Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward: A brutal, brilliant thriller about survival in the ashes

A lot of thrillers pretend to be gritty—Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward actually earns it, dragging readers into the Colorado Rockies and refusing to let them look away. Releasing February 24, 2026, Nowhere Burning is a harrowing, genre-blurring novel that folds the dark myth of Peter Pan and the feral desperation of Lord of the Flies into something uniquely Ward: unsettling, intimate, and psychologically razor-sharp.

Get your copy of Nowhere Burning from my independent online bookstore today!

Riley and her younger brother Oliver flee their troubled home in the middle of the night, chasing rumors of Nowhere—an abandoned ranch once owned by a reclusive movie star and now whispered about as a refuge for runaways. What they find is a scorched sanctuary with its own rules, its own hierarchy, and its own buried horrors. It promises freedom. It demands a price.

Continue reading “Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward: A brutal, brilliant thriller about survival in the ashes”
Author Interview

Interviewing Louise Phillips about her new novel, Nina, and the stories that shape us

Stories leave fingerprints on every writer, and Louise Phillips carries an especially vivid map of influences, obsessions, and lived experience into her newest novel, Nina. In our conversation, Phillips reflects on the early books that cracked open her curiosity about human nature, the quiet discipline of early-morning writing sessions, and the pull toward ordinary people navigating extraordinary pressures. She also shares the surprising rituals behind her writing space, the challenges that have sharpened her craft, and what she most hopes readers hold close after turning the final page of Nina.

Louise Phillips’ latest novel, Nina, released November 18, 2025.

Q: What/who were your early literary influences, and how do you think their writing has shaped you as a storyteller today?
A: Growing up, finances were always challenging at home, which meant my reading material comprised of secondhand books or borrowing books from the library. It also meant from an early age I was introduced to an eclectic mix of material, which looking back was a great way to be exposed to literature. I was certainly a fan of the Enid Blyton books, especially the Famous Five or the Secret Seven, however, a little later, other books stood out. Lord of the Flies by William Golding, for one. My young mind learnt a lot about human nature in between those pages.

Continue reading “Interviewing Louise Phillips about her new novel, Nina, and the stories that shape us”