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Forgotten Life
Three Hearts and Three Lions
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance - Now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem!
No Earthly Sunne
Blood Music
Bears treatment of the traditional tale of scientific hubris is suspenseful and a compelling portrait of a new intelligence emerging amongst us and changing our world irrevocably. The Sword and the Satchel
DANDELION WINE
The Martian Chronicles
The Day It Rained Forever
Iron Kissed
Moon Called
Blood Bound
Bone Crossed
Breathers: A Zombie's Lament
Meet Andy Warner, a recently deceased everyman and newly minted zombie. Resented by his parents, abandoned by his friends, and reviled by a society that no longer considers him human, Andy is having a bit of trouble adjusting to his new existence. But all that changes when he goes to an Undead Anonymous meeting and finds kindred souls in Rita, an impossibly sexy recent suicide with a taste for the formaldehyde in cosmetic products, and Jerry, a twenty-one-year-old car-crash victim with an exposed brain and a penchant for Renaissance pornography. When the group meets a rogue zombie who teaches them the joys of human flesh, things start to get messy, and Andy embarks on a journey of self-discovery that will take him from his casket to the SPCA to a media-driven class-action lawsuit on behalf of the rights of zombies everywhere. Darkly funny, surprisingly touching, and gory enough to satisfy even the most discerning reader, Breathers is a romantic zombie comedy (rom-zom-com, for short) that will leave you laughing, squirming, and clamoring for more. The Coming Race
Future Imperfect: " Wanting Seed " , " 1985 "
Grave Peril
Fool Moon
Storm Front
Summer Knight
Intrepid Enchanter
Magician's Guild: Book 1 of Black Magician Trilogy
Serpent's Reach
Beholder's Eye
SNOW WHITE, BLOOD RED
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
Stealing the Elf-King's Roses
Pawn of Prophecy
Castle of Wizardry
Magician's Gambit
Queen of Sorcery
ENCHANTERS' END GAME
Guardians of the West
Demon Lord of Karanda
King of the Murgos
Sorceress of Darshiva
The Diamond Throne
The Ruby Knight
Seeress of Kell
The Worm Ouroboros
This Other Eden
If the end of the world is nigh, then surely it’s only sensible to make alternative arrangements. Certainly the Earth has its good points, but what most people need is something smaller and more manageable. Of course there are those who say that’s planetary treason, but who cares what the weirdos and terrorists think? Not Nathan. All he cares is that his movie gets made and that’s there’s somebody left to see it. In marketing terms the end of the world will be very big. Anyone trying to save it should remember that. From the Paperback edition. Sherlock Holmes vs. Dracula: Or, The adventure of the sanguinary count
Dayworld
The Eyre Affair
Fforde's heroine, Thursday Next, lives in a world where time and reality are endlessly mutablesomeone has ensured that the Crimean War never ended for examplea world policed by men like her disgraced father, whose name has been edited out of existence. She herself polices textagainst men like the Moriarty-like Acheron Styx, whose current scam is to hold the minor characters of Dickens' novels to ransom, entering the manuscript and abducting them for execution and extinction one by one. When that caper goes sour, Styx moves on to the nation's most beloved novelan oddly truncated version of Jane Eyreand kidnaps its heroine. The phlegmatic and resourceful Thursday pursues Acheron across the border into a Leninist Wales and further to Mr Rochester's Thornfield Hall, where both books find their climax on the roof amid flames. Fforde is endlessly inventive: his heroine's utter unconcern about the strangeness of the world she inhabits keeps the reader perpetually double-taking as minor certainties of history, literature and cuisine go soggy in the corner of our eye. The audacity of the premise and its working out provides sudden leaps of understanding, many of them accompanied by wild fits of the giggles. This is a peculiarly promising first novel. Roz Kaveney Lost in a Good Book
The Well of Lost Plots
