#BookReview: Smitten by Tom Bellamy

Weird Blend Of Neuroscience And Self-Help Lacks Critically Necessary Documentation. This book is fascinating in a lot of ways, and could genuinely help some people, but its critical flaw is also its biggest: showing up at just 12% documentation – at least in the Advance Review Copy edition I read over a month before publication (and which I’ve had for several weeks already before getting to it) when you’re proposing a novel diagnosis of neuroscience fails the Sagan Standard (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) pretty damn badly.

Now, for what the book actually covers… “weird” is actually putting it nicely. This is a novel blend of science and self help unlike any I’ve ever personally come across, and I read literally hundreds of books per year. (Admittedly across nearly all genres and not just in the neuroscience/ self-help spaces.)

Both the science and the self-help seem reasonable enough to a layman who simply reads a lot, though I’m nearly positive both actual neuroscientists and psychologists may have more choice words and harsher criticism there. But again, the severely lacking documentation, knowing this is such a novel concept… I mean, I only removed one star because that’s what I do for lack of documentation, but the case really could be made that the lack of documentation combined with the novel claims here are a much bigger problem than a single star deduction. But read the book for yourself and write your own review and let’s see what you think there.

Overall it is an interesting and very easy to read book (at least for those accustomed to reading popular neuroscience type books), I’m just not sure I would trust what it says any further than I could physically throw the book.

Recommended. But think critically about it.

This review of Smitten by Tom Bellamy was originally written on December 30, 2025.

#BookReview: Night Terror by Vincent Ralph

Solid YA Horror. Weird Whiplash As Book 2 In Series. This book, taken independently, is pretty damn awesome. You’ve got strong 80s vibes, including strong RL Stine type vibes. You’ve got a mall – that quintessential 80s teen experience (says the kid who was never a teen until the mid 90s). You’ve got all kinds of ancient smalltown creepiness and secrets. Seriously, every bit of this is clicking on every level.

You’ve even got monsters that fans of Jeremy Robinson will recognize, as the way Ralph writes his zombies here is very reminiscent of the way Robinson uses at least some types of zombies in his book TORMENT, later retconned to be part of his INFINITE TIMELINE event. Which was nice to see – and possibly shows Ralph to be as … “creative”, let’s go with “creative”… as Robinson. 🙂 One thing Ralph’s version lacks, particularly from Robinson’s original incarnation of TORMENT, is the subtle yet also quite present religious allegory. Ralph’s tale here is instead more straight horror, zero subtext (at least that this reader picked up on).

No, where the whiplash comes in is that the first book in this series was set 40 ish years after this second entry, with the first book being bleeding edge tech and very human horror, whereas this second entry both sends us back in time *and* gives us a far more supernatural style of horror that wasn’t even hinted at in the first book. Read independently, both books are awesome. Read as a “series”… you almost have to envision each book as being the same town in different universes, all experiencing horrors unique to that universe’s version of the town? Which is a bit weird, but can also work well enough. (Indeed, Robinson himself did a horror series that was more akin to Sliders where the entire town slid between universes – he called that series REFUGE, and to date it remains one of his fans’ favorites.)

Still, for what this book itself is, this really was a quite solid YA horror tale that does a phenomenal job of showing its version of this town and its time period quite well indeed.

Very much recommended.

This review of Night Terror by Vincent Ralph was originally written on December 23, 2025.

#BookReview: Dead Fake by Vincent Ralph

Bleeding Edge Thriller May Not Be For The Younger Side Of YA. This is one of those tales that will be utterly terrifying for many in just how real it is, at least in its basic “Yes, AI can do this now” premise. And on that side, it absolutely works quite well without going into the “AI is evil” camp, which is quite refreshing to see an author hold off on going off that particular cliff. AI is a tool, same as any other, and thus can be used for both good and evil – it is the mind and the intent of the human wielding the tool that is actually good or evil, not the tool itself, and it was genuinely awesome to see an author take pretty much that exact position here and even use it quite well in a horror setting.

What makes this tale perhaps not suitable for the younger YA readers is that there are absolutely enough F-bombs in this short 250 ish page text to garner it an R rating, even without the body count and grisly descriptions of most of the murders at hand. Is it puritanical to care more about language than vividly described gory murders? Perhaps, but in this case you’re also reading review being written by a fan of Mortal Kombat since it first came out, and while I’m no fan of hyper gory horror ala Saw, this one had a just enough to be gruesome in some scenes without going heavy handed slasher. Far more Scream or I Know What You Did Last Summer than Saw or Texas Chainsaw Massacre… and with enough self awareness to actually have its characters talk about being in a horror “movie”.

