Fiction Books
Related Subjects: Genres Fan Fiction Writing Circles Short Stories
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Used price: $3.11
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Awesome book!Review Date: 2008-07-31
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-07-16
Courtesy of Teens Read TooReview Date: 2008-06-27
The book picks up with the former Thief of Eddis, Gen, now the newly crowned king of Attolia, except no one is taking him seriously, not even himself. The people of Attolia are furious with "the goat foot" who stole their beloved queen, and humiliating the king has become a national pastime. Poor Eugenides has found snakes in his bed, sand in his food, and has been attacked by the palace dogs, but isn't willing to enforce his authority. His court thinks he's an oaf and a pushover, and an unwilling king is a serious detriment as Attolia faces a war with the Mede Empire.
When Costis, a young idealistic member of the Queen's Guard, makes the mistake of showing his dislike for the king, he thinks he gets a fate worse than death; Eugenides promotes him to a lieutenant and makes him his personal guard. Though being the king's scapegoat is no easy trip, Costis soon realizes the difficulties Eugenides faces as a foreign sovereign in a hostile court. All the characters are tested in THE KING OF ATTOLIA as various forces vie for political power.
This book was a joy to read. Megan Whalen Turner gives the reader rich descriptions of both the sumptuous Attolian palace and its many inhabitants. The novel seems even more plot-based than her previous two books. It twists and turns around the topics of espionage, assassination, and diplomacy. While a reader can still make sense of the story without reading THE THIEF or THE QUEEN OF ATTOLIA, this book is a special treat for returning fans. One of the surprising things for me was how the wonderfully charismatic and clever Gen is transformed into a clumsy idiot under the prejudiced eyes of Costis. Turner hints at the drawbacks of underestimating people without being moralistic. I have waited over six years to read this novel and I'm delighted that it leaves plenty of room for future stories.
Reviewed by: Natalie Tsang
A Modern Classic!Review Date: 2008-06-03
Clever and Cunning, The Thief is King Review Date: 2008-04-10
But Eugenides is anything but predictable and has married the queen for love, even if by doing so he must leave his beloved Eddis behind.
As the third book in this excellent series starts, Eugenides is stranded in the Attolian palace. Ridiculed by the Attolian courtesans, despised by the Queen guards and his own attendants, he endures their daily pranks, pretending to be a guileless idiot while weaving a web of intrigue to gain his queen's heart and bring his enemies to their knees. If only he lives long enough.
Cleverly plotted and beautiful written, the story moves at a fast pace to a satisfying conclusion that answers many questions while posing new ones,
Is the Queen pregnant as her fainting may suggest?
Where is Sophos, the heir of Sounis? Would he marry the Queen of Eddis?
Would the political situation in a not distant future set Eugenides against his cousin, the queen of Eddis?
The only thing I know for sure is that I'm impatiently waiting for the King's return.

The Lost Queen of EgyptReview Date: 2008-06-10
ANCIENT..... EGYPT..... AS..... IF..... YOU......WERE.....THERE!Review Date: 2008-03-30
The book has many illustrations....always welcome in any book, even one for adults....but especially one for teens and pre-teens, as is this book.
The colour front-plate of "Queen Anksenamon", on shiny paper, is from another book, "Great Ones of Ancient Egypt". It is a painting in the modern style, as if the queen were sitting for it today. In her ancient Egyptian robes and wig, the queen's portrait is three-dimensional, very realistic, charming, and totally regal. Yet, one can easily sense the real person beneath the royal robes. This queen has many problems, which are deliniated in this fictionalized (?) life-story.
Starting when Princess Anksenpaaten, second daughter of the fabled Pharaoh, Aknaton, is just a girl, the book tells of her childhood, her parents, her grandmother, Queen Ti, her cousin, Princess Baketaton, her 6 sisters, her cousins Samenkarah and Tutankaton, and various soldiers, (including the general Horemheb, later himself to become Pharaoh), the evil, and wily counsellor, Ay -- and Kenofer, a young artist from Crete. In delineating Ankenspaaton's story, which unfolds amidst a background of royal luxury, and a family that truly does love one another, a tale of palace intrigue and danger unfolds, filled with friendship, tragedy, terror, and suspense!
Helping the story along are the marvelously wonderful black and white line illustrations...all done in the manner of the ancient Egyptians...that is, showing people mostly in profile, and in stylized poses. But these poses are still realistic, and one is enchanted with their artistry and believability.......
All in all, this is an entrancing, involving, exciting book, filled with historic, true-to-life characters that come to life before the reader's eyes. Coming to life too is the historical setting and atmosphere. Gripping with its suspense, and breath-taking in it's tragedy and romance, this book is a true classic which, one hopes, will endure in the hearts of its readers, (and in successive printings!), for as many generations as Ancient Egypt itself did!
AmazingReview Date: 2007-12-08
Excellent, excellent book with the perfect amount of detail. Truly pulls you in and makes you "see" Ancient Egypt with the characters.
Loved it!
Yet another lover of this book!Review Date: 2007-10-16
Another 'lost' book found!Review Date: 2006-12-02


