 
    Death is in the Details
Book
A woman haunted by her past. A killer who won't let her forget. Faith Day's condition curses her...
thriller fiction adult crime mystery small town
 
    Zinnia (Angelbound Offspring #3)
Book
As the last dragon shifter, I live alone, hiding in one of Earth’s sacred deserts. My human...
Young Adult Fantasy
 
    Shattered Promises
Book
For twenty-one year-old Gemma, life has never been normal. She knows nothing about her past and has...
paranormal romance new adult
 
    City Girl vs Country Boy (Forever Love #1)
Book
A tragic accident brought them together. Will devotion be the glue that mends their broken hearts? ...
Sweet Young Adult Contemporary Romance
 
    Renovated (Chance Brothers #1)
Book
They’ve been hired to remodel a mansion. Will they end up getting a room? Marisa Sanchez has...
Adult Contemporary Romance
 
            
            ClareR (5991 KP) rated Lost Children Archive in Books
Sep 2, 2021
The parents are clearly at odds with one another, both wanting to progress their careers in different ways. The father wants to make a soundscape of Apacheria where the last tribes had lived, and the mother wants to help a friend to find her lost children. They had been sent to the US with a coyote (a guide), had been found and sent to a detention centre - but they had subsequently gone missing. The mother discovers that these lone children have been disappearing on this journey for a long time.
The lost children hits close to home when the parents own children go missing.
I really enjoyed this. I loved how the two stories - the journey of the children, and that of the children in the mothers book who are being smuggled from Mexico - were intertwined. I enjoyed the way that the narratives swapped between the mother, the boy and the immigrant children, although the lines often became blurred between reality and the mothers novel.
It is in parts both devastating and informative, particularly in the times that we live in. This isn’t an easy book, but its well worth the read.
 
            
            Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2434 KP) rated McElligot’s Pool in Books
Sep 29, 2021
This early book from Dr. Seuss is imagination on display. The heart of the book is Marco’s fish stories, which go from the plausible to the outlandish and back again. It’s fun. The rhymes could be a bit better, and the book does feel a bit repetitive, but I remember enjoying this one as a kid, and it still has charm rereading it as an adult. This is early Dr. Seuss, so the illustrations are very detailed pen and ink, some in color and some not. Yes, this is one of the recently banned books. It is banned takes to one page that features Marco’s imaginative take on Eskimo fish. Yes, the drawings on that page are caricatures, but the entire book is filled with caricatures. They fit right in. While this isn’t one of Dr. Seuss’s best books, it is a shame that it won’t be around to spark the imagination of future generations.
 
    The Cursed King (Inferno Rising #4)
Book
He will burn. She will rise. Airk Azdajah, the rightful King of the White Clan, spent half a...
Adult Paranormal Romance Shifters
 
    Severance Package: a ménage office romance
Book
Claire Simmons' life is a mess. After an affair with her boss ended with imminent unemployment,...
Adult 18+ Contemporary Erotica Office Romance
 
    Fever (Songbird #1)
Book
Singing in the shower takes on a whole new meaning in Melissa Pearl's first New Adult Contemporary...
Contemporary Romance
 
        
