Book Review: Charles Todd’s The Cliff’s Edge
Caught in a deadly feud between two families, Bess Crawford’s life is endangered as she struggles to keep order within the family and against the police.
Caught in a deadly feud between two families, Bess Crawford’s life is endangered as she struggles to keep order within the family and against the police.
A monster hurricane, a long-lost father, the Irish mob, and a rogue vampire are all trying their darndest to smash Dead End, Florida into pieces — and then another dead body shows up. What are a pawn shop owner and tiger shifter PI to do?
This second settlement hierarchy post focuses on the differences between town, city, and metropolis in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Escaping a dark and violent past, Lily Bard falls into a new misadventure when she’s in the wrong place at the wrong time. Lily doesn’t care who did it, but then the police and local community start pointing fingers in her direction.
Part of the Building Your Own Website resource, discover more than you want to know about the images needed for a website, the HTML/CSS for images and their captions,, sizing tricks, and resources for image editing tools and a source for images in this post from KD Did It.
With Queen Artemis dead, the North American vampires must elect a new queen, and Belladonna Barrone is in the running, if she can survive Hawke Fitzhugh, the vicious vampire governor of New York.
Phoebe Monday comes into her own through murder, theft, and an unexpected art exhibition.
It makes sense that an isolated dwelling is the smallest type of settlement, and while a hamlet is smaller than a village, it usually lacks a place of worship while a village has a place of worship and usually is centered around a common interest in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
A minister and a minster is but one “i” away from the difference between a religious representative and a church, er, cathedral, in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
I received this book for free from my own shelves in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Source: my own shelves Death by Nightby John Creasey spy thriller in a Kindle edition that was published by Agora Books on August 1, 2016 and has 209 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon Other books by this author which I have reviewed include The Unbegotten, The Toff Goes On, Gideon and the Young Toughs and Other Stories, Introducing the Toff, The Peril Ahead, The Death Miser, Redhead, Carriers of Death, First Came a Murder, Death Round the Corner, Sabotage, A Kind of PrisonerFourteenth in the Department Z vintage spy thriller series and revolving around an early version of the British Secret Service. The focus is on Mark Errol and Garry Cartwright. Death by Night was originally published in 1940. My Take It may have been published in 1940, but it takes place in 1941, six months after the outbreak of war — a “futuristic” novel, *grin*. Creasey is using a third person global subjective point-of-view, as perspectives from several characters, including their thoughts and actions. Creasey has his own […]