White Sun Press


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White Sun Press is a new, independent press designed to publish fiction and nonfiction ebooks by select authors.

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Maya Papaya    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $4.99 USD. 71940 words. Published by White Sun Press  on December 19, 2011. .

(5.00)
11-year-old Maya Papaya has a tail. That’s right, a tail...and stranger still, it seems to have a mind of its own. Maya's tail is a big secret and she has to wear these itchy tail pants and can’t have sleepovers or go swimming like the other kids. She still lives a fairly normal life with Mr. Norbert, though...until a knock on the door puts events in motion that send her across the world.
Shadow: Allie's War, Book Four    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $6.99 USD. 222510 words. Published by White Sun Press  on December 11, 2011. .

Following the disappearance of her husband Revik, the infamous ‘Sword’ and leader of the rebellion against humanity, Allie finds herself despised by every free seer in the western world…and most of those in the East. Even those on her own side think she’s lost her mind when she decides to try and save Revik on her own, despite the fact that he’s as likely to kill her as thank her for it.
Jack Dervish, Super Spy    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $4.99 USD. 69010 words. Published by White Sun Press  on November 11, 2011. .

0.75 star(4.67)
Jack Dervish was just four-years-old when the nasty incident took place at 74 Eaton Place and his super-spy parents vanished. Now Jack is twelve, and after years of living in his parents’ super-spy lair, training in every manner of super-spy skills, he’s decided to attend school. After all, how can he foil the international crime syndicate if he can’t pass as a normal, youngish Londoner?
The Alien Club    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $2.99 USD. 29080 words. Published by White Sun Press  on October 12, 2011. .

Suki thought she knew what she’d signed up for when her pal, Rishi, invited her to a corporate party at one of the new alien fetish clubs. The new “must have” experience for the uber-rich and uber-bored supposedly involved sex-starved aliens who could give orgasms just by looking at a person. But when Suki arrives, she soon finds out that the clubs are really about something else entirely.
The Kung Fu Instructor: An Erotic Novella    by Blue Daniels
Price: $1.99 USD. 21670 words. Published by White Sun Press  on September 21, 2011. .

Dylan wants to be a ring fighter more than anything. If she could just stop obsessing about her gorgeous kung fu instructor, Luc, she might be able to focus enough on the martial arts to be able to pull it off. But the dreams she’s been having about him for the past few weeks, convincing her that she knows him somehow, make that well nigh impossible, (Explicit material).
The Box: An Indian Tale    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 16400 words. Published by White Sun Press  on August 24, 2011. .

Priscilla putters along in her usual life of bridge and gossip and coffee shops and shopping at the local markets in the small Indian town where she lives, until one morning, the mysterious man known only as the Pharsee gives her a box. The thing is filthy, twitchy and just plain wrong…but no matter what Priscilla tries, or how many cleaning boys she fires, she simply cannot get rid of it.
Elephant    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 19070 words. Published by White Sun Press  on August 3, 2011. .

Didier is an elephant, but he isn’t sure if he likes being an elephant all that much. He lives in Mumbai with his mother, who tells fantastic tales of the wild, before humans captured her and turned her into a domestic animal. Neither she nor the rest of Mr. Rahol’s herd, however, understand Didier's quest to determine whether it might be better to be some other animal instead.
Marla the Lemur    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 19330 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 31, 2011. .

Marla’s boyfriend, Billy, might live a little too much in a fantasy world. Then again, Marla sees lemurs in the apple tree outside and wonders if the little man she sees screaming at her from Billy’s shoulder is actually there. Insanity might be one way to get out of a bad relationship. Following your boyfriend into his imaginary world might be another.
The Black Men and Steven Spielberg    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 16260 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 30, 2011. .

Semi-autobiographical but mostly fantastical essay on growing up in the outdoors of California, and the importance of having family just as quirky and not-quirky as you are.
The Vampire Market    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $1.99 USD. 17460 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 29, 2011. .

