Book Review: Byline Budapest by Diane Wagner
BYLINE BUDAPEST by Diane Wagner is a post-WWII story with a clear sense of history and some truly thrilling scenes. Reviewed by Eric Mayrhofer.
BYLINE BUDAPEST by Diane Wagner is a post-WWII story with a clear sense of history and some truly thrilling scenes. Reviewed by Eric Mayrhofer.
I, MONSTER by Clifton Wilcox is a gripping and horrifying story of a man’s descent into inhumanity. Reviewed by Philip Zozzaro.
KEEPING THE COUNTESS by Lille Moore is where a luminous love story blooms in the midst of secrets and chaos. Reviewed by Tomi Alo.
Thwarted romance, grief confronted, adversity overcome—That Last Summer by SK Snyder is a delicious bite of family drama with a frosting of Regency aesthetics.
Immersive & culturally rich—a novel about lifechanging choices—and temptations—over the course of the Phillies miraculous 1950 season. Whiz Kid by Joel Burcat.
At the intersection of history and mythology, Anaiti encounters both human dangers and otherworldly foes. Of Wind and Wolves by JM Elliott.
THE ADVOCATE by Homeless is a stirring chronicle of one woman’s fight against fear and repression during America’s McCarthy era. Reviewed by John M. Murray.
Wrestling the weight of expectation may be even harder than any opponent in the pit. THE CONTENDER FROM DELOS by Leo Carrington.
A pirate captain with the soul of a poet. A mission born from vengeance that becomes something far greater. SILKEN DRAGONS by Daniel McKenzie.
Blues, love, and litigation in 1970s Austin. AUSTIN BLUES by Gary A. Keith reviewed by Josie Prado.










