Jane's Hotel 2: Family Hero (Full)
Games and Entertainment
App
Restore your family chain of hotels in this sequel to the famous strategy game. After building her...
All the Wrong Pages (Collier Creek)
Book
High school rivals turned small town enemies, a meddling family, and two stubborn guys who don’t...
Contemporary MM Romance
Apocalyptin
Book
First in the world psychotherapeutic metaphorical fairy tale for adults effectively working with the...
fiction psychology
Gratification in Gluttony (Passing Through Cafe #2)
Book
When Jude entered The Passing Through Cafe, Toni thought he’d be nothing more than a fun night, a...
Urban Fantasy Rom-Com
Forewarned: A Daphne Ann Post Novel
Book
For 15-year-old Daphne Ann Post, the summer of 1976 at Lake Carlson should be filled with new...
Young Adult Supernatural Mystery Suspense
Ruth Frampton (577 KP) rated Marcy Mary's Memoirs: A Dachshund Princess Shows the Way (Marcy Mary, #2) in Books
Apr 10, 2018
A real, feel-good book for dog or pet owners, but a true treasure for anyone who has ever spent time with a doxie. I love it.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2436 KP) rated The 101 Dalmatians (The Hundred and One Dalmatians, #1) in Books
Mar 9, 2018
This is the book that inspired the Disney animation classic, and it is a lot of fun. The basic story is the same, but there are lots of changes along the way, plus more about the de Vil family. The humor is much more subtle than the film, but it still made me laugh and smile. Definitely a charming, fun read.
Read my full review at <a href="http://carstairsconsiders.blogspot.com/2014/07/book-review-101-dalmatians-by-dodie.html">Carstairs Considers</a>.
Awix (3310 KP) rated Conan the Barbarian (1982) in Movies
Feb 22, 2018 (Updated Feb 22, 2018)
Dodges most of the more tedious fantasy-movie cliches by being about a straightforward hunt for revenge rather than a quest for plot coupons. Arnie isn't quite up to portraying Conan's inner life, but hits people with an axe very capably. It's all very staunchly right-wing - opens with a quote from Nietzsche and continues in a similar vein - but the results are campy more than actually problematic. Bombastic score from Basil Poledouris is a major plus.




