Selasa, 29 Maret 2016

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

After knowing this extremely easy method to review and also get this Hope Ignites, By Jaci Burton, why do not you inform to others concerning through this? You could inform others to visit this web site as well as opt for searching them preferred books Hope Ignites, By Jaci Burton As understood, right here are lots of listings that provide several type of publications to collect. Simply prepare few time and web connections to get the books. You could actually enjoy the life by reading Hope Ignites, By Jaci Burton in a very simple manner.

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton



Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Read Online and Download Ebook Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

When a movie crew asks to film on his cattle ranch, Logan McCormack doesn't expect Desiree Jenkins, the young, sought-after star, to be so open, so down-to-earth, or so intimately interested in him. But the last thing a loner like Logan needs is a distraction like Des, who wouldn't understand what it's like to live peacefully off the land. But it's Logan who doesn't understand. What Des wants is an escape from paparazzi and gossip columns, and she's found it at Logan's ranch. Now it's up to her to prove that she's like any other girl looking to be accepted for who she is. And she's hoping that it's by this real-life cowboy who has everything it takes-and more-to give her the kind of happily ever after that can't be found in the movies.Contains mature themes.

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

  • Published on: 2015-05-05
  • Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.40" h x .60" w x 5.30" l,
  • Running time: 9 Hours
  • Binding: MP3 CD
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Review "Burton once again delivers in this small-town romance with a sexy hero and a likeable heroine." ---RT Book Reviews

About the Author Jaci Burton is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling, award-winning author of over fifty books, including the Play-by-Play series, the A Storm for All Seasons series, and the Wild Riders series. She won the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award in 2006. Jaci lives in Oklahoma. Visit her at jaciburton.com.Saskia Maarleveld is an experienced audiobook narrator and voice-over actress based in New York City. Raised in New Zealand and France, she is highly skilled with accents and dialects, and many of her books have been narrated entirely in accents other than her own.


Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Where to Download Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Wanted More By Nissanmama Hope Ignites is the second installment in the Hope Series. I like small town romances because they are full of unique details and quirky characters that make them relatable and fun. Like the first story in this series, Hope Flames, the dogs are ever-present players which provide a certain continuity between books. Main character Logan McCormack’s brother, Luke and his fiancée Emma, from Hope Flames, make appearances and it was good to check-in with them too.Logan McCormack is not just a country boy and the ranch he runs is not just the family homestead. It’s a forty-five thousand acre working cattle ranch. That’s roughly seventy square miles or the whole city of Madison, Wisconsin. How about the entire country of the Republic of the Marshall Islands? Logan doesn’t often leave the ranch and as a loner by nature, he likes it that way. He comes off tall, dark, handsome, and broody. *swoon*He does have a soft spot for his housekeeper, a mother figure in his life, who keeps him and the ranch hands fed. When a movie production company rents out a portion of his land as an alien planet, his housekeeper twists his arm into driving her out to watch the filming. The star of the sci-fi thriller, Desiree Jenkins, catches his eye. Desiree is the current A-list “it girl” in Hollywood, a Jennifer Lawrence type, who catches everyone’s eye. He assumes she is high maintenance and dismisses the impulse to engage her entirely. He will be happy when both she and the crew are gone. In fact, after watching filming for some time, he criticizes Desiree’s rifle handling skills.What Logan doesn’t know is that Desiree is tired of the glitz, the glamour, and the pressure of her industry. She loves the openness of the ranch and its pace. She also likes Logan. More to the point, she pursues Logan in a refreshing display of feminine decisiveness. Knowing that there is an expiration date on this fling, Logan gives into his desires and flames erupt. Burton excels at flames.I liked both Logan and Desiree. I felt they were actually well matched with mature perspectives on love and life. Occasionally Logan fell back into his broody behavior and failed to communicate well, but Desiree was uncomplicated and straight-forward with hers. There were plot complications, but not a lot of angst in this story. I wanted more from it because I liked the characters so much. I felt Burton could have done more with them. It could have been a longer story despite the time constraints of the movie shoot. Lastly, the ending was a little abrupt for the above reason.Reference Full Review: [...]

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Great story By Kelly NUMBER OF HEARTS: 4 1/2REVIEW:Love love love Jaci!!! She always knows how to pull me into a story and make me fall in love with the characters. Jaci also always make it so easy for me to want to strangle the characters at times too. And Hope Ignites is no difference.I loved Logan. He is a total alpha male, a cowboy and a man who thinks he need no one in his life. Logan is an island of his own and he is about to met a hurricane named Desiree..Desiree is awesome. I love her back bone of steel. I love that she stands by her best friend no matter what. And I absolutely loved how she blow in and turned Logan’s world upside down.Needless to say I loved this book and can’t wait for the next installment in this series.Disclaimer:I received a complimentary copy of the book from NetGalley & PENGUIN GROUP Berkley, NAL / Signet Romance, DAW in exchange for an honest review. This review is my own opinion and not a paid review.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. 2 to 2.5 stars By J. Holmes I can't believe that this is the second book in a row from Jaci Burton that I have rated this low. This book was almost exactly like the first one. The chemistry wasn't there, the love scenes need some work and the storyline was just okay. I liked Des because she spoke her mind. I liked how she held nothing back. The problem is that I don't really see someone like her going for someone like Logan. Logan had no personality. He didn't talk, he didn't express himself and he showed no emotion. There wasn't any redeemable qualities to him. I was actually surprised that Des didn't give him a piece of her mind earlier in the book. I don't know if I want to follow this series. My interest is piqued with Molly and Carter, but I'm afraid that it will be like the first and second book. Yes, I finished them both, but I will never go back and read them again.

See all 112 customer reviews... Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton


Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton PDF
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton iBooks
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton ePub
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton rtf
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton AZW
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton Kindle

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton
Hope Ignites, by Jaci Burton

Senin, 28 Maret 2016

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Interested? Of course, this is why, we expect you to click the link web page to check out, and then you can appreciate the book Portraits At An Exhibition: A Novel, By Patrick E. Horrigan downloaded and install up until finished. You could save the soft file of this Portraits At An Exhibition: A Novel, By Patrick E. Horrigan in your device. Certainly, you will bring the gizmo all over, won't you? This is why, whenever you have downtime, each time you could delight in reading by soft duplicate publication Portraits At An Exhibition: A Novel, By Patrick E. Horrigan

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan



Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Read and Download Ebook Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

An alienated young man searches for his life's purpose through a gallery of portraits at an exhibition. Afraid he may have contracted HIV the night before during a risky sexual encounter and only beginning to fathom the possible consequences, Robin winds his way through the rooms, studying the portraits of people from faraway places and times, looking for clues in the lives of others to the mystery of his own discontent. Several masterpieces of portrait painting, reproduced in the novel, become the focal-points of Robin's physical and spiritual journey; ranging from the Renaissance to the turn of the 21st century, they include works by such famous artists as Sandro Botticelli, Diego Velazquez, and John Singer Sargent. Each portrait opens like a time capsule to Robin's gaze, releasing stories about the sitters, artists, and critics who, over the centuries, have turned their everyday struggles, disappointments, and dreams into transcendent works of art. Portraits at an Exhibition plunges the reader directly into the mind of Robin, seeing as he sees, reading what he reads, and learning, along with him, the often unsettling life lessons that only the closest observation of great art can teach.

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1358338 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-05-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.02" h x .53" w x 5.98" l, .76 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 232 pages
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Review ''Patrick Horrigan's Portraits at an Exhibition explores the power of portraiture to transport us into distant worlds of imagination and desire. The celebrated paintings featured in the book are far from static images to be dissected and tamed by art historical analysis. Instead, they function as shimmering mirrors and portals, leading Horrigan's characters and readers into deeply felt journeys of the mind, senses, and spirit. Like the Renaissance painters whose works the novel so acutely reproduces, Horrigan's subjects are men and women who struggle to shape their own destinies even as they confront the vagaries of chance, the haunting shadows of loss and doubt, and the relentless pull of their own desires.'' --Mario DiGangi, Mario DiGangi, Professor of English and Lesbian/Gay Studies at Lehman College and the Graduate Center, CUNY''A masterful debut novel that calls into question the barriers between artist, subject and admirer. Portraits at an Exhibition is one of those rare novels that both makes the reader think and feel simultaneously, a vibrant and intellectually challenging exploration of love, family, illness, loss and art, told through five of the world's most celebrated paintings.'' --Jacob M. Appel, author of The Man Who Wouldn't Stand Up''Horrigan's protagonist reminds readers that the menace of AIDS has never truly left gay life. Yet, this is not a story of sorrow but of finding hope through appreciating art, a sovereign remedy our community has always relied on, be it John Singer Sargent or Keith Haring. A recommended read for us all.'' --Jameson Currier, author of Where the Rainbow Ends and A Gathering Storm

About the Author An English professor at LIU Brooklyn, Horrigan has won the David Newton Award for Excellence in Teaching. This is his debut novel.


Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Where to Download Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Character Study By Jean Roberta The structure of this novel appears at first to have too many frames in every sense. The third-person narrative centered on a gay-male art lover named Robin is interspersed with descriptions of the portraits in a New York art gallery that Robin studies as a means of understanding his own life as well as distracting himself from it. Other characters, including a female security guard and a psychologist who may or may not be the man who could save Robin from his demons, enter the gallery and star in their own streams of consciousness.The impression of a chorus of voices, or an exhibition of portraits (literal and figurative) resolves itself into a clear pattern after the first few pages. Once the reader has adjusted to the quick changes of tone, the effect is rich and poignant. Here Robin reads a sign that introduces the exhibition of oil portraits:“Today, portraiture is ubiquitous: people stare out at us from newspapers, magazines, and websites; movies and TV shows contain countless ‘close-ups’; our own faces adorn ID cards, passports, driver’s licenses, and online networking sites; snapshots fill our wallets and photo albums; pictures and family and friends cover our walls at home and our desks at work” [passage in bold in the novel].Robin is reminded of his own collection of photographs:“He had finally put away the picture of Brian after weeks of pretending it wasn’t really over. Now there was just the one of Stephen [Robin’s deceased twin] and himself when they were seven years old, dressed for Halloween as Batman and Robin (he always came second—‘Little Squirt’ Stephen used to call him), and the photo of the two of them, arm in arm, on the day of their high school graduation.”Robin continues reading:“The camera’s ability to produce an accurate mirror reflection of whatever it sees in the world is perhaps the most vital legacy of the Renaissance portrait.”The real-life circumstances behind each portrait are explained on signs, but Robin, who dropped out of a Ph.D. program in art history, is already well-aware that art comes from life. While studying Portrait of a Boy by John Singer Sargent, Robin notices that the boy’s mother is painted behind him, fading into the darkness of the background. She holds a book about the War of 1812, from which she reads aloud to hold the boy’s attention. To Robin, the woman looks like a servant, while the beautiful boy in the foreground shows the unconscious arrogance of privileged youth. Robin reads:“In April 1890, Saint-Gaudens [the boy’s father] expressed a desire to sculpt a portrait of Sargent’s twenty-year-old sister Violet, in exchange for one by Sargent of Saint-Gaudens’ ten-year-old son, Homer.”Robin considers the status of the two women and the boy as items of exchange between two successful male artists. As a university student, he studied the work of trendy theorists on the politics of inequality, but his sensitivity to the feelings of those who are treated as less-than (“squirts”) can be traced back to his own boyhood.The contrast between physical and spiritual beauty, and Robin’s awareness of his own esthetic snobbery, are threads that run through his consciousness. As a man in his thirties, he has moved uncomfortably beyond youth, but he hasn’t yet reached middle age; he is looking for love as well as sex while he is still able to attract attention. Like so many others, Robin is afraid he might never find everything he wants in one Significant Other. He is haunted by a fear of failure on several levels.The reader is taken on a tour through the gallery as Robin studies Portrait of a Young Man by Sandro Botticelli, Self-Portrait in Fur Cloak by Albrecht Durer, a portrait by Velasquez of his Moorish apprentice and former slave, Juan de Pareja, and Portrait of an Old Man by Hans Memling. Robin’s loneliness, his self-doubt, his hopes and desires are mirrored in the stunningly lifelike portraits of various men from the late 1400s. Few of Robin’s questions are answered by the end of the novel – and his most urgent question is whether he has contracted AIDS, that modern equivalent of a terrifyingly infectious, incurable disease from a past century. Luckily for the reader, his encounters with the living and the dead serve to counteract his tendency to be self-absorbed.What this novel lacks in speed it makes up for in depth. Patrick Horrigan’s study of the human condition in our time shows the continuing influence of Renaissance humanism. Polymaths of the fifteenth century, such as Leonardo da Vinci and Pico della Mirandola, would probably feel at home in Robin’s world.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A book of incredible scope that seamlessly weaves back and ... By Julie c. OBrien A book of incredible scope that seamlessly weaves back and forth in perspective and between narrators of multiple time periods. It sensitively recreates the experience of being in an art museum following the mind as it blurs art with personal experience and voyeurism. I found it to be a unique and pleasurable read.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Wonderful worlds within worlds By Amy Pratt I thought this book was wonderful, and have enjoyed it even more as I mull it over. It was such a pleasure to roam in the world of Horrigan's thought – to read a book that is unapologetic about ideas and to engage with a text that is so challenging to read well. I particularly loved the first chapter, which establishes the book's many-layered structure, inviting readers to step inside the painted portraits as well as wonder at them. Horrigan weaves together various formal and plot threads to raise a set of abstract questions about the art of portraiture. But he also introduces engaging characters in a story which asks what we are doing, emotionally, when we make, or look at, portraits. We wonder, with surprising suspense, whether the narrative's protagonist will, through his museum wanderings, learn enough about himself and his own desire to remake himself in the face of grief and loss. This short book is full of much richness.