Vlad is a bored, irritated vampire living in San Jose, California. Tired of the neverending parade of life, cable television and boring food, he lets his friend, a flatulent demon named Roz, talk him into a night on the town at the monthly Vampire Markets at the Winchester Mystery House. Little does he know, Vlad’s life will never be the same again.
Daydreams of the Apocalypse: A Collection of Shorts    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $2.99 USD. 37420 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 12, 2011. .

Six stories of the apocalypse, from the point of view of an ex-stock broker, a crow, a young girl, a soldier turned holy warrior, a sentient automobile and a being who incarnates every few centuries as a human only to be killed and have to do the whole thing all over again. The world is ending, about to end or long gone in these tales by JC Andrijeski.
Monkey: An Indian Tale    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 20090 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 10, 2011. .

(5.00)
Tugli lives happily in a metal box on a friendly street where vendors hawk wares and a Buddhist stupa sits at his back. Everything pretty much goes the same way, every day, until the day the pickle lady stops delivering the pickles. After that, a disgruntled monkey, a three-legged dog and a kindly old woman pretty much disrupt the course of Tugli’s life forever.
Snowfall    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 16410 words. Published by White Sun Press  on April 21, 2011. .

Sent on a recon mission to a planet long abandoned to the devastation her species wreaked on it, the girl is shocked to find survivors after so many years. But a long time has passed and the world these strangers have built is based on rules she can't comprehend...even before they force her into a test that might get her killed.
Sword: Allie's War, Book Three    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $4.99 USD. 166600 words. Published by White Sun Press  on April 11, 2011. .

0.5 star(4.50)
After losing her husband only months earlier, Allie finds herself the new official face of the seer race, fighting to prevent humans and seers from exploding into all-out war. But her husband, Revik, isn’t really gone. Instead he’s transformed into someone she barely knows. Unlike her, he wants war...and revenge...and will do whatever it takes to bring the human civilization to its knees.
Bird Magics    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 14660 words. Published by White Sun Press  on March 2, 2011. .

0.5 star(4.50)
Ulak is a crow. A berry addict and eccentric in the crow community living in the courtyard behind a row of white houses, he decides one day that the humans have to die. Convinced he knows the secret to making this happen, he shares his ambitions with his two friends, Fark and Jaak. They, of course, think he’s nuts...at least until the white lights begin to appear in the sky.
He Lacks Utility    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 15640 words. Published by White Sun Press  on February 27, 2011. .

Reggie Brinks just wanted to ride out the deadly virus that threatened to kill the world. A few months in cryogenic freeze while they came up with a cure, and he’d be right as rain. But the civilization that greets him on the other side is a pretty far cry from the one he left behind, and infuriatingly, he finds his opinions and money just don’t have quite the pull they had when he left.
Shield: Allie's War, Book Two    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $4.99 USD. 167870 words. Published by White Sun Press  on January 16, 2011. .

(5.00)
Grappling with her identity as "Bridge," a being thought to herald the end of humanity, isn't even Allie's biggest problem. She's also dealing with being married to a seer while trying to stop the Rook she put in the White House from starting a war. Then the boy appears. A highly dangerous telekinetic seer, he doesn't appear to have aged in over 100 years. Worse, he thinks Allie belongs to him.
Dirt    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 12730 words. Published by White Sun Press  on January 13, 2011. .

Due to an untimely mishap with a runaway piano, a thief and a homeless lady with a very pointy umbrella, Harold gets to know some of his neighbors living in a single tree planter box on a New York City Street.
Rook: Allie's War, Book One    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $4.99 USD. 153890 words. Published by White Sun Press  on January 9, 2011. .

0.5 star(4.45)
28-year-old San Francisco native, Allie Taylor, at least thought she was human. But when she meets her first real seer, a race of human-like beings discovered in the 1900s, he tells her that not only is she a seer, like him, but that all the other seers believe she's going to end the world. Unfortunately, no matter what she does, everything that happens after that only seems to prove him right.
New Girl    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 14650 words. Published by White Sun Press  on October 13, 2010. .

