Thursday, October 22, 2020

Prodigal Son by Gregg Hurwitz ( Orphan X #6)

Prodigal Son (Orphan X, #6)Prodigal Son by Gregg Andrew Hurwitz
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is not a paid review and thank you to NetGalley for the advance look.

There is not much more to say. I believe that Gregg Hurwitz has taken over the mantle of best thriller writer out there. His Orphan X series is a study in excellence and growth. Excellence because the quality and consistency is on display from the start of the series though what is now book #6. Growth because, Evan Smoak, Orphan X is nowhere near the man he was in book one. It takes an author of skill to mature and grow a character as convoluted as X. Hurwitz succeeds masterfully.

At the end of book 5, Into the Fire, Evan had just made a deal with the President of the United States to stop his activities as the Nowhere Man. That is until his Roamzone rings and on the other end is a voice of a woman that tells him that she is his mother. Which brings us to Prodigal Son, unsettled by the phone call and trying his best to ignore it, Evan tries his newfound retirement and is frankly, bored. So, when the phone rings again with the same caller, he decides to take the plunge.
Meanwhile, a impound lot worker witnesses a murder and is now on the run. The problem is that the murder wasn't done with just any ordinary weapon, but a miniature drone that looks like a wasp. Tying the two together, Evan's mother asks him to help Andre, the impound worker. What transpires from these two very different story arcs is what will be the best thriller of 2021.
We also learn a lot more about Evan Smoak and the where's and why's of how he came to be left at the orphanage as a baby, as well as a deeper look into his time there and eventual recruitment to be part of the Orphan program.
No spoilers here but if you are in the mood for evil scientists, hellfire missiles, super smart tiny drones and one heck of a cliffhanger ending. Look no further. Pick up Orphan X and get reading. That way you will be ready for Prodigal Son when it hits the shelves.

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Thursday, August 27, 2020

The Thieves of Heaven by Richard Doetsch ( Michael St. Pierre #1)

The Thieves Of Heaven (Michael St. Pierre #1)The Thieves Of Heaven by Richard Doetsch
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Sometimes you pick up a book that just catches your eye. It may be the description, or the blurb from an author you love. But, when that book turns out to be just awesome, then you have something. The Michael St. Pierre series from Doetsch is just one of these books as well as the whole series and ANYTHING else Richard Doetsch has written. He deserves best seller status.
In The Thieves of Faith, we meet our hero, Michael, a flawed man but with an incredible talent for theft. In the course of a heist, he saves a beautiful woman from being killed and is in turn caught and sent to prison. Later, after being released, a known felon, he meets his wife, he gives it up and becomes a security professional, helping other people design systems to stop thieves. Finding his soul mate in a cruel twist of fate in that she soon becomes very sick. With a new business and no money, Michael is blackmailed into stealing again to save his wife's life. Something he promised her he would never do. The heist? Just steal two keys from the Vatican. One gold and one silver.
This is a quasi religious thriller in the mold of the Da Vinci Code but so much more. Michael completes the job and comes to find out that the treatment for his wife is not working, additionally he is visited by a enigmatic stranger who tells Michael that those keys are the keys given to Simon Peter and are the only things keeping Satan in check. They must steal them back from the billionaire who commissioned the job, someone NO ONE wants to mess with if you get my meaning. Do yourself a favor and read this and it's sequels. You will not be disappointed.

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Veil of Lies by Jeri Westerson ( Crispin Guest 31)

Veil of LiesVeil of Lies by Jeri Westerson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Every once in a while you pick up a book on a whim. This was the case with Jeri Westerson 's Veil of Lies, the first book in the Crispin Guest Medieval Noir series.
What a plaesant surprise! The author knows her craft and subject. It is not easy to evoke the feeling of medieval England but Westerson does.
This nystery takes place in the late 1300's and involves our hero, former disgraced knight, Crispin Guest. Since his fall from grace, he has become known as The Tracker and solves mysteries and finds things for people. Owning much of his experience to his former life as a noble and a knight, Guest is a breath of fresh air. He's not perfect but has a nobility that shines through.
In Veil of Lies, Guest is commisioned by a wealthy merchant to keep an eye on his young wife, he believes her to be having an affair. Reluctantly, Guest agrees. After discovering the truth, Guest reports back to the merchants manor only to find him stabbbed to death in a room that had been locked from the inside.
Throw into the mix a nasty Sherrif, an Italian syndicate bent on destroying the English economy, Crispin's loyal houseboy Jack and a mysterious relic that may or may not bear the image of Christ and you have one hack of a story. Twists and turns abound and you coulkd swear at times that you can smell the Thames nearby or the squalor of the Shamnbles.
Well worth reading.

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Just Watch Me by Jeff Lindsay ( Riley Wolf #1)

Just Watch Me (Riley Wolfe #1)Just Watch Me by Jeff Lindsay
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Long live Riley Wolfe! Riley Wolfe is a thief, but not just any thief. He is the best in the world. But, it seems that he may be in a bit of a rut. There are no challenges. Everything is to easy. The answer? He has to find the unstealable. Something that he might fail at.
This is the premise of Just Watch Me. A very fast moving and well written book by Jeff Lindsay of Dexter fame. Riley is a complex character. There is nothing that will stand in the way of his objective:
If he has to kill,maim, or hurt it is just part of the job, which can also be a real sign of someone playing without a full deck.
In Just Watch Me, Riley has become who he is due to events that shaped him when he was young. Being bullied was part of his daily life and he had a father that died when he was young with a mother that kind of checked out. His father always told him to "not be a sheep, but be a wolf", this lesson kicks in in his teenage years and will carry him through life even with a name change to reflect the new found philosophy.
In researching the impossible heist, Riley finds that the Iranian Crown Jewels are coming to the States. With the best security that money can buy and a troop of the Republican Guard from Iran. It can't be done. Or can it?
We follow Riley in his planning which involves some pretty nifty disguises as well as his love of parkour to relax and think. One of the coolest things about this book is that Riley loves his music while thinking and Lindsay has been kind enough to let us know what he is listening to. So, if you have Amazon Music, Apple Music or Spotify handy while you read, you can really immerse your self in Riley's world.
In the course, of the heist, Riley will kill, break hearts and bank accounts. With the help of a beautiful master forger and the backstory of an FBI agent hot on his trail, Just Watch Me was well worth reading.

