I finally got around to reading this, and I am so glad that I did! :)
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I finally got around to reading this, and I am so glad that I did! :)
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Just finished reading Richard Russo's Everybody's Fool, which was quite good-- Russo's best for at least the past 15 years. Also, Patrick Madden's essay collection Sublime Physick was excellent. Just started Karen Russell's Vampires in the Lemon Grove, too.
[URL="https://onplanners.com/daily-planner-todo-list"]My website[/URL]
I finished reading the Lorna Barrett mystery [url=https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2966082769][i]A Killer Edition[/I][/url].
I am almost finishing reading The Ants by Peter Tremayne.Ants in horror stories is not that usual,but i am enjoying reading it.
And i am almost finished reading the Bloodbones by Jonathan Green.Now this is a gamebook RPG of the Fighting Fantasy franchise not a book per say.All though the book is more about reading that the RPG part of this collection of books.About the stories it´s not bad,not my favorite from the Fighting Fantasy books i have read but entertaining.
I'm reading Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell. I wouldn't normally buy a romance book about teenagers, but Rowell's Runaways work made me interest to read more from her. Can't say I'm disappointed, it's very very good.
Read the "Ballad of Black Tom" by Victor Lavalle yesterday.
I'm working on the Lea Wait mystery [I]Twisted Threads[/I].
And I met Brad Meltzer last night.
(No idea why the pic is coming out sideways since it isn't that way on my computer.)
I started reading The Funhouse by Dean Koontz.
Re-reading Angry Candy by Harlan Ellison.
I finished reading the Lea Wait mystery [url=https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2971275589][i]Twisted Threads[/i][/url].
New Kindle book: [I]The House of a Thousand Candles[/I] (1905) by Meredith Nicholson.
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[I]Black Leopard Red Wolf[/I] by Marlon James, set in a fantastical pre-colonial Africa, a man known only as Tracker is hired to find a mysterious boy. A highly imaginative and adventurous story with inspirations from African mythology and folklore. The book is written from the perspective of the protagonist and as such is entirely written in a dialect that takes some getting used to. Although the story being told does have a conclusion, it also makes use of a framing device which is sort of left unresolved. A really enjoyable, if emotionally draining read.
Content warning [spoil] several depictions of rape [/spoil]
[U]Inventing Mark Twain: the Lives of Samuel Langhorne Clemens[/U] by Andrew Hoffman
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I've been recommended this book many times. Have to admit I does have my interest.
[QUOTE=Moon Ronin;4574632][IMG]http://fantasy-faction.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Locke-Lamora-UK.jpg[/IMG]
I've been recommended this book many times. Have to admit I does have my interest.[/QUOTE]
This is on my list too. I've heard good things.