Calling the new girl at the office, Lucy, odd is more than a tad bit of understatement. In a short period of time, she frees Amber of her inhibitions, her prestigious corporate project, her teeth, her sense of style...and her sanity. A bizarre tale of corporate cannibalism, or a generous sacrifice for a fellow human being? It all depends on your perspective.
...Beware the Jabberwock, My Son    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 15970 words. Published by White Sun Press  on October 13, 2010. .

(5.00)
A squad of soldiers takes a ride out to the middle of nowhere, thinking they’re being punished for posting pictures of the Lieutenant’s old lady. But in an empty stretch of desert lives a cave where they stumble across a man whose presence they can’t explain...who speaks in riddles and seems to know them. Before they can figure out what he wants, they're already marked men.
Organic    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 12910 words. Published by White Sun Press  on October 1, 2010. .

What if in the future your car were made of as many animal parts as machine? What if it became self-aware and less and less enamored of toting you and your family around, getting its seats covered in ice cream and being left in parking lots for hours on end? What if it and some of its friends decided to do something about it? In Organic, meet your car. And be nervous. Very, very nervous.
A Letter to the Establishment: The Cautionary Tale of Hunter S. Thompson    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $1.99 USD. 14470 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 18, 2010. .

Drug-crazed, iconic, outrageous--Hunter S. Thompson’s own reputation as the rock star writer of the 1970s obscured the meaning behind much of his work, even for many of his fans. An essay on Hunter S. Thompson as a journalist, and the implications and intention behind his style of “gonzo journalism” on current day media…as well as what set him apart.
Journey Into Jung's Red Book: Liber Primus    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $2.99 USD. 17060 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 17, 2010. .

A personal and theoretical look at “Liber Primus,” the first of the collection of books written by psychologist Carl Jung that were collectively entitled “The Red Book.” Unpublished until October of 2009, “The Red Book” is considered by many, including Jung himself, to be the foundation of all of Jung’s groundbreaking theories and writings to follow.
The Program    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 13350 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 12, 2010. .

A successful, beige-wearing business woman is minding her own business, blending in, not making waves. But after hundreds of identical business motivation conventions, each with their own system for getting ahead, maximizing your potential, executing success, demonstrating excellence…she meets someone who offers to show her the evil pattern behind it all. Sort of.
Karma    by JC Andrijeski
Price: $0.99 USD. 16260 words. Published by White Sun Press  on July 12, 2010. .

What if Hitler and Churchill were actually playing out an age-old battle between two rivals that had been incarnating together over and over across time? Exploring roles from evil to good to lazy and decadent in an attempt to understand the human experience, one of these beings seems destined to destroy the other, no matter what the circumstances, no matter how much the world changes over time.


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White Sun Press 's favorite authors on Smashwords


