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
Ever since I read Snow Crash, I knew I wanted to read more of Neal Stephenson’s work. Deciding which book to read next was the hard part, because quite frankly, the size of his books scare me. Stephenson is known to write
The Fat Cat in the Red Hat Runs for Office is a picture book written by Barron John and illustrated by Daniel Irala. The book is a satirical take on the events leading up to Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential election.
After reading Haruki Murakami’s Men Without Women short story collection, I knew he was one of the elite living authors of our time. This immediately made me want to pick up more of his work and I eventually settled on Sputnik Sweetheart.
When I say Hidden Bodies is as satisfying as You, I mean it satisfies that craving to read more about our new favourite psychopath, Joe Goldberg. Hidden Bodies is a continuation to You, picking up right where the first book left off.
When writing stories about hackers, or books set in cyberpunk or Sci-fi settings, the hardest thing is knowing how to strike that balance between storytelling and technical description. Echoes by Laura Tisdall is a hacker book that leans much further on the
When I started YOU, I was prepared to read a typical psychological thriller about some mentally damaged stalker, who’s a sociopath that shows no emotion for his actions. Never did I think that I would actually end up feeling sorry for the
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest follows on from book two in the Millennium series, The Girl Who Played With Fire. It picks up right where the second book left of and has a similar pace. By similar pace, I mean
Something about legal thrillers intrigues me; despite not being law savvy. I’ve read a number of John Grisham books, which have become my go-to when I want an easy read that’s grounded in reality. I decided to give a new author a