Saturday, September 11, 2021

By Wind by T Thorn Coyle

Rating: WARTY!

The biggest problem with this story is that the author has actually drunk the Flavor Aid, and she believes everything she writes: the magic, the aroma therapy, the healing power of crystals, and so on. That's all bullshit, and it wouldn't even be so bad if she didn't preach her religion instead of writing a novel.

Worse even than this is that the story is so tediously lethargic that it drags and drags, and drags and goes nowhere. I dropped this at 30% because literally nothing interesting had happened except for endless Cassandra-style wailing about, as John Fogerty put it, a bad moon arising. In short, up to when I quit, there was no story and what there was instead was awful.

I mean, for example, Brenda, the leader of the 'coven' has a closer-than-a-sister best friend whom she's known for years, yet not once has she confided in her over this bad feeling she's been having until she's pretty much forced into an 'intervention' of sorts! How close can they be when Brenda won't even call or drop her best friend a text? It's tell one thing, but show another all the way here.

The plot, such as it is, is that new age garbarge shop owner Brenda, 'has a bad feeling about this' but what 'this' is, she can't say. She supposed to be a witch, but none of her purported magic, nor that of her 'coven' is of any value whatsoever since no one can tell her anything useful. Plus, she's hearing voices. This woman is in dire need of lithium and psychotherapy.

The other metronomc voice in this tediously tick-tock story is of her purported lover-to-be, Caroline, who is, of course a magical crystal saleswoman. The problem is that at 30% these two had barely even said 'hello'. The blurb asked stupidly (as usual) "Who - or what - stalks Caroline?" Well that would be her control-freak husband who Caroline is apparently too stupid to ditch despite all the freedom she has. The blurb boasts, "Brenda and her coven must act swiftly, before the coming storm blows them all away." Given how ineffective those losers are, it ain't gonna happen. This story was truly bad and boring.

Friday, September 10, 2021

Judas Horse by Lynda La Plante

Rating: WARTY!

"From an Edgar Award-winning author" who evidently didn't win for original character names. "After a mutilated body is discovered in an English country home, detective Jack Warr" Jack as a main character name is an automatic reject for me. But Jack Warr? Seriously? Barf.

The Devil's Bones by Jefferson Bass

Rating: WARTY!

"When a woman's burnt body is found seated inside a burned car" Wait, a burnt body inside a burned car? How in hell did that happen? That just burns my biscuits! Now if it had been written by Sam Bass, I might've been interested! Dumb-ass book description for sure.

Gold Mine Massacre by William W Johnstone, JA Johnstone

Rating: WARTY!

I donlt normally pay any attentiont o dumb-ass Westerns. "When two businessmen arrive in the town of Big Rock" Big Rock seriously? "to mine for gold, Smoke Jensen" Smoke? Seriously? "and his daughter, Denny," Tough horny hombres love to eat at Denny's.... barf.

Will Harper Mysteries: Vol. 1-6 by David Crosby

Rating: WARTY!

"Reporter turned private investigator Will Harper navigates Florida's waterways in his yacht as he hunts down the state's most slippery criminals." What are they? Porpoises? The police refer to them as poips - it's short for poipetrators. LOL! And Whip(smart) poor Will thought there was something fishy going on! Was he ever wrong! It was mammaly.... Barf.

Calculated Deception by KT Lee

Rating: WARTY!

"When professor Ree Ryland is framed for a crime, she joins forces with FBI agent Parker Landon to help pin the real culprit." What? She's going to pin him? Is she going to wear his letter jacket? How romantic! "But the evidence they find points to a diabolical plan" Diabolical? Oh my god! Call the FBI! Oh wait, he's already come! He'll get on it as soon as they get out of bed.... Ree Ryland? Ree-ly? Does the FBI memo about this case have a subject line that reads: Re: Ree? Why not name her Ree Ree Reeurboat? LOL!

The MacTaggart Brothers Trilogy by Anna Durand

Rating: WARTY!