What I've been waiting forReview Date: 2008-08-11
First things first, I'll get the negative out of the way and move on. This edition has numerous editing mistakes, it talks about gods (which, I know some people don't mind, but I hate), and one character, Priscilla, who was one of the main characters in Conflict of Honors, is very nearly nude for the majority of her short appearances in Carpe Diem. What else can I say but that I am a huge, terrible prude and find her under-clothed state...unnecessary. And my last complaint: 846 pages was not enough.
Now that all that's done, here it goes.
There comes a time, about every year or so, when I look back and think of all the things I've read. Now, when I say this, I am dead serious: this book made my whole year.
From betrayal to trust and love; from escaping assassins, government brain tampering, and the threats posed by one's own self; from the cataloguing of space, telepathic bonds, and, of course, adopted family members who are giant turtle-like aliens (That somehow reminded me of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, although no similarities-other than the fact that they resembled turtles and spoke-exist, and, for some odd reason, old trees...), I had unknowingly been looking for these stories before I even found them (And if you've been reading long enough, you probably know what I mean). I was enthralled when they began and devastated when I reached the very last page. 846 pages passed by in only three days--nearly impossible for me. It isn't often that I get so caught up in a story.
I feel very deeply for the characters within these pages, and the only adequate comparison I can give is Firefly. It was a television series that ended just as brilliantly as it began, and just as I felt when watching Firefly, reading these stores was like finding old friends I'd been missing for years. Everything else is overshadowed by the amazing characterizations. I can't remember the last time I came across characters in literature who were all so different, appealing, and real. My personal favorites are Miri, with her funny braid hair-do, small stature, loyalty, and strength, and Val Con, who is musically gifted, damaged, and just about as vertically challenged as Miri; they make a good match. And the last book in the Omnibus, Carpe Diem, which is pretty much their story, deserves three awards: most memorable scenes, greatest characters, and all-time favorite.
Honestly, I did hear wonderful things, but was not expecting what I found. There is a very rare quality to the stories in which the characters share bonds that are not based entirely on graphic encounters (you know what I mean...) and yet comes across as even stronger with this element missing. This is something I greatly appreciate. If there is one thing I despise, it's having too much of a certain kind of information given, and this goes to show that one can do well enough without.
This is the kind of book I wait-and hope-to find. I consider myself lucky to have read it. For me, this was 846 pages of pure entertainment. There have been times where I felt the need to read for the sole purpose of getting to the good parts or finishing, and I never felt this way about Partners in Necessity. Now, I await the next book and hope that, whoever you are, you enjoy this as much as I did.
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller are a tremendous writing duo. Thanks to them and well done.
From one incredibly picky but very pleased reader.
Yummy!Review Date: 2008-08-04
memorable charactersReview Date: 2007-02-20
this is wonderful writingReview Date: 2005-12-29
Absolutely Wonderful - DO NOT MISS THIS ONE!!Review Date: 2004-01-30
Conflict of Honors: Priscilla Delacroix y Mendoza left her homeplanet when she was only sixteen, convicted of blasphemy and exiled to be homeless and clanless, but she survived. Ten years later, after working her share of grunt jobs, she was the cargo master on the Daxflan, a Liaden ship captained by Sav Rid Olanek. It wasn't an easy job as Terrans were treated like second-class citizens and the second mate, Dagmar, kept trying to "charm" her into a relationship, but Priscilla could not afford to leave the ship and damage her reputation so she stayed. Then Priscilla discovered that the Captain had taken on a cargo of illegal drugs and passed them off as innocent pharmaceuticals. Priscilla tried to hide her knowledge, but she found herself knocked out and locked up on a second-class planet with no money, no job and a resume that now claimed she was a thief.
