This soul-expanding novel of hope and resiliency is a celebration of womanhood, connection and the power of perseverance.
This soul-expanding novel of hope and resiliency is a celebration of womanhood, connection and the power of perseverance.
This soul-expanding novel of hope and resiliency is a celebration of womanhood, connection and the power of perseverance.
Maaza Mengiste has produced a work of fiction that is epic in reach, with brilliant borrowings from the forms of classic tragedy.
Chbosky’s chutzpah is to reimagine the Christian story of the Madonna and Child as a horror story.
How much loss can a good person endure? H.P. Lovecraft never cared to ask the question, but Shaun Hamill cares very much.
Joe Hill eats genre fiction like junk food, chewing up the whole tradition of horror into a new, unique pulp.
Each tale is a creaking door, hinging on a high concept or an uncanny hook, nicely derivative of weird masters such as Edgar Allan Poe and Robert Aickman.
If you like darkness poured out like molasses from a bucket, you’ll love this novel.
Romance takes a contemporary turn in Kate Racculia’s wonderful new novel, set in present-day Boston.
Sarah Davis-Goff has given us a zombie novel with a Celtic twist and an empowering feminist bent.
A female war correspondent raises a young orphan girl in WWII Paris.
Alan Lightman’s time spent in Cambodia is apparent through the beautiful and unforced descriptions in Three Flames.
If there’s a book that’s a masterpiece of the wages of the worship of Moloch, it’s We, the Survivors.
Rob Hart’s prose feels as densely claustrophobic as the living conditions he has constructed for the disenfranchised millions now working for the Warehouse.
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