Average customer rating:
- Fantastic Dark Elf fiction
- Quite entertaining, if you don't expect too much
- Macabre on high and dangles you in front of it to make sure you see it all!
- A Brooding, Dark Bloodstorm event horizon...
- Send a monster to kill a monster ...
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Darkblade: Bloodstorm (Warhammer)
Dan Abnett , and
Mike Lee
Manufacturer: Games Workshop
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
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Orcslayer (Gotrek & Felix)
ASIN: 1844161927 |
Book Description
In the savage kingdom of the dark elves, life is a constant fight for survival, and no member of this doomed race is more cruel or devious than Malus Darkblade. Possessed by a daemon, Malus is forced to seek a number of magic artefacts or his soul will be forfeit. In this tale, Darkblade must brave a magic labyrinth and defeat its fearsome guardian to recover the Idol of Kolkuth.
Customer Reviews:
Fantastic Dark Elf fiction.......2007-08-30
The second book of this series picks off right where the first book left off. Malus returns to Hag Graef from his disastrous journey to the Waste, only to find his holdings seized, and his life declared forfeit. Quick thinking and dealing with his powerful brothers and sisters saves him from being sacrificed, and he slowly begins to rebuild his power base, setting himself as a crucial ally to all of his siblings against the others, all while keeping the daemon Tz'arkan a secret.
After locating the resting place of the second of five artefacts, he forces his plan on his siblings to brave the treacherous North Sea, and his most powerful brother, all while several death sentences hang over his head should he falter or fail in the slightest.
Abnett and Lee produce yet another great storyline, with great character interaction, well described combat scenes, and fantastic dialogue. They describe the culture of the Dark Elves without apology, and manage to work in subtles of their behavior that're shocking to even fans of dark fantasy without being overwhelming or disgusting. Magic is a pivotal plot device without being a deus ex machina. The ending is incredibly well written, with a final battle scene that is very inventive and captures the tone of Chaos well.
Quite entertaining, if you don't expect too much.......2007-08-12
You get pretty much get what you expect from this book:
a fast read, with unrelenting action. The character development
is pretty much restricted to illustrating Malus' depravities,
and taking them further notch by notch. No other
characters really get developed, and you can pretty
much guess why. If you are willing to accept these as
features, rather than bugs, then this book is quite a fun
ride.
Macabre on high and dangles you in front of it to make sure you see it all! .......2007-01-11
I picked up this book the other day mainly because of the cover, art work is amazing. Having never read a Warhammer novel, I had no intentions of reading it until I learned more about it. Well I sat down to look at the cover art work once more, before shelfing the book, when I decided to read the first page...Hooked! That has rarely ever happened for me.
The author(s) detail is so vivid I might as well been in an IMAX theater! The opening seen is so well described I had to keep reading to find out what happens...and what happens is entirely frightening. This book is dark! From brutal fleshly tortures to the depths of wickedness of demonic cult gatherings this book explores all that is macabre and dangles you in front of it to make sure you see it all!
Full of surprises and leaves you wanting to know more and worst of all...see more gruesome rendezvous. Action packed to the last page got to get more of this Malus Darkblade! This is the second volume in a series but reads well on its own telling you much of the back story leading to this particular edition. Rushing out to get the others!
A Brooding, Dark Bloodstorm event horizon..........2006-09-08
This 2nd novel of three started out just like the 1st - excellent and dark fantasy that hinted to greater things to come - but didn't for me.
Just like the 1st novel, the first half of the 2nd volume seems to be written by one of the authors, while the other half is written by the other. And it seems, whomever wrote the two first halves of both novels - is the better writer. I liked the fist halves of both novels way better than the latter halves.
Still, all in all, both novels are thrill rides, filled with dark mayhem and fantasy-filled adventure. I just purchased the 3rd volume. These are two of the better fantasy Warhammer novels out there. Graham McNeil's Guardians of the Forest is thus far the best in the fantasy Warhammer series. Check both of these series out.
All three cover artworks are excellent. I wish Malus's nauglir beast would have been in this story more.
Send a monster to kill a monster ..........2006-07-30
'Bloodstorm' is the second installment in the tale of dark elf Malus Darkblade, the first being 'The Daemon's Curse'. While 'Bloodstorm' could stand alone, I highly recommend picking up 'The Daemon's Curse' first.
