Monday, February 2, 2026

#Review - A Fate So Cold by Amanda Foody and C.L. Herman #YA #Fantasy

Series:
 
A Fate So Cold (#1)
Format: 432 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: November 4, 2025
Publisher: Tor Teen
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult / Dark Fantasy

TWO CHOSEN ONES, ONE CHOICE: THE WORLD OR EACH OTHER.

In Alderland, nothing is feared more than Winter.

For six brutal weeks, Winter raged, destroying towns and claiming lives. Even after it ended, to shiver was a sign of bad luck.

Dom has witnessed the price of power firsthand and sworn never to seek it—but destiny has not granted him a choice. The most feared of Living Wands, Valmordion, has awakened and only disaster will follow. And when it chooses Dom to wield it, he is terrified.

Ellery Caldwell has spent a lifetime diligently striving to live up to all the expectations resting in her shoulders—and yet she’s relieved when Valmordion refuses her. But her comfort briskly fades when she accidentally creates the first Winter wand in existence, a feat no magician has accomplished in known memory.

Now, as the two most powerful magicians in Alderland, Domenic and Ellery are faced with the responsibility of discovering an apocalyptic cataclysm and thwarting it. Icy natural disasters, political unrest, and forbidden romance complicate an already seemingly impossible task—and when they discover a darker truth, they’ll be forced to choose: the world, or each other.


A Fate So Cold is the first installment in authors Amanda Foody and C.L. Herman's A Fate So Cold duology, the same duo that gave us the All of Us Villains series. This book features two narrators: 18-year-old Dominic Barrow and 19-year-old Emery Caldwell. Dominic is the kid in class who has all sorts of potential but plays the part of someone who doesn't care. Emery is at the top of her class, but carries a memory of her past that weighs her down. 

A Fate So Cold is a study of contrasts: destiny and choice; duty and desire; isolation and belonging; bitter cold and comforting warmth. The story unfolds in a world divided by eternal seasonal conflict, where Summer and Winter stand as opposing forces locked in a bitter, centuries-old war. When Winter arrives, it arrives with devastation that lasts 6 weeks. Magic revolves around bonding with seasonal champions, wielders who channel immense power tied to heat/light versus cold/darkness. 

Dominic (aligned with Summer's domain) and Ellery (tied to Winter) are thrust into roles far larger than themselves—one as a prophesied champion, the other as something more subversive and dangerous, after Ellery somehow manages to create the first new wand in a thousand years. Their paths collide in a training academy-like setting that echoes shades of The Hunger Games arenas crossed with late-era Harry Potter tension, complete with rivalries, betrayals, and a magic system that feels both innovative and deeply atmospheric. 

The characters are the heart of the book. Dominic and Ellery are complex, flawed, and deeply traumatized—recovering from past losses that shape their guarded natures. Their slow-burn dynamic (more yearning and angst than outright romance) carries real emotional weight, though some readers have noted the shift from tension to connection can feel abrupt after prolonged one-sided pining. The supporting cast adds depth, with academy politics and rival champions providing plenty of intrigue and moral grayness. 

What I appreciated most about A Fate So Cold is its avoidance of the overused enemies-to-lovers trope dominating the market right now. Instead, we get two chosen ones working together with genuine communication, not just with each other, but also with the magic committee—as they piece together prophecies to prevent their world from being frozen over. You can expect some twists and turns and some shocks as well. You can also expect a cliffhanger ending that will lead into the series finale. 



DOMENIC SUMMER

Domenic Barrow didn’t know if he loved magic enough to die for it.

He trudged through the forest, the glow of his wand so feeble he didn’t catch the puddle ahead until his loafer sank deep into mud. But he didn’t risk feeding the wand more magic. Already its cheap plywood had begun to splinter, and the grit of its sawdust caked between his fingers, flaking like dead skin. If he’d known the night would require an expedition, he would’ve packed a spare.

“Would you please just tell me where we’re going?” he asked.

“You promised to keep an open mind,” Hanna said, several paces ahead of him.

“That was before I started to wonder if by ‘intervention’ you meant dragging me out here to murder me.”

“Oh, don’t be so dramatic.”

“To kidnap me, then?”

“If I’d fancied kidnapping you, you’d already be in the trunk of my car.”

