about 4 months ago - 1 comment
Communication had always been the priority of all living beings. As for humans, the first communicative process was the scriptures in caves. This gradually resulted in writings on leafs and then on papers. Today other than advance audio visual communications, books are also a good source of information. In fact, till date, it is still considered to be an idealistically superior mode of communication.
about 4 months ago - No comments
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld Leviathan is delightful Steampunk and WWI alternative history blending that comes off gripping with its rapid-pace. Europe is divided into two factions. Austria-Hungry have advanced weaponry called Clankers, which can cause devastation in their many walking tank-like forms. Britain and its affiliates are Darwinists adhering to an advanced genetic science. Leviathan
about 4 months ago - No comments
Thirteen Years Later by Jasper Kent One of my favorite books of 2009—and one of the year’s best debuts—was Jasper Kent’s “Twelve”. In fact, I loved “Twelve” so much, I had concerns about the sequel disappointing me due to the lofty standards set by Mr. Kent’s outstanding debut. Fortunately, I needn’t have worried… For starters,
about 5 months ago - No comments
The Desert Spear by Peter V. Brett In The Warded Man, Brett had introduced a world in which demons rise from the ground each night, slaughtering anyone they can catch. And each night the people of the land cower behind the only defenses that they have, specialized wards that the demons are unable to cross.
about 6 months ago - No comments
The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death by Charlie Huston Web Goodhue, an unemployed former school teacher, spends most his days harassing his best friend. Web is a bit of a jerk, a fact tolerated by his few friends because of the traumatic events that led to his unemployment and the fact that
about 6 months ago - No comments
Geosynchron (Book Three of the Jump 225 Trilogy) by David Louis Edelman Imagine the brilliance of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs in the personality of a rock star. Imagine this individual has charted maverick territory in the technological world, and that same world is waiting on baited breath for him to let it know when
about 6 months ago - No comments
Sleepless by Charlie Huston Sleepless is a stark and startling novel in which nothing is sacred, a lucid dream of an awful future that threatens to impinge upon a present that is but a hair’s breadth from our own. Yet it is a league more powerful than other such doom-saying tales because its woeful suppositions are
about 6 months ago - No comments
Suspense fiction books are growing in popularity because of the fact that they include elements no other type of novel does. The type of bitter-sweet diversion they present is that of a mystified entrapment that embeds itself in your brain. Continuously it tightens it’s grasp around your senses until you are utterly addicted!
about 6 months ago - No comments
Mr. Shivers by Robert Jackson Bennett Mr. Shivers was easily one of the most highly anticipated novels of early 2010 for me – the blend of horror, gritty realism, and the bleakness of the Great Depression setting instantly appealed to me, and I was ecstatic when I received an ARC for the title. Add to
about 6 months ago - No comments
Sleepless: A Novel by Charlie Huston Sleepless is Charlie Huston’s 11th and probably most challenging book to date. It is definitely one of the most difficult books I’ve read in recent years, but not challenging in the sense that I couldn’t follow what was going on as the events and actions of the characters are