Tag Archives: science-fiction

The Pulse Between Us – B. K. Brown

The Pulse Between Us
B. K. Brown

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Debut Author Delivers a Slow-Burn Sci-Fi Romance with a Thrilling, Intimate Core


Blurb:

Across light-years, two strangers are forced into the deepest intimacy imaginableโ€”and hunted for it.

Dr. Mira Tian has built her career on discipline and control. A scientist aboard Aris Station, she has mastered the art of keeping her emotions contained, her focus sharp, and her private longings buried beneath layers of precision.

Rafe Anders has built his exile on silence. Living on the remote mining outpost Sigma-9, he has resigned himself to isolation, convinced that distance is the only way to survive his past mistakes.

But when a violent solar event ripples through deep space, something impossible happens. Through their neural interfaces, Mira and Rafe make contactโ€”mind to mind, thought to thought, feeling to feeling. At first itโ€™s fragile, like a whisper in the dark. Soon it becomes undeniable. Addictive. Irresistible.

For Mira, the connection is the most profound intimacy she has ever known. For Rafe, it is the first chance at redemption. Together they share memories, regrets, and hopes as if they are two halves of the same soul. Yet every moment of closeness leaves traces in the systemโ€”traces that the wrong people are trained to find.

Cognixis, the corporation that built their neural technology, sees the bond not as intimacy but as opportunity. To them it is a resourceโ€”something to isolate, dissect, and replicate. Under the scrutiny of Camille Thorne, Director of Neurodevelopment, and Vosk, Head of Applied Neurosecurity, Mira and Rafeโ€™s secret lifeline becomes the center of a ruthless corporate campaign. To survive, they must hide their tether, maintain the faรงade of normality, and outwit a surveillance machine designed to expose them.

But hiding isnโ€™t enough. The deeper the connection runs, the harder it is to conceal. Mira and Rafe are pulled into a high-stakes struggle that tests not just their survival, but the very definition of self, trust, and love. If discovered, they wonโ€™t just lose each otherโ€”theyโ€™ll lose their freedom, their identities, and perhaps even their lives.

The Pulse Between Us is a gripping blend of sci-fi romance and psychological suspense. It explores what it means to be truly known by another person, the risks of radical vulnerability, and the lengths weโ€™ll go to keep the one person who sees us fully.

Perfect for readers searching for:
sci-fi romance adult stories that blend intimacy and suspense
star-crossed lovers romance where connection is both salvation and danger
telepathy romance that explores what happens when two mindsโ€”and heartsโ€”collide

If you love star-crossed lovers navigating impossible odds, if you crave sci-fi romance that balances futuristic ideas with raw human intimacy, and if you want a slow-burn bond that feels both dangerous and irresistible, The Pulse Between Us is for you.

In the ink-black void of space, they found each other. But in a universe built on control, love may be the most dangerous anomaly of all.


Set in a corporate-dominated dystopia, The Pulse Between Us delivers one of the most unique sci-fi romance concepts Iโ€™ve read in years. While telepathic connections in fiction arenโ€™t new, B.K. Brown takes it to an entirely different levelโ€”one that feels intimate, immersive, and emotionally real.

Instead of exchanging thoughts like text messages, Mira and Rafe share physical sensations, involuntary emotions, and even memories. Thereโ€™s a visceral richness to this portrayal thatโ€™s deeply engaging. When Rafe feels the rough scratch of his uniform, Mira instinctively sends back the sensation of her soft lab coat. Their connection quickly evolves beyond intentional messages, and their deepest, most private experiences begin to bleed through.

What happens, his thoughts came slowly, deliberately, when we can’t tell the difference between your sensations and mine?

The question hung between them, unanswerable. Neither spoke the obvious follow-up:

What happens when we can’t tell the difference between you and me?

This slow emotional burn is incredibly well-crafted. Thereโ€™s vulnerability and fear, but also recognition and trust. One of my favorite moments beautifully captures the raw power of being seen:

He’d stepped into her most vulnerable moment and simply stood beside her, offering neither judgment nor pity. Just recognition.

