A review for the newest book by Rachel Harrison, So Thirsty. This is a different kind of vampire story, one where the vampires are not the main issue. It is a story about a friendship between two women who will do anything for each other, even kill.
A review for the newest book by Rachel Harrison, So Thirsty. This is a different kind of vampire story, one where the vampires are not the main issue. It is a story about a friendship between two women who will do anything for each other, even kill.
A review for the audiobook version of the fourth book in the Saint of Steel series by T. Kingfisher. An enjoyable story and romance between two characters that you wouldn’t think would work together, but they do.
A review for the fourth book in the Edinburgh Nights series by T.L. Huchu. The Legacy of Arniston House is story full of magic, ghosts, and a deadly cult bent on bringing back the past to make Scotland great again.
I’m trying to keep on top of my reviews this month, so you might see a few more mini-reviews from me. This week I am reviewing two recently published books that are pretty different from each other. Both were good, but not anything exceptional. But I did enjoy reading them. Today I am reviewing to new books: Lula Dean’s Little Library of Banned Books by Kirsten Miller and Home is Where the Bodies Are by Jeneva Rose.
First Lines Friday is a weekly feature (or when I feel like it) hosted by Wandering Words. What if instead of judging a book by its cover we judge it by its opening lines?
Can you figure out this week’s book just from the first line?
A review for the new book by Paula Hawkins, The Blue Hour. This suspense thriller unfortunately didn’t quite work for me, mostly because of the lack of suspense and a very ambiguous ending.
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