"Who can resist a man in a kilt?" Me! I volunteer. This is another condescending look at Scotland by an American author: "When the sexy, Scottish MacTaggart brothers travel to the US, their charming brogues and fiery passion will lead to red-hot connections" and lots of penicillin shots. Barf. Stereotype much?

Dragon Keeper by Robin Hobb

Rating: WARTY!

"Dragons have returned to Rain Wilds - but they can no longer fly." Oh my fucking god! What a tragedy! How did they get back to Rain Wilds? Uber? Electric scooter? Light rail? Dragon their asses overland? Yawn.

Caulky by KM Neuhold

Rating: WARTY!

"Newly single Ren isn't ready for another relationship" Of course he isn't. "...but he can't seem to resist hot contractor Cole," Hot - Cole? Get it? Barf. Is this contractor going to caulk his holes? You bet your ass. Because this is all about sex. Love and a relationship have nothing to do with it, nor will they ever in this ridiculous genre, and every single one of them who isn't ready for a relationship inevitably ends up in one....

Ignite the Sun by Hanna C Howard

Rating: WARTY!

"An evil witch queen..." Evil. Withc. Queen. Seriously? "...has shrouded her kingdom in shadow" Why? And how is this causing problems, just out of curiosity? Not that this plot hasn't been done to death. "...but 16-year-old Siria is determined to restore the light. With the help of a motley group of rebels," That's where I'm looking for the exit, right there. Motley? Quirky? Count me out. And Siria? Siriasly? What's her BFF's name? Alexia? Besides, the sun was ignited some four or five buillion years ago wasn't it?! Siria's a bit late to the party.

The Event by Whitney Dineen

Rating: WARTY!

"When an embarrassing faux pas cuts her dream career short, Emmie reluctantly returns home to Creek Water, Missouri. Can she survive as the subject of small-town gossip?" I'm guessing yes and she'll meet the heartthrob of her life. Yet another useless female main character running away instead of fighting back. How unexpected! Not! Barf.

Murder in the Paperback Parlor by Ellery Adams

Rating: WARTY!

"A clever whodunit"? How is it clever when it's the same as all the others: a murder in a bookstore which the proprietor has to solve, because evidently the police are too stupid? "When a famous writer dies at Storyton Hall's Valentine's Day book retreat, proprietor Jane and her book club must race to catch a heartless killer!" Why? The best thing, clearly, is to avoid bookstores like the plague because they're very dangerous places! 'Buy all your books online if you don't want to be murdered' is the take home message here. This is how Amazon is making a killing....

City of Shattered Light by Claire Winn

Rating: WARTY!

From an advance review copy for which I thank the publisher.

I had high hopes for this story which seemed to promise two strong female leads, but once again, as they so often do, the book blurb failed to give an honest description of the story, so it was more of a lose than a Winn for me. It was slow to start and seemed very repetitive. I was ready to ditch it after chapter one, and I would have, except this was a review book, so I felt I had to give it a chance. It did pick up somewhat in chapter two, but even so, it never got going. It was such a long, repetitive slog that I grew bored with it.

It was a very pedantic 2-Person PoV story tick-tocking tediously like a metronome between the two main female characters' perspectives that it was putting me to sleep. At least it wasn't first person PoV, but the tedium was strong with this one and by 52% I'd had enough of the repetitive antics of supposed hero "Riven" and her hi-tech non-love-interest "Asa" that I could stand to read no more. I cared nothing for either of the characters or for their fate, and their supposed love story was dead in the water from the very start.

Asa Almeida is the 17-year-old heir to a hi-tech empire. Riven Hawthorne - which is a thoroughly stupid name, is a lowlife street crook who talks big, but consistently achieves nothing. She's supposed to be a no-nonsense girl who is a dead-shot with her antique pistols, but despite having two clear-cut chances to kill her arch-rival (in the half that I read) she fails both times and one failure leads to another. Riven is thoroughly incompetent: all talk and no traction, and she has no spine. Asa, who is supposed to be smart, is a complete dumb-ass and she persistently proves it.

