
Stitching Snow
Book
Princess Snow is missing. Her home planet is filled with violence and corruption at the hands of...

When You Are Near
Book
After her father's death, Lizzy Brookstone, the star trick rider of the all-female Brookstone Wild...
christian fiction historical romance

Of Mice Not Men
Book
In the near future, mankind has exhausted the last of their fossil fuels and a new energy crisis...
space science fiction dystopian horror violence apocalypse

Blue Fire
Book
Fire cost Jared Kenny his home and all his memories of the man he’d loved for over half his life....
This is dystopian fiction, set in a very probable present/ near future. Everyone's life has a monetary value. Crimes are calculated and those who commit them can pay off their value. Those who can't afford to pay the fine, are sent to the 'pattie line'. Social media is king and The Company runs everything.
The main character, Theo, is a faceless, seemingly emotionless man, who runs in to an ex-girlfriend. He then has to admit to himself and to her that he isn't in fact Theo Miller in reality. It's a persona he has stolen from an old university friend who was killed in a 'duel gone wrong' so that he could get on in life (social class is still everything). His ex is murdered and Theo decides that he has the responsibility of trying to solve her murder and continuing with the task she had set herself before she was murdered. And in the process, he hopes to bring down The Company.
The language is disjointed and unsettling, which only adds to the feelings of distress and hopelessness in this dystopian future-present.
I loved it, and would happily turn back to the beginning and start all over again. I will say though, if you're looking for a light 'beach read' (I've never understood that term), this probably isn't it. If you're looking for something that will make you sit up and think, then this is the book for you!
Children of the Prison Boom: Mass Incarceration and the Future of American Inequality
Sara Wakefield and Christopher Wildeman
Book
An unrelenting prison boom, marked by stark racial disparities, pulled a disproportionate number of...

Urban Wildlife Management
Book
Urban development is one of the leading worldwide threats to conserving biodiversity. In the near...

A Study in Honor: A Novel
Book
Paste Magazine’s Most Anticipated 25 books of 2018 Medium’s Books We Can’t Wait to Read in...

tapestry100 (306 KP) rated The Great Divide in Books
Jul 26, 2017
The Great Divide is definitely not for the lighthearted. This is a very grim look at humanity and what happens when all means of physical contact is stripped away. It is a violent, sexualized dystopia that Ben Fisher and Adam Markiewicz give us, but it is still a story about the resilience of the human spirit.

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2320 KP) rated Academic Curveball in Books
Oct 16, 2018
I wanted to like the book, but I felt it had some flaws to it. It was overly wordy, especially with some rehashing of things we already knew and theories we'd already considered. Additionally, there were several nitpicks, like this dinner several months before Kellan's father planned to fully retire. The mystery, overall, was strong, however. There were several believable suspects that kept me guessing until Kellan figured things out. Likewise, I really liked the potential series regulars, and the book introduced several threads that will make for great future books in the series.