See all 4 customer reviews... Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan


Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan PDF
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan iBooks
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan ePub
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan rtf
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan AZW
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan Kindle

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan
Portraits at an Exhibition: A Novel, by Patrick E. Horrigan

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestan

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure Of A Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), By Leif Sterling. Adjustment your habit to put up or waste the time to just talk with your friends. It is done by your everyday, do not you feel tired? Currently, we will show you the new routine that, really it's a very old practice to do that could make your life much more certified. When feeling burnt out of constantly talking with your close friends all spare time, you could locate the book qualify Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure Of A Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), By Leif Sterling and after that review it.

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling



Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Download Ebook Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

EPISODE 3 - Combat Obstacles

Determination forged in combat is its purest form. Game One of the Tech Games is pushing the limits of even extra-human capabilities. Roland must face the longest and most dangerous obstacle course in existence, if he wants a chance at uncovering evidence against the ruthless Pinnacle Corporation to save his father. With 20 story rope climbs, 70 mph escalators, 100 foot free dives, and a strongman event, will Roland’s homegrown nanotech be able to keep up with the other cutting edge contestants? Roland and his tiny team will have to dig deeper than they ever thought possible as they try to find solutions on the fly for overcoming these harrowing obstacles. Weapons are authorized! Episode 3 adds another method for the contestants to dish out even more brutal punishments than before: futuristic weapons. Roland unleashes his carbon alloy weapon, using his mind to uniquely shape it for every situation. There’s more than just the race! Skylar’s latest plugin puts Roland undercover in Pinnacle’s most secure facility. One false move on this clandestine operation will most certainly put Roland in a small cell with Pinnacle only too happy to throw away the key.

About the NANO CONTESTANT SERIES (Episode 3 of 12 Serialized Episodes):

In 2114, Pinnacle Corporation, the world’s largest tech company, hosts the Tech Games to showcase the world’s latest technology. The contestants must battle it out in 11 brutal games to ultimately win a $100 million prize! These digital and hybrid athletes must use everything at their disposal in order to take that prize and all of its glory in the Tech Games. Hacking, firewalls and electronic countermeasures are all being used by each contestant while running and fighting at top speed. It’s all on the line, because nothing is being left on the table!

Nano Contestant Series - Science Fiction & Thriller ebook Categories:

- Thrillers 100 Must Reads - Science Fiction Best Sellers - Sci Fi Cyborg Android - SyFy - TechnoThriller Kindle Books - Techno Action - Dystopian Fiction - Science Fiction Cyberpunk - Men's Adventure - Best Sellers List New York Times - Techno Thriller - Kindle Books Mystery and Suspense - The Maze Runner - James Patterson Kindle Books - kindle Books Science Fiction and Fantasy - Science Fiction Best Sellers - Science Fiction Bundles - Science Fiction Best Sellers in kindle Books - Science Fiction Combat - Science Fiction Deals - Science Fiction Disaster - Science Fiction for kids 9-12 - Science Fiction in kindle Unlimited - Thriller in kindle Unlimited - Technothriller in kindle Unlimited - Cyberpunk in kindle Unlimited - Action Adventure in kindle Unlimited - Science Fiction Lending Library - Great Science Fiction Novels - Science Fiction New Releases Last 30 Days - Science Fiction on Kindle Free - Science Fiction Series on Kindle - Science Fiction Techno Thriller - Science Fiction Top 100 - Science Fiction Utopia - Science Fiction Warfare - Science Fiction Youth - Science Fiction YA - Thriller Cussler - Thriller Genre - Thriller James Patterson - Free Crime and Thriller Kindle Books - Thriller Patterson - Thriller Prime books - Cyberpunk 2015 - Cyberpunk Crime - Cyberpunk Novels - Cyber Punk - Cyberpunk Anthology - Space Marine Novels

Similar Series:

Hunger Games, Divergent, Maze Runner

Keyword Tags:

androids cyborgs robot genetic quantum nano tech nanotech nanotechnology race racing marathon run running urban city future futuristic fantasy dystopian cyberpunk cyber attack punk hacker outlaw marine corps marines veteran science fiction scifi sci-fi sci fi syfy sy fy techno thriller technothriller maze runner hunger games

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #244854 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-10
  • Released on: 2015-05-10
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling


Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Where to Download Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Worth reading, but getting a little repetitive By Amazon Customer It's still exciting, as the first two but I found that it was beginning to get a little repetitive as he tried to complete a given obstacle. He would "turn on" the same abilities, and the descriptions would be the same each time. I was hoping for a bit more advancements, perhaps some unseen for both the user and the programmer, but non of that happened. However, still worth reading.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Nanotechnology - I'm hooked! By Linda I Ackerson Okay, I'm hooked. I want to see what happens to Roland, Skylar, and the rest of the contestants. The first three books are exciting and take organic technology to the next step in human development. I can't say anything else without giving away the entire ending. Good series so far.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Gripping Action By D Smith The story line pulls you along as you wonder how Roland will overcome the next obstacle. Good read!! Hope Lief continues this good work.

See all 12 customer reviews... Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling


Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling PDF
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling iBooks
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling ePub
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling rtf
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling AZW
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling Kindle

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling
Nano Contestant - Episode 3: Combat Obstacles: The Technothriller Futuristic Science Fiction Adventure of a Cyberpunk Marine (Nano Contestant Series), by Leif Sterling

Jumat, 25 Maret 2016

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed And Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes By A War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), By Terri Grace. Provide us 5 minutes and also we will certainly show you the very best book to check out today. This is it, the MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed And Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes By A War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), By Terri Grace that will be your ideal option for far better reading book. Your five times will certainly not invest lost by reading this website. You could take the book as a resource making much better principle. Referring guides MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed And Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes By A War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), By Terri Grace that can be positioned with your demands is sometime tough. But here, this is so simple. You could find the best thing of book MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed And Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes By A War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), By Terri Grace that you could review.

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace



MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

Download PDF Ebook Online MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

Clementina Rose is no stranger to tragedy. Widowed with child, and abandoned to a life of misery at the hands of her dead husband's brother, she almost despairs. Her only lifeline are the secret letters she receives from her husband's civil war comrade, Grover Ash. When the letters stop, Clementina is crushed. Stripped of everything other than her faith in God and love for her young son she boards a Westbound train to find Grover and beg for his hand. But will Grover be there to meet her? Is he even still alive? Widows and wastrels, war weary cowboys, flames of destruction and fires of love, all signed, sealed and delivered with a tender conclusion that will leave your heart and soul warmed with true Western romance. The Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Collection are stirring stories of despairing Mail Order Brides pulled from the ashes by loving Western husbands. Interview With The Author What kind of stories do you enjoy writing? My favorites are Clean Romance short stories, especially Mail Order Bride. I love writing historical Western romance novellas and short stories. I also write a cozy mystery or two. They are such fun! Your books often contain an element of faith as well as clean romance and love. Is that important to you as a writer? Yes, my faith is important to me, and as an author clean Christian western romance is my heart passion. I love being able to tell a story, be it an American mail order brides series, a Mail Order bride and babies tale, or a historical western romance novella, and at the same time bring a positive message of hope, faith and love to uplift readers. Are all of your stories Clean reads? Yes, every story I write is clean and wholesome, and I find that language and sex free Mail Order Bride books are just as good as those that include such things. I don't think that offensive elements are necessary to tell a great story, and I always ensure that I write great Christian Western romance free of anything that might compromise my readers in any way. The main thing for me is always the story, and the characters. A great plot is what makes a story worth reading. Where do your brides and their stories come from? Mail Order Brides of the west, east or sometimes even foreign brides jump into my imagination every day, each telling their own special story! I have mail order brides of Texas, New York, even Liverpool, England. So many places, so many tales to tell. I get an idea for a book or a series and when I begin to write the stories often take on a life all of their own. Just like my readers, I am often on the edge of my seat eagerly waiting to find out what will happen next! I even have a few Mail Order Husbands cooking. :) What would you like to say to your readers? Just two short words. Thank you! I think many authors take their readers for granted, but without you there would be no stories. A story only really comes alive in the hand of a reader. My readers are the reason I write, the reason I can tell my tales. Without them, well, there would be no story to tell. Every email I receive, every review that is left - every one of them means so much to me. Why should a new reader pick up one of your books? If you enjoy clean Christian Western romance and mail order bride romance free from smutty themes; if you love great romantic stories full of surprises; if you love delightful characters and happy endings, any Terri Grace book will be thoroughly enjoyable for you. Is your Historical Western Romance Kindle Unlimited eligible? As I mentioned just now, my readers are the most important thing in the world to me. That is why all of my Mail Order Bride and Cozy Mystery books are part of the Kindle Unlimited program. I love being able to offer clean and free Mail Order bride books to eager readers, and the Kindle Unlimited program allows me to do this. It's a win-win.

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #43135 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-09-10
  • Released on: 2015-09-10
  • Format: Kindle eBook
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

From the Author "Beauty For Ashes is a series of stories that witnesses true love lifting the helpless and the hopeless from the dark reaches of despair and lifting them to the heights of joy. With the black night of adversity as a backdrop, the light of God's love and perfect purposes for our heroes and heroines shines ever brighter in contrast. This first story came to me as I was observing people going about their daily lives. As I sat with a fresh cup of coffee and a naughty sweet pastry, I was moved by the thought of how each life has its own tale of tragedy and triumph to tell. As I mused on these thoughts, the character of Clementina Rose knocked on the door of my imagination. I am glad I let her in to share her amazing story. A tale I now share with you, my readers..."  Terri Grace, Author


MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

Where to Download MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Didn't see it as others did By L. Christensen Others have given the plot just fine so I'm just going to give the reasons why I didn't like this book. The actual story line was not that great. Little to no character development and huge jumps in time left me wondering if I read the same book as the glowing reviewers. It's clean for sure and has a good message but that part isn't focused on or highlighted. The protagonists pray a lot for better situations.That about sums up the message part of it.It could use a proofreader. Things were capitalized and they didn't need to be. The story is told in a series of letters and each one is signed in large, flowing script that messed up the formatting. Some of the letters to each other are italicized, others aren't. It just didn't keep my interest and I wouldn't recommend this book.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Clementina and Grover By Rose Arbor The story opens with Clementina marrying John Sparks. When he leaves to fight in the Civil War, Clementina is pregnant with their son Jacob. As time passes, Clementina learns about a dear friend, Grover, from her husband's letters. Then one day, a letter arrives from Grover and Clementina's world comes crashing down as she learns of her husband's death. She finds some solace in corresponding with Grover and eventually they fall in love through the mail. There are some troubles and misunderstandings ahead in this long courtship but all is right at the end.I really enjoyed this story and think you will too.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Historical Western Romance By Glaidene's reads A 5 star rating for Terri Grace's book " Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved from The Ashes by a War....." I loved the story and hope you will also!!!!!

