Sixth in the Anthony Award-winning Southern Vampire series. Spiked with a frothy fusion of romance, mystery, and fantasy, this bestselling series sends the supernaturally gifted cocktail waitress Sookie Stackhouse to New Orleans, where she has to deal with the legacy of one of her own family and a host of potentially dangerous characters.
See Me After Class: Advice for Teachers by Teachers
Added by: algy | Karma: 431.17 | Black Hole | 14 April 2011
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See Me After Class: Advice for Teachers by Teachers
“You know how you’ve always thought that if you were a teacher, you’d go insane? Well, this very funny book proves that you definitely would. But in a good way.”
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Former pop star Heather Wells has settled nicely into her new life as assistant dorm director at New York College—a career that does not require her to drape her size 12 body in embarrassingly skimpy outfits. She can even cope (sort of) with her rocker ex-boyfriend's upcoming nuptials, which the press has dubbed The Celebrity Wedding of the Decade. But she's definitely having a hard time dealing with the situation in the dormitory kitchen—where a cheerleader has lost her head on the first day of the semester. (Actually, her head is accounted for—it's her torso that's AWOL.)
Added by: Au_claire | Karma: 26.92 | Fiction literature | 9 January 2011
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Gossip Girl, The Carlyles #1
The latest in the Gossip Girl series is definitely a successful continuation of a storyline so delicious you won't be able to put it down. With triplets introduced to the Upper East Side scene, trouble and fun are definitely being added to the mix. Gossip Girl manages to stay true to character as the series continues in the lives of newcomers. Though the book starts off rocky and takes a few chapters to get into the swing associated with previous Gossip Girl books it manages to grab the reader’s attention and keep a plot that intrigues.
For a start, it is very deliberately a post-9/11 thriller, in which a man bereaved by the loss of his wife and children in the Twin Towers sets out to wreak what he thinks of as a sacrificial vengeance on the city by becoming a serial terrorist himself. For another, Block, who wrote some pornography early in his career, has created a female character whose kinky sex antics will definitely ruffle some of his mainstream readers. Block's intimate knowledge of New York and its folkways--and of urban character and conversation--has always been one of his great strengths and is on plentiful show again here.