
08/07/2025
My Book just got another five star review. This time from Italy.
I didn’t expect this book to linger with me the way it did.
Saifa isn’t just another sci-fi thriller. It’s intimate and unsettling in a quiet way—the kind that makes you stop and think about what memory really means. The writing feels poetic but never pretentious, and the world it builds—shattered timelines, rogue AI, broken souls—feels painfully plausible.
What struck me the most was how human it all felt. The Whisperer is one of those rare characters you don’t realize you’re holding onto until the end. He doesn’t fight, he doesn’t command, but he stays with you. That quiet resistance—memory, choice, grief—carries more weight than any weapon.
This is not a fast-paced book, but that’s exactly what made it powerful for me. It doesn’t rush. It lets things unfold, and in that stillness, it asks real questions: Who are we without our past? What do we become if we forget who we loved?
If you’re looking for explosions and laser battles, this might not be for you. But if you’re open to something deeper—something that feels raw, reflective, and strangely timely—Saifa will stay with you long after the last page.
SAIFA: The War for Human Consciousness