Anne Reincarnated

RE-blogging this from Rachel Carrera, Novelist. As Anne Frank Trust’s, Digital Generation Diary is 12 June 2014-11 June 2015, for 13-15 year olds. Go to http://www.generationdiary.org.uk, to find out more.

Teachers Be Like Minions

Here’s one for all those teachers out there! End of term is nearly here.
Reblogged from Lauraagudelo272

lauraagudelo272lauraagudelo272's avatarlauraagudelo272

Teachers Be Like Minions

Click the image to view today’s funniest pictures – 91 pics –

View original post

The Art of Blogosphere Conversation: Responding to Readers

Useful post about keeping the blogging party going!

Review of The Exiled by William Meikle

theexiled

Goodreads Synopsis:

When several young girls are abducted from various locations in Edinburgh, Detective John Granger and his brother Alan, a reporter, investigate the cases from different directions. The abductor is cunning, always one step ahead, and the only clue he leaves behind at each scene are the brutalized corpses of black swans.

When the brothers’ investigations finally converge at a farmhouse in Central Scotland, they catch a glimpse of where the girls have been taken, a place both far away yet close enough to touch. A land known throughout Scottish history with many names: Faerie, Elfheim, and the Astral Plane. It is a place of legend and horror, a myth. But the brothers soon discover it’s real, and, to catch the abductor, they will have to cross over themselves.

To catch a killer, John and Alan Granger will have to battle the Cobbe, a strange and enigmatic creature that guards the realm, a creature of horrific power that demands a heavy price for entry into its world. The fate of both realms hangs in the balance…and time is running out…

My review of The Exiled, by William Meikle. This is an advanced readers copy that the author has kindly supplied to me via NetGalley. Publication date 1 July 2014.

My review:

The Exiles does much to recommend it. It combines a well crafted detective story, a serial killer thriller, and dark supernatural fantasy, in a work that is gripping and about as original as it gets. The story landscape is Edinburgh, what more could I ask for?The majority of my young adult life was spent in Edinburgh, and the way that William Meikle describes the city, and some of its less salubrious inhabitants and aspects, certainly brought the narrative to life. A large proportion of the detective, and investigative journalistic time was spent in watering holes, persuading half drunk Scotsmen to tell all! The two main characters are brothers, John is a detective inspector, and Alan a journalist with an uncanny ability to research leads. To begin with Meikle paints them as brothers who have grown apart, almost like separate entities, on two sides of the divide. The Macabre nature of the crime draws the two brothers together, in a quest to find and bring to justice the abductor of the missing girls. Meikle manages to interweave a tale that is at times, so dark, that a smattering of black humour, and drunken, humorous elements, are needed to lighten the heavy load. The book is most definitely a page-turner. The characters are realistically depicted. The stress and pressure put on detectives investigating terrible crimes such as these, is realistically portrayed. In fact, John can only seem to cope with the situation by resorting to chain-smoking. moreover, Meikle stereotypes the Scots’ drinking habits, by suggesting that a stiff drink is a prerequisite for all and sundry. Somehow, his realistic, colloquial, dialogue and well crafted scenes, allow him the license to get away with this. Very early on, it’s clear that this is not a novel for the faint-hearted. The darkness, and disturbing graphical images that Meikle paints may well haunt the reader. In light of this, I would not recommend this to younger readers. But, having said that, the darkness of the plot is lightened by the desperation of the two main characters to solve the mystery, and stop the advancing progress of evil. I’m impressed by Meikle’s imagination, and his ability to combine Fantasy with detective genre in such a convincing, and readable way. I would be interested in reading more of his work. I found The Exiled difficult to rate but decided on four stars, though for originality I think it would score a high-five!

Very highly recommended for readers of thriller, dark fantasy, horror.