Malus has returned to Hag Graef and his father, the Vaulkhar Lurhan, once again in shame. Now possessed by the daemon Tz'arkan, who insinuated himself inside Malus the moment he touched the treasure found in Tz'arkan's Temple. Malus has brought back the Octagon Of Praan, a relic of great power, but cannot rid himself of the daemon unless he finds four more relics within one year's time. The Octagon, and his plans, he cannot reveal to his family.
The Vaulkhar finds Malus out, though, and tortures him brutally. After enduring torture beyond any ever met out by Lurhan, kept alive by Tz'arkan, Malus is nursed back to health by his sister Nagaira. Nagaira has more plans for Malus, but Malus has plans of his own.
Now Malus must find the next relic, the Idol Of Kolkuth, which is said to reside on a hidden island deep in the territory of the Skinriders, a savage people who worship a god of decay. For this, Nagaira is useless to him, but not so his older brothers Bruglir The Reaver and Urial The Forsaken.
Through blood, treachery, murder, torture, blackmail, and horrifically brutal rituals, Malus gains Urial's support and forces Bruglir's fleet to take him through the dangerous waters of the Skinriders to find the Idol of Kolkuth. The Skinriders are a great addition to the series, their bodies literally rotting, their skin sloughing away, from their worship of the god of decay. Yuck!
'Bloodstorm' is the second bloodbath ... er ... book in this series, and I cannot recommend it highly enough. Comparable to Salvatore's awesome 'War Of The Spider Queen' series, the tales of Malus Darkblade are a feast worth dining on for any lover of dark elves. Don't skip over these books because they have ties to a popular video game, they are well written, stand alone tales that will leave you thirsty for more. Enjoy!
Average customer rating:
- Definitely Worth A Read
- ON A WICKED DAWN Is Not So Wicked!
- Incredible
- On a Wicked Dawn
- On a Wicked Dawn
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On a Wicked Dawn (Cynster Novels)
Stephanie Laurens
Manufacturer: Avon
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Laurens, Stephanie | ( L ) | Authors, A-Z | Romance | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0060002050
Release Date: 2002-04-30 |
Book Description
Amelia Cynster is stunned to hear these words from Lucien Ashford—the enigmatic sixth Viscount Calverton and the man she has always loved—just before the handsome rogue passes out at her feet. Dawn is breaking and she's already risked scandal by lying in wait for him just outside his London home. And though torn between indignant affront and astonished relief, she's nevertheless thrilled that Luc has agreed to her outrageous marriage proposal.
However, rather than submitting to a hasty wedding as Amelia had planned, the exasperating lord insists on wooing her properly
in public and in private. She longs for their time alone, when she can learn all about seduction from a master, yet frustratingly, they all too often find themselves beneath the stifling gaze of the ton.
But there is method behind the viscount's madness—he has a secret reason for wooing Amelia. And like all desirable things, his passion has a price.
Download Description
E-book extra: From the Lab to the Regency: One Writer's Travels (Part Two): An Interview with Stephanie Laurens. "Marrying you will be entirely my pleasure." Amelia Cynster hears these words from the handsome, enigmatic Lucien Ashford and is stunned. It's near dawn and she's risked scandal by lying in wait for him just outside his London house. But he agrees to her outrageous marriage proposal - just prior to passing out at her feet. Amelia's torn between astounded relief and indignant affront, then decides she doesn't care. She has always loved him - no other man will do - and, frankly, she's tired of waiting. Sometimes a young lady needs to take matters into her own hands. But matters of the heart are never that simple. The first hitch in Amelia's plans comes when Luc refuses to agree to a hasty wedding but insists on properly wooing her...in public and private. Soon, she longs for those moments away from the watchful gaze of the ton, in which she can learn all about seduction from a master. But unbeknown to Amelia, Luc has a very good reason for wooing her. Every wicked gentleman has his price. Be sure not to miss the tale of Amelia's twin, Amanda Cynster - On a Wild Night - also available from PerfectBound e-books.
Customer Reviews:
Definitely Worth A Read.......2006-12-06
I don't know what people are complaining about - I really loved this one. The relationship between Luc and Amelia develops nicely and the love scenes are delectable. Give it a chance!
ON A WICKED DAWN Is Not So Wicked!.......2006-12-05
1825, London
It's not the best book in the Cynster Series, but it's okay. The storyline started out promising with Amelia proposing to Luc, but dragged on with Luc tying to reconcile his feelings of love for Amelia. It is worth reading, though!
Incredible.......2006-11-11
One of the sexiest, more romantic books of the bar cynster. Luc and Amelia are a great couple, and their love story is overwhelming...
