6. The Unwritten vol. 1: Tommy Taylor and the Bogus Identity by Mike Carey and Peter Gross: Super interesting graphic novel. A man models his famous teen wizard after his own son and then disappears. But is Tom Taylor turning into the Tommy Taylor of the books?
7. Kiss An Angel by Susanne Elizabeth Phillips: Daisy is a child to a wild crazy model and a Russian diplomat. Her mom dies and her life falls apart. Her father arranges a marriage to a circus manager. Hi-jinx ensue. I thought it was a little heavy handed with the morality but it went with the character. It was okay.
8. The Name of The Wind by Patrick Rothfuss: Kvothe is the biggest fable in all of the kingdom. Think Superman/Einstein/Merlin all in one. He fakes his own death and retires into a boring life as in innkeeper. A Chronicler finds him and Kvothe begins to tell him the truth about his life (which is almost better than fiction). Will this be the thing that will awaken him into being a hero again?
9. Film is Not Dead: A Digital Photographer's Guide to Shooting Film by Jonathon Canlas: A super interesting book on film photography. Begins with why, goes into what camera, what film, how to load it and etc. Great pictures through out and helpful info. It's in bite sized pieces and casual voice. I really liked it.
10. Explosive Eighteen by Janet Evanovich: I'm pretty sure the writing quality has gone down if that tell you anything. Stephanie is still caught in a Ranger-Morelli love triangle. She's also caught in a weird tech scandal where she has hired killers after her coming out of her ears.
11. If Looks Could Kill by Kate White: Bailey Wiggins is roped into solving her editor's nanny's mysterious death. I read this a million years ago and had a random thought about it and decided to pick it up. It's actually pretty good and my replace my Stephanie Plum addiction.
7. Kiss An Angel by Susanne Elizabeth Phillips: Daisy is a child to a wild crazy model and a Russian diplomat. Her mom dies and her life falls apart. Her father arranges a marriage to a circus manager. Hi-jinx ensue. I thought it was a little heavy handed with the morality but it went with the character. It was okay.
8. The Name of The Wind by Patrick Rothfuss: Kvothe is the biggest fable in all of the kingdom. Think Superman/Einstein/Merlin all in one. He fakes his own death and retires into a boring life as in innkeeper. A Chronicler finds him and Kvothe begins to tell him the truth about his life (which is almost better than fiction). Will this be the thing that will awaken him into being a hero again?
9. Film is Not Dead: A Digital Photographer's Guide to Shooting Film by Jonathon Canlas: A super interesting book on film photography. Begins with why, goes into what camera, what film, how to load it and etc. Great pictures through out and helpful info. It's in bite sized pieces and casual voice. I really liked it.
10. Explosive Eighteen by Janet Evanovich: I'm pretty sure the writing quality has gone down if that tell you anything. Stephanie is still caught in a Ranger-Morelli love triangle. She's also caught in a weird tech scandal where she has hired killers after her coming out of her ears.
11. If Looks Could Kill by Kate White: Bailey Wiggins is roped into solving her editor's nanny's mysterious death. I read this a million years ago and had a random thought about it and decided to pick it up. It's actually pretty good and my replace my Stephanie Plum addiction.