Tag: DNF

Some DNF’s From Last Month.

Posted March 8, 2010 by Rowena in Reviews | Tagged: , , , | 6 Comments
Some DNF’s From Last Month.

Sometimes you run across some books that you thought you’d like to read and then you open them up and you’re just not into them. There comes a time in a reader’s life when you just have to put the book down. Sometimes it’s because the book just isn’t working for you and sometimes its […]

December DNFs

Posted January 4, 2010 by Holly in Reviews | Tagged: , , , | 3 Comments
December DNFs

For some reason I had a really hard time getting into books last month. I managed to finish 14, but it was a struggle. I picked up and put down so many after checking the blurb I lost count, and I started and stopped 15. The issue here isn’t the books. Some of them were […]

Review: Wolfen by Madelaine Montague

Review: Wolfen by Madelaine Montague

As engrossed as Danika generally is in her work, even she notices the underlying hostility with which the locals in the small northwestern town regard her and her research. She notices the biker gang that arrives shortly behind her even more. With their long hair, tattoos, and piercings, the rough group of bikers aren’t the […]

Guest Review: Border Moonlight by Amanda Scott

Guest Review: Border Moonlight by Amanda Scott

  Lovely nineteen-year-old Lady Sibylla Cavers is marriageable, yet she has rejected the first three candidates her father has introduced. Lord Simon Murray (appearing in the first two novels of this Borders Trilogy) is one of these three spurned suitors — and Simon is famous for never forgiving an offense. One day when Sibylla is […]

Review: Border Lass by Amanda Scott

Review: Border Lass by Amanda Scott

Hero: Sir Garth NapierHeroine: Amalie MurrayGrade: DNF A woman locked in her past and the fierce knight determined to set her free…Amanda Scott returns readers to the fourteenth century Scottish Borders, when men battled sword against sword and the hills echoed with the thunder of a thousand hooves. Unfit for marriage? Young, fair, yet mistrustful […]