Penalty Shooters Football Game
Games
App
This game is made only for pure football games fans. Simple, 100% free, addictive soccer shootout....
Going Nowhere
Book
My name is Hibiscus Brown, my best friend is a unicorn and my life is going absolutely nowhere. Oh,...
Paranormal Romance Humor
The Victorian (Lavender Shores #9)
Book
Sexy bartender Seth Marino is the epitome of the allure and sophistication for which the town of...
Contemporary M_M Romance
Space Opera
Book
IN SPACE EVERYONE CAN HEAR YOU SING A century ago, the Sentience Wars tore the galaxy apart and...
Music Science fiction Humor Alien Space travel
Saving CeeCee Honeycutt
Book
Steel Magnolias meets The Help in Beth Hoffman’s New York Times bestselling Southern debut novel,...
Spice and Wolf
TV Show
Holo is a powerful wolf deity who is celebrated and revered in the small town of Pasloe for blessing...
Romance Supernatural
This book shows how a virus was taking over everything and how it dominated our society. In a fun and funny way. Though this is funny, would you please take the virus seriously and prevent it from getting it?
It takes place with a germ that wants to dominate the world for its evil plans. Will it work? Or will humans learn to take the precious and separate and do things differently to draft a nasty germ? The first time I read it, It was not funny for me. But when I was reading it a little as my mom read it. I got a little chuckle out of it. We all need a few books like that. Especially the way 2020 was and how everything flipped upside down. We still are dealing with it. But a little humor and taking the things to stop the virus is a good thing.
I do love the pictures. I did enjoy the virus cartoon image; It's charming. The way the plot exists is fun. Children will enjoy this as well as parents, I am sure.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2579 KP) rated The Case of the Canterfell Codicil in Books
Jan 26, 2024
I was intrigued by this series when I saw it described as Dorothy L. Sayers meets PG Wodehouse. If you take those two authors’ output and put it in a blender, you have a pretty good approximation of this series. It did take me the first chapter to adapt to the writing style, which mimics the 1920’s when the book is set. But once I did, I was hooked. The mystery was intriguing, with plenty of twists on the way to the logical climax. Anty makes a fantastic lead character, and picks up on quite a few things I missed. The rest of the cast are equally fleshed out. And the humor was wonderful. It’s very dry British wit, so it might not be for everyone, but I was as hooked for the laugh as I was the twists. And the book had plenty of both. I will be reading the next one as soon as I can.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2579 KP) rated Rivers and Creaks in Books
Jan 11, 2025
This author has been on my radar to try for a while, and I finally got a chance with this book. Sadly, the results were mixed for me. I grew up near where this book is set, so I enjoyed that aspect of things. However, the plot was uneven, with as much focus on Andy settling into his new life as the murder. This led to a weak climax that at least did answer our questions. Meanwhile, Andy was a bit pricklier that I found enjoyable. I get it, but it took a while to warm up to him. Some of that came from the new relationships he is forming, and I enjoyed reading about those. I also enjoyed the humor of the book. I’d give a second book in this series a try, but I hope the issues with the first are ironed out.
Stakeouts and Strollers
Book
Amateur private investigator and new dad Charlie Shaw gets more than he bargained for when he agrees...


