![]() ![]() Can she give up her old life, her family and friends, to embrace this adventure… and Jax?Her Saviour And Her Captor…Jax the Wanderer is a hunter, an explorer, and an oddity among his kind. Yet Macy is undeniably drawn to this strange creature. Treated like a curiosity and a possession, she’s desperate to go home. ![]() ![]() She awakens to a rescuer who is anything but human – and he refuses to let her go. Her fears come to fruition when a sudden storm capsizes their boat, rekindling her old terror. His Treasure And His Obsession…Despite her longing for the sea, Macy has clung to the safety of land for half her life, devoting herself to her daily routine – until she agrees to go sailing with a childhood friend. You can read this before Treasure of the Abyss (The Kraken, #1) PDF EPUB full Download at the bottom. Here is a quick description and cover image of book Treasure of the Abyss (The Kraken, #1) written by Tiffany Roberts which was published in December 25, 2017. Brief Summary of Book: Treasure of the Abyss (The Kraken, #1) by Tiffany Roberts ![]()
0 Comments
![]() ![]() We don't allow personal recommendation posts. We also encourage discussion about developments in the book world and we have a flair system. We love original content and self-posts! Thoughts, discussion questions, epiphanies and interesting links about authors and their work. ![]() Please see extended rules for appropriate alternative subreddits, like /r/suggestmeabook, /r/whatsthatbook, etc. ‘Should I read …?’, ‘What’s that book?’ posts, sales links, piracy, plagiarism, low quality book lists, unmarked spoilers (instructions for spoiler tags are in the sidebar), sensationalist headlines, novelty accounts, low effort content. Promotional posts, comments & flairs, media-only posts, personalized recommendation requests incl. Please use a civil tone and assume good faith when entering a conversation. All posts must be directly book related, informative, and discussion focused. ![]() If you're looking for help with a personal book recommendation, consult our Suggested Reading page or ask in: /r/suggestmeabook Quick Rules:ĭo not post shallow content. It is our intent and purpose to foster and encourage in-depth discussion about all things related to books, authors, genres or publishing in a safe, supportive environment. Subreddit Rules - Message the mods - Related Subs AMA Info The FAQ The Wiki Join in the Weekly "What Are You Reading?" Thread!.Check out the Weekly Recommendation Thread.New Release: Sing Her Down by Ivy Pochoda. ![]() ![]() ![]() Robinson is the author of The African American Travel Guide which has been featured on CNN, FOX News and other media across the U.S., Canada and the U.K., including EBONY, BLACK ENTERPRISE and ESSENCE magazines, the most popular monthly publications reaching more than 15 million African Americans. Robinson as guest speaker who will help audiences identify what prevents so many people from success, and will reveal secrets never revealed to Black communities. The “Success By Design” seminar will feature Mr. Robinson, will be hosting a motivational seminar at 4pm on Saturday, September 27 at the Montego Bay Convention Centre. Negril, Westmoreland, September 15, 2014: African American author Wayne C. Success By Design Seminar Reveals To Black African American Author Hosts Motivational Seminar ![]() ![]() He is, perhaps, the most magnetic of her characters. Of course, the Brat Prince of vampires made this list. ![]() I refuse to rank them! I don’t even know if I could. As 2021 comes to a close, I thought I’d share my list with you, and maybe you can share yours with me in the comments on social media. I return to their stories over and over again. Over the years, certain characters have emerged as favorites, of course. I was soon devouring everything Rice had written, and became one of those fans who anticipated the next release, counting down the days and reading them all, often in one sitting. These vampires had lives, souls, conflicting desires, moral codes. I’d read vampire novels before, but never one that centered on the vampire’s story rather than humans running for their lives from the evil bloodsucker. The next time I was in my local library, I picked up the book and I felt like a door had opened. ![]() In the early 90s I discovered Interview with the Vampire, first as a film. ![]() ![]() This incredible woman whose work had influenced so many parts of my life was gone forever. I woke up to find that prolific author Anne Rice had died in the night. ![]() ![]() Lovers at the Lake by Asta Idonea-When Prince Vladimir stumbles upon a lake and goes for a swim, he encounters Dušan. ![]() If finding him means rekindling ties with Colm D'Arsy, avowed half-goblin and one-time flame, so be it. Now widowed, all that stands between him and prosperity is his late wife's meddlesome boy, who has gone missing. No Witch's Brew by Helena Maeve-After the trenches of the Somme and a brief affair with a man well below his rank, Alistair traded the soldier's uniform for an earl's suit. If he succeeds, he'll get a life of warmth and comfort. When a strange man makes a bet, Arron takes it: for three years he must live as an outcast, telling no one the truth. ![]() Then she meets Meg, a chambermaid in the palace, and begins to wonder if she'd been imagining the wrong happy ending all along.