Domenic huffed but didn’t dispute it. After all, nothing about his flimsy training wand resembled the one she carried. Its pale aspen shaft curled underneath itself like an overgrown fingernail, and the dark knots in the handle looked uncannily like eyes, squinting into the golden radiance of Hanna’s enchantment. Whereas his wand’s romantic origins began on a conveyor belt, destined only to be drained and discarded—about the furthest thing from real magic, Domenic had always felt—Hanna’s was so ancient to be called an artifact, so powerful to be called notorious, so singular that it even bore a name.

Syarthis.

Syarthis was a Living Wand, an everlasting instrument that bonded to a sole wielder until their death, then passed onto successor after successor—an honor students such as Domenic devoted their lives to attaining.

Of the 536 Living Wands in Alderland, only forty-two did not currently bear a wielder. And, so Domenic suspected, those forty-two wands were the subject of his intervention tonight.

“So,” Hanna drawled, “how’s school going?”

“Spectacular, as always.” For the fifth year running, Domenic had clinched the title of dead bottom of his class.

“Mhm. You still holding your breath for that random old magician to keel over?”

“I wouldn’t—” He cursed as he stumbled over a tree root. “I wouldn’t put it like that.”

“Well, how would you put it?”

Domenic had never been good at phrasing his thoughts into words. He settled with: “I think Octorion would suit me, is all.”

“Then kill him.” After a pause, Hanna chuckled. “Kidding. Kidding.”

Domenic wanted to believe her. And he did—he did. But Hanna had changed in the five years since she’d bonded with Syarthis and joined the Magicians Order. Gone was the girl who’d used a faded postcard of Gallamere as a bookmark, who’d insisted their first task upon arrival was hiking up the city’s mountainside to compare the sepia skyline to the real view. Now Hanna didn’t stop to admire much of anything. Redness tinged her brown eyes from nights spent poring over moldy parchment. Her fair skin had gone ashen. Her nails were bitten to their beds, her lips perpetually scabbed, as if she chewed on them past the point of drawing blood.

Of course, wielding Syarthis would change anyone.

“So is that really your plan, to wait for him to die, then wait another year after that?” Hanna asked. A magician could only bond with a Living Wand on the death day of its previous wielder. So unless a student was present for that wielder’s final breath—as Hanna had been—another year needed to lapse before testing whether they were a match.

Domenic cringed as he sank into another puddle. His socks were soaked. “There are worse plans.”

“What about Ravfiri? Its vigil is on the twenty-eighth, isn’t it?”

“Ravfiri is volatile.”

“No, Ravfiri is powerful. Those words don’t mean the same thing.”

This wasn’t the first time Hanna had suggested Ravfiri to Domenic—or Pyrrinisus, or Ulthrax, or Quellbarrow. They were all incredible wands, ones many of his peers dreamed of wielding.

But Domenic wasn’t like his peers.

To the young magicians of the Order’s academy, Hanna Mayes was the prodigy and Domenic Barrow the enigma. His sightings in class were few and far between, but what he did with his spare time, no one could say. Many considered him lazy. Even more assumed him troubled—not that anyone blamed him for it, of course. And though his disheveled russet hair and exceptionally freckled fair skin weren’t handsome in the conventional sense, amid a school obsessed with prestige, he had the unique allure of a bad decision—one that, if you believed the gossip, a great many had made.

Before Domenic could muster a response, the forest ended at a cement tunnel in the base of a cliffside. Ropes crisscrossed its entrance, hung with a sign that warned DANGER–KEEP OUT.

While Hanna ducked beneath it, Domenic asked, “What is this place?”

“You’ll see.”

“But the sign … Are we gonna get in trouble for this?”

“Careful. You wouldn’t want to ruin that whole bad-boy thing you’ve got going on.”

“I’m being serious, Hanna.”

“So am I. Do you know how hard it is to keep a straight face when I hear what they say about you? The boy who always carried flowers in his pocket, now apparently arguing with his teachers? Sleeping with half his class? Your reputation suits you less than Octorion.”

Even if Domenic’s persona was exaggerated, he didn’t care. Anything was better than the alternative. “Whatever. First you drag me into the woods in the middle of the night. Then you won’t tell me anything. And now we’re, what, trespassing? Well, I’m done. I only agreed to this because I never see you anymore. And if you were ever around, you’d know I’m fine! I don’t need your help. I don’t need anyone’s help.”

As he spun to storm off, Hanna seized his wrist and twisted him back around to face her.

“I’m sorry I’m never home anymore,” she rasped. “But I worry about you, and—”

“I told you. I’m fine.”

“I know you better than that.”

He wrenched his hand away. “It’s late. I’m going home.”

“Wait. Please, Dom? For me?”

