As a black-British writer, I am speaking from the viewpoint of someone misunderstood. People see me on the street, on buses, and on trains, and have a preconceived idea of the type of person I am based on how I look. And
I’ve been covering video games since 2008 at website The Koalition, so I felt I owed it to myself to read this memoir from veteran Video Game Journalist Russ Pitts. In Sex Drugs and Cartoon Violence, Russ details a decade of his
Pond is a series of short stories from the perspective of an unnamed young woman whose been led to a life of solitude in a rural stone house, for reasons we never learn. The short stories focus on the woman’s random and
Stephen King is one of the most unique brands in literature. Stephen King isn’t the kind of author brand that produces page-turner thrillers to accompany you on a plane journey; a Stephen King book is nowhere near as accessible as say a
Few people that you meet in life will speak to your soul and help you grow as a person. For me, Anthony Frasier is one of them. I’m older than him by a couple months, but every time I speak to him
One Day is one of those genius concepts that make you wish you would have thought of it before. It’s a story that spans a couple decades, revisiting the lives of two people on a single date every year. That date is
In the past I interviewed the lovely Sara Secora about the process of writing her first novel. Well a few weeks back I was contacted by Sara because she was finally ready to issue early review copies of Throne of Lies. I
A Brief History of Seven Killings begins in the Jamaican ghettos of 1976 and ends all the way in New York in the 1990’s. It’s an incredible journey of many characters that tells the tale of Jamaican hardships. At the core of
It’s time to review the featured book for April 2016. The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins was selected as our latest mystery read. The book is the best-selling of 2015 so I was eager to find out why. If you