The book starts off great, with a little bit of humour and sarcasm on the first story, with a very good progression and implications. The dry humour and sarcasm is definitely a GREAT trait of this book, Kevin Revolinski should get the award for the most sarcastic writer in the planet. It's just flawless, and... Continue Reading →
“The Freedom Broker” by K. J. Howe
It doesn’t matter how many accolades a book or author might have, the reader knows at once on the first words, how good a book may, or may not be, and the first words of the Freedom Broker by K. J. Howe are gripping! You start off reading about Thea Paris, in the middle of... Continue Reading →
“House of the Moon – Surviving the Sixties” by Donna D. Conrad
Sex, drugs and more sex and some more drugs. This is the starting point of this memoir as Donna D. Conrad tells us her experiences throughout the sixties on her early teens, narrated in a objective manner with very well detailed acts that lacked responsibility, or care, on her part, where her choices led her,... Continue Reading →
“Grolar” By Thorsten Nesch
The book has a slow start that lets you, the reader get comfortable and even bored on purpose. A casual pace, almost like a lazy stroll on the beach with words that start building up as the story moves forward.In this story, we have a quite peculiar bear-like beast, to which we don't know how... Continue Reading →
The Line is Drawn by Jocie McKade
First impressions are essential and this book starts off with a bang, blood, and murder – “MOE SHERIDAN, Esq., fell to the floor unleashing an agonizing scream. His perfectly knotted bow tie sagged to one side and a quickly growing bloom of crimson blood covered his finely tailored shirt.” Well, hell yeah! With all the... Continue Reading →
“Passages – Death, Dementia, And Everything In Between” by H M GOODEN
The foreword, written by the author, H. M. Gooden, is something beautiful, and gives the starting note of what promises to be an emotional literary journey for us readers, and we become sure that, by the end of this same journey we will see aspects of life that we might have ignored or not known... Continue Reading →
Complete Darkness COMIC VERSION! by Matt Adcock
Complete Darkness by Matt Adcock is one of the coolest Sci-fi books we have reviewed on Scribble’s Worth, and you can read why we have are telling you this on the review of this awesome title. Available on Amazon So, in the review of the book, we told you that the imagery that the narration... Continue Reading →
“Four” By MJ Preston
The second part of the BEST Crime Thriller reviewed on our site so far this year, HIGHWAYMAN, is finally here and it’s named “Four”. OK. For those who haven’t read the book, or the review of HIGHWAYMAN by MJ Preston, you can, and should check it out before we kick off this review. Don’t worry,... Continue Reading →
Why Self-Publish?!
In this article, we are going to talk about the advantages of Self-pub over Traditional, and why we think that it's better for writers, readers, agents and book bloggers overall. But before we start... an advice. Review here IF you are a self-published writer, or even a traditional published author, or intend to, even if... Continue Reading →
Complete Darkness By Matt Adcock
The book doesn’t even start and we already love it because the disclaimer goes like: “This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is... Continue Reading →