Domenic’s indignation withered, but it didn’t die. He leaned against a tree, pressed his head against it until the bark bit into the vulnerable meeting point between neck and skull. It smelled like Summer out here. Real Summer. Like mountain moss and honeysuckle and whispered secrets that misted the humid air. Not at all like the sweating asphalt and exhaust fumes he’d grown used to.

“The City of Magic” was Gallamere’s nickname. It didn’t live up to it.

“I swear this will all make sense if you just come with me. If you trust me.” When Domenic still didn’t respond, Hanna rummaged through her pockets until she procured a packet of bubble gum. She slid out two foiled sticks, opening the first for herself and offering the second to him. “Are you really gonna make me kidnap you?”

He snatched it and ripped off the wrapper. He chewed unhappily. “Fine.”

They started into the tunnel, the light from their wands shimmering off the damp floor—Syarthis’s a blazing gold, Domenic’s an artificial, almost fluorescent white. Domenic guessed the tunnel burrowed beneath the city, deep within the mountain. And indeed, within minutes, a passing subway rumbled overhead, like the tossing and turning of a sleeping giant.




Friday, January 30, 2026

#Review - Elusive by Genevieve Cogman #Fantasy #Historical

Series:
 
The Scarlet Revolution (#2)
Format: Paperback, 380 pages
Release Date: May 06, 2025
Publisher: Tor
Source: Library
Genre: Historical / Fantasy

In Revolutionary France, the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel faces vampires fighting for power and a devastating betrayal from one of their allies. Elusive is the thrilling, fast-paced sequel to Genevieve Cogman's Sunday Times bestseller, Scarlet.

Revolutionary France is full of blood and bite, as vampires plot for power. Featuring Genevieve Cogman’s trademark wit and fast-paced plotting, Elusive is the second book in the Sunday Times bestselling Scarlet Revolution trilogy.

Eleanor, once a lowly English maid, is now a member of the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel, known for their daring deeds and rescuing aristocrat vampires from the guillotine.

Eleanor and the League are investigating the disappearance of Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand, the notorious French statesman and diplomat. But they soon uncover two vampire parties feuding for power, and learn that Talleyrand's disappearance is part of a bigger, more dangerous scheme – one that threatens to throw France into bloody chaos . . .





Genevieve Cogman's Elusive is the second installment in the author's The Scarlett Revolution series. Elusive continues the alternate-history adventure that mashes up the French Revolution, vampire politics, and the classic Scarlet Pimpernel legend. The story picks up with Eleanor Dalton, the former English maid who, in the first book, dramatically rose from servitude to become a full member of the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel. While the book begins in London, it returns to Paris for key moments.

The League—led by the enigmatic Sir Percy Blakeney—specializes in daring rescues of aristocratic vampires targeted by revolutionary forces. In Elusive, the plot kicks off when the notorious French diplomat Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand mysteriously vanishes. The League mobilizes to find him, suspecting foul play tied to the chaotic power struggles in revolutionary France. What Eleanor and her comrades uncover is far more dangerous than a simple kidnapping: two rival vampire factions are locked in a deadly contest for dominance, and Talleyrand's disappearance is just one piece of a larger scheme that could plunge France (and potentially beyond) into even greater bloodshed and chaos. 

The narrative weaves espionage, rescues, betrayals, and moral dilemmas as Eleanor navigates her growing role in the League, her evolving relationships with characters like Percy and other members, and her own personal growth. The French Revolution setting feels vivid and authentic (down to political maneuvering and period atmosphere), while the vampire society adds a layer of intrigue and gothic flair. The "blood and bite" tagline isn't just marketing; vampire politics and their immortality-fueled ambitions drive much of the tension. 

Eleanor's character arc is one of the book's strongest aspects along with her relationship with Anima, a former mage who was likely killed by vampires 500 years ago. In Scarlet, she was the newcomer finding her feet; here, she's more confident but still grapples with feeling like an outsider at times, chafing against restrictions placed on her (as a woman and former servant in a high-stakes aristocratic operation). Her internal reflections and determination to have a voice in plans add emotional depth amid the swashbuckling action. 

Once the conspiracy unfolds and the League launches operations, the momentum picks up considerably with classic Cogman set pieces: clever disguises, narrow escapes, tense confrontations, and satisfying twists. The book balances adventure, light romance threads, and political scheming without feeling overcrowded. The author once again uses iconic historical figures to tell the story, but also leaves a cliffhanger ending, ensuring that if you have read the first two books, you will have to read the next one as well. 