The 'winterdark' MacGuffin in the story appeared to be a direct rip-off of William Gibson's 'wintermute' which is an artificial intelligence character in his novel Neuromancer but since in this story it really is just a name without, apparently, anything behind it (not in the part I read anyway), I guess it doesn't matter what it was. The other side of this coin is tha tthe auhtor evidently hasnlt ehard of a farady cage whcih woudl ahve made her little device undetectable at dradiofrwuencies

The writing had issues, too. I read, for example, at one point: "No doubt the rumor mill would love to grate her to a pulp. A mill grinds, it doesn't grate. Unless of course it hasn't been oiled in a while.... At another point I read, "The phoenix ruffled its wings." Nah! I’m guessing it ruffled its feathers! Then again: "Riven willed herself to be impassable," was used when the author needed 'impassive'.

Some of the technology wasn't very well thought-through. For example, Asa has a suit that she can use to make herself invisible, but this author - as do many sci-fi writers, sci-fi movies, and TV shows - conflates invisible with undetectable. Visible light is only one minuscule portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, and trapping that doesn't trap everything else, from gamma rays at one end to Am radio at the other. The suit wouldn't have worked, and the author even seems to admit this at one point where one of the guardbots stops and scans her. Clearly it detected something. The author also seems to forget that Asa's body is in motion, and emitting heat. Both of these things can be detected. The suit itself by its very use is emitting electronic frequencies.

A smock was actually developed that used tiny cameras to transmit an image of the scenery to the opposite side, so it made the smock close to invisible, but not quite. The thing is that even something like this is still actually there. If a bright light shone on it, it would cast a shadow of sorts, and any radar pulse aimed at it would bounce back faster and with a different 'feel' to it from her body than, say, the wall in front of which Asa was standing, so there was so much wrong with this that it was laughable. For a young kids' story it would have been fine, but not for grown-ups, not unless you're going to say it has magical powers (like Harry Potter's invisibility cloak) rather than hi-tech powers.

For me, the worst part was that the story quickly became bogged down in Riven's tedious, endless, and leaden-footed non-attempts to escape the absurdly one-dimensional criminal city, where every single thing is rotten to the core, and every single person is evil and amazingly good at finding and defeating Riven. It made this story truly boring. I can't commend this at all.

Murder at an Irish Wedding by Carlene O'Connor

Rating: WARTY!

"Siobhán O’Sullivan..." stop right there! I don't need to read any further to know this is yet another condescending Irish story. bring on the leprechauns and start the shillelagh-shallying! Only a quarter of the top twenty Irish names begin with the O'prefix! There's only one O'name in the top five, yet every single Irish story by US authors is uninventively and unimaginatively is larded with them! This author is an American who lives in Chicago, BTW. Yawn.

Strange Little Girl by John Dean

Rating: WARTY!

"When he’s called to the scene of a desecrated grave, detective John Blizzard..." stop right there. John Blizzard? Really? I'm out of here just based on the ridiculous name. It tells you everything you need to know about this style of writing, and none of it is good.

Ripple of Doubt by Jenifer Ruff

Rating: WARTY!

"When she retreats to a secluded lake house, FBI agent Victoria Heslin is looking for a quiet respite - but upon discovering a woman’s drowned body, she’s pulled into a disturbing murder case where every one of her neighbors is a suspect" Why? It's not her turf. It's the job of the lcoal police. And isn't this just another story where a 'retired' person is pulled back into the job? It's been done so many times now. Yawn.

Obliteration by Darren Wearmouth, James S Murray

Rating: WARTY!

"Humanity faces a war for survival when subterranean creatures begin to emerge from the ground." Holy shit! The last place I'd expect subterranean creatures to emerge from is the ground! Hasn't this been done already in Pacific Rim? Close enough? But it took two people to write it, so it has to be twice as good, right? Yawn.

Monday, September 6, 2021

The Royal Art of Poison by Eleanor Herman

Rating: WORTHY!