Priscilla knew that she had to get off the planet and hunt down the Daxflan, if for nothing else than to reclaim her possessions, so she turned to the only ship in orbit at the time - the Dutiful Passage captained by Shan yos'Galan. Unbelievably, the Captain hired her as a pet librarian and then proceeded to help her with pilot and leadership training. Priscilla did not know quite how to react to the friendship of those aboard the Dutiful Passage, but she slowly started to think of the ship as her home. But Dagmar and Captain Olanek were not going to let Priscilla escape and they had a score to settle against Shan yos'Galan, her beloved Captain and source of protection...
Agent of Change: Val Con yos'Phelium, Clan Korval, future Delm and Second Speaker, was just doing a routine mission on some backwater planet in the middle of the universe when his life changed. After completing his mission, he encountered a small spitfire of a woman and saved her life, for which she promptly repaid him by bashing his head in. When Val Con woke up, the spitfire dumped him, but Val Con was intrigued, so he followed her and saved her life again. Now Miri Robertson, whose life he had saved twice, was forced to deal with Val Con, honor demanded it. She was intrigued by Val Con, whom she nicknamed "Tough Guy", but definitely didn't want a partner. As a former mercenary and bodyguard, she could handle herself and, as a target for the powerful Juntavas crime ring, she couldn't trust anyone...
However, both Val Con and Miri, both of whom were used to working alone, soon found that they worked well as partners, at least they would if Miri would stop trying to ditch Val Con at every opportunity. Val Con knew that Miri was something special, she made him feel things that he hadn't felt in years, she made him feel alive again. Miri didn't know what was wrong with Val Con, but she knew it had something to do with what he called The Loop, some kind of brain implant that gave him the odds of success on every mission/action he made. As they grew closer together, both Val Con and Miri realized that the Department of the Interior, who had trained Val Con as an agent, must have some ulterior motive in plan. But in order to find out what it was, they had to stay alive...
Carpe Diem: Val Con his lifemate, Miri Robertson were ordered not to be harmed by the Juntavas syndicate. However, personal interpretation of 'not be harmed' left Val Con and Miri on a broken-down spaceship in the middle of nowhere with the enemy Yxtrang ready to kill them for the hunk of junk they were sitting in. However, Val Con and Miri managed to rig something together and 'jumped' to one of the nearest planets - a backwater world named Vandar.
Vandar had no contact with the outside universe and didn't even know that other cultures existed. With no spaceships and no radio comm that they could use, Val Con and Miri tried to resign themselves to a long stay and set about learning the culture and the language. Meanwhile, Shan yos'Galan, Val Con's brother and his lifemate, Priscilla, began searching the galaxy for him, as did Edger and Sheather, Val Con's Clutch brothers. Back on Liad, Nova yos'Galan, Val Con's sister, had translated a cryptic message from Val Con that, while ensuring the Clan of the heir's survival, told them precious little else. But she did discover that the Department of the Interior, a department that seemed shrouded in mystery and determined to conquer the planet of Liad and from there, the universe, was also looking for Val Con. The more she investigated, the more interested the Department became in Clan Korval...until Nova was forced to call Plan B - retreat strategically, trust no one, prepare for all out war....
These are books 3-5 in the Liaden series if you read them chronologically, which I recommend. As with the other books, I simply loved Lee & Miller's characters and world building. They spend time on the details and it shows that they have carefully thought out and executed another masterpiece. I really feel as if I know the Korval family and am taking a remedial course on Liaden etiquette, these books are that well written! If you enjoy any kind of science fiction or space opera then this book has something for you - great characters, lots of action, enemies on all sides, high tech battle sequences, romance, family relations, honor, and much, much more! You can read this book as a stand-alone novel, but I would recommend starting with the prequels (Local Custom & Scout's Progress, also found in omnibus Pilot's Choice), so that you are familiar with Liad and Clan Korval, but, these books were the originals for the Liaden universe and were written first. Also, you definitely should not miss out on any book in the wonderful Liaden universe - all of them are very highly recommended!
Collectible price: $80.00

