The Latest

SCIENCE FICTION

First Contact deep in the Amazon rainforest

First Contact deep in the Amazon rainforest

What can I say about a book that could have been great but isn't? In Entropy, the 31st entry in his long-running series of standalone novels about First Contact with alien intelligence, Australian author Peter Cawdron tells a gripping story about the crash of a private jet deep...

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MYSTERIES & THRILLERS

Travis McGee stumbles into a massive financial fraud

Travis McGee stumbles into a massive financial fraud

He calls himself a beach bum. Travis McGee lives on a houseboat in Fort Lauderdale and only works when he's running out of money. Then he becomes a "salvage consultant," helping someone who's been robbed blind. He'll steal back the money or valuables—for half the take. But this...

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NONFICTION

How cities have built civilization and shaped human history

How cities have built civilization and shaped human history

When I was born in 1941, about six months before the United States entered World War II, the world's three largest cities were New York, Tokyo, and London (which had been #2 before the Blitz). None of the three housed even close to 10 million people. As of 2025, the three...

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Popular Fiction

A brilliant novel of love, hope, and the Rwanda genocide

A brilliant novel of love, hope, and the Rwanda genocide

Today, Rwanda is one of the brightest lights in Africa. The economy is booming. Corruption is rare. Government delivers services. The streets of Kigali, the capital, are clean. It's even easy to open a business. Thirty years ago the country was in chaos, as this award-winning...

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Explore My “BEST OF the category” selections

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE BOOK?

When people ask me that question, I never know what to say. In a lifetime of reading, I’ve read many thousands of books. And I’ve reviewed well over 2,000 of them on this site. Picking just one as a “favorite,” or even a handful of them, makes no sense to me.

The problem is, I read for many different reasons. Perhaps you do, too. And I read many different sorts of books. Mysteries and thrillers. Popular fiction, especially historical fiction. Science fiction.

And nonfiction, history in particular. You’ll find hundreds of reviews in every one of those categories on this site.

Look to the right for a rotating random selection culled from throughout this site.

Happy reading!

 

Cover image of "The Determined Spy,"

He launched the CIA’s regime change ops in Iran and Guatemala

Throughout its eight-decade history, the Central Intelligence Agency has racked up an extraordinary number of clandestine operations gone wrong. Of course, the agency's defenders assert we don't know about the many successes that have never seen the light of day as well as a few that have. One,...
Cover image of "The First World War," a history of World War I

They called it the Great War, and so it was

Historians frequently write of "the Long Nineteenth Century" from 1789 to 1914. In The First World War, the acclaimed military historian John Keegan shows how dramatically the events of 1914 to 1918 capped that period. The "Great War" led to the dismemberment of the four empires that had defined...
Cover image of "IQ," a novel about a crimesolver

Sherlock in the hood: inner-city crimesolver

Most readers of detective fiction are well educated and live in comfortable circumstances. So it's not surprising that most novels about people solving crimes involve well-educated investigators who live in at least middle-class homes. There are many exceptions, of course. George Pelecanos...
Cover image of "Heartstone,"

Two troubling legal cases in Henry VIII’s England

London reels from increasingly frantic reports that the French are assembling a massive invasion fleet across the Channel. Officers roam the streets in search of young men to press into service for the army. And, to pay for the impending war, the king has debased the currency again, causing havoc...

The best spy novelists writing today

The first espionage novels appeared early in the 19th century with the publication of James Fenimore Cooper's The Spy in 1821 and The Bravo in 1831. A few other notable titles were published in the ensuing decades, and Sherlock Holmes got into the act around the turn of the century...
Fjällbacka series: The Ice Princess by Camilla Lackberg

The Fjällbacka series of Swedish thrillers from Camilla Läckberg

In the Fjällbacka series of detective novels, a brilliant young police investigator teams up with a local true crime author to take on the most baffling murder cases that crop up in that small Swedish coastal town and the nearby countryside. The novels comprise one of the best written and most...
This is a Nancy Pelosi biography.

A critical but admiring biography of Nancy Pelosi

She has one of the most recognizable names in America. Yet far too few Americans have more than the most trivial understanding of who she is and where she comes from. And that ignorance is compounded by a relentless, years-long smear campaign by the Right Wing—a campaign that has only intensified...
Cover image of "The Lady from Zagreb," a novel about a detective in Nazi Germany

Cynicism and romanticism in Nazi Germany

Philip Kerr has written a series of eleven novels featuring homicide detective Bernie Gunther in Nazi Germany. I hope there will be more. It's hard to resist characters who would think such things as this: "Being a Berlin cop in 1942 was a little like putting down mousetraps in a cage full of...
Agent Sonya was a Soviet spy in World War II.

The extraordinary Soviet spy who gave Stalin the bomb

Ben MacIntyre is one of the most prolific producers of nonfiction books about espionage in the English language. Of the thirteen books he's written to date, nearly all are about spies, saboteurs, and partisans, and five of those books have been made into documentaries by the BBC. In his latest...
Cover image of "The Immortal Irishman," a book about the "Muslim immigrants" of the 19th century

The Irish: the “Muslim immigrants” of the nineteenth century

In prose of unusual grace, Timothy Egan tells the tale of The Immortal Irishman: The Irish Revolutionary Who Became an American Hero. His subject is Thomas Francis Meagher (pronounced "Mar"). At the age of forty-three, he vanished mysteriously, a victim of drowning in the Missouri River in Montana...

My Most Popular Reviews

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Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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