I see you.

The structure of the book mirrors this deepening connection. It begins with alternating third-person chapters focused on Mira and Rafe individuallyโ€”standard for romance. But as their bond intensifies, chapter breaks disappear. The POV shifts seamlessly without formal cues, brilliantly illustrating how their minds (and lives) begin to merge. Itโ€™s a subtle, masterful storytelling device.

While the sci-fi backdrop is rich and well-developed, the emotional core always stays front and center. When romantic tension finally surfaces, itโ€™s tender and awkward in the most human wayโ€”more like best friends tiptoeing toward something more than lust-driven passion. This makes the eventual intimacy feel earned and powerful.

There are broader thematic undercurrents too: corporate surveillance, digital ownership of identity, and the commodification of connection. Mira and Rafeโ€™s fight to stay hiddenโ€”when even their thoughts are no longer privateโ€”echoes real-world concerns about data privacy and digital autonomy. Their rebellion is quiet but desperate, and it had me rooting for them every step of the way.

Additional Notes:

  • Pacing: Excellent. A fast, immersive read without feeling rushed.
  • Tone: Emotionally grounded with a strong sci-fi framework.
  • Genre Blend: Sci-fi romance with psychological depth and slow-burn tension.
  • POV & Tense: 3rd person close (alternating), past tense.
  • Editing: Very clean. A few small errors were noted and reported to the author.
  • Steam Level: Contains sex scenes, but theyโ€™re tastefully blurred rather than explicit.
  • Language: Occasional mild cursing.
  • Tropes: Star-crossed lovers, forced proximity (mental/emotional), neural connection, dystopian surveillance, slow burn.
  • Length: 233 pages
  • Release Date: November 5, 2025
  • Price: $2.99 (Amazon)

Bottom Line:
If youโ€™re craving a sci-fi romance that dares to explore what happens when two people are truly seenโ€”flaws, traumas, desires and allโ€”The Pulse Between Us is a must-read. Itโ€™s a love story that is equal parts cerebral and soulful, and it lingers long after the final page.

I loved this book and highly recommend it. Itโ€™s SAFE (no cheating, no triangles, no abuse), emotionally satisfying, and delivers a true HEA. I look forward to seeing what B.K. Brown writes nextโ€”because Iโ€™ll be first in line to read it.

I was given an advanced review copy by the author and am voluntarily leaving this honest review.

Her Alien Delegate โ€“ Sky Robert

Her Alien Delegate
Sky Robert

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Truly alien aliens reverse-harem romance

Blurb:

When her mating contract is sold to the highest bidder, her future and freedom are uncertain until she falls for an alien diplomat that would scour the universe to keep her.

Protective partners, bonding rituals, power dynamics, fated mates, wrapped into a spicy alien romance!

Evie joined the H.E.T. (Human Exchange Trade) to marry an alien trill diplomat after her miscarriages on Earth have led to her housing credits being revoked. Shortly after her arrival, her husband sells her contract at the Blue District where she is to be mated to a stranger or struggle to survive after a terrorist attack on the latest human trade ship, making humans a target for abduction, or death. Her trill husband comes back to forcefully mate with her, but she is saved by a warrior species called the unGor that help heal the betrayal of her last alien mate. Only, the unGor believe the best way to care for their mate is to share the responsibility of her happiness with more than one unGor, and she may have not one, but three fated mates who will stop at nothing to keep her.

A standalone sci-fi fated-mates alien romance from Sky Roberts. This steamy, page-turning romance between three diplomat aliens and the smart human that captures their hearts and tentacles, will have you devouring every morsel towards their HEAFN.

World building sci-fi adventure but with a sexy twist. Strong females, and possessive (but respectful) love interests. For all you alien lovers out there that like vibrating, pulsating extremities, and mates that bond for life. The steamy bare chest should be evidence enough of what you are getting yourself into.

