Book Review: Richelle Mead’s Gameboard of the Gods
Justin March, former religious investigator, gets a second chance and is partnered with supersoldier, Mae Koskinen, to solve a string of ritualistic murders.
Justin March, former religious investigator, gets a second chance and is partnered with supersoldier, Mae Koskinen, to solve a string of ritualistic murders.
It’s a battle against the Shadowspawn, and Adrian and Ellen ally with the Brotherhood to break the Council’s hold on humanity. A move that is against his own.
A magical flare is a once-every-seven-years event, and it’s slamming Atlanta, bringing with it a tug-of-war between two gods. If Kate can’t stop them, the city may not survive…
Homo Lupens, Shadowspawn. They ruled the earth eons ago and still exist. Adrian Brézé is one, but he rebelled against his own. Chose to live as an ordinary man and now must battle his own.
In apocalyptic Atlanta where magic rises and falls, monsters roam, and Kate Daniels walks, with her magic blood and sword, is a target. Hiding isn’t a choice when the right choice must be made.
Walt Longmire goes undercover to save a woman whose husband burned her beloved horses alive. It’s not a confession he believes and others also want him dead.
A woman lies dead at the bottom of the stairs, stripped of all her valuables. Most cops might call it a mugging gone wrong, but Lieutenant Eve Dallas knows better.
In the aftermath of a forbidden moment that rocked Sydney to her core, she finds herself struggling to draw the line between her Alchemist teachings and what her heart is urging her to do.
Compromising pictures, evil androids running amok, and international tensions pale when Jeff Martini and Charles Reynolds disappear—and even ACE can’t help.
Mage apprentices are vanishing without a trace, and Alex Verus has no evidence, no witnesses, and no suspects. Now they’re targeting his apprentice’s classmate.