Books tagged with: friendship

  • All the Birds in the SkyCharlie Jane Anders
    All the Birds in the Sky
    by Charlie Jane Anders
    Science Fiction

    Just a month into the New Year and already I've found a must read book. All the Birds in the Sky is the debut novel of Charlie Jane Anders who has been editor-in-chief of the popular SF site IO9.com for quite some time. All the Birds in the Sky follows the paths of two very different people who f...

  • Finders KeepersRuss Colchamiro
    Finders Keepers
    by Russ Colchamiro
    Science Fiction

    Finders Keepers is a comedy scifi novel and the debut of Russ Colchamiro. On a backpacking trip through Europe, Jason Medley and Theo Barnes stumble through hash bars and hangovers; religious zealots and stalkers; food poisoning and thunderstorms; cute girls; overnight trains; fever pitch hallucina...

  • MechalarumEmma Larkins
    Mechalarum
    by Emma Larkins
    Science Fiction

    The product of a 2013 Kickstarter, Mechalarum is Emma Larkins debut work and has clearly benefited from her efforts to crowd fund. The process has allowed her creative control and enabled her to seek professional assistance in assuring the work comes up to scratch. And come up to scratch it does, w...

  • Mr VertigoPaul Auster
    Mr Vertigo
    by Paul Auster
    Science Fiction

    Mr. Vertigo is a novel by the American author Paul Auster. Reading Auster is a bit like riding a bike, you’ll get a really good view of the scenery, you’ll have to do some of the work yourself and if you keep at it for to long your ass will start to hurt. Peter Aaron is a writer, Peter has a frien...

  • USUJayde Ver Elst
    USU
    by Jayde Ver Elst
    Science Fiction

    USU is a clever, clever book. Set after some cataclysmic event has rendered the Earth free of it's human infestation, the novel follows the stuffed and robotically animated rabbit known as Usu. He searches the broken, twisted wasteland for something, something he will only know when he finds it. The...

  • A Heist Too FarRob Knipe
    A Heist Too Far
    by Rob Knipe
    Fantasy

    A Heist Too Far is a fantasy novel by Rob Knipe. Mallik is a skilled assassin who is very quick on his feet with an even quicker temper, he travels with Dick Swede (aka The Black Moustache) who is nearly famous as a highwayman and Jules Van Jives - a quickly bored elf with an unhealthy obession for...

  • ChangesMercedes Lackey
    Changes
    by Mercedes Lackey
    Fantasy

    Changes continues the story of Herald trainee Mags, following on from the events of Foundation and Intrigues - all set within the long running Valdemar series. As with the previous two books, Changes manages to disarm the reader and surround them in a warm, soothing embrace - yes we are firmly in t...

  • Dragon RiderDavid Burrows
    Dragon Rider
    by David Burrows
    Fantasy

    Dragon Rider is the second novel is the Prophecy of the Kings series, written by David Burrows. After the climatic cliff hanger at the end of Legacy of the Eldric, we find our intrepid adventurers return to a world that has changed without them. War now threatens the land and Nations who once had s...

  • Hunt for ValamonDK Mok
    Hunt for Valamon
    by DK Mok
    Fantasy

    Hunt for Valamon is a fast paced epic fantasy tale that manages to portray a number of genre tropes in a fresh and exciting way. The strong authorial voice of the writing quickly draws the reader in, the almost conversational tone of delivery actually put me in mind of Terry Pratchett. The language...

  • Moon CrossingCathy Farr
    Moon Crossing
    by Cathy Farr
    Fantasy

    Moon Crossing is the second novel in the Fellhounds of Thesk series and the follow-up to the young adult fantasy novel Moon Chase. We are once again joined with Wil Calloway and those huge Fellhounds and this time its to rescue one of Wil's friends, continuing on from the cliff-hanger ending of the...

  • NocturnalScott Sigler
    Nocturnal
    by Scott Sigler
    Fantasy

    San Francisco Homicide detective Bryan Clauser thinks he may be losing his mind. What other explanation could there be for the dreams he keeps having, dreams where he witnesses some really gruesome murders that also happen to be actually carried out all over the city. As he and his partner Pookie Ch...

