Book Review: Faith Hunter’s Blood Trade
Jane puts her life on the line. Again. With Beast’s desire for Leo a dangerous distraction. Cold iron. Three cursed trees. Blood and lightning.
Jane puts her life on the line. Again. With Beast’s desire for Leo a dangerous distraction. Cold iron. Three cursed trees. Blood and lightning.
It seems like October “Toby” Daye’s life may finally be settling down…at least until dead changelings start appearing in the alleys of San Francisco, killed by an overdose of goblin fruit.
A picnic is meant to be a joy but not for October Daye, as Toby’s mother is strips her of free will, forcing the choice on Toby.
“The Oregon Trail Diary of Willa Porter” is a collection of diary entries from Willa Porter’s journey west with her family, into territory which gets stranger and stranger.
An enchanting novel about a small French town turned upside down by the arrival of a bewitching chocolate confectioner, Vianne Rocher, and her spirited young daughter.
Princess Meredith fled the high court of Faerie three years ago and has been in hiding ever since. As Merry Gentry, I am a private investigator, but the shadows have found me.
Husband-and-wife team Sam and Remi Fargo uncover a book of Mayan secrets so powerful that some people would do anything to possess them.
Mist has been the guardian of Odin’s spear, Gungnir, for centuries, but she believes the gods are dead and intends to throw it into the Bay. Until she rescues a woman from jumping.
I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Four Summoner’s TalesIt is part of the Joe Ledger #6.5 series and is a in Paperback edition on September 17, 2013 and has 321 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon Four short stories of horror in this anthology revolving around the basic plot of someone offering to raise the dead…for a price. Series: “Alive Day” (Joe Ledger, 6.5) My Take All four were horrorific in varying degrees. And all four were well written as complete stories with backgrounds and developed characters. The Stories Kelley Armstrong‘s “Suffer the Children” is a nasty bit of complex betrayal in a small village outside Ontario in the nineteenth century, and I cried so at the end. Christopher Golden‘s “Pipers” was the most depressing as events fall apart around the townsfolk. People who mostly hoped to bring back their loved ones, but were pushed and blackmailed into continuing with a deadly plan. David Liss‘s “A Bad Season for Necromancy” was my least favorite as the “hero” was such a weak man who preyed on others for his own […]
An horrific truth, a murder kept secret, from Bess Crawford’s life in India. Lying, damning facts that reveal a brutal reality that could have been her own fate.