Tagged with fiction
Peanut
author gender:
medium:
book type:
free:
Sisters, the
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Age of Miracles, the
author gender:
book type:
medium:
recommendation:
Dead Witch Walking
author gender:
book type:
medium:
recommendation:
Deadlocked
author gender:
book type:
medium:
recommendation:
Summoning, the
author gender:
medium:
Laura Lamont's Life in Pictures
author gender:
book type:
free:
medium:
This Case Is Gonna Kill Me
Vampires, werewolves, elves and lawyers are the dangerous creatures in this new series by Phillipa Bornikova (a pen name, so readers don't get confused between this and Snodgrass's sf novels). It's a fine read, though sometimes surprisingly amateurish for such a veteran writer. There are also typos and misspellings that the editors should have caught, like George M. "Cohen" for "Cohan" and "vise" for "vice," or the overuse of the word "saliva." (Four times denoting the narrator's hunger "Saliva burst in my mouth..." and only once a vampire's fangs.) So not to seem entirely petty, let me say that I like the protagonist because she's short.
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Life as We Knew It
My holds hadn't come in, so I grabbed this book from the YA shelf at the Tompkins Square branch of NYPL because I remembered the name Susan Beth Pfeffer from reading her YA books when I actually was a young adult. Weirdly the book didn't list all of her earlier works, just one recent publication, so I wasn't sure I had the person I remembered. I was shaky on her name and thought maybe Susan was the daughter of the Someone Beth Pfeffer I was thinking of. The Wikipedia page I viewed today didn't indicate any of the works I remembered either, but with a little digging, I found that she is indeed the author of classics like Marly the Kid, The Beauty Queen and Starring Peter and Leigh, none of which has a science fiction theme, btw.