A Wind in the Prom Lines
Aug. 14th, 2007 04:22 pmBlood Lines, by Tanya Huff (reread)
Vicki Nelson, ex-cop in Toronto, teams up with a sexy vampire and a her cranky (yet sexy) ex-partner to fight supernatural crime. This time around, the villain is an Egyptian mummy. Woot, it is as fun as I remembered it.
(143/250)
Prom, by Laurie Halse Anderson
Entertaining YA novel about an average kid who gets drafted into making a prom happen for her classmates, against long odds and against her own better judgement. Somehow Anderson manages to make me enjoy things I would never pick up jf I went by the story descriptions.
(144/250)
A Wind in the Door, by Madeleine L'Engle, read by the author (unabridged audiobook, reread)
I'm not sure whether this or Many Waters is my favorite Murray book, but I am sure that I love love love hearing Madeleine L'Engle read aloud. She has such a grandmother voice, it's wonderfully soothing and attention-grabbing at the same time.
(145/250)
Vicki Nelson, ex-cop in Toronto, teams up with a sexy vampire and a her cranky (yet sexy) ex-partner to fight supernatural crime. This time around, the villain is an Egyptian mummy. Woot, it is as fun as I remembered it.
(143/250)
Prom, by Laurie Halse Anderson
Entertaining YA novel about an average kid who gets drafted into making a prom happen for her classmates, against long odds and against her own better judgement. Somehow Anderson manages to make me enjoy things I would never pick up jf I went by the story descriptions.
(144/250)
A Wind in the Door, by Madeleine L'Engle, read by the author (unabridged audiobook, reread)
I'm not sure whether this or Many Waters is my favorite Murray book, but I am sure that I love love love hearing Madeleine L'Engle read aloud. She has such a grandmother voice, it's wonderfully soothing and attention-grabbing at the same time.
(145/250)