My rating:

4 stars

imagesFA9DHJ69

ISBN no. 9781940544212 available on Dark Fuse. http://www.darkfuse.com/ and Amazon http://www.amazon.com/

William Meikle’s website: http://www.williammeikle.com/

Information from his website: He is a Scottish genre writer now living in Newfoundland. When he’s not writing Willie drinks beer, plays guitar and dreams of fortune and glory! He has 20 novels and several hundred short stories in genre presses, anthologies and magazines. His current top seller is the sci-fi novel THE INVASION with 20,000 copies sold and counting.

Have you read The Exiled? Do leave a comment below I’d love to hear from you.

Bye for now,

file

Marje @ Kyrosmagica xx

Generation Diary: Anne Frank Trust

1532142_10152083674026463_6137007760182361136_n

13-15 year olds, join in on this opportunity to create the world’s biggest digital diary.  https://www.facebook.com/annefranktrust

 

 

 

The Top Ten Novels of 2014 (So Far)

Thanks for this. Great list, from Read Her Like An Open Book.

Bill Wolfe's avatarREAD HER LIKE AN OPEN BOOK

As we near the halfway point of 2014, Top Ten Tuesday has asked book bloggers to share their ten favorite/best novels so far this year. Here are my favorites (listed alphabetically by author’s last name); I can’t honestly say they’re the “best” because there are so many novels I haven’t read.

(The hot links will take you to my recent reviews. I have also done interviews with Molly Antopol, Cara Hoffman, Laline Paull, and Mary Vensel White. My interview with Laura McBride is coming this week.)

The UnAmericansThe UnAmericans — Molly Antopol (Feb. 3)

Ice Cream Queen of Orchard StreetThe Ice Cream Queen of Orchard Street* — Susan Jane Gilman (June 10)

Be Safe I Love YouBe Safe I Love You — Cara Hoffman (April 1)

We Are Called to RiseWe Are Called to Rise — Laura McBride (June 3)

Everything I Never Told YouEverything I Never Told You* — Celeste Ng (June 26)

Boy, Snow, BirdBoy, Snow, Bird — Helen Oyeyemi (March 6)

The BeesThe Bees

View original post 225 more words

Book Review: The Waiting Room by Alysha Kaye

Another interesting sounding book, The Waiting Room, by Alysha Kaye, reviewed by Virna Aryanita.

virnaaryanita's avatar

The Waiting Room Print 03

Rate: 4 out of 5 stars. I loved, enjoyed it, and would love to recommend this to everyone!

First of all, can we talk about the cover? It’s so pretty and I love it.

I always thought the term “true love never dies” is bullshit. After all, nothing last forever because in the end we all are gonna die, right? But I never really thinking what happened after we all die? Where are we going next? Either straight to hell or heaven?

The Waiting Room follows Jude, who dies in a car accident, and find himself wake up in The Waiting Room, place where all the souls waiting to go on to their next life, except Jude. He spent his entire time there watching his wife Nina through a window, until one day he learns that he’s the only one who ever wait that long. How long will he stay?…

View original post 111 more words

RIVER OF DUST: a spiritual journey through unknown China for characters and readers alike

River of Dust, Virginina Pye, review courtesy of Read Her Like An Open Book. This sounds interesting.

Bill Wolfe's avatarREAD HER LIKE AN OPEN BOOK

River of Dust

River of Dust

By Virginia Pye

Unbridled Books, 2013

Trade paperback published April 14, 2014

256 pages, $16.00

One of the great joys of the reading life is the ability to travel to other times and places, to experience life among other peoples and cultures. Virginia Pye’s River of Dust, though not a joyful novel, offers those pleasures in abundance. River of Dust is a character study of a man of great faith enduring a spiritual crisis, a close examination of the dynamics in a young marriage, a suspenseful missing persons story, and a jaundiced travelogue.

A few years after the Boxer Rebellion of 1898-1900, Reverend John Wesley Watson and his young wife, Grace, have been sent by the church to engage in missionary work in the small Chinese city of Fenchow-fu in the drought-stricken country northwest of Beijing. After making a name for himself building schools, roads, and…

View original post 511 more words