Book Review: Matt Haig’s The Humans
Looking at our world through the eyes of an appalled alien in a journey and exploration as he learns how inaccurate and lacking, in part, his views are.
Looking at our world through the eyes of an appalled alien in a journey and exploration as he learns how inaccurate and lacking, in part, his views are.
It’s a lightweight drama with a gentle lap of shallow melodramas with an interesting premise: deadly, life-sucking angels with no conscience.
It’s a switch-up when Ashwini gets paired with the vampire she usually hunts, Janvier. It’s a tricky enough hunt, then Nazarach expresses his interest. Eek!
Grace Brooks is starting over, working as a dog walker for overwhelmed ER doctor Josh Scott. A job that soon segues into caring for his rambunctious kids.
With the fae she loves and the fae she’s tied to pulling her in different directions, McKenzie must uncover the truth behind the war and accept the sacrifices needed to end it.
Fourteen years in…fourteen years back. She and Seth have the chance to make a 19-year dream come true but at the expense of Christmas with her family. Yet another sacrifice…
Arden has taken her throne, the war has ended, even Toby Daye is relaxing…until Simon Torquill comes back, and it all begins to fall apart.
An anthology of four short, hot blooded, and erotic stories which received the Hughey Award for Best Anthology as well as the P.E.A.R.L. for Best Anthology in 2004. And well worth it!
World War I battlefield nurse Bess Crawford’s career is in jeopardy when a murder is committed on her watch.
As Mary and Michael face their final battle, unsure if they can trust either side, Michael’s loyalties are tested, making him vulnerable just when Mary needs him most.