īearskin by Andrea Speed-A soldier returned from war, instead of a warm welcome Arron finds himself homeless, alone, and dying of illness alone in a cave. Nicole Field, Andrea Speed, Helena Maeve, Asta Idonea, Keelan Ellis, Tess Amram, K.M.Penemue, Camilla QuinnĪfter Ever After by Nicole Field-After her fairytale wedding to Prince Phillip, Lotte comes to realize the ending she always imagined isn't what she expected. ![]() ![]() ![]() The library only had kids books, I said, and grown-up books. Next year, I told my mom about this wonderful series and she decided we needed to take a trip to the library. But there was Lions at Lunchtime, several levels above what I was supposed to read. I was supposed to select from my reading level. A couple of months later, I had to pick out a take-home reading book from my teacher's learning to read shelf. That was the first chapter book I ever read on my own. It took me a long time to figure out the Jack was laughing, not "lugging." Now, what exactly does a lug sound like? And the author's name, I discovered, was not "Mary Pop."īut I did get through it. It took me an entire week of reading by lamplight. Ten chapters with a picture on each beginning page. I liked the bright colors and surfing kids, so I had my mom buy it for me along with another Magic Tree House: Dolphins at Daybreak, which my parents helped me read. ![]() I saw it at my school's book fair in first grade and thought it was a picture book. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() TSBtS is the autobiography of Maureen Johnson, the mother of Heinlein’s favourite literary alter-ego, Lazarus Long. How does it measure up to his other works? To Sail Beyond the Sunset was Heinlein’s last published novel before his death in 1987. Following a severe period of bad health in the beginning of the Seventies, Heinlein’s latter novel, they say, are overindulging, under-edited, sex-obsessed and more concerned (in the words of Alexei Panshin) about “opinions as facts”. Yet all fans, and most critics, consider that Heinlein’s career suffered immensely during his later years. Beyond my personal liking for the man’s work, he has attracted a tremendously fanatical following-even now. He’s the man who wrote Stranger in a Strange Land yet he’s also the man who gave us Starship Troopers. His influence is enormous enough that we should probably dedicate the whole field of SF to him and move on to other matters. (Or: To sail beyond the boundaries of adequate editing…)Įven in a field as smart as Science-Fiction, Robert A. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Promotional posts, comments & flairs, media-only posts, personalized recommendation requests incl. Please use a civil tone and assume good faith when entering a conversation. All posts must be directly book related, informative, and discussion focused. If you're looking for help with a personal book recommendation, consult our Suggested Reading page or ask in: /r/suggestmeabook Quick Rules:ĭo not post shallow content. It is our intent and purpose to foster and encourage in-depth discussion about all things related to books, authors, genres or publishing in a safe, supportive environment. ![]() Subreddit Rules - Message the mods - Related Subs AMA Info The FAQ The Wiki Join in the Weekly "What Are You Reading?" Thread!.Check out the Weekly Recommendation Thread.New Release: Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea by Rita Chang-Eppig. ![]() ![]() That's how Kate feels about Persephone, and I really felt for her. ![]() ![]() She's had it first, then rejected it, leaving the leftovers to you. From your mother, to your husband, to your job, even. And then you find out that that person is your sister. Imagine having a someone whom you can never live up to. She knew how hard it would be to face Henry's first wife, the woman she is endlessly compared to, but she did it anyway, for the good of everyone. What I really liked were the events that led to Kate seeking out Persephone. I liked that she was not content to sit back and let everyone else do the work, she jumped right in and did her part to save the world. She really took responsibility for Henry and the other gods and goddesses. I liked it when Kate took charge and took action against Cronus. I liked watching both Henry and Kate change. I liked a lot of things about Goddess Interrupted. I just love it when I can read two or more books in a series in a row, don't you? It makes the books so much more enjoyable when the events of the previous book are fresh on my mind. I really enjoyed The Goddess Test (book one in this series) and read Goddess Interrupted immediately after finishing The Goddess Test. ![]() ![]() ![]() He documents a string of gratuitous massacres of Native Americans, much to be deeply regretted, but insists that official Washington never contemplated genocide. ![]() ![]() Cozzens is determined to debunk the main thrust of Brown’s one-sided book - that the government’s response to the so-called “Indian problem” was genocide. Now, 46 years later, the military historian Peter Cozzens counters Brown with “The Earth Is Weeping” - a largely chronological march with an Army viewpoint of the same era, a work reminiscent in scope and approach to James McPherson’s “Battle Cry of Freedom” (about the Civil War). While Brown’s book contained factual errors, it dramatically succeeded in changing the attitudes of the Vietnam War generation about how the West was really won. So when Brown - a white novelist and historian from Arkansas with a degree in library science - published his searing account of westward expansion, accusing the Army of annihilating Indians between 18, his timing was explosive. Just months before its publication a group of Native American activists calling themselves Indians of All Tribes had occupied Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay, demanding that the former prison outpost be deeded back to them by the United States government. ![]() Seldom does a nonfiction book pack the cultural wallop that Dee Brown’s “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee” did in 1970. THE EARTH IS WEEPING The Epic Story of the Indian Wars for the American West By Peter Cozzens Illustrated. ![]() |