BeSoccer - Soccer Live Scores
Sports
App
Follow live games, comment with other users, receive notifications and so much more in any of our...
Soccer Scores
Sports and Entertainment
App
Live soccer scores, real-time data for live football / soccer scores for the Premier League...
Marktjagd Prospekte & Angebote
Catalogs and Shopping
App
The Marktjagd Prospekte & Angebote shopping app provides the latest leaflets, catalogs and brochures...
Speed cameras and red lights
Navigation and Travel
App
Map with all the fixed and mobile speed cameras, speed traps and red light cameras. The map has one...
D-Day Girls: The Spies Who Armed the Resistance, Sabotaged the Nazis, and Helped Win World War II
Book
The dramatic, untold true story of the extraordinary women recruited by Britain's elite spy agency...
The Shadow War
Book
Inglourious Basterds meets Stranger Things in this dark and thrilling tale of power, shadow, and...
Merissa (13765 KP) rated War (The Four Horsemen #2) in Books
Apr 25, 2023
The PTSD is handled incredibly well in this book, and it doesn't shy away from the grim reality of war. Both Russell and War have guilt issues to work through, and together, they help each other. Their relationship, although fast, still has time to develop.
We get a few extra snippets in this book, including the fact that the horses can speak in the world between worlds. Death is as intriguing and cryptic as ever, although I still love him.
A very different series that I am thoroughly enjoying. Definitely recommended for anyone who wants a slightly different read.
* A copy of this book was provided to me with no requirements for a review. I voluntarily read this book, and the comments here are my honest opinion. *
Merissa
Archaeolibrarian - I Dig Good Books!
Nov 12, 2015
Friedrichstrasse 19
Book
Sometimes I get fanciful and think the buildings speak. That all their history is locked into the...
Historical fiction Literary fiction Germany Berlin
A Prodigy in Auschwitz: Simon
Book
When Nazi Germany troops enter Krakow, Poland on September 2, 1939, fourteen-year-old Simon Baron...
Historical Fiction WWII Auschwitz Jewish Survivor Story
MaryAnn (14 KP) rated An Hour Unspent (Shadows Over England, #3) in Books
Mar 5, 2019
Evelina Manning has constantly fought for independence but she certainly never meant for it to inspire her fiancé to end the engagement and enlist in the army. When the intriguing man who saved her returns to the Manning residence to study clockwork repair with her father, she can’t help being interested. But she soon learns that nothing with Barclay Pearce is as simple as it seems.
As 1915 England plunges ever deeper into war, the work of an ingenious clockmaker may give England an unbeatable military edge—and Germany realizes it as well. Evelina’s father soon finds his whole family in danger—and it may just take a reformed thief to steal the time they need to escape it.
My Thoughts: This is an intriguing and entertaining book. From the first chapter to the last, it has the reader completely enamored. This is the third book in the series and if the reader like myself hasn't read the first two, they will be able to read along easily. The setting takes place during the first world war and grabs the readers attention from the first page. The characters are fun, witty and down to earth.
I believe that this book is to teach us what family really is and to appreciate and to hold on tight and love our famililies. It's a book about serving others and putting family first.
I believe that readers will truly enjoy this novel, especially those who love historical fiction.