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The Wild One by Nick Petrie ( Peter Ash #5)

The Wild One (Peter Ash, #5)The Wild One by Nick Petrie
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Nick Petrie is stellar and his Peter Ash series is one of the finest series out there. These books are well written with well drawn characters that you genuinely care about.
In The Wild One, Peter is trying and failing to control his PTSD from the war. Unable to escape from the dreams of people who died under his watch, Peter takes a job from a wealthy woman whose grandson is missing with his father who is accused of killing his wife
who is her daughter. The real story however is that she discovered secret files that would prove damaging to the powerful in Washington DC.
The job is in Iceland and as Peter arrives it becomes quickly apparent that someone powerful doesn't want him to succeed.
The action begins immediately in this book with the scenes alternating between current day and 12 months previous where the child, Oskar and his parents, Erik and Sarah are in the throes of trying to expose the powerful. Much to their own danger.
In Iceland, Peter comes to find the relatives of Erik and Oskar and to see if they are hiding with family. The brutal beauty that is Iceland is on full display as is the powerful loyalty of family.
This book is not to be missed.

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The Last Odyssey by James Rollins ( Sigma Force #15)

The Last Odyssey (Sigma Force, #15)The Last Odyssey by James Rollins
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I have been reading Rollins for almost 20 years and the one thing that I have always loved is his blend of history and action and the whole narrative of "what if". When reading him, sometimes to really have to stop and google things to see of they are true. Fun stuff!\
In The last Odyssey, our friends from Sigma Force are investigating an Arab Dhow locked in a glacier in Greenland when all hell breaks loose. Literally.
The Homeric epics loom large here and the tantalizing idea of just what was true and what was fiction has our heroes racing around the Med to try to keep a very powerful weapon out of the hands of an Apocalyptic cult bent on the world's destruction.
There is a lot of heart in this book none more so than the very end which will cause a few tears..
This is truly one of those series where you could pick up any book and enjoy it, but they are so much better when you start with Sandstorm and wade though with Painter, Gray, and the others.

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The Order by Daniel Silva ( Gabriel Allon #20)

The Order (Gabriel Allon #20)The Order by Daniel Silva
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Every year there is always a Daniel Silva book to look forward to. Silva is really in a class by himself. Just a quick warning though about The Order, there is a ton of religious discussion and supposition. If your faith is flimsy, you might want to pass on by,
In The Order, Chief of the Office, Gabriel Allon needs a vacation. So, he and hwife, Chiara and there two children head to Venice. While they are there, Gabriel learns of the passing of his friend the Pope, whom he saved years ago in a attempted bombing. Not only that, Luigi Donati, another friend as well as the Pope's personal secretary, comes to Venice to talk to Gabriel about his suspicions that the Pope was actually murdered. Also, before he died, there was a letter that the Pope had written to Gabriel that never got delivered and is now missing. So, Gabriel begins looking into the circumstances surrounding the pontiff's death and comes to realize there is much here that doesn't jibe. Throw into the story a militant anti-jewish order, the death of a younf Swiss Guard who was stationed outside the Pope's rooms on the night in question, and rumors of the Gospel of Pontius Pilate and you have quite the story. There is also the papal Conclave that will either see the election of a new Pope, hopefully one that is not involved with the above order. As in all Allon books, there is art and history and a glimpse into what may be next for Gabriel and his family.

A worthwhile book.

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The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi ( The Interdependency #1)

The Collapsing Empire (The Interdependency, #1)The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Really enjoyed this by Scalzi. Loved his Old man's War from years past and to see him return to his galactic roots was welcome.
Full disclosure, I bought this book over 4 years ago and just never got to it until recently. Glad I did, for not that large of a book, the story is huge!
The Interdependency is a conglomeration of many different star systems all with one thing in common. The Flow. There is still not a way to travel faster than light, but there is The Flow which allows the Interdependency to be connected, something that would be impossible dur to many of the systems being light years from each other. When a ship enters the Flow it travels faster that light making all of this possible. The problem is that no one knows exactly how they work.
The House of Wu rules the Interdependency and the old Emperox is dying. His preferred heir was killed in an accident leaving the mantle to Cardenia, who was an illegitimate child but the only one who can take over. Something she never wanted.
In Scalzi's universe there are little to no actual planets that can support life except End, at the far end of the Interdependency. Hub being where the Emperox is at the other end, many years before the Flow to Earth just disappeared. Which is a problem now facing this new generation.
In an act of foresight, Cardenia's father sent his friend, a Flow Physicist to End to study the Flow decades before. His result is that the Flow is going away.
Add to this unique problem the struggles of dynastic merchant guilds, attempted assassinations, rebellions and some great characters and you have one hell of start to a series.
Well worth the read, even if Scalzi's characters can swear with the best of them.

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Friday, July 24, 2020

Network Effect by Martha Wells ( Murderbot #5)

Network Effect (The Murderbot Diaries, #5)Network Effect by Martha Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Long live Murderbot! Our snarky, construct is back in a full length novel and as with the others in the series, Murderbot's inner dialouge is well worth the price of admission.
In Network Effect, Murderbot aka SecUnit is protecting one of Preservation's scientific forays until marauders are persuaded to cease and desist with a little Sec Unit motivation. Upon enetering space, their ship is almost immediately fired upon. What makes the matter even more strange is that it is SecUnit's old friend ART. Something must be wrong, because ART isn't answering and this is just wrong.
Martha Wells is a master of place and time as well as the instinctive knowledge to bring the reader to laughter as well as tears, Network Effect is no different. She weaves storylines together effortlessly and there are a few doosies in NE.
Do yourself a favor and pick these up, read them in order to get the full flavor and enjoy. They are a distinctly guilty pleasure. More please!

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Exit Strategy by Martha Wells ( Murderbot #4)

Exit Strategy (The Murderbot Diaries, #4)Exit Strategy by Martha Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Murderbot is such an interesting and unique character. In many ways, the character seems not to trust the idea of a home, probably a result of never really having one. As to identity, Murderbot has more explicit reasons to question its motivations than most - how much is coded in, how much is what it actually wants?

This fourth installment offers a lot more of the good stuff. Murderbot moves through different stations and governments in search of the mystery of it's past while helping it's humans. By the far the best novella so far.

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Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells ( Murderbot #3)

Rogue Protocol (The Murderbot Diaries, #3)Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If you love a snarky, insecure murderbot. You need to read these book by Martha Wells. Nothing serious here just fun well told stories. In Rogue Protocol, Murderbot continues his investigation into the Greycris Corporation all in an effort to protect his "stupid humans" whom he really cares for. The running interior of thoughts of Murderbot are worth the price of admission.