Monday, January 26, 2026

#Review - The Younger Gods by Katie Shepard #Fantasy #Romance

Series:
 
The Night-Singers Duology
Format: 464 pages, Paperback
Release Date: January 13, 2026
Publisher: Ace
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance

Danger looms when a former priestess sails to the realm of the dead to find her fallen lover, only to discover the gods she thought she defeated are preparing for war.

Iona Night-Singer thought she’d overthrown the gods. Her mortal rebellion eked out a painful victory by using the gods’ own powers against them—though she lost her betrothed, Taran, in a final battle with the god of death. Months later, the war doesn’t feel over. Not with Taran gone. Especially not when the gods still answer the prayers she sings.

Angry, grieving, and with a gnawing dread that the gods will return, Iona strikes a deal with her former patron goddess: if Iona can convince Taran to follow her home from the Underworld, he’ll be free to live again. If she fails, they’ll both be trapped there forever.

No sooner does she find him, she makes a horrible discovery. The dead gods have been reborn, they are plotting revenge—and Taran, it seems, was always one of them. This reincarnated trickster god with Taran’s face no longer remembers her or the war they fought together, and she doubts not just his loyalties but his love.

Determined to stop the next war without revealing her part in the last one, Iona enters her deadliest battle yet, one where she fights to bring Taran home without him even knowing it.



The Younger Gods, by Katie Shepard, is the first of a two-part duology called The Night-Singer Duology. This story is the author's romantasy debut in the epic fantasy space, blending Greek-inspired mythology, a gender-swapped Orpheus-and-Eurydice retelling, high-stakes adventure, and deeply emotional romance. At its core, the story follows Iona, a former priestess who once led a rebellion against the tyrannical gods—particularly the God of Death—and seemingly won. 

But victory came at a devastating personal cost: the death of her beloved betrothed, Taran. Refusing to accept his loss, Iona embarks on a perilous journey to the Underworld (the realm of the dead) to bring him back. What begins as a classic descent-into-hell-for-love quest quickly spirals into something far more complex and dangerous. In the land of the dead, Iona discovers that the gods she believed defeated are not gone—they've been reborn as the "younger gods," scheming revenge and preparing for war. 

Even more shattering, Taran may not be the mortal man she loved; he could be the reincarnated form of a trickster god, with no memory of their shared past or their relationship. The worldbuilding feels rich and lived-in: a complex religious system, vivid depictions of the Underworld, and a pantheon of gods who are convincingly vicious, petty, cruel, and manipulative—far from benevolent Olympians. The gods' cruelty and the lingering consequences of Iona's rebellion add moral ambiguity that elevates the stakes beyond simple good vs. evil. 

Iona is a compelling protagonist—fierce, determined, guilt-ridden, and deeply human in her flaws. Her grief and love for Taran feel raw and authentic, driving the book's emotional core. Taran, as the potential trickster god, brings sharp banter, charisma, and layers of mystery; their chemistry crackles with tension, especially as questions of identity, memory, and trust complicate their reunion. Side characters, including scheming deities and allies in the Underworld, add depth and keep the plot twisting, including a twisted cliffhanger ending. 




Monday, January 19, 2026

#Review - No One Knew by Kendra Elliot #Thriller #Suspense

Series:
 
Noelle Marshall (#2)
Format: 317 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: January 6, 2026
Publisher: Montlake
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thriller, Suspense

For a detective and an FBI agent, two seemingly disparate murder investigations collide with a twist in an explosive novel of suspense by a Wall Street Journal bestselling author.

In the crisp mountain air of central Oregon, a teenage girl’s search for discarded cans leads to a horrifying discovery: a body, brutally murdered and abandoned in the woods. The case falls to Deschutes County Detective Noelle Marshall, who finds herself navigating a community steeped in secrets, suspicion, and distrust of outsiders—especially law enforcement.

Miles away, FBI Special Agent Max Rhodes investigates a different kind of darkness—chatter about a violent uprising from a shadowy militia group preparing for war. The two cases seem worlds apart. But as Noelle digs into the murdered man’s past and Max closes in on the source of the terror plot, their paths begin to converge in a terrifying way. This was no random killing. It was a message. A merciless killer and a hidden army are operating in the same shadows, and finding the link between them is the only thing standing between a single murder and a full-blown massacre.



