Reviews

Rachel M.
Atlanta, GA
This book is unsettling in the best way. It forces you to confront how easily justice can fail and what that failure does to victims.
Michael T.
Columbus, OH
Omega I doesn’t feel like fiction for long. The courtroom scenes alone are enough to make you angry, but the quiet moments are what stay with you.
Lauren K.
Nashville, TN
What impressed me most was the restraint. The author doesn’t glorify violence or revenge. Instead, the story asks uncomfortable questions about responsibility and silence. I finished it thinking about it for days.
Daniel R.
Phoenix, AZ
This book goes deeper into the emotional damage left behind by trafficking. It’s painful, but necessary. The way trauma and survival are handled feels honest and well-researched.
Stephanie L.
Madison, WI
A Cry for Help is heavier than the first book, but also more personal. You see the cost of fighting evil over and over again. It made the characters feel real, not heroic.
Chris W.
Portland, OR
This one stayed with me. The psychological aspects, especially around control and manipulation, were disturbing but handled with care. It’s clear this book was written with respect for real victims.
Anthony S.
Boston, MA
The scope of this book is massive. Taking the story international raises the stakes, but it’s the loss and consequences that hit hardest. This is not a feel-good ending, and that’s exactly why it works.
Melissa J.
San Diego, CA
Omega III doesn’t pull its punches. It shows what happens when you confront something this big and this entrenched. The tension, grief, and moral weight feel real.
Kevin D.
Des Moines, IA
This was the most intense book in the series for me. It doesn’t offer easy victories or clean resolutions. It respects the seriousness of the subject and the reader.