
The Unprofessional Soldier - Memoirs of a Foot Soldier in the Mesopotamian Campaign of the Great War
Book
Are lessons ever really learned? Incredibly detailed and highly emotive, The Unprofessional Soldier...

Norman Bethune in Spain: Commitment, Crisis & Conspiracy
Book
Born to fanatical religious zealots, deeply wounded by an unloving mother and a weak father whom he...

The House of Impossible Beauties
Book
A gritty and gorgeous debut that follows a cast of gay and transgender club kids navigating the...

Beyond Reach / Skin Privilege (UK) (Grant County, #6)
Book
A Riveting tale of murder in a small town, a troubled woman cop ad the center of it all, and the...

A Day at the Racists
Book
A Day at the Racists is a stunning new piece of political theatre from award-winning playwright...

On the Road: Growing Up in Eight Journeys - My Early Years
Book
Memoir of the early life of TV presenter Richard Hammond, told through eight significant road...

Lyndsey Gollogly (2893 KP) rated Fae: The Wild Hunt (The Ryvern Wyrd Saga #1) in Books
Mar 18, 2021
Kindle
Fae: The Wild Hunt ( The Riven Wyrde saga book 1)
By Graham Austin-King
Once read a review will be written via Smashbomb and link posted in comments
Sometimes the faerie tales are a warning. Sometimes they are true.
The Fae were banished so long ago they have become a myth, but the ancient barriers are failing. They are returning, and vengeance is within their grasp.
Klöss wants nothing more than to pass the trials and join the ranks of the Bjornmen raiders, following in the footsteps of his forefathers. But times are changing in the Barren Isles. Coastal plunder is making way for outright conquest, and the threat of war is looming.
Found abandoned in the forest, Devin leads a simple life. But fate, it seems, has other plans.
As his sleepy village transforms in the face of foreign invaders, whispered rumours tell of creatures in the moonlight, shadowy figures with eyes of amber flame. The Fae were banished so long ago they have become a myth, but the ancient barriers are failing. They are returning, and vengeance is within their grasp.
As the first battles rage, only one man seems to know the truth about the Fae, but can Devin or Klöss convince anyone before it is too late?
It was ok a lot of character and world building with action towards the end. Some interesting characters I did get a little bit bored in some parts but I can see what is trying to be achieved so worth sticking with at the moment.

Rodney Barnes (472 KP) rated The Incredible Hulk (2008) in Movies
Feb 15, 2021

Alex Wolff recommended Taxi Driver (1976) in Movies (curated)

LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Sharp Objects in TV
Nov 26, 2020
Decay in all its forms, *very* HBO - right down to the opening credits sequences - in the best ways. If I have one complaint it's that I wish this were an episode longer to really settle into its final moments before the jaw-dropping rug-pull ending (and maybe I wish it was a little more physically gross when it calls for it) - but I digress, this is phenomenal television all the same. Flynn is as complex a writer as ever and Jean-Marc Vallée is at some of his most fully engrossing. As someone living in a tawdry small town just like this it does a bangup job at showing how those types of areas prey upon their little boys and girls, and bears witness to the differing ways their subsequent rage manifests between each gender. You know yourself much less than everyone else *thinks* they know you, if you aren't peering directly into their eyes you aren't safe from disparaging remarks even from your supposed closest allies - the moment in episode 5 where the camera keeps switching POVs while somebody glares at someone else, who then glares at someone else, who then glares at someone else, etc., etc. does a good job at exemplifying this. Adams, Messina, and particularly Clarkson, Scanlen, Perkins, and Czerny are sublime as these haunted enigmas of people. Gives away some of its themes a touch too on-the-nose later in the game but nonetheless a grim, fragmented, trancelike nightmare of hatred. Magnetic as hell.