Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004)
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It's Harry's third year at Hogwarts; not only does he have a new "Defense Against the Dark Arts"...
The Hurricane Heist (2018)
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The rural town of New Hope, Ala., has a pair of super-sized problems heading its way: There's a...
action thriller
Martinis & Men
Tabletop Game
Match Up Your Friends. Then send them on their first dates, in hopes of love at first sight. But be...
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Mr. Iglesias
TV Show Watch
Hilarious high school teacher Gabriel Iglesias tries to make a difference in the lives of some smart...
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The Spine of Night (2021)
Movie Watch
When ancient, dark magic falls into sinister hands, a group of heroes from different eras and...
graveyardgremlin (7194 KP) rated A Charmed Death (A Bewitching Mystery, #2) in Books
Feb 15, 2019
After the slow-moving first seventy to eighty pages that was mostly background information on the town, the shop, characters and a recap of the last book, the story actually moved onto the main mystery in this book. I found the mystery very intriguing and well-done (I could easily envision it on TV, heck, I wouldn't be surprised if I had seen a similar story-line), and the author shed more light on Marcus, which was nice, but was also detrimental to other secondary characters, namely Felicity (a.k.a. Liss, which the first time Maggie mentioned that nickname I forgot for a minute who she was referring too. That probably should have been clarified more, I may have read the first book less than a month ago, but I can't remember everything and it's not like it's Melissa/Liss which I would have picked up on immediately. :P). So less Felicity, and also Steff and Tom, surprisingly enough. Any interaction Maggie had with Tom was strained, sometimes strange, and there was a bit at the end I didn't buy in regards to the two of them. Maggie herself was exactly the same as in the first book, except a bit dumber but I'll come to that a moment, so that disappointed me. It's not as if I expect her to grow every book, but a little development here and there or something new we didn't know about her wouldn't hurt. Although her development of her 'powers' has been nicely and realistically done, and the only problem I had was a scene at the end that seemed more magic than magick. Now we come to Maggie doing a couple of stupid things I never thought she'd be dumb enough to do, one of which led to her 'showdown' with the murderer. In that instance, she really had no need to do what she did to get him/her arrested or for any reason. It just seemed a contrivance to put her in the murderer's path. Overall, after the first fourth or so of the book, it was a decent yet flawed read, and I am going to pick up the next in the series with the hope that any minor problems I had will have been just a fluke.
Making Magnificence: Architects, Stuccatori, and the Eighteenth-Century Interior
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This book tells the remarkable story of the craftsmen of Ticino, in Italian-speaking Switzerland,...
Ex-Centric Migrations: Europe and the Maghreb in Mediterranean Cinema, Literature, and Music
Book
Ex-Centric Migrations examines cinematic, literary, and musical representations of migrants and...