See all 19 customer reviews... MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace


MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace PDF
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace iBooks
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace ePub
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace rtf
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace AZW
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace Kindle

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace
MAIL ORDER BRIDE: Widow's Flight: Widowed and Wasted Mail Order Bride Saved From The Ashes by a War Weary Cowboy: Inspirational Historical Romance (Beauty For Ashes Inspirational Romance Book 1), by Terri Grace

Kamis, 24 Maret 2016

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Just what should you believe much more? Time to get this Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, By Athena Wright It is simple then. You could just rest and also remain in your place to get this publication Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, By Athena Wright Why? It is on the internet book store that supply numerous compilations of the referred publications. So, merely with net connection, you can delight in downloading this book Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, By Athena Wright as well as numbers of publications that are looked for currently. By checking out the web link web page download that we have actually given, the book Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, By Athena Wright that you refer a lot can be discovered. Just conserve the requested publication downloaded and after that you could appreciate guide to read each time and also area you want.

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright



Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Read Online Ebook Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

What happens when a rock star god meets the one girl who sees beyond his cocky facade?I have it all.I'm a popular online music reviewer. I just got an internship at an indie music label. Most importantly, my crush Neil finally asked me out. Everything in my life is perfect.That is, until I meet Jayce, the panty-melting guitarist of Feral Silence. He's smoldering, mysterious and with just one look I'm under his spell.He's also frustrating as hell.One minute he wants me. The next he's pulling away. When I uncover his closely guarded secret, even Jayce can't deny our chemistry - physical and emotional.But Neil has slowly stolen my heart. He's intense and passionate with a dirty, sexy mouth. Something is drawing us together and it's impossible to resist.I don't want to choose between them. I can't.My life was perfect. How did I get myself into this mess? And how do I get myself out?Feral Gaze is a steamy MFM ménage rock star romance. It is the first novel in the Feral Silence series. It can be read as a standalone with a HEA, but does have an epilogue which leads into Book #2.Also available:Feral Voice, featuring lead singer Kell - amazon.com/dp/B01AIYDNPQFeral Touch, featuring bassist Ren - amazon.com/dp/B01E7GHABYAthena is giving away a free ebook!Want to know how the rock band Feral Silence came to be? Athena wrote an exclusive prequel available only to newsletter subscribers. Stay up to date with new releases and receive Feral Dream: a Feral Silence Prequel, when you sign up for Athena's mailing list:athenawright.com/free-feral-silence-ebook

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6517 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-09-07
  • Released on: 2015-09-07
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright


Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Where to Download Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Athena Wright knows how to put the steam in a New Adult rockstar romance novel! By Judith *I received a free digital copy in exchange for an honest review* Rating: 4/5Ailey, or Aimee Lee, is known as Audio Ailey in the social media world, is know for posting reviews on various types of music groups. Through this social media world, Ailey made an online friend named Neil that she developed feelings for over the course of their chats. She likes him a lot, but when he suddenly makes a move and a plan for them to meet in person, her world is changed for the better. Ailey becomes an intern for Dark Sound Studios, doing what she loves. She gets lucky enough to become the "internet girl" and follow around one of her favorite bands on tour, Feral Silence. She is instructed to follow the band, and capture everything behind the scenes, and connect the fans with Feral Silence, through social media outlets. Eventually she finds herself face to face with the band, and a connection with one of their own, Jayce. Jayce is hot, and a sexual connection is apparent, but he distances himself from the girl behind the internet. Ailey is thinking all kinds of crazy things about Jayce, but are they really crazy? Does Jayce like her too? Meanwhile, Ailey continues to communicate with Neil, and is still interested in pursuing him. Will Ailey be able to live every fangirl's dream, and get with Jayce? OR will she be able to meet and date the online guy that she's been curious about for months?First off, three letters: WTF?!? I was extremely shocked, surprised, amazed, and dumbfounded by how things turned out for Ailey, relationship-wise. The outcome of what happens in Ailey's love life is such a plot twist to me. I really didn't see that coming, even when it was happening, I couldn't believe what I was reading. I was just like :O. Anyway, this plot twist is the reason why I loved this book so much. It was so unreal and raw. I loved that she was able to get her way, all the way. (sorry if this doesn't make sense, it's vague-ish, I know, I just hate spoiling) Trust me, you have to read this book.I love Jayce so much because of the plot twist too. I love how open-minded he was. I liked how there was more depth to his character. I appreciated how the author made this rock star put up a facade so that we could learn more behind the beautiful rock star god that is Jayce. I also liked Neil. I liked the idea of Ailey and Neil having and online friendship, and it somehow flourishing to something more in real life. That was a nice touch to the storyline.What was missing in the storyline? More. I felt like there should been more scenes, or contact, between Ailey and Jayce. Well, at least, I wish there was. Even with Neil. I felt like the story was more about Ailey being the Social Media intern, than falling for the rock star or the guy online. BUT I think that I am just used to longer story lines. :)The epilogue was gold. It was the perfect epilogue, and I am in the middle of the second book of this series. Trust me, it'll make you want more ;)Enjoy!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. The Land of the Rockstars! By Brit *I beta read this book in exchange for feedback and an honest review*I have got to say that I am hooked on Ms. Wright's books. I have read all of them to date, and I will keep on reading them because she writes awesome new adult romances! In this book, which is longer than any of her others, we are introduced into the world of rockstars. Jayce is the lead guitarist of the hot, new band, Feral Silence. He has many upon many girl groupies falling all over themselves to get a glance from him. He may put off the aura of being cocky and self-assured, but when the curtains come down he is a completely different person. Our female lead is Ailey. Ailey is a music reviewer who is looking for a job within the music industry. She's a huge fan of Feral Silence, and when she gets an internship at their label she is super excited! She may or may not be another obsessed fan of Feral Silence. When she learns she'll be working with the band, it seems all her dreams have come true. The only kink in the plan is that she also is developing a relationship with an online buddy. They may be closer to each other than the other realizes. When things start to heat up between Jayce and Ailey can they make it work? Can Ailey choose between Jayce and Neil (the online buddy)? I really loved Jayce because there was so much more to him than his stage persona. I think Ailey got the best of every world and definitely took advantage of every situation she was put in. I also ended up liking Neil a lot, too. He was hard working and a perfectionist, but that can be a good thing in some situations. The other thing I liked about this book was the side characters! I especially loved the frontman, Renn! He was very hilarious to read about, but he surprised me a time or two with his observance. I cannot wait to read the sequel after that cliffhanger!!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. HOT SEXY ROCK STAR ROMANCE!! By Iceblossoms Ailey is an amateur music critic on line music critic and she always tries her best to be fair and unbiased in all of her reviews. However when it comes to Jayce and his music even though she tries her reviews do seem a bit one sided in his favor. Ailey has been talking and flirting with Neil on line and he picks up on the difference and is a bit upset, Ailey does her best to smooth things over telling him she would never be a rock star groupie and chase after Jayce. Then Ailey lands a summer internship at the record label that Jayce works with and all of her resolve is about to be tested. Ailey has very strong feelings for Neil but now she is face to face with Jayce and is finding it impossible to ignore their strong attraction. Neil has been hiding something from Ailey the fact that he is the assistant producer for the band and at the beginning of the tour they have a run in yelling match later on they come to terms and apologize. When Ailey sends Neil a post describing what happened he figures out who she is and comes forward kissing her in front of everyone. Now Ailey has two guys that are interested in her and both relationships are extremely complicated. Find a comfy spot and relax while you enjoy finding out how these three start working their way out of this muddle and into a possible relationship. Fantastic start to the series!!!

See all 35 customer reviews... Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright


Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright PDF
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright iBooks
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright ePub
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright rtf
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright AZW
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright Kindle

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright
Feral Gaze: A Rock Star Romance, by Athena Wright

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Think of that you get such particular awesome encounter and also understanding by just reviewing a book Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), By James P. Sumner. How can? It appears to be higher when a book can be the most effective thing to discover. Books now will show up in printed and also soft documents collection. Among them is this book Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), By James P. Sumner It is so normal with the printed publications. Nonetheless, many individuals often have no area to bring the publication for them; this is why they can not review the publication wherever they really want.

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner



Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

PDF Ebook Download : Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

***Visit www.jamespsumner.com today to see how you can get a copy of True Conviction, the first book in the Adrian Hell series, absolutely FREE! (Just copy and paste the website into your browser.)*** The more things change, the more he stays the same! A couple of years have passed since Pennsylvania, and Adrian is living the quiet life in the small town of Devil's Spring, Texas. He owns a bar, and no one there knows who he used to be. He's retired, and he's happy. The world is a different place, too. A new president has made radical changes, ushering in a new era of peace and prosperity. Then, three strangers walk into his bar and ask for Adrian Hell, which starts a chain of events that sees the former assassin pick up his guns once more, to help old friends combat a new enemy. A terrorist organization is plotting an elaborate scheme to hold the world to ransom, and Adrian's found himself caught in the middle. Against insurmountable odds, and in many people's crosshairs, Adrian reluctantly goes back to doing what he does best. This action epic sees him travel the country, and the world, fighting an impossible enemy, while facing ghosts from his past. Packed with action, drama, and humor, this new Adrian Hell thriller is a must-read!

The Adrian Hell Series

A Hero of War True Conviction Hunter’s Games One Last Bullet Deadly Intent A Necessary Kill

The GlobaTech Series

D.E.A.D. Till I Die

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #38974 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-01
  • Released on: 2015-05-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner


Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Where to Download Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Another great Adrian Hell book By M.Mak I can't say how much I enjoy these books! This one starts out with Adrian having retired after One Last Bullet (which is still my favorite) and ends with a sort-of cliffhanger. It's just enough of a wrap-up that we know what happened, but we know we're going to see more of Adrian.There are less errors in this book than there have been in the previous three, though there are still a good number of them. It wasn't quite as distracting to me as the prior books were.There are some new characters in this book who become part of the main cast. The town sheriff is really an amazing guy and I was really excited he became part of the main story. He's a small town sheriff with a big heart, and one of those men you want by your side when things go down.There's also Tori, who at times seems a little too "written" for lack of a better word. She's great, I don't mean to say she's bad, just a little too ideal sometimes and not enough of the reactions you'd expect a real person to have in the situations you go through with Adrian Hell.Something I've come to realize as I've read these books, which has helped me a bit, Mr. Summer is British and is attempting to write in American English. It doesn't always work and sometimes it appears (to American readers) as if words are missing. Example: "What do you intend doing?" We would expect it to read, "What do you intend ON doing?" The British English uses "intend" in a way where it's not followed by "to" or "on." That was the most prominent word usage that was different than what American English uses that I picked up on. Then I started to see other little things that reminded me he was a British author. So some of the "missing words" may just be a difference in language use.I'm still very happy to have found Mr. Sumner and have read these four books in just a few days. I've really enjoyed them. I love how Adrian has developed over the series, and can't wait to see what's next. I'm definitely a fan!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Life is good, but as Adrian quotes "You can run as ... By One Fair Critic 3.5 Stars! "Deadly Intent" is the fourth book in the Adrian Hell series, featuring an Ex U.s Military Black Op who later becomes the deadliest hit-man in the world. However, after a long life of infiltrating, killing, and undercover work, Adrian decides to hang up his guns and find solace as a bar owner in a small town in Texas with his stray dog and his girlfriend Tori at his side. Life is good, but as Adrian quotes "You can run as fast as you can, but the past is always quicker." One uneventful afternoon, a dangerous squad of men show up at the Ferryman and threaten Adrian to join forces with an underground terrorist group, Armageddon Initiative. Of course, our hero declines which gets him into a world of trouble. As Adrian and his team, his best friend Josh, a local Texan cop, an FBI agent, and the head of a private military contractor, bond together to end an unbeatable threat, they find themselves uncovering secrets that prove that those threats are a lot closer to home. "Deadly Intent", like the other books in this series, was full of great suspense, action, and blood, blood, blood all around. My kind of story. The plot was fun and engaging, truly heart-stopping and ends with the perfect cliff-hangar. However, I did have a few qualms about the book. Of course it was a bit far-fetched in some situations, but that's just how the AH series goes. But I don't complain seeing as AH is such a bad ass and fun character you completely overlook it. My main and only issue was with Tori, Adrian's girlfriend. To me, she felt forced and seemed like a waste of space. She was the typical damsel in distress who tries to act tough, but just ISN'T and just seemed to get in the way and clog the story in my opinion. I don't think she was a good match for Adrian just because she's to simple and cliche. I was hoping for someone we've either met before in the previous books or someone at least somewhat on Adrian's level of bad ass-ness. Tori just kind of popped in out of no where as an extremely undeveloped and unimportant character. I wanted someone who could connect with Adrian more on a personal level, not just someone who's redheaded, hot, and who "thinks" they can keep up with an ex-assassin. But regardless of her irrelevancy, I still enjoyed the story and I'm excited to see how things end with the next book considering the utter BLOW OUT at the end of the book! More! More! More!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Another excellent action packed Adrian Hell Book By KARI As a beta reader, I was given a free advance copy of this book by the author, in return for an honest review.We find Adrian, an assassin with morals, enjoying his retirement in a sleepy town in Texas, but, of course, not for long. The storyline introduces some interesting and thought provoking issues and within the first few pages I was already swept up in the story. The action is well crafted and fast paced and the plot has lots of twists and turns. We are also treated to a couple of overseas locations, the return of some characters from previous books and lots of new ones too. Adrian's sarcastic wit and interesting taste in music all help to create a great character. It is certainly one of those books that you don't want to put down. Another enjoyable read.

