Posts tagged: CJ Cherryh
Release Week: Brent Weeks, Kameron Hurley, Adam McOmber, Olaf Stapledon, CJ Cherryh, and more
Posted on 2012-09-12 at 14:07 by Sam
The second release week of September still shows no sign of Brandon Sanderson’s Legion, read by Oliver Wyman; but I’m sure it’s coming soon. Not that I’m hitting reload that often…
The Blinding Knife: Black Prism, Book 2 By Brent Weeks, Narrated by — Series: Lightbringer, Book 2 — Length: 23 hrs and 48 mins — I haven’t gotten to book one of this series yet, The Black Prism (narrated by
Read more...Posted in regular, Release Week | Tagged adam mcomber, brent weeks, CJ Cherryh, junot diaz, kameron hurley, kristine kathryn rusch, michael chabon, olaf stapledon, release week
Release Week: King of Thorns; Laird Barron's The Croning; Neal Stephenson's Some Remarks; David Tennant narrates a new sequel to Treasure Island; apocalypses and ghosts; more Stephen King; and more
Posted on 2012-08-08 at 13:58 by Sam
The first release week of August packs a pretty big whallop, though it doesn’t bring a couple of the titles I was most looking forward to (Jim C. Hines’s Libriomancer and T. Aaron Payton’sThe Constantine Affliction— Payton is a new pseudonym for Steampunk from the brilliant Tim Pratt) it does bring an anticipated sequel, one of my “most missing audiobooks” from earlier in 2012, and two more interesting “genre in the mainstream” picks, along with a few new audiobooks of older Stephen King books, 6 books in
Read more...Posted in regular, Release Week | Tagged CJ Cherryh, david tennant, foreigner, gary gibson, george mann, king of thorns, laird barron, mark lawrence, markus heitz, neal stephenson, peter heller, release week, rudy rucker, sandi tan, sarah zimmerman, sherrilyn kenyon, silver, some remarks, stephen king, the black isle, the croning, the dog stars, treasure island
Release Week: Kosmatka, Pagliassotti, Zebrowski, Cherryh, Julavits, Medina, and more...
Posted on 2012-03-14 at 14:58 by Sam
A prolific and intriguing release week is led by The Games By , Narrated by This stunning first novel from Nebula Award and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award finalist Ted Kosmatka is a riveting tale of science cut loose from ethics. Set in an amoral future where genetically engineered monstrosities fight each other to the death in an Olympic event, The Games envisions a harrowing world that may arrive sooner than you think. Silas Williams is the brilliant
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