No One Knew is the second installment in author Kendra Elliot's Noelle Marshall series. The story is told via Detective Noelle Marshall, Special Agent Max Rhodes, and Emma Chambers, a young woman who finds a dead body that triggers a series of events that include Special Agent Mercy Kilpatrick and Police Chief Truman Daly to stop a possible terrorist attack around Bend, Oregon. The story opens with a haunting discovery: a lonely teenage girl, scavenging for discarded cans in the woods to scrape together a living, stumbles upon a brutally murdered body. 

This chilling find pulls Deschutes County Detective Noelle Marshall into a complex investigation in a tight-knit community riddled with secrets, suspicion, and deep-seated distrust of law enforcement. Meanwhile, FBI Special Agent Max Rhodes (Noelle's romantic interest from the first book) is tracking ominous online chatter about a violent uprising planned by a shadowy militia group gearing up for war. What initially appear to be two unrelated cases slowly converge in shocking ways, revealing that the murder was no random act—it was a deliberate message, and the stakes quickly escalate from a single homicide to the threat of a full-scale massacre. 

Noelle Marshall continues to be a standout protagonist: tough, intelligent, and layered with personal history that makes her relatable. Her evolving relationship with Max adds emotional depth without overwhelming the suspense—it's sweet, realistic, and full of chemistry. The teenage witness, Emma, is heartbreakingly well-drawn; her loneliness and resilience steal the show and add a poignant human element to the thriller plot. The book explores timely issues like militia extremism, community distrust of authorities, and the power of unlikely alliances. 

Yet it also emphasizes hope, compassion, and people stepping up for one another. I find it interesting that both Noelle and Max have painful past histories. Noelle is still experiencing issues that force her to write everything down, while Max's family is still angry at him for something that happened 12 years ago, which makes him hunted by a villain in this story. This series is not finished. Elliot posted that she intends to continue Noelle's story, and I am all for it. I am looking forward to seeing Max's family issues resolved. I am looking forward to more of Mercy and Truman as well. 




Friday, January 16, 2026

#Review - Secrets You Can't Keep by Debra Webb #Mystery #Suspense

Series:
 
Vera Boyett (#3)
Format: 319 pages, Paperback
Release Date: December 9, 2025
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Source: Publisher
Genre: Mystery, Suspense

From USA Today bestselling author Debra Webb comes crime analyst Vera Boyett’s next case—a triple homicide that tears a small town apart…and an accident that could do worse to her family.

A cabin in the woods. Three dead, one in critical condition. Property owned by not just any Tennessee local, but one of the richest men in the country.

Vera Boyett isn’t quite sure what it means. But that’s why Sheriff Gray “Bent” Benton called her: to figure it out. Criminal analysis is what she does best. Even when the town is in panicked shambles, even when the case is more delicate than most…and even when it’s not the only case on her plate.

Vera’s family is caught in a deadly mess of its own. And while her pregnant sister seems an unlikely culprit, each new detail seems to point to her guilt. Desperate to protect her, Vera vows to find out what really happened.

As evidence emerges in both cases, Vera and Bent work to unravel a dangerous web of secrets to get to the truth. But their investigations reveal more than they ever expected…


Secrets You Can't Keep is the third installment in author Debra Webb's Vera Boyett series. The book introduces the two storylines: one of the multiple murders at the cabin of the area’s local billionaire and the second, the death of the mother-in-law of Vera’s little sister, Luna. Vera, now a Crime Scene Analyst Consultant in Tennessee, works with Sheriff Bent on the murder investigation of Thomas Wilton and two of his guests. The story is told through the eyes of Vera, Bent, Luna, and a fourth character I won't spoil. 

Upon arriving at the scene of the murder of Thomas Wilton and two other guests, Vera discovers that Alicia is still alive (even though she will spend most of the novel in a coma and as a suspect, since a murder weapon was found under her body). The death toll and the number of suspects grow the deeper Bent and Vera get into the investigation, and the more twisted the story becomes. Vera, who is very intuitive, knows she's being played and ends up getting hurt. 

Simultaneously, Vera soon discovers that she has another death on her hands when she learns that her younger sister Luna found her husband's mother, Jackie, dead at the bottom of the stairs when Luna returned from the store. Her sister, Luna, is very pregnant with her first child and the innocent sister in the Boyett family. Allegedly, Jackie attacked Luna, who managed to survive with a few bruises. To make matters more twisted, Luna's father-in-law had a massive heart attack at the time of Jackie's murder. 

