Storm Front: The Dresden Files, Book 1
Book
Harry Dresden is the best at what he does. Well, technically, he’s the only at what he does. So...
Science fiction fantasy crime
Crossroads of Canopy: A Titan's Forest Novel
Book
The highly-anticipated fantasy debut from Aurealis and Ditmar Award-winning author Thoraiya Dyer,...
Science fiction
27 hours: Nightside Saga Series, Book One
Book
ZERO HOUR MEANS WAR Rumor Mora fears two things: hellhounds too strong for him to kill, and...
Science fiction fantasy LGBTQ
Shape of Secrets (46. Ascending #2)
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Seven year old Zane vowed to become a superhero. As a child too smart to fit in, he studied...
Science Fiction Fantasy
Becs (244 KP) rated Animal Farm in Books
Oct 2, 2019
Genre: Classic, Fantasy, Fiction, Science-Fiction, Literature, Dystopia
Audience: High School
Reading level: Advanced Fluent
Interests: Classics, Dystopia, Science-Fiction
Style: Advanced Fluent
Point of view: Third Person
Difficulty reading: It was only difficult in the spots that were lacking plot.
Promise: Promise of history related read, it delivers
Quality: Good.
Insights: Animal Farm is a very well-written book and if you like a history-related book along with any literary classic books, you’ll love this book! I, myself, have never really been a huge history buff so to me Animal Farm was lacking an interesting plot. If I broke the book down into two sections, there would be half of the book as interesting and half being monotonous.
Ah-Ha Moment: When the animals overtook the farm and the pigs started to act like the humans.
Favorite quote: “Man is the only creature that consumes without producing. He does not give milk, he does not lay eggs, he is too weak to pull the plough, he cannot run fast enough to catch rabbits. Yet he is lord of all the animals. He sets them to work, he gives back to them the bare minimum that will prevent them from starving, and the rest he keeps for himself.” – I really like this because it’s a great representation of humans and earth. How we lack with caring for the planet we live on and that isn’t right.
Aesthetics: The copy that I received had an awesome cartoony cover of the animals which I found quite adorable.
“Four legs good, two legs bad.”
The Call of Cthulhu: And Other Weird Stories
Book
Collecting uniquely uncanny tales from the master of American horror, H.P. Lovecraft's The Call of...
Markswoman: Asiana Book 1
Book
An order of magical-knife wielding female assassins brings both peace and chaos to their...
science fiction
Alien Minds (Dimension Drift #3)
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DIVERGENT meets OCEAN’S EIGHT in this urban fantasy heist! On my seventeenth birthday, I wake...
Science Fiction Young Adult
ClareR (5721 KP) rated The Immortalists in Books
May 6, 2018
I really liked this: I liked how the author describes their lives and decisions. I felt that it made them more human and not just another story. I like these family dramas though, and the chance to peek into someone else’s life.
This is definitely not a fantasy or science fiction book though. I did think there was a possibility that it might be when I first read the synopsis, but it’s definitely set in our world. AIDS, depression, obsession, OCD: these people have real life struggles.
It wasn’t always a comfortable read, but I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Deadly Curiosities
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Cassidy Kincaide owns Trifles & Folly, an antique/curio store and high-end pawn shop in Charleston,...
Science fiction fantasy