On a Wicked Dawn.......2006-11-10
I greatly enjoyed this book. I recently discovered the Cynster series and purchased all of the titles. They have made great reading.
On a Wicked Dawn .......2006-11-07
I used to love Stephanie Laurens books, but they have grown very boring to me and all seem to have the same plot and characteristics. I did not even finish this book - it was such a disappointment!
Customer Reviews:
i don't want a stepsister.......2006-11-14
I'm SOOO glad i don't have a stepsister. Mary Anne and Dawn are sure that being stepsisters will be totally fun. But they don't know that they'll be fighting constantly. I won't give away what the book is about but it is really good.
mary-anne, i don't like her.......2005-09-01
wow, i know that moving is hard on anyone seriously, bu in this book mary-anne just makes me so mad! dawn tries her best to be a good bestfriend and an even better step-sisiter, but things always had to be maryanne's way! and dawn couldn't take it anymore, you go dawn! sometimes, you just can't be nice to the people who don't derserve it! and mary-anne does not deserve it at all!
Dawn vs. Mary Anne.......2005-07-27
Dawn and Mary Anne are best friends... So they're SURE that being stepsisters will be fun.
They were wrong.
For one thing, Dawn and her mother are vegetarians, and Mary Anne and her father eat meat a lot. For another, before Mary Anne and her father moved in, it was common to find towels carefully put away... in the silverware drawer. And at Mary Anne's house, her father put his shirts in the closet alphabetically by color: Blue, brown, gray, red, white; like that.
As a side plot, Dawn and Mary Anne's friend Mallory Pike, who has SEVEN brothers and sisters, gets her SECOND case of chicken pox... Then three of her brothers get pnemonia... Then her other brother breaks his finger... Then one of her sisters sprains an ankle... Then her other sisters get bronchitis (I think)... Finally, her parents get injuries when they're playing tennis.
Will Dawn and Mary Anne ever speak to each other again? Will the Pike Plauque end? Read this book and find out!
MA ia a Crybaby!.......2005-04-16
Mary Anne is such a crybaby. I mean, she's 13 and hasn't grown out of crying IN PUBLIC. She's scared when Dawn pulls this dopey prank on her, and she's so spoiled! In the chapter when she and Richard move to Dawn's, MA crys over little things like cleaning supplise, not to metion is way overprotective of Tiger! Of course the movers wouldn't drop a chair on him! Furthermore, MA blames everything on Dawn. I agree with Dawn - Mary Anne is the wicked stepsister of Stoneybrook!
I gave this book 5 stars, however, for Dawn. She tried her hardest to put up with her wicked stepsister and played an incredible prank on MA. Way to go, Dawn!
Can't they be friends again?.......2005-03-28
When mary anne's father and Dawn's mother were married, Mary Anne And Dawn used to be Best Friends but now they are rivals. Mary Anne and Dawn are getting into a fight here. Jeff tries to stay out of it. But how will Mary Anne and Dawn be friends?
At the end of the book, There is a letter explaining to you why it is called "Dawn's Wicked Stepsister". Just guess that maybe that she has a stepsister and they also get into a fight
After the letter, There is a notebook page that explains when did you read it, when did you finish.....
After that, there is special photos about Dawn showing her when she was a baby, They also show her having a spooky mystery at their old farmhouse.
Later, ann Martin wrote something that read all the books about Dawn. I only have Dawn and the impossible Three, The Ghost At dawn's House and this book about Dawn and for the mysteries i Have Beware, Dawn!.
so keep in mind: If there are photo pictures of the BSC Members in those books, Order it.
HAPPY READING, BSC FANS!
Average customer rating:
- Satire and Disillusion
- I Admit It- I Never Heard Her Name!
- The Gift of Laughter
|
The Wicked Pavilion
Dawn Powell
Manufacturer: Zoland Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Literary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Powell, Dawn | ( P ) | Authors, A-Z | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
20th Century | United States | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 1883642396
Release Date: 1998-06-01 |
Book Description
The “Wicked Pavilion” of the title is the Café Julien, where everybody who is anybody goes to recover from failed love affairs and to pursue new ones, to cadge money, to hatch plots, and to puncture one another’s reputation. Dennis Orphen, the writer from Dawn Powell’s Turn, Magic Wheel, makes an appearance here, as does Andy Callingham, Powell’s thinly disguised Ernest Hemingway. The climax of this mercilessly funny novel comes with a party which, remarked Gore Vidal, “resembles Proust’s last roundup,” and where one of the partygoers observes, “There are some people here who have been dead twenty years.”
