Name the last three books you have read...

Discussion in 'In the Media' started by Sir Nose, May 12, 2009.

  1. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Pretty good.


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    I enjoyed it, but I felt like there was more story potential that wasn't put to use.


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    Worth the read if you're into true crime books.


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    Not bad.

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    Another interesting read for true crime fans.

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    As usual, this author doesn't disappoint. Another great addition to the series.
     
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  2. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Enjoyable 2 book series.


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    Yawn. This barely qualifies as a short story IMO. It's like the author wrote a few chapters of a novel, got bored, and decided to end it before going anywhere with it.
     
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  3. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Pretty good. It makes you think a lot about the hell foster care can be for the children whose parents who've already made their lives hell enough as it is.


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    Definitely worth the read, but hard to review. The fiction and truth are all stirred together in a way that's weird but fascinating.


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    Not bad but a bit too slowly paced. It's the first book in a series, so I'll have a better idea what I think after I read the rest of them.
     
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  4. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Not a bad trilogy. All three books were put together in the version I bought, so the pics below are the names of the different books.

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  5. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Excellent anthology. I highly recommend it. There are also two more books in the series I've added to my reading list.


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    Another story with potential, but it turned out to be a big ol' pile of meh.

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    This one is a snoozer, but it was free. lol
     
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  6. Ra

    Ra Well-Known Member

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    The wealthy seem to exist in a different, glittering world from the rest of us. Almost as if by . . . magic.

    Stephen Oakwood is a young man on the edge of this hidden world. He has talent and potential, but turning that potential into magical power takes money, opportunity, and training. All Stephen has is a minimum wage job and a cat.

    But when a chance encounter with a member of House Ashford gets him noticed by the wrong people, Stephen is thrown in the deep end. For centuries, the vast corporations and aristocratic Houses of the magical world have grown impossibly rich and influential by hoarding their knowledge. To survive, Stephen will have to take his talent and build it up into something greater—for only then can he beat them at their own game.



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    Vampires and humans live side by side thanks to an uneasy peace maintained by the Assembly. As an Arbiter for the powerful organization, Miles Watson is authorized to act as judge, jury, and executioner for anyone—living or undead—who breaks the law. But now Miles is up against a threat more sinister than anything he’s seen in his centuries as a vampire.

    A criminal network in London is offering wealthy humans the chance to become vampires without the Assembly’s consent. When the process goes disastrously wrong, the Boss wants to eliminate any trace of the fiasco. But a rogue enforcer refuses to play along, and trouble quickly escalates out of anyone’s control.

    As Miles sets off searching for the illegal vampires, he finds himself on the trail of a monstrous serial killer. The twisty investigation takes him from London’s deadly underworld to the rural backwaters of the Pacific Northwest—where an even more devious criminal enterprise threatens all of vampire-kind . . .

    Known for his terrifying tales of urban fantasy, author Steve McHugh goes even deeper into the shadows with this noirish vampire thriller, which masterfully combines suspenseful plotting and intricate world-building.




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    Civil War tore across the Union Empire, leaving countless dead in its wake. It was a war started by one man, once beloved by the Empire. His betrayal still lingers in the memory of those who lived through it.

    Decades later, his son, Felix Drake, is a Warden tasked with both protecting the ruling members of the Union Empire and its Council, and bringing those powerful and influential people to justice should they break the law.

    Drake protects the very Empire his father sought to destroy.

    When two members of a Council family are murdered, Drake and his team investigate, only to uncover corruption, resentment, and yet more death.
    As the case deepens, Drake is forced back into a life he’d left long ago, bringing with it the same disdain and anger from the very people he’s sworn to protect.
    However, he’s no longer a helpless child, and the people who try to intimidate him now are about to discover that Drake is so very much his father’s son.



    All three books are Book Ones for planned ongoing book series with Benedict Jaka's Book Two of his Magic series coming in October & Steve McHugh's Atoned actually being a follow-up to his novella Blackcoat, which set up the story's universe and featured one of Atoned's supporting characters as the protagonist for that particular story. All three books were entertaining reads.
     
  7. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Aside from a few editing issues, this one was pretty entertaining. If you like horror, it's worth the read.


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    I found a new author I like. This was well-written and engaging, and a solid thriller/suspense novel.

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    Another well-written book by this author.
     
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  8. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    I enjoyed all three.
     
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  9. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    It's well-written, a good story, and I'm looking forward to her future novels.


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    Worth the read for anyone into true crime.


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    This one was okay. Some parts are engaging and others are downright corny.
     
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  10. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    Highfalutin garbage.



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    Excellent book and beautifully touching story.




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    It got off to a slow start, but overall it was a solid story.
     
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  11. CAkicker

    CAkicker Well-Known Member

    I have to applaud you for your discipline of reading Tam, I'm trying to read more often
     
  12. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

    Thanks. If I was actually disciplined though, I'd be writing a lot more than I'm reading. lol I read a lot more when the mood strikes me, and when I have a lot of downtime for whatever reason. I also tend to get more out of reading than I do a lot of other things.