Sky Roberts continues to give us truly alien aliens, but this time weโ€™ve got a human to look at the novelty of it through. I enjoyed this one a lot more than โ€œHer Alien Starbreakerโ€, with much less confusion.

The Trillume Universe is extremely creative with unique alien species and far-out customs. I did find myself struggling to picture some of descriptions given, but I identified with Evie, her confusion, and the misunderstandings this very alien universe occasioned. Itโ€™s truly culture shock. I definitely understood Evieโ€™s emotional journey, and that is the core of this story. Itโ€™s an emotional comedy of errors rather than an action storyโ€” mistaken identity and misunderstood intentions everywhere.

There was some good humor sprinkled around, but I wouldnโ€™t call it a full-on romantic comedy. I appreciated what there was, especially the very funny AI computer and Vaquel, one of the unGor suitors.

The spicy scenes were hot! Everything was consensual, respectful, and very inventive!

I do join other reviewers in wishing the cover more clearly illustrated the tentacle-like hair. The current cover has hair that is too wispy to match the written descriptions, and it doesnโ€™t have any of the objects that are supposed to be woven in them.


Contains graphic sex scenes.

1st person past tense from Evie and Broma.

Errors: Too many to count. Misspelled, wrong, extra, and missing words. Sudden changes in tense. It wasnโ€™t unreadable.

253 Pages

$3.99 at Amazon.

I received an review copy for free from BookSirens, and I am leaving this honest review voluntarily.

Her Alien Starbreaker, Treasures of Trillume Book 0 โ€“ Sky Robert

Her Alien Starbreaker
Treasures of Trillume Book 0
Sky Robert

Rating: 3 out of 5.

Truly alien aliens romance

Blurb:

There’s a threat to the Trillume Universe and the “cure” may just be the beginning of the end.

Commander Yueril of the Galactic Authority was on a mission that he never expected to return from, all in the name of protecting the universe against the Solungors, an invasive species destroying every planet they touch. Though, when he arrives at the outlaw planet Delta-Fal, he comes across someone he least expected to meet, a mate that makes his instincts scream to protect her, but she may just be the one protecting him.

Hazel is snatched from her home planet Estreldez by the krelis horde that seeks to invade her planet, but when she arrives to be sold off to slavers, one takes pity on her and sneaks her off ship, only to find herself trapped on an outlaw planet with no one willing to help her now that she holds the mark of the Birds of Zorn.

For those of you monster fudgers that love something different and like your aliens more alien than human, this spicy romance is for you. The trill are a reptilian species with sharp teeth, scales, fancy equipment, and exceptionally playful tails. There’s a bit of a breeding kink, but there is no “oops I’m preggers”, none of that in these pages. Fated mates, mating marks, biting, tail play, knotting, and even a bit of exhibitionism. All the fun stuff.

This is a standalone alien romance spice that will have you curling your toes, and a fascinating universe that unravels the more books you read in the Trillume Universe. No, you do not have to read any other book before reading this one, in fact, this book takes place before every other book I’ve written in the universe so far!

I love aliens that are truly alien, not just humans with a different skin tone or any other equally subtle change. But I do now know that I prefer one of the main characters to be human so I can more easily relate to the narrative. I was so confused by this that I didnโ€™t know the sex of the narrator until near the end of the first chapter. I was intrigued enough to continue reading, but my confusion remained high throughout. Frequent errors in the text didnโ€™t help matters.

I didnโ€™t feel like I really got to know the characters because I had no human filter to view them through. The graphic scenes were interesting but not overly stimulating for the same reason.

Contains graphic sex scenes.

1st person past tense from Hazel and Yueril.

Errors: Too many to count. Misspelled, wrong, extra, and missing words. Sudden changes in tense. It wasnโ€™t unreadable.

204 Pages

$3.99 at Amazon.

Free copy provided by BookSirens for honest review.