
Strategic Reassurance and Resolve: U.S.-China Relations in the Twenty-First Century
Michael E. O'Hanlon and James Steinberg
Book
After forty years of largely cooperative Sino-U.S. relations, policymakers, politicians, and pundits...
Imagining Home: American War Fiction from Hemingway to 9/11
Book
War has often been seen as the domain of men and thus irrelevant to gender analysis, and American...

The Sea in the Greek Imagination
Book
The sea is omnipresent in Greek life. Visible from nearly everywhere, the sea represents the life...

Breath of Fire
Book
In a land where magic is might, Catalia Fisa is the mightiest of them all ...Catalia Fisa, Lost...
Beth is a loner with no friends or family to speak of apart from a seemingly ideal boyfriend. She seems to have the perfect life, aside from recurring horrific nightmares, but it soon becomes clear that she has a dark and disturbing past that she is keen to forget and put behind her.
The writer of The List is just that ... but why and what does she have to do with Beth and what are her intentions given that the first two people on The List are dead?
Ruby is a teenager in an institution placed there following her part in a totally heinous and horrific attack on a vulnerable child ... what does she have to do with Beth and the writer of the list?
This is a story that although is a work of fiction, is not beyond the realms of reality unfortunately which makes it a hard and emotional read in places. It's also a slow burner which builds in tension as the whole story emerges and Beth's life unravels and this is the only complaint I have, it wasn't as fast paced as I would have liked with a bit too much description which affected the flow for me but, having said that, I would still recommend to dark, thriller lovers who enjoy reading something a bit different for the norm.
Many thanks to Orion Publishing Group via NetGalley for my advance copy in return for an honest review.

Laxmi Chalisa-Audio
Lifestyle and Entertainment
App
Chalisa - forty verses of lyrics. Verses that praise and plead with devotion. They are recited over...

Lost Souls: Enchanted Paintings HD
Games and Entertainment
App
Rescue a missing boy and immerse yourself in this breathtaking adventure! When a mysterious...
The Daughter of the Sea and the Sky
Book
Evolved Publishing presents the literary saga of a young girl plucked from the sea under mysterious...

Hazel (2934 KP) rated The Marriage Act in Books
Jan 22, 2023
Would you 'upgrade' your marriage if it meant getting preferential treatment ... the best jobs, the best houses, better health care, education, etc., etc., etc.? But then what if that meant artificial intelligence was listening in to snap shots of your conversations and then analysing them to make sure you are keeping to the terms of your marriage? And if not, a scale of interventions would be put into action. Would you still do it? Well, The Marriage Act will probably make you think again!
Mr Marrs certainly gets you thinking and poses really interesting questions and dilemmas in this well plotted, perfectly paced book told from the viewpoints of his well created characters and with some great twists and turns.
Thoroughly enjoyable and quite an unsettling book that actually doesn't feel that far from becoming a reality! How many have an Alexa, Siri or similar digital voice assistant in the home or on your wrist that just sits there? I'm not a conspiracy theorist, however I imagine it wouldn't take much for a law to be passed in the name of improving the economy or society in some way, then a switch is flicked and the process would start ... definitely not beyond the realms of reality and very scary!
This is the second of Mr Marrs' books I have enjoyed and I will definitely read more in the future and thanks must go to Pan Macmillan, Macmillan and NetGalley for enabling me to read and share my thoughts of The Marriage Act.