Quantum Reaction
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Life-altering tech is on the horizon, and someone wants it stopped—permanently. Can a murder...
Science Fiction Mystery
Solar Flares: Science Fiction in the 1970s
Book
Science fiction produced in the 1970s has long been undervalued, dismissed by Bruce Sterling as...
Liar's Poker
Book
The original classic that revealed the truth about ambition, greed and excess in London and Wall...
Anyone: A Novel
Book
Charles Soule brings his signature knowledge—and wariness--of technology to his sophomore novel...
Solar Poems
Homero Aridjis and George McWhirter
Book
A book of cosmological surrealism in the tradition of Octavio Paz, Solar Poems is the first English...
Foxes Unearthed: A Story of Love and Loathing in Modern Britain
Book
As one of the largest predators left in Britain, the fox is captivating: a comfortably familiar...
The Ghost is Clear (A Series of Midlife Curses #1)
Arial Burnz and AJ Nuest
Book
A Midlife Crisis…or Curse…or BOTH? Life after forty is fun, they said. You can be whoever you...
Paranormal Women's Fiction
ClareR (5721 KP) rated Bottled Goods in Books
Aug 18, 2018 (Updated Aug 18, 2018)
The bottled goods of the title could be used as a metaphor for different aspects of this story: the perfumes Alina covets from the West; Liviu’s reliance on alcohol; how the couple (and probably their countrymen) bottle up their emotions and desire to defect; and a final, more fairytale bottling up - which I won’t give away.
This was all presented in the form of flash fiction that joined together to make a whole story. I liked this approach. It made the whole book feel uncomfortable (you never quite get in to the swing or the rhythm of the story), probably how Alina and Liviu felt, constantly under threat of arrest.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Fairlight Books for my copy of this book.
Savage Country: A Novel
Book
In September 1873, Elizabeth Coughlin, a widow bankrupted by her husband’s folly and death,...
Fiction
Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick
Book
‘Genius’ Alice Walker ‘Rigorous, convincing, dazzling’ Zadie Smith on Their Eyes Were...