Book Review: Quiet by Susan Cain

I purchased a copy of this book for my own enjoyment with no expectations of a review   Cain’s Quiet was a real eye-opener for me. I mean, I knew I was introverted, but not really by how much. I gained a new perspective and a few new ways of doing things.   There are […]

Book Review: The Stuff of Life by Asif Zaidi

This book was reviewed for the Manhattan Book Review   Asif Zaidi’s The Stuff of Life is a veritable treasure trove of essays bridging a wide variety of philosophical topics. There are several sections, each with a general focus. This book is stuffed with the type of philosophical questions that I, as a philosopher myself, […]

Book Review: Gilded Cage by Vic James

This book was reviewed for the San Francisco and Seattle Book Reviews & Netgalley   Vic James has woven a vision of a dystopic alter-earth where certain people, known as Equals or the Skilled, have magical abilities. In some countries, the Equals rule to the exclusion of others. Great Britain is one such country.   […]

Book Review: Confessions of Young Nero by Margaret George

George’s Confessions of Young Nero humanises an oft demonised ghost from distant ages past, he who ‘fiddled’ whilst Rome burned. We follow Nero’s musings about his childhood, and see how known and suspected events likely shaped the real Nero’s life. This is the first of a pair of books, unusual for George, who specialises in […]

Book Review: Longhorn by Chance Maree

While going to observe a calving of one of his prize longhorns, Jesse meets his new veterinarian, come to give him news. On the way to the calving, they pass men in hazmat suits traipsing around in his wife’s neighbor alfalfa fields. The vet enquires, but Jesse doesn’t know much about his wife’s business.   […]

Book Review: Obelisk by J L Pugh

**This book was reviewed for the Seattle Book Review*   I have no words adequate to describe the beauty of this work. As the opening poem, Progeny, suggests, each of these poems are seeds, burrowing in the mind to unfurl exquisite truths. I have an ecopy of this book, but I want a hardcopy to […]

Book Review: Himself by Jess Kidd

**This book was reviewed for Port Jericho via Netgalley Kidd’s Himself tells the tale of Mahoney, an orphan come from Dublin to the provincial village of Mulderrig in search of his past and the truth of his mother’s apparent abandonment of him. Mulderrig is a quiet town, harbouring hidden secrets, secrets ready to burst forth […]

Book Review: Lockwood & Co: The Creeping Shadow by Jonathan Stroud

This book was reviewed for the Manhattan Book Review   I am sad to admit that Lockwood and Co: The Creeping Shadow was my first foray into Stroud’s Lockwood books. I absolutely adore his Bartimaeus series. Stroud has a true gift for weaving tales of gritty magic, and stringent societies, complete with strong females, and […]

Book Review: The Far Shore by Paul T Scheuring

This book was reviewed for the San Francisco Book Review   **Warning: graphic description of war situations, including torture.   With The Far Shore, Scheuring has woven a tale that traverses time itself. It is the slow stitching together of a person’s life, quilted from memories of the distant past, giving shape, form, substance to […]

Cover Reveal: Amanda Lester and the Gold Spectacles Surprise

Today is the cover reveal for Amanda Lester and the Gold Spectacles Surprise by Paula Berinstein. This cover reveal is organized by Lola’s Blog Tours. The cover is designed by Anna Mogileva. Amanda Lester and the Gold Spectacles Surprise (Amanda Lester, Detective #6) By Paula Berinstein Genre: Detective/ Mystery Age category: Young Adult Release Date: […]

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