This week, in the Star Thistle saga Russell faces the aftermath of the battle with the Yan Wo.
In A Voice You Touch by Rick McQuiston, Cassie and her friends are trapped in a nightmare. And the narrator of Guy Burtenshaw’s Die Nasty, is correcting unknown wrongs. The Days of Mr. Thomas Sestina continues to go places with the company. In Joseph Farley’s A Ride With Francois Cliff takes a taxi ride with a madman – or does he?
Our serials Daniel’s Dream and Hilltop Manor continue, with Maxine and Daniel meeting the Man In The Box in the former, and Gale seeing a new side to Alice in the latter. So do The First Men in the Moon, where our heroes explore the lunar surface, and A Journey to the Centre of the Earth, where the explorers experience their first subterranean Sunday.
And in A View through the Bionacle, Obsidian is reviewing Quirk Books’ classic mashup Pride and Prejudice with Zombies. Many years ago, the current editor approached Harper Collins with a proposal for a story entitled Bloodbath in Narnia, and learnt a speedy and salutary lesson in copyright law. If only I’d aimed my satirical energies at public domain classics, life might have been very different …
In A Voice You Touch by Rick McQuiston, Cassie and her friends are trapped in a nightmare. And the narrator of Guy Burtenshaw’s Die Nasty, is correcting unknown wrongs. The Days of Mr. Thomas Sestina continues to go places with the company. In Joseph Farley’s A Ride With Francois Cliff takes a taxi ride with a madman – or does he?
Our serials Daniel’s Dream and Hilltop Manor continue, with Maxine and Daniel meeting the Man In The Box in the former, and Gale seeing a new side to Alice in the latter. So do The First Men in the Moon, where our heroes explore the lunar surface, and A Journey to the Centre of the Earth, where the explorers experience their first subterranean Sunday.
And in A View through the Bionacle, Obsidian is reviewing Quirk Books’ classic mashup Pride and Prejudice with Zombies. Many years ago, the current editor approached Harper Collins with a proposal for a story entitled Bloodbath in Narnia, and learnt a speedy and salutary lesson in copyright law. If only I’d aimed my satirical energies at public domain classics, life might have been very different …