Overall this was a solid high school level horror tale that makes great use of its overall setting to tell a tale that is both ancient and exceedingly modern.

Very much recommended.

This review of Dead Fake by Vincent Ralph was originally written on December 23, 2025.

#BookReview: Your Data Will Be Used Against You by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson

If You See This Review, You Should Be Terrified. I’m a Xennial. I’ve grown up with computers. The Net first became a public thing when I was 10 yrs old, and within a decade I would complete a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science. I’ve known all along that privacy online was more theater than fact, no matter how careful you are – that if it has a computer chip, you’re safer to assume it is tracking you than not, and that someone you may not like will likely be able to access that data.

Even knowing this almost as long as I’ve known anything… Ferguson makes clear just how much worse it actually is, from a legal perspective. *Even in* the United States, where we “supposedly” have 4th, 5th, and 6th Amendments to the Constitution of the United States rights limiting government searching of our data and how it can use the results of such a search.

While Ferguson doesn’t address at all how very eroded and damn near paper thin those Amendments have become over the last 250 yrs of jurisprudence, he makes it all too crystal clear that the words on the papers haven’t kept up with the actual technical capabilities, and because of this, many of the things that once kept your written words on paper safe or even your words to certain people safe no longer protect you in this digital era *at all*. Indeed, quite the opposite – many of the exceptions to those earlier forms that actively limited what government was allowed to do are instead now the rules that give government nearly unlimited abilities to search your data without even having to get a “warrant” rubber stamped.

Indeed, another of Ferguson’s large points throughout this text is just how little privacy you have *specifically* when a warrant is signed… and he even tosses a point or two in about the “qualifications” needed to be able to sign such a warrant. (There are basically none to be a Magistrate Judge in particular.)

While all of this is utterly terrifying – and Ferguson goes to great lengths to show that this *should* be terrifying no matter your own personal political bent -, Ferguson does actually offer paths forward at every level that could at least begin to alleviate many of the concerns he details. He even goes so far as to note which ones are likely more politically palatable within the current system and which ones would do more to actually alleviate privacy concerns… but which are also far larger hauls in the current political environment.

Overall this is absolutely a book every American should read, and indeed anyone globally who thinks of America as the “land of the free”. Ferguson shows here that this “freedom” is illusory at best, particularly in the current world environment.

Very much recommended.

This review of Your Data Will Be Used Against You by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson was originally written on December 22, 2025.

#BookReview: Make It Out Alive by Allison Brennan

Less Gory Saw. I’m glad the description mentioned the “escape room” and the need to make it out or die, as it made that headline *so* much more concise, since it technically isn’t a spoiler. 😀

And yet that headline is exactly what you get here – the latest entrant in the Quinn and Costa police procedural thrillers is a version of Saw set in North Florida (the “First Coast” region of Jacksonville (where I happen to live) and St Augustine) and surrounding areas.

I’m not a fan of horror generally and specifically not a fan of gory horror, so I can’t tell a fan of the Saw franchise just how closely this aligns with that franchise – I don’t know. I do know the base ideas are similar enough that fans of that franchise will enjoy this book on at least some level, but this book is also rather deep in an ongoing series and thus will reveal at least certain things from prior books. However, most of those elements are about the team itself rather than the prior mysteries they were solving, so this may well be a decent enough place for fans of the Saw franchise who may not have read these books before to start and see what they think.

More long time fans of this series specifically or police procedurals generally will also find quite a bit here, as the narrative spends nearly equal time on “oh shit, we woke up in a dangerous situation” and “oh shit, our teammates are missing and the case we thought we had in the bag… isn’t”. Thus, there’s a solid mix of tension and investigation on two different fronts, as we see both sides play through to their inevitable meetup. But what condition will the missing teammates be found in? Who the hell could be sick enough to attempt a Saw type setup in the “real” world? Brennan does a great job really on all aspects here, including our criminals of the tale, and really allows pretty well every character – including several more minor ones – at least a few scenes to shine. Of course, she’s working with 400 pages here… so she’s got the space. 😉

And yes, even this region of the country has its moments in this book, be it in St. Augustine itself, the FBI office in Jacksonville, or the other nearby areas that also come to bear. All are done pretty damn well – well enough that it is clear that Brennan did at least some research on the areas, if not actually came out here and experienced them herself. Which is always pleasant to see as a consumer of a story that claims to be set in a place you are very familiar with. 🙂

Overall truly a well-paced thrill ride that will keep you on the edge of your seat throughout… and will probably keep you up well into the night reading.

