If you are looking for a fun series that combines element of horror and historical fiction, have I got a series for you! Shane Carrow’s Avery & Carter series (3 titles) has a lot of great historical detail, plenty of action and adventure, and some classic horror movie characters. The first book in the series is Vampire on the Orient… Read more
Lisa
Review: Bunny by Mona Awad
Bunny is one of the best books I’ve read this year – and one of the strangest. I mean, I love strange books, but there were times when I had to set the book down and say “What the [heck] did I just read? Seriously, what did I just read?” Crazy stuff, but worth the effort. Samantha is an MFA… Read more
Review: Camino Ghosts by John Grisham
This is a great addition to this series. It stays in the universe of Camino Island and draws on many of the characters we’ve already met. The new story is still about books and the book business, with some history and some courtroom drama mixed in. (After all, this is John Grisham – I knew there would eventually be a… Read more
Review: Camino Winds by John Grisham
This is the second book in the Camino Island series and, like most second installments, isn’t quite as good as the first. Still, it’s a page-turner with a plot that would make a great movie. We rejoin our bookseller, Bruce Cable of Bay Books, after the hubbub surrounding the Princeton manuscripts has died down. Mercer is coming back to town… Read more
Review: Camino Island by John Grisham
Camino Island starts out with a caper, and I love a good caper. A group of men are planning a heist. They are scoping out their target, getting familiar with the security, and devising a plan to break into the rare books library at Princeton University and steal the original manuscripts written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. It’s a cunning plan… Read more
Review: The Echo of Old Books by Barbara Davis
This is really a lovely book. Ashlyn is a rare book dealer and in a box of books from an estate, she comes across an oddity: a bound book with no author, no publisher, no end pages, none of the usual stuff. Only a title – Regretting Belle – an inscription: How, Belle? After everything…how could you do it? Intriguing!… Read more
Review: Trouble Is What I Do by Walter Mosley
To paraphrase the great Sugar Ray Robinson,” I said, “trouble is what I do.” Leonid McGill Walter Mosley is a poet. Sure, he writes detective novels, but the way he writes them can be pure poetry. From the names of the characters, to his descriptions, the words and phrases he chooses are a pleasure to read — but that’s only… Read more
Review: Polar Bear Dawn by Lyle Nicholson
So, this was another of my Bargain Books on Kindle. A while back, I ordered a stack of titles that were all free or 99 cents, and most of them have been pretty good (there are a few that I started and abandoned, but that’s another post altogether). Polar Bear Dawn is the first book in the Detective Bernadette Callahan… Read more
Review: All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries) by Martha Wells
Murderbots! How could I resist a book about Murderbots! Even the title is awesome — All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries) — and I can’t stop saying it (murderbot murderbot murderbot). The fact that the author of this terrific bit of sci-fi is a woman (Martha Wells)? That’s just icing on the murderbot cake. All Systems Red: The Murderbot Diaries… Read more
Review: The Dime by Kathleen Kent
I picked up a copy of The Dime by Kathleen Kent because I requested (and am eager to get my hands on) a review copy of the second book in the series, called The Burn. Makes sense to read the first book first, right? But as I was ordering the first book on Amazon, I noticed a familiar title and… Read more