See all 58 customer reviews... Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner


Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner PDF
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner iBooks
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner ePub
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner rtf
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner AZW
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner Kindle

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner
Deadly Intent (Adrian Hell Series Book 4), by James P. Sumner

Minggu, 20 Maret 2016

By clicking the web link that we offer, you can take the book flawlessly. Connect to net, download, and conserve to your device. What else to ask? Reading can be so simple when you have the soft file of this in your gizmo. You can additionally replicate the documents to your office computer or in your home or even in your laptop computer. Merely share this great information to others. Suggest them to see this resource as well as obtain their searched for publications .





PDF Ebook Download :





Where to Download




PDF
iBooks
ePub
rtf
AZW
Kindle

Sabtu, 19 Maret 2016

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

When getting guide Exit Interview, By Amrita Mukherjee by online, you can read them any place you are. Yeah, even you remain in the train, bus, hesitating checklist, or other areas, on the internet book Exit Interview, By Amrita Mukherjee could be your buddy. Whenever is a great time to review. It will enhance your understanding, enjoyable, enjoyable, driving lesson, as well as experience without spending more cash. This is why on-line book Exit Interview, By Amrita Mukherjee ends up being most wanted.

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee



Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Read Online and Download Ebook Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

When the rebellious Rasha Roy leaves the comfort of her home to pursue a career in journalism, little does she know of the challenges that lie in her path. But she quickly discovers that life isn't a bed of roses for young rookies-especially one with a mind of her own-despite her exceptional acumen for sniffing out stories. As she moves from one job to another-first in India and then in Dubai-trying to make herself heard, she realizes that the companies' exit interviews are all a sham. Those three short lines on the interview form are not enough to sum up her struggles. She cannot write about the sexual harassment she has faced at the workplace, the promotions she has missed because of nepotism and the trouble she has landed in for a shocking exposé. But a chance encounter with a young woman at a police station in Cairo leads Rasha to stumble on to the biggest story of her life. Will this be the big break that she has been looking for? Or will this story too, like so many of her others, be sent to an early grave? Exit Interview is the captivating story of an ambitious young woman trying to find her place in an unforgiving world.

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3670319 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-05-01
  • Released on: 2015-01-04
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 7.75" h x .79" w x 5.10" l, .53 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 316 pages
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

About the Author Born and raised in the charming city of Kolkata, Amrita Mukherjee s formal education took off at South Point School, after which she graduated with a first class in sociology from Presidency College and topped it off with another first class in the masters programme from Calcutta University. As a journalist, for the last fifteen years, she has been closely associated with the world of entertainment and Page 3 journalism, working with top publications like The Times of India and Hindustan Times in Kolkata, and was also the features editor at ITP Publishing Group in Dubai. A strong believer in alternative journalism, she has been practising it, with good results, in her blog. Presently, she is a media activist and freelance journalist, writing for Indian and international publications and websites. This book is her first attempt at fiction writing.


Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Where to Download Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A fast paced novel that'll reach out to All ! By rajasri saraswat I was waiting to get hold of this book for a while as I have been following the author's blog for a while and was always impressed with her narrative . Exit Interview is great weekend read & will keep you hooked throughout. The author showed prowess in her art by skillfully creating a storyline that merged reality with fiction . This novel has international appeal as it deals with real human emotions & experiences that we go through in our daily life. Overall , it's a great read & I highly recommend it.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A delightful summer read... Fast, unexpected and very hard to put it down. By Pradeep Sukumar A delightful summer read.... It's a fast paced book with unexpected storyline... Very hard to put down. A visual storytelling that follows the journey of a talented young journalist, who is not afraid to take risks... But rare breed, who doesn't trample over people to get an exclusive.Those, who have been in Kolkata, Dubai and Egypt will feel a rush of memories flooding. And those who haven't been there, will get a vivid picture from its fluid narrative.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Loved it! By Rhiti Bose A brilliant book by a brilliant author.The smartness of the language and the easy flowing storyline makes it a great read.Must BUY!

See all 4 customer reviews... Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee


Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee PDF
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee iBooks
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee ePub
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee rtf
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee AZW
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee Kindle

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee
Exit Interview, by Amrita Mukherjee

Rabu, 16 Maret 2016

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty,

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

When some individuals considering you while checking out Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, By Farrah Rochon, you may really feel so proud. Yet, rather than other people feels you should instil in on your own that you are reading Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, By Farrah Rochon not due to that factors. Reading this Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, By Farrah Rochon will certainly provide you greater than people admire. It will certainly guide to know greater than the people staring at you. Even now, there are several sources to learning, checking out a publication Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, By Farrah Rochon still ends up being the front runner as an excellent method.

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon



Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Best Ebook Online Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Books One and Two in the “Moments in Maplesville” Novella Series A PERFECT HOLIDAY FLING - Book One (Originally published December 2012) It’s no mystery why veterinarian Callie Webber is having a hard time getting into the holiday spirit. When the residents of her small hometown aren’t pitying her because of her ex-husband’s very public departure, they’re attempting to hook her up with a man…any man. Fed up with being everyone’s favorite charity case, Callie considers closing her animal clinic and moving to the big city. But, before she goes, she decides to give herself a Christmas treat to remember: a romantic holiday fling. And who better to have a fling with than the gorgeous newcomer who is turning heads around Maplesville? When injured Navy pilot Stefan Sutherland reluctantly rescues a gutter cat for the sake of his five-year-old nephew, he never imagined it would lead to him discovering Maplesville’s most fascinating attraction…its smoking hot vet. Getting involved with a woman was the last thing Stefan anticipated when he agreed to care for his nephew during his Army nurse sister’s deployment, but if he’s going to spend the holidays in this sleepy Southern town, why not make the most of it with the perfect holiday fling. A LITTLE BIT NAUGHTY - Book Two (Originally published March 2013) Sometimes a girl can't help being a little bit naughty... Jada Dangerfield was living her fairy tale—married to her high school sweetheart and working in her dream job—until it all came crashing down. Struggling to make ends meet, the unemployed divorcée stumbles upon a decidedly naughty new income stream, selling erotic toys to the women of her small hometown. And when Jada gets the chance to host a "Naughty Nights" party at the home of her uptight life-long nemesis Mason Coleman, she realizes it’s the perfect way to get under the skin of the one person who has always made her feel as if she wasn’t good enough. Mason Coleman relishes his career as a high-powered tax attorney, but his most important job is keeping the promise he made to his father to watch out for his baby sister...even though she hasn't been a "baby" in thirty years. When he learns that his sister may be in trouble, Mason is forced to call on the one person he's never been able to abide, her brash and sexy friend, Jada Dangerfield. There's just one problem...how does he stop Jada from corrupting his sister with her kinky new business? When this unlikely pair is forced to work together, things get a little bit naughty.

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #390563 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-09-09
  • Released on: 2015-09-09
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon


Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Where to Download Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Most helpful customer reviews

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful. Love & Romance! By Felicia I love a story that makes me smile long after I’ve finished it, and that’s exactly what happened with both of these awesome romances.“A Perfect Holiday Fling” could definitely become a Christmas favorite…or I could read it in the middle of June! LOL! Even though there’s no snow, the author’s detailed descriptions put you right into the moment of a Louisiana holiday season. I also get a sense of “rebirth” – Callie letting go of her fears; Stefan finding a new career, Jacob beginning to “be a kid” again…and even Sandy! There’s also a Christmas miracle feel here with Callie and Stefan not following through with their original plans, but still getting something they didn’t even know they wanted…or needed.Jada and Mason…aw lawd! Counseling for two, please! I loved how they came together, but loved their feud even more! The sex toy angle was perfect – not overplayed…or ignored…just enough for the two of them to be “A Little Bit Naughty.” Mason’s confession about how he’d felt about Jada all these years had me tearing up, and when she took him fishing, I had to grab the tissues. (I’m thinking this series needs a book 2.5 – “Murder in Maplesville” – Eric, Adrian and Garrett so deserve it!)Someone asked the question just the other day “What do you want to see more in Romance novels?” I answered…Romance. It’s ironic that I sat down and read this double book set not long after that. Callie and Stefan walking down the street holding hands and taking in the holiday sights; Jada and Mason fishing…things people in love do with or for the people they love.Add that to good writing and character and plot development, and you cannot go wrong with these two amazing stories. 1-click them now! (I’ve already read book 3 and book 4 is queued on the Kindle – I’m hooked!)Enjoy!

20 of 23 people found the following review helpful. A funny book By Ann Smith Romance but too much sex. Some suspense . The continued story of women in a small town where have been best friends.

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful. I loved both of the stories in this bundle By Judy Pflueger I loved both of the stories in this bundle. "A Perfect Holiday Fling" bring Stefan Sutherland into the life of the local vet, Callie Webber, when his 5 year old nephew finds a stray cat that needs medical care. Stefan is on medical leave from the Navy due to an eye injury and is caring for his nephew, Jacob while Stephanie, Stefan's identical twin is deployed to Afghanistan. There is a sizzling attraction between Callie and Stefan. Callie's friends feel she is long overdue for a fling. Stefan is definitely interested as she is but they both start thinking about what will happen when the other leave Maplesville. Stefan started rethinking his commitment and desire to return being a pilot even if his eye injury allows it. Callie starts wondering if she should give up her own veterinary practice or stay in Maplesville. A great story where two people have personal obstacles to overcome in order to have a promising future. In "A Little Bit Naughty" Jada Dangerfield keeps crossing paths with Mason Coleman, her friend Keira's older brother. Unfortunately, they have a mutual dislike for each other and have had since high school. Along the way, one of their encounters got them to talk to each other civilly. Jade soon finds out that Mason actually had a crush on her in high school. The attraction between them soon becomes sizzling. This was a great story about how find they have mutual respect for each other that develops into something was under the surface all along.

See all 78 customer reviews... Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon


Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon PDF
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon iBooks
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon ePub
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon rtf
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon AZW
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon Kindle

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon
Moments In Maplesville Bundle Edition: A Perfect Holiday Fling & A Little Bit Naughty, by Farrah Rochon

The book will certainly still make you favorable value if you do it well. Finishing the book to read will certainly not become the only goal. The objective is by getting the favorable value from the book till the end of guide. This is why; you have to discover more while reading this This is not only how quick you review a publication and not just has the amount of you completed the books; it is about just what you have gotten from guides.





Free Ebook Online





Where to Download




PDF
iBooks
ePub
rtf
AZW
Kindle

Senin, 14 Maret 2016

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

It can be among your early morning readings Tarzan: Return To Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures Of Tarzan) (Volume 1), By Will Murray This is a soft documents publication that can be survived downloading from on-line publication. As understood, in this advanced period, technology will certainly ease you in doing some activities. Also it is simply reviewing the visibility of book soft documents of Tarzan: Return To Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures Of Tarzan) (Volume 1), By Will Murray can be added function to open. It is not only to open up and conserve in the device. This time around in the early morning as well as other spare time are to check out the book Tarzan: Return To Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures Of Tarzan) (Volume 1), By Will Murray

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray



Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Read and Download Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

With the African continent engulfed by World War II, John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, abandons his role as Lord of the Jungle in order to combat the spreading Nazi menace. Flying a P-40 Tomahawk warplane, Clayton is sent on his first mission: to rescue the missing British Military Intelligence officer code-named Ilex. But the daring task plunges him into his savage past after he’s forced down in a lost land that seems hauntingly familiar. When Tarzan of the Apes returns to the prehistoric realm called Pal-ul-don, he must revert to his most savage persona, that of Tarzan-jad-guru––Tarzan the Terrible!

