No Easy Catch (Cleat Chasers, #4)
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A jock and a party girl teaming up—makes total sense, right? Actually, maybe… Ambar Hernandez...
Young Adult New Adult Contemporary Sports Romance
The Dead Ex
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One man's disappearance throws four women's lives into chaos--and not all will survive. . . Vicki...
Tintin et l'alph-art (Tintin and Alph-Art) (Tintin #24)
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Sketches of Tintin's 24th and unfinished adventure - first published in book form in 1986. While...
The Ripper (The Vampire Diaries: Stefan's Diaries #4)
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The fourth book in the New York Times bestselling series by L.J. Smith. The Ripper is the fourth...
Paranoid
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From #1 New York Times bestselling author Lisa Jackson comes a new novel of nerve-jangling suspense...
Magic Dark, Magic Divine (Warrior of the Divine Sword #1)
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Pennrae Linbry’s done everything to make her life look as normal as possible. She’s a skilled...
Urban Fantasy Romance
The Gifted Hands (2013)
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A little girl is kidnapped and murdered in the jurisdiction of gang buster detective Yang Chun-dong,...
David McK (3633 KP) rated Terry Pratchett: A Life with Footnotes in Books
Mar 31, 2023
I was also going to say that I don't often read biographies.
Except that, truth be told, this is actually the first one that I've ever read (despite attempting, in the past, to start some and then getting bored senseless within about the first 10 pages or so ...)
And also, truth be told, it wasn't one that I was really going out of my way to look forward, except that the late, great Terry Pratchett is/was one of my favourites and that I saw this on sale for something like 99p.
Written by long-term assistant Rob Wilkins, this has been compiled - I think that's the right word - from 'official' notes/memories as provided by Pratchett himself (before his untimely death, in 2015, to a rare form of Alzheimer's) and from personal recollections of Rob himself, covering Pratchett's entire life story from his childhood) where he was told by his headmaster he would never amount to anything and hated reading), right on through to his diagnosis and eventual (unassisted) death.
The last part, in particular, is particularly moving.
Merissa (13443 KP) rated Use Somebody in Books
Apr 12, 2023
It was wonderful to read something that was a slow-burner, where they took the time to get to know each other and indeed, the idea of taking that any further shook one of them up so much that it became a detailed part of the story.
There is a twist to this story that I never saw coming and I LOVED IT! I won't say any more than that because I don't want to spoil it for anyone else but it certainly gave the whole story a new spin which is incredibly hard to do at such a late stage in the book.
A raw and poignant story about life, love and friendships. Definitely recommended!
* A copy of this book was provided to me with no requirements for a review. I voluntarily read this book; the comments here are my honest opinion. *
Merissa
Archaeolibrarian - I Dig Good Books!
September 11, 2016
Blazing Minds (92 KP) rated The Mummy (2017) in Movies
Nov 1, 2021 (Updated Nov 3, 2021)
Then many, many, years later in 1999 Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz brought The Mummy back to life (excuse the pun) on the big screen with it wit, wonderful chemistry between Fraser and Weisz, some pretty nifty CGI during the transformation scenes of Arnold Vosloo’s Mummy and not forgetting that one line that so many off would throw into conversations as much as we could, “Apparently he was having a very good time!”.
Now 18 years later (oh damn now I do feel really old!) The Mummy is back with not only a reboot of the film, but also the start of the “Dark Universe“, a new world of gods and monsters that will be unleashed on to cinemas screens, starting with The Mummy, all the films will be connected by a mysterious organisation known as the “Prodigium” which is led by Dr. Henry Jekyll (Russell Crowe, (Nice Guys, Les Miserables) who we have been introduced to in this movie.