Smashwords book reviews by White Sun Press

  • Crow's Nest on Jan. 30, 2011
    star star star star star
    Irene Watts' writing always seems to transport me into a mythical world, with odd and neurotic creatures somehow endearing in their vulnerabilities and inherent humanity. Fragments of a whole, her Appetite and Sentiment in the Crow's Nest seem to make up the primary characters of a single being lurching through the vast ocean of a wider consciousness, occasionally boarded by a blind and malicious being like Montag, or watched carefully by the more compassionate birds. I find her work charming...and the visual accompaniment only lends to the poetry.
  • To Inhabit on Feb. 06, 2011
    star star star star star
    Irene Watts' writing is more like entering a state of mind, an existential moment. There is an element of being lost inside a deconstructive haze. And, if you're anything like me, there's humor there, in the dark corners. Kind of Edward Goreyish, "To Inhabit" is like the Doubtful Guest only with the protagonist as her own suspicious intruder.
  • The Bizarre Tongue on Feb. 06, 2011
    star star star star star
    Irene Watts' "The Bizarre Tongue" takes the reader on a journey through the birth, cycles of life and discovery and realization (or ideation) of a consciousness to a form of enlightenment...but it seems to me that is not the crux of the story. Instead, it is how the world responds to different forms of beauty, missing the core of experience living inside that transformation as they try to make it manageable, marketable, attainable, material...classifiable. Written as a bird-filled poem, rich with imagery and quirks of humor covering over a deeper sadness at the blind groping of most "seekers" and marketers of seeking, this story stays with you, poignant and haunting.
  • The Sun Shone on Feb. 06, 2011
    star star star star star
    A quirky, odd, disjointed tale, "The Sun Shone" features homicidal yet sympathetic bulls, back braces, snot, gods and goddesses, vitamin packs, angry pharmacists, Jesus and GI Joe. The images are difficult and visceral. The humor jabs out of nowhere, at times making me laugh aloud. Makes Woody Allen's tales of neurosis in New York seem tame in comparison.
  • Cold Comfort on Feb. 06, 2011
    star star star star
    Interesting story, more about the changing of consciousness and its vessel, combined with an almost humorous view of the randomness of coincidence than about cryogenics per se. Some interesting ideas in here (the image of robots "cavorting in caves" will stick with me for some time), and moves quickly, almost Asminov-fashion in terms of style and sparse, dialog-heavy style. A very good read.
  • Dead Letters on Feb. 06, 2011
    star star star star star
    A dark, twisted tale of death, office fires and spam from beyond the grave. Eerie tone, well-written. Brilliant.
  • After on Feb. 07, 2011
    star star star star
    A sweet, well-written pondering around death from the perspective of an artist and free spirit.
  • Firebug on Feb. 07, 2011
    star star star star star
    Great story - very well written with a visual, in the moment style, believable dialogue and characters. It's also extremely creepy (in a good way). Has a bit of the Butcher Boy vibe to me, only with a great twist at the end. Definitely worth a read!
  • Centaur of the Crime on June 24, 2011
    star star star star star
    This story really is “CSI meets CS Lewis,” and a really fun read. Dayna Chrissie, Office of the Medical Examiner in LA, thinks she is about to investigate a run-of-the-mill murder, but a number of facts don’t add up in the case and she finds herself instead transported into another world. There, she is promptly (and unwillingly) enlisted in helping to stop a war by solving the murder of their king. She has a time limit to accomplish this, of course...all without equipment or a lab and surrounded by suspects who seem like the product of a nervous breakdown she suspects she might be having, and/or some kind of chemically-induced hallucination. I won’t say too much more about the plot, as I don’t want to do the spoiler thing, but I absolutely love the rag-tag band of characters the heroine collects from this other world. Not only are they all likable, sympathetic characters (not always easy to do in fantasy, where it’s easy to follow the tropes and create really cardboard archetypes instead of living, breathing “people”), but Dayna really does get handed every single “loser” in this fantastical world. Every one of them is completely endearing, from the centaur with a father-complex, to my personal favorite, the world’s only unlucky Fayleene (a deer-like creature famous for their inbuilt good-luck-bringing qualities...well, most of them anyway). When the group follows the evidence back to “our” world, the story only gets better...some of the scenes of this group trying to survive Los Angeles were laugh out-loud funny, which doesn’t often happen for me with books. Angel manages the nearly impossible...creating memorable characters in the midst of an intriguing mystery, action, humor and heart. There is even room for a little romance in the mix. I look forward to the next installment in the series!
