slym2none
"Lazy extract brewer."
"Starshield Sentinels" by Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman
A good effort in space-faring fantasy/sci-fi by the team that brought us many great D&D-based books.
"Mystery" by Peter Straub
I really liked this book. Straub writes like Stephen King at times, but it's not aping. And it's only at times, the rest he is his own writer, and he's good.
"Assumed Identity" by David Morrell
A slick spy novel, where the antagonist has to use his own identity instead of one of the many covers he's used over the years, and finds out he doesn't know who he really is.
"Dark Maze" by David Adcock
This is a good crime-noir style book. A quick read, it stays just shy of being more Mickey Spillaine than a Mickey Spillaine story.
"A Small Death In Lisbon" by Robert Wilson
This was a really good book. It sets you up with two different stories, one starting in Nazi Germany, that end up coming together in the here-and-now to solve the murder of a young girl in Lisbon.
"Primary Inversion" by Catherine Asano
What a great book this was - hard science/speculative fiction combined with an author that makes you care about her characters. It's definitely a set-up for at least a sequel, if not a trilogy, with a small Romeo-and-Juliet aspect to it.
A good effort in space-faring fantasy/sci-fi by the team that brought us many great D&D-based books.
"Mystery" by Peter Straub
I really liked this book. Straub writes like Stephen King at times, but it's not aping. And it's only at times, the rest he is his own writer, and he's good.
"Assumed Identity" by David Morrell
A slick spy novel, where the antagonist has to use his own identity instead of one of the many covers he's used over the years, and finds out he doesn't know who he really is.
"Dark Maze" by David Adcock
This is a good crime-noir style book. A quick read, it stays just shy of being more Mickey Spillaine than a Mickey Spillaine story.
"A Small Death In Lisbon" by Robert Wilson
This was a really good book. It sets you up with two different stories, one starting in Nazi Germany, that end up coming together in the here-and-now to solve the murder of a young girl in Lisbon.
"Primary Inversion" by Catherine Asano
What a great book this was - hard science/speculative fiction combined with an author that makes you care about her characters. It's definitely a set-up for at least a sequel, if not a trilogy, with a small Romeo-and-Juliet aspect to it.