Subtitled "Filthy Palaces, Fatal Cosmetics, Deadly Medicine, and Murder Most Foul" this audiobook goes into some detail - often quite nauseating and gruesome, be warned, but at other times highly amusing, and then at others downright depressing to think people were once so ill-educated and poorly informed. It's read admirably well, given the subject matter, by Susie Berneis.

The sad, but in hindsight and with historical distance, amusing thing about the nobility of yesteryear, is that even as they had people to taste their food to catch would-be poisoners, these idiots were in fact slowly poisoning themselves by employing dumb-ass makeup containing lead and arsenic, and adding things to their diet for medicinal purposes, which were also actually poisons.

Herman's well-written book travels through history from ancient times to modern, reporting on various historical personalities, dignitaries, and royalty who had encounters with one poison or another in one way or another, from belladonna to plutonium, some of which survived, others who succumbed slowly or rapidly. This author has done her research, and it shows without being tedious.

The book is fascinating and very educational, especially if you're thinking of writing your own historical novel involving someone's untimely demise! Which I am not, but you might be! I highly commend this book as a worthy read.

The Heap by Sean Adams

Rating: WARTY!

NPR considers this "downright fun"? They're pushing it a couple of months after Champlain Towers South collapsed resulting in 99 deaths? "After the 500-story Los Verticalés apartment tower crashes down, radio DJ Bernard continues broadcasting beneath the rubble while his brother, Orville, works to free him from the collapse." What the fuck is Bernard broadcasting about in a basement? This is ill-considered at best.

The Girl in the Moon by Terry Goodkind

Rating: WARTY!

The title alone is enough to turn me off this novel. The fact that Goodkind authored it is another warning sign. When it comes to writing, he's more of a bad-kind. "Born with a supernatural ability to recognize killers, reclusive Angela Constantine" Constantine, really? That's the best he can do for a character name? Barf!

The Hocus Pocus Magic Shop by Abigail Drake

Rating: WARTY!

"Between her chaotic romantic life and floundering career," and whose fault is that again? "discovering her aunt's spell book is the last thing chemist Grace needs - especially when some of the love potions actually work!" So this jerk has robbed people of self-determination? And it's supposed to be funny? "Will an infuriatingly handsome" Infuriatingly handsome? How many scores of books have that in their blurb? This book is quite obviously shit. "Will an infuriatingly handsome reporter spill her secret before she can clean up the mess?" I hope so because this meddling jackass needs to do some jail time. Hokey poke-ass more like.

Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight

Rating: WARTY!

That title alone is an automatic no. Period.

Enthrall by ZL Arkadie

Rating: WARTY!

"Innocent Jada accepts a job as an assistant to reclusive billionaire Spencer - and her role requires her to move to his remote ranch." Of course it does, because why not render her a prisoner, totally dependent on you if you want to rape her? "When they finally meet, can they resist mixing business with pleasure?" Seriously? Does the book description writer think all readers are dumbasses to ask that dumbass question, or is the book description writer just a dumbass? I can't figure which it is. I do know this book is a disaster though.

Magic Shifts by Ilona Andrews

Rating: WARTY!

"When mercenary Kate Daniels learns of a friend's disappearance, she'll need to follow a trail of sinister clues to save him" Sinister clues! Oh my god! Sinister! We are so fucked! Barf. Although Ilona Andrews is a really cool name that ought to be attached to better, more original novels.

Rise of the Gladiator: Forbidden Planet by Cheree Alsop

Rating: WARTY!

Forbidden planet is way over-used, but get this: "Embarking on a dangerous rescue mission, Captain Nova Ardis takes a risk in bringing along a gladiator as her bodyguard." Why? And why would she want a guy half-dressed in leathers, and carrying a sword and shield when a ray gun can drop this asshole in a heartbeat? Bodyguard? Horseshit. I've had issues before with Alsop's books and this does nothing to earn any faith whatsoever in her ability as a writer. This marks three strikes against her.

Deceived by LA Starkey

Rating: WARTY!

