Some Kind of Fairy Tale by Graham Joyce
I bought this book recently while bored one lunchtime
wandering around the shopping mall near work, I think I might have read a
positive review about it somewhere. Anyway it is an interesting read and I
liked the idea that a belief in a fantasy world and mental illness might get
mixed up by a rational world and I wonder if that idea could be worth further
investigation (I might have to jot that down as another possible story to
write).
‘It is Christmas afternoon and Peter Martin gets an unexpected phone
call from his parents. It pulls him into a bewildering mystery. His sister,
Tara, has come back home. Not so unusual you might think, this is a time when
families get together. But twenty years ago Tara took a walk into the woods and
never came back, and as the years have gone by with no word from her the family
has, unspoken, feared that she was dead.
But now she’s back, tired, disheveled, but happy and full of stories
about twenty years spent traveling the world, an epic odyssey taken on a whim.
But her stories don’t quite hang together and the intervening years have been
very kind to Tara . . . She really does look no different from the young women
who walked out the door twenty years ago.
Peter’s parents are just delighted to have their little girl back, but
Peter is not so sure. There is something about her. A haunted, otherworldly
quality. Some would say it’s as if she’s off with the fairies. And as the
months go by Peter begins to suspect that the woods around their homes are not
finished with Tara and his family…’
Wired by Douglas E Richards
The first of two e-books that I have read that propose
a possible man-made evolutionary step towards an enhanced human and the
possible consequences should the technology and subsequent power it brings fall
into the wrong hands. Although the ideas are interesting (I have often thought
I would like to be able to take something that would make me smarter) I found
the characters to be lacking in depth and the plot line to be quite naive in
execution, nevertheless it was an easy read and quite entertaining.
‘Kira
Miller is a brilliant genetic engineer who discovers how to temporarily achieve
savant-like capabilities in all areas of thought and creativity. But what if
this transcendent level of intelligence brings with it a ruthless megalomania?
David Desh left the special forces
after his team was brutally butchered in Iran. Now he has been reactivated for
one last mission: find Kira Miller, the enigmatic genius behind a bioterror
plot that threatens millions. But when Desh learns that the bioterror plot is
just the tip of the iceberg, he is thrust into a byzantine maze of deception
and intrigue, and he becomes a key player in a deadly game he can't begin to
understand. A game that is certain to have a dramatic impact on the future
course of human history.’
Amped by Douglas E Richards
Soon Kira and her team are in a desperate battle for their lives. And to make matters even worse, while on the run and being relentlessly attacked from all quarters, Kira comes across evidence of savage acts that the enhanced version of Desh kept hidden, even from himself. Now both she and Desh must question everything they think they know. Can they trust each other? Can they even trust themselves?
And all the while, the greatest threat of all may be coming from an entirely unexpected direction. A threat that could lead to devastation on a global scale. And time is quickly running out . . .’
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