Review of Devils Reality Show by Arjun Shaji


Rating: 5/5

When I opened this book I felt a chill that stayed with me for a long time. Right away I knew this was not a story about monsters or ghosts. It is a story about people put under pressure until their real selves show up. From the opening pages the idea that a game can reveal who we truly are kept me turning pages.

The setup that grabbed me

Six strangers wake up inside a sealed underground bunker. They are watched by cameras and a calm robotic voice. There is no food, no water, and the clock is ticking. They are told they have a short time to prove themselves and only one can leave with the prize. The confinement and the rules, or the lack of clear rules, create a pressure cooker situation that the book uses to full effect.

The people inside the bunker

Each person carries a burden from their past. The book never hands out easy backstories. Instead those secrets come out in pieces as the pressure mounts. I found myself caring about some of them and fearing what they might do next. Watching alliances form and fall apart felt real. The characters are not simple good or bad; they are human and messy, and that made their choices hit harder for me.

The atmosphere and tension

The bunker itself becomes a presence in the story. The rooms, the cameras, the sudden announcements, the hidden objects all feel alive and deliberately cruel. Hunger and thirst are used like tools. The writing makes the claustrophobia so thick I could feel it. The tension is constant, and even quiet moments carry an edge because you know something can change any second.

What the book made me think about

This is a book about guilt, denial, and performance. It shows how people lie to themselves to survive and how those lies can become the real danger. The spectacle of being watched is a sharp idea here. It made me think about how audiences can watch pain without feeling it and how systems can push normal people into terrible acts.

Writing style and pace

The prose is tight and moves quickly. Scenes shift fast and the stakes rise with almost every chapter. That pacing kept me on edge in a good way. The author balances moments of violence with quieter, psychological beats so the reader has time to breathe but never to relax fully.

The ending and the feeling it left me with

The ending does not wrap everything up neatly. It left me unsettled, thinking about what survival really means and whether being the last one out is a victory or a different kind of loss. That lingering unsettlement stayed with me long after I put the book down.

It should be a movie

This story begs to be on screen. The bunker, the cameras, the slow breaking of each person would feel electric in a film. I can already picture the tense close-ups, the sudden announcements, and the silence that screams louder than any action. If they make it into a movie, I will be the first in the theatre to watch it.

Final thoughts

Devil’s Reality Show gripped me from start to finish. It is dark and uncomfortable in places, but that discomfort serves the story. It made me think, it made me feel uneasy, and it stayed with me. If you like intense psychological stories that examine human choices under extreme pressure, this book will sit with you for a while.

Review of Where The Rivers Meet by B.M. Reed


Rating: 4.5/5

I picked up this book expecting a gentle, quiet story, and that is exactly what I found. Right away I felt the writing wanted me to sit close to the characters, not to watch big events from far away. The tone is warm and calm, and it made me slow down and notice small, honest moments.

Story and structure

The book follows three women across different times and places. Their lives touch one another in subtle ways, and the author moves between India and the United States without making it feel forced. The chapters are short and intimate, so the story reads like a collection of memories that build into something whole.

Characters

I really connected with the way each woman is shown through small choices and quiet sacrifices. None of them are loud or dramatic, but their inner lives are full. I found myself thinking about them after I closed the book, which to me is a sign the characters stayed alive in my mind.

Themes that stayed with me

Migration, memory, motherhood and the cost of duty are woven through every page. The book talks about belonging in a way that felt honest — how a place shapes you and how leaving a place does not erase what you carry. It celebrates everyday courage: the kind that shows up in routines, care, and decisions most people never notice.

What I loved most

I loved the small, truthful scenes — a conversation, a quiet household moment, a memory returning. Those scenes make the book feel lived in. The language is simple but full of feeling, and the pacing lets those moments breathe. It felt like being invited into real lives rather than being told a plot.

A very small note

If I have to point out something, it would be that the pace can feel slow in parts. For me that was not a problem because the slow pace is part of the book’s charm, but readers who want nonstop action might find it gentle to a fault.

Final words

Overall, this is a quietly powerful read. It is the kind of book that asks you to pay attention to ordinary things and, when you do, it gives back a lot. I enjoyed how personal and humane it felt, and I kept thinking about the characters long after I finished.