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Arificial Condition by Martha Wells ( Murderbot #2)

Artificial Condition (The Murderbot Diaries, #2)Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Murderbot is just fun. I can't really say more than that. These are not hard science but oh so fun.. In Artificial Condition, Murderbot now a "free agent" after leaving his group from All Systems Red , is trying to find out if it really killed 57 people in an earlier incident or if there are other answers. It secure passage to the mining planet where the incident happened on a Bot driven freighter with a great AI named ART.
Upon arrival Murderbot poses as a security consultant to a group of researchers who are having difficulties getting their research released back to them from a corrupt company, and with the help of ART our "hero" must find out what really happened to itself as well as protect his clients from getting killed by the corrupt company.
Good stuff and the conversations between Art and Murderbot are classic.

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All Systems Red by Martha Wells ( Murderbot #1)

All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)All Systems Red by Martha Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read this on a lark, and man was it fun. Murderbot is cool! We tend to think of half human/half machine constructs as perfect, unfeeling constructs. Not so for Murderbot. It (since there is no gender) has thoughts, feelings, and even enjoys a good drama series on the entertainment feed.
This is just a novella, but so well done and really make you want to know murderbot more.
In All System's Red. Murderbot is the SecUnit on a exploration survey with a group of scientists when things start going wrong. Murderbot, having hacked it's governor can't be compelled to do anything, but rather chooses to do things which is unique. Conspiracies are afoot and things aren't adding up fortunately Murderbot is there.
Read this!

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Mutation by MIchael McBride ( Unit 51 Book 3)

Mutation (A Unit 51 Novel)Mutation by Michael McBride
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Thank you to Net Galley for an adavnce reader ebook of this book.
This was the third book in the Unit 51 series following, Suhuman and Forsaken. Is it the last Unit 51 novel? I guess we have to wait and see. For one, I am really hoping it isn't these books were fun. A little fantastic at times but entertaining as all get out and isn't that why we read. To get away from the real world? To many authors today keep interjecting theirn politics, etc, into their works, therefore putting a damper on my enthusuasm to read more of their work.
McBride is pure entertainment. If you like books that just move and have science, archeology, ancient mysteries and some pretty scary creatures. This is the book for you.
A word to the wise though, you really need to start at the beginning with Subhuman. McBride shows a deft hand at moving all the parts and locales while building and growing his characters. What is at stake in Mutation? Nothing less than the end of the world as we know it. From the Great Pyramid at Giza to the rainforrests of Mexico and the ruins of La Venta to an abandoned air force base that is much more than it seems. Monsters, pandemics, and ancient mysteries galore are in these books.
You will love them.

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Forsaken by Michael McBride ( Unit 51 Book 2)

Forsaken (Unit 51, #2)Forsaken by Michael McBride
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I didn't thgink that author McBride could ratchet up the action any higher than he did in Subhuman. I was wrong. Forsaken is a mile a minute thrill ride that takes place in such exotic locales as Teotihuacan, Antartica and the englisf moors. Between shadowy organizations and monsters from your worst nighmares, McBride keeps the storyline from Subhuman moving and evolving. Using ancient myth and our world's greatest mysteries from Stonehenge to the Nazca Drawings to the Great Pyramids in Eygpt to crop circles in the english countryside, this is on heck of a book. But, you really need to read Subhuman first. You will be lost if ou don't.
Next up Mutation Unit 51 #3!

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Subhuman by Michael McBride ( Unit 51 Book 1)

Subhuman (Unit 51 #1)Subhuman by Michael McBride
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I really had fun with this. It reminded me of early Rollins. It was hard to put down after all of the scientific things were explained. Interesting, well draw characters. If you love ancient mysteries like Atlantis, the Nazca drawings, the great pyramids, Crop Circles, Stonehenge, etc. You will love this. Great characters with differing pasts and their own secrets make this one to savor.
Looking forward to book 2!

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Tuesday, May 12, 2020

Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo ( Alex Stern #1)

Ninth House (Alex Stern, #1)Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Many books in the last few years have been touted as "Harry Potter for adults", but I think Ninth House is the closest I have seen. It is gritty, dark, magical and pretty dang cool.
Leigh Bardugo the highly popular creator of the YA Grishaverse, shows here that she is a writer who can write for anyone.
Ninth House takes place at modern day Yale.. I know at first you are like, yawn, wake me up when it's over. But, once you read the first sentence, you realize that this Yale is way different , more spooky and mysterious than you have imagined.
Ninth House is about a young women named Galaxy Stern or Alex. She has been brought to Yale because she can see things others cannot. Namely, dead people or Grays. You see, at Yale there are a bunch of secret societies that deal with various magical and occult properties and they have some very famous alumni, George W. Bush, Jodie Foster, Anderson Cooper and others. The 8 Houses are watched or policed by Lethe House. Lethe are the caretakers, making sure that nothing goes wrong or the houses abuse their power.
There is magic here. Not only in Bardugo's writing, but in the magic system that sheb has built using these real locales.
Alex arrives at Yale fresh from some pretty horrible stuff in California to be trained as Lethe's new "Dante". Her "Virgil", Darlington, (Daniel Arlington) the previous Dante is to train her, so that one day he can take his place and train another in her stead. There is an "Ovid" named Dawes who supports them and helps with any knowledge they might need, and a "Centurion" who is an investigator with the police department. One who doesn't believe in magic or what he is there in case something happens that involves harm to the outside world.

Well. something happens. A town girl is found murdered on the grounds of Yale and it is up to Alex to find out why and if the Houses are involved. There are wonderful and eerie surprises in this book, which you need to discover on your own. But, Alex's journey is a hard one with turmoil and death on all sides, not to mention some pretty badass magic that gets directed at her.

Pick this up. You will enjoy it, but be warned this isn't a young adult book and Bardugo's characters have scars, lusts and colorful language galore.

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The Magic of Recluce by L E Modesitt ( The Saga of Recluce #1)

The Magic of Recluce (The Saga of Recluce, #1)The Magic of Recluce by L.E. Modesitt Jr.
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I have had the first 7 or 8 of this series on my bookshelf since 2000. All first editions and signed at a book signing I had LE Modesitt at. And never read them.
Finally got the itch to start. Glad I did. I am still a little confused about reading order and chronological order but I'll go with what the author says. Read in published order.
The Magic of Recluce is really good and the authors magic system is new and interesting for a change. The story concerns Lerris a resident in Recluce is bored with all the order and perfection. As such, not knowing what he wants he is given two choices. Exile or Dangergeld. He chooses the latter and is shipped if to neighboring Candar where it isnt so perfect and too he needs to undertake a journey.
In Modesitt's magic system there is order which is black and chaos which is white. Very involved but makes a lot of sense.
Lerris learns much and comes to an understanding of of who and what he is in a very readable take.
Onto The Towers of Sunset!






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Godsgrave by Jay Kristoff ( The Nevernight Chronicle #2)

Godsgrave (The Nevernight Chronicle, #2)Godsgrave by Jay Kristoff
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Godsgrave is a true work of art! Godsgrave picks up 8 months after the closing events of Nevernight and we discover Mia has a new destination, the Collegium.