  • Quest of the DemonML Sawyer
    Quest of the Demon
    by ML Sawyer
    Fantasy

    Darci is a fairly regular sixteen year old, living in a country town and plays basketball in her free time with her best friend. Her life is abruptly changed when she is accidentally transported to the strange land of Nahaba by a young apprentice wizard called Taslessian. Within hours of her arriva...

  • RedoubtMercedes Lackey
    Redoubt
    by Mercedes Lackey
    Fantasy

    Redoubt is the fourth novel in the Collegium Chronicles, following the adventures of the Herald trainee Mags and his friends Bear, Lena and Amily. Mags is becoming something of a hero, not least due to his rescuing of Amily (the daughter of Kings Own Herald Nikolas) from agents of Valdemars treacher...

  • Serpent MageWeis and Hickman
    Serpent Mage
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    The novel picks up just where Fire Sea left off. Alfred jumps into Death's Gate as Haplo's ship passes through it, and finds himself in a stasis room like the one he woke up in; in fact, he believes he's on Arianus. Tired, he decides to put himself back to sleep... Only to find someone in "his&...

  • Something Wicked This Way ComesRay Bradbury
    Fantasy

    Illustration ©2019 Tim McDonagh from The Folio Society edition of Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes The bright yellow cover of this Folio Society edition of Bradbury’s classic fantasy novel is inset with a cartoon-like carnival poster, clearly telegraphi...

  • The Cat's MawBrooke Burgess
    The Cat's Maw
    by Brooke Burgess
    Fantasy

    In the small, sleepy town of Appleton, Billy Brahm’s life goes from clumsy to cursed. After following a cat into the road, he’s hit by a car, his leg shattered, and his summer is ruined. A mysterious cat begins to visit him at his bedside, and Billy is haunted by strange dreams. According to the cre...

  • The Desert of SoulsHoward Andrew Jones
    The Desert of Souls
    by Howard Andrew Jones
    Fantasy

    The Desert of Souls is a sweeping tale that is firmly rooted in the traditional sword and sorcery genre and yet flows with a steady, refreshing grace. Set in 8th Century Baghdad the novel is full of an eastern style that sets it apart from the majority of the genre. It's a refreshing environment and...

  • The Dragon on the BorderGordon R Dickson
    The Dragon on the Border
    by Gordon R Dickson
    Fantasy

    The Dragon on the Border is a fantasy novel by the author Gordon R Dickson. Jim, the product of a technologically advanced civilization 600 years ahead of the one he now calls home and now minor apprentice in magic has become the target of the Dark Powers in their latest attempt to disrupt the bala...

  • The Goblet of FireJ K Rowling
    The Goblet of Fire
    by J K Rowling
    Fantasy

    The first thing that you notice when you pick up this, the fourth volume in the Potter saga, is that it's more than twice as thick as any of the previous Potter books. The first thing that you notice when you start reading it, is that it doesn't start of like the other books, with Harry livi...

  • The Great HuntRobert Jordan
    The Great Hunt
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    For centuries traveling gleemen have told the tales of The Great Hunt of the Horn. So many tales about each of the Hunters, and so many Hunters to tell of . . . Now the Horn itself is found: the Horn of Valere long thought only legend, the Horn which will raise the dead heroes of the ages. Rand al...

  • The Lemoncholy Life of Annie AsterScott Wilbanks
    Fantasy

    The Lemoncholy Life of Annie Aster was a rollercoaster ride from start to finish. Though it begins a little bit slow, as more and more threads are strung together for the reader, everything picks up. I love the storyline, I love the characters, and I love the settings. In modern San Francisco, Anna...

  • The Philosophers StoneJ K Rowling
    The Philosophers Stone
    by J K Rowling
    Fantasy

    (Seems to be titled "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" in the US). Not a word about Hollywood and the movie (which I will be seeing in a couple of days). Not a word about the merchandise and kids dressed as Potter. Not a word about how this book made the kids read again. Just the book. Some o...

  • The Prisoner of AzkabanJ K Rowling
    The Prisoner of Azkaban
    by J K Rowling
    Fantasy

    I’m really impressed. Rowling has managed what to write a series of books, where at least the first three are wonderful. That isn’t something that you see everyday. …The prisoner of Azkaban, starts of exactly like the first two Potter books, with Harry enduring the Dursleys and looking forward his...

