
Merissa (12943 KP) rated Midnight Exposure (Midnight, #1) in Books
Dec 17, 2018
Our main female and male leads both come with baggage and flaws. Jayne is no weeping wallflower mind you. One of my favourite parts of the book was when she used her black belt karate on someone. She is not just going to sit there and be a victim. The supporting characters are all well rounded and develop really well throughout the book.
As for the 'occult' side of things - I thought this was remarkably well written and that's coming from a pagan. Too often in books, knowledge is mis-used or only given in part and the result can be something that makes me cringe as it dumps every earth and nature based religion in with satanism. The parts of this book that were revealing more about the villain and his motives etc, never painted the actual symbolism as black, instead just showing how it was being used for his purposes. I know I haven't explained it very well but trust me, Melinda Leigh did a great job. As for the reviewer who said "we get no clue what kind of religion this is", I suggest you take a re-read as it is written plain as day.
Loved this book and have started on book 2, Midnight Sacrifice. Recommended!

Tim McGuire (301 KP) rated A Serious Man (2009) in Movies
Jan 21, 2020

Pool of Life: The Autobiography of a Punjabi Agony Aunt
Kailash Puri and Eleanor Nesbitt
Book
Eleanor Nesbitts introduction contextualises the life of Kailash Puri, Punjabi author and agony...

The Immortals: Faces of the Incredible in Buddhist Burma
Guillaume Rozenberg and Ward Keeler
Book
In 1952 a twenty-six-year-old man living in a village in Central Burma was possessed by weikza -...

The Vatican Heresy: Bernini and the Building of the Hermetic Temple of the Sun
Robert Bauval, Chiara Hohenzollern and Sandro Zicari
Book
In 16th century Italy, in the midst of the Renaissance, two powerful movements took hold. The first,...

Power, Patronage, and Memory in Early Islam
Alain George and Andrew Marsham
Book
When the Umayyads, the first Islamic dynasty, rose to power shortly after the death of the Prophet...

India and the Unthinkable: Backwaters Collective on Metaphysics and Politics
Vinay Lal and Roby Rajan
Book
A remarkable but little commented on feature of the various discourses on India circulating today is...

ClareR (5885 KP) rated The Betrayals in Books
Dec 14, 2020
So what IS The Betrayals about? Well, betrayal, actually. Everyone is backstabbing and lying to everyone else in this book, and they’re lucky if they live to regret it. It’s the cloistered version of Dallas (with less sex)! I loved it. This was a hard book to put down, and one I steamed through far too quickly. This ticks a lot of boxes for me: historical fantasy (double whammy straight away), a mystery to solve, dystopian and a smattering of magical realism. I’m glad it looks like a book that could have a sequel - even if it never as one. It leaves the reader able to make up their own next moves (yes, I do that).
Huge thanks to the publisher for providing me with a NetGalley copy of this book - it was one of my reading highlights of 2020.

Ducklady (1174 KP) rated The Core: The Demon Cycle in Books
Aug 25, 2019
I loved the new additions to the POV characters, my favourites being Ashia and Briar. I did feel like it skated away from the main protagonists many times, which frustrated me while I was anxious to get back to Arlen and co. Saying that, the chapters for Ragen and Elissa were brilliant and gave some insight into characters that were already held dear. It revisited some of Arlen's friends from his childhood and the way they had changed from children to adults was an interesting read.
The gap in coming back to the main characters made the book even more tense and made me want to read more and more.
I was confused about the author's opinions on religion, particularly with the scenes between Arlen and Jardir. I have gotten a very negative vibe surrounding religion all throughout the series, but when they were travelling to the core, that seemed flipped on its head.
One part that really struck me was the reaction that Leesha had when she saw her rapist. she relived the moment and still spared the man's life. He was a simple monster that had been implied to have raped other women too. Leesha had a daughter to think about and I think that would have realistically caused her to execute the man, it even said that she wouldn't have been judged for it. Half the time Leesha is holier than thou, although other times she has used her flameworks and poison to kill people... like come on, kill the goddamn rapist. Other than that, this book was almost impossible to put down.
I am excited for the next series and will likely reread the entire series again.

Civilisations: How Do We Look / The Eye of Faith
Book
The idea of 'civilisation' has always been debated, even fought over. At the heart of those debates...