One thing I loved about Nevernight was the storytelling and Kristoff keeps it up. The book itself is split into 3 parts and I absolutely love how part 1 tells the story of here we are now but let me also tell you how we got to now, this is told through flashbacks. To me it is never hard to follow the past and present story lines because each one is very unique. I also love how the flashbacks do not overstay their welcome, it has a precise story line and ends.

As for the present story and plot, Godsgrave amps up all the action and drama by 100. Kristoff writes some of the best action scenes ever, period. They are gripping, exhilarating, and downright gruesome. Every action scene is vivid and well detailed and that is all thanks to Kristoff's incredible writing style.

Now the plot stays it's course from Nevernight, we are still after those that ruined Mia's life, however we now join a Collegium rather then a school for assassin's. Man did I love the Collegium in this book! The new characters were all fleshed out, some likeable some not so likeable. However I do have to tell myself when it comes to Jay Kristoff books I really need to not get so attached to the characters because well you will just have to read the book to find out. The new characters add a fresh new feel to the book to the point that we get to see a more softer side to Mia that we really didn't get to see in the first book, so I appreciated that. Seeing a softer side to Mia really showed some great character development and there definitely was quite a bit of character development throughout this book. The Collegium is also where we get to see all the action take place. Like I said before these action sequences were epic. They all weren't the same either and what I mean by that is, we didn't have just big blood bath battles. Like a true Colosseum in Rome, their were games, chariot races, and of course blood baths.

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Darkdawn by Jay Kristoff ( Nevernight Chronicle #3)

Darkdawn (The Nevernight Chronicle, #3)Darkdawn by Jay Kristoff
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What can I say about this series. I am so sad that it has come to an end. Raunchy, wonderful, crude and addictive. Definitely not for the faint of heart. But what a creation. Mia Corvere and all of the others are simply brilliant characters that you care for and root for and yes, cry for. With the lush world building that resembles ancient Rome and Venice, with their various locales, are just astounding. If you like your fantasy dark and gritty and full of angst and wonder; pick up Nevernight and start the adventure.

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The Russian by Ben Coes ( Rob Tacoma #1)

The Russian (Rob Tacoma #1)The Russian by Ben Coes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Ben Coes is one of the best thriller writers going today and with this new series, starring one of his regular characters from the Dewey Andreas book, the future is bright. This was fun, at some points it bordered on the incredible, but still fun. Let's put it this way. I don't think even Jack Reacher would stand a chance against Rob Tacoma.
Plus with an ending that promises more, we will have to see what's next for Calibrisi, Katie, Rob and Dewey.

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Into the Fire by Gregg Hurwitz (Orphan X, #5)

Into the Fire (Orphan X, #5)Into the Fire by Gregg Andrew Hurwitz
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Long live Evan Smoak! After Orphan X's last adventure it left one wondering where author Gregg Hurwitz had left to go. But, it just goes to show that Hurwitz is much more clever than I.
Orphan X #5 is REALLY good. But, could this actually be the last mission for X? He seems to be moving that way and as his fans we sincerely hope not.
In Into the Fire, X is considering hanging it up after one more Nowhere Man mission and much internal dialogue to the point on what it would be like to be "normal".
With that, Evan receives the now normal call to help from someone who is already running from those trying to kill him. Max Merriweather is a down on his luck guy who promised his older brother that he would deliver a package to a lawyer if anything ever happened to him. With the older brother's death by torture, Max starts the quest to fulfill an obligation only to be chased and almost killed. Not knowing where to turn, while running he runs into the last X helpee and is given THE number to contact the Nowhere Man. In his typical fashion, X handles the problem fairly quickly, but it seems that that there are others involved and much to Evan's surprise and consternation, each head killed sprouts two more. Knowing that Max will never be safe until the job is completely done, Evan forgers ahead into some of his most harrowing experiences yet. Add the reliable standby's of Mia, Peter, and Joey not to mention a new addition Dog, and you are in for a wild ride.

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A Dangerous Man by Robert Crais (Elvis Cole, #18; Joe Pike, #7)

A Dangerous Man (Elvis Cole, #18; Joe Pike, #7)A Dangerous Man by Robert Crais
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Elvis Lives!
I have been reading Robert Crais for over 20 years now. I have told hundreds of people about him, Elvis Cole and Pike. These are consistently great in every way and when a new Pike or Elvis book comes out, make time because you won't want to put it down.
A Dangerous man is no different. There is everything you would want from this book. Great characters, humor and tremendous action scenes. Bad cowboys, lowlife thugs, the Witness Protection Program, Federal Marshall's and of course one dangerous man in Pike.
The story begins on a normal day after Pike does an errand at his bank. Moments after finishing, the young bank teller leaves for lunch only to be kidnapped in broad daylight with no on noticing.. except Pike.
Pike saves her and a chain of events occurs that no one could see coming. With the help of the intrepid Elvis Cole, Pike and Elvis unravel a 20 year old mystery and in the process meet some bad dudes. But, none can hold a candle to Pike.

If you haven't discovered these books, pick up The Monkey's Raincoat and start! Now! Today! and read them in order.. You will love these books.

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Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett ( The Founders Trilogy #1)

Foundryside (The Founders Trilogy #1)Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I loved this book. “Foundryside” is an amazingly smooth read. Very well written with characters that you really care about. Very original and tremendous world building as well.
Bennett has developed an innovative magic system along with some exquisite world building. The city of Tevanne has hints of a great past of imperial dynasties ruling the land and now profits through the sale of magic. Merchant houses compete against each other and is the primary source of political intrigue in the novel. The magic system is truly unique. Through a process called ‘scriving’ various products, machinery, and devices are imbued with special magical scripts which tell objects how to defy reality. Imagine an elevator in a mine shaft which is scrived to ignore gravity and naturally “fall up”. Part of the fun in reading Foundryside, is discovering how these rules work. While the merchant houses grow wealthy due to selling and controlling scrived products, there is an active underworld which operates by manufacturing knock-offs of their own. All of this creates an impressive world for the characters to play in.

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Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence (Books of the Ancestor #3)

Holy Sister (Book of the Ancestor, #3)Holy Sister by Mark Lawrence
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The Books of the Ancestor by Mark Lawrence are three of the finest fantasies that I have read in a long time and Holy Sister was amazing. Lawrence can write with the best of them and his characters are real. This is the type of book that at times you have to put down because you care so damn much.
Holy Sister is the continuing story of Nona Grey and the story of the Corridor and the Convent of Sweet Mercy and the battles with the Scithrowl who want to invade and take over everything in their path.
This review will not do justice to the book in part because I hate to give spoilers. But, Nona has been at Sweet Mercy for a decade now and while still learning, has become formidable in her own right. The book alternates between events three years in the past where the second book in the series, Red Sister, ends and present day from the point of view Nona and those around her. The battle scenes are intense and the worldbuilding first rate. I also dare anyone with a beating heart to shed more than a few tears during this book. Especially a dramatic scene with dear Sister Pan that shows Lawrence's brilliance.
READ THIS SERIES! You will not regret it.

