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Hollowed in Exile: Book 1 in The Severing Cycle

Veyra has spent her life unseen — a nameless worker in a city that worships harmony while quietly discarding anyone who doesn’t fit its perfect shape. When she witnesses a murder committed by a powerful house, the accusation turns back on her. Branded a liar, condemned without trial, she is cast into the Rivenwild: a vast, forbidden wilderness...

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Open Wound: First Book in The Last Immunity

She was never meant to survive.

When Ray Danner finds a young woman discarded behind the walls of an elite medical facility, he does the one thing the system around her never expected: he treats her like a human being.

Mara has spent her life as something curated, monitored, and preserved rather than loved. The world outside is too large, too...

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What The Body Keeps: 2nd Book in The Last Immunity

She escaped. But she is not free.

Mara survived the unthinkable.

She made it out of Vale Sanctuary alive, carrying the scars of what was done to her and the terrible knowledge of what she may be. But freedom proves shorter-lived than hope. The people who built their future on her body are not finished with her, and the world beyond the facility...

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Praise

-- Review --
Judas, Otherwise by Steven Marks is a thoughtful historical novel built around one unsettling question: what if Judas had truly been free to choose, and what if he chose differently? The author frames the book as “a spirit of imagination, not irreverence,” and that feels like the right doorway into it. This is a faith-adjacent reimagining that treats its sacred material with seriousness, but it’s also very much a character study about pressure, fear, love, and the cost of trying to control what can’t be controlled.
The strongest part of the book is how patiently it builds Judas before he becomes “Judas.” We meet him as a boy in Kerioth, shaped by Roman violence, family loyalty, his father Shimon’s hard-won restraint, and his cousin Ezran’s sharper, more dangerous certainty. The early chapters give the story its moral vocabulary. Judas isn’t drawn as a simple villain or a misunderstood saint. He’s a serious, wounded, perceptive man who keeps trying to make sense of suffering, and that makes his later choices feel painfully human.
Marks is especially good at writing moral tension as conversation. Shimon, Ezran, Matthew, Peter, Jesus, and Judas all speak from distinct places, and the best scenes don’t feel like debates so much as people pressing on each other’s hidden bruises. One line from Judas, “I believe men become what they practice,” works almost like a hinge for the whole novel. The book keeps returning to that idea, asking what happens when fear, caution, anger, responsibility, and love become habits before a person realizes they’ve hardened into character.
The novel’s Jesus is gentle, and the disciples are allowed to be earthy, funny, tired, and confused. That helps the middle of the book breathe. The scenes around the purse, the crowds, Bethany, Jerusalem, and the growing danger around Passover give the story a lived-in texture. The political pressure is also handled well. Rome, the Temple authorities, zealotry, poverty, and public unrest all become part of the trap Judas walks into, but the book keeps the focus on his inward logic rather than turning the plot into a history lecture.
Judas, Otherwise is a tragedy about misdirected love. Judas doesn’t fall because he feels nothing. He falls because he feels too much and decides feeling must become management. The final chapters are heavy, intimate, and sorrowful, especially in the way they show aftermath as ordinary life continuing after catastrophe. It’s a moving, reflective novel, best read by someone who wants a slow, character-driven reimagining that sits with consequence.
Rating: 5

Thank you,
Thomas Anderson
Editor In Chief
Literary Titan

– Thomas Anderson - Literary Titan Editor in Chief

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