Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Ruins by Lily Brooks-Dalton: A haunting literary mystery about civilization, memory, and the stories we choose to tell

In Ruins by Lily Brooks-Dalton (releasing March 31, 2026), an ambitious archaeologist chases proof of a lost empire—and in the process, confronts the fragile architecture of her own world. After loving The Light Pirate, I could not wait to read this one. I was not disappointed. Ruins just catapulted itself to the number one spot on my best books of 2026 list.

Get your copy of Ruins from my independent online bookstore today!

I read an advance review copy as an ebook, as I do with most ARCs. I usually prefer print, but you can’t argue with free. This, however, was one of those rare cases where I found myself wishing the book had already been released so I could run out and buy a physical copy. I wanted to hold it in my hands. I wanted the weight of it. The experience of immersion felt so complete that a screen almost seemed insufficient.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Heap Earth Upon It by Chloe Michelle Howarth: Obsession, family loyalty, and the danger of loving too much

Heap Earth Upon It by Chloe Michelle Howarth is a gothic, psychologically rich literary novel that burrows under your skin and stays there. Set in 1965 in the quietly watchful town of Ballycrea, the story opens with the arrival of the O’Leary siblings, whose carefully guarded past and tightly bound loyalty to one another immediately raise questions no one is quite asking out loud.

Get your copy of Heap Earth Upon It from my independent online bookstore today!

Following her acclaimed novel Sunburn, Howarth once again writes with precision and restraint, layering unease rather than rushing toward easy answers. At its heart, this is a novel about grief and survival, and about what happens when sibling devotion turns inward and begins to do real harm. The O’Learys have lost their parents and, in the absence of any other safety net, have clung to one another so fiercely that none of them are truly allowed to grow.

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Author Interview

Author interview with romantasy writer E.A.M. Trofimenkoff

Inspired by Anne Bonny and Mary Read, two of her all-time favorite female pirates, E. A. M. Trofimenkoff is the author of the Dark Depths duology as well as their contemporary romance, You and I Collide.

In A Kiss of the Siren’s Song, two women disguised as men board a pirate ship: one set on revenge, the other escaping land and the bounty on her head. The two of them quickly find themselves in the middle of a voyage to find the world’s most dangerous weapon: the Kraken’s Fang.

Even worse, their evil captain has a far more nefarious plot in mind. Can the two unravel the sea of secrets, and save the world? Or will their budding feelings for each other result in their downfall?

Q: What/who were your early literary influences, and how do you think their writing has shaped you as a storyteller today?
A: I think The Hunger Games was the first book to make me truly fall in love with reading. So much so that I still remember exactly where I was when I read it for the first time, and every year when it snows, it reminds me of that trip, and I have to pick up the series and re-read it. To this date, I’ve read the original trilogy over thirty times, and it remains my favourite series of all time. Now that I am writing my own stories, I am inspired to write complex characters who aren’t always loveable, who go through their challenges and come back with scars to show for them, and it’s given me the courage to explore difficult narratives that involve impossible decisions and the consequences that accompany them.

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