Just started The Winter Long by Seanan McGuire.
Ha, maybe! Is that what they're called? The first time I googled the author her Instagram said "See you at the ripped bodice" and I wondered what that meant. This story is just like some love triangle in a New York apartment block. It's just very low key though and I love that.What? Some kind of bodice-ripper?
Meanwhile, I'm now between Inferno and Purgatorio, in the Divine Comedy.
Ha, maybe! Is that what they're called? The first time I googled the author her Instagram said "See you at the ripped bodice" and I wondered what that meant.
I'm finishing up New Frontier: Once Burned and am considering skipping straight to the Double Helix #5, which continues the New Frontier storyline. Part of me wants to start at the beginning of the Double Helix series, but a much more time-conscious part of me wants to skip ahead so I can continue my drive through New Frontier.I am currently reading the Double Helix books in the TNG series and loving them.
You can understand Double Helix #5 just fine with only your knowledge of the New Frontier series. In books #1-4 of Double Helix, not much happens in the meta-narrative. You can come back later to those books if you want medical drama and unusual character team-ups. Double Helix #6 is a story set earlier in the timeline that explains the who and why of what went on during the miniseries.I'm finishing up New Frontier: Once Burned and am considering skipping straight to the Double Helix #5, which continues the New Frontier storyline. Part of me wants to start at the beginning of the Double Helix series, but a much more time-conscious part of me wants to skip ahead so I can continue my drive through New Frontier.
As @Smiley indicated, you can do that without issue. The Double Helix books were each standalone-ish books that had a recurring theme of a disease. But each book had its own beginning, middle, and end. The true objective of the series, as editor John Ordover put it back then, was "Star Trek Colorforms," mixing and matching different characters from different parts of the franchise.I'm finishing up New Frontier: Once Burned and am considering skipping straight to the Double Helix #5, which continues the New Frontier storyline. Part of me wants to start at the beginning of the Double Helix series, but a much more time-conscious part of me wants to skip ahead so I can continue my drive through New Frontier.
Is the established author/new co-author thing more prevalent nowadays, or is it just me?
It's just you. That's been a thing for a while, trust me.What We Hide by Colleen Coble and Rick Acker.
Is the established author/new co-author thing more prevalent nowadays, or is it just me?
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