Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows
When a fervor hits Mole amid his spring cleaning, he finds himself popping above ground and tumbling into a new life of sunshine, boats, and adventures.
Book reviews, novel progress, and other writing related musings.
Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows
When a fervor hits Mole amid his spring cleaning, he finds himself popping above ground and tumbling into a new life of sunshine, boats, and adventures.
Dan Santat’s A First Time For Everything
How much could a trip to Europe before High School change your life – apparently a lot more than anyone would expect.
Shawn Speakman’s The Tempered Steel of Antiquity Grey
A mech – a whole mech – Erth hadn’t been allowed control of one in generations, but now Antiquity stared at one buried in the desert sands, intact, functioning, and illegal.
Scott Chantler’s Squire & Knight
A dragon has moved into the area, and the people of Bridgetown now live in fear – fortunately an adventuring Knight is willing to solve the problem.
Damian Myron’s Dig Down
Rob deals with some pretty high profile people, and when one of them is picked up by the police, the life Rob has meticulously built goes up in flames.
A. C. Cobble’s Conspiracy (Wahrheit #1)
The king is dead; and for the first time in over 600 years, there is no heir.
Shannon Lane’s Temperance
Olivia lost her father at the age of five. Charles may be alive, but how much is an absent alcoholic father really involved in their child’s life?
Eleanor Estes’s The Hundred Dresses
When children have a pecking order, laughter can change a life.
Michael J. Sullivan’s Nolyn (The Rise and Fall #1)
Long ago, a war was fought between the Humans and Fhrey – elves who ruled the land like gods. Generations have passed, and the details of that war have begun to muddle in the retellings, but forgotten things have a habit of coming back around.
S. D. Smith’s The Green Ember (The Green Ember #1)
Young rabbits, Heather and Picket, were raised in the peaceful fields of Nick Hollow, but their parents can only delay the inevitable.