reviews11/12/2022

Magissa, by Kassandra Flamouri

Magissa is a great novel about grief and dealing with pain, a really well-written tribute to the Greek traditions, while also constituting an entertaining urban fantasy book. We are directly thrown into the funeral of Chrysa’s parents, who died in America in strange circumstances, being this funeral hosted in Greece, their homeland, to where Chrysa has returned after fourteen years out, as she has been raised as an American.

reviews11/11/2022

Our Bloody Pearl (These Treacherous Tides #1), by D.N. Bryn

Our Bloody Pearl is the first book in the These Treacherous Tides series, by D.N. Bryn, but can be read as a standalone. It’s such a unique book, featuring a non-binary, disabled protagonist, a mermaid who were captured by a pirate captain, so different from the classical image we have for that concrete myth, and which serves as a way of thought of many difficult themes, one of the virtues the fantasy genre has.

reviews11/10/2022

A Canticle for the Fallen (Aria of Steel #2), by Steven Raaymakers

A Canticle for the Fallen is the second book in the Aria of Steel trilogy, this coming-of-age epic fantasy series by the kiwi writer Steven Raaymakers. Situated four years after the end of A Canticle of Two Souls, we are going to be following Raziel, being this book darker than the first one, but equally engaging.

reveals11/9/2022

Cover Reveal: Gurzil & Badon Hill, by I. Anonymous

I have the pleasure of revealing the new covers for the audiobooks of a saga that is really beloved for me, as its unique retelling of Arthurian myths really made me fall in love with it. Yes, I’m talking about The Wars of Wrath, by I. Anonymous.