Tag: Adventure

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Be Careful What You Wish For by Jeffrey Archer

"Be Careful What You Wish For" is the fourth in this series. It spans the years 1957 through 1964. The Clifton's and Barrington's continue to face much adversity and evil.

Best Kept Secret by Jeffrey Archer

“Best Kept Secret” tells a story by itself, with enough explanation of how the characters came to be without retelling the previous events but rather focusing one the events that were unfolding.

The Sins of the Father by Jeffrey Archer

The Sins of the Father is the second of the Clifton Chronicles series. We catch up with Harry Clifton as he disembarks the Kansas Star in America, only to be promptly arrested for murder.

Only Time Will Tell by Jeffrey Archer

Only Time Will Tell is the story of Harry Clifton. Clifton comes from a very modest home and humble beginnings. All along, people around him can tell that there's something special about Harry.

The Warramunga’s Aftermath Of War by Greg Kater

This book reveals the devastation that takes place in the Philippines as a result of the war. The author did a good job of describing some of the places in utter ruins.

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Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan

An honest, spoiler-free review of Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan. A thirty-nine-year-old single mother strikes a pretend-girlfriend bargain with a Rhode Island heir, and finds something harder to hand back at summer's end.

Phoebe Berman’s Gonna Lose It by Brooke Averick

A spoiler-free, deeply read review of Brooke Averick's debut Phoebe Berman's Gonna Lose It. Honest praise for its sharp anxiety writing, ensemble friend group, and pre-K classroom humor, plus the patches where the pacing falters. Comparable reads included.

The Midnight Train by Matt Haig

Matt Haig's The Midnight Train follows an ageing bookseller on a ghostly steam-engine ride through his own life. A warm, spoiler-free review of the second Midnight World novel, after The Midnight Library.

The Divorce by Freida McFadden

A spoiler-free review of The Divorce by Freida McFadden. Honest take on the unreliable narrator, three-act perspective shift, suburban texture, and where this 2026 thriller stacks up against The Housemaid and Never Lie.

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