Showing posts with label Joy Spraycar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joy Spraycar. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2012

It's been a few days...

Unfortunately, between being sick, swamped at work and at the part-time gig and basketball tournaments the past weekend, this weekend and next weekend, I haven't had a lot of time to post to the blog as wanted.  However, that's going to change with this weekend.  I'm dedicating the next couple days (when not at tournaments) to lining up reviews to be posted.

So I've decided to tease the books I'm going to review, not in the order that I'm going to review them, but in alphabetical order (I'm crazy like that, alphabetizing books).

That being said, the following books have been read and are on my shelf to be reviewed as you read this:
  • Acheron by Sherrilyn Kenyon
  • Crusader Gold by David Gibbins
  • Grave Witch by Kalayna Price
  • No Mercy by Sherrilyn Kenyon
  • Quicksilver by Joy Spraycar
  • Rabbit in the Road by Oliver Campbell and Danika Potts
  • Remembering Christmas by Dan Walsh
  • Second Earth by Eunice and Ed Vought
  • The Guardian by Sherrilyn Kenyon 
There are more, but these are the ones at the top of my list that will be posted first.  Please note, my reviews will clearly state how I acquired the books, whether I purchased them on my own from a book store, or if it was given to me as a review copy by the author or publisher in accordance with FCC standards.

Each book listed above will turn into a link as I get a review posted.

Happy reading!

Monday, December 12, 2011

Not Musing Monday Answer Today

Since today's topic is actually a topic I want to cover in a longer, more indepth discussion that's multifaceted, I'm not doing today's Musing Monday's produced by Should Be Reading.

Instead, later today I should be posting a review of No Mercy by Sherrilyn Kenyon and Quicksilver by Joy Spraycar.

If you're interested in answering the Musing Monday question in this post, feel free to. The question is:
I once knew a man who read about WWII. He read everything he could get his hands on on the subject. He had a whole wall of books that were all about WWII. It amazed me. How could he continue to find one subject that engrossing? My mother, on the other hand, loves to read best sellers. I’ve known other people who read science fiction to the exclusion of everything else; for others it was philosophy, self-help, or history. 
So, to the questions...
  • What kind of books do you like to read? 
  • Why? Provide specific examples.