Category: Reviews

DRIFT by Andrew Cyrus Hudson – Review

DRIFT by Andrew Cyrus Hudson – Review
Posted January 2, 2012 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

Today I would like to welcome Andrew Hudson to my blog, whose first novel Drift is now available in e-book format. Drift is about a man who is trying to fix past mistakes in his life but ends up getting more than he bargained for.  When Hudson asked me to review Drift, he mentioned that […]

EVERBLOSSOM by Larissa Hinton – Review

EVERBLOSSOM by Larissa Hinton – Review
Posted December 29, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 1 Comment

I’d like to welcome Larissa Hinton to Books, Bones & Buffy.  Larissa was kind enough to ask me to review her newest e-book, Everblossom: A Short Story and Poetry Anthology. Everblossom is a short collection with alternating stories and poems, and can easily be read in one sitting.  The entries are grouped in three sections, […]

MORTALITY BRIDGE by Steven R. Boyett – Review

MORTALITY BRIDGE by Steven R. Boyett – Review
Posted December 15, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

If you’re planning a trip to Hell to get back your lost love, the best way to get there is by Checker Cab, because if you live in Los Angeles, the entrance to Hell is probably not where you think it is.  This particular cab driver, however, knows the way and will get you there, […]

EVERY PRECIOUS THING by Brett Battles – Review

EVERY PRECIOUS THING by Brett Battles – Review
Posted December 8, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

Brett Battles is just like a carnival juggler.  Imagine one of those burly guys with a bare oiled chest, juggling impossible objects in front of a stunned crowd by torchlight.  Imagine a chainsaw, a sabre, a fiery club, all flying in air at the same time, and Battles below keeping the whole thing spinning with […]

THE VAGABOND KING by James Conway – Review

THE VAGABOND KING by James Conway – Review
Posted November 30, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

Since starting this blog, I have had the opportunity to read several debut books by new writers who are publishing their works exclusively for the digital market. Today I am happy to introduce James Conway, whose ebook The Vagabond King is now available. Written in poetic prose with the blues as a driving rhythmic force, […]

READY PLAYER ONE by Ernest Cline -Review

READY PLAYER ONE by Ernest Cline -Review
Posted November 21, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 3 Comments

So, after reading Ready Player One, it turns out I’m a geek.  I suspected I was, since I’ve always had a fondness for all things geeky. But although I was never really into video games (I do remember, however, obsessively playing a game called “Castle” sometime around 1988 or ’89.  It was loaded on my […]

HAZARDOUS CHOICES by Joseph Rinaldo – Review

HAZARDOUS CHOICES by Joseph Rinaldo – Review
Posted November 16, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 2 Comments

Joseph Rinaldo’s first book, A Spy at Home, was a thriller about a CIA operative who embezzles nine million dollars from his employer and the repercussions of his actions, and featured an endearing character with Down syndrome.  Hazardous Choices, his second release, also has a main character with Down syndrome, but that is about the […]

ZONE ONE by Colson Whitehead – Review

ZONE ONE by Colson Whitehead – Review
Posted November 5, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

Let’s get this straight: Zone One is a zombie novel.  There is blood, viscera, various bodily fluids streaming through the gutters, dead men walking, and heads being blown off right and left.  There is terror and running away and hiding from the dead.  There is a dying world without electricity, ash-covered streets, and bleak prospects […]

WONDERSTRUCK by Brian Selznick – Review

WONDERSTRUCK by Brian Selznick – Review
Posted October 23, 2011 by Tammy in Reviews / 0 Comments

The wonderfully inventive Brian Selznick broke new ground in 2007 with The Invention of Hugo Cabret, a “children’s” book that combined text and illustrations in a way that had never really been done before.  In fact, half the book is text and the other half full-spread illustrations, and the illustrated passages tell just as much […]