Sanctuary by Ken Bruen – Review




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Sanctuary: A Novel (Jack Taylor Series) by Ken Bruen
To paraphrase Mark Twain, Jack knows it is easy to stop drinking; he has done it a thousand times. The story line is fast-paced though the ending feels rushed and the hero is a bit “Xanaxed†down than his normal level of belligerency. Still fans of the series will appreciate this tale because we know Jack.
via Genre Go Round Reviews: Sanctuary-Ken Bruen.
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Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld – Review
about 1 week ago - 1 comment
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
The novel is in many ways a familiar YA construction: a hidden Prince, a disguised girl, both people who need to grow up and are being forced to do so in a dangerous situation. The book delights in part because both protagonists are nicely depicted and fun to follow and root for. [...]
Burn Me Deadly by Alex Bledsoe – Review
about 1 week ago - No comments
Burn Me Deadly: An Eddie LaCrosse Novel by Alex Bledsoe
“Burn Me Deadly” is the second book in a new series by Alex Bledsoe that features private investigator Eddie LaCrosse. Bledsoe takes my two favorite genres, fantasy and detective fiction, and mixes them up with highly entertaining results. In my review of The Sword Edged Blonde, [...]
How Not To Get Your Book Published
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
You’ve got a great idea for a book and you’re raring to go. You’re sure it will become a best-seller. You start to fantasize about the great jacket blurbs you’re going to get, and whom you will thank in your Oscar acceptance speech for Best Adapted Screenplay (you resolve to remember to thank both the [...]
Qualities of Classic Books
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Mark Twain defined a classic as, “Something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read”. What characterizes a classic work of fiction? Is a book a classic when it has a great number of printings? Or is it the number of languages into which it has been translated? Is it called a [...]
Nyphron Rising by Michael J Sullivan – Review
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Nyphron Rising: The Riyria Revelations (Volume 3) by Michael J Sullivan
Nyphron Rising is the third book in Sullivan’s Riyria Revelations following both The Crown Conspiracy and Avempartha. The first novels set the bar rather high and I’m happy to report that Nyphron Rising manages to live up to its predecessors in just about every respect [...]
Sleepless by Charlie Huston – Review
about 2 weeks ago - 1 comment
Sleepless: A Novel by Charlie Huston
So Sleepless is an apocalyptic crime story plus many other pieces that all add up to literary fiction. Yes, this is a book that is both genre and literary (in spite of having a plot). It is very much a discussion on the human condition – it’s just that most [...]
Hawkmoon: the Jewel in the Skull by Michael Moorcock – Review
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Hawkmoon: The Jewel in the Skull by Michael Moorcock
This is a fast-paced, action-packed reprint of a 1960s sword and sorcery thriller that holds up nicely though contains little insight into life under the Black Jewel sorcery rule as the plot is linear. The hero makes the story line work as he believes his ultimate abjection [...]
Wings of Creation by Brenda Cooper – Review
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Wings of Creation (The Silver Ship) by Brenda Cooper
Cooper explores what it means to be human by exploring what isn’t and in doing so does more to illuminate the human condition than any bit of “realistic” fiction ever could. However, I felt the story was overlong, dragging in the parts when Cooper pauses to have [...]
Veracity by Laura Bynum – Review
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Veracity by Laura Bynum
I think many of the problems I had with the novel were personal because I’m such a stickler for plausibility. Everyone has their own plausibility tolerance level. Obviously the author found it plausible and so did the many people it takes to get a book published these days, and so might you. [...]
Sons of Dorn by Chris Roberson – Review
about 2 weeks ago - No comments
Sons of Dorn (Warhammer 40,000 Novels: Imperial Fists) by Chris Roberson
All in all, this is not a novel I can recommend with any sincerity. It starts well enough, though Roberson’s particular brand of prose doesn’t grab me personally, and then really seems to lose the plot with lackluster action scenes and poorly conceived attempts at [...]





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