  • The Supernatural EnchancementsEdgar Cantero
    Fantasy

    Quirky, accomplished and a great deal of fun, The Supernatural Enchancements is a solid, unusual novel. The premise of the story is the protagonist (known only as A) inherits the American estate "Axton House" following the death of his second cousin "Uncle" Ambrose, whom A had never met or even kne...

  • The TwyningTerence Blacker
    The Twyning
    by Terence Blacker
    Fantasy

    The Twyning is the story of young ratling Efren, born into a time of change for the Kingdom of rats that live beneath the city streets. After the King is assassinated by a human scientist Dr Henry Ross-Gibbon the whole rat society is in turmoil. This death is just the start though, with the Doctor...

  • Traitor's BladeSebastien De Castell
    Traitor's Blade
    by Sebastien De Castell
    Fantasy

    Traitor’s Blade is a rare treat for the fantasy reader, it follows Falcio Val Mond, First Cantor of the Greatcoats as he and his loyal comrades Kest and Brasti struggle to survive in a world that has turned against them, valiantly trying to follow the last orders of their fallen king. Facing off aga...

  • Vegas KnightsMatt Forbeck
    Vegas Knights
    by Matt Forbeck
    Fantasy

    Vegas Knights is an urban fantasy novel by Matt Forbeck. Set in Las Vegas (Nevada) the story tells the tale of two college guys Jackson and Bill at the University of Michigan who also happen to be students of magic (or "trans-quantum postulating" in scientific terminology). Having learnt such valua...

  • DreamcatcherStephen King
    Dreamcatcher
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Dreamcatcher is a horror novel by Stephen King. This is the first novel from King since his accident and as that eagerly awaited - did he damage more than his hip? Would all his stories from now on be stuffed with references to his own accident and the horror that is recovery? Or even worse; rete...

  • ITStephen King
    IT
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Probably one of the best King books ever written. No that isn’t the review although if it was that would still sum the book up pretty easily. So great I’ve now read it four times, although admittedly never as fast as that first hungry initial reading. With every read, certain elements jump out at yo...

  • Blade BoundChloe Neill
    Blade Bound
    by Chloe Neill
    Fantasy

    Blade Bound is the final instalment of Chloe Neill’s urban fantasy Chicagoland Vampire series.  It can be read as a standalone novel, but I recommend you start earlier in the series to get full enjoyment, reading them in reverse order will result in significant plot spoilers.  The protagonist, Me...

  • The Ion RaiderIan Whates
    The Ion Raider
    by Ian Whates
    Science Fiction

    The Ion Raiders is book two of Ian Whate’s Dark Angels series, however despite featuring some if the same characters as book one, Pelquin’s Comet, it is not a direct continuation of the same story so can be read without knowledge of the first.  Not to give to many spoilers, but the story does contin...

  • Body in the WoodsSarah Lotz
    Body in the Woods
    by Sarah Lotz
    Horror

    Newcon Press’ second novella series continues with Body in the Woods by Sarah Lotz. This book is perhaps the least fantastical of the set. The story is in first person, our narrator is Claire, a single mother who has recently moved into a remote house that backs on to a swathe of woodland. One ni...

  • The Chalk ManC J Tudor
    The Chalk Man
    by C J Tudor
    Horror

    I picked up The Chalk Man purely as a result of Stephen King recommending it on twitter after he said If you like my stuff, you'll like this. He isn't wrong. While it has a voice all it's own, The Chalk Man is a perfect accompliment to Kings' work. It begins in 1986, 12 year old E...

  • Sherlock Holmes and the Sussex Sea-DevilsJames Lovegrove
    Fantasy

    Sherlock Holmes and his creator may be long dead, but this has not stopped the master detective living on in the works of others. James Lovegrove has written several stories that have expanded on Arthur Conan Doyle’s legacy, but The Cthulhu Casebooks offer something very different by blending...

  • The Sign of NineG. S. Denning
    The Sign of Nine
    by G. S. Denning
    Fantasy

    Warlock Holmes is back. No, not Sherlock, Warlock. If you think about it, what makes more sense; a man who can somehow divine everything from a few clues, or a Warlock who just uses magic to do the same? The Sign of Nine continues the premise that Sir Conan Doyle’s original stories were actual...

  • Lord of SecretsBreanna Teintze
    Lord of Secrets
    by Breanna Teintze
    Fantasy

    To the ill-informed all fantasy books must look the same. They are about elves and dwarves, just retelling The Lord of the Rings repeatedly, aren’t they? Fans of the genre know that this is anything but the truth. Fantasy is an evolving genre that encompasses high and low, fantastical and the...