"For decades Dawn Powell was always just on the verge of ceasing to be a cult and becoming a major religion." -- Gore Vidal
Customer Reviews:
Satire and Disillusion.......2002-10-16
Dawn Powell (1897-1965) grew up in rural Ohio, but spent most of her adult life in New York City. Although little known during her lifetime, her reputation has blossomed in recent years. "The Wicked Pavilion" is her next-to-last novel. It was written in 1954 and is set in New York City in the late 1940's.
The "Wicked Pavilion" in the novel is the Cafe Julien, on Washington Square in Grenwich Village. It is a haunt for failed artists, lovers, bohemians, mid-towners, and those on the make. The novel centers around three groups of characters: a) a group of three failed artist friends, Dazell, Ben and Maurius and their agents and hangers-on. Much of the story centers upon the apparent death of Marius and the instant celebrity and inflation of his reputation that follows in its wake; b) Rick and Elleanora, on-again off-again lovers who meet and carry on their relationship over the years in the Cafe Julien; c)Elsie and Jerry. Elsie is an elderly woman from a wealthy Boston family who befriends Jerry a struggling model and would -be kept woman who spends a night in a mental institution with prostitutes. The three stories are interrelated, but the plot does not fit together althogether well and is the weakest part of this still excellent novel.
The book is biting precise, well-observed satire. The characters in the book, both male and female, are predominantly people who have come to New York from the Midwest in search of adventure, art, success, a new life -- much as Dawn Powell herself did. The dream of New York as a "happy city" remains but it becomes covered in Powell's work with disillusion, failure, and cynicism. The artists lack talent, the lovers lack passion, and everyone is on the make. Still, at the end of the book, the Cafe Julien is torn down and Powell makes us feel how an era is at an end.
The book begins with a short chapter, an essay in fact, called "entrance" which sets the stage for the disillusion we see in the course of the book. It also sets out, as satire will do, an ideal which the world the book shows us only parodies. Powell writes"
"But there were many who were bewildered by the moral mechanics of the age just as there are those who can never learn a game no matter how long they've been obliged to play it or how many times they've read the rules and paid the forfeits. It this is the way the world is turning around, they say, then by all means let it stop turning, lit us get off the cosmic Ferris wheel into space. Allow us the boon of standing still till the vertigo passes, give us a respite to gather together the scraps of what was once us -- the old longings for what? for whom" that give us our wings and the chart for our tomorrows."
This book gives a picture of a New York City that physically is no longer and perhaps always lived as a vision and ideal. The book is sharp, cutting and funny in its picture of what Powell portrays as a fallen reality.
I Admit It- I Never Heard Her Name!.......2002-03-22
I had never heard of Dawn Powell before- this was the first of her novels that I've read. The New York art scene of the that compelling between war period, is drawn and quartered in this timeless tale of obsession and illusion that is a comic classic of the highest form. I read the book in one and a half sittings and regretted its end. I strongly disagree with those who accuse it of nothing more than a bitchy and bitter novel. I was overcome, at the gentility by which Powell drew the most vulgar and opportunisitic social pariahs with ultimate sympathy and grace. Even the most pretentious social parasite, is awarded a show of dignity, and not a reptilian exit that would have been his due in less compassionate hands. The Cafe Julien, described in the title is modeled on a real artists' haunt in Powell's Greenwich Village. However it is equally every time and every place where humans come apart and remake themselves in that painful custom peculiar to man. It is no less the synagogue of the moneychangers, Balzac's Paris, the Occupied Left Bank, The Storming of Versailles. It could be peculiar to Caesar's or Mussolini's Rome with decadence the perfect counterpart of Brechtian Berlin. For this is how we act, this is what we do; often in the name of art and always, in pursuit of glory. We create and devour, crown and then dethrone, and like the lions, we will honor the new ruler by gobbling our young. In the Wicked Pavillion, some artists die physically and the rest undergo a spirtual death all in pursuit of what cannot be named. Even the timeless Julian is ultimately leveled and as easily forgotten as the woman who once had beauty and now posesses nothing else. Barstools at the Julian were like places at a royal court and equally vain and vicious were the proud patrons who owned them. We witness once committed artists become forgers of their dead comrade's work, postuhumously valuable. Everyone is making out, the would-be intellectual critics and the jackals who own the galleries. Even an ex comes uninvited to a mock remembrance service covered in widow's weeds. The service is taped and reveals nothing more than the vicious remarks made about all in attendance. Everyone is stripped and denuded but none so starkly as the naked, crazy prostitutes locked away on a psych. ward- the fate to which their chic counterparts eventually succumb. But, forget this cautionary blather- read the book for the character Elsie!
