Audible Audiobooks

Arcanum Unbounded: The Cosmere Collection
Arcanum Unbounded: The Cosmere Collection

Review:I love Brandon Sanderson books. He is an excellent author and storyteller. The worlds that he creates are amazing and the characters in them make you want to read more and more about each. This is a great collection of his novellas and introductions/glimpses into some of the worlds of the cosmere. Read more

Go-Givers Sell More
Go-Givers Sell More

Review:Both The Go-Givers and the Go-Givers Sell More, as simple as they are, made a very big impact on me. Easy reads. Can't put them down. Perfect timing for starting a new year, and planning to grow our businesses. Read more

The Will of the Empress
The Will of the Empress

Review:reading/watching the relationship between the four is like watching a train wreck! they were in complete discord, even when they seem to be having FUN in the arguments with each other there was like an underlying sense of, i don't know, anger? disaster? if anyone thinks in musical terms, it's like badly clashing notes with nothing to smooth it over. They were each in their on little pool of self pity and 'my experience was worse than yours' i just wanted to smack them all in the face. Not to men... Read more

Legion
Legion

Review:This is the first Sanderson work I've read, and I didn't know what to expect. I loved the plot, the characterization, and the pacing. I'm definitely looking forward to reading other works of his now. Read more

World of Warcraft: Jaina Proudmoore: Tides of War
World of Warcraft: Jaina Proudmoore: Tides of War

Review:*Warning, review may contain spoilers (though I'll try to keep them as low key as possible)*

Once again Christie Golden delivers another fantastic entry in the Warcraft Lore. Whether you're Horde, Alliance, or both; Jaina Proudmoore: Tides of War offers new insights for how the story is to progress upon the release of Mists of Pandaria. Such brilliant insights include showing how Garrosh Hellscream has chosen to walk a much darker path than Thrall had hoped he would when he left him the... Read more

Mona Lisa Overdrive
Mona Lisa Overdrive

Review:i'd be hopeless writin a review
i've loved th man an his works since i was five years of age
yehno
i'd just rather
spin you ∑music
or
sit you down an read yeh palms
tell you one of meh long short stories
of love
and places
all th details i'm know fer weavin inta it
yeh that's wot i'd rathers be doin w'yah
a song
a box of found objects
a dance of gestures

would you like a cuppa while ya sit w'me? Read more

The Peripheral
The Peripheral

Review:Superb! A vision of the future of a future where humans are still very human but reality is well..... Peripheral!
So many ideas, down to earth yet soaring. From the hillbilly trailer down by the creek to the baroque RV of a strangely Victorian London future, a great engrossing tale.
Couldn't put it down.
Gibson is still the King! Read more

A Crown of Swords: Book Seven of The Wheel of Time
A Crown of Swords: Book Seven of The Wheel of Time

Review:First off, I enjoy the series, and RJ has a remarkable gift with language.
However, I have a few peeves with his writing. For one, he seems to have a strange, juvenile fixation on nudity, especially breasts. Just take a highlighter and mark every reference; you'll run out of ink!
Secondly, his female characters are almost without exception ill-tempered and man-hating. The men, on the other hand, roll over every time a woman snaps at them. Min is about the only female character wh... Read more

Knife of Dreams: Book Eleven of The Wheel of Time
Knife of Dreams: Book Eleven of The Wheel of Time

Review:We seem to have different kinds of WoT readers here, so I'll review it from different points of view..

1) If you want don't ever want this series to end and you love all the details that RJ gives:

You will not be completely happy. RJ does a lot of his usual prose, but in this book it is for a reason. Unlike some of the previous books, things happen here. Nothing is truly wrapped up (it's not the last book, folks), but most of the major plots are advanced.

There is lots... Read more

The Crucible
The Crucible

Review:Edward Albee's "The Goat" or Who Is Sylvia is, to the issue of Gay Marriage, what Arthur Miller's The Crucible was to McCarthyism. Albee manages to show an audience exactly what true love is and he uses a middle class WASP family with a homosexual son and a goat to do it. The end of the play has a hurt and confused wife holding forth a dripping burlap sack full of hacked up pieces of a dead goat as her husband weeps into his hands. Not only does it address the issue of how dare we define love, ... Read more

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