
Acanthea Grimscythe (300 KP) rated Secrets of the Weird in Books
Jun 5, 2018
What I loved: the dynamic cast of characters Stroup creates. His ability to write lifelike and engaging characters is astounding. The main character, Trixie, is so real in her struggles that I imagine she’s quite relatable for several people. Her trek to being a woman is filled with bump after bump, and yet she still finds a reason to carry on, to seek her own happiness. In fact, much of this book focuses on her journey to self-acceptance, culminating in a beautiful metamorphosis. Other characters are equally fleshed out, but in ways that make my stomach turn. For instance, Cypress and the Angelghoul are despicable. Were either character to perish, I’d be fine. But its these anti-heroes that open up a lot of unanswered questions – if they can be called that.
First, there’s the Withering Wyldes. A creature whose purpose is to convert others into joining their cult like organization. Their history is explained, and they consistently show up throughout the book, but after a few chapters in which a linguist tries to understand their method of communication, they become background noise. The Angelghoul’s quest for enlightenment goes uncompleted. Trixie’s boyfriend fades away into nothing. And finally, Cypress’s threats seem to… well, not come to fruition.
The book is most definitely a fun read, but with those plot issues it falls short of a five skull rating for me. I’ll have to give it three.

Phil Leader (619 KP) rated 2084 in Books
Nov 8, 2019
Following his selection for work in one of the Ministries David very soon finds out the truth. The wider populace are controlled by fear, propaganda and lies. The workers in the Ministry are controlled by greed, power and lust. He soon learns that the whole system is corrupt, rotten to the core, despite the all-powerful and dispassionate AIs that are supposed to only benefit mankind. But as one man there is little he can do, and certainly nobody he can trust. But there are plenty who want to use him as a weapon is their political infighting and power battles.
Clearly a more technological update on 1984, Hogan tackles this grim subject matter from the human perspectives of David and his childhood friend Juli, who is also pulled into the dark world of the power and corruption. Like peeling a rotten onion, layer after layer is removed, finally revealing the rotten heart. Along the way there are some huge plot twists, shocking events and reveals that completely change how the reader understands this future vision. The ending, which it comes, is certainly cataclysmic.
As with the best science fiction, this casts a light on the world we live in with certain current events clearly used as a basis for how Hogan constructed his dystopia. Sometimes the subtext isn't as subtle as it could be, but there is no denying the chilling warning it delivers.
Note: This book contains multiple scenes and themes of a sexual nature

Audible – audio books, original series & podcasts
Book and Entertainment
App
Welcome to Audible. We’re an Amazon company, and home to an unmatched selection of audio books....
Books on tape narrarated books audio for books

Noir: A Novel
Book
The absurdly outrageous, sarcastically satiric, and always entertaining New York Times bestselling...
humor fantasy fiction
Let the Right One in
Book
Audiences can't get enough of fang fiction. Twilight, True Blood, Being Human, The Vampire Diaries,...

Peckinpah Today: New Essays on the Films of Sam Peckinpah
Book
Written exclusively for this collection by today's most significant writers and researchers on Sam...

The Doctor Dissected: A Cultural Autopsy of the Burke and Hare Murders
Book
A series of bizarre disappearances filled the citizens of early nineteenth-century Scotland with...

Prayer for the Dead
Book
Sunday Times bestseller Prayer for the Dead is the fifth novel in the bestselling Inspector McLean...

The Devil's Workshop: Scotland Yard Murder Squad: Book 3
Book
The Devil's Workshop is the third historical thriller in Alex Grecian's acclaimed Scotland Yard...

The Little Demon
Ronald Wilks, Fyodor Sologub and Pamela Davidson
Book
A dark classic of Russia's silver age, this blackly funny novel recounts a schoolteacher's descent...