It's almost impossible to summarise the amazing adventures in which the beguiling (and confused) Ms Next becomes involved, but after she leaves Swindon (and her life inside an unpublished book called Caversham Heights), she becomes involved in the inauguration of a golden age of fictional narrative. But this turns out to be a very dangerous experience, and she finds herself having strange encounters with Dickens' Miss Havisham (even more eccentric than she was in Great Expectations) and enduring an unsettling journey into the world of Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights. But who is the villain laying waste to her memories? And will she come to terms with the fact that her husband Landen exists only in her mind? As this synopsis indicates, The Well of Lost Plots is a truly unique jeu d'esprit. It helps to be familiar with many of the books being riffed on here, but even if you're not, this will be one of the most idiosyncratic and often hilarious experiences you will find a within the pages of a book. Jasper Fforde enthusiasts know that already. Barry Forshaw Something Rotten
The Big Over Easy
Rather in the fashion in which Stephen Sondheim exploded the world of fairytale in Into the Woods, Fforde here brings all the apparatus of the tough crime thriller to bear on the nursery rhyme. Minor baronet Humpty Stuyvesant Van Dumpty III has been found deadand in piecesbeneath a wall in a less salubrious area of town. The perpetrator would appear to be his ex-wife, but she has shot herself. Detective Inspector Jack Spratt and his colleague Mary Mary are assigned to the case, and soon find themselves knee-deep in money-laundering, bullion smuggling and major problems with beanstalks. This isn't quite the Fforde mixture as before, although he has previously favoured a crime motor for his plots. The skill in this outrageously entertaining (and rigorously plotted) concoction lies in a double conjuring trick: we are always amazed to find ourselves reading so assiduously about ludicrous figures (who become quite as interesting heroes as, say, Philip Marlowe) when common sense dictates only children should find such conceits entertaining. Not so! No child could appreciate the dazzling wordplay and witty imagination on offer here, and most readers will be more than happy to encounter detective Inspector Jack Spratt (and his contrary sidekick kick Mary Mary) again and again. Barry Forshaw The Fourth Bear
First Among Sequels
Shades of Grey
Neverwhere
ASH: A Secret History
The Princess Bride
William Goldmanwhowho's won two Oscars for his screenwriting (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and All the President's Men), and has endeared himself to dentists and their patients planetwide through his novel Marathon Manhas always claimed he merely abridged this text, extracting the "good parts" from an inventive yet wordy classic by Florinese literary superstar, S Morgenstern. It has, however, been whispered in certain circles that Morgenstern himself is a figment of Goldman's ultra-fertile imagination. Read Goldman's original and special Anniversary introductions and make up your own mind. Ohand don't forget his explanation as to why he's only "abridged" the first chapter of the sequel Buttercup's Babywhich appears here for the first timeand why it took him so long to get round to it. Completely delightful, suitable for cynics and romantics alike. Suspension of disbelief optional. Lisa Gee Rocannon's World & Planet of Exile
Dead as a Doornail
Definitely Dead
Grave Sight
Grave Surprise
An Ice Cold Grave
Dead and Gone
All Together Dead: A True Blood Novel
Club Dead: A True Blood Novel
From Dead to Worse: A True Blood Novel
Living Dead In Dallas: A True Blood Novel
Dead To The World: A True Blood Novel
Grave Secret
A Sudden Wild Magic
The Tough Guide to Fantasyland
Diana Wynne Jones describes (starting, of course, with a map) every sword-and-sorcery cliché in wickedly accurate detail, arranged alphabetically. Elves sing in beautiful, unearthly voices about how much better things used to be. Swords with Runes may kill dragons or demons, or have powers like storm-raising, but they are not much use when you're attacked by bandits. You can only have an Axe if you're a Northern Barbarian, a Dwarf, or a Blacksmith. Jones also tackles hard-hitting questions: how does Fantasyland's ecology work when there are few or no bacteria and insects and vast tracts of magically irradiated wastelands? Why doesn't the economy collapse when pirates and bandits are so active and there is no perceptible industry? The Tough Guide to Fantasyland (U.K. Edition) was a 1997 Hugo and World Fantasy Award nominee. It's a good companion to Jones's Dark Lord of Derkholm, a fantasy about what happens when your land is turned into a theme park for questing tourist parties. Fans of Terry Pratchett's Discworld books will enjoy both. Nona Vero The Aware
Gilfeather
The Tainted
Knight of Delusions
The Storm Lord