Vera, Eve, and Luna have been hounded by something that happened many years ago, while Luna seems to be the only sister untouched by those events, Vera and Eve know the community knows they don't have clean hands. We also have the deepening relationship between Vera and Bent, which ends up in a comfortable position by the time the story ends. Like Bent, I have said this before, and I will say it again, Vera always seems to put her own life on the line, and sometimes ends up hurt. Lastly, I am not sure if this is the last in the series, which it appears to be, but one of the storylines wasn't finished as far as I am concerned, and no, I am not going to spoil what happens. 




Tuesday, January 6, 2026

#Review - The Unraveling of Julia by Lisa Scottoline #Thriller #Suspense

Series:
 Standalone
Format: 
400 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: July 15, 2025
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Source: Publisher
Genre: Thriller / Suspense

One awful night, Julia Pritzker witnesses the murder of her beloved husband during a mugging on a Philadelphia street. Later, while grieving him, she’s suddenly fearful that her fate is written in the stars, not held in her own hands.
 
Her luck seems to change when stunning news arrives from Italy, informing her that she’s inherited a fortune, a Tuscan villa, and a vineyard. But she’s mystified by her Italian benefactor, a total stranger named Emilia Rossi. She flies to Tuscany for answers.
 
There, Julia learns that Rossi suffered from delusions of grandeur, believing herself to be a descendant of Caterina Sforza, a powerful Renaissance duchess. Julia doubts that is true, but she can’t deny the uncanny resemblance between her, Caterina, and Rossi. She starts to unearth eerie parallels between them—and disturbing secrets.
 
Before long, Julia suspects she’s being followed and experiences disorienting delusions of her own. Even meeting a romantic Florentine doesn’t quiet her unease. Then events turn deadly, and Julia finds herself in a harrowing struggle for sanity and survival.


Lisa Scottoline, a prolific author known for her legal thrillers and standalone suspense novels, ventures into bolder gothic territory with The Unraveling of Julia. This psychological thriller follows Julia Pritzker, a young widow grappling with profound grief after witnessing her husband Mike's brutal murder during a mugging in Philadelphia. Believing herself cursed—especially after her horoscope seems to predict the tragedy—Julia spirals into depression and agoraphobia. 

An unexpected inheritance from a stranger, Emilia Rossi, offers a lifeline: a crumbling Tuscan villa and vineyard in Chianti, along with a substantial fortune. Hoping Emilia might be a biological relative (Julia was adopted), she travels to Italy to uncover the truth, only to find herself entangled in secrets, dangers, and questions about her own sanity. The Tuscan setting is vividly rendered, transporting readers to sun-drenched hills, wild vineyards, and historic sites tied to figures like Caterina Sforza, a fierce Renaissance warrior whose story parallels Julia's journey of resilience. 

The novel explores themes of grief, identity, ancestral echoes, female empowerment, and the blurred line between reality and delusion, with light supernatural touches involving astrology, visions, and premonitions that add an ethereal layer without overwhelming the plot. Julia is a compelling protagonist—vulnerable yet determined—as she confronts loss and seeks rebirth. Her emotional arc, from bedridden despair to fierce self-discovery, feels authentic and poignant. 

Supporting characters, including potential romantic interests and enigmatic caretakers, add depth and suspicion. The exploration of how past traumas and ancestral histories resonate in the present is thoughtfully handled. Excellent twists keep readers guessing, with dashes of romance providing emotional balance. The subtle astrology elements explore sanity versus madness in a fresh way.





Wednesday, December 17, 2025

#Review - Blood Oath by Steve Urszenyi #Thriller #Espionage

Series:
 
Special Agent Alexandra Martel (#3)
Format: 304 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: November 18, 2025
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Espionage, Thriller

In this action-packed thriller, Special Agent Alex Martel's fight becomes personal when her father is abducted by rebel forces.

In the heart of Africa, CIA Special Agent Alexandra Martel’s safari with her father spirals into a deadly game of betrayal when he is kidnapped by rebels. Suddenly, her peaceful Serengeti vacation transforms into a desperate race against time. As the general is held by local rebels, Russian mercenaries and Chinese MSS operatives descend on East Africa, all hunting the military secrets locked in her father’s mind.

Alex assembles an elite team to navigate the treacherous terrain, but complications arise when her CIA boss, Caleb, shows up unexpectedly, stirring feelings she’s tried to bury since her husband’s death. As competing forces close in, Alex uncovers betrayals stretching from the Serengeti to the highest levels of global intelligence. Trust becomes as scarce as water in the African savanna.

With enemies converging from all sides, Alex must embrace her darkest instincts to save her father. But in a world where allies become enemies, and nothing is as it seems, how much of herself is she willing to sacrifice to honor the bonds of blood?