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Tear It Down by Nick Petrie ( Peter Ash #5)

Tear It Down (Peter Ash, #4)Tear It Down by Nick Petrie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Peter Ash, has grown restless after recuperating at his girlfriend’s house from an accident. He’s having trouble adjusting to civilian life. June suggests that he go and help her friend Wanda Wyatt, a combat photographer, because she’s having a little trouble with vandalism at her home in Memphis. Once Peter gets there, he finds out that Wanda is in a whole lot of trouble that could get her killed. Someone is looking for something they believe belongs to them, and it’s in the house Wanda bought after returning from an assignment overseas. They’ll stop at nothing to get it back, even if it means killing Wanda to get her out of the house.

Eli Bell helped rob a jewelry store against his better judgment. He wants to play the blues, but can’t seem to get his life together. After robbing the jewelry store, he finds himself in trouble with a local gangster named King Robbie. Robbie wants what’s his, and he’s coming after Eli to get it. Eli decides to steal a truck from an ex-marine who let him. Not only has he got King Robbie on his tail, now Pete is looking for him too.

Pete is faced with a battle on all sides, so he calls in his friend Lewis to help clean up the mess in Memphis before someone gets killed.

You cannot put this book down. It also gives you a look at the seamier side of Memphis and the poverty that abounds in many southern cities.

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Light It Up by Nick Petrie ( Peter Ash #3)

Light It Up (Peter Ash, #3)Light It Up by Nick Petrie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Nick Petrie and Peter Ash are good. Many have compared Ash to Jack Reacher and it is a good comparison, but it feels that Ash is more real. He has flaws and while being formidable is still vulnerable.
Book 3, Light It Up, did not disappoint. Petrie just keeps up the high standard that has made this series a must read. In Light It Up, Peter is helping a friend and his daughter out by being a guard for the money and product that is now a staple of the Colorado economy. Marijuana growing and distributing. It is while guarding a large shipment of cash that Peter and his group are ambushed, with many people dying. As we have come to know, Peter won't let things go until he solves the problem or avenges a friends death. Which are both present in Light It Up.
Throw in Lewis, and Junie, and this book hits all the right notes.
Well worth the read.

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The Terminal List by Jack Carr ( James Reece #1)

The Terminal List (James Reece, #1)The Terminal List by Jack Carr
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Really enjoyed this book. Jack Carr is ther real deal. You can tell by the incredible amount of detail that this is a like the author himself has lived. What is really interesting is that the are certain parts of thre book that are redacted. Which is both frustrating and cool.
The story is concerned with James Reece a SEAL commander, well respected by his troops and a staunch family man. While on deployment he and his men are sent on a bad mission from higher up. Eeveryone is wiped out except from James and one other. Shortly therefater, he come to find out that he has a brain tumor that has been causing excruciating headaches.
Returning home, bad things begin to happen. Boozer the other soldier, suposedly commits suicide and then a group of mexican thugs shoot up his home killing his wife, little girl and unborn son. realizing that this can't be coincidental.
After some digging, Reece finds a conspiracy that reaches to the highest levels of government. But, all Reece wants is revenge for his family and his men.
This book hums!



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Burning Bright by Nick Petrie ( Peter Ash #2)

Burning Bright (Peter Ash, #2)Burning Bright by Nick Petrie
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read Nick Petrie’s The Drifter last year and was impressed to say the least. So, I picked up book #2 in the Peter Ash series, Burning Bright when it came out in paperback. It has sat on my “to read” shelf awhile and I finally decided to get on it.
I am so glad I did! It is rare for the 2nd book of a series to surpass the first but this book does it in spades. Great characters, great scenery and great dialogue make this one of my favorite books so far this year.
Our protagonist, Peter is in Northern California hiking among the giant redwoods and trying to keep his PTSD and claustrophobia at bay.
In a chance encounter with a large,hungry bear forces Peter to climb a tree to get away.
Once up the tree he discovers a climbing rope leading up.. so he follows it and another and another until he comes upon a makeshift tree platform with a young women on it pointing a gun at him.
Are you hooked yet?
Peter comes to find out that June Cassidy I hiding from men who would do her harm. In fact, as he is learning this they hear the searchers far below and need to get away or face certain death.
Petrie writes a killer story about a tough investigative reporter, Junie, who is trying to discover why these men want her and if it’s connected to the death of her brilliant l, computer scientist mom.
Turns out that Junie’s mom developed an algorithm that could tilt the balance of power in favor of who has it.. something people are will to kill for.
With the help of Peter, Junie’s investigation uncovers more than she bargained for including a crazy military contractor, an assassin with a penchant for hanging it up, Peter’s friend Lewis, and even Junie’s reclusive former billionaire father, nicknamed the Yeti and self learning technology and you have a great book. Petrie also brings to light the plight of many of our brave soldiers who after having returned from combat in the middle east are have a difficult time rejoining society. Their issues are poignant and instructive and should be all of ours concern.
With two more Peter Ash books already available my April will be a happy place indeed!


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The Demon Crown (Sigma Force #13)

The Demon Crown (Sigma Force, #13)The Demon Crown by James Rollins
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

James Rollins is one of those standbys that you can read and it is like visiting an old friend. With this, the 13th Sigma Force book, he blends his trademarks of the mysteries of history and action with great characters and a story that moves along at a great pace.
Taking on the mystery of who James Smithson was and why he left his fortune to a fledgling country in the United States to build up a center of scholarship and learning in the Smithsonian Institution, a Japanese industrialist looking for revenge, ancient, deadly wasps and a new dynamic in Gray and Seichan's relationship, this book has everything.
It will keep you up reading and the scholarship presentred is fascinating.

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The New Iberia Blues by James Lee Burke ( Dave Robicheaux #22)

The New Iberia Blues (Dave Robicheaux #22)The New Iberia Blues by James Lee Burke
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If you love James Lee Burke, and you love Dave Robicheaux and company, you will love The New Iberia Blues. As good as the last book in the series, Robicheaux, and in some ways better. TNIB is a welcome addition to the canon of work of Burke. His books never get old, mainly because of the writing. Burke is a master of language and mood. His characters breathe and bleed and are entirely human.
What's not to love?