  • Fate of the fallenKel Kade
    Fate of the fallen
    by Kel Kade
    Fantasy

    I love Fantasy, I believe it creates a sense of the epic better than any other genre. Not only do big events happen but you often get a manifest destiny. The issue can be that too much might happen. Our heroes come across so many monsters, pitfa...

  • The Rise of SkywalkerRae Carson
    The Rise of Skywalker
    by Rae Carson
    Science Fiction

    The movie tie in novel is much maligned but I have always had a soft spot for them. I have spent many a pleasurable hour with the works of tie in master Alan Dean Foster who was able to improve several mediocre films with his prose. Films are great at bombastic action, but they often fail to convey...

  • Survivor SongPaul Tremblay
    Survivor Song
    by Paul Tremblay
    Horror

    Releasing a book about a pandemic during the middle of a real pandemic is a bold move but one that Paul Tremblay has taken. Although there are some parallels between what is happening in the world today and those within the pages of Survivor Song, they are not enou...

  • Lycanthropy and Other Chronic IllnessesKristen O'neal
    Fantasy

    Stories about monsters were told back in the day as a way of making people scared. And they should be. How do you stop a curious child from walking in the woods at night or going for a swim in a deep lagoon? You speak of vampires, werewolves and merfolk that are th...

  • SwashbucklersDan Hanks
    Swashbucklers
    by Dan Hanks
    Fantasy

    Nostalgia is a dangerous tool to use in a novel as what people think happened is not always the case. They prefer to see the past through rose tinted glasses. The 1980s can be seen as an era of Nintendo playing and Bermuda shorts, but that was not my 80s. I remember the Spectrum, my milk being&...

  • The Knave of SecretsAlex Livingston
    The Knave of Secrets
    by Alex Livingston
    Fantasy

    I am not a gambler. All I do is look at how rich the casino and betting companies are to see that the odds are stacked in their favour. If you play the odds, eventually you will lose. However, there are games that require skill. Poker is one. It has elements of luck, but a skilled player is far more...

  • The Last Adventure of Constance VerityA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    That one time you saved the world with stick with you for a lifetime. You may bask in the glory one day and wake up with cold sweats the next, either way, the event will be forged in your memories forever. What about two times? Three or four? Do you think that James Bond can remember ...

  • Constance Verity Saves the WorldA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    Constance Verity is anything but normal, blessed as a child to live an adventurous life, this may sound exciting, but the reality is much different. Now in her 30s, she is fed up with having to save the world all the time and just wants some normal downtime. By Constance Verity Saves the World, some...

  • Constance Verity Destroys the UniverseA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    By this, her third outing, Constance Verity has saved the world countless times and the Universe itself just as many. Fighting off otherworldly threats is an everyday occurrence. It is the more mundane things in life that worry Constance like assuring her best friend’s wedding is not ruined by...

  • The Kaiju Preservation SocietyJohn Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    What are you going to do if Godzilla arrives. You must have a plan in mind. At least one for home and one for the office. I used to have a great plan that would see me have an almost 100% chance of surviving, but then I went and started a family. Now I have no chance as their little legs are just no...

  • StringersChris Panatier
    Stringers
    by Chris Panatier
    Science Fiction

    Comedy combined with Science Fiction is rare because it is so hard to do. When it clicks though it is worthwhile as you get some absolute classics such as Red Dwarf or Hitchhiker's. Those are mighty large shoes to try and fill, but Chris Panatier is giving it a go in Stringers, a book that feel...

  • Signal to NoiseSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Signal to Noise
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Science Fiction

    I am not one to look back on my life, preferring to live and enjoy what I have in the present, but when I do it is often about my years at school and University. That person I could have treated better or the time I stood up in assembly by mistake. The events felt at huge at the time, but in retrosp...

  • CackleRachel Harrison
    Cackle
    by Rachel Harrison
    Fantasy

    Witches have a bad reputation, green skinned, covered in warts and prone to stealing children so that they can use their bones for broth. People feared the idea of witches so much that they would place innocent people on trial. Don’t they realise that if witches were as powerful as they though...

