
The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty
Book
What has planetary-scale computation done to our geopolitical realities? It takes different forms at...

This is Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Mapping the Relationship Between Online Trolling and Mainstream Culture
Book
Internet trolls live to upset as many people as possible, using all the technical and psychological...
Understanding the Digital World: What You Need to Know About Computers, the Internet, Privacy, and Security
Book
The basics of how computer hardware, software, and systems work, and the risks they create for our...

Star Wars: Aftermath: Journey to Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Book
Journey to Star Wars: The Force Awakens. The second Death Star has been destroyed, the Emperor...
Re-Thinking Economics: Exploring the Work of Pierre Bourdieu
Asimina Christoforou and Michael Laine
Book
Once again, unfettered capitalism has failed. Promises for global prosperity and peace have given...

Permaculture for the Rest of Us: Abundant Living on Less Than an Acre
Book
Many of us want to increase our self-sufficiency, but few have access to the ideal five sunny,...

Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2357 KP) rated Prodigal Son in Books
Mar 17, 2021 (Updated Mar 17, 2021)
If you are new to these books, I don’t recommend you start here. Yes, the background you need is given as events unfold, but to fully appreciate the growth in Evan and his relationships with others, you need the full background the earlier books give you. As a fan, I loved those growth moments in this book. Unfortunately, they did come at the expense of the pacing. Normally, author Gregg Hurwitz is a master at keeping the thrills going while developing the characters for us. Don’t get me wrong, there are some great action scenes, and the book always held my interest. It’s just not quite on par with his others. The scenes spent giving us technical information didn’t help with the pacing. Having said that, it’s going to be a long wait until the next book comes out so I can find out what happens next. Being a thriller, this does have more language and violence than my normal selections, so be prepared before you pick it up. Fans will definitely enjoy this book, and if you haven’t started the series yet, I recommend you do so today.

Debbiereadsbook (1454 KP) rated Cypher (The Dragon's Bidding #2) in Books
Aug 9, 2021
This is book 2 in The Dragon’s Bidding series, and it cannot be read as a stand-alone. You NEED to read A Hero For an Empire before this one and I would recommend you read them back to back. It’s been 4 years since I read the first one, and I think that’s why I feel as I do about this one. I did not have time to reread book one before reading this one!
I found this a much more difficult read, to follow. It’s heavy on the technical stuff and at times I struggled to keep up.
It moves fast, and even though I had to slow down my reading (which is usually a good thing!) I still struggled a bit.
Fitz and Wolf’s relationship is intense in book one, and that flows over into this one. That fact, and the fact we meet Cypher here, are what made me able to finish this book.
Cypher takes over Wolf’s body, his muscles and his bones but not his mind. He can see what Cypher is doing and is helpless to stop it. He has to trust his love for Fitz, Ari and the others in his life will tide him through and THEY will get to the bottom of it all.
It is HEAVY on the fighting/violence scale. While I enjoyed that in book one, it was a not so much here.
Things are still not where Wolf, Fitz and Ari want them to be, and I expect it may take more than one more book to make it so.
I have Cypher’s book to read next, and given what happens here, I’m looking forward to that.
3 stars
**same worded review will appear elsewhere**

LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Children of a Lesser God (1986) in Movies
Sep 19, 2020

Hazel (2934 KP) rated The Scent of Death (David Hunter #6) in Books
Sep 27, 2019
The blurb gives an outline of what the story is about so I won't repeat it but what I will say is that it's as good, if not better, as it sounds. The setting is perfect and provides an additional layer of atmosphere and general creepiness and tension to this excellent book. The characters are well developed and believable; the details of the forensic side is not over done or too technical that you either get lost or lose interest and the plot development and twists means this is one book that I found hard to put down (cliché I know, but true).
I have absolutely no hesitation in recommending this book to lovers of fast-paced thrillers from a different perspective than the usual police-procedurals and don't be put off that this is the 6th in the series as it can be read and enjoyed as a standalone.
My thanks go to the Publisher via NetGalley for accepting my request for a copy in return for an honest and unbiased review; you have helped to remind me of how good Simon Beckett's work is.