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Zackary Drucker recommended The Portable Dorothy Parker in Books (curated)
Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated Before the Fall: Arrival (Embassy Row, #0.5) in Books
Jan 6, 2021
So this was really short. But I get the basics of the story;
1. Her mum was killed by a guy with a scar
2. She has nightmares pretty much every night after seeing the above incident
3. She's being sent back to her grandpa and the house she used to spend her summers in
4. She's going to miss her brother.
1. Her mum was killed by a guy with a scar
2. She has nightmares pretty much every night after seeing the above incident
3. She's being sent back to her grandpa and the house she used to spend her summers in
4. She's going to miss her brother.
Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated The Woman Who Lives Next Door in Books
Jan 6, 2021
Amanda told me about this on here so I thought I'd check it out.
It's my first book by the author and it was okay, though I felt we missed out on a lot of information like how old everyone was, how long they'd known each other etc.
For such a short story, it was good but not exactly my sort of thing.
It's my first book by the author and it was okay, though I felt we missed out on a lot of information like how old everyone was, how long they'd known each other etc.
For such a short story, it was good but not exactly my sort of thing.
Robert Pattinson recommended Headhunters (2012) in Movies (curated)
Julio Torres recommended Complete Works and Other Stories in Books (curated)
The Chocolate Lady (94 KP) rated The Mountaintop School for Dogs and Other Second Chances: A Novel in Books
Oct 7, 2020
On a whim and a hope, Evie signs up to learn how to train dogs, but the school she's going to is anything but a normal kennel. Maybe that's for the best, because nothing has been normal in Evie's short life so far. Read my review of this heartwarming story here https://tcl-bookreviews.com/2014/07/19/a-puppy-for-your-thoughts/
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Ivan the Fool
Book
Ivan the Fool is an 1886 short story by Leo Tolstoy, published in 1886. It describes the struggles...
Dean (6926 KP) rated The Woman in the House across the Street from the Girl in the Window in TV
Jul 1, 2023
Slightly odd Comedy Thriller
A decent short series, just 8 episodes around 20-25 minutes long each. I thought it was a general Thriller to start with but halfway way through it is more of a parody of other recent Thriller Films and series. Decent story although the ending was rather silly, if you like Murder Mysteries you should enjoy it.
Ross (3284 KP) rated One Word Kill in Books
Dec 4, 2019
Nothing original but a good read
Mark Lawrence has stepped out of the fantasy bubble into this loosely sci-fi trilogy set in the 1980s. 15 year old Nick is diagnosed with cancer and while undergoing chemotherapy starts to have strange visions and deja vu. A mysterious figure seems to be stalking him and his D&D friends, and he ends up planning a siege to help this person from the future.
The story is very short (a little over 200 pages on kindle), but is quite heavy on the 80s references and D&D gameplay. The story itself is nothing new but with a little more head-scratching time travel/parallel universe pseudo-science crammed in. The twists throughout the story are fairly predictable and cliched.
The dialogue also doesn't feel like authentic 80s teenager speech to me, a few too many Americanisms ("hey" instead of "hi", "do it, already" etc).
A reasonably enjoyable short book, but a little Stranger Things bandwagon-jumping to me. I'm not sure whether the other two books carry on the story or how, so I will be interested to see where they go from here.
The story is very short (a little over 200 pages on kindle), but is quite heavy on the 80s references and D&D gameplay. The story itself is nothing new but with a little more head-scratching time travel/parallel universe pseudo-science crammed in. The twists throughout the story are fairly predictable and cliched.
The dialogue also doesn't feel like authentic 80s teenager speech to me, a few too many Americanisms ("hey" instead of "hi", "do it, already" etc).
A reasonably enjoyable short book, but a little Stranger Things bandwagon-jumping to me. I'm not sure whether the other two books carry on the story or how, so I will be interested to see where they go from here.