Dear Friends — Literary Titan recently posted this five-star review for WORLD OF WORLDS. Available on Amazon for pre-order, WORLD OF WORLDS will be published July 14. Best, Richard
WORLD OF WORLDS
WORLD OF WORLDS Richard Scott Sacks’s World of Worlds is a literary action-adventure short story collection that follows young, ...
WORLD OF WORLDS
MAY 27
Posted by Literary Titan

Richard Scott Sacks’s World of Worlds is a literary action-adventure short story collection that follows young, restless travelers, reporters, climbers, drifters, and idealists across Africa, Europe, India, and the United States between 1968 and 1981. The book gathers fifteen stories shaped by travel, political unrest, culture shock, danger, and moral pressure, with much of its world centered on the turbulence of the late 1960s and 1970s.
I came away feeling that Sacks is less interested in adventure as spectacle than in adventure as a test of character. That surprised me, in a good way. The stories have movement, and sometimes real peril, but the strongest moments often happen in the quiet after the danger, when a character has to sit with what they have done, avoided, misunderstood, or lost. The writing feels alert to place. Rivers, roads, mountain air, crowded rooms, border crossings, and decaying outposts don’t just sit in the background. They press on the characters. They wear them down. The prose has the confidence of someone who has carried these landscapes in memory for a long while.
What I found most compelling was the author’s choice to keep the characters young, often proud, often naïve, and not always easy to like. That gives the book its bite. These are people who want freedom, meaning, escape, or a story worth telling, but they keep running into systems and histories much larger than themselves. Colonial aftermath, corruption, racial violence, war, and personal ambition all move through the collection without turning it into a lecture. Some stories are more direct politically, while others work through mood and tension. I appreciated that mix. Its pace can be reflective, and its moral questions are not neatly packaged. I liked that. Life on the road rarely comes with clean lessons.
I would recommend World of Worlds to readers who enjoy literary short fiction with an adventurous edge, especially those drawn to travel writing, political fiction, and stories about outsiders trying to understand places they can never fully possess. It will appeal most to readers who like their action grounded in atmosphere and consequence. For me, the collection works best as a map of uneasy encounters, both with the wider world and with the self.
Pages: 264 | ASIN: B0GX2Z6MJV