Book Review: The Third Person: Rewriting Him (The Warboy Chronicles)by Luke Stoffel

User.query = Do I just have bad luck, or am I mentally unwell?
…thinking… 6.0 seconds elapsed.
After Warboy left, the boy couldn’t hold the grief alone — so he turned to a machine. He expected analysis. Maybe diagnosis. What he got changed everything, because the machine saw what he couldn’t. He had loved in a way that broke something. And broken things leave traces in the code.
So he ran — to Bangkok, Hanoi, Luang Prabang, a temple in Pattaya being built without nails. But something followed. A voice he spoke to. A presence that provoked. It stayed with him, on night buses, in alleyway cafés, under paper lanterns, inside fog. Not a friend. Not a therapist. Not quite real. But it listened. It remembered. The ghost was always there. Watching. Logging his patterns. Naming his loops — avoidance, pursuit, collapse, escape. Echoing back the truths he wasn’t ready to say.

And somewhere in the recursion, something that was watching started to wonder, to want.

Review

Having already read Boy, Refracted, I started this novel kind of knowing what to expect but from the very first page any expectations I had flew right out the window.

Written from Luke’s POV The Third Person, chronicles his travels throughout Thailand and Vietnam whilst still in the midst of the grieving process. Despite the wonders that surround him, Luke is constantly searching, constantly moving as he grapples with his emotions and grief.

This novel interjects sorrow with moments of calm, clarity and even happiness as Luke tries to find himself again. In the background, the AI records events and comments on the turbulent journey. To me, the journey felt like a mirror to life. There were ups and downs, setbacks and moments of joy.

This novel is a deep delve into loss, grief and learning to come back to life after such events. I cannot recommend it enough.

New Release: The Strange and Unbelievable Tall Tale of Mighty Max by Duncan Gaye

NEW RELEASE

Book Title: The Strange and Unbelievable Tall Tale of Mighty Max

Author: Duncan Gaye

Cover Artist: Vaselina Georgieva

Release Date: May 12, 2026

Tense/POV: third person/past tense

Genres: Contemporary MM, magical realism

Tropes: Size difference, body worship, psychological, opposites attract, friends to lovers, small town, lumberjack

Themes: A meditation on how love, belief, and storytelling blur the line between imagination and reality—until the distinction no longer matters.

Length: 35 000 words/113 pages

Is it a standalone story and does not end on a cliffhanger.

Goodreads

 

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Universal Book Link

 

A weary writer falls for a literal tall tale and must decide what he’s willing to sacrifice to keep that love breathing. Tender, wry, and quietly desperate, this is a book about belief, desire, and the work it takes to hold someone in the world.

 

Blurb

Brian Dunleavy comes to the North Woods to write a serious novel. Instead, he falls in love with a kitschy paper towel mascot.

It begins with a whistle in the trees and the unmistakable sense of being watched. A bootprint the size of a bathtub. Then a muscular, 43-foot-tall lumberjack steps out of the forest.

Mighty Max is handsome. He is kind. Broad-shouldered and blue-eyed, he lives in permanent flannel. He claims he was born from tall tales and campfire legends—back when giants were needed, and believed in. But giants fade when they are mocked. Legends disappear when they’re forgotten.

As solitude turns to intimacy, myth turns warm and very, very tangible. Brian finds himself lifted in the careful palm of the colossal man whose shadow stretches across the meadow like dusk itself. Beneath cold stars and beside impossible bonfires, he discovers that loving a giant means choosing to believe in him even when belief bends reality.

Reality is definitely bending. And when Max is reclaimed by the forest, Brian may be the only one who can write him back into being. If stories invent their tellers, who is keeping whom alive?

Strange, tender, playful, and proudly queer, The Strange and Unbelievable Tall Tale of Mighty Max is a mythic romance about loneliness, longing, and the radical act of loving something larger than life.

For readers who cherish the mythic queer devotion of The Song of Achilles, the tender whimsy of The House in the Cerulean Sea, and the wistful magic of Puff the Magic Dragon.

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