Blood Oath is the 3rd installment in author Steve Urszenyi's Special Agent Alexandra Martel series. Special Agent Alex Martel, a tough, skilled CIA paramilitary operative, Former FBI Agent, and sharpshooter who was awarded both the Purple Heart and Silver Star, is finally taking a well-deserved break: a photography safari in Tanzania's Serengeti National Park with her retired general father, David Martel. What begins as a peaceful father-daughter bonding trip quickly escalates into chaos when her father is kidnapped by rebel forces.

After her mother died unexpectedly, Alex and David formed a bond that neither would leave the other behind for any reason. "Blood of my blood, until my last breath." Complications arrive when her CIA boss, Caleb, arrives unexpectedly. Caleb and Alex have worked together for about a year, and Caleb wants more from their relationship. After David is kidnapped, they assemble an elite team to rescue the general, but betrayals are in abundance. Who can Alex trust? Nothing is as it seems. As Russian mercenaries and Chinese operatives swarm the region, pursuing sensitive military secrets held by David, Alex is thrust into a desperate rescue mission. 

Trust is scarce in this treacherous environment, forcing Alex to confront betrayals, alliances of convenience, and her own limits. The story explores themes of family bonds, honor, sacrifice, and the blurred lines between right and wrong in the shadowy world of international intrigue. Nearly everyone had agendas, and the novel features deception, betrayal, espionage, power, protecting political careers, national security, compromise, cooperation, and more. Alex Martel remains one of the standout heroines in contemporary thrillers. 

She's fiercely competent—a decorated sniper, combat medic, and operative—yet Urszenyi humanizes her by exposing her emotional vulnerabilities without diminishing her strength. This book makes her journey deeply personal, amplifying the stakes as she fights not just for duty, but for family. Supporting characters, including her father and various allies/antagonists, feel grounded and multifaceted, adding layers to the conflict. The ending of this book leaves hope that the author will write another novel. Too many secrets were exposed to leave them unanswered.



CHAPTER 1

SERENGETI NATIONAL PARK, TANZANIA

Somewhere ahead in the fog lurked her quarry, and as she stalked through the grass she remained vigilant, watching and listening for any hint that she had been detected. But only the muffled sounds of the savannah filled the air—the whispering rustle of the grass, the distant bray of a zebra, the low grunt of a wildebeest chasing off a rival. All other noise was muted as if swallowed by the fog that crept in and enveloped her.

Special Agent Alexandra Martel, contract CIA paramilitary officer, pushed forward. Each beat of her heart sent a rush of blood coursing through her veins, echoing in her ears like a Maasai drumbeat in the stillness of the heavy air.

Alex had always trusted her instincts. They had served her well as a young combat medic in her Ranger regiment, and with every posting and assignment ever since. Now, having lost sight of her quarry, she hoped those instincts wouldn’t let her down. But as the minutes ticked by without another sighting, she wondered if perhaps she had lost her edge, and the moment had escaped her. Maybe she’d been outsmarted. Maybe they were on to her. Or worse, maybe they had circled back and flanked her.

Then, as if someone had lifted a veil, she saw her target and adjusted her aim through her optics.

A little to the right, she told herself. And ever so carefully, she slithered sideways on her belly, making the required adjustments to bring her subject back into range and focus.

“Eighty-five meters,” called her spotter.

But Alex wasn’t satisfied. The thorny branch of a blackthorn acacia partially obscured her primary target through her lens, so again, she waited.

“Alex,” whispered her spotter. “Take the shot.”

Moments slipped by as Alex watched and waited for the image in her mind to align with the sight picture presented through her optics. Luck was the intersection of preparation and opportunity, and she was content to await a stroke of it to achieve success.

“Take the shot! You’re going to lose him.”

Her,” she whispered.

“What?”

“It’s her, not him. Now be quiet for two seconds.”

She was losing time. The sun was setting, and the rays reflecting off the thin layer of fog set her subject off in a hue of golden light that wouldn’t last more than an instant. But the wind shifted behind them, carrying their scent on the warming air currents up the slight grade to the kopje, an island outcropping of ancient granite in a sea of grass.

The female leopard she had been watching through her camera’s telephoto lens pressed her nose into the air, lifting it to sniff the wind. Then Alex saw her chest give a slight heave. Though she couldn’t hear it, she knew the mother cat had issued a warning call to her three leopard cubs poking their heads over the edge of the rock high above. They scampered down the rock face toward their mother. Together, they disappeared into the many small trees, shrubs, and hollows that provided plenty of cover and concealment options from predators.

