Life After Care
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Trigger Press are proud to announce Theinspirationalseries, partner to their innovative...
Globalization and Migration: A World in Motion
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Focusing on the intersection between globalization and migration, this powerful text traces a...
The Borders of Europe: Autonomy of Migration, Tactics of Bordering
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In recent years the borders of Europe have been perceived as being besieged by a staggering refugee...
The Feud: Vladimir Nabokov, Edmund Wilson, and the End of a Beautiful Friendship
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The Feud is the deliciously ironic (and sad) tale of how two literary giants destroyed their...
Carceral Mobilities: Interrogating Movement in Incarceration
Kimberley Peters and Jennifer Turner
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Mobilities research is now centre stage in the social sciences with wide-ranging work that considers...
13 Bullets
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All the official reports say they are dead - extinct since the late '80s, when a fed named Arkeley...
Batman: Arkham Origins Signature Series Strategy Guide
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Punish Gotham's most vile villains with the help of this BradyGames strategy guide. Batman: Arkham...
Jezebel's Daughter
Wilkie Collins and Jason David Hall
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'The power that I have dreamed of all my life is mine at last!' How far is a mother prepared to go...
Christ's Entry into Brussels
Dimitri Verhulst and David Colmer
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It is announced that Jesus Christ is to visit Belgium in a few weeks time, on its national day, the...
Kristina (502 KP) rated Sanctum (Asylum, #2) in Books
Dec 7, 2020
Once again, Madeleine has kept me up way past my bedtime, scared to go to sleep with the lights off. It worries me that I felt so compelled to read Sanctum, the second book in the Asylum series, considering how much I hate being scared. But I did feel compelled and I did read the book - with the lights on, I might add. Of course, to help relieve some of my fear, I did my best to read the whole book in one sitting instead of trying to sleep with unanswered questions scrambling around inside my head. The pictures provided in Sanctum, thankfully, were a lot less creepy than those in Aslyum, though the plot left the same fearful chill. It was pretty amazing to watch everything come together and grow into something so much bigger than I could have ever imagined. Even if I hadn't been aware beforehand that there is a third book, I would immediately know that Dan's story is not over - not when he still possesses that red stone. I don't claim to be a fortune teller, but I foresee more trouble heading Dan's way and I have a feeling that stone is at the center of it. It'll be interesting to see how Madeleine intertwines more into this already complex story. I look forward to unraveling more of Daniel Crawford's mysteries.