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Discover Your Next Favourite Author


A.G. Rodriguez: Writing with Heart, Humour, and a Broken Mop
In a sci-fi market often driven by high drama and even higher stakes, Rodriguez offers something different. He's funny, messy, character-driven, and emotionally honest.


Review: Immortal by Sue Lynn Tan
A sweeping, romantic fantasy about sacrifice, love, and the weight of destiny, Immortal builds on the mythic beauty of Daughter of the Moon Goddess while standing powerfully on its own.


Review: The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley
A melancholy, clever, deeply human time-travel novel about bureaucracy, romance, and the people history forgets.


Review: Space Brooms!
If you’ve ever wished that Hitchhiker’s Guide had more janitors and slightly more laser cows, Space Brooms! might be your new favourite thing.


Gunnawah by Ronni Salt
Ronni Salt’s debut is not just a thriller. It is a slow reckoning. Gunnawah explores organised crime, corruption, and the kind of silence that keeps everything in place.


The Murder Show by Matt Goldman
The Murder Show is a sleek, satisfying thriller with brains, heart, and bite. You’ll race through it—and then want to talk about it.


The Collaborators by Michael Idov
The Collaborators is a brilliant, layered novel about art, power, and the lies we tell ourselves to survive. Funny, disturbing, and unsettlingly relevant.


First Love Language by Stefany Valentine
A sweet, funny, and emotionally resonant YA romance about identity, language, and learning to be loved as you are.


Bad Little Bride by Meagan Brandy
Explosive, indulgent, and just a little bit wicked, Bad Little Bride by Meagan Brandy takes the classic marriage-of-convenience trope and sets it on fire.


Once Smitten, Twice Shy (Wilmot Sisters)
A quiet, comforting romance that chooses emotional honesty over grand gestures. Thoughtful, inclusive, and easy to love.


Greenteeth by Molly O’Neill
A darkly playful debut that blends gothic folklore with girlhood trauma, Greenteeth is part monster tale, part feminist reckoning, and entirely ungovernable.


Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Certain books ignite a spark that spreads like wildfire among readers. Rebecca Yarros’s Fourth Wing is one such novel.


The Lamb by Lucy Rose
A body remembers. Long after the bruises fade. Long after the house is sold. Long after you’ve decided you are fine now.


At Dark I Become Loathsome by Eric LaRocca
A bleak, beautiful horror novella that blends trauma, grief, and strange tenderness into something uniquely unsettling.


Review: Honeysuckle and Bone by Trisha Tobias
A lush, haunting YA gothic that wraps grief, family secrets, and quiet horror inside the beauty of a Caribbean paradise.
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