Richard Scarry's BESTReview Date: 2008-01-05
Very fun anthology of numerous 2-page stories from around the world. Charming detailed pictures, culturally relevant backdrops.
Publishers: Please renew licenses for this and reprint it! I've bought "busy, busy town" and "mother goose" as gifts only because this one is out of print.
Loved this bookReview Date: 2007-12-17
MemoriesReview Date: 2007-11-26
Best Bedtime Book EverReview Date: 2007-04-08
Amazingly, I don't remember knowing who Couscous was in the street scene until reading it to them and noticing the clue in the next scene.
My gift to my granddaughterReview Date: 2007-07-24
His wife asked him if he had a favorite book as a child, and this was it!
Despite it's being read SO many times, it's in really good condition and is the 1965 edition, which I now know is long out of print.
So, this will be a gift for her from grandma & grandpa... though she likely won't handle it herself for a while!

Used price: $3.44
Collectible price: $17.00

The Best!Review Date: 2008-08-15
What Do People Do All Day?Review Date: 2008-07-02
I love this bookReview Date: 2008-06-26
Great BookReview Date: 2008-03-27
A GEM!!! MY ALL TIME FAVORITE CHILDREN'S BOOK (moooooore stars!!!!)Review Date: 2008-05-12
The copy I'm reviewing here is a reprint that misses several spreads, but sad though it may be, if you don't know about it you won't miss it.
Richard Scarry shows different "people" (animals in clothes), all kinds of professions, how they interact and how one depends on the other. And in doing so he introduces a child to society where we all depend on one another.
More than anything else he was responsible that I grew up to be free minded and open spirited person. Whatever a human being does for a living, if he/she does it with love he will make your day.
A policeman, a baker, a newspaper man, a writer, photographer or singer, the postman, the bus driver. We all depend on one another. And as long as we try our best to understand that and accept and respect our fellow citizens we will be on the right path.
His drawings are world famous. They're sweet and funny without being too simplistic. No matter what family, the rabbits, the mice or the pigs, even the worm, they're all lovely characters with different personalities.
It has always been my first choice as a gift for kids.

Used price: $0.01

orgamizedReview Date: 2004-10-25
A mouse with the cheese can't be pleasedReview Date: 2004-09-22
Various vaultsReview Date: 2004-06-14
Simply the best book I ever hadReview Date: 2004-03-02
Really good. REALLY really good.Review Date: 2003-12-16

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Tender Story of Love, Heartache & Finding HomeReview Date: 2008-09-25
Her family is somewhat dysfunctional but very loving - her father, a landscape artist and the traveling nature of his job is the reason behind their frequent relocations. Her mother is beautiful and a little wild, but she has a strong bond with Tamara's father and allows his lifestyle to effect their family. Tamara has a younger brother and sister who have their own difficulties leading such a nomadic life and at times, Tamara takes out her frustrations on them and even on herself.
Sarah Willis adds the concept of atheism to the story, as both Tamara's parents practice it. The neighbors across the street are devout Christians and manage to get their permission to take Tamara & her siblings to church, which opens up a whole new world for Tamara and she starts to question her beliefs and make bargains with God to keep her in one place.
Tamara's life gets even more stressful when she learns that her mother has an illness that takes her away from the family, perhaps permanently and Tamara is forced to fill her shoes around the house. This is where Tamara begins to rely more heavily on God and asks him to help heal her mother. She also discovers that her complex feelings for her mother are a foil for the love she feels in her heart and through letters, they grow to understand each other better.
Tamara also finds the stirrings of her first love when she connects with Rusty who also lives next door. Sarah Willis portrays the feelings of wonder, fear and joy that we all feel when we find what we think is love and the other person feels it too. Willis does a fine job of providing excellent, solid characterization, and precisely detailing their neurosis so precisely that we can relate to them and their shifting, complicated connections to each other.
I loved the way she uses words to create pictures in the mind of the reader. I enjoyed the section where she uses colors to stress the importance of the situation comparing them to the colors her father uses in his artwork - a unique way to show the similarities between father and daughter when neither feels they have anything to share - masterful! I thought about this book and its characters for a while after I finished reading it and that is always a sign of an excellent story - I have found a new favorite author in Sarah Willis and look forward to reading more of her novels.
Excellent book- I read it in one day! Review Date: 2008-08-23
A Nice Coming of Age StoryReview Date: 2008-04-16
I enjoyed reading this book very much, but it didn't touch me as much as some of the other coming of age stories like, Whistling in the Dark, The Book of Bright Ideas and Cold Rock River. Those stayed with me after I was done and while I really enjoyed this coming of age story, it's not one that will stay with me like some other ones.
Still it is well worth reading and I highly recommend it.
What a good book!Review Date: 2008-03-24
And a first novel? ... wow. I can't wait to read her next one!!!!
Just LOVED this book!Review Date: 2008-01-26


