Review: How do I Know If I Know?
by John Bytheway How Do I Know If I Know John Bytheway, besides having the cutest name since Picabo Street, is a fantastic speaker on LDS matters. No matter what…
Review: Head On
by John Scalzi Head On Some authors write good books once in awhile with clunkers in between. Anne McCaffrey, for instance, with all of her brilliance, still managed to pump…
Review: Wait, What?: And Life’s Other Essential Questions
by James E. Ryan Wait, What?: And Life’s Other Essential Questions I’m a sucker for inspirational, self-help books, especially those with a practical approach. This one hit nicely in that…
Review: Dungeon Calamity
by Dakota Krout Dungeon Calamity The second book in this series was the strongest. The first book suffered from excessive world-building but in the second one, the author found his…
Review: Dungeon Madness
by Dakota Krout Dungeon Madness So often the second book in a series is a let-down and you realize the author didn’t have more than one idea to explore. Other…
Review: Dungeon Born
by Dakota Krout Dungeon Born Are you a 12-14 year old boy who loves sitting on Grandma’s old couch in Mom’s basement munching on Doritos, arguing about how to build…
Review: Painting Kisses
by Melanie Jacobson Painting Kisses Lia Carswell is an Artist with a capital “A.” She’s not your average dabbler, no, she’s an artiste! I got really tired of hearing how…
Review: Not My Type: A Single Girl’s Guide to Doing It All Wrong
by Melanie Jacobson Not My Type Pepper Spicer is about 20% jerk and 80% loser when we first meet her. She throws a fit when her family refuses to ignore…
Review: Tarzan and the Madman
by Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan and the Madman And so I face the final curtain… It has been a long, sometimes bumpy, road from Tarzan of the Apes to Tarzan…
Review: What Da Vinci Didn’t Know: An LDS Perspective
by Richard Neitzel Holzapfel, Andrew C. Skinner, Thomas A. Wayment What Da Vinci Didn’t Know: an LDS Perspective I read The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown against my better…