The big time
The First Book of Lankhmar
The Sirian Experiments
The Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire
The Making of the Representative for Planet 8
The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four and Five
The Marriagesis set in the indeterminate lands of the Zones, Strange realms which encircle the Earth. Zone Three, a peaceful, contented, matriarchalparadise, is ruled by the gentle Queen Al-Ith;the neighbouring Zone four is land given to war and chaos, controlled by brutal warrior-king, Ben-Ata. Their marriage, a melding of the extreme male and female principles, threatens to destabilise the entire galactic empire. Shikasta: Re-colonised Planet 5
In Shikasta the story of the final days of our planet is told through the Johor, an emissary sent from Canopus. Twentieth-century Earth, named 'Shikasta, the stricken' by the kindly paternalistic Canopeans sho colonised it many centruies ago, is under the influence of the evil empire, Puttoria. War, famine, disease and environmental disasters ravage the planet. To Johor, mankind is a 'totally crazed species', racing towards annihilation: his orders to save humanity set him what seems to be an impossible task. The Stepford Wives
White Fire
Fevre Dream
Royal Chaos
Jason Cosmo
Dirty Work
Star trek: The wrath of Khan
Star Trek III The Search for Spock
Souls in the Great Machine
And all the while a faint mirrorsun hangs in the night sky, warning of the cold to come. In Sean McMullen's glittering, dynamic, and exotic world two millennia from now, there is no more electricity, wind engines are leading-edge technology, librarians fight duels to settle disputes, steam power is banned by every major religion, and a mysterious siren "Call" lures people to their death. Nevertheless, the brilliant and ruthless Zarvora intends to start a war in space against inconceivably ancient nuclear battle stations. Unbeknownst to Zarvora, however, the greatest threat to humanity is neither a machine nor a force but her demented and implacable enemy Lemorel, who has resurrected an obscene and evil concept from the distant past: Total War. Souls in the Great Machine is the first volume of Sean McMullen's brilliant future history of the world of Greatwinter. The Miocene Arrow
Voyage of the Shadowmoon
The Dune Encyclopedia
Lonely Werewolf Girl
A canticle for Leibowitz
Saint Leibowitz
The Glittering Plain
The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe (English Library)
Boneshaker
But on its first test run the Boneshaker went terribly awry, destroying several blocks of downtown Seattle and unearthing a subterranean vein of blight gas that turned anyone who breathed it into the living dead. Now it is sixteen years later, and a wall has been built to enclose the devastated and toxic city. Just beyond it lives Blue’s widow, Briar Wilkes. Life is hard with a ruined reputation and a teenaged boy to support, but she and Ezekiel are managing. Until Ezekiel undertakes a secret crusade to rewrite history. His quest will take him under the wall and into a city teeming with ravenous undead, air pirates, criminal overlords, and heavily armed refugees. And only Briar can bring him out alive. Interview with the Vampire
While Rice has continued to investigate history, faith, and philosophy in subsequent Vampire novels (including The Vampire Lestat, The Queen of the Damned, The Tale of the Body Thief, Memnoch the Devil, and The Vampire Armand), Interview remains a treasured masterpiece. It is that rare work that blends a childlike fascination for the supernatural with a profound vision of the human condition. Patrick O'Kelley Splashdance Silver
The Fairies' Midwife
A College of Magics
Earth abides
The Family Trade
The Hidden Family: Book Two of Merchant Princes
The Revenants
Beauty
The Shaping of Middle-Earth
The War of the Ring: The History of The Lord of the Rings, Part Three
Maske: Thaery
Night Lamp
Outcasts of Heaven Belt
Eyes Of Amber
Catspaw
On Fortune's Wheel
Player Piano
Cat's Cradle
Happy Birthday, Wanda June
Player Piano
Jailbird: A Novel
Jailbird
Galapagos
God Bless You, Mr.Rosewater
Slapstick or Lonesome No More!
Slapstick or Lonesome No More!
The Sirens Of Titan
Slaughterhouse 5
THE SIRENS OF TITAN.
The Resurrectionists
Giants of the Frost
Snake Agent: A Detective Inspector Chen Novel
The Demon and the City: A Detective Inspector Chen Novel
Precious Dragon: Detective Inspector Chen Novel
The Shadow Pavilion: A Detective Inspector Chen Novel
The Day of the Triffids
Bring Me the Head of Prince Charming
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