by Laurie Faria Stolarz
Camelia’s life is pretty ordinary until the day she almost dies. Walking across the school parking lot, she is barely missed by a careening, out-of-control car. The car only missed her because a young man saved her, pushed her out of the way in the nick of time then left before she [...]
Posts tagged Supernatural
Deadly Little Secret
Hell Week (Maggie Quinn: Girl vs. Evil)
by Rosemary Clement-Moore
First, I know that I’ve posted about how uber-excited I was to read Hunger Games and now here I am obviously having read something instead of Hunger Games. I’ve had a very stressful last couple of weeks and needed something lighter to read. I want to be in a fully engaged frame of [...]
The Demon Ororon (Volume 1)
by Hakase Mizuki
Chiaki notices Ororon alone and hurt on the street and offers to help him. What Chiaki doesn’t know is that Ororon is a demon, the King of Hell to be exact, and is fleeing from the many people (well, things I suppose) that are trying to kill him. For her kindness, Ororon offers [...]
Prom Dates from Hell
by Rosemary Clement-Moore
Maggie Quinn does not do prom. Sarcasm, yes; journalism, yes; prom, NO! But strange things begin to happen after she turns down an invitation to prom from the school dork, Stanley Dozer, then immediately rescues him from the school’s elite, the Jocks and the Jessicas, by photographing their cruelty toward Dozer and threatening [...]
The Summoning: The Darkest Powers (Book One)
by Kelley Armstrong
Chloe Saunders is a fairly normal high school freshman, or so she thinks. Then she is attacked by a janitor with a melting face only she can see–a ghost, but she doesn’t know that quite yet. After the whole school witnesses her running down the halls screaming while being chased by an imaginary [...]
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L. J. Smith and the Night World
In the long, long ago when I was a teenager (ok, so not that long ago) I was in love with a series by L. J. Smith called the Night World. Recently I have had several L. J. Smith encounters, not with the actual person but with her work. In the bookstore I noticed that [...]
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