Book Review: Red Winter by Annette Marie

Marie’s Red Winter tells the engaging story of Emi, a girl training as the kamigakari of Amaterasu. She’s been following this path for the past ten years and it is all coming to fruition. She is just two months shy of truly becoming the avatar of Amaterasu. This path has been fraught with danger. Amaterasu […]

Spotlight: Red Winter by Annette Marie

Synopsis Emi is the kamigakari. In a few short months, her life as a mortal will end and her new existence as the human host of a goddess will begin. Carefully hidden from those who would destroy her, she has prepared her mind, body, and soul to unite with the goddess—and not once has she […]

Book Review: Kalico Jack by Mike Nahorniak

This book was reviewed via Netgalley   There are great lessons here about how being different is okay. Kalico Jack is a bunny of a different coat. Literally, as it happens. Jack is a jackrabbit with a calico-coloured pelt and mismatched eyes. Since all the bunnies at home make fun of Jack, he decides to […]

Book Review: Diary of the Mad by Victoria Kulik Haugnes

I received a copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review   Haugnes’ Diary of the Mad is a series of short stories showcasing some of the best and worst elements of the human experience. Many focused on the darker aspects of life- loss of hope, despair, depression, motives of murder, […]

Book Review: Human Again by Moran Chaim

This book was reviewed for the San Francisco Book Review Chaim’s Human Again is a purebred thrill-ride from start to finish. We follow Roy, a young Israeli soldier who was put into cryosleep after he was wounded in action Flashforward 300 years and Roy is brought back, woken to a world where the land is […]

Guest Post by Gemma Brocato: Are the Muses Still Relevant in Modern Life

Hello and thank you so much for hosting me today. I had to think for a while about the best way to answer your question; Are The Muses Still Relevant In Modern Life? To give the most rational answer I can, I had to first consider what the world would be like without them. Imagine […]

Book Review: Tyranny by Gemma Brocato

  *** This book was reviewed via Netgalley é Barclay Publicity***   Brocato’s Tyranny follows Clio, one of the Greek Muses. It is present day, and Clio, Muse of history, appropriately works in a library. The wheel has turned ’round again, and again Clio and her family are challenged by the demented deity Pierus, whose […]

Book Review: Oppression by Jessica Therrien

  This Book was reviewed via Xppresso Publicity   Oppression is the first in Therrein’s ‘Children of the Gods’ series. It starts off with Elyse working to settle into a new place. That it is San Francisco delighted me, and she’s absolutely right. San Francisco is a place to come to be yourself. There’s an […]

Author Interview: Ioana Visan, Author of Broken People

  Welcome to Port Jericho! Today we are interviewing Ioana Visan, author of Broken People, available at: Amazon- http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00PM4SYYI Barnes and Noble- http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/broken-people-ioana-visan/1121218837?ean=2940046574814 iTunes- https://itunes.apple.com/ro/book/broken-people/id967009201?mt=11 Smashwords- https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/518980 Kobo-https://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/broken-people   Createspace- https://www.createspace.com/5120151 Bookdepository- http://www.bookdepository.com/Broken-People-Ioana-Visan/9781503335677 Getting to Know You Ioana, where are you from? – I’m from Iasi, a city in the north-east of Romania. Tell us […]

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