“I told you,” said her companion.

“For an old man, you can be such a twelve-year-old girl,” she said, noting his frown. General David Martel didn’t seem amused by the analogy—or the snipe at his age. “Truth hurts, huh, Pops?” she said.

“Yeah, well, the truth is you missed the shot.”

“For your information, I got some great shots.”

“Maybe, Little Miss NatGeo, but you also miss one hundred percent of the shots you don’t take.”

“So now you’re channeling hockey wisdom?”

“If the skate fits…”

He was right, of course. Although she had gotten a few photos that would probably turn out well, she had been so focused on the great shot that she might have let the best of them slip away. But there was no sense telling him that and inflating his already robust ego.

She sat up and slung her camera over her shoulder, the long, heavy lens weighing down the front of her Nikon. She reviewed the images on the camera’s display. “Look at this one,” she said, tilting the screen toward him. “See how the light catches her eyes?”

It still amazed her that, after all these years, she still wanted her dad’s approval. She guessed she would always be her daddy’s little girl.

Retired US Army general David Martel leaned closer, his weathered face softening into a warm smile. “Beautiful shot, Allie.”

Alex grinned. For once, she wasn’t calculating wind speed or counting heartbeats between trigger pulls. No lives hung in the balance. There were no targets to eliminate. Just this moment of perfect stillness in the Serengeti, sharing her father’s company and the simple joy of photography—a passion she’d neglected during years of deployments and operations.

She had come out a few days ago to meet her dad for a safari vacation. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d taken a vacation, let alone one with her dad. Despite being unable to spend much time together over the past few years, they quickly fell back into their usual banter and good-natured chirping. They were having fun, and she found herself smiling more than she had in a long time. She was relaxed, enjoying her time with her dad.

“Come on,” she said. “Let’s get back to the truck.”

They didn’t hike far before finding the Toyota Land Cruiser, where their guide awaited their return. James was a native of northern Tanzania, descended from the Chagga people who inhabited once-sovereign kingdoms within the Kilimanjaro Region on the mountain’s southern slope. When he wasn’t guiding safaris, he still called the town of Moshi, two hours east of Arusha along the Arusha Himo Road, his home.

“I was wondering if I was going to have to send a search party,” said James, exuding a cheerful facade through a robust accented voice.

“Alex thinks she’s a famous nature photographer,” the general replied as they climbed into the SUV.

“My daughter has much the same delusions,” he said, shaking his head, his puffy jowls shaking as he laughed. “We are in Tanzania, David. Africa is a magical place that elevates notions of our own greatness.” He sniffed like a lion checking a scent on the breeze. “It’s in the air,” he said.

Alex sniffed the air herself. “The only thing I smell here, James, isn’t coming from any magical place I’ve ever been,” she said. “Mavi ya tembo.”

He laughed even louder. “Now I am sorry that I am teaching your daughter Swahili, General. When she starts speaking about elephant dung, I know she is becoming too fluent in our language!”

“She’s a fast learner, alright,” said David Martel. “Just a slow photographer.”

“You’re a pair of real comedians,” said Alex. “Home, James.”

“And you seem to have lost your sense of humor, Ansel,” Alex’s dad teased, summoning the legacy of the groundbreaking American photographer Ansel Adams.

“Yes, but I’ll have the last laugh when I’m awarded a prestigious juried prize for wildlife photography for my photos of the leopardess and her cubs.”

James and the general burst out laughing as they headed along the two-track red dirt road toward their lodge.

The Land Cruiser featured a closed-cab design with a pop-top roof, sliding windows, and creature comforts like air-conditioning and a refrigerator. Alex and her dad preferred to ride with the roof up and the sliding windows fully opened rather than with the A/C cranking. Most of the time, they stood with their heads and shoulders protruding through the opened roof, taking in the majesty of the land and on the lookout for animals. But, as it was getting late, the pair lounged in their seats, one on either side of a center aisle.

Alex picked a traditional Maasai shuka off the seat in front of her, then wrapped the red, green, and black cloth around her shoulders like a shawl. She leaned her head against the 4x4’s window. She had almost drifted off into a much-desired slumber when two staccato pops in rapid succession reached her ears. Immediately, she sat bolt upright in her seat.

“What is it?” asked James, who had caught her movement out of the corner of his eye.

“Did you hear that?” she asked.

“I heard nothing.”

“Hear what?” asked the general.