Book Review: The Summoner by Layton Green
The Summoner was not an easy novel to read. Having previously read and reviewed both fiction and non-fiction about Africa, I was intrigued when indie author Layton Green offered a review copy… Read More
The Summoner was not an easy novel to read. Having previously read and reviewed both fiction and non-fiction about Africa, I was intrigued when indie author Layton Green offered a review copy… Read More
I have to confess right up front that I have never been a fan of Stephanie Myers’ Twilight books. I remember that someone donated them to the library and I was actually… Read More
Six hundred and fifty page celebrity biographies are my idea of a reading challenge. While I was of course familiar with Vivien Leigh from her iconic performance as Scarlett in Gone With… Read More
Memoir, it seems, is quickly becoming one of the most popular niches in the indie publishing scene. I’ve received several memoirs to review lately. The Youngest Light by Jane Chin quite… Read More
Lorilee Craker writes well. I want to say that up front, right off. I’ve long been interested in the Amish people, who forsake technology and live simpler lives in accordance… Read More
The second installment of Lory S. Kaufman’s History Camp Trilogy– The Bronze and the Brimstone moves fast. Trapped in 14th century Verona, Italy teenagers Hansum, Shamira and Lincoln turn to the artificial… Read More
One of the things I have missed the most since retiring from the library is reading and reviewing children’s books. In the course of my work days, I checked in and shelved… Read More
Steve Ulfelder’s Purgatory Chasm was a very different kind of reading experience for me. Protagonist Conway Sax is kind of an anti-hero. A former race car driver and car mechanic, on… Read More
Some novels defy categorization. Lory S Kaufman’s The Lens and the Looker is billed as young adult science fiction (and it is) but largely reads like an historical novel set in 1354… Read More