  • Legends and LattesTravis Baldree
    Legends and Lattes
    by Travis Baldree
    Fantasy

    What is Comfy Fantasy? It is a new name for the type of fantasy that does not have you on edge all the time. As a genre fantasy can often feel epic, but also stressful. The heroes on the run from a darkness they cannot fathom, or a fellowship were hardly anyone can be trusted. Sometimes you just wan...

  • Reluctant ImmortalsGwendolyn Kiste
    Reluctant Immortals
    by Gwendolyn Kiste
    Horror

    Classic stories leaving copyright has been a boon to modern authors who are suddenly able to play with much loved characters as they wish. The mash up is not unusual when two contemporary characters suddenly meet, but often these books are set at the same time as the original text. What would happen...

  • Bang Bang BodhisattvaAubrey Wood
    Bang Bang Bodhisattva
    by Aubrey Wood
    Science Fiction

    What is the near future going to be like, utopian, dystopian, a bit of both. Chances are that it will be just as messed up as the past and the present. The future may be a little grim, but that does not mean it cannot be fun. Aubrey Wood’s future is as bright as neon, but also as dark as pitch...

  • The Road to NeverwinterJaleigh Johnson
    The Road to Neverwinter
    by Jaleigh Johnson
    Fantasy

    The tie in novel can have a bad press, a book churned out to steal some of the glory from a popular TV show or film, but I have a soft spot for them. When done well they can expand the universe; tie in novels for the likes of Star Trek, Doctor Who, Star Wars (twice) and many others have given fans c...

  • Silver NitrateSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Silver Nitrate
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    There is something magical about the silver screen. I enjoy watching films at home, but I love going to the cinema. A group of people in a dark room with a large screen and superior sound. I feel like I am immersed in the film, it draws me in, there is a power. But what if that power was real? What...

  • The Others of EdenwellVerity M Holloway
    The Others of Edenwell
    by Verity M Holloway
    Horror

    Societies’ relationship with death has changed through the ages. With developments in healthcare and longer lifespans the modern world seems to want to forget that death exists, you are dropped into a lonely pit of grief while others continue to live around you. Good health was not always easy...

  • The KindnessJohn Ajvide Lindqvist
    The Kindness
    by John Ajvide Lindqvist
    Horror

    I like to think that the world is built upon small acts of kindness. Whilst nation states and some individuals may be doing their best to destroy the world, the rest of us are just trying to get by. This can be helped with a please or a thank you. If you see someone drop their credit card, you would...

  • The UndetectablesCourtney Smyth
    The Undetectables
    by Courtney Smyth
    Fantasy

    Advances in forensic science can feel like magic from the discovery that we all had unique fingerprints to the use of DNA to catch criminals, but what would you do in a world were magic exists? Can science be used to solve crimes committed by magic? The Undetectables believe so, they use their scien...

  • Captain Marvel Shadow CodeGilly Segal
    Science Fiction

    Any fan of the Marvelverse will understand there are various aspects to it. You have your traditional superhero tales, but also those set-in space, or ones that feature magic. Captain Marvel has always been a character who spans them all. Captain Carol Danvers has seen it all in her adventures acros...

  • Boneshops & BonedustTravis Baldree
    Boneshops & Bonedust
    by Travis Baldree
    Fantasy

    I have read a lot of Fantasy fiction over the years and have picked up trends as time passes from the classic High Fantasy epics of the 80s to the gritty Low Fantasy of more recent times. A new trend is in town, and I see Travis Baldree at the vanguard of Cosy Fantasy. Legends & Lattes was a sfb...

  • The Dead Take the A TrainCassandra Khaw
    The Dead Take the A Train
    by Cassandra Khaw
    Science Fiction

    Certain jobs can change you, the things that you see, the things that you must do. You may become closed off, hard, brittle, or just a little bit over the edge. Julie Crews has become all these things and more as a local Psychic Operative. Living off a diet of cocaine, regret and apprentices wh...

  • Network EffectMartha Wells
    Network Effect
    by Martha Wells
    Science Fiction

    After a string of novellas that were, frankly, brilliant, the fifth book and first full-size novel in The Murderbot Diaries, Network Effect stormed the science fiction scene when it was released, winning the holy trinity of Hugo, Locus and Nebula awards for best novel. As I write this the first...

