Book Review: Kelly Gay’s The Darkest Edge of Dawn
Charlie and Hank are on the federal task force and have all sorts of leeway to investigate and capture the bad guys: aliens plotting, using ash.
Charlie and Hank are on the federal task force and have all sorts of leeway to investigate and capture the bad guys: aliens plotting, using ash.
This is where it all begins—with the tourist Twoflower and his wizard guide, Rincewind, as their gleeful, explosive, wickedly eccentric expedition sets out.
A victim run down and left. His past providing a link Inspector Ian Rutledge can’t ignore, that pits him against the new Acting Chief Superintendent.
When a group is suspected of causing a tidal wave, Private Kaylin Neya must come to Court where the emperor has commissioned a play to ease racial tensions, and the writer has his own ideas about who should be the focus.
Kaylin’s past puts her under a cloud of suspicions when the city’s oracles warn of brewing unrest in the outer fiefdoms.
John Rebus returns to investigate the disappearances of three women from the same road over ten years.
A girl in a pool needs help, a mysterious ancient box with no keyhole, holding a great darkness inside is stolen in Elani Street. It’s another day in Private Kaylin Neya’s life.
Jillian Kincaid never wants another bodyguard, even if it’s the seductive Nolan Garrett. Far from the spoiled princess he expected, Jillian is tough, independent, and fighting him every step of the way.
For Kitty Katt, anti-alien conspiracies, threats from outer space, and a couple of killer alligators are all in a day’s work working with A-C aliens.
The crow-mage Jack Winter returns —to crash a secret gathering of ghost hunters, soul stealers, and other uninvited guests, both dead and alive…