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #401846 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-05-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .88" w x 6.00" l, 1.15 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 390 pages
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

About the Author Will Murray is the author of over 60 adventure novels in series ranging from The Destroyer, Doc Savage, The Executioner and others. His Year 2000 novel, Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD: Empyre, predicted the terrorist 9/11 attacks while his Doc Savage novels have pitted the Man of Bronze against King Kong and The Shadow.


Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Where to Download Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Most helpful customer reviews

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful. Giving back a childhood hero... By Stephan Friedt I was a voracious reader as a child. I don’t believe pre-school or kindergarten were offered in the public schools at the time, but my mother took me to the public library twice a week for story times and to gather a huge stack of books for reading at home. Thanks to that exposure, I was reading simple readers when I entered 1st grade and progressed rapidly.Dr. Seuss was quickly joined by Walter Farley, and then H.G. Wells, Stevenson, and a host of classic writers. Among those early influences was Edgar Rice Burroughs. My love for his books led me in later life to discover Kenneth Robeson and Maxwell Grant and RE Howard and Lovecraft and more. But ERB’s books made the most impact on me; the nobility of the characters…the exotic locations…the headlong rush into adventures with confidence. It didn’t hurt the old ego to find out later that his writings were considered to be equal to 2nd and 3rd year college reading levels thanks to his vocabulary and style. ERB’s stories taught me right from wrong, to have confidence in myself, and to appreciate strengths in others regardless of gender…or species.It was depressing to reach the point of having read everything published by ERB or Robeson. The attempts by other writers to carry on the varied characters were few and far between….and always lacking.Then I discovered the writings of William Patrick Murray…or just “Will Murray” as we knew him from the fan publications and small press. I was pleasantly surprised when he took up the mantle of the pulp writers behind the Doc Savage character. His novels had the feel and the “voice” of the original chroniclers like no other.Now he’s cast his lot with the world of E. R. Burroughs with his latest novel “Return to Pal-ul-don”…returning Lord Greystoke to one of the many fantastic worlds within darkest Africa that ERB had concocted…an isolated area of fantastic creatures and even more fantastic humanoids, cut off from the rest of the world by seemingly impenetrable barriers to evolve and exist in its own incredible way.Will Murray has once again captured the “voice” of the original author. Once again the character of Tarzan lives and breathes with the vitality that the original creator instilled within their stories. The attention to detail, the conviction to character, and the steady pace of the adventure unfolding have once again transported us to the world that up till now belonged only to Edgar Rice Burroughs.All I can say is, “Bravo, Mr. Murray!” I look forward to any additional adventures he wishes to chronicle. You have successfully restored a childhood hero to my reading library and for that I thank you!

11 of 13 people found the following review helpful. A GREAT RETURN TO A GREAT CHARACTER By Paul Bishop This first authorize Tazan novel from the sure hand of pulpmeister Will Murray does a fantastic job of capturing the true spirit of Tarzan, not a grunting monosyllabic cartoonish strongman, but an evolved, brilliant, man of honor equally at home as Lord Greystoke and as the savage Tarzan the Terrible. Murray's prose is assured, never allowing the reader to be pulled out of their 'willing suspension of disbelief.' This is not only a great Tarzan novel, but a great adventure novel filled with strange creatures and heroic exploits. Read it now ...

13 of 16 people found the following review helpful. (Tarzan the Terrible, Burroughs By Raven Tarzan Return to Pal-ul-don by Will MurrayBook Review: Friday, June 26, 2015(BackstoryDuring World War One, The Germans invaded Africa, and Tarzan’s plantation and compound in British East Africa was destroyed. When Lord Greystoke returns, he not only finds the place in ruins, he finds a burned female body he thinks is his wife, Jane Porter Clayton.Tarzan wages a one man war on Germany, and manages to capture and kill Major Schneider and Captain Fritz Schneider, who commanded the battalion that destroyed Tarzan’s home. After an adventure with a female double agent, Bertha Kircher, Lord Greystoke discovers the German Captain’s diary and learns that Jane is still alive, but lost somewhere in Africa. (Tarzan the Untamed, Burroughs, 1920)In the next volume, Lord Greystoke tracks Jane Porter Clayton to an area of Africa that is almost unexplored due to thorn thickets and swamps, which keeps most explorers out. But Jane’s trail leads into this area and where Jane goes, Tarzan is bound to follow.Thus the Ape Man enters the world of Pal-ul-don. Since the area is so remote and unexplored, Tarzan finds animals, plants, and even humans that are several rungs back on the evolutionary scale. There are hairless white men with tails called Ho-Don and black furry men called Waz-Don. There are other, more primitive people and triceratops, which the Natives call gryfs. After many adventures, the Greystokes leave Pal-ul-don behind them. (Tarzan the Terrible, Burroughs, 1921)And now this adventure begins. John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, Tarzan of the Apes—is now simply Flight Officer Clayton of the RAF. It is World War Two and the Nazis have risen to power in Germany. Once again the Dark Continent is in danger from German greed.Tarzan has joined the RAF, though his superior officers express their reservations about his age. But the Ape Man and his family take Kavuru pills (Tarzan’s Quest) which keep them perpetually young. Tarzan is asked to undertake a mission to find a downed plane and a British Secret Agent named Ilex. The plane has crashed on the edge of the thorn thickets and swamps of Pal-ul-don. And the three people on board have parachuted into the midst of the land of men still untouched by time.Tarzan finds himself in more danger than he has ever seen. There are a tribe of small spider-like men with deadly blow guns that inhabit this part of Pal-ul-don. These small savages, the Jad-Jinna, live among spiders and use their poison on their deadly darts. They have a very strange feature—two opposable thumbs. Then too, they speak no language, but converse by gestures and popping finger joints.In taking up the mantle of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Will Murray proves again why he is a first class pulp wordsmith. There is a genuine echo of the original Tarzan novels in this, the first modern Tarzan story authorized by the Burroughs Estate.Far from portraying Tarzan (as some have) as a bumbling savage that can barely say “Me Tarzan. You Jane,” Will Murray paints Tarzan with the brush of the Ape Man’s creator. Tarzan was savage at heart and far more at home in a loincloth in the Jungle, but he also had the Greystoke Estate in England. John Clayton, Lord Greystoke was a member of the House of LordsTarzan spoke many languages, not just the language of the Apes, but French, English, Swahili, Arabic, and other tribal languages. In one adventure where there he discovers a lost Roman city, he learns Latin.Once the action in this novel starts, it is one hair-raising moment after another, as Tarzan and Torn Ear, an elephant, along with a Waz-Ho-don warrior (a mixed race from the joining of the tribes of hairless white men with tails and the tribes of hairy black men with tails,) seek Ilex and the agent’s companions through the valleys and canyons of Pal-ul-don.And before Lord Greystoke leaves Pal-ul-don he will have been captured, escaped, captured again, nearly poisoned, trapped by a great spider, ride a giant turtle, and make new friends. This book is highly recommended. It is Tarzan as Tarzan should be written.I note that the cover has The Wild Adventure of Edgar Rice Burrough’s Tarzan, which I hope means at least one more and perhaps several more books! You rock, Will Murray! A clear five out of five stars!Quoth the Raven…

See all 31 customer reviews... Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray


Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray PDF
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray iBooks
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray ePub
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray rtf
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray AZW
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray Kindle

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray
Tarzan: Return to Pal-ul-don (The Wild Adventures of Tarzan) (Volume 1), by Will Murray

Minggu, 13 Maret 2016

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

Invest your time also for only few minutes to check out a publication The Book Of Phoenix, By Nnedi Okorafor Reading a publication will certainly never reduce as well as squander your time to be worthless. Reading, for some people become a need that is to do every day such as spending quality time for eating. Now, just what concerning you? Do you want to read a publication? Now, we will show you a brand-new e-book qualified The Book Of Phoenix, By Nnedi Okorafor that can be a new method to explore the knowledge. When reading this publication, you could get one point to consistently remember in every reading time, even detailed.

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor



The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

Best PDF Ebook Online The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

A fiery spirit dances from the pages of the Great Book. She brings the aroma of scorched sand and ozone. She has a story to tell…. The Book of Phoenix is a unique work of magical futurism. A prequel to the highly acclaimed, World Fantasy Award-winning novel, Who Fears Death, it features the rise of another of Nnedi Okorafor’s powerful, memorable, superhuman women.Phoenix was grown and raised among other genetic experiments in New York’s Tower 7. She is an “accelerated woman”—only two years old but with the body and mind of an adult, Phoenix’s abilities far exceed those of a normal human. Still innocent and inexperienced in the ways of the world, she is content living in her room speed reading e-books, running on her treadmill, and basking in the love of Saeed, another biologically altered human of Tower 7.Then one evening, Saeed witnesses something so terrible that he takes his own life. Devastated by his death and Tower 7’s refusal to answer her questions, Phoenix finally begins to realize that her home is really her prison, and she becomes desperate to escape.But Phoenix’s escape, and her destruction of Tower 7, is just the beginning of her story. Before her story ends, Phoenix will travel from the United States to Africa and back, changing the entire course of humanity’s future.From the Hardcover edition.

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #174775 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-05
  • Released on: 2015-05-05
  • Format: Kindle eBook
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

Review  Incredible praise for Who Fears Death:   “Both wondrously magical and terribly realistic.” —The Washington Post   “[Okorafor’s] expository sections sing like poetry. Descriptions of paranormal people and battles are disturbingly vivid and palpable.” —Village Voice   “A fantastical, magical blend of grand storytelling.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)   “Beautifully written, this is dystopian fantasy at its very best.” —Library Journal (starred review)   “Okorafor is a master storyteller who combines recent history, fantasy, tradition, advanced technology and culture into something wonderful and new that should not be missed.” —RT Book Reviews (top pick)   “This is a horrifying, inspiring, painful, joyous book.” —io9 Selected accolades for Who Fears Death: —Winner of the 2011 World Fantasy Award for Best Fantasy Novel —Winner of the 2010 Carl Brandon Kindred Award —Winner of the 2010 RT Reviewer’s Choice Best Book Award (Science Fiction) —A 2010 Locus Award Finalist for Best Fantasy Novel —A 2010 Nebula Award Nominee —A 2011 Tiptree Honor Book —Finalist for a 2010 Black Excellence Award —A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2010 —An Amazon.com Best Book of 2010 —A Library School Journal Best Book of 2010—And more!From the Hardcover edition.

About the Author Nnedi Okorafor was born in the United States to two Igbo (Nigerian) immigrant parents. She holds a PhD in English and is a professor of creative writing at Chicago State University. She has been the winner of many awards for her short stories and young adult books, and won a World Fantasy Award for Who Fears Death. Nnedi's books are inspired by her Nigerian heritage and her many trips to Africa. She lives in Chicago with her daughter Anyaugo and family. She can be contacted via her website, www.nnedi.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED U.S. PAT. AND TM. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES—MARCA REGISTRADA HECHO EN U.S.A.

PROLOGUE

Found

Nobody really knows who wrote the Great Book.

Oh, the religious always have answers to explain the unexplainable. Some of them like to say that the goddess Ani wrote the Great Book and made it so that ten men and women who loved stories would find copies of it at the same time. Some of them say a mere woman with ten children transcribed Ani’s words over ten years. Others say some illiterate half-witted farmer wrote it in one night after Ani blessed him. Most believe that the Great Book’s author was a mad yet holy, always always holy, prophet who’d taken refuge in a cave.

What I can tell you is that two hundred years after it all went wrong an old man named Sunuteel was out in the desert. This man was one of those who enjoyed being out there for weeks on end, close to the sun, sand, and desert creatures. The time away from his wife made their time together sweeter. Sunuteel and his wife agreed on this. They were old. They had wisdom.

“Go on,” his wife said with a smile. She took his old rough hand into her equally rough old hand. She was a beautiful woman, and Sunuteel found it easy to look into her eyes. “It is good,” she said. “I need the solitude.”

There had been an especially powerful Ungwa storm and the old nomadic couple had barely survived the dry thundery night of lightning. A bolt had struck near their sturdy tent, setting on fire one of the three stunted palm trees they’d camped beside. His wife had been peeking out of the tent when it happened. Thankfully, she’d blinked at precisely the right moment. She said the tree looked like a woman dancing in flames. Even as Sunuteel dragged her to the center of the tent where they huddled and prayed, his wife felt a presence. She was sure it was a premonition.

