Tag: 5.0 Reviews

Guest Review: I Shall Not Want by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Guest Review: I Shall Not Want by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Judith‘s review of I Shall Not Want (Clare Fergusson and Russ van Alstyne Mystery) by Julia Spencer-Fleming In Julia Spencer-Fleming’s most suspenseful and passionate novel yet, town cop Russ Van Alstyne and Episcopal priest Clare Fergusson are separated by guilt and grief over Russ’s wife’s death. While these emotions keep them from being together, intense […]

Guest Review: "One Was A Soldier" by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Guest Review: "One Was A Soldier" by Julia Spencer-Fleming

Judith‘s review of One Was A Soldier (A Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne Mystery) by Julia Spencer-Fleming The tension has been building . . . the pieces are all in place . . . and all good things come to those who wait.  Julia Spencer-Fleming’s award-winning series has followed the flawed and complex characters Russ Van […]

Guest Review: Harvest Moon by Robyn Carr

Guest Review: Harvest Moon by Robyn Carr

Readers encountered Kelly briefly in the previous novel, Wild Man Creek as Jilian’s award-winning San Francisco chef, a woman who really knows her way around a professional restaurant kitchen and who knows what she has to do to succeed. She has made some important friends, not the least of whom is her boss, a popular, […]

Guest Review: River Marked by Patricia Briggs

Guest Review: River Marked by Patricia Briggs

Tracy’s review of River Marked (Mercy Thompson #6) by Patricia Briggs Car mechanic Mercy Thompson has always known there was something different about her, and not just the way she can make a VW engine sit up and beg. Mercy is a shapeshifter, a talent she inherited from her long-gone father. She’s never known any […]

Guest Review: Wild Man Creek by Robyn Carr

Guest Review: Wild Man Creek by Robyn Carr

It is a tribute to author Robyn Carr that her creativity seems endless as she continues to give us more stories in the Virgin River series.  As the 12th book in this series, one would understandably expect that there would be a sense of the “same old, same ole” and yet that doesn’t seem to […]