  • Sharpest Tool in the Shed on July 04, 2011
    star star star star star
    Really great short story - in fact one of the best I've read in a long time. The characters are well drawn and I got sucked in enough to be at the edge of my seat by the ending, as there's a strong thriller component in addition to the humor. Surprisingly touching ending too, given where it starts - strong recommend!
  • The Taste of Shrimp on July 04, 2011
    star star star star
    Very sweet short story, with a lot of heart like all of Laura Ware's work. I'll read pretty much anything by her, because there's always such a sincerity to her characters and situations. This is about the compromises one has to sometimes make to keep a marriage intact.
  • Afterburn on July 04, 2011
    star star star star
    Really fun and original urban fantasy novel, with a tough heroine and one of the most fascinating worlds I've read about in a long time. Once I got past the initial confusion as to Karen Abrahamson's version of Seattle, I was completely hooked on the world and its characters, and read the entire story in 24 hours. The idea of redrawing the "map" of the world in kind of a cold war stalemate occurring between and within countries totally fascinated me. Rather than a "magical" world, this felt very grounded and real to me...I found myself sucked into the power struggles between this off-shoot of Homeland Security and the rest of the agency, as well as between the different characters within the branch itself. The main character, Vallon Drake, is an agent of the GSA and one of the "gifted" tasked with holding the nation's boundaries and correcting accidental changes to the landscape by nascent gifted who are unaware of their abilities. In her world, if one is gifted they can access an ability to remake the physical...erase a house or change a building into a parking lot with some basic tools and their inherent abilities. But woe to the person (or people) who happen to be inside the building being redrawn! The story opens with Vallon looking for a colleague of hers who is caught in just this predicament. While trying to save his life, she ends up a murder suspect, and in the course of trying to clear her name uncovers a wider plot to destroy the NW coast of the United States. It's a fun ride, and I'm really looking forward to more books in this world!
  • The Bikini Wedding on July 04, 2011
    star star star star
    I don't normally read a lot of Christian fiction, but I enjoyed this. It's a sweet story and the characters and situation were well drawn and touching, with a quirky yet uplifting ending.
  • The Society of Secret Cats on July 04, 2011
    star star star star star
    I really enjoyed this - kind of like "Where the Wild Things Are" mixed with a bit of Lewis Carroll and a dash of J.R.R. Tolkien with the scary spider creatures. My only complaint really is that it seems almost like too big of a story for a short story...would love to see a novel with this world, or even a novella. It reminds me of those dark yet whimsical stories I loved most when I was a kid (and still do!)
  • Skin and Bone on July 05, 2011
    star star star star
    Fascinating world with a tough and very authentic heroine whose gift as a "storyteller" is what both gives her power and also marks her for death. I found myself drawn completely into this world and its characters pretty much from the beginning, when Sally stumbles in to find her grandmother murdered on her own kitchen floor. She manages to pass Sally a final story as she dies, about a creature called a "Bone Collector" who hunts storytellers like the two of them. From that moment forward, Sally is both chasing and hunting one of the more frightening villains I've read in a long time, who eats the bones of storytellers to take their stories into himself. He hunts her friends, her father-figure, Doc, her lover, Rafe, all in an attempt to collect on the deal her grandmother made with him many years previous. In the process, Sally is forced to brave the void to other worlds, and to do whatever she can to kill the Bone Collector before he kills her. It's difficult to summarize this story, as so much of it is in mood and feel, which alternates between darkly poetic and gritty and very urban/real feeling. The characters are sympathetic and multi-dimensional as they struggle with the multiple realities they are facing. The world which Sally inhabits used to be a part of our world, but for reasons unknown "drifts away" from the world we knew, until no one there needs to eat, and there is no contact with anyone past the void at the edge of town. That alone forms such an interesting backdrop...this fading world and how the people of the town cope with their situation. It actually at times reminded me of the Gunslinger stories by Stephen King, part mythos and part reality...or some of Neil Gaiman's work. A very unusual voice and world, and one that will stay with me probably for quite some time.
  • Chasing the Minotaur on July 10, 2011