"An entrancing debut" Nope - not at all. It's a cookie-cutter debut the same as all the other love triangle stories. There's nothing new here at all. "High schooler Samantha is Pandora's daughter - and the twin sons of the last Titan will do whatever it takes to claim her heart." Such a sense of entitlement they have! Barf. Abandon hope all ye who enter here.

The Royal Runaway by Lindsay Emory

Rating: WARTY!

"After being left at the altar, princess Thea needs a break from royal life. But the arrival of Scottish spy Nick, her ex-fiancé's brother...." Another weak woman running away, another guy saving her. Absolutely nothing whatsoever new here. Female authors continue to create insulting female main characters with romantic porn where every woman needs it and they all need a man to give it to them. Barf.

Dressed to Kill by Lynn Cahoon

Rating: WARTY!

"When bookstore owner Jill Gardner signs on to perform in a dinner theater charity show, she finds herself in the middle of a very real murder mystery." Unoriginal title and a bookstore owner (again!) solving a murder? Overdone, overblown, over it completely.

And They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton

Rating: WARTY!

"Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy fights to carve out her place in history — even after tragedy upends her life." What fucking place in history? Setting fashion trends? She disappeared from public life after John Kennedy's death and marrying a filthy-rich dude. That tells you all you need to know about her. She's no icon. You want iconic, you need to look at people like Eleanor Roosevelt, Martha Washington, Laura Bush, and Michelle Obama.

The Distant Dead by Lesley Thomson

Rating: WARTY!

"An investigative journalist on the trail of a murderer dies in the arms of Stella Darnell, cleaner turned detective." Seriously? What's her skill set? Finding the dirt on people? Barf.

Sons of Valor by Brian Andrews, Jeffrey Wilson

Rating: WARTY!

"Navy SEAL Keith "Chunk" Redman" Really? Chunk? Redman? Please don't tell me you're going to have him be of American Indian extraction? "...and his elite special ops team must take on a new terrorist group with deadly military power." Another Navy SEAL story? Because we sure don't have anhywhere enar enough stories where the operatives eat bullets for breakfast and don't even shit lead.

Sei Thrillers: Books 1–3 by Ty Hutchinson

Rating: WARTY!

"The first three novels in a nail-biting series!" How thrilling can they be when the author has to unload them dirt cheap, three at a time? "When ex-assassin Sei is given the chance to find the daughter she thought she lost, she’s pulled back into the life she swore off." Yet another tired trope cliched 'comes out of retirement' bullshit tale. There must be a shit-ton of people coming out of retirement days; so how can Social Security be so pressured for funds? LOL!

Played to Death by BV Lawson

Rating: WARTY!

"In this Shamus Award finalist" That tells me all I need to know about the Shamus award's utility! "...former FBI agent Scott Drayco inherits a dilapidated opera house that he hopes to sell. The only problem: A corpse with the letter “G” carved into its chest has just showed up within its walls… Can Scott solve the crime before he becomes the next fatality?" And Scott has to solve this because the locals cops are? Useless? Non-existent? All corrupt? They did it? Barf.

Getting Schooled by Emma Chase

Rating: WARTY!

"When cocky coach Garrett’s teenage sweetheart starts subbing at his school, he offers to show her around" Barf! No. Just no.

Leads & Lynxes by Rebecca Chastain

Rating: WARTY!

"Journalist Kylie has the lead of a lifetime - but how far will she go for a story? She and her gargoyle companion..." Okay, let me out right there. Another dumb-ass story qwith another Disney animal companion. Barf!

Pride and Premeditation by Tirzah Price

Rating: WARTY!

Kerri Maniscalco says this is "A romantic and entertaining page-turner." Who the fuck is Kerri Maniscalco? Never heard of her. Why should I give a flying shit what she says? Seriously? What kind of dumb-ass publisher would put this in a book blurb like it has any meaning whatsoever to the massive majority of readers out there? Another Austen rip-off that adds nothing to the canon, but wet powder. When murder strikes London’s high society, aspiring lawyer Lizzie sets out to solve the case - but infuriating and handsome Darcy keeps interfering" Seriously? This tired retreaded trash is the best you got? 'Infurating' handsome guy? Barf to the max. This is cookie-cutter clone cliché garbage, pure and simple. Now if the author's name were Fanny Price, she might get some traction. As it is, it's just an unrelieved pain in the ass.

