Mystery
Review:"Three Bedrooms, One Corpse" does not rank as one of my favorite Roe Teagarden mysteries. The plot was actually pretty silly in my opinion, & the book seemed to center more on Roe's relationship with Martin Bartell. Seeing that I don't particularly like Martin, I struggled to finish this book. I also feel that their relationship is ridiculous to a point. Read more
Review:I loved this book! I love Sookie. She is hilarious! This book was just as satisfying as the 1st! Sookie & Bill have the most crazy "relationship" with the vampires, and the shape shifters, were wolfs. I love the TV series too.
The Fellowship is crazy people. They are weird. and freak me out. I cannot believe what they did to Sookie. I am glad that all turned out well. I will be reading the 3rd book for sure. As I have all the books that are published so far!
Sookie + Bill = :)
Are y... Read more
Review:Sorry, the movie from Hallmark Channel is better. First of all, Ms Harris trots out every Southern stereotype that she possibly can (I'm from Georgia, know about the small towns surrounding Atlanta), her books portray the 1950's as far as those go. Secondly, Aurora in the books is a rather mean-spirited person who sort of falls into these solutions, she doesn't solve them by investigating. Also I find it strange that every male in town seems to have to hots for a short, overweight, myopic, frizz... Read more
Review:This book appeared to be the last in the Aurora Teagarden series. There were 8 books from 1990 to 2003. I enjoyed the series but still had several in my TBR stack. Then Hallmark's mystery channel picked up the Aurora Teagarden series and two new books were written. One was released in 2016 and the other one in 2017. Hopefully, there will more going forward. Charlaine Harris is a diverse author. She has written several series and each is uniquely different. It is like a different author wrote eac... Read more
Review:I love the midnight series. They are a fun read and being a fan of Charlaine Harris novels I love that she incorporates characters from some of her other series. I hope this isn't the last of the Midnight series!!! Read more
Review:I read all the Sookie Stackhouse novels, and adored them. After I rapidly read through all of those books, I decided I'd go in a different direction for a while. you know, try not being hooked on Charlaine Harris or even a series in general. It didn't last long. After Sookie, there was a serious void. Nothing I read could compare to Harris-nothing! Maybe because I'm a Southern female, maybe because I enjoy paranormal novels, maybe because I just like the way she creates characters...whatever the... Read more
Review:This book had some real laugh out loud parts. I loved the relationship between the main character and her roommate/best friend a lot. I found the budding romance between the main character and the cop to be a little awkward and forced but the story line was good, with a good back story as well. Read more
Review:This is a good read, fun, interesting, and it grabs you from page one to the end. With the socks on the cover I first thought this would be just for teens or younger, but, I took a chance. I am oh so glad I did. It does need to be edited some because of spelling and grammar, but for me, I still love the story. The characters are real. The storyline, as paranormal, is believable. I recommend this to all ages. Read more
Review:The strangeness and mystery was lost when H.M.'s kept going on about a character f...he should have killed off earlier.! I couldn't even finish the book even though I read the previous Sheep novel...I just gave up... Read more
Review:I have read Father Brown stories before, but never in the proper order. This collection provides back stories, details, developments, that make the stories much more understandable and enjoyable. I now know how he and Flambeau came to be friends, what happened with the intrepid French detective, how Father Brown showed up in the most unexpected places, and how the combination of reasoning and evidence plays out in these stories. Chesterton's writing is spot-on, and occasionally it's dazzling. Read more