Literature & Fiction
Review:This book was set up very well from the beginning. The author quickly introduced you to the lead male and female, Sebastian and Kaderin.
What I like about them is that their love was different from Lachlain and Emmaline's romance (Book 1: A hunger like no other) but it was just as engaging. In fact, I found this book to have a quicker pace as well as more better relationship development.
Sebastian is just a gentleman. He worked very hard to win Kaderin's love. In fact, at times I wonde... Read more
Review:I LOVED this book!!
Great story, great characters! I can't fault the contents of the book at all, I liked Natalie and I liked the Siberian!
This would have been 5 stars if only it wasn't such a short book!! I can't stand reading something in a matter of hours then itching for more only to find the entire series are all very short novellas of only 170 ish pages!!! I'd rather buy all the books together as one book!
I didn't purchase the second book because of my annoyance but I know I wil... Read more
Review:Mrs. Cole is a wonderful story teller. Her frighteningly realistic tale had me on pins and needles. Can't wait to read more of the series. I'll gladly miss more sleep so I can enjoy this apocalyptic tale! Read more
Review:Kresley Cole is steadly moving up to one of my top five favorite writers. Cole's dialogue is fun and witty. Her characters are heartbreakingly sexy. Even a character as hate-able as Sabine, I adored. I find it amazing the way Cole twisted her character into a self-centered, egotistical, self-proclaim liar and thief who is also a mentally and physically strong, loyal to her sister, and who is only fighting for her and her sister to have a home. Most of all I LIKED her character. Then there ... Read more
Review:Cole and crew do their research and it shows. Every minute detail ensnares the mind and the story becomes an obsession that cannot be put away until the end. Thank you, Cole, for sharing these heroes and heroines with the world! Read more
Review:WOW!!! Kresley Cole is such an incredible talent! I love a book you can't put down. I've read 3 of her books (so far) and though they are a series, each was completely different...ie different plots and characters...even the steamy parts (hot...HOT hot) were so well written and not a bit redundant as are in other novels by other authors.
I also enjoyed how the three stories intertwined and that we discovered how, in the Epilogue, we were left with a happily ever after for the three MacCar... Read more
Review:There has been enough refinement in recent science fiction to make the concepts of this book obsolete. I have nothing against Phillip K. Dick. Its just that the plot, descriptions of items and people won't make sense to the reader Read more
Review:Philip K. Dick's strength isn't in his prose or his dialogue or his characters. He didn't have the time to write beautifully polished sentences or to explore his protagonists deeply. What he did, and did magnificently, was tap into the wellspring of existential angst which we all possess.
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said does this by having Jason Taverner, world-famous variety show host and singer, wake up in a world where he doesn't exist. No one recognizes him, and there is no record of... Read more
Review:If someone were to ask me which author can consistently grab your attention with the very first sentence of a book, I'd have to say PKD, hands down. It all starts off with a man who is shaking invisible aphids from his body and he's afraid that they're going to eat him. If that's not weird, nothing is, and only PKD would have thought of it. But the bugs, though interesting, are not what this book is about. It is about drugs, and a cop that has to take on the role of a drug-user. The idea is exce... Read more
Review:"The worlds through which Philip Dick's characters move are subject to cancellation or revision without notice," sci-fi great Roger Zelazny once wrote, and it strikes me that Dick's "Ubik" is a perfect example of that statement. The author's 25th science fiction novel since 1955 (!), "Ubik" was originally released as a Doubleday hardcover, with a cover price of $4.50, in May 1969. It finds Dick giving his favorite theme--the mutability of reality--a thorough workout in a wonderfully well-written... Read more