All Things New Study Guide: A Revolutionary Look at Heaven and the Coming Kingdom
Book
All Things New is a revolutionary four-session video Bible study (DVD/digital video sold separately)...
Seven: The Days Long Gone
Video Game Watch
If there’s one place that Master Thief Teriel avoids at all costs, it’s the prison island of...
action adventure role-playing
Before Pictures
Book
Douglas Crimp is the rare art critic whose work profoundly influenced a generation of artists. He is...
Mysteries of Paris
Book
The first new translation in over a century of the the brilliant epic novel that inspired Les...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Doors: Field of Blood in Books
Apr 8, 2021
This book sees the group enter a door that takes them to an alternate version of middle-ages France/Germany and the reign of the Frankian empire. As with the World War II element of the second book, this was more or less a passing interest to the book rather than a key element of the story.
The group have found themselves in a version of history where women rule the empire and generally take positions of power, and a building conspiracy among men seeks to reverse this and look to change this in the history books. For me, this was the most interesting aspect of the book, and one that could be plausible. Sadly, I couldn't see past some modern day people apparently conversing comfortably with people from the 9th century without issue, and there being no attempt to address this at all.
Meanwhile in the real world, we learn more about the doors, their use and the mysterious agency controlling them. We learn more in this one book than the other two put together, and between the three we now have a good amount of knowledge about these portals. Some aspects of their use don't add up though, as with any sort of time travel/portal notion.
The book ends fairly abruptly with a long voyage which is skipped over in a very 'sod it, that's the word count reached, wrap it up' style.
Overall, I was very disappointed with these books. While I liked having to piece together things from each book and start to get a feel for the world, I felt so much of it fell short. As with the other two books, it offered so much promise but fell flat.
Cradle of Empires
Games and Travel
App
When boring, uninventive match-3 puzzles prevail and all hope is lost, it all comes down to one...
The School : White Day
Games
App
● Game Introduction ● The legendary classic horror game returns with full 3D graphics. The...
The Buried: An Archaeology of the Egyptian Revolution
Book
From the acclaimed author of River Town and Oracle Bones, an intimate excavation of life in one of...
Merissa (13555 KP) rated Maxim (Fueled By Lust #6) in Books
Apr 11, 2023
This is a fast-paced book (or maybe it was the speed that I was reading as I simply could not put it down!) with an incredible storyline that involves spoilt, little rich men, psychic abilities, and even the gods. There is never a dull moment and plenty of laughter along the way.
I love the relationship that Maxim has with his brothers and this is evident in the book. The relationship between Maxim and Skylar is both fast and slow. The attraction is instant (as Maxim finds out in the airport) but the rest of it, with love and trust being the biggies, takes time to develop. I loved the explanation given by Skylar about insta-love!
This book has it all for me - action, adventure, a hot alpha male, a smart and feisty female, and sex that scorches the pages. The only trouble I have is leaving the Insedi behind. I feel the need to re-read every one of these books again and I don't say that about every book I read!
* A copy of this book was provided to me with no requirements for a review. I voluntarily read this book; the comments here are my honest opinion. *
Merissa
Archaeolibrarian - I Dig Good Books!
December 19, 2018
The Omega Lesson (Billionaires in Heat #2)
Book
Alphas don't have heats. Except when I "switch" to omega at an all-male alpha academy. Alphas are...
Reverse Harem Omegaverse Paranormal Romance Why Choose? Billionaires