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Bones by Jonathan Kellerman ( Alex Delaware # 23)

Bones (Alex Delaware, #23)Bones by Jonathan Kellerman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Bones begins with a guy buying the contents of a foreclosed storage unit only to find an bunch of junk magazines, newspapers and crap. Except at the bottom of a bag of trash is a beautiful wood box with what appears to be polished finger bones inside of it.
Soon after a corpse is found is a protected marsh area of LA with it's right hand cut off. Soon 3 other bodies are found in the marsh as well with a similar disfigurement. But unlike the first one they have been there awhile.
Enter Milo and Alex and a newcomer, Moses Reed to the equation. In the course of their investigation, they run up against a fanatical marsh conservationist, pot head high school boys, millionaires and a twitchy, nervous estate manager.
All signs point to the estate manager especially after he bolts and is unable to be found, but things aren't what they seem. Especially after his millionaire bosses and their prodigy, piano playing son disappear. It turns out that things have been going on for a while and the evil they encounter has no bounds.

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Artificial Condition by Martha Wells ( Murderbot Diaries #2)

Artificial Condition (The Murderbot Diaries, #2)Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Murderbot is just fun. I can't really say more than that. These are not hard science but oh so fun.. In Artificial Condition, Murderbot now a "free agent" after leaving his group from All Systems Red , is trying to find out if it really killed 57 people in an earlier incident or if there are other answers. It secure passage to the mining planet where the incident happened on a Bot driven freighter with a great AI named ART.
Upon arrival Murderbot poses as a security consultant to a group of researchers who are having difficulties getting their research released back to them from a corrupt company, and with the help of ART our "hero" must find out what really happened to itself as well as protect his clients from getting killed by the corrupt company.
Good stuff and the conversations between Art and Murderbot are classic.

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Compulsion by Jonathan Kellarman ( Alex Delaware #22)

Compulsion (Alex Delaware, #22)Compulsion by Jonathan Kellerman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It is rare for an author to keep a consistent level of excellence going for years. But, Jonathan Kellerman seems to have been able to do it so far through Alex Delaware #22, Compulsion. This was a very good Delaware. Milo, Robin and Alex are old friends and with newcomers, Petra Conner and Raul Biro, you really have quite the group.
In Compulsion, you get two mysteries for the price of one. The story begins with a Bentley being found with what appears to be a blood stain. But, the car was just borrowed and returned after being cleaned up. Soon, a young woman on the way home from a bar, runs out o gas and is picked up in a gorgeous, expensive car, driven by a rich older woman, only to never be seen again and like the Bentley the car is returned to where it was borrowed from. No damage, nothing strange.
It turns out that the cases are linked and take Alex from the high desert of California to the streets of Manhattan.
Things are not what they seem and it could be an old murder was the catalyst for all of it.
On the other hand, a convicted killer is trying to make a plea deal by saying he knows where the bodies of others are buried and the Chief orders Milo to help find out the truth. It's been 16 long years and a young man's parents are looking for closure on what happened to their son. Though not involved with the other case, it still is hair raising and will test Milo and Alex's belief in the human race.

Twists and turns abound and this is one of the really good ones in this series. So, glad I began reading them again and can't wait for #23.



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All Systems Red by Martha Wells ( Murderbot Diaries #1)

All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries, #1)All Systems Red by Martha Wells
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read this on a lark, and man was it fun. Murderbot is cool! We tend to think of half human/half machine constructs as perfect, unfeeling constructs. Not so for Murderbot. It (since there is no gender) has thoughts, feelings, and even enjoys a good drama series on the entertainment feed.
This is just a novella, but so well done and really make you want to know murderbot more.
In All System's Red. Murderbot is the SecUnit on a exploration survey with a group of scientists when things start going wrong. Murderbot, having hacked it's governor can't be compelled to do anything, but rather chooses to do things which is unique. Conspiracies are afoot and things aren't adding up fortunately Murderbot is there.
Read this!

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Sins of Empire by Brian McClellan ( Gods of Blood and Powder #1)

Sins of Empire (Gods of Blood and Powder, #1)Sins of Empire by Brian McClellan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love these books. They are so good and McClellan's writing and world building is so assured. If you haven't read the prequel trilogy to this one. Run out and get it now! the Powder Mage trilogy is amazing and after reading the first volume of Gods of Blood and Powder, Sins of Empire, I think its going to be a wild ride.
SoE takes place years after the events in the powder Mage trilogy. Lady Flint (Vlora) and her confidant Olem are back with their Riflejacks in a mercenary capacity in Fatrasta across the sea. They have taken a contract with the Lady Chancellor in Landfall to put down the Palo uprising in the backwaters of the country.
Meanwhile, a large obelisk is discovered in the swamps outside of the city and it gives off strange vibrations and feeling to those around it, driving many crazy.
In a bit of political subterfuge, the Lade Chancellor redirects Lady Flint and her army to Landfall to root out a Palo agitator, Mama Palo, who has been actively stirring up trouble in the mainly Palo held Greenfire Depths. Did I mention the world building? The vision of the Depths is genius.
Throw into the mix, Mad Ben Styke, a hero from the Fatrastan Civil War who is now labeled a traitor and his Mad Lancers disbanded, a scret police force called the Blackhats that are led by their own meglamaniac, and just maybe some old friends from the previous trilogy and you have one hell of a book.
McClellan weaves his threads of story lines in a wonderful way. The warp and weave bringing to life this incredible world and those who inhabit it. Just when you think you have some things straight an Kez fleet shows up wanting the Obelisk and will do ANYTHING to get it.
This is bloody good fun! Read it now!

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Obsession by Jonathan Kellerman ( Alex Delaware # 21)

Obsession (Alex Delaware, #21)Obsession by Jonathan Kellerman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Really enjoying catching up with Alex Delaware and Milo Sturgis. Just fun, easy reads.
In Obsession, Alex reacquaints himself with a former patient that he had as a child. Tanya Bigelow. Tanya's step mom, Patty, has died of cancer but before she died, she told Tanya that she had done a terrible thing. Unable to reconcile this with what she knew as the best mom a girl could have as well as a stellar nurse who served with Milo's significant other, Rick Silverman, it is out of character as well.
To put the girl's mind at ease, Milo starts doing some digginbg around the places where Tanya grew up as a child with interesting consequences. People start dying and sordid details emerge from around one of the neighborhood's that Patty and Tanya lived. Did Patty really do something? Through a series of twists and turns and innuendo, clarity emerges and it is not what anyone would have thought.
Very good book.

