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Reviews

All reviews.

July 1, 2014 by Drevil on Fiction, Mystery, Reviews

An Unsuitable Job for a Woman by PD James

The title refers to the first case for newly solo private investigator Cordelia Gray. She is summoned to investigate the apparent suicide of a college student at Cambridge.

 
June 29, 2014 by Drevil on Comedy, Fiction, Reviews

Dave Barry Slept Here by Dave Barry

A short, scathing review of one of Dave Barry’s books.

 
June 20, 2014 by Drevil on Fiction, Mystery, Reviews

Wild Justice by Philip Margolin

A medically-trained torturer-slash-serial-killer, an emerging young criminal defense attorney and some Mafioso types

 
June 20, 2014 by Drevil on Memoirs, Nonfiction, Reviews

12 Years a Slave by Solomon Northrop

Review of the book that inspired the 2014 movie.

 
March 16, 2014 by Drevil on Fiction, Reviews

Hawaii by James A Michener

Surprised by how good this book is.

 
December 13, 2013 by Drevil on Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Reviews

King and Gaiman

Just what is the connection between Stephen King and Neil Gaiman? Does Tim Burton get a say?

 
October 12, 2013 by Drevil on Comedy, Fiction, Reviews

Coyote Blue by Christopher Moore

Get ready to meet M.F., short for “Minty Fresh,” the coolest problem solver Vegas has ever produced.

 
April 5, 2013 by Drevil on Comedy, Fiction, Reviews

Fluke by Christopher Moore

Forget biological warfare. Bring on the biology humor!

 
March 20, 2013 by Drevil on Comedy, Fiction

Fool by Christopher Moore

Christopher Moore’s Fool is what happens when you mix King Lear with Monty Python and pornographic movies.

 
March 18, 2013 by Drevil on Fantasy, Fiction, Reviews

Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman’s mix of comedy, folklore and horror is a tasty story. You’ll
have fun reading it.

 
January 17, 2013 by Drevil on Book v Movie, Nonfiction, Reviews

Book v Movie: Crazy Enough

Well, it was never a movie, but Crazy Enough was a crazy good one-woman show.

 
January 12, 2013 by Drevil on Fiction, Literature, Reviews

Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen

Jane Austen’s book is deliciously interesting precisely because of the wrongness. We cheer the reconciliation of the errors.

 
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