    star star star star
    The opening sequence of the book is really evocative, and pulled me in immediately to want to know more about the mystery of the painter, Emery Lake, and his work about to be unveiled in NYC after years of producing nothing. I really enjoyed the interactions with the famous, long-dead painters when Lake and his daughter travel to Provence and he "meets" (or creates?) Renoir, Cezanne, Picasso and Van Gogh...although I admit they worked for me better as characters sometimes more than others. I really loved the main characters throughout, particularly that of Emery Lake himself. Overall, this was a great read and I found myself being pulled back to it, again and again. Much of it is about grief and moving on, especially as an artist...and finding a new foot forward from which to create after the tremendous loss of a loved one. It's also about being a parent, and how sometimes you have to make it through not only for yourself but for those who love and need you. All in all, a great book, and one that really showed a tremendous knowledge and appreciation of the subject matter by the author, including the historical periods demonstrated and the personalities of the artists portrayed. Will look forward to reading more by Terry Hayman for sure!
  • Monsoon on Aug. 01, 2011
    star star star star star
    Too funny. Definitely captures, err...something...in the experience of attending retreats during the monsoon in the land of monkeys, dal and the Dalai Lama. Worth a read if you enjoy laughing at the absurdity of culture clashes and spiritual seekers who take themselves too seriously.
  • Fires of Alexandria on Aug. 10, 2011
    star star star star star
    Really fantastic alternate history/historical novel with an excellent lead character in the form of Heron, a mathematician and "miracle inventor" in the time of the Roman occupation of Alexandria. Heron, a real historical figure, is portrayed with a twist in Carpenter's book as a woman (the twin brother to the male Heron, who takes his identity when he dies, as she is the real mastermind of the pair, as portrayed in this novel). The main premise surrounds the mystery surrounding the cause of the fires that burned down the Library of Alexandria...but the novel takes us through numerous other political intrigues happening at the time, as well as other historical figures Heron interacts with. There is also an interesting (fictional) character in the form of "the barbarian" from the North, who hires Heron to fashion for him a mechanical army from her "miracle" technologies, and in the process she prematurely invents the steam engine. Speaking of steam, in terms of the miracles themselves, there's a bit of a steampunk flavor the book at times, even without the actual steam power. Overall, a huge recommend for strong characters, a believable alternate history (and interpretation of real history) that is completely fascinating and compelling. Add to that strong action, mystery and intrigue throughout the course of the novel, and it's a tough one to put down.
  • Three Scars - J.D. Cutler and Michael Angel on Nov. 23, 2011
    star star star star star
    Three ways a person can scar themselves...all of them very different, and told with both heart and a wry sense of humor. The last story in particular was really visceral, and definitely squirm-inducing, (but in a good way), as well as being the funniest of the three. A well-written and interesting collection of tales that definitely stay with you. Recommend, especially if you like stories that sit somewhere between black humor, memoir, drama and horror.
  • A Road Painted in Scarlet on Nov. 23, 2011
    star star star star star
    Really great vignette about a real-life incident on the dangerous Ortega Highway in southern California. The outcome manages to shock even as the author conveys its near-inevitability...as well as its greater significance. To me, the story is more about the humanity of the narrator himself, and the combination of guilt and horror that accompanies those thoughts that arise in all of us from time to time, whether we admit it or not. The honesty of the writer and the dark humor mixed with real regret, really serves almost as a dual warning...about our mortality in those tin-can devices we tend to treat as indestructible, and how easy it is to wish ill on others we don't know, especially when they scare the pants off us. Highly recommend!
  • The Fiddler's Talisman on Jan. 10, 2012
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    This review is from: The Fiddler's Talisman (Kindle Edition) Really cute, fun story with endearing characters...I love the fairy godmother in a bar scenes, really funny and the voice of Evie, our fairy godmother narrator, makes the book just fly along. Great blend of magic and fantasy and absolutely grounded reality, along with history and classical music and everyday relationship woes. The love story is refreshingly innocent, too, and doesn't insist on the kind of cynicism common in a lot of similar fare. I also thought the book gave a nice take on New York itself, almost an "old fashioned" view of the city, like used to be portrayed more in movies a few decades ago, that I found faintly nostalgic. The setting and how it is experienced through the characters grounds the book even further, blending fantasy with reality in a convincing and almost seamless way. Definitely promises to be a great series - I look forward to more!