She is my newly crowned queen of American characters, a pretender to the throne of female greats held for years by her predecessor, the equally, overbearing British country Dame, Lady Circumference, the infamous peeress in Waugh's,"Decline and Fall." I so love these heavy, plodding females with aristocratic license to bore and command. Boston-bashing Brahmin, Elsie Hookler, is the terror of any hostess, intrusive grand dame, consummately worthy of position in American characters. Readers of Waugh, Wharton, Mitford, Parker, etc.- you know who you are- this is required!
The Gift of Laughter.......1999-11-28
"Born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world is mad," remarks an anonymous character in "The Wicked Pavilion." That seems like a shard of a micro-self-portrait buried in the book. And can one ever doubt how clear-sighted Powell was about her unique strength? Recently Lorrie Moore took Powell to task in The New York Times Book Review (Nov 7, 1999) for her "point-of-view problems." "'[Her novels] are dart-throwing fiestas,' to borrow one critic's words," said Moore, "'The Wicked Pavilion,' for instance, is on the brittle brink of being mere mood -- mean and elegant, but whose?" Such Jamesian prudence is off-base when confronted with Powell's raucous, near-drunken laughter bellowing from almost every page. (Her razor-sharp wit seems able to better Woody Allan any day! But how many artist-fools can we find in our Entertainment Century who could turn down writing assignments from Hollywood on "Funny Girl" and "The Wizard of Oz"?) Powell's comic vision is unabashedly omniscient and aggressively earthy. "The Wicked Pavilion" is no doubt elegant. If it appears to be acidic, it's also unmistakably warm. Her lyricism at the end of the novel brings to mind her elegant but no less tough-minded predecessor Edith Wharton, for what else is Cafe Julien but Society -- in this context the Glamor-rotten Big Apple of New York -- where all is cloaks and masks and the dreams of love and fame a deadly dart-throwing masquerade? If one finds Powell's caricature of the art world too one-dimensional, her insights about a struggling artist's plights are painfully immediate and ultimately, with the ruins of her life haunting these pages, authoritative. "Being dead has spoilt me," said Marius, the artist who is complicit in the news of his death and witnesses the incredible ascendence of his reputation. At such moments you seem to hear Dawn Powell speaking from beyond the grave. Her voice has survived magnificently, not because she has, like Marius, won "the Grand Immortal Prize of death which opened the gates closed in life" to her, but because it has spoken the unspeakable about human foibles and the necessary lies and illusion of happiness through the mirage of her art.
Product Description
An exclusive 2-in-1 hardcover edition featuring twin sisters Amanda and Amelia Cynter.
Customer Reviews:
Worth More than Five Stars Brilliant Book.......2007-07-22
I love these stories of the cynsters. These are the stories about the twins and are captivating with wonderful romance and intrigue. A real page turner I could not put it down from page one. Like others have said I too will read anything with Stephanie Laurens name on it.
Average customer rating:
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Angels on toast ;: The wicked pavilion ; The golden spur
Dawn Powell
Manufacturer: Quality Paperback Book Club
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books | Classics | Comic | Contemporary | Literary
Powell, Dawn | ( P ) | Authors, A-Z | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
Domestic Life | Women's Fiction | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B00071QHZ4 |
Product Description
2 Medium Size Paperbacks
Product Description
three mmpb books. 3 Titles By Stephanie Laurens : A Lady of Expectations All About Passion On a Wicked Dawn
Customer Reviews:
I loved Mallory and the Mystery Diary!.......1998-12-28
Mallory and the Mystery Diary is about Mallory and Stacy thinking there is a ghost in Stacy's new house. They find old portriats and a big old-fanshioned trunck. They find out a rich family lived here in the 1800's. Mallory gets to keep the truck. Her brothers finally open it (she has brothers that are triplets!), and finds fine, old clothing and a diary with a stack of papers. She reads the diary and finds a mystery that needs to be cleared. Finally she reads the stacks of paper and it was admitted. This is the best book! I loved the book!
I loved Kristy and the secret of Susan........1997-11-22
Please put this book on video so I can buy it. The only thing is that you didn't say if she changed or not at the end. Please try to get Ann M. Martin's signiture and give it to me!
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- Forever Peace (Remembering Tomorrow)
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