Book Review: Imber
IMBER by Deborah Mistina is an evocative sci-fi about a governmental plan to relocate humanity to a so-called Eden. Reviewed by Frankie Martinez.
IMBER by Deborah Mistina is an evocative sci-fi about a governmental plan to relocate humanity to a so-called Eden. Reviewed by Frankie Martinez.
Melding poetic forms, candid conversations, and calls against injustice, these poems are confessional, communal, rage-filled, compassionate, and above all, kind. Reviewed by Warren Maxwell.
A GOOD LIFE by Karl Lorenz Willett is an honest & raw look at one man’s experience with schizophrenia and mental health stigma.
Indie lit has always been counterculture. Check out Nick Gardner’s list of seven literary fiction books that are punk AF.
Queer Black women float, grieve, steal, sweat, and fight back in this thrilling collection of stories that put us first. SYMPATHY FOR WILD GIRLS by Demree McGhee.
VHS by Chris Campanioni (CLASH Books) is a collage of dreamlike, visceral images—an experimental arthouse movie in shifting literary form. Reviewed by Victoria Lilly.
A pirate captain with the soul of a poet. A mission born from vengeance that becomes something far greater. SILKEN DRAGONS by Daniel McKenzie.
IN A COUNTRY WITH NO NAME by Ron Morris is a spy thriller filtered through a backpacker’s sunburn and a shot of Red Bull. Reviewed by Melissa Suggitt.
STOPPING TO FEEL by SL Collins is a vital memoir about the dangers of inheriting silence. Reviewed by Samantha Hui.
THE OTHER BOOK by Alexey L. Kovalev is a convention-breaking novel that explores the intricacies of human experience. Reviewed by Joelene Pynnonen.