FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ Having to live with any type of chronic illness is not good for anyone, but fate usually has its way of kicking the strong in the behind. Add to that the type of society you would only get in a dystopian science fiction novel, then you have a situation … Continue reading Review: A Touch of Death (The Outlands Pentalogy Book 1) by Rebecca Crunden
Category: Speculative Fiction
Review: The Long and Dark by Joshua Banker
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Though I myself don't know much about sea travel, I've read a lot about how spooky the sea can become for unsuspecting sailors if they don't keep their eyes open on the waters enough. I think, realistically, the mind can quickly play tricks on anyone, anywhere, but … Continue reading Review: The Long and Dark by Joshua Banker
Review: Full Moon Knights by Matthew Danza
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆Full Moon Knights (Book Three of the Fin Series) is another adventure horror novel by Matthew Danza featuring the venomous shark slayer Lee Elizabeth Kager as the lead character. She is a bit out of it and initially, an all new level of crazy. Danza, however, gets the ball … Continue reading Review: Full Moon Knights by Matthew Danza
Review: Traveller Inceptio by Rob Shackleford
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Having been a Scuba instructor, a college teacher, and a business executive in tourism, Rob Shackleford is an Australian writer who enjoys travelling. His book Traveller Inceptio, book one of the Traveller trilogy, begins with a man named Michael stumbling through a forest and falling on his … Continue reading Review: Traveller Inceptio by Rob Shackleford
Review: We Call It Monster by Lachlan Walter
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ We Call It Monster is one of those books that gets you jittery with excitement from the start. Lachlan Walter starts his sci-fi horror novel off with a monstrous bang: "Everyone remembered where they were and what they were doing the first time they saw an enormous and ungodly … Continue reading Review: We Call It Monster by Lachlan Walter
Review: The Finn (Revenge Will Surface) by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆It takes a real adroit genius to come up with creative horror masterpieces like that of Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth. I never get tired of reading them and I never get tired of the frights that come attached with them. They are creeeepy and out of this … Continue reading Review: The Finn (Revenge Will Surface) by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
Review: The Fin by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
FF's Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ My apologies to fans of the classic horror shark movies like Deep Blue Sea, and The Shallows. I remember those as if watching them just yesterday. "He is a huge fan of the horror genre and hopes that sharks can once again, scare people from entering the ocean". … Continue reading Review: The Fin by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
Review: Before It Began (The Neuphobes Series Book 1) by Thomas Zman
FF’s Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ What really is the truth when it comes to the archaic question of what is the origin of man? Is it as they say in the history books or is there something that happened in the history of man that we do not know about? These are … Continue reading Review: Before It Began (The Neuphobes Series Book 1) by Thomas Zman
Review: Always Scream Fire by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
FF’s Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Well, I’m sweating beads. Profusely. And I’m grateful that I’m sweating beads rather than smelling my own flesh melt. To step into Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth’s Always Scream Fire, which is the sequel to their just as nightmarish Always Yell Fire, is to step into something akin … Continue reading Review: Always Scream Fire by Matthew Danza and Adam Horeth
Review: The Gnomes of Nome by R.K. Wheeler
FF’s Star Rating: ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ King Arthur and his famous sword is one of many mental fantastical images that I will never get out of my head. Growing up, discovering fictional heroes like him must’ve been just about my most favorite thing to do. The Gnomes of Nome is a short novel taken … Continue reading Review: The Gnomes of Nome by R.K. Wheeler