hands and how tight you have to grasp it to avoid slipping away. Reviewed by Jaylynn Korrell.
TUESDAY by Lou Gibbons is a modern fable for the age of corporate burnout that grants you permission to go after what you want. Reviewed by Elizabeth Stargiotti.
CARROLL GARDENS STORY by Sally Frances is a haunting psychological portrait of family, trauma, and silence, set against the shifting streets of Brooklyn. Reviewed by John M. Murray.
Historical fact and storytelling blend comfortably in harrowingly uncomfortable settings in Frozen Frontlines by Jeff Knight. Reviewed by Peter Hassebroek.
THE RAPE OF ELLIOTT ROTH by D.E. Adler is a haunting psychological drama that explores the rippled effects of trauma, betrayal, and accusation. Reviewed by Erin Britton.










