Published Reviews
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RT Book Reviews reviews
"Combines time travel, romance, historical figures, and a thrilling plot to captivate readers from beginning to end. Marley's knack for combining historical...
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First Draft, The Journal of the Alabama Writers' Forum reviews
"Things known in Roberts's world are as familiar to most Southerners as dirt, a favorite topic of hers, her presentation of the quotidian so immediate and sensual...
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Inspiring Gardeners for 100 Years: Horticulture magazine reviews
From interview:
"I think dirt is the reason I have spent my whole life in the South," offers Huntsville, Alabama poet, Bonnie Roberts, whose poem "Take Me Down...
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Small Press Reviews reviews
"Love at Absolute Zero" represents an experiment for Christopher Meeks in more ways than one. First off, it’s only available as an e-book, as Meeks, whose previous...
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Dread Central reviews
by Weston Ochse
"There are names in the field of horror literature that everyone knows. Names like Barker, King, Lovecraft, and Straub are firmly implanted in the collective...
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Shroud Magazine reviews
by Weston Ochse
"Weston Ochse is the real deal: a military veteran and former intelligence officer whose resume is no doubt peppered with events he can't talk about, who travels...
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Paperback Horror reviews
by Weston Ochse
Multiplex Fandango. Say it. Multi-plex Fan-dan-go.
It's beautiful, isn't it? Just rolls off the tongue.
It’s almost as beautiful and satisfying as the...
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Publishers Weekly reviews
by Weston Ochse
Weston Ochse. Dark Regions (www.dark-regions.com), $40 (286p) ISBN 978-1-937128-06-7
Ochse (Scarecrow Gods) builds a "multiplex" of 16 stories (six original to...
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Fangirltastic reviews
All of the stories prominently feature magic, and most of the writers break out of popularized (overused) magical tropes. There are no sexy vampires, and we get...
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Future Fire reviews
From a servant girl with healing powers to a witch detective who uses demons instead of a computer to solve cases, the stories in Hellebore and Rue have a nice...
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Pacific Sun reviews
In the medieval epic Gawain and the Green Knight, a monstrous knight, all in green, appears at King Arthur's Camelot. Anyone there may chop off his...
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January Magazine reviews
It wasn't long after our love affair with the car developed that we managed to combine it with another passion: travel. That seems an obvious statement since cars...
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Leadership Quarterly reviews
by Joe Raelin
What is it about leadership that excites the minds of scholars and practitioners that so many of them,
Joe Raelin being the latest, can continue to reformulate...
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Washington Post reviews
Before he began writing novels, David Corbett spent 15 years as an operative with a San Francisco private investigation firm, an experience that left him without...
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The New Yorker reviews
by Bill Hayes
Hayes’s history of the illustrated medical text “Gray’s Anatomy” coincides with the hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary of its first publication. Fascinated by the...
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FanBoyWonder reviews
...we wish to spotlight what we see as a promising new five-issue mini-series from DC Comics that’s hitting stores Wednesday—The Huntress: Year One.
Here’s the...
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Metroactive.com reviews
If time were liquid, An Open Weave would be decades of warm sweet milk, deliciously consumed in one day. San Francisco poet devorah major's first novel is...
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National Geographic Traveler Online reviews
Tales from the Expat Harem, edited by Anastasia Ashman and Jennifer Eaton Gokmen (Seal Press, 2006)Follow the journeys of 29 women as they discover Turkey and its...
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Long and Short Reviews reviews
by Terry Spear
Savage Hunger is as steamy a story as the humidity of the jungle it takes place in and is just as dangerous. Take a good look at the wonderful and vibrant cover...
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http://www.fictitiousmusings.com reviews
by Keith Pyeatt
Pyeatt has created an intense tale of horror that is one of the most gripping reads I’ve read this year. From the very first page, you are thrust into a story that...
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