Book Review: Lee Child’s No Middle Name
Twelve of the Jack Reacher short stories by Lee Child, that will thrill, chill, and keep you laughing.
Twelve of the Jack Reacher short stories by Lee Child, that will thrill, chill, and keep you laughing.
A story of passionate awakening and redemption unites a war hero consigned to darkness with a remarkable woman who finds her own salvation by showing him the light of love.
Three students bound by fate and fated for trouble, as their dreams come into conflict with the friendship of a powerful mage, an ambitious prince, and an overlooked power.
The widowed Lady Muir has no interest in marriage, content with her life, until she’s rescued by the dour Lord Trentham, who finds he cannot resist her manner, laughter, or face.
When a ransom exchange turns violent, Commander William Monk faces the unthinkable: betrayal by his own men.
Mistaken identity slows down the hunt, as Detective Will Trent of the GBI discovers the truth of who’s dead. And is saddled with a woman detective who has reason to hate him.
A hero was born, one who finds more than expected in a snarky goat companion, a cheese-loving Dark Lord, the fearful assassin, the bikini-clad heroine, and the rabbit bard.
In the city of Atlanta, women are dying—at the hands of a killer who signs his work with a single, chilling act of mutilation. And two cops and an ex-con enter the hunt.
A double set of shocks, a malpractice suit against Sara Linton and Det Lena Adams’ arrest for murder sends Sara and Chief Jeffrey Tolliver into a dark web of betrayal and vengeance.
The lessers are done, they thought. Xcor’s traitorous second-in-command is using a sentient tome of spells worse than the Omega against the Black Dagger Brotherhood.