| Fall 2023 Book Recommendations |
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Fall is almost upon us! This is my favorite season of the year in general, but also my favorite time for reading. There’s always a plethora of titles being released for the season, many of which are perfect for Halloween and even the Christmas Horror subgenre. I always have so much fun putting together my Fall reading recommendations not only because of all the new titles I’m anticipating, but also so I can look back on what was released earlier in the year and read anything I might have missed. Below are some titles — with accompanying links to the print, ebooks, and audiobooks editions — that I personally am looking forward to this Fall, presented here in order of release date, starting with those releasing in September 2023. After this main list, I’ve included some titles that came out earlier this year that you might have missed that would be appropriate to read this Fall. At the end, I included recommendations for themed Cookbooks, Crafts, Guides, Coloring Books Sourcebooks, and Tarot Decks that would be great to dive into during the spooky season. Continue on to check out my Fall 2023 Book Recommendations…
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Tags: Ace Books, Alison Goodman, Berkley Publishing, Bloomsbury Publishing, Bret Easton Ellis, Brian Herbert, Burt Solomon, Carissa Orlando, Carlo Rovelli, Cassandra Khaw, Catriona Ward, Chronicle Books, Chuck Wendig, Clay McLeod Chapman, Dune, Elizabeth Hand, Grady Hendrix, HarperVoyager, Hocus Pocus, Insight Editions, Jane Austen, Janice Hallett, Jessie Burton, John Hay Mysteries, John Scalzi, Kevin J Anderson, Kim Harrison, Knopf, Kotaro Isaka, Lev AC Rosen, Medusa, Mur Lafferty, Naomi Novik, Necronomicon, Oppenheimer, Quirk Books, Rachel Harrison, Richard Kadrey, Shirley Jackson, Soho Books, Stephanie Barron, Stephen King, Stranger Things, Tarot Cards, Tarot Deck, The Haunting of Hill House, The Nightmare Before Christmas, The Overlook Press, Tor Books, Wheel Of Time | |
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| Audiobook Review: Star Wars: From A Certain Point Of View
Star Wars: From A Certain Point Of View
Star Wars Expanded Universe
Audiobook | Hardcover | Kindle
Narrated by Jonathan Davis, Ashley Eckstein, Janina Gavankar, Jon Hamm, Neil Patrick Harris, January LaVoy, Saskia Maarleveld, Carol Monda, Daniel José Older, Marc Thompson
Published by Penguin Random House Audio
Release Date: October 3, 2017 What a spectacular collection of talent, this audiobook has! Star Wars: From A Certain Point Of View is loaded to the brim with amazing stories and has a star-studded cast of voices, each one chosen specifically to create the most presentable experience possible for the listener. Whomsoever is responsible for dreaming this up should be rewarded handsomely.
...continue reading » Tags: Adam Christopher, Alexander Freed, Ashley Eckstein, Ben Acker, Ben Blacker, Beth Revis, Carol Monda, Cavan Scott, Charles Soule, Christie Golden, Chuck Wendig, Claudia Gray, Daniel José Older, Delilah S. Dawson, E. K. Johnston, Elizabeth Wein, From A Certain Point Of View, Gary D. Schmidt, Gary Whitta, Glen Weldon, Greg Rucka, Griffin McElroy, Ian Doescher, Janina Gavankar, January LaVoy, Jason Fry, Jeffrey Brown, John Jackson Miller, Jon Hamm, Jonathan Davis, Kelly Sue Deconnick, Ken Liu, Kieron Gillen, Madeleine Roux, Mallory Ortberg, Marc Thompson, Matt Fraction, Meg Cabot, Mur Lafferty, Neil Patrick Harris, Nnedi Okorofor, Pablo Hidalgo, Paul Dini, Paul S. Kemp, Penguin, Penguin Random House, Penguin Random House Audio, Pierce Brown, Rae Carson, Random House, Random House Audio, Renée Ahdieh, Sabaa Tahir, Saskia Maarleveld, Star Wars, Star Wars: From A Certain Point Of View, Tom Angleberger, Wil Wheaton, Zoraida Córdova | |
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| Book Spotlight: Nights Of The Living Dead By Jonathan Maberry & George A. Romero |
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Nights of the Living Dead: An Anthology
Paperback | Digital Book | Audio CD
Edited by Jonathan Maberry & George A. Romero
St. Martin’s Griffin
Release Date: July 11th, 2017 In 1968, a horror movie from director George A. Romero came out called Night of the Living Dead. Nearly 50 years later, zombie horror is “alive” and well, with hit shows like The Walking Dead and Fear the Walking Dead based on Robert Kirkman’s comic book series. Over the past decade, we’ve seen a renaissance of zombie fiction in all forms of entertainment, from comics to novels like World War Z (Max Brooks) and Pride & Prejudice & Zombies (Seth Grahame-Smith) to TV and film. Zombie even manage to cross over into other genres. The TV series iZombie takes the flesh eaters into the world of police forensics and the underground “brain trade.” Movies like Warm Bodies (2013) showed zombies can be romantic and of course Shaun of the Dead (2004) proved they can be the butt of jokes. Though, there was a time when zombies were not the “it” thing in horror, but back in 1989, an undead anthology called Book of the Dead (edited by John Skipp & Craig Spector) made zombie literature cool again. Nights of the Living Dead is a collection of original zombie short stories all based in the world Romero built. What’s really interesting is reading the introductions by Romero himself and co-editor, author, and unabashed Romero fanboy, Jonathan Maberry.
...continue reading » Tags: brian keene, Carrie Ryan, Chuck Wendig, Craig E. Engler, David J. Schow, David Wellington, George A. Romero, Isaac Marion, Jay Bonansinga, Joe R. Lansdale, John A. Russo, John Skipp, Jonathan Maberry, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Max Brallier, Mike Carey, Mira Grant, Neal and Brenda Shusterman, Night of the Living Dead, Nights of the Living Dead, Nights of the Living Dead: An Anthology, Ryan Brown | |
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