    It helps if you read topics/genres you enjoy.
     
  13. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    This one was good. There were a few moments of sloppy/poorly edited writing that were distracting, but overall I enjoyed it.


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    I enjoyed the story, but the writing was generally sloppy as hell in this book. Sometimes it seems like he was drunk when he wrote it and said to hell with proofreading. Hell, maybe whoever was responsible for editing was also drunk. Still a good story though.


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    Part 2 wasn't bad. The quality of the writing was a million times better, so the reading experience was that much better as well.

    Even with the author's inconsistent writing, the stories themselves still have me looking forward to reading the rest of what he's written.
     
  14. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    This is my favorite book from this author so far. The story was awesomeness, and an action-packed read. Just an FYI, the synopsis above isn't entirely accurate.


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    An excellent book.

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    A good read.



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    Another cute and uplifting book by this author.


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    Although reading the dialect used in the book took a little getting used to, the story was touching and powerful.


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    A well-written story about a narcissistic parent, and the damage it does to her family.
     
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  15. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    It's a pretty good story.



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    It was an entertaining read, and I'll for sure be checking out the author's other work.


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    Set against the backdrop of the 2002 World Cup and rising anti-American sentiment due to a deadly tank accident involving two young Korean girls, The Korean Word For Butterfly is told from three alternating points-of-view:

    Billie, the young wanna-be poet looking for adventure with her boyfriend who soon finds herself questioning her decision to travel so far from the comforts of American life;

    Moon, the ex K-pop band manager who now works at the English school struggling to maintain his sobriety in hopes of getting his family back;

    And Yun-ji , a secretary at the school whose new feelings of resentment toward Americans may lead her to do something she never would have imagined possible.

    The Korean Word For Butterfly is a story about the choices we make and why we make them. It is a story, ultimately, about the power of love and redemption.[/QUOTE]

    This one made no real impression on me. It wasn't bad; it just was.


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    Not bad. It's the first of a trilogy, and I do plan on reading the next two at some point.



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    It's a highly entertaining story, and I'm looking forward to reading everything this author has written.



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    This is another great story by this author. It's inspired by the true story of the Slender Man stabbing.
     
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  16. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    I enjoyed them all.
     
  17. CAkicker

    CAkicker Well-Known Member

    Glad you don't run out of books to read.:)
     
  18. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

    Thanks. Me too. :p
     
  19. Tamstrong

    Tamstrong Administrator Staff Member

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    These are the last two of a trilogy. Not bad for a zombie apocalypse series.


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    Not bad.
     
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  20. Ra

    Ra Well-Known Member

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    With the monsters of old wiped out, Daniel and Tina of Hyde, Inc., face a greater foe— from beyond the stars.

    Whatever happened to all the old monsters?

    The vampires, the werewolves, the ghouls . . . Daniel & Tina Hyde wiped them out, to make the world a safer place. But nature abhors a vacuum, supernature even more . . . Something’s got to fill the gap left by all those monster clans. The question now is, what happened to all the old aliens? The Martians, the Bug-Eyed Monsters, the Reptiloids and the Greys?

    They’re coming out of the shadows with a vengeance, and Daniel and Tina Hyde are about to discover there are much worse things than monsters. Fortunately, Hydes love a good fight.

    Daniel and Tina are in for the fight of their lives, with the whole world at stake.

    Quick & straight to the point horror/action story. Decent enough read if you are looking to fill some time.


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    Porter is missing, Bug doesn’t know where he is, but she’s going to find out.

    Someone has kidnapped Jericho Porter.

    After destroying the Gatekeeper HQ, the list of enemies is long.

    It doesn’t matter.

    Bug is going to find Porter even if she has to leave a trail of bodies in her wake.

    When Corman tells her there’s a group of rogue Gatekeepers called The Black Riders who may be behind Porter’s disappearance, Bug does everything possible to locate them and get Porter back.

    What she uncovers will challenge everything she thought she knew about Gatekeepers and companions. Secrets will be revealed, and lives will be threatened, starting with her own.

    She wouldn’t have it any other way.



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    Companions are being hunted…and killed.
    When the Black Riders obtain a death list revealing their identities, companions start dying mysteriously.

    Officially, the Gatekeepers are condemning the deaths.
    Unofficially, a new purge has begun, targeting blood-bonded companions.

    Now, Porter and Bug must uncover who controls the Black Riders, sanctioning the deaths of companions. They must step into the shadows, unravel Gatekeeper secrets, and destroy the Black Riders, before it’s too late.

    Together, they will step into a world of darkness and death, where only the lethal survive.


    Second & third of the Tales of the Gatekeepers Trilogy (the first book I read some time ago). All are decent compact action sci-fi/fantasy reads.
     
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