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Review: The House at Cobb End by Karen Chance
The House at Cobb End is another one of Karen Chance’s short stories. This one, like many of her other works, fits perfectly into the world of Cassie Palmer. In fact, this short story probably won’t make a whole lot of sense if you haven’t read any of the series up until now. Read more
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Review: Heartwood Box by Ann Aguirre
Heartwood Box is the newest novel by Ann Aguirre, and it is an amazing blend of different genres. It’s young adult, and has romance, supernatural, and science fiction elements as well. It’s a time travel tale, but also a tale of a teenage girl trying to do what is right. And it’s so amazingly dark… Read more
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Review and Q&A: The Saturday Night Ghost Club by Craig Davidson
The Saturday Night Ghost Club is a unique blending of genres, perfect for fans of the supernatural and coming of age themes. It doesn’t fit perfectly into either category, though it pulls elements from both. The end result is something heartwarming, bone-chilling, and everything in between. Read more
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Review: Curse the Dawn (Cassandra Palmer #4) by Karen Chance
Curse the Dawn is the fourth novel in the Cassandra Palmer series. Though if you want to get technical, it’s the fifth novel in the world of Cassie Palmer (counting Dory’s first novel). Like the other novels before it, this one follows Cassie and her whirlwind journey as Pythia. There’s plenty of chaos, humor, and… Read more
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Review: Kill the Farm Boy (The Tales of Pell #1) by Delilah S. Dawson and Kevin Hearne
Kill the Farm Boy is a hilarious and irreverent beginning to an all new series called the Tales of Pell. If the first novel is anything to go by, the entire series is bound to be wholly unique. The novel is a play on the classic chosen one quest, only with a whole lot of… Read more
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Review: Midnight’s Daughter (Dorina Basarab #1) by Karen Chance
Midnight’s Daughter is the first novel in the Dorina Basarab series. The whole series fits into the Cassandra Chance world, so if you’re a fan of one, I strongly urge you to read the other. Both series bounce around each other in the timeline, so it’s really quite fun to read them all. Read more
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