The Last Contract of Isako sounds fast, smart, and a little dangerous
A battle-worn corporate samurai on one last mission is the kind of premise that gets my attention immediately.
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A battle-worn corporate samurai on one last mission is the kind of premise that gets my attention immediately.
I have a soft spot for mysteries that know the pleasure of a sealed-in puzzle and don’t waste time pretending to be something else.
Some mysteries win you with twists. The better ones win you much earlier, with voice, momentum, and the feeling that the author knows exactly what ...
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