The old man was used to his superstitious wife and her odd intuitions. Therefore, he knew his wife would want to be alone to think and ponder and fret. When the storm passed and she gently encouraged him to take a few days to go and see what was out there, he didn’t argue. He took the rolled up goatskin tent and satchel of supplies she handed him and kissed her on the cheek. He didn’t say goodbye because in his tribe “goodbyes” were a curse.

“I leave my chi to keep you company,” he said. Each night he was away, along with her meals, she’d prepare a small plate of food for his personal god until Sunuteel returned. He clipped his portable to his hip, facing the tiny device inside his pocket. After one last, far more prolonged kiss, he walked away from his wife. Did she think an angel was coming to visit her? His wife’s descendants were from the Islamic portion of Old Naija. She said that her father used to tell her all sorts of stories about angels and djinn. She’d passed these magical stories on to their own children as they grew up.

Minutes after leaving, Sunuteel brought out his portable and laughing to himself, called up the virtual screen and typed, “Hussaina, greet her for me when you see her, whether she’s an angel or djinni.” Moments later, his wife Hussaina’s reply popped up on the screen saying what she always said when Sunuteel went off, “And you make sure you bring me back a good story.”

 • • • 

Two days later, Sunuteel came upon a cave full of computers. A tomb of old old technology from the Black Days, the Times of the Dark People, the Era of the Okeke. This was one of those caves into which panicked Okeke packed thousands of computers just before Ani turned her attention back to the earth. These computers were supposedly used to store huge amounts of information separate from digital repositories called virtual spaces. Little good this did; virtual or physical, it was all dead, forgotten, rotten.

“What am I seeing?” he whispered. “Can this be?”

He pressed a shaky hand to his chest, feeling the strong heartbeat of his strong heart. Standing here, he didn’t feel so old. No, not old at all. This place made him feel young as a babe. Sunuteel, who was Okeke and therefore a descendant of the evil that caused the goddess Ani to bring the deserts, knew of the poisonous Black Days and their most poisonous genius gadgetry. However, he had always wanted to see these ancient computers with his own eyes.

So, he went in.

The cave was cool and it smelled of dust, mineral oil, plastic, wires, and metal. There were ghosts here and Sunuteel shivered from the thought of them. Still, he approached these old machines. This was a story to tell his wife. The third computer that he touched sparked with life. Terrified, he snatched his hand from the “on” pad he’d accidently brushed against and stumbled back. The grey hand-sized box, softly hummed. Then it spoke to the portable clipped inside the pocket of his dusty pants. The portable pinged softly as it wirelessly received a large file from the computer. Sunuteel blinked and then fled from the cave, sure a ghost had touched him.

When he made it back to his small goatskin tent beside a baobab tree, only then did he dare look at his portable. He held the coin-sized device in his palm and brought it to his face, for his eyesight was poor. He squinted at the tiny screen. Next to the file that contained messages from his wife was a black icon in the shape of a bird that seemed to be looking over its shoulder. He tapped it with the tip of his finger and a deep male voice began to speak in . . . English!

It was an audio file. Sunuteel sat back in his tent, grinning with delight. My goodness, he thought. How strange. What are the chances?! He knew this dead language, albeit the accent was very odd, indeed. He brought up the virtual screen. The visual words that appeared as the audio file played were tinted red instead of the usual green. He put the portable on the blanket before him. Then he watched and listened.

The voice read a table of contents as it digitally projected the words on the virtual screen in front of him:

“Section one, mythology. Section two, legend. Section three, mechanics. Section four, news . . .”

He frowned as it read on and on. After a while, he decided to click on “Section thirty-eight, memory extracts” because the phrase rung a distant bell from when he was a child. In school, the teacher had spoken about the dark times hundreds of years ago, when human beings were obsessed with the pursuit of immortality. They had even found a way to pull out and capture people’s memories right from their minds so they could preserve them forever. “Just like a capture station sucking condensation from the sky to make drinking water,” his schoolteacher had said.

Sunuteel had been fascinated and quietly proud of just how far human beings had gotten in their technological pursuit. Nevertheless, his schoolteacher had discouraged him from further research. “Sunuteel,” she said. “This was what led us to receiving Ani’s wrath.”

And so the young Sunuteel turned away from the past and looked mostly toward the future. He loved language, words and stories. He’d gone on to become one of his village’s most valued recorders and reciters. He could recite the most beautiful poetry in five different dialects of flawless Okeke, but also in the language and various dialects of the majestic and mighty Nuru people and the common language of Sipo. And most amazingly, one of the prominent village elders had been able to teach him English, too.

As far as Sunuteel knew, this elder, an old-timer in Sunuteel’s village who’d always been called The Seed, was the only person who knew the language. The Seed was also the only light-skinned person in his village who was not albino. This man refused to call himself Nuru, insisting that he was “Arab,” a term that had long become more an insult than an ethnic description of the Nuru people. The Seed preferred to live amongst the Okeke, the dark-skinned woolly-haired people. He’d built a house in front of one of the pyramids because it reminded him of home. When Sunuteel was a teen, The Seed looked no older than fifty, but Sunuteel’s mother said he was actually much older.

“He looked the exact same when I was a little girl,” she’d told him. She was right. Even now that Sunuteel was an old old man, The Seed still looked no older than fifty. Sunuteel was of a people who understood that the world was full of mystery. Thus, a seemingly immortal man living in the village didn’t bother anyone. The Seed had an amazing command of the English language and though he was moody and reclusive at times, he turned out to be a wonderful teacher.

Sunuteel went on to read the only two English texts in the entire region, both of which were owned by the Seed. One was an anthropology book titled Virulent Diseases of the Mars Colonies, the other a book about igneous rock sediments. Despite the dryness of the subjects, Sunuteel loved the rhythm of English. It was a liquid sounding language, due to the way the words ran together.

“Memory Extracts,” the voice announced in English. But then it began speaking another list and each item on it was in a different language, none of which he understood. Annoyed, Sunuteel listened for a while and was about to go back to the main menu when the male voice clearly said, “Extract number 5, The Book of Phoenix” in English.

He clicked on it.

At first there was a long pause and the bird icon popped on the screen. It rotated counter-clockwise. He counted thirteen rotations and when it kept going, he looked up at the sky. Blue. Clear. A large hawk-like bird flew overhead, soaring high in the sky, probably seeing him perfectly with its sharp eyes. I will return to Hussaina in two days, he thought. That’s enough alone time for her to stop thinking about premonitions and angels. He smiled to himself. She would excitedly cook him a spicy meal of doro wat when he told her he had “a big big tale to tell.” She loved a good story, and good stories were best told on a full stomach.

“Memory Extract Number 5,” the male voice suddenly announced, making Sunuteel jump. “Title: The Book of Phoenix. Location Number 578.”

And then a woman began feverishly speaking. Her soft breathy voice was like a powerful incantation, for as she spoke, it seemed that the old man’s eyesight, which dimmed more and more every year, began to brighten. His wife would have recognized what was happening. However, Sunuteel was a man less open to such things.

Still, as he sat in his tent, gazing through the red virtual words before him and the open tent flap just beyond the words, outside into the desert, he realized he could see for miles and miles. Sweat prickled on his forehead and between the coarse hairs of his armpits. He listened. And the very first person to hear one of the many many entries from The Great Book was awed by the story he heard.

“There is no book about me,” the voice said. “Well, not yet. No matter. I shall create it myself; it’s better that way. To tell my tale, I will use the old African tools of story: Spoken words. They are worthier of my trust and they’ll last longer. And during shadowy times, spoken words carry farther than words typed, imaged, or written. My beginnings were in the dark. We all dwelled in the dark, mad scientist and speciMen, alike. A dear friend of mine would say that this time was when ‘the goddess Ani still slept’. I call my story The Book of Phoenix. It is reliable and short, because it was accelerated . . .”

CHAPTER 1

SpeciMen

I’d never known any other place. The 28th floor of Tower 7 was my home. Yesterday, I realized it was a prison, too. I probably should have suspected something. The two-hundred-year-old marble skyscraper had many dark sides to its existence and I knew most of them. There were 39 floors, and on almost every one was an abomination. I was an abomination. I’d read many books and this was clear to me. However, this building was still my home.

Home: a. One’s place of residence. Yes, it was my home.

They gave me all the 3D movies I could watch, but it was the plethora of books that did it for me. A year ago, they gave me an e-reader packed with 700,000 books of all kinds. No matter the topic, I consumed those books voraciously, working my way through over half of them. When it came to information, I was given access to anything I requested. That was part of their research. I didn’t know it then, but I know it now.

Research. This was what all The Towers were about. There were seven, all in American cities, yet they were not part of the American government. Not technically. If you dug for information, you would not find one governmental connection on file.

I had access to information about all the towers, and I read extensively. However, Tower 7 was where I lived, so I studied this tower the most. They gave me many “top-secret” files on Tower 7. As I said, I was always given what I asked for; this was part of the research. But also, they did not see me as a threat, not to them. I was a perfectly contained classified “speciMen.” And for a speciMen, knowledge wasn’t power.

Tower 7 was located in Times Square on the island of Manhattan, United States of America. Much of Manhattan was underwater, but geologists were sure this part of it was stable enough for Tower 7. It was in the perfect position for top surveillance and security. I’d read about each floor and some of the types of abominations found on them. I’d listened to audios of the spiritual tellings of long-dead African and Native American shamans, sorcerers and wizards. I’d read the Tanakh, the Bible, and the Koran. I studied the Buddha and meditated until I saw Krishna. And I read countless books on the sciences of the world. Carrying all this in my head, I understood abomination. I understood the purpose of Tower 7. Until yesterday.

Each tower had . . . specializations. In Tower 7, it was advanced and aggressive genetic manipulation and cloning. In Tower 7, people and creatures were invented, altered, or both. Some were deformed, some were mentally ill, some were just plain dangerous, and none were flawless. Yes, some of us were dangerous. I was dangerous.

Then there was the tower’s lobby on the ground floor that projected a completely different picture. I’d never been down there but my books described it as an earthly wonderland, full of creeping vines covering the walls and small trees growing from artistically crafted holes in the floor. In the center was the main attraction. Here grew the thing that brought people from all over the world to see the famous Tower 7 Lobby (only the lobby; there were no tours of the rest of the building).

A hundred years ago, one of the landscapers planted a new tree in the lobby’s center. On a lark, some Tower 4 scientists who were there to visit the greenhouse on the ninth floor emptied an experimental solution into the tree’s pot of soil. The substance was for enhancing and speeding up arboreal growth. The tree grew and grew. In a place where people thought like normal human beings, they would have uprooted the amazing tree and placed it outdoors.

However, this was Tower 7 where boundaries were both contained and pushed. The tree grew ravenously and in a matter of weeks it reached the lobby’s high ceiling. Tower 7 carpenters constructed a large hole so that it could grow through the second floor. They did the same for the third, fourth, fifth. The great tree eventually earned the name of “The Backbone” because it grew through all thirty-nine of Tower 7’s floors.

 • • • 

My name is Phoenix. I was mixed, grown and finally birthed here on the 28th floor. One of my doctors said my name came from the birthplace of my egg’s donor. I’ve looked that up; Phoenix, Arizona is the full name of the place. There’s no tower there, so that’s good.

However, from what I’ve read about the way they did things there, even the scientists who forced my existence don’t know the names of donors. So, I doubt this. I think they named me Phoenix because of something else.

I was an “accelerated organism,” born two years ago. Yet I looked and physically felt like a forty-year-old woman. My doctors said the acceleration had stopped now that I was “matured.” They said I would always look about forty, even if I lived to be five hundred. To them, I was like a plant they grew for the sake of harvesting.

Who do I mean by “them,” you must wonder. All of THEM, the “Big Eye”— the Tower 7 scientists, lab assistants, lab technicians, doctors, administrative workers, guards, and police. We speciMen of the tower called them “Big Eye” because they watched us. All the time, they watched us, though not closely enough to realize their great error and not closely enough to prevent the inevitable.

I could read a 500-page book in two minutes. My brain absorbed the information and stories like a sponge. Up until two weeks ago, aside from mealtimes, gazing out the window, running on my treadmill, and meetings with doctors, I spent my days with my e-reader. I’d sit in my room for hours consuming words upon words that became images upon images in my head. Now they gave me paper-made books, removing the books when I finished them. I liked the e-reader more. It took up less space, I could reread things when I wanted, there was a lot more to read and the e-pages didn’t smell so old and moldy.

