A Matter of Murder Has a Good Old-Fashioned Hook
Sometimes all you really need is a sharp premise, a strong title, and the promise of a mystery that knows what it is doing.
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Sometimes all you really need is a sharp premise, a strong title, and the promise of a mystery that knows what it is doing.
Some novels announce scale before you even crack the cover. This one does that in a quiet, persuasive way.
A good review tells you whether a book works. A second look tells you why it stays with you.
Who wrote it: Roger Spitz, Chair of the Disruptive Futures Institute and Founder & CEO of Techistential. He's ranked among the Top 15 Futurists Worldw
I picked up When Paris Whispers expecting a travel-infused coming-of-age story, and while it certainly delivers that, the novel surprised
Clark T. Carlton's Diamonds and Roses, Vipers and Toads is most compelling in the question it dares to ask: what happens after the prince
Bill Smoot's San Quentin Exodus is a thoughtful, deeply humane novel that blends social realism with quiet suspense. Written with restraint