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Gabino Iglesias Reviews Broken Fevers by Tenea D Johnson

Gabino Iglesias Reviews Broken Fevers by Tenea D Johnson
locusmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from locusmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Gabino Iglesias Reviews Later by Stephen King

Gabino Iglesias Reviews Later by Stephen King
locusmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from locusmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Gabino Iglesias Reviews The Sentient by Nadia Afifi

Nadia Afifi’s debut novel The Sentient is the kind of science fiction narrative that comfortably inhabits the realm of plausi­bility. There is superb technology on display here, including ways of dealing with trauma that would be very useful today, but human suffering, stress, death, and the dark side of religious fanaticism are at the core of the novel, showing that annoying human trait of moving forward in terms of what we can do while simultaneously staying behind on the things that matters most. Amira Valdez is a young neuroscientist with dreams of bringing her talents to outer space. She is an outstanding student with a promising future, but she still struggles dealing with her past. Amira grew up in strange religious compound known as Children of the New Covenant where physical and emotional abuse was normalized, and the life she has built after escaping isn’t com­pletely free of the trauma and bad memories of her years spent at the compound. When, instead of getting t

Gabino Iglesias Reviews Ink by Jonathan Maberry

People are the amalgamation of their memo­ries and experiences, and Jonathan Maber­ry’s Ink explores what happens when we lose our most important memories. A sprawling, dark narrative made up of the interwoven stories of a set of misfits that struggle to get by, Ink is a moody horror novel that deals with grief, anger, guilt, and Otherness in a small town. Patty Trang, known as Patty Cakes, is a Viet­namese tattoo artist living in the small town of Pine Deep. She runs a tattoo shop she opened after spending some time in New York. She has a tattoo of her dead daughter’s face on the back of her hand and has a sixth sense that makes her connect deeply with some of her clients. Unfortunately, she’s losing her memories of her daughter, who was kidnapped and brutally murdered. Owen Minor is a man who became something else, something darker than human. He can steal people’s tattoos and lives for the thrill of stealing the painful memories attached to them. Monk Addison is a

Gabino Iglesias Reviews Disease by Sarah Tolmie

Sarah Tolmie’s Disease is a strangely funny book about fictitious diseases and psychological conditions. Presented in a scholarly tone that resembles a series of academic case studies, this book looks at some bizarre ailments that range from scavenging, a psychological affliction in which people compulsively move into old houses, to a poor guy who developed an allergy to comedy. Tolmie’s imagination runs wild in this book. There are new diseases being discovered all the time, as the COVID-19 pandemic so violently reminded the world, but the illnesses presented in Disease are not only new but also quite strange, unique in their symptomatology, and fun to read about. For example, a man wakes up one day to find out he is made of glass, a poor young women suffers from “chronic misrecognition” – a disease that makes others confuse her with a variety of people, both male and female – and a man is followed by animals wherever he goes. Tolmie’s serious tone and the heartbr

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