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!

 

Intelligent plants star in "Interference."

Humans, intelligent plants, brilliant insects, and that’s not all!

In Semiosis, Sue Burke introduced the human colonists of the planet Pax and the sentient alien species they encountered there. But Burke seems to have more in mind than simply writing a good science fiction novel. Apparently, she was eager to show off. Semiosis is a term from linguistics that...
In Over the Edge, the author demonstrates his psychological expertise.

Psychological expertise enlivens this crime thriller involving gifted children

Alex Delaware had left behind his practice as a child psychologist three years earlier. But when he receives a call in the middle of the night about a former patient, he doesn't hesitate to rush out to the psychiatric hospital where the young man was living. Except that Jamey Cadmus is no longer...
Cover image of "The Double Comfort Safari Club," a novel about two African detectives who are women

About cakes, cattle, and the passing of the old ways

For any reader looking for respite from the unrelenting violence of the world we live in, The Double Comfort Safari Club is a worthy antidote. It's nominally a novel about two African detectives who are women, but author Alexander McCall Smith's subject is Africa as he knows it. The characters in...
Cover image of "The Story of Ain't," one of the good books about dictionaries profiled here

Good books about dictionaries, libraries, and language

Words, words, words. How else might we perceive the reality we live in, much less convey what we see, think, or feel to another? Unfortunately, as the seventeenth century English philosopher John Locke once wrote, "So difficult it is to show the various meanings and imperfections of words...
The Talented Mr. Ripley is a classic mystery novel.

A classic mystery novel about a creepy criminal

If you check out just about any list of classic mystery novels, you're likely to come across The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith (1921-95). And it's easy to understand why. When it was published in 1955, it must have created a sensation. Kirkus published a brief spoiler review of the...
Cover image of "Player Piano," Kurt Vonnegut's warning about automation.

Kurt Vonnegut’s warning about automation in his first published novel

Kurt Vonnegut was never willing to concede that he wrote science fiction. Though it's difficult to read his work without drawing that conclusion anyway, his many novels could also be considered as social commentary. Biting commentary, at that. So it goes with his first published novel, Player...
Cover image of "The War Girls,"

Life in wartime Warsaw before the Ghetto Uprising

Estimated reading time: 4 minutes The "war girls" of the title are three young Polish women whose lives we follow from the Nazi invasion to the outbreak of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in April 1943. Stefa Majewski is Jewish. Stefa lives in the city with her parents, Izreal and Rose, and her teenage...
Two love affairs and espionage during Prague Spring dominate this excellent novel.

A tale of love and espionage during Prague Spring

If you read the marketing material, you'll think that Prague Spring is an espionage novel. But it’s only that up to a point. More properly, the book is an historical novel set in Prague in 1968, when the reformist government led by Alexander Dubček departed from the path of hard-line...
"Educated" by Tara Westover is about growing up among survivalists.

“Educated” by Tara Westover: A remarkably candid memoir about growing up survivalist

If you grew up in a comfortable middle-class home, as I did, you may be shocked by Tara Westover's Educated, an account of her childhood and adolescence in a Mormon survivalist family in Idaho. I was. Again and again, I found my jaw dropping at the cruelty, ignorance, and superstition surrounding...
Cover image of "My Father's House," a novel about the WWII Vatican Escape Line

The WWII Vatican Escape Line for Jews and Allied POWs

Oskar Schindler and Raoul Wallenberg are the best known of the 28,000 Righteous Among the Nations. All were non-Jews from fifty-one countries recognized by Israel's holocaust museum, Yad Vashem. The Irish priest Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty is much less well known, and joined the list only in 2017....

My Most Popular Reviews

Weekly Reviews Delivered to You!

Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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