I haven’t read any of Meg Rosoff’s books before. I know, I know. Everyone tells me how awesome they are. As with most things, I am missing out. What finally propelled me to read Rosoff’s latest Picture Me Gone was……
Read of the Week: The Brokenhearted by Amelia Kahaney
Prima ballerina Anthem Fleet is closely guarded by her parents in their penthouse apartment. But when she meets the handsome Gavin at a party on the wrong side of town, she is immediately drawn into his dangerous world. Then, in…
Book Review: How I Lost You by Janet Gurtler
Grace is losing her best friend Kya. Kya is losing her common sense. Me, well I’m losing my non-existent sanity. At the end of the day though, Janet Gurtler never loses the reader. (I’m sorry, you’ll have to excuse my…
Read of the Week: Desert Tales by Melissa Marr
Return to the world of Melissa Marr’s bestselling series and discover how the events of Wicked Lovely set a different faery tale in motion. . . . Originally presented as a manga series and now available for the first time…
Audiobook Review: ‘Bang’ (Visions #2) by Lisa McMann
Crash, the first book in Lisa McMann’s Visions series, left readers on a serious cliffhanger. Jules finally figured out and stopped her terrible vision from killing the guy of her dreams. Since stopping it, she no longer has any visions…
Audiobook Review: ‘The Fall of the Hotel Dumort’ (Bane Chronicles #7) by Cassandra Clare & Maureen Johnson
Magnus Bane watches the once-glamorous Hotel Dumort become something else altogether in 1970s New York City. Fifty years after the Jazz Age rise of the Hotel Dumort, immortal warlock Magnus Bane knows the Manhattan landmark is on the decline. The…
Read of the Week: Ultraviolet Catastrophe by Jamie Grey
Quantum Electrodynamics. String Theory. Schrödinger’s cat. For sixteen-year-old Lexie Kepler, they’re just confusing terms in her science textbooks, until she finds out that her parents have been drugging her to suppress her outrageous IQ. Now Branston Academy, a school run…