The Modernista
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Dance of the Gods is the second book in Nora Roberts’s Circle Trilogy. Although I really enjoyed it, it kind of fell prey to The Two Towers curse: it’s the middle part of an epic battle, so the reader is left without the excitement of the intro or the satisfaction of the finale. Nevertheless, Roberts [...]

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I have an interesting story associated with this book. I first came across it on a shelving cart one day. I casually thumbed through it, and though I was intrigued, I saw that it was geared toward teens, so I put it back without noting the author. A few days later I changed my mind [...]

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I’ve actually been reading quite a lot lately, but two titles really stood out to me. The first was Morrigan’s Cross, the latest effort from uber-author Nora Roberts. It seems that she writes a mass market trilogy every year (last year it was the In the Garden trilogy, featuring Blue Dahlia, Black Rose, and Red [...]

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I just finished two very interesting books by British author Chris Wooding. Not only does he have fantastic writing skills, but he is only two years older than I am, and way more accomplished. On one hand, that kind of bums me out, but on the other, it gives me hope. People my age can [...]

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I’ve had Charles de Lint’s The Blue Girl sitting on my nightstand for more than a month, but I just couldn’t seem to get around to reading it. It first came onto my radar in March, when I heard it discussed at a Young Adult Fantasy session at PLA. Since I’d been reading "urban fantasy" [...]

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   As part of my quest to further explore the fantasy and horror genres, I just read Libba’s Bray’s duet A Great and  Terrible Beauty and Rebel Angels. Set in the late 1800s, they are the story of Gemma Doyle, a British girl raised in India, whose world is turned upside down when she begins [...]