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Gone by Jonathan Kellerman ( Alex Delaware #20)

Gone (Alex Delaware, #20)Gone by Jonathan Kellerman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Really glad that I started reading good old Alex Delaware again. Plus, I think I have at least 10 more to catch up!
In Gone, a couple of theater students stage a fake abduction and end up in trouble with the law. Enetr Alex Delaware to interview the girl, Michaela, about why she did it. Work done, or so he thinks. Alex turns to other things until Milo calls with the news that Michaela's body was found.
The whole acting / theater scene of aspiring actors is brought into focus with the thread that other acting students had gone missing over the years and it seems the one common thread is a freeform theater study group led by woman named Nora Dowd who is the third member of siblings who own a lot of property and seem to be a little off kilter.
With all of the supposition of what the siblings are up to as well as another case of disturbed psychiatrist that Alex helped prove guilt and his on again/off again with both Robin and Allison and Gone is one of the more gritty series entries.


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Rage by Jonathan Kellerman ( Alex Delaware #19)

Rage (Alex Delaware, #19)Rage by Jonathan Kellerman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Over 20 years ago, I never missed the opportunity to read the newest Alex Delaware. Then, for some reason I just kinda quit. So after a long hiatus, I'm back and glad I am. I have missed Kellerman's writing and the likes of Alex and Milo.
In Rage, Delaware receives a phone call from a troubled young man who 8 years previously with another kid, kidnapped and killed a toddler. Having just been released the young man, Rand, wants to meet and talk with Delaware who consulted on the earlier murder case. Delaware agrees only to be stood up. Later he finds out from Milo that the young man was killed that night.
Flashbacks to the earlier time as well as the new investigation moving forward dominate the story line.
Once Milo and Alex start digging, things just start to not add up and there are more questions than answers that stretch back to the original murder. Through sheer perseverance and much hypothesizing, the duo begin to make sense of the convoluted timeline and come to realize that there well may be a serial killer on the loose. Thrown into the mix is Alex's relationship with another Psychiatrist as well as the possible reemergence of Robyn, and things are getting interesting.
Looking forward to reestablishing my relationship with these two.

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The Autumn Republic by Brian McClellan ( Powder Mage #3)

The Autumn Republic (Powder Mage, #3)The Autumn Republic by Brian McClellan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

There is not a lot I can say about this series except I am so sad that this part is over. The Powder Mage Trilogy, ( Promise of Blood, The Crimson Campaign and The August Republic) were so good.
This is what fantasy is all about. Creating different worlds and magic systems that resonate and imbue the reader with a sense of wonder and dare I say it... This is so cool!
These books have it all. Great characters, tremendous story line, mortals fighting Gods and humor, love and tragedy in all it's forms.
No spoilers.. Just trust me and give it a try.. You won't be disappointed.












































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































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Shadows of the Dead by Spencer Kope ( Special Tracking Unit #3)

Shadows of the Dead (Special Tracking Unit #3)Shadows of the Dead by Spencer Kope
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If you haven't discovered Spencer Kope and his Special Tracking Unit series, you are missing out. I was lucky enough to receive a ebook ARC from Netgalley for the purpose of this review.

There are a lot of really good thriller writers out there. Greg Hurwitz, Nick Petrie, Ben Coes and now it's time to add Kope to the list.
His thrillers are unique. His hero's aren't larger than life, they can't go toe to toe with Dewey, or Reacher or Peter Ash, but they don't need to. Kope's protagonist, Magnus "Steps" Craig, a professional tracker for the FBI has a secret. He can see everyone's shine. Every person leaves a residue, when he walks, or touches something. All of these shines have a different and distinct color, and just like DNA no two are the same. His ability to see shine is from his childhood where he got lost in the woods and actually died from hypothermia. After being brought back to life, he could see the shine.
Quite handy for a tracker of killers. The only people "in the know" are his partner Jimmy and the FBI Director.
In Shadows of the Dead, women are being abducted and "fixed" because they are broken. This fixing comes in the form of casts made of their faces and then those casts being placed in mannequins and posed in lifelike situations. Then, the women are killed.
In the course of their investigation, they come to find out that an individual known as the Onion King, is responsible.
The story moves along, with great forensics, the dark web and characters you cheer for as they hunt for the killer. One extra benefit of shine is that Steps can tell if a person is still alive by the look of the shine. Which becomes increasingly important as another women is abducted and they must find her before her fate matches all the others.
If you haven't discovered this author, Pick up book 1, Collecting the Dead and enjoy. Kope has the professional background as a criminal analyst to give a believability to his work which can sometimes be lacking in other writers.

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The Wild One by Nick Petrie ( Peter Ash #5)

The Wild One (Peter Ash, #5)The Wild One by Nick Petrie
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Nick Petrie is stellar and his Peter Ash series is one of the finest series out there. These books are well written with well drawn characters that you genuinely care about.
In The Wild One, Peter is trying and failing to control his PTSD from the war. Unable to escape from the dreams if people who died underbid watch, Peter takes a job from a wealthy woman whose grandson is missing with his father who is accused of killing his wife
who is her daughter. The real story however is that she did overed secret files that would prove damaging to the powerful in Washington DC.
The job is in Iceland and as Peter arrives it becomes quickly apparent that someone powerful doesn't want him to succeed.
The action begins immediately in this book with the scenes alternating between current day and 12 montgs previous where the child, Oskar and his parents, Erik and Sarah are in the throes of trying to expose the powerful. Much to their own danger.
In Iceland, Peter comes to find the relatives if Erik and Oskar and to see if they are hiding with family. The brutal beauty that is Iceland is on full display as is the powerful loyalty of family.
This book is not to be missed.

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The Crimson Campaign by Brian McClellan ( Powder Mage#2)

The Crimson Campaign (Powder Mage, #2)The Crimson Campaign by Brian McClellan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is one fine series. If you love unique magic systems, well drawn characters and great world building, you will love these books. McClelland seems to have the gist of writing and creating that Sanderson does.
The Crimson Campaign though a little more grim than Promise of Blood, was still a great story.
With three distinct story lines running through the narrative, you would think it would get convoluted and messy, but that is far from the case.

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Promise of Blood by Brian McClellan ( Powder Mage #1)

Promise of Blood (Powder Mage, #1)Promise of Blood by Brian McClellan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This... was... awesome! It is such a nice surprise when you pick up a fantasy and you read a few pages and you become hooked. Time ceases to exist, you are immersed in a world other than this one and you marvel at the author's imagination. Magic, Muskets, Gods and tremendous writing. Promise of Blood should be on every serious reader of fantasy's must read list. This is that good.