  • Sword of the War GodTim Hodkinson
    Sword of the War God
    by Tim Hodkinson
    Fantasy

    There are ways of writing a historic epic. The current trend is more towards long drawn-out sagas over several books, sometimes up to twenty or more. This allows you to really get to know the characters and read about them for decades, keeping you and the author busy for years. They are great but ca...

  • Small Town HorrorRonald Malfi
    Small Town Horror
    by Ronald Malfi
    Horror

    The horror genre has taught me how to deal with events that happened in my childhood. If you and a bunch of friends accidently run over a homeless person or set fire to a witch, the best thing is just to admit it without delay and take your lumps. You see, no matter how many years pass, they always...

  • The DieJude Berman
    The Die
    by Jude Berman
    Science Fiction

    There are a lot of different ways to be smart and just because you are one, does not automatically make you the other. The classic is book versus street, you may know your way around an academic essay, but would fail to talk yourself out of a tricky situation outside the pub at closing time. If you...

  • ScorchedDon Silver
    Scorched
    by Don Silver
    General Fiction

    Coming-of-age stories are perennial favorites because most of us get the chance to come-of-age at some point. You may know a few immature adults, but when it comes down to it, they are not walking around in short trousers and attending school. The reason that we do not all write about our own story...

  • The Fan Who Knew Too MuchNev Fountain
    The Fan Who Knew Too Much
    by Nev Fountain
    General Fiction

    Cozy crime comes in all sizes, but it still has an odd name. The characters may be eccentric, the setting twee, but when it comes down to it, there is still a dead person lying on the carpet. Marple had her village with its higher crime rate than Gotham, Poirot had various summer vacation spots, Jes...

  • Shoestring TheoryMariana Costa
    Shoestring Theory
    by Mariana Costa
    Horror

    The creation of a new subgenre comes fraught with danger, there may be a good reason it did not arise before. I am seeing an increase in what can be called Cosy Fantasy, novels that have many of the tropes of the genre but concentrate on character interaction over the action. The threat is that Fant...

  • The Sorcerer and the NecromancerSusan Ann Walker
    The Sorcerer and the Necromancer
    by Susan Ann Walker
    Fantasy

    I adore the fantasy genre and as someone who reads it a lot, I have seen the ebbs and flows in the genre over the years. There have always been outliers, but there is a certain style of fantasy that dominated for each of the decades. Until recently, I have read a lot of Low Fantasy, a genre low on m...

  • Conan: Cult of the Obsidian MoonJames Lovegrove
    Fantasy

    What makes a good Conan novel? It seems like a simple calculation, a brawny barbarian, a massive sword, wine, woman, and violence. Mix the lot into a pot and you have a Conan adventure to be proud of, except it is not that easy. Conan lives in a vibrant and complex world that can be stodgy to read i...

  • The Serpent Called MercyRoanne Lau
    The Serpent Called Mercy
    by Roanne Lau
    Fantasy

    There are shifts in the Fantasy genre that perhaps only the ardent fan will notice. The epics of Tolkien and the 80s are still being written, but now there are more intimate stories that follow one or two characters as they graft in their small way among the wider Fantasy world. These are often...

  • Clockwork BoysT Kingfisher
    Clockwork Boys
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

    The fantasy genre has the reputation of producing books big enough that you could use as a casual seat, trilogies that you could line up, throw some cushions on top and make into a settee. It does not have to be this way and T Kingfisher has certainly bucked the trend with Clockwork Boys, which come...

  • The DescentChristian Francis
    The Descent
    by Christian Francis
    Horror

    I read so much genre fiction and have seen so many horror movies that I don’t scare easy. My brain automatically remembers all the behind-the-scenes make-up specials and director commentaries; I know it is not real. However, back in 2005 the last film that scared me was about a group of female...

  • Carried AwayT J Derry
    Carried Away
    by T J Derry
    General Fiction

    There are different people in life. There are those that love the idea of travelling to a remote Indonesian island with three friends and surfing huge waves, and those that think this is a barmy idea and would rather go on a nice city break or read a book by the pool. What you do not always get is a...

  • Death Wasnt InvitedCarlene O'connor
    Death Wasnt Invited
    by Carlene O'connor
    General Fiction

    I love to play hidden object games; I find them a nice way to relax after a busy day. I also love to read for the same reason, even a crime story can be comforting in its own way. Death Wasn’t Invited by Carlene O’Connor combines the two as it is a ‘cosy’ crime caper based on...