I stared out the window watching the cars and trucks below and the other skyscrapers across from me as I touched a leaf of my hoya plant. They’d given the plant to me five days ago and already it was growing so wildly that it was creeping across my windowsill and had wrapped around the chair I’d put there. It had grown two feet overnight. I didn’t think they’d noticed. No one ever said anything about it. I was so naïve then. Of course, they’d noticed. The plant was not a gesture of kindness; it was just part of the research. They’d never cared about me. But Saeed cared about me.

Saeed is dead, Saeed is dead, Saeed is dead, I thought over and over, as I caressed one of my plant’s leaves. I yanked, breaking the leaf off. Saeed, my love, my only friend. I crumpled the leaf in my restless hand; its green earthy smell might as well have been blood.

Yesterday, Saeed had seen something terrible. Not long afterwards, he’d sat across from me during dinner-hour with eyes wide like boiled eggs, unable to eat. He couldn’t give me any details. He said no words could describe it. He’d only held my hand, pulling at his short dark brown beard with his other.

“What does your heart tell you about this place?” he’d earnestly asked.

I’d only shrugged, frustrated with him for not telling me what he’d seen that was so awful.

“Behiima hamagi. Xara,” he muttered, glaring at one of the Big Eye. He always spoke Arabic when he was angry. He leaned forward, lowering his voice. “You read all those books . . . why don’t you feel rebellion in your heart? Don’t you ever dream of getting out of here? Away from all the Big Eye?”

“Rebellion against whom?” I whispered, confused.

“I’d even settle for being a mild speciMen,” he muttered. “They are fucked up, but not that fucked up. At least the Big Eye let them go out and live normal lives like normal people.”

“Mild speciMen aren’t special,” I said. “That’s why the Big Eye release them out there. I’d never want that, I like who I am.”

He laughed bitterly, touched my cheek and lightly kissed me, looking deep into my eyes. Then he sat back and said, “Eat your jollof rice, Phoenix.”

I tried to get him to eat his crushed glass. This was his favorite meal and it bothered me to see him push his plate away. But he wouldn’t touch it.

“I can live without it,” he said.

Before we returned to our separate quarters, he asked for my apple. I assumed he wanted to paint it; he always painted when he was depressed. I’d given it to him without a thought, and he’d slipped it into his pocket. The Big Eye allowed it, though they frowned upon taking food from the dining hall, even if you didn’t plan to eat it.

His words didn’t touch me until nighttime when I lay in my bed. Yes, somewhere deep deep in my psyche I did wish to get out of the tower and see the world, be away from the Big Eye. I did want to see those things that I saw in all the books I read. “Rebellion,” I whispered to myself. And the word bloomed from my lips like a flower.

 • • • 

They told me the news in the morning, during breakfast-hour. I’d been sitting alone looking around for Saeed. The others, the woman with the twisted spine who could turn her head around like an owl, the man with long-eyelashed expressive eyes who never spoke with his mouth but always had people speaking to him, the three women who all looked and sounded alike, the green-eyed idiok baboons who spoke using complex sign language, the woman whose sweater did not hide her four large breasts, the two men joined at the hip who were always randomly laughing, the woman with the lion claws and teeth, these people spoke to each other and never to me. Only Saeed, the one who was not of African descent (aside from the lion lady, who was Caucasian), spoke to me. Well, even the lion lady was part-African because her genes had been combined with those of a lion.

One of my doctors slid into the seat facing me. The African-looking one who wore the shiny black wig made of synthetic hair, Bumi. They always had her deal with me when I had to experience physical pain, so I guess it made sense for them to send her to break upsetting news to me, too. My entire body tightened. She touched my hand, and I pulled it away. Then she smiled sympathetically and told me a terrible thing. Saeed hadn’t drawn the apple. He’d eaten it. And it killed him. My mind went to one of my books. The Bible. I was Eve and he was Adam.

I could not eat. I could not drink. I would not cry. Not in the dining hall.

 • • • 

Hours later, I was in my room lying on my bed, eyes wet, mind reeling. Saeed was dead. I had skipped lunch and dinner, but I still wasn’t hungry. I was hot. The scanner on my wall would start to beep soon. Then they would come get me. For tests. I shut my eyes, squeezing out tears. They evaporated as they rolled down my hot cheeks, leaving the skin itchy with salt. “Oh God,” I moaned. The pain of losing him burned in my chest. “Saeed. What did you see?”

 • • • 

Saeed was human. More human than I. I’d met him the first day they allowed me into the dining hall with the others. I was one year old; I must have looked twenty. He was sitting alone and about to do something insane. There were many others in the room who caught my eye. The two conjoined men were laughing hard at the sight of me. The idiok baboons were jumping up and down while rapidly signing to the woman with lion claws and teeth. However, Saeed had a spoon in his hand and a bowl full of broken glass before him. I stood there staring at him as others stared at me. He dug the spoon into the chunks of glass, scooped out a spoonful and put it in his mouth. I could hear him crunching from where I stood. He smiled to himself, obviously enjoying it.

Driven by sheer curiosity, I walked over and sat across from him with my plate of spicy doro wat. He eyed me with suspicion, but he didn’t seem angry or mean, at least not to the best of my limited social knowledge. I leaned forward and asked what was on my mind, “What’s it like to eat that?”

He blinked, surprised. “‘What’, she asks. Not ‘Why’.” He grinned. His teeth were perfect—white, shiny, and shaped like the teeth in drawings and doctored pictures in magazines. Had they removed his original teeth and replaced them with ones made of a more durable stuff? “The taste is soft and delicate as the texture is crunchy. I’m not in pain, only pleasure,” he said in a voice accented in a way that I’d never heard. But then again, the only accents I’d ever heard were from the Big Eye doctors and guards.

“Tell me more,” I said. “I like your voice.”

He’d looked at me for a long time, then he smiled and said, “Sit.”

After that, Saeed and I became close. I loved words, and he needed to spill them. He could not read, so I would tell him about what I read, at least in the hours of breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Sometimes, he grumbled with annoyance when the current series of books I was reading were romance novels or what he called “woman tales,” but he couldn’t have disliked them that much because he always demanded to hear these stories from beginning to end as well. “I like the sound of your voice,” he said, when I asked him why. He may have, but I believe he liked the stories, too.

Saeed was from Cairo, Egypt, where he had been an orphan who never went hungry because he could always find something to eat. He ate rotten rice, date pits, even the wooden skewer sticks of kebabs; he had a stomach like a goat. They brought him to the tower when he was thirteen, six years ago. He never told me exactly how or why they made him the way he was. It didn’t matter. What mattered was that we were who we were, and we were there.

Saeed told me of places I had never seen with my own eyes. He used the words of a poet who used his tongue to see. Saeed was an artist with his hands, too. He had the skill of the great painters I read about in my books. He most loved to draw those foods he could no longer eat. Human food. Portraits of loaves of bread. Bowls of thick egusi soup and balls of fufu. Bouquets of smoked lamb and beef kebabs. Oniony fried eggs with white cheese. Plates of chickpeas. Pitchers of fresh-squeezed orange juice. Piles of roasted yellow corn. They allowed him to bring the paintings to mealtime for everyone to view. I guess even we deserved the pleasures of art.

Saeed could survive on glass, metal shavings, crumbles of rust, sand, dirt, those things that would be left behind if human beings finally blew themselves up. They tasted delicious to him. Nevertheless, eating a piece of bread would kill him as eating a giant bowl filled with sharp pieces of glass would kill the average human being.

The first time he kissed me, we were sitting together at dinnertime. I’d just finished my own meal of fried chicken curried rice. I was telling him the chemical makeup of the flakes of rust he was eating and speculating on how green rust would probably taste different to him. “I think you will find green rust tastier because it’s more variable and complex.” We were sitting close, a habit we’d gotten into when we’d realized that my natural body temperature was usually warm and his was cool.

He took a deep gulp of water from his full glass, turned to me, cupped my chin and kissed me. All thought of iron oxide and corrosion fled my mind, replacing it with nothing but amazed shock and the soft coolness of his lips.

“No affected behavior,” we heard one of the nearby Big Eye bark and immediately we pulled away from each other. I couldn’t help the smile on my face. I had read and watched many stories where people kissed, this was nothing like what I imagined. And I’d never thought it would happen to me. Saeed took my hand under the table and my smile grew bigger. I heard him snicker beside me. And I snickered, too.

Everyone in the dining hall stared at us. I remember specially the idiok baboons pointing at Saeed and me, and then signing energetically to each other. “They’re just jealous,” Saeed whispered, squeezing my hand. I grinned, my stomach full of unusual flutters, and my lips felt hot. Even if it were from within, it was the first time that I had ever laughed at the Big Eye.

Now, I couldn’t stop thinking about what had happened. He took my apple and he ate it. He took my apple and he ate it. He took my apple and he ate it. The Big Eye explained that then his stomach and intestines hemorrhaged and Saeed was dead before morning. I couldn’t stop stressing about the fact that I never got to tell him what was happening to me. I was sure that it would have given him hope; it would have reminded him that things would change. I wiped a tear. I loved Saeed.

 • • • 

As grief overwhelmed me for the first time in my life, I pressed a hand against the thick glass of my window and longingly looked down at the green roof of the much shorter building right beside Tower 7; one of the trees growing there was in full bloom with red flowers. I’d never been outside. I wanted to go outside. Saeed had escaped by dying. I wanted to escape, too. If he wasn’t happy here, then neither was I.

I wiped hot sweat from my brow. My room’s scanner began to beep as my body’s temperature soared. The doctors would be here soon.

 • • • 

When it first started to happen two weeks ago, only I noticed it. My hair started to fall out. I am an African by genetics, I had the facial features, my skin was very dark and my hair was very coily. They kept my hair shaved low because neither they nor I knew what to do with it when it grew out. I could never find anything in my books to help. They didn’t care for style in Tower 7, anyway, although the lion lady down the hall had very long, silky, white hair and Big Eye lab assistants came by every two days to help her brush and braid it. And they did this despite the fact that the woman had the teeth and claws of a lion.

I was sitting on my bed, looking out the window, when I suddenly grew very hot. For the last few days, my skin had been dry and chapped no matter how much super-hydrated water they gave me to drink. Doctor Bumi brought me a large jar of shea butter, and applying it soothed my skin to no end. However, this day, hot and feverish, my skin seemed to dry as if I were in a desert.

I felt beads of sweat on my head and when I rubbed my short short hair, it wiped right off, hair and sweat alike. I ran to my bathroom, quickly showered, washing my head thoroughly, toweled off and stood before the large mirror. I’d lost my eyebrows, too. But this wasn’t the worst of it. I rubbed the shea butter into my skin to give myself something to do. If I stopped moving, I’d start crying with panic.

I don’t know why they gave me such a large mirror in my bathroom. High and round, it stretched from wall to wall. Therefore, I saw myself in full glory. As I slathered the thick, yellow, nutty smelling cream onto my drying skin, it was as if I was harboring a sun deep within my body and that sun wanted to come out. Under the dark brown of my flesh, I was glowing. I was light.

I pulsed, feeling a wave of heat and slight vibration within me. “What is this?” I whispered, scurrying back to my bed where my e-reader lay. I wanted to look up the phenomena. In all my reading, I had never read a thing about a human being, accelerated or normal, heating up and glowing like a firefly’s behind. The moment I picked up the e-reader, it made a soft pinging sound. Then the screen went black and began to smoke. I threw it on the floor and the screen cracked, as it gently burned. My room’s smoke alarm went off.

Psss! The hissing sound was soft and accompanied by a pain in my left thumbnail. It felt as if someone had just stuck a pin into it. “Ah!” I cried, instinctively pressing on my thumb. As I held my hand up to my eyes, I felt myself pulse again.

There was a splotch of black in the center of my thumbnail like old blood, but blacker. Burned flesh. Every speciMen, creature, creation in the building had a diagnostics chip implanted beneath his, her, or its fingernail, claw, talon, or horn. I’d just gone off the grid. I gasped.

Not twenty seconds passed before they came bursting into my room with guns and syringes, all aimed at me as if I were a rabid beast destroying all that they had built. Bumi looked insane with stress, but only she knew to not get too close.

“Get down! DOWN!” she shouted, her voice quivering. She held a portable in her hand and her other hand was in the pocket of her lab coat.

