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

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!

 

The American Mission is a diplomatic thriller.

A diplomatic thriller set in a country where more died than in the Holocaust

At times it seems that Africa is at war with itself. The list of border conflicts, civil wars, insurrections, and terrorist attacks in recent decades seems endless. They're too numerous to mention, but three stand out for their scope and ferocity: the Rwanda genocide, Darfur, and the unending wars...
Cover image of "The Mugger," the second in a series of police procedurals

When mugging turns to murder

Novelists have been turning out stories about crime since the early 1800s, and private detectives entered into the picture not long after. But police investigators didn't gain a firm hold in the mystery and suspense genre until well into the twentieth century. And it wasn't until the 1950s that...
Cover image of "Clark and Division,"

Murder strikes a WWII Japanese American family

Aki Ito arrives in Chicago with her family in January 1944 expecting to find her glamorous big sister, Rose, waiting for them. Finally, the family is reuniting after two years in the desert concentration camp of Manzanar. But Rose is missing. And all too soon, Aki learns that her beloved sister...
Breaking Bad: Difficult Men by Brett Martin

Visit the writers’ rooms at The Sopranos, Breaking Bad, and Mad Men

A review of Difficult Men: Behind the Scenes of a Creative Revolution—From The Sopranos and The Wire to Mad Men and Breaking Bad, by Brett Martin. @@@@@ (5 out of 5). A tribute to the high-quality cable TV programming of the past decade.

Cover image of "New Pompeii,"

It’s not time travel. But it looks like it.

Visits to the past or future have figured in English-language literature since the 18th century. And when H. G. Wells' classic novel, The Time Machine, appeared in 1895, the trope made its debut in the science fiction genre. For decades, authors simply created stories around the assumption that...

A true-life account of a spectacular WWII prison camp rescue

Early in 1945, as the Nazi regime began to crumble and American soldiers, marines, and sailors relentlessly pushed ever closer toward the Japanese home islands, two thousand civilian prisoners of war, mostly Americans, suffered indescribable deprivation at the hands of a sadistic prison camp...
One Person No Vote is about Voter suppression gerrymandering and voter id laws.

Voter suppression, gerrymandering, and voter ID laws

Democrats tend to act as though the greatest harm that results from all the recent monkeying around with voter registration and election mechanics is that the Republican Party gains an unfair advantage. That's true, of course, as far as it goes. But what is often lost in the debate about voter...
An AI expert worries about the future in 2062.

An AI expert worries about the robots of the future

I believe that one day we will create machines that think," writes AI researcher Toby Walsh in his new book, 2062. "We will invent machines that are superior to us. They will be stronger, faster and more intelligent than us." However, he notes, they will think in ways very different from us. "A...
Dreyer's English advises how to write clear English.

A top copyeditor explains how to write clear English

So, chances are you're convinced you know perfectly well how to write clear English. But, just to be sure, take this quick quiz: How many of these rules do you follow when you write? Never begin a sentence with "and" or "but." Never split an infinitive. Never end a sentence with a preposition....

Stanley Milgram showed us humanity’s darker side

So, here's a biography of one academic social psychologist by another one, and guess what? It's fascinating! Most of the credit has to go to the subject of this book, Stanley Milgram, whose experiments without question made him the most famous social psychologist to ever trod the halls of academe....

My Most Popular Reviews

Weekly Reviews Delivered to You!

Mal Warwick - Book Reviews

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Mal Warwick

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