I don't know what was with this book, but it just seemed extra long, extra boring.it was eventful, don't get me wrong but i didn't feel the intensity and drama of the plot as much as u felt I sshould've. it was slow even though it spanned over about a week. and I didn't even know wht he kissed...
As #2 in a series where I really liked #1, this book was a great disappointment. Much of the description was boring and filled with unnecessary detail. It just stopped, having had little real conflict and with even less resolution. It literally ended with "To be continued." Kids, who had bee...
This book was slow going and I just couldn't make myself interested. It sounded like it would be a great book, but I can't say that it was. Normally I love this type of book and the mysteriousness to things and by the end of the book I am usually left with something to think about. I just didn't ...
This was a very unusual book, which shouldn't be terribly surprising, since the author, Mark Frost is a co-creator of the TV series Twin Peaks.I definitely enjoyed the book, but it is difficult to do it proper justice in a review without giving away too much of the story. I will do my best.Arthur...
The second (and so far final) in Twin Peaks co-creator Mark Frost's series of books featuring a fictionalised Arthur Conan Doyle as a character isn't a great departure from the first. Once more, our trusty author - now thoroughly jack of Holmes - is caught up in world-changing events of a superna...
Bestselling author Mark Frost makes a triumphant return to fiction with this riveting World War II thriller, based on a shocking real-life German operation run by "the most dangerous man in Europe." Fall 1944. Germany is losing, and the Americans are starting to hope they'll be home for Christmas...
On a rooftop of the Crag, Will stood transfixed at Franklin Greenwood’s side, staring at his father through thick one-way glass. His father, Hugh Greenwood, wore operating scrubs and was holding a scalpel to Elise’s throat as she lay unconscious on an operating table. Mr. Hobbes stood behind Hugh...
The gigantic doors had split along that seam down the middle, and the two halves were opening outward, but ever so slowly, inch by inch, accompanied by the grind of immensely heavy gears meshing and turning. They trained their flashlights on the gap as it widened, but the ...
Luis Tiant is “The Man.” HALL OF FAME PITCHER JIM PALMER AFTER EACH OF THE FIRST TWO SEASONS HE PITCHED FOR the Mexico City Tigers, Luis Tiant returned home to Cuba for the off-season. He had established himself as a rising star during his second year, in 1960, going 17–7 and leading the Tigers t...
Set apart from the quad, it was the most modern building on campus—a six-story tower of blue-tinted glass and steel. Some donor had written a large check to put their name here: Large brushed silver letters identified it as the Haxley Medical Center.They took an elevator to the fifth floor. Dr. K...