  • The Weight of Moonlight on Jan. 11, 2012
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    Really amazing book, and this coming from someone who doesn't normally read a lot of stories about werewolves. A book and its sequel rolled into one, Talbot's story starts us off by introducing us to Mason Locke, the new guy in this small town in Pennsylvania (after growing up in NYC), who is quickly thrown unknowningly into a war between werewolves and their historical enemies, "The Huntsmen," who both had a hand in creating the original werewolves, enslaved them and then warred with them in the time since. Masquerading as highly skilled wood-workers, the Huntsmen start off by trying to keep the more dangerous elements of the werewolf community in check, but graduate to mass extermination under an insane and sadistic leader who uses the werewolves' "less than human" status as an excuse to satisfy his own twisted appetites. A really great and multi-layered book, with wonderful characters, some really fun twists and an interesting and unique world. A cut above most in this genre...and also featuring a very sexy hero and heroine and a touching love story. Highly recommend!
  • At Road's End on Jan. 12, 2012
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    Really great historical novel that takes place at the beginning of the end of the Anasazi cliff dweller's cultural dominance in the SW of the United States. I love the way this book was written, from the point of view of an "outsider" to that culture, a Native American from far south of the cliff dweller's region (prior to the Aztecs, from a rival tribe to the Mayans). The cultural clash is handled really well through a love story between one of the Anasazi women and a man from the warrior caste from the lands around Lake Texcoco, from a civilization that calls itself the Azcapotzalco. At the time Saadia is writing about, they share the fertile region with the Culhuacan, and a new group of bloodthirsty outsiders, the Aztecs. Hearing about the different viewpoints and philosophies of the very different religions and cultural practices of the two regions (even prior to the Aztecs, all of the natives in that region performed blood sacrifices with enemy captives, something the Anasazi didn't do, at least not in the same way). Doing this through the viewpoint of the young lovers works very well in my opinion, and lends a much more grounded and realistic lens into these people...while also using their emotional tension to make this less of a "history lesson" and more about people the reader cares about. I really enjoyed watching the warrior from the south, Tecpatl, struggle to understand the cliff dwellers with their less hierarchical society and the lack of birth castes that determine both social status and one's future work. Their love story was really charming and the action sequences exciting...all in all great read, especially if you are fascinated by this region, its peoples and its history. I am looking forward to the sequel, too, which sounds like it will be set more in those southern lands in the context of the burgeoning war with the Aztec invaders. Highly recommend!
  • Nate Rocks the World on Jan. 22, 2012
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    A cute middle grade story about a boy named Nate who lives in his own world, at least part of the time. He struggles with school, a bratty older sister, and the daughter of his mom's best friend, who rats him out on everything and takes credit for their partnered projects at school...and ends on a sweet note where a lot of those struggles are (mostly) resolved. A cute, light read, fun for kids...it almost reminded more of books that were around when I was a kid, without a lot of modern bite to it at all.
  • Double-take Tales on Jan. 22, 2012
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    This collection of stories by Donna Brown is delightfully dark and contains fascinating characters with stories that feel off in all of the right (and wrong) ways. I think my favorite of these was "Poison," the story of a wife's struggle with an indifferent and shallow mate, but all of them are clever and unexpected with fun twists. "Round Trip" is the story of a five-pound note as it changes hands through a slew of interesting characters, including a taxi driver, a waitress in a dive pub and a bingo parlour, telling each of their mini-stories. "C'est la Vie" is a grim story of murder and mayhem that also sneaks under your skin and pulls you into the mind of its rather off-kilter but oddly sympathetic narrator. All of these stories are great reads - a collection reminiscent of Shirley Jackson or Roald Dahl's more twisted shorts.
  • The Corridors of the Dead on Jan. 22, 2012
