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October 3, 2017
Our roundup of the best-reviewed self-published titles from BookLife authors.

In this month’s look at the best-reviewed self-published titles, we highlight contemporary fantasy, an oral history of the great migration, a tongue-in-cheek whodunit, and a whole lot more. 

Holding Out for a Zero by Heather Wardell

Synopsis: This is a riveting novel about childhood trauma and the harmful neuroses that can arise from unresolved guilt.

PW’s Takeaway: This book’s warning about how unresolved traumas can manifest in devastating ways will appeal to a wide readership, and the author’s authentic voice will prompt chills, chuckles, and empathy.

Comparable Titles: Some Women

Sample Line: “But being friends is a mistake. As bitter experience has taught me, getting too close to people is never a good idea.”

Read the review.

Strangehold by Rene Sears

Synopsis: Sears’s debut is a contemporary fantasy in which human magic wielders and magical fae live among mortals.

PW’s Takeaway: The author balances worldbuilding with solid characters and skillful descriptions. These elements, combined with a bit of romance, will enchant fantasy fans.

Comparable Titles: Karen Marie Moning’s the Fever series

Sample Line: “The general human population had been able to forget that Faerie had ever been real, that Faerie ever existed. Those of us with magic never had.”

Read the review.

 

Gertrude, Gumshoe: Murder at Goodwill by Robin Merrill

Synopsis: Gertrude stumbles upon a murder victim during a shopping trip.

PW’s Takeaway: Readers who enjoy tongue-in-cheek whodunits will find themselves grinning.

Comparable Titles: Schlock Homes

Read the review.

 

 

Shadow Mountain by Tess Collins

Synopsis: The son of the Watcher who protects Shadow Mountain finds himself called upon to rejuvenate the sacred peak.

PW’s Takeaway: Through narrative tension and vivid characters, Collins’s new series starts strong.

Comparable Titles: The White Queen

Read the review.

 

On a Burning Deck by Tom Jones

Synopsis: An oral history of the great migration told via the stories of the author’s family.

PW’s Takeaway: Jones’s book gives insights into the lives of white Southerners who migrated north before the Depression.

Comparable Titles: The Warmth of Other Suns

Read the review.

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