Another day, another Alex Cross adventure. This time, Alex Cross is back in Washington DC where a duo calling themselves Jack and Jill go up the Hill… to kill, to kill, to kill…
In this novel, our favorite gruff, no nonsense, good ol’ country doctor returns. That’s right – Dr. Katherine Pulaski is back!
This book always seems to be among the favorites of sci-fi and literature readers alike. So, naturally I have to read it. And man-oh-man is it packed with story elements from sad to darkly humorous and from historical to fantastical. It’s a lot to unpack. So it goes.
What would you do if you lived the same lifetime over and over and remembered everything from your previous lives? Would you try to protect the world? Or destroy it?
Dulmer and Lucsly are back and with them are more of their friends from the Department of Temporal Investigations. Including one from several hundred years in the future. But can the DTI hold a story all their own without other familiar Star Trek faces?
I’m the kind of person who is willing to read just about anything. As I continue my journey through the Alex Cross series, I’ve decided that erotic fiction is not my jam. Not that I was interested in erotic fiction in the first place. But getting slapped in the face with it in a suspense/thriller novel left me feeling a bit… uncomfortable…
I’m not sure how many people in my generation (I prefer X-ennial over geriatric millennial) even know who Charles Lindbergh was, let alone what happened to his kid. But you can learn all about it in this thriller in which a character has somewhat of an obsession with the Lindbergh Baby kidnapping…
Picard and Garak on the cover? The Enterprise-D docked at Deep Space 9, er, Terok Nor too?! Oh, this is going to be gooood! [Spoiler Alert: It. Is. Great!]
Dr. Julian Bashir is turning out to be a lot like Jack Bauer. Being a hero time and again but getting damned for his efforts. I mean, Bashir essentially committed treason, but we should be able to look past a little thing like that, right? Section 31 can!
Hey, remember the Sam Elliott movie, Conagher? You should because it played on TNT about every other day in the early ’90s! This is the book that inspired that film about a lone soul drifter looking for something. And that something happens to be a widow with a couple kids…
