
Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated Because of Him (Fortunate, #1) in Books
Sep 21, 2019
I really liked this. I wasn't sure what to expect with it being a-new-to-me-author but God, is it good! I was so emotionally invested in these two.
I cried like a baby towards the end with the Jemma incident. How could everyone turn on her like that? She'd not been any trouble, she'd never shown any interest in drugs and they're all ready to throw her out and wash their hands of her apart from Granny Yo. And then Granny Yo... *sniffles*
I'm glad these two got their HEA and I'm interested to see what happens in the rest of the series.

Hunter's Desire (Dark Reserves #2)
Book
What if you can’t feel anything anymore? Hunter is many things: a tough cop, an ex-army ranger...

Unhooked: How to Quit Anything
Book
Is smoking, alcohol, drugs, food, gambling, the Internet, or sex addiction holding you back from...

Chicken Soup for the Soul: Miracles and More: 101 Stories of Angels, Divine Intervention, Answered Prayers and Messages from Heaven
Book
These true personal stories of angels, answered prayers, messages from heaven, miraculous healing...

Catalina: A Novel
Book
A magnetic, provocative debut novel chronicling a young woman’s downward spiral following the end...
mystery fiction

The Experiment of Dreams
Book
Benjamin Walker’s career testing experimental drugs and medicines, as well as performing bizarre...
Sci-fi Art History Travel Dreams Technology

Where There's Smoke
Book
Santiago Mendoza Chicago nearly destroyed me, but moving to Cobalt, I found everything I needed...
M_M Contemporary Romance

Daisy Jones & the Six
Book Watch
Everyone knows Daisy Jones & The Six, but nobody knows the reason behind their split at the absolute...

Halloween Party Murder
Barbara Ross, Leslie Meier and Lee Hollis
Book
Small town traditions are celebrated throughout Maine during the holiday season. But when it comes...

ClareR (5864 KP) rated The Pharmacist in Books
Jul 24, 2022
This isn’t a light read, and the dread isn’t even underlying: it’s constantly there, glowering in every paragraph, every sentence. The reader doesn’t know why these specially chosen people are all holed up in a bunker together, but something terrible, world changing, has happened.
And the claustrophobia! I could imagine the close living quarters, the smell of the not-quite-clean inhabitants, the fear of doing something to incur the wrath of the bunkers leader. Now, he’s quite some character: power mad and more than happy to use anyone to get what he wants. And although the pharmacist, Wolfe, is supplying him with ever greater supplies of drugs, she is the one who is at his mercy.
Whatever is outside the bunker is worse than what’s inside (I debate this, and would be much happier taking my chances on the outside!). And the tasks that the leader demands that Wolfe undertakes, get worse and worse.
This is an unrelentingly grim read, and I’m sure it says a whole lot about me when I say that I loved it. I looked forward - with trepidation - to reading every one of the ten instalments on The Pigeonhole.