New from Heidi Cullinan and Samhain Publishing: Carry the Ocean

I have read this book and I absolutely loved it. I didn’t really review it because I felt incapable of summing up what the book meant to me in a few (any) words. Instead, I simply implored my Goodreads followers to READ IT. I added the qualifier: IT’S AMAZING. Sometimes we just don’t need aContinueContinue reading “New from Heidi Cullinan and Samhain Publishing: Carry the Ocean”

Review: Mission to Mahjundar by Veronica Scott

Major Mike Varone and his cousin, Johnny, have been pulled out of retirement for one more mission to Mahjundar. A ship has gone down in the mountains and the crew needs rescue. Seems simple enough but simple doesn’t make a very compelling read, does it? Their first day planetside adds several complications. The crash courseContinueContinue reading “Review: Mission to Mahjundar by Veronica Scott”

Reading Challenge Update (March)

Wrapping up Science Fiction Week with a Reading Challenge Update. As always, notes on what I’m writing at the end. In February I read Spherical Harmonic by Catherine Asaro. Set in the aftermath of the Radiance War, Spherical Harmonic picks up and tidies up threads left by several other books. For some readers, this will feelContinueContinue reading “Reading Challenge Update (March)”

Review: Echoes (The Epherium Chronicles #3) by T.D. Wilson

Battle stations! Echoes, the third book of ‘The Epherium Chronicles’ by T.D. Wilson, begins and ends with conflict. Lester Styles, captain of the EDF Cestus, is in charge of the supply train headed for Cygni. He has one jump left to make and one ship reporting a problem with their space-fold drive. Appointing the CestusContinueContinue reading “Review: Echoes (The Epherium Chronicles #3) by T.D. Wilson”

Review: The Void by Timothy S. Johnston

CCF Homicide Investigator Kyle Tanner has experienced his share of untenable situations. In the previous two novels of this series, The Furnace and The Freezer, he got up close and personal with a massive sun and found himself sinking through the ice of one of Jupiter’s moons. In between these extremes exists the void, aContinueContinue reading “Review: The Void by Timothy S. Johnston”