Very much recommended.

This review of Make It Out Alive by Allison Brennan was originally written on December 22, 2025.

#BookReview: Whisper Creek by Allison Brennan

Tremors Meets Open Range. I truly think the best way to describe this book for an at least somewhat general audience – you still need to be familiar with these movies – really is the combination of the movies I use in the title of the review here.

In Tremors, you get an excellent use of a closed environment (in the case of the movie, a desert valley where the only road in or out has been blocked) to create a fun, intense survival type thriller where the good guys can only guess at what is going on. Brennan absolutely *nailed* that element here, using catastrophic flooding to great effect.

In Open Range, there are other issues going on between neighbors, with some neighbors being less than neighborly to their neighbors. Some might even say they were dirty, underhanded, cowardly snakes who were only looking out for themselves. Again, Brennan absolutely *nails* this element as well… while actually expanding on it in some rather interesting ways.

Ultimately, our central family truly is the heart of this tale, even as the events of the book keep them separated for so much of it. Brennan uses both environment and human quite well, and truly manages to give very nearly every character some level of weight to them such that you really want to see how this plays out for everyone… even the snakes. But especially the family cat who has run off in the storm…

Solid book that could get perhaps a touch too real for some when it is scheduled for release in the middle of the summer of 2026, this is absolutely a book fans of both family drama and survival tales are going to want to read, and it appears to be truly standalone to boot.

Very much recommended.

This review of Whisper Creek by Allison Brennan was originally written on December 19, 2025.

#BookReview: The Oldest Rocks On Earth by Simon Lamb

Part Geologic History. Part Memoir. All Intriguing Information. This is one of those books where, like at least one other early reviewer mentioned, it is nearly as much about the author as it is his subject. So for those looking for a book more solidly focused on geology or science, where the author rarely if ever interjects himself into the narrative… know up front that this isn’t that. At all.

Instead what we get is a book where the author has spent a lifetime researching something he is clearly passionate about, one where he has several personal theories he openly admits aren’t shared by all of those in his field, yet also one who has had some very interesting experiences along the way as he was doing his research. This narrative encompasses all of the above and more. We get a lot of deeply scientific detail of how the oldest rocks on Earth formed and how scientists find and study them. We get a lot of stories of the type of “and that is how I wound up being the personal taxi for an entire region when the regional bus failed one day” or “these are the people I was partying with at a remote campsite deep in the African wilderness”. We also get several instances of “these are my personal theories based on my own research and studying the field for a lifetime, but not everyone agrees with me”.

In other words, a fascinating look at a topic that some could consider quite dry indeed, but which Lamb brings to life with both his own life and his passion for the subject. Yes, there is perhaps too much here at times for anyone who knows anything less about this subject than Lamb himself does, but for the most part he really does explain even these concepts well enough that the reader can have at least a rough understanding of them – enough to generally follow along with Lamb’s narrative and story, if not enough to pass any kind of test about them.

No, the only real thing I could find to fault here is the dearth of a bibliography. Yes, I recognize that this tale is at least part memoir, but still, there is enough geology and objective nonfiction here that just 12% bibliography still seems lacking, even if much of the objective nonfiction is based on the author’s own research. But hey, maybe I’m being a touch harsh there. Read the book for yourself and write your own review of it and let the world know either way what you think on that point. 🙂

Overall a truly fascinating book that works as much as a travel memoir as it does as a geologic tale.

Very much recommended.

This review of The Oldest Rocks On Earth by Simon Lamb was originally written on December 18, 2025.

#BookReview: Too Close To Home by Seraphina Nova Glass

Solid Summer Escapism. You know those summer movies where you just want to be entertained, so you turn your brain off a bit and just go for the ride?

Do that here, and you’re going to have a *blast*. (Literally, in the case of this tale, as it opens with a car bomb in a small lake town.)

Featuring a small yet interwoven cast and a multi-POV storytelling mechanic, this is one of those tales that uses everything it has to craft a tale that will worm its way into your brain as you’re reading it and won’t let you go… but also isn’t going to be the most memorable book out there once you dive into the next escapist book. The twists and turns and action are all solid, don’t get me wrong. They’re just also a bit plain. Which isn’t a bad thing – plain and expected is *great* for escapist fiction. Again, you don’t *want* your brain working too hard with this particular type of tale.

