Book Review; Carolyn G. Hart’s Honeymoon with Murder
Annie and Max get married but Ingrid calls at midnight for help. It’s murder, and she’s being framed. Then she disappears, and Posey decides she’s the murderer.
Annie and Max get married but Ingrid calls at midnight for help. It’s murder, and she’s being framed. Then she disappears, and Posey decides she’s the murderer.
While battling her attraction to two different men, Justine is plunging deeper into wizardry, eroticism, and cosmic secrets. A world that frees her from her madness while discovering a worse reality.
When Annalise’s mission goes wrong, Ray Lilly has to take it over. Alone. He’s a one-spell wooden man set to stop a sorcerer who’s sacrificing dozens of innocent lives in exchange for supernatural power.
I received this book for free from the library in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Source: the library Resurrection Rowby Anne Perry historical mystery in a paperback edition that was published by Fawcett Books on May 12, 1986 and has 224 pages.or Amazon Other books by this author which I have reviewed include Death in the Devil’s Acre, Cardington Crescent, Silence in Hanover Close, Bethlehem Road, The Cater Street Hangman, Callander Square, Paragon Walk, Rutland Place, Farriers’ Lane, Bluegate Fields, Midnight at Marble Arch, A Christmas Hope, Dark Tide RisingFourth in the Charlotte & Thomas Pitt historical mystery series set in Victorian England and revolving around an unlikely couple. My Take Twisty. Perry sure went to a lot of work on this one. It’s foot-slogging having to go back over and over again. Dealing with the same people as Pitt continues to drag the bits and pieces out of them. Slowly assembling the puzzle. It’s an excellent example of why the police need to ask so many seemingly unrelated questions. You never know when one bit of information, one sly hint will be the catalyst to […]
A seductive knight and a mysterious young woman unite to stop a murderous enemy. raging through the Highlands.
Journalist Jenna McMillan and Black Ops Gabriel Jones are forced together by a bombing where they confront the urgent longings that simmer between them.
I enjoy short story collections. Mind you, I didn’t for the longest time, but I’ve come to appreciate them for a number of reasons: Holds me over until the next novel in a series is published Fills in background on a character or event in a series Introduces me to a new series or author Sometimes, I’m just in the mood for short and sweet Of course, it is so useful if I can actually find the short story. So, what’s the deal with announcing that so-and-so has a new short story out but not telling us where we can actually find it? Isn’t that sort of the point for all these book sites? To promote the book, alert the reader so they can actually…gasp…find the story to read it?? Or am I just being naive?
Rebelling against her billionaire father, Carina Jurgensen is cut off after leaking a story about his business. So she fibs her way into a job only to find they expect her to use her connections.
The son of the man who invented the machine that unleashed a deadly gas on Seattle intends to rewrite history. His quest will take him under the wall and into a city teeming with ravenous undead, air pirates, criminal overlords, and heavily armed refugees. And only Briar, his mother, can bring him out alive.
It’s better to be “all right” than it is to be “alright”, unless you’re aiming to depict a particular sort of character in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.