Kevin W. Herron started reading Odysseus Ascendant by Evan Currie (Odyssey One, #7)

I've always been curious about what drives people to do the crazy things they do.
I'm especially drawn to sprawling universes like Star Wars: Legends and The Expanse, where the scale of the universe makes every human choice feel weightier. In my library, alongside these starships and distant empires you'll also find biographies, history, and the occasional book on psychology or the creative process — anything that helps me analyze and process why we humans strive, create, and reach out to one another.
For all the fictional journeys among the stars, I still have a soft spot for swashbuckling tales a little closer to home. The Three Musketeers and The Scarlet Pimpernel have been lifelong favorites — there's something about their particular mix of wit, courage, and moral clarity that never gets old.
Classe Ink is my refuge — a small corner of calm in a world that often feels defiant, polarized, and exhausting. The stories here remind me that empathy matters, and that imagination can be its own quiet form of resistance.
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