Excellent! Great Story!Review Date: 2008-08-29
This book featured a character that we were introduced to in Indigo, Raimond LeVaq, who was the life long friend of Galeno Vachon. Sable Fontaine, a former slave, was his love interest. I really enjoyed getting to know both of them. Raimond and LeVaq were both born into the Creole society of New Orleans.
The Creoles are primarily result of African women and French slaveholding men. The slave women' offspring were generally educated in France. They maintain themselves by marrying others like them. The female children of these African women were often used as Fancy Women, sex slaves for the sole pleasure of rich white men. They would even have annual balls to present the girls to be chosen as mistresses.
They saw themselves as a distinct from their darker, African looking brethren and sisters. Many of them were slaveholders and obtain great wealthy. Though they tried to distance themselves from the darker blacks, white society would not let them escape their African origin.
We first meet Sable on the plantation. She escapes before she is sold. She has a dream that she will meet someone. And guess who later finds her and directs her to a contraband camp? No other than the infamous, Arminta. Y'all may her as Harriett Tubman. This is Sable first encounters her future human, Raimond LeVaq. We also become reacquainted with his able assistant, who we also met in Indigo, Renaud.
This is the basic setting of the book. I absolutely loved it. Again, a great story, with a little erotica, and very interesting characters, and a little African American history, makes for a great read. The stories are very realistic and told in an engaging manner.
I have read some books about the confusion during and after the Civil for black folks. The Redemptionists (Confederates) did everything in their power to re-enslave our ancestors by forcing them to work for planters, stealing children, beating the former enslaved for saying they were free, etc. Just by the knowledge she drops, I know she is a serious history buff.
She puts these various aspects together so brilliantly. Before you know it, you have had a good read and been educated at the same time.
Yet both went against the grain and married formerly enslaved women, marrying completely out of their class.
There were a few editing issues. The first I notice was on the same page Raimond calls him mama, mama. The next paragraph he calls her mother. Overall, I have very few issues with this book. I loved the cover. I give the artwork 5 stars and the content 5 stars.
I recommend all of Ms. Beverly's books, even the ones I have some issues.
*Note: For those interested in reading a little history, I would like to suggest Gwendolyn Hall's Africans in Colonial Lousiana: The Development of Afro-Creole Culture in the 18th Century. This book is very enlighening. It sheds some light about the Africans and the Creoles who are one in the same.
I can't shake this book!Review Date: 2008-01-20
Great book! Great Author!Review Date: 2008-01-03
Entertaining and educationalReview Date: 2006-10-12
Through The StormReview Date: 2007-04-03

CreativeReview Date: 2008-08-27
Loved this book!Review Date: 2008-03-22
AMAZING!Review Date: 2007-08-27
The best book I ever readReview Date: 2007-02-13
THIS IS A GOOD BOOK!!!!Review Date: 2006-10-04

Mrs Pollifax renewedReview Date: 2008-09-08
Mom liked itReview Date: 2008-07-22
Unexpectedly Amazing!!!Review Date: 2007-06-13
You're never too old!Review Date: 2008-08-05
Her adventures are truly unexpectedReview Date: 2007-09-07
Related Subjects: Genres Fan Fiction Writing Circles Short Stories
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