Book Review: Ilona Andrews’ Bayou Moon
William, a changeling soldier forced back into service crosses paths with Cerise Mar and her unruly clan of the Edge who are out for revenge and to save her parents.
William, a changeling soldier forced back into service crosses paths with Cerise Mar and her unruly clan of the Edge who are out for revenge and to save her parents.
To have and to hold . . . sigh . . . romantic, legal, and then there’s holed. Dang, something holed usually has holes in it, or if you’re golfing, you holed that hole, yay, in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Rose works a minimum wage job after she went too far one day. Now she simply survives until Declan Camarine shows up, determined to have her (and her power).
Jogging through Central Park after midnight may not have been the brightest idea, but Margrit Knight never thought she’d encounter a dark new world filled with magical beings—not to mention a dying woman and a mysterious stranger with blood on his hands. Her logical, lawyer instincts told her it couldn’t all be real—but she could hardly deny what she’d seen…and touched.
Ingenious generally refers to clever ideas or solutions while ingenuous refers to people who are innocent or sincere in this Word Confusion from KD Didi It.
When a stranger runs his car into a ditch in dense fog in South Wales and makes his way to an isolated house, he discovers a woman standing over the dead body of her wheelchair-bound husband, gun in her hand. She admits to murder, and the unexpected guest offers to help her concoct a cover story.
To accede is to agree, but to concede is to yield while to exceed is to be greater — and not always to the positive in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Young and flat broke, Tommy Beresford and Prudence ‘Tuppence’ Cowley are each desperately short of money and decide to embark on a daring business scheme: Young Adventurers Ltd. It’s their first job, and one with a twist involving the American Jane Finn carrying secret papers who’s been missing for five years.
Emily Inglethorp has been poisoned. And it seems everyone at Styles Court, from the hired help to family members, had a motive—and the means. But with Detective Hercule Poirot out of retirement and on the case, no one’s getting away with murder.
It’s all about the -ing and the -ed endings — provided you remember that to lop is to cut off or go limp while lope is all about the long, easy stride in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.