Overall a fun lake escape with a few thrills and chills, some great vibes, and a few solid enough hooks to keep you reading even as this may be a touch long for some readers (north of 350 pages). Still, stick with it and you will absolutely be rewarded here.

Very much recommended.

This review of Too Close To Home by Seraphina Nova Glass was originally written on December 18, 2025.

#BookReview: The Swamps by Seraphina Nova Glass

Short Xennial Scooby-Doo Type Tale. This is one of those books that is great for an early-year release (and end of January certainly qualifies, in my mind), because it is a 200 page very quick read. Easy win to get moving on your reading goals for the year, even if those goals measure in the single digits or low double digits.

It is also a very fun tale squarely aimed at Xennials (those of us born between 1977 ish and 1984 ish) now solidly in their 40s who grew up with several great renditions of Scooby-Doo cartoons, as this is very much effectively an adult version of a Scooby-Doo mystery. Minus the van and the dog, and adding a bit more of a Scream/ I Know What You Did Last Summer vibe. Again, pretty *squarely* targeting a specific population… but this is also a fun enough book that more general audiences will likely enjoy it nearly as much, *perhaps* even more.

Now, there *is* a scene or two of jalapeno or so spiciness, so those that prefer their tales no more spicy than a warm glass of milk… you do you. That scene is only just the one scene really, and actually adds far more depth to the story overall than similar scenes in romance novels, so I thought it actually worked rather well in this particular tale.

Overall just some fun “turn your brain off and enjoy the ride” (oh, wait. maybe a little *too* meta there in the review, considering the last paragraph 😉 ) type of tale that again, is a very quick read great for jumpstarting whatever annual reading goals you may have for yourself – if you have any at all. Or maybe you just need some pure escapism generally. This tale will work perfectly in that regard too.

Very much recommended.

This review of The Swamps by Seraphina Nova Glass was originally written on December 14, 2025.

#BookReview: The Most Awful Responsibility by Alex Wellerstein

Reasonably Well Documented Book Will Force You To Rethink All You Think You Know Of The Post-WWII Era. This is one of those rare history books that actively goes in to not just point out something most people missed about an era and/ or a person, but also goes to show the reader that a lot of what you thought you knew… may not have happened quite the way you think it did.

For example, one of the main points of the early part of the text: You think President Truman ordered the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. That was what most textbooks (at least in America) teach, at least lower than say upperclassman history majors at the collegiate level. Except…. Wellerstein shows here – repeatedly – that this wasn’t exactly how that went down. Indeed, Wellerstein uses first hand sources from a few different key people – including Truman himself, where possible – to show that not only was there not one single decision to drop the bombs or where, but that Truman himself likely understood neither the weapon nor the target profile. (Which, let’s face it, both humanizes him a bit more – something Wellerstein is *great* at in this text, for what that’s worth – and should give most of us at least a touch of hope given more recent Presidents and their mental abilities.)

Then, in the period after the bombings, Truman – and the world – realize what has been done… and Truman is personally absolutely horrified. This is where and when the real struggles begin, and the “rest of the story” (as Paul Harvey famously proclaimed for so long) begins. And y’all, this part reads almost like a DC spy thriller/ court drama. High ranking people across several different realms within the US government all seeking to have their vision of the future made manifest, with Truman – and his famous “buck stops here” mantra – the focal point and the one both making decisions and seeking to establish his own preferred path.

Now, with all this lesser known history and with the entire point of the book showing a side of Truman most often ignored by history and historians, some may argue that this necessistates application of the Sagan Standard -that these are extraordinary claims that thus require extraordinary evidence. From my reading here and my understanding of both this text and the relevant histories as I know them, I don’t think this is true. This is a bit of a bombshell, yes, but is also fits pretty squarely in with known histories, it simply illuminates lesser known corners of those histories more properly. Thus, for me, the roughly 20% bibliography here sufficiently establishes a reasonable amount of documentation, and the frequent citations of the diaries and memoirs of those directly involved show the depth of research Wellerstein was able to bring to the table here.

Overall a very well written text that will completely rewrite your understanding of the post-WWII period as it relates to the use and control of atomic weapons – which seems to be Wellerstein’s very point, meaning he executed that point to near perfection.

Very much recommended.

This review of The Most Awful Responsibility by Alex Wellerstein was originally written on December 14, 2025.