Justice Calling by Annie Bellet

Rating: WARTY!

"First in a series" Of course it is! I've had good success with Annie Bellet, but this is a tired, tired plot: "After 25 years spent running from a dangerous sorcerer, Jade relishes her quiet life in Idaho. But when dark forces threaten her friends, she’s forced to dust off her magical powers." The 'coming out of retirment' shtick is so yesteryear.

The Dinner List by Rebecca Serle

Rating: WARTY!

"Sabrina is amazed to discover five people gathered for her 30th birthday - including her ex-boyfriend, an old professor, and Audrey Hepburn." And then she wakes up and finds it was all a dream. Yawn. Either that or she's dead. Double yawn. Why not pick on dead celebrities?

Knit to Kill by Anne Canadeo

Rating: WARTY!

"When the Black Sheep Knitters embark on a weekend getaway to Osprey Island," Is it Black Sheep Island? No! It's Osprey Island! Why are they trespassing? "...they stumble into a deadly mystery! Can Suzanne and her friends unmask a crafty killer?" Nope. I predict he'll pull the wool over their eyes. Yawn. Or should I say 'yarn'?

The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes

Rating: WORTHY!

It came to my attention this morning that I never reviewed this book which I read some time ago and found fascinating, so here we go! Note that this book offers no support for young-Earth creationism or for the Biblical mythology. Eve is used loosely and I wish it had not been, but authors don't always think up the best titles for their books - or worse, they're pushed into choosing misleading titles by their publisher for the sake of boosting sales.

The book is all about mitochondrial genetics. Mitochondrial DNA comes to us only through our mothers. It is separate from the main complement of DNA that we have, and was probably, at one point way, way back, a bacterium that got inside a cell and thrived there. Since it is part of the cell, it comes from the mother's ovum. It is not found in sperm, so this is a matriarchal lineage that can be traced back genetically and can tell enthralling tales of ancestry unavailable to us via other means.

The book focuses on modern European lineages, all of which can be traced back to seven founding groups. note that this doesn't mean that there there were only seven women alive back then. There was never a point where there was one Eve, either. There were many, many more women alive, but only these seven had their mitochondrial DNA lucky enough to survive the ages through to modern times. This means that a heck of a lot of DNA has been lost! We should mourn that.

The groups are referred to as haplogroups, scientifically, which in a very rough sense is somewhat akin to a sub-species or a tribe, but these only very rough approximations. Humans are all the same species, but even within a single species there can be many subgroups. The author attaches female names to each of these sub-, or haplogroups, the initial letter of which is taken from the alphabetical letter by which the haplogroup is known to science. The author gives his fictional the names as follows:

  • Helena
  • Jasmine:
  • Katrine
  • Tara
  • Ursula (Haplogroup U5, excluding subgroup K)
  • Velda
  • Xenia

TO BE COMPLETED!

Little White Lies by Elizabeth McGregor

Rating: WARTY!

On a perfectly ordinary morning, Beth’s husband drives his car at full speed into a truck’s path and is killed instantly. But as Beth slowly reconstructs the sequence of events that led up to that day, she discovers unspeakable secrets that have been lurking beneath her marriage." Beth's a dumbass.

Damage Control John Gilstrap

Rating: WARTY!

"When rescue specialist Jonathan Grave heads to Mexico to free a group of hostages, deadly secrets and violent enemies could put him six feet under! " Put this man named Grave six feet under? Let's hope so. Yawn.

Summer Kisses at Mermaids Point by Sarah Bennett

Rating: WARTY!

"When a potential mermaid sighting brings troves of tourists to Mermaids Point, café owner Laurie is eager for their business. But her newest patron - an undercover journalist - will do whatever it takes to land the scoop of the century." What scoop? Laurie's delicious ice cream? Yawn. The journalist probably thinks mermaid's point is a reference to the fishy female's breasts....

