Skip to main content

Mind Games: A Review of The Session: Murder At Midnight by LaToya Lawrence

Intrigue, suspense, and a therapist on the brink – LaToya Lawrence's The Session: Murder At Midnight had me hooked from the first page.

Bambi, the seasoned therapist, thinks she's heard it all, but her newest client throws her for a loop. 

Lawrence masterfully crafts a psychological thriller that blurs the lines between therapist and patient, leaving you questioning everyone's motives. 

The tension builds with each session, and the reader is drawn into a world of secrets, manipulation, and hidden agendas. 

I loved the way Lawrence explores the power dynamics within the therapeutic relationship and how easily those boundaries can be crossed. 

This is a must-read for fans of psychological thrillers who enjoy a good mind game!

👉 See more books from indie authors here!

A gripping thriller that will keep you guessing until the very end. 🤯🔪🤔

👉 Grab your copy today!

Loft: 4

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Depression Recovery Roadmap You've Been Searching For

💫 An authentic lifeline from someone who's walked through the darkness and found their way back to light. This isn't just theory—it's hard-won wisdom that illuminates a practical path forward. 🌱🧠 #MentalHealthJourney #DepressionRecovery #HealingProcess When mental health advice comes from lived experience rather than just clinical observation, there's a profound difference in both approach and impact. "One Survivor's Guide for Beating Depression and Thriving Thereafter" by Nima Fard stands out precisely because it emerges from the trenches of personal struggle. This isn't just another self-help book with generic platitudes about positive thinking. Fard offers a holistic approach to depression recovery that feels both intimate and practical—a rare combination in mental health literature. The first-person narrative creates an immediate connection, transforming what could be clinical advice into a compassionate conversation with someone who truly und...

Sweet, Deadly Secrets: When Pastries Become the Perfect Murder Weapon

A deliciously twisted culinary mystery that will make you question every bakery treat you encounter. LaToya Lawrence's "The Bakery Boutique" serves up murder with a side of frosting! 🍰☠️🔍 #CulinaryMystery #DeadlyDesserts #WhodunitThriller The aroma of freshly baked goods typically brings comfort, but in LaToya Lawrence's "The Bakery Boutique: Desserts To Die For," that sweet smell might just be your last sensory experience. Lawrence has crafted a tantalizing mystery that combines two of life's greatest pleasures: decadent pastries and puzzling whodunits. The premise is deliciously simple yet effective—customers at Jordanna's family-owned Irresistible Bites Bakehouse are dying after consuming her exceptional treats, yet there's no apparent cause. The title isn't just a cute play on words; these really are desserts to die for. What makes this culinary mystery so engaging is the complete absence of obvious evidence. Medical examiners are st...

Across Three Continents: A Tale of Power, Deception, and the Brutal Shadow of Slavery

A mesmerizing historical epic that masterfully weaves truth with lies through an unreliable narrator whose ambition knows no bounds. Agawu-Kakraba's "The Restless Crucible" burns with unforgettable intensity! 🌍📜🔥 #HistoricalFiction #AfricanDiaspora #SlaveTradeNarrative Freedom fighter or opportunistic villain? In Yaw Agawu-Kakraba's spellbinding historical novel "The Restless Crucible," the answer depends entirely on who's telling the story. From the moment we meet Pedro de Barbosa—self-described ex-slave, con artist, slave trader, warmonger, and lover—we're pulled into a narrative that brilliantly challenges our understanding of truth itself. What begins as Pedro's memoir quickly reveals itself as something far more complex and fascinating. Agawu-Kakraba employs a truly innovative narrative structure where the omniscient narrator eventually wrests control from Pedro, exposing the protagonist's manipulations and fantasies for what they t...