The book opens with a military coup that takes power away from the King of Adro. We find out the reason why is that the King was imminently going to pretty much sign over the country to Adro's enemies, Kez. Tamas and his co-conspirators cannot let this happen, knowing that if they do it will be a tremendous blow to the people and pretty much enslave them to a foreign power. While successful in the coup, there are other matters afoot. Tamas wlll shortly face traitors, treachery and near death in his fight to free the people, but the real magic here is the magic systems that are employed with great skill by McClellan. In his world there are Powder Mages, those who can ingest gunpowder and by so doing increase everything from strength to the path of a musketball and its velocity. Very reminiscent of Sanderson's Mistborn, but entirely different. We also have people who are Knacked, or Privileged who have their own magic, with the Privileged the more powerful.
In the course of the story, we meet Tamas son, Taniel a Powder Mage in his own right, like his father. His companion is a "savage" girl named Ka-Poel who is MUCH more than she seems.
Are you intrigued? Because that is all you get from me.
Get this book. You won't be sorry.



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Just Watch Me by Jeff Lindsay ( Riley Wolfe #1)

Just Watch Me (Riley Wolfe #1)Just Watch Me by Jeff Lindsay
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Long live Riley Wolfe! Riley Wolfe is a thief, but not just any thief. He is the best in the world. But, it seems that he may be in a bit of a rut. There are no challenges. Everything is to easy. The answer? He has to find the unstealable. Something that he might fail at.
This is the premise of Just Watch Me. A very fast moving and well written book by Jeff Lindsay of Dexter fame. Riley is a complex character. There is nothing that will stand in the way of his objective:
If he has to kill,maim, or hurt it is just part of the job, which can also be a real sign of someone playing without a full deck.
In Just Watch Me, Riley has become who he is due to events that shaped him when he was young. Being bullied was part of his daily life and he had a father that died when he was young with a mother that kind of checked out. His father always told him to "not be a sheep, but be a wolf", this lesson kicks in in his teenage years and will carry him through life even with a name change to reflect the new found philosophy.
In researching the impossible heist, Riley finds that the Iranian Crown Jewels are coming to the States. With the best security that money can buy and a troop of the Republican Guard from Iran. It can't be done. Or can it?
We follow Riley in his planning which involves some pretty nifty disguises as well as his love of parkour to relax and think. One of the coolest things about this book is that Riley loves his music while thinking and Lindsay has been kind enough to let us know what he is listening to. So, if you have Amazon Music, Apple Music or Spotify handy while you read, you can really immerse your self in Riley's world.
In the course, of the heist, Riley will kill, break hearts and bank accounts. With the help of a beautiful master forger and the backstory of an FBI agent hot on his trail, Just Watch Me was well worth reading.

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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Grey Sister by Mark Lawrence ( Book of the Ancestor #2)

Grey Sister (Book of the Ancestor, #2)Grey Sister by Mark Lawrence
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Mark Lawrence is simply awesome. It is very hard to write a sequel that is better than the first book. But, Lawrence has done just that with Grey Sister. Through the first two books of the series, as a reader, I have come to really care and cheer for the characters in this series. Nona Grey, Ara, Darla Abbess Glass, Kettle and even Zole. What a fantastic group and the storylines are simply brilliant.
This is Game of Thrones on a smaller scale and on steroids. It doesn't get better than this. No spoilers here. Read Red Sister and then get your hands on Grey Sister. Then, unfortunately, sit on your hands, and wait somewhat patiently for book 3..

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Bloody Sunday by Ben Coes (Dewey Andreas #8)

Bloody Sunday (Dewey Andreas, #8)Bloody Sunday by Ben Coes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Coes just keeps getting better and better. After last year's stellar Trap the Devil, I didn't think that Coe's could top it. But, he did in spades.

In Bloody Sunday the very real scenario of a nuclear North Korea is on full display. After receiving the news that he has terminal cancer and a very short to live, Kind Jong Un decides to go out with a bang, a big nuclear bang on US soil. Acquiring what he needs, he plots his course and bides his remaining short time.

Through an operation the US discovers the plan and with the help of a mission planning operations guru,currently on loan from MI6, Jenna Chambers who may or not be what she says she is, and a reluctant Dewey Andreas, the race against the clock begins in earnest.

This book is extremely hard to put down. So don't and enjoy the ride.


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House of Spies by Daniel Silve (Gabriel Allon #17)

House of Spies (Gabriel Allon #17)House of Spies by Daniel Silva
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Daniel Silva is a master. What more can you say. The quality of story has always been 5 star. From The Unlikely Spy to this new novel have all been quality.
I love the Gabriel Allon series and really hope that Christopher Keller gets his own novel at some point. House of Spies us vintage Allon.
If you have never read this series, do yourself a favor and pick up The Kill Artist or the second book in the series, The English Assassin (which is a classic) you will be hooked.


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Killfile by Christopher Farnsworth ( John Smith #1)

Killfile (John Smith, #1)Killfile by Christopher Farnsworth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

How would you like to read one of the most original thrillers in years? The only book lately that has come close was 2016's "Collecting the Dead" by Spencer Kope. Another great start to what I hope is a long running series.
Killfile stars our hero, John Smith. Smith is remarkable. He knows what you are thinking, what everyone is thinking, which can get a little loud. A former black-ops soldier, John now makes his living by helping the 1% that can afford him fix problems. He is very good at it. When a tech billionaire hires him to retrieve information from a former employee who is ready to make billions and then erase the memory he balks. Until he hears the payment offered. His own island, complete with home and everything he will ever need. Someplace Smith can actually relax and not hear the voices every second of every day. He agrees. What happens next is unputdownable. The skill of Farnsworth in building this character is off the charts. It is fascinating and disturbing and makes you think.
The first of a series I am looking forward to #2.

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Flashmob by Christopher Farnsworth ( John Smith #2)

Flashmob (John Smith, #2)Flashmob by Christopher Farnsworth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Christopher Farnsworth's second John Smith thriller, "Flashmob" built on the stellar first book, Kill File and surpassed it in many ways. John Smith isn't your ordinary special forces stud. He has a skill that while affecting him in many ways is also almost foolproof in surviving even the most dire circumstances. John can hear your thoughts. You can't sneak up on him, he sees the punch before it's coming and as an added bonus he can make you feel memories of pain and experiences that make you think the real thing is happening to you. His only drawback, he gets back a portion of whatever he does to you.
In this second effort the dark web comes into playing a big way. Someone out there has figured out a way to influence the masses through social media into not just talking about their gripes but into actually acting on those impulses. Hired by the billionaire who originally constructed the algorithm in an attempt to make society a better place, Smith is tasked with finding the genius who has stolen it and has weaponized it.
Great fight scenes, fascinating detail and a very big surprise when Smith finds someone just like him on the other side, make this one of the best thrillers of 2017.. in my humble opinion.

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