Book Review: John Sandford’s Shock Wave
PyeMart is coming to town and most are furious. Virgil Flowers has to find out who is mad enough to bomb innocents before more are killed.
PyeMart is coming to town and most are furious. Virgil Flowers has to find out who is mad enough to bomb innocents before more are killed.
A beautifully illustrated picture book with a weird story that doesn’t make sense.
Dire trouble in two universes forces a switch of Kittys: both have strengths the other universe will need to prevent World War III and keep everyone alive.
Homophones may sound like but they don’t look alike nor do they have the same meaning in this combination Linguistics and Word Confusion post for self-editing authors.
Everyone needs a goal, and Kachka Shestakova has her mission. One that will find her sword crossing the path of the one-eyed king, battling and rescuing and laughing all the way.
A dream sequence of escape as that naughty Max discovers why home is best.
A cousin to the homophone, homonyms are spelled the same in this combination word confusion and grammar explanation.
Murder, an accident, and a suicide that aren’t is what Virgil Flowers delves into as he penetrates the inner workings of a small community.
An active little groundhog refuses to go to sleep, despite the advice of several animal visitors, until finally the cricket tries something that works.
The Internet and intranet are both frameworks, networks of servers that hold all the information we find on the Web.