Self-Publishing Review

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Ordinary Miracles by Krissi Marie McVickers

 

Sep 11 2012in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags:
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Some women get pregnant with little effort. Others, however, struggle with infertility issues and need an outlet for both their educational needs and to bond with others in a similar situation. Author Krissi Marie McVicker never imagined that in her 20s she would have trouble conceiving, especially because her twin sister did not. She connected [...]

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The Home Front by Alan J. Summers

 

Jul 12 2012in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: ,
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This well-crafted British war novel set during the London Blitz of 1940-1941 resurrects elements that have enlivened the genre for seven decades. Alan J. Summers gives us derring-do aloft: his hero is a dashing, 19-year-old Spitfire pilot named Mark Brabham, downed over the Channel in the act of destroying two German aircraft in a fiery [...]

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Laura Denfer by Anne-Marie Bernard

 

Jul 2 2012in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags:
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The title of this unremittingly dark espionage thriller is fitting; although the storyline is impressively labyrinthine and adeptly narrated, it’s the incredibly complex – and utterly heartrending – character of Laura Denfer that makes this such a powerful read. The story begins in shocking style: thirty-six-year-old Laura Denfer, who is half Korean and half French, [...]

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The God Within by Martine Racine

 

Apr 29 2012in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: , ,
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Author Martine Racine is a Jungian psychoanalyst and ordained minister. In The God Within, she describes how the divine lives in all of us. Racine posits that our center of power, creativity, and morality doesn’t come from extrinsic sources. Rather, they reside in our being and are tapped into when we feel from our hearts. [...]

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Review: Falling into History by Peter Fleming

 

Nov 14 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: ,
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A man, a woman, and a talking Martian plant walk into a bar… OK, that doesn’t exactly happen in Falling into History—among other things, the plant doesn’t walk; it glides. However, Peter Fleming’s time-traveling tale is about a sentient, super-powered plant transporting itself and two human companions through time and space, and an eighteenth-century London [...]

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Review: Elvis Cream by Peter Menting

 

Nov 10 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: ,
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The plot, if that is the word, of Peter Menting’s Elvis Cream is quickly told: Ali Hasheeshee, a wealthy fundamentalist sheik in the Emirate of Quais, wants to go to the United States to convert its population to Islam, but unfortunately he is a dead-ringer for America’s most hated terrorist enemy, Osama Al Osama. Meanwhile, [...]

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Review: Carlos the Impossible by J.T.K. Belle

 

Nov 6 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: , ,
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In this short but elegant novella, an aging matador from Mexico meets his greatest adversary in an infamous bull from the American heartland. Inspired by traditional folk tales, the author sets his story in an indeterminate time period, spinning a legend all his own with the compassion and verve of a born storyteller. The novella [...]

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Review: Power and Control by Ralph Leaton White

 

Nov 3 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: , ,
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Ralph White’s debut novel, Power and Control, a political thriller that takes place in the near future, begins shortly after a cataclysmic Christmas Day that saw entire towns and villages in 19 countries totally wiped out by chemical or biological attacks. The “Earth Cleansers,” who have taken responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of thousands, [...]

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Review: Mississippi Flyway by Nel Rand

 

Oct 19 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: ,
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Nel Rand’s debut novel is a picaresque tale that takes the reader down the Mississippi River and through the haunted past of its main character, Ellie. Ellie is recovering from divorce when her estranged father, Tiny Moon, a 300-pound gambler and eating contest champion, re-enters her life. Despite her efforts to remember her deep-seated anger [...]

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Review: Impure: Resurrection by J R Bailey

 

Oct 1 2011in Book Reviews by BlueInk ReviewTags: ,
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Powered by an intriguingly complex antihero, richly described realm-building, relentless pacing, and a darkly lyrical and deeply philosophical narrative, the first installment of J.R. Bailey’s fantasy series is gloriously comparable to classic adventure fantasy sagas like Moorcock’s History of the Runestaff, Howard’s Conan, and Leiber’s Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. After almost being turned into [...]

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