I read "Possession" last year and enjoyed it. A little darker than usual with a solid ending. Didn't know it was a sequel at the time. "Demons" is on my list for sure. Love the cover art by Boris Vallejo as well.Finally finished The Family.
Now reading J. M. Dillard's Demons. I wasn't aware that "J. M. Dillard" was a pseudonym. And I'd forgotten that (1) the book featured the lower-deckers of the 1980s Novelverse (the one that Richard Arnold suppressed with extreme prejudice), and (2) that she'd written a TNG sequel.
Compared to the real-life horror of The Family, horror fiction seems as light and silly as Trek to Madworld or How Much For Just the Planet.
There! There wolf! There castle!I enjoyed her recent werewolf book
A what?"Chekhov's Stuffed Armadillo."
Now over a third of the way into Bloodthirst. Which is to say that I've been introduced to what, as I recall, becomes a "Chekhov's Stuffed Armadillo."
I'd thought that Admeral Waverleigh had put more than just words of comfort into his stuffed-and-animated armadillo, "Old Yeller," shortly before his death. That he'd put evidence implicating Mendez into it. I was mistaken. We don't actually find out what message he'd left Kirk in the armadillo until after Mendez and his co-conspirators have been arrested (and referencing the corruption thread in "General Trek Discussions," we evidently get four or five corrupt admirals for the price of one here.A what?![]()
Is it recommendable? And does Lucy kick some vampire butt?Lucy Undying: A Dracula Novel by Kiersten White.
About Lucy Westenra, naturally.
And does Lucy kick some vampire butt?
Van Helsing: She's almost dead!
Jonathan Harker: She's dead enough. Oh! This is - this is ghastly!
Van Helsing: Yes, you're right. We should have put newspapers down!
Is it recommendable? And does Lucy kick some vampire butt?
Anyway, I did start reading "Greater than the Sum" and - I like T'Ryssa already.
Hmm, this andFollowing some "enforced method acting" (after all, "she just ate") in the staking scene:
I found it very engrossing and compelling. And, yes, Lucy eventually kicks some serious butt, both undead and otherwise.
The book alternates between three storylines:
The events of "Dracula," retold and reinterpreted from Lucy's POV. (Turns out she had a secret journal that relates what REALLY went down back then.)
Her post-"Dracula" existence, traveling the world while trying to figure out what to do with her immortality.
A modern-day storyline in which she crosses path with a young woman on the run from an insidious conspiracy -- with deep roots connected to you-know-who.
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