BlueInk Review

About BlueInk Review

BlueInk Review is a fee-based review service offering honest, objective reviews exclusively to self-publishers. Books are reviewed by professional critics whose bylines have appeared in major publications, including the Washington Post and New York Times, as well as editors from major publishing houses, such as Random House and Viking. Reviews are posted on the BlueInk website and other venues. In an exciting pilot program, the Colorado Douglas County Library system (annual circulation 8 million) is using BlueInk reviews to select self-published titles for purchase and circulation in its libraries. SPR visitors receive $25 off a standard review (8-9 week turnaround) or $40 off a fast-track review (4-5 week turnaround). Click here to get started.

Review: Carlos the Impossible by J.T.K. Belle

In this short but elegant novella, an aging matador from Mexico meets his greatest adversary in an infamous bull from the American heartland. Inspired by traditional folk tales, the author sets his story in an indeterminate time period, spinning a legend all his own with the compassion and verve of a born storyteller.

The novella begins by introducing the titular monolith of the book, a gargantuan bull from Kansas whose moniker quickly evolves from “Son of Carleton” to the ironic “Carlito,” to “Big Carl” and finally, to the ultimate compliment: “Carlos the Impossible.” By the time he’s been drafted for […]

2020-02-21T05:40:50+02:00November 6th, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews, Member Blog|

Review: Power and Control by Ralph Leaton White

Ralph White’s debut novel, Power and Control, a political thriller that takes place in the near future, begins shortly after a cataclysmic Christmas Day that saw entire towns and villages in 19 countries totally wiped out by chemical or biological attacks.

The “Earth Cleansers,” who have taken responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of thousands, send messages to eight powerful governments with the pronouncement that they believe the population of Earth must be decimated for the survival of the planet. Christmas Day is just a sample of what is to come on the Ides of March. Each country must […]

2020-02-21T05:41:17+02:00November 3rd, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: Mississippi Flyway by Nel Rand

Nel Rand’s debut novel is a picaresque tale that takes the reader down the Mississippi River and through the haunted past of its main character, Ellie. Ellie is recovering from divorce when her estranged father, Tiny Moon, a 300-pound gambler and eating contest champion, re-enters her life. Despite her efforts to remember her deep-seated anger for Tiny, Ellie finds herself drinking wine with him and relaxing for the first time in months. When he asks her to join him on a trip down the Mississippi River, she readily accepts.

But she soon discovers that this is no vacation: Tiny is […]

2020-02-21T05:41:28+02:00October 19th, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: Impure: Resurrection by J R Bailey

Powered by an intriguingly complex antihero, richly described realm-building, relentless pacing, and a darkly lyrical and deeply philosophical narrative, the first installment of J.R. Bailey’s fantasy series is gloriously comparable to classic adventure fantasy sagas like Moorcock’s History of the Runestaff, Howard’s Conan, and Leiber’s Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser.

After almost being turned into a vampire, young necromancer Koristad Altessor was chained and imprisoned in a coffin for 16 long years. Now freed and working as a proxy lightwielder – a warrior dedicated to keeping the peace and upholding the laws of the empire – Koristad sets out to […]

2020-02-21T05:41:37+02:00October 1st, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: When the Jacaranda Petals Fall by David Barnato

Barnato’s adventure tale, which travels between Scotland and South Africa, begins dramatically in 1999 when Johannes, a young South African, sets fire to his neighbor’s house after catching him having sex with his wife. The next chapter rapidly shifts to a Scottish castle and is written through the eyes of Boysie, the new resident Jack Russell terrier, who gives an amusing account of the entertaining life of his masters Rupert and Dianna. The morning after one wild party, Boysie and the other dogs take advantage of the place: “By seven, the castle was as silent as if the occupants had […]

2020-02-21T05:41:46+02:00August 1st, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: Mneme’s Place by Glenn P. Wolfe

When retired Hollywood scriptwriter Glenn P. Wolfe succumbed to lung cancer in 2007, at age 81, he left unfinished this wildly inventive story about the tricks of memory and the emotional tug of baseball; about comic folly in a disorderly family, the neuroses of showbiz folk, and the glories of language itself. There’s so much energy and wit in “Book One” of Wolfe’s incomplete magnum opus that even its intermittent shortcomings—repetition and verbal excess—feel like blessings. Absent an ending, the tale still satisfies.

The title derives from the Greek goddess of memory, Mnemosyne, who is also the mother of the […]

2020-02-21T05:41:54+02:00August 1st, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: Open Source by M.M. Frick

M.M. Frick, an active duty Naval officer who has traveled the world’s geo-political landscape, has written an enjoyable thriller from an unconventional perspective. The main characters are a vending machine stocker in Savannah, Ga. – a self-described “nobody” – and a sharp intelligence analyst working for a high-powered consulting firm in New York City.

The two cross paths when Casey Shenk, the vending stocker everyman who mulls over international political puzzles on his blog as a hobby, writes about a hijacked Russian ship in the Baltic Sea. The ship turns out to have stolen missiles on board – something Susan

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2020-02-21T05:42:01+02:00April 1st, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|

Review: Leaving Brogado by Marshall Harrison

Marshall Harrison presents this book as one Marine’s memoir of his experiences in Vietnam, but readers will quickly realize that these recollections are no more factual than those of George MacDonald Fraser’s popular character Harry Flashman. Leaving Brogado is actually a funny, honest, thoroughly engaging novel, published (posthumously) by a writer who experienced three tours of duty in Vietnam, one who knows and handles his time, place, subject matter and characters with consummate assuredness.

It is 1967 and Beauford T. Adams and his buddy AC Murphy, both 18, have to get out of Brogado, Texas, because if the tiny town […]

2020-02-21T05:42:09+02:00March 6th, 2011|Categories: Book Reviews|
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