Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Charter
  • Discord
  • Bookshelf

Terms of Enlistment - a slow start to a good series.

By Lore | Fri, 05/13/2016
Terms of Enlistment Book Cover

​​​​​​​The Frontlines series introduces us to a bleak future that offers little hope to those born in the overcrowded cities of the North American Commonwealth. Most large American cities are now government run slums called PRCs (Public Residence Clusters) and this is the life Andrew Grayson is born into. Andrew and his parents live on welfare and since he has no intention of inheriting such a limited existence from his parents he opts for the only choice that appears to be a brighter future - he joins the Armed Forces. After all, if he makes it through boot camp then he will have a consistent paycheck and even an outside shot at leaving Earth by being assigned to the Navy. That has to be better than living in a PRC...

Book Review
Sci-Fi
Marko Kloos
Luke Daniels
  • Read more about Terms of Enlistment - a slow start to a good series.

NPCs - a unique story concept

By Lore | Fri, 05/06/2016
NPCs Book Cover

​​​​​​​As an old school pen & paper RPG player, mostly D&D and AD&D, the story concept presented here really caught my eye. Basically at the start of the book there is a GM running a D&D style game for a group of greedy and belligerent players. The GM has warned his players that the new game system that he is using attempts to be ultra-realistic and they must be extra careful; however, they do not heed his warnings and they find themselves all dead mere minutes into the game. In the game world a local group of NPCs notices that the adventurers are all dead and they fear being blamed for the deaths. So in an effort to protect their small village from the wrath of the King they decide to attempt to fulfill the adventurer's quest themselves. The story then transitions from our world into theirs.

Book Review
Fantasy
Drew Hayes
Roger Wayne
  • Read more about NPCs - a unique story concept

Great North Road - a sci-fi mystery.

By Lore | Fri, 04/29/2016
Great North Road Book Cover

It is the year 2142 and in the city of Newcastle there is a mystery that needs to be solved. Police detective Sidney Hurst is called on the scene when a body is fished out of the Tyne river. As soon as he lays eyes on the corpse with the wound in the chest he knows that he is in deep - the body is a North. The North family is the most powerful family in mankind's inter-planetary expanse and they run Northumberland Interstellar which is responsible for providing all of the bio fuel humanity relies on. Nobody messes with the North family and of course their response to any threat is swift and brutal. Someone will be convicted of this crime and it will certainly happen quickly, evidence be damned. Unfortunately for Sid, he is now stuck in the middle of this mess.

Book Review
Sci-Fi
Peter F. Hamilton
Toby Longworth
  • Read more about Great North Road - a sci-fi mystery.

Ex-Isle - heading out to sea in the zombie apocalypse.

By Lore | Fri, 04/22/2016
Ex-Isle Book Cover

​​​​​​​Book 5 of the Ex-Heroes series sees Peter Clines return the series to something a bit more traditional than the last book. In fact, if this was a TV series this book would be considered a filler episode with only some minor character development going on. The larger story arc doesn't move forward all that much but since all your favorite characters from the series return it is still quite enjoyable. Book 4 was weird enough that fans of the series like me will find that a nice solid "back to reality" story really hits the spot.

Book Review
Sci-Fi
Peter Clines
Jay Snyder
Khristine Hvam
Mark Boyett
  • Read more about Ex-Isle - heading out to sea in the zombie apocalypse.

Morning Star - the Red Rising series hits a high note.

By Lore | Fri, 04/15/2016
Morning Star Book Cover

​​​​​​​As this series has gone on I have found myself more and more invested in it. Red Rising was good but I felt that it contained a few standard YA tropes that forced me to keep my distance. Golden Son was better but as the middle story of the trilogy it was a bridge that went nowhere ending with a cliffhanger. That left Morning Star with a built in obligation to build upon the unfinished foundation laid before it and it does not fail to deliver. For me it was the best book of the series.

Book Review
Sci-Fi
Pierce Brown
Tim Gerard Reynolds
  • Read more about Morning Star - the Red Rising series hits a high note.

Golden Son - the Reaper heads into space.

By Lore | Fri, 04/08/2016
Golden Son Book Cover

At the end of book one, Red Rising, Darrow's brutal experience at the Institute concluded with him firmly embedded in Gold society. Darrow, a lowly Red hidden with the ranks of Gold, was required to choose a patron to sponsor his future and he chose to become a Lancer for House Augustus. This means he now works for the ArchGoverner - the man who killed his wife. He did this in order to be close to his hated enemy as well as to be able to attend the Academy, where Gold prodigies learn starship fleet command. As a member of House Augustus, Darrow finds that life among the Peerless Scarred is not as straight forward as he hoped. It is often hard to tell the difference between his allies and his enemies which leaves Darrow pretty confused as to the best way to move forward with his hidden agenda.