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    You gotta love a fantastical, apocalyptic novel set primarily in Eureka, Bakersfield and Barstow California and ending up in Vegas, NV. Or at least I do. Having traveled those murky roads myself, I couldn't help getting a kick out of the familiar settings and believable yet fantastical characters that evolved out of the crossing of those worlds with the supernatural. While at times the world-building got a little too heavy and slowed the story more than I would have liked, I found the characters great, the narrative voice of Mattie the Circle K graveyard shift employee, artist, lesbian and supernatural badass in training to really carry the story. The action is also engaging and the cast of supporting characters a lot of fun with some great chemistry between them. Allen has created a unique and interesting world populated by colorful and likeable characters (and truly horrifying villains), so I look forward to seeing where this series goes.
  • Gamers on Jan. 25, 2012
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    I loved this book...to me it was one of those books where you think it's going to be about the premise (which was cool in and of itself), but it really ends up being so much more than that, not only in terms of plot but in the people. The characters really got under my skin and felt very realistic to me, which isn't always the case in books of this kind. In terms of the premise, Gabby's world is pretty much of the logical extension of where we are heading now. It's a virtual reality type landscape, where instead of attending school the way children do now, they essentially are playing one giant video game in order to earn point thresholds that might allow them to make it into university. Carpenter does a great job setting up the world in the first part of the book, and establishing the main character, Gabby, as one of the ambitious overachievers in her class...yet also hinting she's not above a little hacking and game manipulation to help out her friends...especially those who struggle to maintain the high scores that come so easily to her, due to her high thoughts per second (TPS) scores. But then the story goes into a totally different direction, with a mystery thrown Gabby's way about the true purpose of the game, and what's really at stake for those who don't make it to "university." Wrapped into all of this is a lot of action and quirky characters, especially the frags who live outside the society, and the surprising depth behind one of the "mean girl" characters who seems totally different when you first meet her in the book. A really great read, and I'll definitely be looking for the sequel. There is still so much I want to know about the world. While it resolved well for a book one, a ton of mysteries remain as to who really runs the world and what will happen with the frags and the other kids who don't make it into university (and those who do). There are also a lot of great villains and potential villains...one character in particular who could go either way...so really left on a highly suspenseful note.
  • Blind Veil on Jan. 29, 2012
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    I really enjoyed this book, and it is a fast read. It starts out with a very likeable character, Emmett, an older, African-American man who owns a farm in a time and a place where that didn't happen very often. When a crime is committed on his land, he is forced to cover it up because of who and what he is to the other ranchers, but it haunts him until the day he dies, and pretty much tears his family apart. The story starts there, but then fast-forwards about forty-odd years to his nephew, who is a NYC beat cop and a lot more affected by those past events than he knows. What follows from there is one of the most intriguing plot lines I've read in a long time...it reminded me of "They Live," a movie I really loved when I was younger, only without the dark humor of that movie. Instead it carries a far more serious tone, one somewhere between the X-Files and a police procedural. Simms, the main character, has a pretty normal life for a cop, until one day he is kidnapped by a bizarre and seemingly scientist who tells him a fantastical story about a conspiracy threatening to annihilate the human race. In the process of his kidnapping, the scientist shoots Simms up with a substance that he claims will allow him to see the "truth." After that, Simms' life is never the same...as a reader you're put through the wringer with him as he starts seeing things he can't explain, ends up in a mental institution and then on the run, all the while caught up in a conspiracy whose players he can only guess at, some of whom appear to be friends he's known and trusted for years. If I had any gripe at all (and it's a small one), it was only that it ended a little abruptly, and I would have liked more regarding the final payoff where the reader finally learns the true extent of what's going on and Simms' connection to all of it. But I really hope Lorde is planning a sequel, because I definitely want to read that book! Strong recommend.