Arianna Grace liked her boring, Midwestern, teenage life where she ignored the many unanswered questions of her childhood. Why were her parents dead? Why did she not have family? Where was she raised until she was five? When someone offers to explain it all, Arianna thinks she’s just getting answers. Instead, she is thrown into… Continue reading Book #43: The Legend of the Blue Eyes by B. Kristin McMichael
Tag: Book Review
Book #42: The Marked Son by Shea Berkley
Seventeen-year-old Dylan Kennedy always knew something was different about him, but until his mother abandoned him in the middle of Oregon with grandparents he's never met, he had no idea what. When Dylan sees a girl in white in the woods behind his grandparents' farm, he knows he's seen her before...in his dreams. He's felt… Continue reading Book #42: The Marked Son by Shea Berkley
Book #41 of 2016: Time’s Divide by Rysa Walker
The Cyrists are swiftly moving into position to begin the Culling, and Kate’s options are dwindling. With each jump to the past or the future, Kate may trigger a new timeline shift. Worse, the loyalties of those around her—including the allegiances of Kiernan and the Fifth Column, the shadowy group working with Kate—are increasingly unclear.… Continue reading Book #41 of 2016: Time’s Divide by Rysa Walker
Book #40 of 2016: Time’s Edge by Rysa Walker
To stop her sadistic grandfather, Saul, and his band of time travelers from rewriting history, Kate must race to retrieve the CHRONOS keys before they fall into the Cyrists' hands. If she jumps back in time and pulls the wrong key--one that might tip off the Cyrists to her strategy--her whole plan could come crashing… Continue reading Book #40 of 2016: Time’s Edge by Rysa Walker
Book #39 of 2016: Moving In by Ron Ripley
“Iron…and…salt,” whispers the old man. The dead old man. “Hurry or it will be too late…” To escape the stress of living in the city and the anxiety of his high pressure job, Brian Roy moves his family to the country. His wife loves the easy living, but Brian hates it…especially when weird things start… Continue reading Book #39 of 2016: Moving In by Ron Ripley
Book #38 of 2016: The Girl I Used To Be by April Henry
When Olivia's mother was killed, everyone suspected her father of murder. But his whereabouts remained a mystery. Fast forward fourteen years. New evidence now proves Olivia's father was actually murdered on the same fateful day her mother died. That means there's a killer still at large. It's up to Olivia to uncover who that may… Continue reading Book #38 of 2016: The Girl I Used To Be by April Henry
Book #37 of 2016: How to Ditch Dead Guys by Ann M. Noser
After everyone EMMA ROBERTS raises from the dead sinks back into the river, she longs for a purpose. A schedule. Something to accomplish. Then OFFICER WALKER leaves a message on her voice mail: "There's been another murder, and I need your help." With a bag of witchcraft supplies slung over her shoulder, Emma performs a… Continue reading Book #37 of 2016: How to Ditch Dead Guys by Ann M. Noser
Book #36 of 2016: Arena by Holly Jennings
A fast-paced and gripping near-future science fiction debut about the gritty world of competitive gaming... Every week, Kali Ling fights to the death on national TV. She’s died hundreds of times. And it never gets easier... The RAGE tournaments—the Virtual Gaming League’s elite competition where the best gamers in the world compete in a no-holds-barred… Continue reading Book #36 of 2016: Arena by Holly Jennings
Book #35 of 2016: Indexing: Reflections by Seanan McGuire
“For her to love me, she had to be willing to kill me. Anything else would show that her heart was untrue.” The struggle against not-so-charming storybook narratives isn’t the only complicating factor in Henrietta “Henry” Marchen’s life. As part of the ATI Management Bureau team protecting the world from fairy tales gone awry, she’s… Continue reading Book #35 of 2016: Indexing: Reflections by Seanan McGuire
Book 34 of 2016: Indexing by Seanan McGuire
Good advice...especially when a story can kill you. For most people, the story of their lives is just that: the accumulation of time, encounters, and actions into a cohesive whole. But for an unfortunate few, that day-to-day existence is affected—perhaps infected is a better word—by memetic incursion: where fairy tale narratives become reality, often with… Continue reading Book 34 of 2016: Indexing by Seanan McGuire