River of Ruin by Jack Du Brul

Rating: WARTY!

The fact that Clown Cussler apparently once said that this author is "the finest adventure writer on the scene today" is more than enough to permanently turn me off his books.

Ink Witch by Lindsey Sparks writing as Lindsey Fairleigh

Rating: WARTY!

"To save her brother's soul, immortal assassin Kat Dubois will have to come out of retirement." So already we're knee-deep in trope with a main charcter named "Kat" and a main character coming out of retirment. Yawn. Is there anything here that's even remotely original? And what's with the dishonesty over the author name? How many frigging names does an author need before they can be accused of purposefully misleading readers? Or do they think their readers are so dumb they won't eventually find out it's the same person? The blurb asks stupidly, "can she find her brother before it's too late?" but who gives a shit? Especially if the author is so unimaginative that she's forced to retread the most tediously go-to purportedly bad-ass female name for a witch slash demon hunter slash paranormal girl. Yawn. That tells me everything I need to know about this waste of my time.

Doormaker by Jamie Thornton

Rating: WARTY!

"Maella is forbidden from opening any doors - or else she'll cause violence and destruction." So she's spent her entire life stuck in the nursery at the hospital where she was born.... "But when circumstances force her to break her family's rule, she enters a portal into a dangerous alternate world" And through there she'll meet a hot, hunky, handsome guy who will take care of her and tell her what to do. I could see that coming a portal away. Yawn.

Blackbirds by Chuck Wendig

Rating: WARTY!

"Miriam Black knows she can't rescue the people whose deaths she foresees. But when a vision of murder shakes her to the core, she risks everything to change the future" If she knows she can't change it, then why risk everything? Unless she's a callous idiot who's never seriously tried to change it. Either way I have no interest in reading about her. Why not call this novel "Black Ops" and start a whole series with derivative titles like "Blackout," "Black Jack,"and "Blackpool"?

Most Marshmallows by Rowboat Watkins

Rating: WORTHY!

Someone with the unlikely name of Rowboat is stealing my shtick! "In a world of ordinary marshmallows, some dare to dream big!" The very nerve! No seriously, I wish Rowboat all the best. I was very unlikely to write about marshmallows (though it has crossed my mind!) and I'd actually have used pictures of marshmallows rather than line drawings had I done this, but what the heck! They're a definite target for a children's book and long overdue! I hope that getting a stamp of approval from the idiots at Kirkus doesn't cause problems for the book's sales: "Expressive line drawings pack beauty, tension, and drama into each page. This sweet flight of fancy will find a young audience eager to devour it" Yeah. Hilarious. But I consider this a worthy idea at least.

Can't Tie Me Down! by Janet Elizabeth Henderson

Rating: WARTY!

"As a virtual girlfriend, Mairi earns good money without ever risking her heart. But when someone tells her online boyfriends that she's in the market for a husband, they begin descending on her Scottish village to unpredictable effect! A hilarious and heartwarming read." How is having these guys swarming around like they're wild dogs and she's a bitch in heat even remotely amusing? Nauseating is more like it. This is harassment. No. Just no. I am not impressed by this author who is a Scot who abandoned her homeland and moved to New Zealand, yet now writes lovingly of Sctoland? Seriously?

Murder in an Irish Village by Carlene O'Connor

Rating: WARTY!

Another 'Irish' book by another O'Connor who again isn't Irish. She hails from Chicago. It was really the 'quaint' that got me on this description: "Murder turns a quaint town on its head when Siobhán O'Sullivan stumbles upon a well-dressed corpse - seated at a table in her family's bistro!" The quaint says to me that this will be yet another condescending look at the Irish. Maybe it won't be, but I lost all faith in it from that alone. The title doesn't help, and this description: "If Janet Evanovich and Maeve Binchy wrote a book together, Murder in an Irish Village would be the result" really turned me off because I'm not a fan of either of those authors and even were I, I wouldn't trust that this author could emulate either of them much less both together. So essentially, the description failed to do its job - again!