Fiction

Fiction

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Hi Fiction-book-reviewer! I wrote a book called "The Dead Set" (on Amazon), and I was wondering if you might have bandwidth to review it? It's actually about a girl ghost-hunter, newly recruited into a paranormal team by a hunting prodigy. Please feel free to reply to me if you feel you have the time and interest. If you want to eyeball The Dead Set, you can search for the title, or title and author (Tracy Eire) on Amazon. Thanks for your time! :)

Hello, I took at look at your book’s overview and I would love to do a review on The Dead Set. Please send me a private message or email about any details you need for me to know and how the copy of the novel will be making its way to me. I will be resuming my book reviews on the 8th of January but if you are in a time crunch for the review please let me know! My email is fiction.book.reviewer@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Update #34

I’ve finished reading Fated and I haven’t gotten lost in a book like this since The Mortal Instruments series. I will be writing up the review tomorrow which will be up by Friday morning. Happy Holidays!


“That old saying- ignorance is bliss-finally makes sense.
The ignorant are definitely the lucky ones here.
Though unfortunately for me, I’m no longer part of that group. I’ve split from their ranks.”
-Fated (Chapter 12, Page 96)

Until Next Time…


Friday, November 27, 2015

Update #33

The next book I will be doing a review on will be Fated by Alyson Noel. This book is the first of The Soul Seekers Series. I will be reading this on my dinosaur of a nook will have the full review out on December 11th.


Until Next Time…

Monday, November 23, 2015

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Many new chapters are opening up in my life at the moment. I just got married last month and will be moving over 1,200 miles away to the new husband’s army base after Christmas. I will still be doing reviews during the move as well as settling in. Right now I’m deciding on what to read next and will let you guys know by Friday. Have a great week and Happy (early) Thanksgiving!
Until Next Time…

Friday, November 13, 2015

Review: Phantoms by Dean Koontz

Phantoms take place in a small off season ski resort village in Snowfield, California. On her way back to her home after picking up her newly orphaned sixteen younger sister, Jenny drives through the oddly deserted town. They arrive at Jenny’s home which doubles as her doctor’s office. In the
kitchen they find her secretary dead on the floor, spotted with bruises that seemed to have been inflicted all at one time. The death must’ve happened quick and caught the woman of guard since her eyes were open; her face frozen as if she died in the middle of a scream. Requesting the help from the military’s Biological Investigations Unit the following morning and having them flown in,
another gruesome discovery is made. One of the victims had written a name on a bathroom mirror, “Timothy Flyte”. In Phantoms, Flyte is famously known for his book, “The Ancient Enemy” in which he shares these mass disappearances and says that the cause of these events was done by an ancient predator.  Some of the mass disappearances he mentions are that of the Mayan population as well as the dinosaur extinction. As the story progresses, Timothy Flyte, Jenny, Lisa, the police and the biologists find that the cause is a creature who is able to mimic anything it consumes, growing in
mass as it does. It resembles a jellified, black mass which has been hibernating under the entire town until recently. It is never revealed how big exactly the mass is but it’s made clear it was big enough to fill caverns under the town as well as fill the entirety of under the town itself. The creature commands other parts of itself to detach in to phantom like creatures, into anything it has
consumed.  Their only hope of getting out of Snowfield alive is to put together a biological weapon to attack the creature’s nucleus, obliterating it’s’ existence.

Phantoms was a book I easily got lost in. There were two different stories going on which had me wondering how these two were going to meet. The main story is about what was going on in Snowfield. The side story was about a man who had killed his wife and son. The side story was a nice
break every now and then when the main story was just starting to drag. At the end of the book, the side story met the main portion seamlessly and found myself not wanting the story to end. The ending tied all the loose ends in a nice little bow and I was happy to not to be let down at the outcome. The creature’s outcome was at first a little lack luster but then again Koontz tried to make this story as realistic as possible. I was impressed when Koontz’s “a note to the reader” reveled that the mass disappearances motioned in the book (The Roanoke Island colony, the deserted Eskimo village of Anjikuni, the vanished Mayan populations, the loss of thousands of Spanish soldiers in 1711, etc.) were true events and that he had really researched the back stories of these events  for his book. One of the chemicals that were used in attempts to kill the phantom creature was called Biosan-4 which was a supposed more stable strain of the first patented microorganism which was to fragile to survive outside of the lab. Although Biosan-4 is fictional, the fragile version is in fact real and scientists have not found a way to make a hardier version like the characters used in this book. I would recommend this book to someone who likes facts integrated into fiction novels as well as a scientific twist on a suspense novel. There are some graphic as well as disturbing scenes. This is a book that is undoubtedly different from most.


Until Next Time…
  ~Fiction-Book-Reviewer

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Update #32

After a much needed time away, I will be getting back into doing book reviews. Right now I am finishing up Phantoms by Dean Koontz and will have a review up by next weekend.

Until Next Time…