Book Review
Sci-Fi
Pierce Brown
Tim Gerard Reynolds
  • Read more about Golden Son - the Reaper heads into space.

The Reckoners - an Epic series - literally. :)

By Lore | Fri, 04/01/2016
Steelheart Book Cover

​​​​​​​A red burst in the sky known as Calamity suddenly knocks human society into a post-apocalyptic world ruled by evil super villains known as Epics. The series kicks off in the city of Newcago (formerly Chicago) where an Epic known as Steelheart has ruthlessly established his dominion over the inhabitants of the city, both humans and lesser Epics alike. Everyone knows that Steelheart is invincible and even the Reckoners, a group of humans rumored to hunt and kill Epics, won't mess with him. However, young David Charleston has a secret that he has kept hidden for the last 10 years. On that fateful day many years ago when Steelheart killed David's father he witnessed something that no other living person has ever seen - he saw Steelheart bleed!

Series Review
Sci-Fi
Brandon Sanderson
MacLeod Andrews
  • Read more about The Reckoners - an Epic series - literally. :)

Ark Royal - a solid military sci-fi series.

By Lore | Fri, 03/25/2016
Ark Royal Book Cover

​​​​​​​Ark Royal and her crew are the laughing stocks of the Royal Space Navy. The old lady is 70 years old now and more museum than active carrier as she remains parked in orbit around Earth full time. Her systems are out of date and her crew cobbles together whatever leftovers they can to keep her barely functional. She has also become the dumping ground for Royal Navy personnel that have screwed up elsewhere, so her crew lacks motivation. All of that changes in an instant when an unknown alien race arrives and cuts through the modern ships in the human Space Navies like a hot knife through butter leaving Ark Royal as a last line of defense.

Series Review
Sci-Fi
Christopher G. Nuttall
Ralph Lister
  • Read more about Ark Royal - a solid military sci-fi series.

The Last Chronicles of Thomas Covenant - wtf?

By Lore | Fri, 03/18/2016
The Last Dark Book Cover

When the 3rd Thomas Covenant series started I was ecstatic. I pre-ordered the hard cover version of the first book, The Runes of the Earth, and upon its arrival I instantly dove right in. Unfortunately, I quickly began to feel like this book was written to take financial advantage of my love for the Land rather than to tell me a good story. The book was full of uber-beings that supposedly always existed in the Land but had never revealed themselves before. These powerful beings had always been there but never surfaced even when the Land was on the brink of annihilation. WTF? My beloved Giants, which were so memorable in the first two series, had now become bland, expendable and boring. The same could be said for the stalwart Haruchai who were now corrupted and uninteresting shadows of themselves. It appeared that Donaldson had done what Lord Foul never could and desecrated the Land. Now I had become the Unbeliever.

Series Review
Fantasy
Stephen R. Donaldson
Scott Brick
Tim Gerard Reynolds
  • Read more about The Last Chronicles of Thomas Covenant - wtf?

The 2nd Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever

By Lore | Fri, 03/11/2016
The Wounded Land Book Cover

​​​​​​​At the start of The Wounded Land over 4,000 years have passed since the end of the first trilogy (time moves at a different rate in the Land) and Thomas Covenant is once again summoned back to the Land. This time, however, he is not alone when he arrives as Dr. Linden Avery is summoned along with him. They arrive to find that the Land has been completely corrupted and a malicious force known as the Sunbane has made the Land almost uninhabitable. When the sun rises in the morning it does so with a colored aura every day. That aura dictates what happens to the Land throughout the day cycling at random times between rain, desert, pestilence and unnatural fertility. So day by day the Land either floods, has all plant life die away under oppressive heat, gets overrun by bugs, or has plant life grow at an alarming rate creating a jungle. Revelstone is now inhabited by the Clave who fuel the Sunbane through blood sacrifice and the few remaining inhabitants of the Land have adapted to use blood magic of their own. Covenant's heart is broken when he sees how the beauty of the Land has been corrupted and he vows to set things right and abolish the Sunbane. This is exactly what Lord Foul wants and he takes active steps to increase Covenant's ability to use the power of his white gold ring. Foul hopes to provoke Covenant to recklessly use his wild magic in anger and shatter the Arch of Time on his behalf. The state of the Land in this book broke my heart and I found that Donaldson had manipulated my feelings once again as I was now a staunch supporter of Thomas Covenant.

Series Review
Fantasy
Stephen R. Donaldson
  • Read more about The 2nd Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 49
  • Page 50
  • Page 51
  • Page 52
  • Current page 53
  • Page 54
  • Page 55
  • Page 56
  • Page 57
  • Next page Next ›
  • Last page Last »
  • Book Review (495)
  • Sci-Fi (292)
  • Fantasy (291)
  • Series Review (70)
  • Reset your password
Subscribe to RSS feed
Powered by Drupal