User Profile

Graham Downs

GrahamDowns@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 8 months ago

South African Christian, husband, Software Developer, and author of the urban fantasy novella, Memoirs of a Guardian Angel.

Follow me on Mastodon at @GrahamDowns@mastodon.africa

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Graham Downs's books

Currently Reading

2025 Reading Goal

41% complete! Graham Downs has read 5 of 12 books.

Masha du Toit: Crooks and Straights (EBook, 2023, Masha Du Toit)

ia's brother Nico is different from other boys. And being different can be dangerous in …

Authentically South African, and I love it!

I really enjoyed this book. I picked it up when I saw the author mentioning on Mastodon about how it's been selected as a High School English set work, and I'm glad I did.

I love authenticly South African stories. The cultural references, the language, the names and places... it's just all so SATISFYING, man! I guess this is how other people feel when they read stories set in the places where they live, but I think it's stronger for us because there's relatively few of them. I suppose the people who identify with that sentiment the strongest might be those from places in the Global South, and I'm particularly thinking of people from Australia and New Zealand here, because I've read a few stories set in those places too, and their culture is also quite unique compared to, say, the Americans or the Brits.

Anyway, I digress. I don't …

reviewed Desecration by J.F. Penn (Brooke and Daniel, #1)

J.F. Penn: Desecration (EBook, Curl Up Press)

Her daughter is dying … and a killer with a fetish for body parts stalks …

For fans of the weird and macabre

I've been wanting to start this series for a long time, but I'd been working my way through ARKANE first.

Anyway... wow, that was amazing! It's dark. Oh, so dark. Much, much darker than ARKANE. But it's sort of along the same lines. Instead of the McGuffin being some supernatural artefact, it's a murder mystery, but otherwise the formula is quite similar. Which isn't a bad thing; you know what to expect. But while ARKANE would probably be suitable for teenagers to read, I wouldn't give this book to anyone under the age of, say, 15 or 16. It's gory, it's gruesome, it's (can't stress this enough) very dark, and it deals with some pretty heavy topics around the nature of life, and disability and such.

Plus, I'd never heard of John Hunter before I read this book, but now I'm determined to find out more about him. If you …

Ruth Nestvold: From Earth to Mars and Beyond (EBook, 2012, Red Dragon Books)

"From Earth to Mars and Beyond" is a collection of ten previously published science fiction …

A Great Collection

A collection of short stories -- some shorter than others -- by Ruth Nestvold, all of which previously appeared in some pretty well-known publications.

I love short stories, but generally speaking with these collections, there are some hits and some misses. In this case, though, there wasn't a single one which I didn't enjoy. I will say that the author has a bit of a dark streak, because most of them (minor spoiler alert) have less-than-happy endings. That's not to say that they start out badly; some of these start out painting a beautiful picture of a future that I might actually want to live in, but they end in ways that make you think that the future isn't always as perfect as it seems.