When I just stood there confused, one of the male Big Eye guards grabbed my arm, probably with the intent of throwing me on the bed so he could cuff me. He screamed, staring at his burned, still-smoking hand. The room suddenly smelled like cooked meat. “You’re not going anywhere,” Bumi muttered, pulling a gun from her pocket. Without hesitation, she shot me right in the leg. It felt as if someone kicked me with a metal foot and I grunted. I sunk to the floor, pain washing over me like a second layer of more intense heat. I would have been done for if someone else had not shouted for the others to hold their fire.

Thankfully, I healed fast and the bullet had gone straight through my leg. Bumi said she’d shot me there knowing the bullet would do that; I believed her. If the bullet hadn’t gone straight through and remained in my flesh, I don’t know what would have happened with my extreme body temperature. Bumi knew this more than anyone.

One minute I was staring with shock at the blood oozing from my leg. Then the next, I blacked out. I woke in a bed, my body cool, my leg bandaged. When they returned me to my room, the scanner was in place to monitor me, since I could not hold an implant. They replaced my bed sheets with heavy heat-resistant ones similar in material to my new clothes. The carpet was gone, too. For the first time, I saw that the floor beneath the carpet was solid whitish marble.

Bumi took me to one of the labs soon after that. This would be my first but not last encounter with the cubed room with walls that looked like glass. Maybe they were thick clear plastic. Maybe they were made of crystal. Or maybe they were made of some alien substance that they were keeping top secret. I knew nothing. I didn’t even know what the machine was called. They simply put me in it, and it heated up like a furnace. I felt as if I were on fire and when I started screaming, Bumi’s voice filtered in, smooth like okra soup, sweet like mango juice, but distant like the outside world.

“Phoenix, hold still,” she said. “We are just getting information about you.”

I believed her. Even through the pain. I always believed everything they told me. The space was just large enough for me to sit with my long legs stretched before me, my back straight, my palms flat to the surface. The smooth transparent walls warmed to red and orange and yellow, so it was like being inside the evening sun I watched set every day.

“Does it have to hurt?” I cried. “I’m burning! My skin is burning!” It did not get so hot that my flesh caught fire, but the parts of me that touched the walls—especially my legs—received first-degree burns.

“Nothing great comes without pain,” she said. “Just relax.”

I closed my eyes and tried to retreat into myself. But the memory of the sound of Bumi’s gun firing was still ricocheting in my head. I hadn’t been fighting. I wasn’t as dangerous as some of the other speciMen became when in some kind of distress. I wasn’t doing anything but standing there in confusion thinking about the fact that I was off the grid. Yet, she’d shot me.

I couldn’t help my legs flexing and twitching whenever the pain hit. My legs ran, like a separate part of my body.

“Relax,” Bumi said.

Relax. How could I relax? I frowned. I couldn’t stop thinking about it. It was as if my thoughts had become tangible and were bouncing off the walls, getting faster and faster, like a heated atom. Maybe thoughts were just atoms made of a different type of material for which even the Big Eye lacked tools to study.

“I am trying,” I said.

“Do you want to hear a story?”

For the first time, I was able to pull back from the sound of the gun firing and the kernel of whatever I was feeling deep in my chest. “Yes,” I said, looking up. All I saw was the machine’s artificial burning sun.

“Ok,” Bumi said. She paused. I listened. “You read so much, so I know that you know my country, Nigeria.”

“Official name is the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Capital is Abuja. Most known city is Lagos, the second largest city in the world. West Africa. One of the world’s top producers of streaming films, crude oil, and fine literature,” I whispered.

I heard her chuckle. “You know my country better than I do.” She paused. “But to really know it, you must go there. I was born and raised in the metropolis of Lagos. My parents lived on Victoria Island in one of the high-security gated communities. Big big houses with columns, porches, marble and huge winding staircases. Manicured palm trees and colorful sweet smelling flowers. Even the houseboys and house girls dressed like movie stars. Paved roads. Security cameras. Well-dressed Africans with perfect wigs, suits, jewelry and flashy cars. Can you see it?”

I nodded.

“Good. So, I was born in that house. I was the first of five children. My mother was alone when she went into labor. My father was on a brief business trip in Ghana. The two house girls had gone to the village to visit their families before coming to stay in the house until I was born. She only had a virtual doctor to guide her through it all. She’d never had to use one before then. They could afford to have an actual doctor come to check on her and they’d hired a midwife. But she went into labor with me ten days early and the midwife got stuck in go-slow, Lagos traffic. My mother said it was like being instructed by a ghost.”

“I was born healthy and plump in my mother’s bedroom. She’d shut the windows and turned on the air purifier, so my first breath was not Lagos air. It was air delivered from the Himalayas.” She laughed. “My mother took me outside for the first time three weeks later. I took one breath of the Lagos air and vomited from coughing so hard. Then I was ok.”

I had my eyes closed. Though I could smell my skin slowly baking as the heat increased in the tiny room, I was strolling down the black paved road of Lagos beside Bumi’s mother who was dark-skinned, pretty and short, like Bumi. She was pushing a light-weight stroller with baby Bumi in it, coughing and cooing.

“When I think of my youth in Nigeria, I know that I can never be fully American, even when I am a citizen.”

“So you are not American?” I asked. “But you live here. You work here. You—”

“I’m legal, but not a citizen. Not yet. I will be. My work with you will earn me the pull I need.” She paused. “Do you want to know about how you were when you were a baby?”

I frowned. I remembered life from when I was about a month old; I was like a three year old.

“Do you know when I was a baby?” I asked.

“I was there when they brought you,” she said. “You were so small. Like a preemie. But strong, very very strong. You never needed an incubator or antibiotics or special formula. You took easily to life.”

The lights in the machine went off and something beeped. I breathed a sigh of relief. “Time’s up. Let’s get you to your room,” Bumi said. She didn’t say any more about first meeting me, as we walked back to my room, following the red lines. I was curious, but Bumi always had a set look on her face when she had switched back to her Big Eye self. I knew not to ask for more of my own story.

When we arrived at my room, it was evening.

“May the day break,” Bumi said. This was how she liked to say goodnight to me every night. She said she’d once heard it in a Nigerian movie she’d watched. She only said it to me and usually when she said it, I laughed and smiled.

Tonight, I was in too much pain to smile, but I responded as always, “May it break.”

My body ached from the burns, but by the time I entered my room, removed my clothes and inspected myself, there wasn’t a mark left on my body. But I remembered the pain. You never forget the smell or the pain. I took a long cool shower.


The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

Where to Download The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

Most helpful customer reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful. A Notable Achievement of Magical Futuristic Fantasy By John Kwok Nnedi Okorafor is a living literary treasure of speculative fiction whose heart, mind and soul belong to two continents; her native birthplace of Africa, and her adopted home of North America. Recognized as one of the most unique and distinguished voices in contemporary fantasy, Okorafor’s “The Book of Phoenix” is a worthy prequel to her World Fantasy Award-winning novel “Who Fears Death” and a noteworthy achievement of fantasy writing as high literary art, taking readers into a near future dystopian landscape both familiar and strange, and one that offers substantially more realistic prose than virtually any American mainstream literary fiction writer who has dabbled recently in writing near future dystopian science fiction. Do you need to read her prior novel to enjoy “The Book of Phoenix”? I didn’t and I am confident that most readers will be interested in it as a compelling work of fantasy solely on its strong merits of superb descriptive prose, great character development, a whirlwind of settings that takes readers on a magical, but nightmarish, journey across the continents of North America and Africa, and a memorable plot that will hold readers spellbound until the final page. Okorafor demonstrates ample mastery of her terse, yet muscular, prose, giving readers truly vigorous writing that excels, often simultaneously, in its realism as well as its fantastical elements. A memorable tale told primarily in first person through the eyes of her protagonist, Phoenix, who will be celebrated as yet another of her superb cast of superhuman women encountered within her speculative fiction.Phoenix is a child in an older woman’s body; her calendar age of three years in an adult female body that hovers around the age of forty. A recent “experiment” in the secretive research facility of Tower 7 located in heart of midtown New York, NY, Phoenix is barely aware that she’s been raised as an “experiment”, as a potential weapon of war, living in blissful ignorance until the day that her best friend, Saeed, sees something terrible and responds by committing suicide. Stunned by his death, and the refusal of Tower 7’s administrative and research staff to answer her questions, she realizes that she, like Saeed, has been residing within a glorified prison, unable to escape. Eventually, when she does escape, Phoenix will influence a chain of events in both the United States and West Africa that will change forever, humanity’s future; in other words, she plays the pivotal role in determining that future.With great novels published already like James Morrow’s “Galapagos Regained”, John Love’s “Evensong” and Kazuo Ishiguro’s “The Buried Giant” – the latter perhaps the sole notable work of speculative fiction published this year from a mainstream literary fiction writer - and forthcoming ones ranging from distinguished debuts from Kirsty Logan (“The Grace Keepers”) and Ken Liu (“The Grace of Kings”) to eagerly awaited new novels from Paolo Bacigalupi (“The Water Knife”), Neal Stephenson (“Seveneves”), and Kim Stanley Robinson (“Aurora”), 2015 is shaping up to be a notable year for distinguished speculative fiction. Without a doubt, Okorafor’s “The Book of Phoenix” is yet another notable addition, and one destined to receive serious consideration for the literary honors it so richly deserves. A noteworthy addition that is especially praiseworthy for her elegant blend of African-American culture and history with the traditions and folklore of her native West Africa, and one that should garner a broad audience of enthusiastic readers.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. A MASTER STORYTELLER By David Keymer The Book of the Phoenix is both a good story and a book of transcendent, poetic beauty. Set some time in our own future, at a time when the waters have reclaimed much of our coast line and we’re paying the debt for our failure to respect nature’s limits. Oil is still a big concern and the U.S., like other governments, dances to the tune of the big corporations. The oil fields in Nigeria are ‘protected’ by killer robots –they look like oversized spiders- that react instinctively to tear apart any intruders on the oil fields. Across America, there are seven Towers, raised by a gen tech corporation to hide its hideous experiments on human bodies, suing genetic and cyborg technology. Phoenix is one of their creations, an accelerated kind of human. Though two years old, she looks like a forty-year-old. Her body repairs any injuries to it in minutes. She has eidetic memory and reads at an accelerated pace. She’s never been outside her prison, Tower 7, where her captors experiment on her body without the benefit of any anesthetic. In all essential respects, Phoenix is human: she thinks, she feels, she’s even in love –with another created creature, Saeed, who eats rust and metal and glass for nourishment instead of normal food. They’re not supposed to show affection to each other but they’ve snatched a few surreptitious kisses when their monitors aren‘t looking. Then one day Saeed kills himself. It’s deliberate. He eats an apple –apples, any normal human food, is poison to him. In her quest to find out why, Phoenix escapes the Tower and flees to Africa, the land of her forefathers. Her abusers pursue–they see her only as a humanized weapon—but Phoenix wins through. In the process, she learns a great deal about herself and her amazing capabilities, about the kindness that ordinary people show her, and about how they are all abused by the evil acts of the corrupt corporations that set up the Towers.A novel like this could easily be fluffy, New Age-ish, preachy, but this one isn’t. Okorafor is a master story teller who has struck just the right tone to tell a cautionary tale about much of what is wrong in our present day world. This is a very good book.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Phoenix rises and burns and rises and....lives out her destiny as a strong superhuman female being By Jessica Weissman Nnedi Okorafor is the real thing. A storyteller who creates worlds, characters, and happenings that are vital and convincing; who draws on archetypal stories, who writes like a dream, and who does it all while giving full weight to African traditions.Phoenix's world is a corporate-controlled dystopia, where the genetic experiment we come to know as Phoenix evades her captors, outwits the all-seeing Big Eye, frees many other captives, and learns to fly. She is fueled by rage, her own and that of her love Saeed and another experiment named Mmuo. But there is more than rage in Phoenix, and we discover much of that along with her. She travels to Africa and returns - and experiences true hospitality and community with the people there - much unlike her controlled and empty existence in the corporate Tower that was her first home.Phoenix is destroyed over and over, but also destroys her enemies. She loses nearly everything even as she maintains her essential core and integrity. She calls herself a villain...and you will have to decide whether she is right. No matter whether she is villain or hero, this is a thrilling journey of a book set in a high stakes world.Entertainment of the highest sort.

See all 48 customer reviews... The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor


The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor PDF
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor iBooks
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor ePub
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor rtf
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor AZW
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor Kindle

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor

The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor
The Book of Phoenix, by Nnedi Okorafor